At somewhere around 2:40 or so, you can see the water squishing up...and early on, once he starts walking, you can see a beautiful, small scale explanation of why tsunamis happen. You see the ground open, then close, and then a wave slides into the bush on the left. That, in micro, is how a tsunami works.
It's an amazing piece of video. Scary, yes, but amazing.
I remember, after the 1994 quake, about 6 months after, we had a huge aftershock. I had a friend over with his child, and me and the boy were out in the backyard. His Dad was in front, repairing something for me. The aftershock hit, I grabbed the child, ran a few steps into a fairly safe area in the driveway, and tucked him under me. Their dog came, and leaned on the child's legs. I looked up, and watched the cars in the driveway bounce up and down, like "low rider" cars; saw the child's father leap the gate, and threw himself onto us. We laid there for a while, even after the shaking stopped...we were worried about the fireplace.
While absolutely terrifying, it was also utterly enthralling to watch the ground wave. Like ripples under us, just waving and waving and waving...under the concrete, you could see the ripples coming, then the bump, then the drop, then the rise for the next ripple.
It was amazing. No other real word to say...but a clear, hi-def memory, which was amazing to feel, see, and experience.
Just thought I'd share that bit.
BTW, the quakes I've been through were the Sylmar quake '72, (4-5 miles from epicenter), Whittier quake (80s, about 30 miles from epicenter), San Francisco quake (89? I was in Fremont, about 50 miles from the epicenter), the 1994 Northridge quake (8-10) miles from epicenter, and the TwentyNine Palms quake, about 80 miles from the epicenter (late 90s). I have been in hundreds of smaller quakes, but I don't count those. LOL...if it's not big enough to move me, then it's not "big". LOL.
I don't like them at all. I understand them, but I don't like them. They can, however, be surprisingly intriguing, as long as you're safe.
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