Categories: Science

Researchers create animated model of Japanese tsunami debris field

Debris field model of the Japanese tsunami

A little over a year since the devastating Japanese Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, evidence of the catastrophe litters the Pacific Ocean.

When the tsunami invaded Japan’s east coast on March 11, 2011, the retreating waves swept an estimated five million tons of debris out to sea. Around 70% of this is believed to have sunk to the seafloor, leaving 1.5 million tons drifting on the Pacific Ocean. Now, two researchers at the University of Hawaii have created SCUD model to attempt to simulate where and how this debris would disperse.

The two researchers, Nikolai Maximenko and Jan Hafner of the International Pacific Research Center, used actual satellite data on sea surface height and on ocean surface winds to help build their animated model, as well as data from scientific drifting buoy networks and reports of debris sightings.

They began by placing 678,000 “tracers” along Japan’s northeastern coast, with distribution based on population density and how developed the area was. Deeper colours represent higher levels of likely debris concentration. The model simulates their journey starting on March 11, 2011 to April 3, 2012.

It’s estimated that some debris should reach the west coast of North America “within a year or two”, but most is expected to end up in what is known as “the garbage patch” – a debris field in the middle of the North Pacific Gyre.

A 150-foot unmanned Japanese fishing vessel has recently been spotted off the coast of British Columbia, while other debris protruding above the water line has reportedly reached Washington and Hawaii, carried along hastily by the wind.

Click here for direct link to the animated model if the embed above doesn’t work for you.

Albizu Garcia

Albizu Garcia is the Co-Founder and CEO of Gain -- a marketing technology company that automates the social media and content publishing workflow for agencies and social media managers, their clients and anyone working in teams.

Recent Posts

Bridging Traditional Venture Capital and the Masses: Democratizing Startup and Private Market Investments

Article by Luis X Barrios, CEO of Arkangeles For far too long, venture capital has…

7 hours ago

WEF scrubs ‘Valuing Nature’s Assets’ session from Sustainable Development Impact Meetings

The World Economic Forum (WEF) deletes a session entitled, "Valuing Nature's Assets," from its Sustainable…

2 days ago

Horasis India Meeting 2024: Here’s look at 10 key speakers this week in Athens

The theme of the 2024 Horasis India Meeting is cooperation, impact investing, and sustainable growth…

4 days ago

UN Summit of the Future Global Call: World leaders advocate Agenda 2030, UN reform

World leaders gather on the UN Summit of the Future Global Call to advocate for…

1 week ago

A Look Into AI and the Risks to Elections

Image via: Freepik When an entire nation devotes its attention to Vice President Kamala Harris…

1 week ago

5 ‘interconnected shifts’ are driving ‘profound systemic transformation’: Klaus Schwab, WEF report

World Economic Forum (WEF) founder Klaus Schwab says that the world is undergoing profound systemic…

1 week ago