World's Biggest Tsunami
On
the night of July 9, 1958 an earthquake along the Fairweather Fault in
the Alaska Panhandle loosened about 40 million cubic yards (30.6
million cubic meters) of rock high above the northeastern shore of
Lituya Bay. This mass of rock plunged from an altitude of approximately
3000 feet (914 meters) down into the waters of Gilbert Inlet (see map
below). The impact generated a local tsunami that crashed against the
southwest shoreline of Gilbert Inlet. The wave hit with such power that
it swept completely over the spur of land that separates Gilbert Inlet
from the main body of Lituya Bay. The wave then contiuned down the
entire length of Lituya Bay, over La Chaussee Spit and into the Gulf of
Alaska. The force of the wave removed all trees and vegetation from
elevations as high as 1720 feet (524 meters) above sea level. Millions
of trees were uprooted and swept away by the wave. This is the highest
wave that has ever been known. |
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Detail Map: Lituya Bay, Alaska
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Lituya Bay is an ice-scoured tidal inlet on the northeast shore of the
Gulf of Alaska. It is about seven miles long (11.3 kilometers) and up
to two miles wide (3.2 kilometers). It has a maximum
depth of about 720 feet (219 meters) but a sill of only 32 feet (9.7
meters) in depth separates it from the Gulf of Alaska between La
Chaussee Spit and Harbor Point.
The Fairweather Fault trends across the northeast end of the Bay
and is responsible for
the T-shape of the bay. Glacial scour has exploited the weak zone along
the fault to produce a long linear trough known as the Fairweather
Trench. The Lituya Glacier and North Crillon Glacier have scoured
portions of the Fairweather Trench in the area of Lituya Bay. Gilbert
Inlet and Crillon Inlet occupy the Fairweather Trench on the northeast
end of Lituya Bay.
The rock fall of July 9, 1958 occurred on steep cliffs above the
northeast shore of Gilbert Inlet. It is marked on the map above in red.
The rocks fell from an elevation of about 3000 feet (914 meters). The
impact of 40 million cubic yards (30.6 million cubic meters) of rock
hitting the water produced a local tsunami that swept the entire length
of the Lituya Bay and over the La Chaussee Spit. This wave stripped all
vegetation and soil from along the edges of the bay. This damaged area
is shown in yellow on the map above. The numbers are elevations (in
feet) of the upper edge of the wave damage area and represent the
approximate elevation of the wave as it traveled through the bay. Map
redrawn from data included in United States Geological Survey
Professional Paper 354-C. |
Eyewitness Accounts from Survivors
(As reported by Don J. Miller in United States Geological Survey
Professional Paper 354-C, Giant Waves in Lituya Bay, Alaska, 1960)
Account of Howard G. Ulrich
Mr. Ulrich and his 7-year-old son, on the Edrie,
entered Lituya Bay about 8:00 p.m. and anchored in
about 5 fathoms of water in a small cove on the south
shore. Ulrich was awakened by the violent
rocking of the boat, noted the time, and went on deck
to watch the effects of the earthquake-described as
violent shaking and heaving, followed by avalanching in
the mountains at the head of the bay. An estimated
2 1/2 minutes after the earthquake was first felt a deafening
crash was heard at the head of the bay. According
to Ulrich,
"The wave definitely started in Gilbert Inlet, just before the
end of the quake. It was not a wave at first. It was like an
explosion, or a glacier sluff. The wave came out of the lower
part, and looked like the smallest part of the whole thing. The
wave did not go up 1,800 feet, the water splashed there."
Ulrich continued to watch the progress of the wave
until it reached his boat about 2 1/2 to 3 minutes after it
was first sighted. Being unable to get the anchor loose,
he let out all of the chain (about 40 fathoms) and
started the engine. Midway between the head of the
bay and Cenotaph Island the wave appeared to be a
straight wall of water possibly 100 feet high, extending
from shore to shore. The wave was breaking as it came
around the north side of the island, but on the south
side it had a smooth, even crest. As it approached the
Edrie the wave front appeared very steep, and 50 to
75 feet high. No lowering or other disturbance of the
water around the boat, other than vibration due to the
earthquake, was noticed before the wave arrived. The
anchor chain snapped as the boat rose with the wave.
The boat was carried toward and probably over the
south shore, and then, in the backwash, toward the
center of the bay. The wave crest seemed to be only 25
to 50 feet wide, and the back slope less steep than the
front.
After the giant wave passed the water surface
returned to about normal level, but was very turbulent,
with much sloshing back and forth from shore to shore
and with steep, sharp waves up to 20 feet high. These
waves, however, did not show any definite movement
either toward the head or the mouth of the bay. After
25 to 30 minutes the bay became calm, although floating
logs covered the water near the shores and were
moving out toward the center and the entrance. After
the first giant wave passed Ulrich managed to keep the
boat under control, and went out the entrance at 11 :00
p.m. on what seemed to be a normal ebb flow.
Account of William A. Swanson
Mr. and Mrs. Swanson on the Badger entered Lituya
Bay about 9:00 p.m., first going in as far as Cenotaph
Island and then returning to Anchorage Cove on the
north shore near the entrance, to anchor in about 4
fathoms of water. Mr.
Swanson was wakened by violent vibration of the boat,
and noted the time on the clock in the pilot house. A
little more than a minute after the shaking was first
felt, but probably before the end of the earthquake,
Swanson looked toward the head of the bay, past the
north end of Cenotaph Island and saw what he thought
to be the Lituya Glacier, which had "risen in the air
and moved forward so it was in sight. * * * It seemed
to be solid, but was jumping and shaking * * * Big
cakes of ice were falling off the face of it and down into
the water." After a little while "the glacier dropped
back out of sight and there was a big wall of water
going over the point" (the spur southwest of Gilbert
Inlet). Swanson next noticed the wave climb up on
the south shore near Mudslide Creek. As the wave
passed Cenotaph Island it seemed to be about 50 feet
high near the center of the bay and to slope up toward
the sides. It passed the island about 2 1/2 minutes after
it was first sighted, and reached the Badger about 11/2
minutes later. No lowering or other disturbance of
the water around the boat was noticed before the wave
arrived.
The Badger, still at anchor, was lifted up by the wave
and carried across La Chaussee Spit, riding stern first
just below the crest of the wave, like a surfboard.
Swanson looked down on the trees growing on the spit,
and believes that he was about 2 boat lengths (more
than 80 feet) above their tops. The wave crest broke
just outside the spit and the boat hit bottom and foundered
some distance from the shore. Looking back 3 to 4
minutes after the boat hit bottom Swanson saw water
pouring over the spit, carrying logs and other debris.
He does not know whether this was a continuation
of the wave that carried the boat over the spit or a
second wave. Mr. and Mrs. Swanson abandoned their
boat in a small skiff, and were picked up by another
fishing boat about 2 hours later.
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Landsat Image: Lituya Bay, Alaska
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This is a Landsat Geocover image of Lituya Bay produced with Landsat
data collected by NASA about forty years after the tsunami. The wave
damaged areas along the edges of the bay, where soil and vegetation
were removed are still clearly visible. They are the light green areas
of different vegetation color around the rim of the bay. |
Lituya
Bay a few weeks after the 1958 tsunami. The areas of destroyed forest
along the shorelines are clearly recognizable as the light areas
rimming the bay. A fishing boat anchored in the cove at lower left was
carried over the spit in the foreground; a boat under way near the
entrance was sunk and a third boat, anchored near the lower right rode
out the wave. Photo by D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey. |
Isoseismal Map: Magnitude 7.7 Alaska Earthquake of July 9, 1958
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This is an isoseismal map showing the impact of the Magnitude 7.7
Alaska Earthquake of July 9, 1958 in Modified Mercalli Scale units.
Lituya Bay was in the area of XI intensity. The isoseismal contours
near the epicenter parallel the Fairweather Fault. Map information from
Seismicity of the United States, 1568-1989 (Revised), by Carl W. Stover
and Jerry L. Coffman, U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1527,
United States Government Printing Office, Washington: 1993. |
Source of the Rock Fall: The Cliff Overlooking Gilbert Inlet
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The cliff on the northeast wall of Gilbert Inlet showing the scar of
the 40 million cubic yard (30.6 million cubic meters) rockslide that
occurred on the day before this photo. The head of the slide was at an
altitude of about 3,000 feet (914 meters), just below snowfield in
upper center. The elevation of water in Lituya Bay is sea level. The
front of Lituya Glacier is visible in the lower left corner. Photo by
D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey. |
Looking down the Fairweather Fault Trench
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Photo looking down the Fairweather Fault Trench at the head of Lituya
Bay. The front of Lituya Glacier with lateral and medial moraines is
seen terminating in Gilbert Inlet. The cliff where the rockslide
originated is on the right side of Gilbert Inlet. The opposite valley
wall on the left side of Gilbert Inlet received the full force of the
big wave, stripping it of soil and trees. Photo by D.J. Miller, United
States Geological Survey. |
Spur of land between Gilbert Inlet and Lituya Bay
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The spur of land between Gilbert Inlet and Lituya Bay that received the
full force of the wave. Trees and soil were stripped away to an
elevation of 1720 feet (524 meters) above the surface of Lituya Bay.
Photo by D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey. |
Wave Damage Along the Lituya Bay Shorelines
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Wave damage areas along the shorelines of Lituya Bay, viewed from the south.
Photo by D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey. |
Spruce Tree Snapped Off by the Wave - Seven Miles from its Source
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Stump of living spruce tree broken off by the giant wave at Harbor
Point, mouth of Lituya Bay. Brim of hat is 12 inches in diameter. This
tree is located about seven miles (11.3 kilometers) from where the wave
originated. Photo by D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey. |
Wave Damage at the Mouth of Lituya Bay
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Wave damage on the south shore of Lituya Bay, from Harbor Point to La
Chaussee Spit, southwest of Crillon Inlet. Tree trunks can be seen in
the water and tree stumps along the lower shoreline. This location is
seven miles (11.3 kilometers) away from where the wave originated.
Photo by D.J. Miller, United States Geological Survey. |
Conclusions
A third boat was in Lituya Bay at the time of the Tsunami. It was
anchored near the mouth of the bay and was sunk by the big wave. There
are no known survivors from this boat and it was believed that there
were two people on board.
Prior to the July, 1958 tsunami Don J. Miller of the United States
Geological Survey had been studying evidence for the occurrence of
large waves in Lituya Bay. He had documented evidence for at least four
previous large waves with estimated dates of 1936, 1899, 1874 and 1853
(or 1854). All of these waves were significant in size but shoreline
evidence for all of them was removed by the 1958 wave.
Mr. Miller was in Alaska when the July 1958 wave occurred and flew to
Lituya Bay the following day. He took the photographs shown above in
July and August and documented the older waves in United States
Geological Survey Professional Paper 354-C, Giant Waves in Lituya Bay,
Alaska, 1960.
With such a history of large waves Lituya Bay should be considered as a
dangerous body of water prone to a few large waves every century. When
will the next one occur?
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