The 1964 Alaska Earthquake and Tsunami
The 1964 Alaska Earthquake and Tsunami
The 1964 Anchorage, Alaska, earthquake and the resulting tsunami struck without warning on Good Friday, March 27.
It was a quiet spring day in Anchorage, a holiday. Temperatures were seasonably mild with a moderate amount of snow on the ground. Children had the day off from school, and customer traffic in the stores downtown was light. Many residents were preparing or enjoying dinner at home. At 5:36 p.m. a major earthquake began to shake the ground, and the earth beneath Southcentral Alaska moved in waves for the next four long minutes.
Parents and children slipped, stumbled and fell on shifting floors in a panicked effort to get outdoors to escape breaking windows. Two inch cracks appeared in the ground in many places. Roads wrinkled and split and Fourth Avenue in downtown Anchorage broke apart and collapsed 10 feet or more. The Government Hill Elementary School twisted, shifted and became unusable in a moment. The outside wall of the J.C. Penney building crashed to the street. In the Turnagain residential district the ground liquefied like quicksand, slid away, and swallowed up 75 or more homes.
The four minute earthquake released the energy roughly equivalent to 10 million times the force of an atomic bomb. The mass of the earth and ocean absorbed most of the force, but manmade structures in the area could not absorb the rest of the force without suffering massive damage. Total property damage was estimated at 0 million.
Anchorage was crippled as gas lines and water lines were severed abruptly. Residents resorted to melting snow for water while awaiting repairs. Four days later students returned to available schools as life in Anchorage began to recover.
The Earthquake
The center of the Alaska earthquake was located about 75 miles east of Anchorage and about 55 miles west of Valdez. It began 14 to 16 miles deep in the earth’s crust, a comparatively shallow depth, where the Pacific plate dives beneath the North American plate. The huge subduction zone is located at the north end of the Ring of Fire, a semicircle of volcanic and earthquake activity that defines the rim of the Pacific Ocean.
The earthquake fault, more precisely the thrust fault, which was the cause of the Good Friday earthquake stretched 750 miles from Alaska’s Aleutian Islands to Valdez. The Pacific plate that day moved an estimated 25 to 30 feet northward, diving beneath the North American plate. The grinding of the two massive tectonic plates caused the Alaska earthquake and measured 8.4 on the Richter scale. In later years the measurement of the Alaska earthquake was upgraded to 9.2 on the Mw, or moment magnitude, scale as the Richter scale was determined to be inaccurate at measuring very large earthquakes above 8.0. Within a day of the initial major earthquake 11 more tremors of 6.0 or greater shook an already nervous population. In fact, aftershocks continued for nearly a year.
The earthquake caused the ground to displace upward by as much as 25 feet on several Alaskan islands and by nearly 3 feet upward at the city of Valdez. In other areas the ground displaced downward as much as 9 feet, for example in the town of Portage.
The Alaska earthquake on Good Friday was the strongest earthquake ever recorded in North America. It was the second strongest ever recorded worldwide, surpassed in strength by the 9.5 Mw earthquake in Chile on May 22, 1960. The recent December 26, 2004, earthquake off the coast of the Indonesian island of Sumatra measured 9.0 Mw. The deadliest earthquake occurred in Shensi Province, China, in 1556 where over 830,000 residents perished.
The Tsunami
Tsunami is an adapted Japanese word meaning “port wave,” a reference to the fact that the wave’s danger and destructive power only become evident as it approaches the shore.
During the 1964 Alaska earthquake the North American plate released upward, displacing a huge volume of ocean water and causing a seismic wave, a tsunami, to travel outward. The wave traveled at an estimated 450 miles per hour in the deeper ocean in a long wave of almost imperceptible height.
As the tsunami wave passed over the continental shelf and approached shore its length shortened, its speed decreased and its height increased as the massive volume and weight of water prepared to release its incredible energy on anything in its path.
At the shallow Valdez Inlet the wave reached a maximum height of nearly 200 feet. Further on, at the old town of Valdez, a 30 foot wall of water struck and demolished all structures. Twenty eight Valdez residents died when the tsunami crashed ashore. Valdez was later rebuilt at a higher elevation and further from the waterfront.
In Seward, Alaska, the earthquake caused a portion of the bay to slide. The slide caused a local tsunami which devastated Seward’s port and downtown district, both of which were eventually rebuilt. Twelve residents perished in Seward.
The small town of Portage was leveled by its own local tsunami and never relocated or rebuilt. Another local tsunami struck the small port of Whittier killing 12 residents.
The Destruction
The original tsunami traveled about 8400 miles. It caused damage in the Hawaiian Islands and along the Oregon and California coasts. A 20 foot wave struck Crescent City, California, and killed 10 residents. The tsunami was responsible for the deaths of 16 people in Oregon and California.
The tsunami killed a total of 122 people in three states. By comparison, the earthquake resulted in 9 deaths.
It has been more than 40 years since the Alaska earthquake and tsunami. In the meantime construction materials and building practices have been enforced to produce structures more capable of surviving strong earthquakes. Also in the meantime, the population in Alaska’s vulnerable areas has increased tremendously.
Smaller earthquakes along Alaska’s subduction zone and other fault zones occur on a daily basis, presumably relieving the internal pressures that would otherwise produce another massive earthquake.
However, nobody knows with certainty when, where, or whether another huge and destructive earthquake will strike Alaska.
Garry Gamber is a public school teacher and entrepreneur. He writes articles about politics, real estate, health and nutrition, and internet dating services. He is the owner of The Dating Advisor and is the National Director of Good Politics Radio.
Article from articlesbase.com
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Find More Tsunami Articles
Tags: 1964, Alaska, Earthquake, Hot News, Tsunami

Share your views...
25 Respones to "The 1964 Alaska Earthquake and Tsunami"
@despair2ko
Agree, but 911 was an inside job....
March 13, 2011 at 9:15 PM
That's brutal man. I feel really bad for the Japanese people.
March 13, 2011 at 9:27 PM
i wonder if the earthquake woke up godzilla ?
March 13, 2011 at 9:32 PM
@TheThelonesomemoo why are you so worked up? not refering to you anyway ya? unless you are attacked by your guilty conscience yes? pathetic p.o.s.
March 13, 2011 at 10:00 PM
@despair2ko Just drop it. I am don't want to argue with you. I am against the killing of innocent people and that is just part of war. There is no way in getting around that. To say that the U.S. is not responsible for 100s of thousands of innocent people is just naive. The Japanese did horrible things in the past. So have Americans just leave it at that.
March 13, 2011 at 10:51 PM
@mooseolly2 fuck you you ignorant piece of shit. you dont deserve to live if you think that. we fucking bombed them, i think we're even. you're a waste of oxygen.
March 13, 2011 at 11:15 PM
karma usually doesn't falls on the perpetrators....but on their innocent descendants. Think thrice before you commit some acts.
March 13, 2011 at 11:25 PM
@IAMCANAD yeah, i noticed that, i'm kinda glad the caenra guy turned away, hate seeing people die. you know, gets burned in your memory.
March 13, 2011 at 11:53 PM
OMG
March 14, 2011 at 12:34 AM
@Chaoitcme Bullshit, it's all the same. Japan lost WW2, that's why they haven't been able to kill more civilians. Not every U.S soldier is a genocidal maniac who loves to kill civilians, like you'd be happy to think in your little dream world.
March 14, 2011 at 1:26 AM
@dalsrdotcom both, these lunatics deserve it!. HAHA see how much pwnage they are receiving!
March 14, 2011 at 1:40 AM
@NJsBiggestAssHole You are a dumbfuck. Better kill yourself this instant. For great justice.
March 14, 2011 at 2:30 AM
@NJsBiggestAssHole u mean whales?
March 14, 2011 at 2:59 AM
Thumbs up if these fish head dicks deserve what happend, for all the dolphins they have killed over the last couple of decades!
March 14, 2011 at 3:05 AM
<<<Big fan of Big Quakes
March 14, 2011 at 3:50 AM
@Kenjusa1 I'd say not even the majority feel that way... (Maybe 0.01% of people in the US do, but they seem to have access to the ntenret and not only post abosulty ridicuolous things like are posted here, but also gems like 'the Zionist-controlled US government is going to invade Mars'. I'm actually surprised such brain-dead people are even able to OPERATE a computer, breather, or wipe their asses (and that remains to be seen).
March 14, 2011 at 4:01 AM
Take note at around the 45 second mark when they pan to the left, see the people STILL Driving!!
Best of wishes and Hope they have a good recovery from this Disaster
March 14, 2011 at 4:31 AM
holy shit. D:
March 14, 2011 at 5:23 AM
@jonny2754 If you c an warp numbers into anything you want, why bother at all. Wouldn't that make it utterly pointless?
March 14, 2011 at 5:32 AM
@kentx333 SHUT UP AND GO READ A BOOK ABOUT HOW TSUNAMI'S ARE FORMED! where is god!? huh!? why did he allow that to happen!? huh!? anwser me right now! you are so caught up in your own world! come to the real world now would ya!?
March 14, 2011 at 6:21 AM
fuck!
March 14, 2011 at 7:14 AM
D: that is soo epic scary
...
God bless Japan :(
March 14, 2011 at 7:57 AM
I think God did this...God is a very loving and merciful God, but he is wrathful and vengeful too.
March 14, 2011 at 8:36 AM
@StarsAndStraps909 Well we better move everyone living east of the Appalachian ridge! When that cracked island withing the Canary Islands actually collapses the tsunami could be 300 feet high and wipe out everything on the east coast.....just sayin....
March 14, 2011 at 9:17 AM
@appcookie wondered what the hell that was... then saw this.
Thanks for the note.
March 14, 2011 at 9:49 AM
Post a Comment