A "Bible Revelations" Presentation -   Created Jan. 1, 2005 - Updated  April 15, 2008

Tsunamis in Bible Prophecy?

The awfully destructive power of the Indian Ocean Tsunami

has shed new Light on ancient Bible Prophecies about

"The End of the World" and has brought refreshing re-awakening Warning of the perilous End Time which will precede the Coming of the Messiah for Judgment Day.

 


 

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Scientists warn of gigantic Mega Tsunamis with power to wipe out entire cities

 

From a BBC Science & Nature TV Report - in the year 2000 already, 4 yrs before the Asian Tsunami struck!

Mega-tsunami: Wave of Destruction
BBC Two 9.30pm 12 October 2000
Revisited: BBC Four 7pm 24 May 2003

Source:  http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2000/mega_tsunami.shtml

Followed by commentary from BIBLE REVELATIONS in blue!

Scattered across the world’s oceans are a handful of rare geological time-bombs. Once unleashed they create an extraordinary phenomenon, a gigantic tidal wave, far bigger than any normal tsunami, able to cross oceans and ravage countries on the other side of the world. Only recently have scientists realised the next episode is likely to begin at the Canary Islands, off North Africa, where a wall of water will one day be created which will race across the entire Atlantic ocean at the speed of a jet airliner to devastate the east coast of the United States. America will have been struck by a mega-tsunami.

Back in 1953 two geologists travelled to a remote bay in Alaska looking for oil. They gradually realised that in the past the bay had been struck by huge waves, and wondered what could have possibly caused them. Five years later, they got their answer. In 1958 there was a landslide, in which a towering cliff collapsed into the bay, creating a wave half a kilometre high, higher than any skyscraper on Earth. The true destructive potential of landslide-generated tsunami, which scientists named "Mega-tsunami", suddenly began to be appreciated. If a modest-sized landslide in Alaska could create a wave of this size, what havoc could a really huge landslide cause?

Scientists now realise that the greatest danger comes from large volcanic islands, which are particularly prone to these massive landslides. Geologists began to look for evidence of past landslides on the sea bed, and what they saw astonished them. The sea floor around Hawaii, for instance, was covered with the remains of millions of years’ worth of ancient landslides, colossal in size.

But huge landslides and the mega-tsunami that they cause are extremely rare - the last one happened 4,000 years ago on the island of Réunion. The growing concern is that the ideal conditions for just such a landslide - and consequent mega-tsunami - now exist on the island of La Palma in the Canaries. In 1949 the southern volcano on the island erupted. During the eruption an enormous crack appeared across one side of the volcano, as the western half slipped a few metres towards the Atlantic before stopping in its tracks. Although the volcano presents no danger while it is quiescent, scientists believe the western flank will give way completely during some future eruption on the summit of the volcano. In other words, any time in the next few thousand years a huge section of southern La Palma, weighing 500 thousand million tonnes, will fall into the Atlantic ocean.

What will happen when the volcano on La Palma collapses? Scientists predict that it will generate a wave that will be almost inconceivably destructive, far bigger than anything ever witnessed in modern times. It will surge across the entire Atlantic in a matter of hours, engulfing the whole US east coast, sweeping away everything in its path up to 20km inland. Boston would be hit first, followed by New York, then all the way down the coast to Miami and the Caribbean.

End of quote

Of course, scientists normally have opposing views.  Thus there are those who deny that such a Mega Tsunami is possible - refer http://www.drgeorgepc.com/TsunamiMegaEvaluation.html  - bear in mind though, that at best of times, scientists are caught on the wrong foot when disaster hits unexpectedly.  What is clear in these days (apart from having specific Biblical Prophecy), is that Tsunamis go with certain earthquake movements, and the world is currently experiencing an increasing wave of earth quakes and threatening volcanic eruptions.

BIBLE REVELATIONS Commentary - The Asian Tsunami was a catastrophe of true "Biblical Proportions".  Before it struck on Dec. 26, 2004, bringing death and destruction to 13 countries bordering the Indian Ocean shoreline,  Tsunamis was  an almost totally unknown concept to most people.  In its frightening aftermath, certain Bible Prophecies regarding "The End of the World" have now taken on new shape, bringing refreshing Warning about the seriousness and the reality of the Divinely promised Judgment of mankind by God  and the establishment of His Kingdom on earth.  To religious contenders, striving for the ultimate Goal of gaining entry to this Kingdom, it brought renewed inspiration and cause for serious spiritual introspection.

Now that we all know about Tsunamis and the scary threat that they pose to mankind, the contents of the above BBC Scientists' Report becomes all the more real and frightening.  Only now, we realize the true meaning of the Messianic Prophecy that "men's hearts will fail them for fear because of the roaring of the sea and its waves."

Luke 21:25-28  "There will be signs in the sun and moon and stars; on earth nations in agony, bewildered by the clamour of the ocean and its waves; men dying for fear as they await what menaces the world - for the powers of Heaven will be shaken." 

This prophecy was given by Messiah as part of the "Signs of the End of this Age" and the calamitous events preceding His Coming as the Ruler of His Kingdom. The concept of  "the clamour of the sea" have in the past erroneously been interpreted by most Prophecy commentators as referring to the "clamour (unrest) of the nations".  This threat posed by the sea has also been confirmed by the visionary writings of the Jewish Lubavitch Rebbe as long ago as 1944 - see Report further down this page.

The fear that will come upon people for the "roaring of the sea" is currently (April 2005) clearly depicted by the fear that fills Indonesians where almost daily quakes have not stopped since the disaster of 26 Dec.  Every time a strong quake rumbles, they flee to higher ground.  Refer to Reports on the "roaring of the sea" during Tsunamis

Isaiah 24: 1-7  "See how YHVH lays the earth waste ... buckles its surface (as was the cause of the Tsunami disaster, i.e. an earth quake along a 1000 km fault in the sea) ... The earth is defiled under its inhabitants' feet, for they have transgressed the Law (Torah) ... broken the everlasting Covenant (YHVH's conditions for sharing in His ultimate Blessings for that part of mankind which  complies) ... So a Curse consumes the earth and its inhabitants suffer the penalty.  That is why the inhabitants of the earth are burnt up and few men left (refer the Prophecies re. Armageddon nuclear holocaust).

 

Earth buckling quakes will be a major feature of the "End Time".  Only now, that we have experienced the reality of what a disturbance in the water mass of the oceans can wrought, can we start to imagine the awesomeness of these apocalyptic events destined for the "Time of the End of the World".  Only now do we fully understand the cataclysmic risk of an asteroid or a comet crashing into the oceans of the sea (which form 70% of the earth!

 

For a review of one such a mega quake now in the making,  read a scientist's report of the splitting of Africa's N-W top along the rift that runs from the Dead Sea (next to Jerusalem), right down to mid Africa.  This rift has recently been acclaimed by a Jerusalem professor as "the mother of all quakes."

This quake will be caused by the creation of a new ocean as predicted in the Bible for the End Time - Read it all here!

 

For other "End Time Signs" now in the making, be sure to refer to:

WarningTrumpets - 7 Great Signs of a World in Chaos

A Child's amazing Vision of the End Times - as confirmed in Jewish writings

Next article (below) - Prophetic interpretation of Lubavitch Rebbi concerning the threat posed by the sea in the End Times.

 


Lubavitch Rebbi foresaw the "Drowning of an entire nation" in the "End Time"

 

The prophetic words of the previous Lubavticher Rebbe, from the newsletter HaKria V’HaKedusha (Date: Tammuz, 5704  / 1944) Extracts from www.Shmais.com
 

We find yet another confirmation of "the roaring of the sea and its waves" in the interpretation of Ps. 93 by the visionary Rebbe, as long ago as 1944.  Following are some extracts from his writing:

 

Psalm 93 "The Lord is King; He has garbed Himself with grandeur; the Lord has robed Himself, He has girded Himself with strength; He has also established the world firmly that it shall not falter.  Your throne stands firm from of old; You have existed forever. The rivers have raised, O Lord, the rivers have raised their voice; the rivers raise their raging waves. More than the sound of many waters, than the mighty breakers of the sea, is the Lord mighty on High. Your testimonies are most trustworthy; Your House will be resplendent in holiness, O Lord, forever."

 

This chapter of Tehillim was composed by the G-dly poet (psalmist) regarding Yemos Ha’Moshiach (the Messianic days). He hints briefly at the events which will take place before the Geula (redemption). The central theme of the chapter is that the Jews living at that time will understand by means of these events, that the galus (exile) is over and geula (redemption) has begun.

 

Hashem will be king by wearing greatness!  We generally think the world is run by nature and we forget entirely that there is a G-d who rules over nature. It’s only when an unnatural occurrence takes place such as a flood, earthquake, and other terrible upheavals, that we remember that there’s a Ruler of the world who rules over nature; Then all will say that G-d is king! He put nature aside and showed his absolute sovereignty over nature.

 

Hashem will rise to fortify the Torah in the world, and just as when it was given the first time (with fire and lightning on Mt Sinai),  it was accompanied with proof that He is the ruler over nature, so too (will it be) the second time. The process of kabbolas ha’Torah (receiving the Torah) will include displays of gevura whose purpose is that the entire world accepts the Torah. But, continues the poet (psalmist), He has also established the world firmly that it shall not falter.: many will err and think that Hashem is destroying the world. That’s why the poet writes that the world will remain fortified and it will not falter. It will only be the Jewish people and the Torah which will be elevated once again: Hashem is giving might to His people!
 

This time it won’t be in order to destroy the world, but in order to fortify the Torah, and to bring about the realization of the Promise "and Hashem will be king over all the world" through this that the world will gain knowledge of Torah (and accept it) through the Jewish people.

 

The rivers have raised, O Lord, the rivers have raised their voice; the rivers raise their raging waves.: the literal meaning of the verse is that the rivers will lift up Hashem; the rivers will raise their voice, the rivers will make a lot of noise! This means that the roaring and raging of the rivers will elevate Hashem. The only meaning in this is that Hashem will be uplifted by His making the oceans roar before the geula. Through this noise everybody will understand that Hashem is elevated.

 

The practical conclusion is that the roaring rivers will bring great changes to the world; for example: they will drown an entire nation or at least a great portion, and this natural disaster will cause a revolution in man’s perspective. They will see this as a G-dly punishment. It’s also possible that this natural disaster will change the world political map by a chain of events which will begin with that nation that drowns.

In summary: before the geula there will be a great roaring of water which will shake the world with its intensity, to the point that the world will return to elevate Hashem. That’s how we can understand the verse that the water will elevate Hashem by means of their noise and rage.

More than the sound of many waters, than the mighty breakers of the sea, is the Lord mighty on High: the sound of the many waters will cause the powerful ones to break, and then Hashem will be the powerful One. This means that as a result of the crashing waters, the mighty ones of the earth will be wiped out. World empires will collapse in the face of the water’s strength and then people will acknowledge and agree that Hashem is the only mighty One in heaven.

 

(End of Quote)

 

Refer to witnesses' Reports on the "roaring of the sea" during Tsunamis

 

BIBLE REVELATIONS Commentary - While the Rebbe applies this Prophecy mainly to Judah (the Jews), we know that it includes all 12 Tribes of Israel. We therefore have confirmation in this Psalm also of the Restoration of Torah observance, not only amongst Jews (which is the only solution for Israel's current problems), but also amongst Restorative Hebraic Messianism, i.e. the Lost Ten Tribes of Israel in process of re-identification and re-union with Judah - refer http://www.revelations.org.za/TenTribes.htm

 

Although this Psalm refers to 'raging rivers' and waves,'  the Rebbe applies it to the oceans also.  Bear in mind that the oceans contain great sea streams or 'rivers'.  It is hardly likely that the 'raging waves' which the psalmist refers to, apply to river waves rather than ocean waves.

 

The Roaring of the Sea

 

The recent Tsunami was described as "a roaring wall of water" by many survivors.  as established also by the following quotes:

 

 “Yusniar still hears the roaring in her head, the waves thunderously loud. The sea that was supposed to be a mother, protecting, sustaining, became a fury, sweeping two of her children away” (TIME, January 17, 2005).

 

“Bustami, a fisherman from the Sumatran village of Bosun, is one who experienced the quake and the tsunami and lived to tell about them. Sometime after 7:30 on the morning of Dec. 26, he says, he was on his boat just off the coast when he felt the sea moving around him. ‘That must have been when the earthquake hit,’ he says. About half an hour later came the shock wave – tsunami – that devastated the region. At first, Bustami saw water retreat from shore, with fish jumping around on the empty beaches. Then, he says, ‘I heard this strange thunderous sound from somewhere, a sound I’d never heard before. I thought it was the sound of bombs.’ The water rose behind him as high as the coconut trees on the shoreline, and he was thrown off his boat. It felt like doomsday” (TIME, January 10, 2005).

 

We have another report about the roaring of aTsunami which struck the northern coast of Papua New Guinea on July 17, 1998Retired Colonel John Sanawe,  survived the tsunami and later told his story to Hugh Davies of the University of Papua New Guinea. Just after the main shock struck only 20 kilometers offshore, Sanawe saw the sea rise above the horizon and then spray vertically perhaps 30 meters. Unexpected sounds--first like distant thunder, then like a nearby helicopter--gradually faded as he watched the sea slowly recede below the normal low-water mark. After four or five minutes of silence, he heard a rumble like that of a low-flying jet plane.  Full report at http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=000B6F41-8BC1-1C71-9EB7809EC588F2D7

 


Major Quakes, tsunamis predicted

Overview of a Report to the Australian Re-assurers Conference

By Chris Tinkler

EARTH faces a one in three chance of being hit by an earthquake big enough to destroy a major city.

There is an even bigger chance of a giant tsunami during the same period, a conference for Australian re-insurers has been told by natural disasters expert Bill McGuire.

Prof McGuire, chief of London's Benfield Hazard Research Centre, sits on the Natural Hazard Working Group, which was set up by the British Government in the wake of the Boxing Day tsunami.

Prof McGuire has produced a sobering analysis of the likelihood of various major disasters in future years.

The research comes as rescue workers and villagers continue to remove bodies from the rubble of last month's devastating Indonesian earthquake.

Up to 2000 people are feared to have perished when the 8.7-magnitude quake rocked the islands of Nias and Simeulue.

Prof McGuire, acknowledged as a leader in his field, says that there is:

A 35 per cent chance of a global-reach earthquake, which would devastate a major city, kill hundreds of thousands and have worldwide economic implications.

A 35-70 per cent likelihood of a tsunami due to a major submarine earthquake - similar to the Boxing Day tsunami that left about 300,000 people dead or missing.

A 7 per cent possibility of a volcanic eruption big enough to change Earth's climate.

A less than 0.7 per cent (about one in 150) chance of a mega tsunami triggered by a coastal or submarine landslide, destroying several cities and killing tens of millions of people.

A less than 0.15 per cent (one in 666) likelihood of a volcanic super-eruption powerful enough to wipe out entire countries and plunge survivors into a global nuclear-style winter for several years.

A 0.14 per cent (one in 714) chance of a 200m-wide asteroid colliding with Earth, causing widespread devastation.

A 0.01 per cent (one in 10,000) chance of a 1km-wide asteroid hitting our planet, wiping out up to a quarter of the world's population.

An earthquake similar in size and impact to the big 1923 Tokyo earthquake could kill more than 200,000 people and cost $4000 billion.

Prof McGuire stressed the high possibility that another devastating tsunami could hit somewhere in the globe in the next 70 years.

Countries could no longer bury their heads in the sand, he said, while outlining the risks of major disasters to the reinsurance conference this week.

"The Indian Ocean countries knew they had a tsunami threat, but because it only happens every 100 to 200 years they decided not to spend money on it," Prof McGuire said.

"That was a ridiculous decision."

There is also  considered to be a real threat of a 1km-wide asteroid colliding with Earth.

Then, there will be a one in 300 chance of "object 1950DA" colliding with Earth, it is predicted - unless action can be taken.

If it did hit the planet, it would obliterate a land mass the size of Victoria or Japan and kill millions of people.

But Prof McGuire predicted scientists would have devised a way to divert dangerous asteroids by then.

The Natural Hazard Working Group is looking to form a multi-government panel to make a detailed assessment of threats throughout the world and plan responses.

 


A Tremor, Then a Sigh of Relief, Before the Cataclysm Rushed In

The following article reflects the inability of scientists and the authorities to  effectively have dealt with this Tsunami disaster.  Yet, these same scientists are baffled that the animals in the affected disaster areas knew and escaped to higher ground ahead of time!  The same inability of man applies to the threatening scenario pictured in the BBC Report here above.  Who will take it upon themselves to move 100 million people away from that probable disaster zone?  Who will carry the mega costs to abandon huge cities like New York and Miami?  How will an entire city flee before a skyscraper high wave approaching them at the speed of a jetliner?  It simply would be an absurd and vain attempt. Man's heart will certainly  "fail them for fear!" 

Webmaster, BIBLE REVELATIONS

After southern Asia's massive quake, experts initially were blind to the threat of a tsunami. Others were unable or unwilling to act.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/la-fg-tictoc2jan02,1,7993129.story?coll=chi-news-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true

By Paul Watson, Barbara Demick and Richard Fausset
Times Staff Writers
Published January 2, 2005

MADRAS, India — At a dawn Mass the day after Christmas, as Father Maria Devanesan lifted the host above his head in reverence, the large white wafer began to tremble.

It was 6:30 a.m. in southern India. A tremor had traveled more than 1,000 miles, speeding through the Earth's crust from the seabed off Indonesia to the seashore of India. Now it rattled the pews of St. Thomas Cathedral.

The members of the 500-strong congregation, many of them poor Tamil fishermen and their families who live in shanties at the nearby beach, rose from their knees in fear and ran from the 108-year-old church.

Father Maria hurried down the stone steps from the altar, following his parishioners, who were too afraid to receive Communion. Outside, people rousted from sleep ran from their homes in panic.

When the shaking subsided, the priest persuaded a small group to follow him into the cathedral to pray at the statue of Our Lady of Mylapore, an icon of a woman adorned in gold leaf, joyously anticipating the birth of Christ.

The congregants cried and prayed, thankful that there had been no serious damage from the quake and that the crisis had passed.

In fact, it was just beginning.

The tremor that rattled St. Thomas was merely a knock on the door, a harbinger of a catastrophe that would claim the lives of up to 150,000 people in 11 nations.

Miles beneath the waters of the Indian Ocean, a massive piece of the Earth's crust had heaved, buckled and shifted. Along a fracture zone hundreds of miles long, it moved, releasing pent-up energy equivalent to the power of more than 1,000 atomic bombs. The waters above reared up and crashed down, creating a wave that was now racing across the ocean at 500 mph.

Neither prayers nor science would save those standing in its way.

The records of history and evidence encoded in coral reefs show that tsunamis have hit the Indian Ocean seldom but with great force. At obscure scientific conferences and expert conclaves over the last decade, researchers had urged government officials to establish warning systems. But among the many problems that plague southern Asia — poverty, disease, civil wars — rare but deadly waves seemed a low priority. They were, until the magnitude 9 quake hit.

The cataclysm unfolded over two hours. In that time, some experts around the globe would see the temblor's signature on some of the modern world's most sophisticated monitoring equipment but be blind to the larger threat. Some officials would see the threat, but be ill-equipped to act. Others would take no action for fear of being wrong or out of line. In at least one case — in India — air force officials received a desperate mayday, possibly in time to save thousands of lives, but never made it public.

The wave would outrun them all.

An Alert in Hawaii

As Father Maria prayed with his congregants, Stuart Weinstein, a 43-year-old former New Yorker now living in Hawaii, was taking advantage of the quiet of a rainy Christmas afternoon to work on a research project.

Inside the computer room of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center — a high-tech lair of flat-screen monitors, maps and digital wall displays — a computer caught his attention. The jagged lines relayed a signal from a seismic sensor thousands of miles away in the Cocos Islands, southwest of the Indonesian island of Sumatra, conveying the news of a large earthquake off that island's west coast.

The computer automatically sent a pager signal to one of Weinstein's colleagues, Andrew Hirshorn, who had been napping at his home nearby. Hirshorn, a soft-spoken 48-year-old with a gray ponytail, threw on a shirt and ran over.

The two men conferred. Initial readings indicated the earthquake was magnitude 8 — significant, but not enormous. It was outside the Pacific Ocean, their area of expertise and responsibility.

The center, a U.S. government agency that does much of the work for the U.N.-sanctioned Pacific tsunami warning system, was set up in 1965 in response to a quake off the coast of Chile that had generated a tsunami, killing people as far away as Hawaii and Japan. The center monitors sophisticated tidal gauges and computerized buoys dotting the Pacific. Nothing comparable tracks the Indian Ocean.

Computers ate up 15 minutes verifying the earthquake reading, plotting its location, estimating its size. At 3:14 p.m. Hawaii time, the two men sent a bulletin on an automated e-mail and fax list to their colleagues around the Pacific Rim:

TSUNAMI BULLETIN NUMBER 001

PACIFIC TSUNAMI WARNING CENTER/NOAA/NWS

ISSUED AT 0114Z 26 DEC 2004

THIS BULLETIN IS FOR ALL AREAS OF THE PACIFIC BASIN EXCEPT ALASKA-BRITISH COLUMBIA-WASHINGTON-

OREGON-CALIFORNIA.

THIS MESSAGE IS FOR INFORMATION ONLY. THERE IS NO TSUNAMI WARNING OR WATCH IN EFFECT.

AN EARTHQUAKE HAS OCCURRED WITH THESE PRELIMINARY PARAMETERS.

ORIGIN TIME -- 0059Z 26 DEC 2004.

COORDINATES -- 3.4 NORTH 95.7 EAST

LOCATION -- OFF THE COAST OF NORTHERN SUMATRA

MAGNITUDE -- 8.0

EVALUATION:

THIS EARTHQUAKE IS LOCATED OUTSIDE THE PACIFIC. NO DESTRUCTIVE TSUNAMI THREAT EXISTS BASED ON HISTORICAL EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI DATA.

Already the wave had traveled roughly 100 miles from the epicenter in an ever-widening circle. In Indonesia, the first victims were about to die.

'Water! Water!'

What had seemed to be a moderate earthquake shook residents of Banda Aceh, a city of about 150,000 at the northern tip of Sumatra, around 8 a.m. local time. About half an hour later, many of them were outside inspecting their houses for damage when, on what had been a clear, sunny day, the sky filled with water.

Survivors remembered a sound like the drumbeat of a driving rain.

"Water! Water! Big water!" some screamed, unable to articulate the nature of the phenomenon.

This was water like nobody had seen — snarling, tall as a four-story building.

"It was like Armageddon," remembered Zukarnaen Buyung, a strapping 30-year-old construction worker. "We didn't know it was a wave. We thought it was some kind of rain. Everything behind us was black. The sky, the water."

Buyung ran.

Little high ground exists in Banda Aceh, which is built along a palm-studded coastal plain, but Buyung managed to scramble up a bridge, dragging his wife and their 2-year-old daughter.

They watched, horrified, as the strangely voracious water swallowed up relatives and neighbors. A brother and a nephew disappeared as Buyung looked down, helpless.

"I watched. I couldn't do anything," he recalled, his voice choked with grief.

The tsunami obliterated a swath of the city stretching three miles from the sea. It lifted 75-foot fishing boats and dumped them in the middle of the city, deposited hundreds of bodies in front of what had been brightly lighted shops on Panglima Polem Street. Single-story wooden houses were dismantled as if they were made of sticks, and trees were pulled out like blades of grass.

South along Sumatra's long Indian Ocean coastline, entire villages disappeared without a trace.

*

Sucked Out to Sea

At roughly the same time, the wave washed over the Indian air force base on the tiny island of Car Nicobar, northwest of Sumatra.

The base commander later estimated that the wave was 30 to 50 feet high. It killed 102 airmen, sucking the majority out to sea.

Despite the devastation, someone at the base managed to broadcast a mayday on the high-frequency radio. The signal missed its intended military receiver but was picked up at the civilian airport in Madras, on India's southeastern coast, and was relayed by phone to the Tambaram air base, on the outskirts of the city, Group Capt. Anup Ghosh said.

After quickly confirming that the distress call was legitimate and that the airstrip on Car Nicobar still functioned, the air force within 20 minutes launched transport planes to the Andaman Islands, Ghosh said.

But the officers apparently did not alert civilian officials that the wave might be headed across the ocean toward the Indian mainland, about 1,000 miles to the west.

"The initial report was only that the island has been hit by an earthquake and tidal wave," Ghosh said in an interview Friday. "They did not mention tsunami."

Said Squadron Leader Mahesh Upasani, an air force spokesman: "The Indian air force's job is to fight a war and carry out relief operations in such cases, and not to predict tsunamis.

"People were running for their lives," he added. "It was only after some time that they were in a position to communicate."

In a civilian government office in Madras, P. Chandrashekhar Rao was monitoring the seismograph tucked into the corner of a small ground-floor room. He and two colleagues watched the earthquake's impact as the needle bounced wildly across the machine's white cylinder.

The epicenter was hundreds of miles away, and Rao's thoughts quickly turned to the possibility of a tsunami. He did not know enough about the rare phenomenon to make a recommendation. About 10 minutes after reading the seismograph, following official procedures, he called headquarters in New Delhi and reported his findings.

Rao never talked to the air base on the edge of the city, and air force officers there didn't call him. Official channels didn't permit it.

The wave was now roughly an hour from the Indian coast.

*

Growing Magnitude

When an earthquake hits, shock waves travel through the Earth and within minutes begin jiggling sensitive equipment at about 350 monitoring stations around the world. Those stations, in turn, relay data by satellite to computers at the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colo.

Don Blakeman, a USGS geophysicist, was about to have Christmas dinner when his pager went off — a computer-generated warning that a major quake had just occurred. A colleague, Julie Martinez, also was paged and began analyzing data on her home computer while Blakeman drove to the office.

As data from more and more stations began to arrive, Blakeman revised the estimate of the temblor's magnitude to 8.5 — a threefold increase in size. He triggered a computer program that notified the White House, State Department and major relief agencies of a massive quake.

The information also went automatically to the tsunami warning center in Hawaii, where director Charles McCreery, 54, had abandoned plans to assemble his young daughters' pink bicycles and joined his colleagues watching the computer readouts.

McCreery saw that the quake was much larger than previously thought and therefore more likely to cause a tsunami. He decided to send out a second bulletin:

NO DESTRUCTIVE TSUNAMI THREAT EXISTS FOR THE PACIFIC BASIN BASED ON HISTORICAL EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI DATA.

THERE IS THE POSSIBILITY OF A TSUNAMI NEAR THE EPICENTER.



Roughly an hour had passed since the quake. Unseen by experts, the wave already had traveled halfway across the Indian Ocean and claimed tens of thousands of lives.

*

Debate in Sri Lanka

The national meteorology department in Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka, is lined with dusty leather-bound books of weather reports dating back to 1867, complementing a clock that stopped long ago and a calendar stuck on a faraway date. The country is too poor to buy its own seismology equipment and relies heavily on what information can be garnered from abroad.

So when the telephone started ringing off the hook that morning with reports of a tremor, Sarath Premalal, the meteorologist who was nearing the end of his 24-hour shift, turned to the Internet.

Answering the phone with one hand and Web surfing with the other, Premalal found his way to the USGS website. The site reported that the vibrations he had felt were from a temblor centered off western Sumatra.

"Don't worry. It's far away," Premalal told one woman who called from the interior reporting that her building was shaking. "We already know about it."

Despite the reassurance, the meteorologist and his boss, Jayatilaka Banda, the department's deputy director, were concerned about a tsunami. They had never experienced such a thing but knew that underwater earthquakes could generate destructive waves.

Banda thought about asking Sri Lankan radio and television stations to put out an alert to watch for such an occurrence, but he felt he didn't have the authority without credible evidence of a threat. He told Premalal to keep looking for information.

As Blakeman and his colleagues at the USGS boosted their estimates of the quake's magnitude, the two Sri Lankan officials still debated what to do. An hour and 45 minutes after the first tremors, they were still deliberating when an urgent call came from a weather observation office in Trincomalee on the east coast of the country: The town was under 2 feet of water.

Farther north on the island, in territory controlled by Tamil rebels, when the first wave came, Suppaiya Raja, 38, recalled having heard Christian missionaries predict the end of the world in 2005.

"I heard a huge boom," he said. "They said the world would end next year, but I thought it had come early."

*

Too Little, Too Late

At the Patong Beach Bungalows in Phuket, Thailand, Bruce Hugman, a 59-year-old British medical writer, was awakened by a thud like someone pounding on his door.

He had not felt the quake an hour and 45 minutes earlier, and now wondered drowsily if he should sleep a little longer or get to the breakfast buffet before the resort stopped serving. The water seeping under the door soon made the question moot.

Hugman's first instinct was to stack his luggage on the bed to keep it dry. But a moment later, he recalled from his hospital bed, "water was pouring in, as if it had been injected."

When Hugman pulled back the curtain, he was confronted with a wall of water that rose above the top of the window. The glass did not break, but the pressure of the wave prevented Hugman from even turning the front-door handle to get out.

"That was my first near-death moment," he said. "If the window had blown in, I surely would have drowned."

Instead, the water receded with a loud sucking sound.

Wearing just the underpants he had slept in, Hugman opened his door to an eerie scene: the sky dark, 3 feet of "syrupy brown water with all this stuff floating in it" covering the beach and no sign of any other people.

"I'm on my own," Hugman thought, wondering if he had slept through an evacuation warning.

There was none. In Bangkok, the Thai capital, government officials had seen the U.S. bulletin that a tsunami was possible near the quake's epicenter. They hesitated to issue what could have been a false alarm at the height of winter tourist season. Each year Thailand draws 12 million tourists, mostly Europeans, to its pristine beaches — a key part of the nation's economy.

"There wasn't much information. There was quite a short time," said Amorn Chantananvivate, a senior official in the meteorology department.

Instead of an evacuation order, the department put two bulletins on its website, both too little and too late. The first, an hour and 21 minutes after the quake, advised that the temblor "would be felt in parts of Thailand," according to the text printed in the Bangkok Post.

The next bulletin advised fishermen of 9- to 15-foot waves and warned of high tides on some beaches. It came about two hours after Hugman had fled his bungalow.

The retreating water gave Hugman time to join a Swedish friend at the unit behind him. As a second wave hit, the two escaped by standing on the narrow ledge of a concrete patio railing and holding on to the side of the bungalow. They watched as refrigerators and gas canisters floated past in the churn.

Once again, the water retreated. A man standing on a neighboring roof said he saw a third wave coming in.

Still on the railing, Hugman and his friend tucked their heads under the eaves of the bungalow roof in an attempt to shield themselves from the surging debris. But the water rose higher than the last time.

As Hugman gripped the roof, the tsunami lifted his legs until he was floating horizontally. Once again, the water abruptly retreated, pulling off Hugman's underwear as it went.

He fled with the others up the hill to the paved road that runs above the beach. The small shops that once lined the street had been ransacked by the waves. A bag of T-shirts bobbed past; Hugman grabbed a few to cover himself and continued to run.

*

'Pray for the People'

In Madras, about two hours after he had first felt the tremor — about an hour and a half since the mayday signal from Car Nicobar — Father Maria was back in the cathedral leading Mass when he heard a whisper from the catechist.

The man was shaking as he approached. "The seawater has reached the steps to the beach, so kindly pray for the people," he said. "And try to finish it fast, Father."

In just a few minutes, Father Maria rushed to the concrete steps behind the compound's school campus. The sea had climbed about 15 feet and stopped, as if by a miracle, just inches before it would have flooded the cathedral grounds.

The water was an oily black. But Father Maria immediately thought of the Red Sea and Charlton Heston as Moses.

"I saw the picture 'The Ten Commandments,' " he said.

"That was only cinema. We didn't believe it. But here we saw it. Naturally, it created some shock."

Outside the church, umbrella repairman Raju, 45, and his sister Maliga, 37, had been sitting in the sand in front of their shanty on the beach, chatting and watching the fishermen come and go.

The surf, about 30 yards away, had not betrayed the tsunami that was still racing beneath the surface of the ocean, gradually slowing down as it neared shore.

As the wave hit the more shallow coast, Maliga heard only the idle chatter of her family and friends against the white noise of morning life in the shanties.

"We didn't hear anything," said Maliga, who, like many Indian Tamils, uses one name. "It was like a silent wave."

Only when they saw the water suddenly rising did they know something was wrong. At the first scream from the shoreline, they ran for the steps up to the church and watched the sea swallow their one-room home.

Nine miles away, from the control tower on one of the piers at the harbor of Madras, signal boatswain Guruswamy Napolean, had a 270-degree view of one of southeastern India's busiest ports. About 9:05 a.m., just before Father Maria's catechist whispered his warning, Napolean noticed a swirling eddy of white foam, like water being pulled down a large drain. He wondered aloud whether it was a big fish. The rest of the crew laughed.

Less than five minutes later, a wall of water stretched across the horizon.

"It looked as if the whole ocean was boiling over," said Capt. Anil Kumar Prasad, 47, a harbor pilot. "The water was just rising up, spilling over the breakwater and covering the entire jetty."

The flood into Madras knocked out the control tower's power. Then, just when Napolean thought the worst was over, the water level in the harbor suddenly dropped, and the current started to suck the ships toward the sea.

The first to go, a container ship about 650 feet long and weighing up to 12,000 tons, snapped free of its bonds. The order went out over the radio for all ships to drop anchor.

The towers' radios crackled with panicked voices from ships' bridges.

"I just kept hearing people shouting at me: 'Please, I need immediate assistance! I need immediate assistance!' " Napolean recalled. " 'I need help! I need help!' "

In the enclosed harbor, hulking ships converged in a tight circle as the water swirled and the masses of steel collided like drunken sailors.

About half an hour later, the Internet and 24-hour TV news stations began to broadcast the first reports of death and mayhem around the Indian Ocean.

*

Hurried Warnings

At the tsunami center in Hawaii, McCreery and his colleagues improvised a warning system, rushing to contact officials in countries that could be the wave's next victims. They talked to U.S. consular officials across the Indian Ocean in Madagascar and Mauritius, who said they would relay warnings to Somalia and Kenya.

More data arrived. Scientists boosted their magnitude estimate again, to 9 — 10 times larger than the first estimate — confirming that the quake was one of the most powerful in a century. Only then did people and technology catch up with the wave.

In this case, the warnings proved effective. Even in Somalia, where little centralized authority exists, word of mouth carried the warnings to some fishing villages and may have saved many lives.

In Kenya, only one person died. "Officials were on TV and radio, ordering beaches closed and telling hotels to bring back their guests," said Mike Fitzpatrick, political counselor at the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi.

"They really responded," he said. "It may be a coincidence that the president of Kenya was also vacationing on the coast — that may have made them a little more attentive."

About eight hours after the disaster began, the White House summoned U.S. officials to a 4 a.m. meeting in Washington to begin planning a response.

The quake and tsunami had killed more than 80,000 people in Indonesia, 4,500 in Thailand, 28,000 in Sri Lanka, 9,000 in India and several hundred in half a dozen other nations, with the figures expected to grow. Millions were left orphaned, homeless, bereft. Families in Europe and Israel, South Korea and the United States began frantic searches for missing loved ones.

The world watched in horror as the scope of the disaster unfolded, the death toll doubling and redoubling.

Doubts haunted the scientists at the tsunami warning center in Hawaii, the ones who had caught the first glimmers of impending catastrophe from seismographs.

Should we have known the wave was coming? they asked themselves. What else could we have done? Might a phone call to the right person at the right time have saved more lives?

Amid thousands of accounts of loss and survival, one hit Weinstein particularly hard. It was of a woman in Banda Aceh looking for her 11 children swept away in the flooding.

"That was a kick in the stomach. How do you overcome something like that?" he said a few days later.

Added his colleague, Hirshorn: "It is this scar that is going to be there forever."
 

Watson reported from Madras, Demick from Seoul and Fausset from Honolulu. Staff writers Richard C. Paddock in Banda Aceh, Bruce Wallace in Phuket, Mark Magnier in Colombo, Elizabeth Shogren and Sonni Efron in Washington and Thomas H. Maugh II and Monte Morin in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
 

Copyright © 2005, The Los Angeles Times
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