tsunami
A tsunami is a group of waves that arise from the movement of a large area of water, such as the ocean. Tsunami is also created by earthquakes and great movements, whether on the surface of the water or Volcanic eruptions, underwater eruptions, landslides, water earthquakes, comets and explosions of nuclear weapons in the sea. As a result of this huge amount of water and energy from moving, the effects of the tsunami are devastating. The Greek historian Tusidides was the first to link the underwater earthquakes to the tsunami, but the understanding of the nature of the tsunami remained limited until the 20th century and is still the focus of much of the ongoing research. The tsunamis were referred to in the ancient geological, geographical and oceanographic texts of the Sezamic sea waves. Some of the storms are characterized by high meteorological tensions leading to storms and hurricanes that generate storms that rise several meters above normal tide levels. Within the center of tension. As these storms of beaches approach, large swathes of land are flooded like the tsunami. But it is a tsunami in itself. Such storms overwhelmed Burma and Myanmar (in May 2008).
