This volume, derived from the 1999 International Tsunami Symposium,
presents a unique look at the state of tsunami research at the end of
the 20th century. It displays recent progress both in data recovery and
reconstructions of historical tsunamis and in detail examination of
recent disasters. It shows the tsunami community using both traditional
methods of data gathering - searching archives and attempting to
simulate past events - and integrating modern technologies - side-scan
sonar, GPS, global communications, supercomputers - in the quest to
understand tsunamis and improve mankind's ability to mitigate the
disastrous consequences of these unpredictable and unstoppable events.
It chronicles recent advances in mitigation efforts while illuminating
the continuing need for increased efforts. The papers range from
descriptive texts for the non-specialists to fairly technical
discussions for those familiar with tsunami research.
Audience: This book will be of interest to researchers and graduate
students involved in natural hazards research, physical oceanography,
seismology, environmental impact assessment and risk assessment