skip navigation link

Tsunami Data and Information

NGDC and the co-located World Data Center for Geophysics and Marine Geology compile a unique set of tsunami-related products as part of a continuing program to support the interests of tsunami warning centers, engineers, oceanographers, seismologists, and the general public.

February 6, 2013 Solomon Islands Earthquake and Tsunami

March 11, 2011 Honshu, Japan Tsunami Event


Data
line
Global Historical Tsunami Events and Runups
Tsunami Deposits and Proxies
Deep-ocean Assessment and Reporting of Tsunamis (DART®)
Tide Gauge Records
Tsunami Inundation DEMs

Maps
line
Natural Hazards Interactive Map
Tsunami Travel Time Maps
Natural Hazards KMZ file

Images, Posters and Publications
line
Tsunami Images
Global Tsunami Poster
Tsunami Sources Icosahedron
Tsunami Publications
Tsunami Science on a Sphere

A tsunami is a series of waves generated by an impulsive disturbance in the ocean or in a small, connected body of water. These waves sometimes inflict severe damage to property and pose a threat to life in coastal communities. In the open ocean a tsunami is less than a few centimeters high, traveling at ~800 km / hour (the speed of a commercial jet airplane) with wave energy extending from the surface to the ocean floor. As the tsunami approaches the coastline, the wave energy is compressed into a much shorter distance, creating potentially large destructive waves posing a threat to life in coastal communities.