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Waves that may have reached 100 feet scoured an inlet that’s frequented by cruise ships, tour vessels and pleasure boats.
A landslide early Sunday morning in the Endicott Arm area of Alaska near the state's capital triggered a local tsunami with waves estimated to be up to 15 feet high.
The National Weather Service office in Juneau reported no injuries or infrastructure damage from the landslide or tsunami.
There have been three other tsunami events since July 16, and the most recent produced surges of over 100-foot high.
As Ketchikan nears the one-year anniversary of the Third Avenue Bypass landslide that occurred on Aug. 25, 2024, another event that occurred at about 5:45 a.m. this past Sunday in ...
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A massive tsunami-causing landslide in Southeast Alaska on Sunday likely sent more than 100 million cubic meters of debris — ...
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At Harbour Island, where the kayakers were camping, the tsunami caused waves of up to five metres, according to the Alaska ...
Seismic stations more than 600 miles away picked up the rumbling as a mountainside collapsed upon South Sawyer Glacier and ...
On day 78 of kayaking the Inside Passage, a trio of sea kayak guides and instructors woke at 5:45 in the morning to a rush of water that missed their tent by inches. "I think when a lot of people ...