February 28, 2010 12:12 PM

Tsunami Hits Hawaii, Causes Minimal Damage

(CBS/AP)  Last Updated 12:12 a.m. ET

After a day of several tide fluctuations along the Hawaii coast, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center lifted a warning triggered by a massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake in Chile Saturday morning.

While evacuations were ordered and roads into tourist-heavy Waikiki closed off, officials said the state escaped unscathed, with initial waves looking more like an extreme fluctuation in the tide than a giant tsunami. A tsunami warning was canceled for Hawaii by 2 p.m.

An official from the center gave an optimistic view about the tsunami while it was causing dramatic tide fluctuations in the Aloha State.

"I think we dodged a bullet," Gerard Fryer, a geophysist for the tsunami center of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center, which issues warnings to almost every country around the Pacific Rim and to most of the Pacific island states, told reporters in Hawaii Saturday afternoon. "It's sort of the best tsunami you think you can have."

In California, Oregon, Washington state, parts of Alaska and coastal British Colombia, tsunami advisories, the lowest level of warning, were issued, and the West Coast barely felt any effects from the tsunami.

"Anti-climatic. And you can print that," said Dan Berg, assistant harbormaster in Ketchikan, Alaska.

But other areas in the Pacific Rim are still in the bullet's path. Japan's Meteorological Agency warned that a "major" tsunami of up to 9 feet could hit northern coastal areas early Sunday morning.

The tsunami hit Hawaii around noon local time. The extent of the damage was not immediately clear, but the effects of the tsunami were obvious, exposing reefs and sending dark streaks of muddy, sandy water offshore. Water later washed over Coconut Island, a small park off the coast of Hilo.

CBS News Affiliate KGMB-TV in Honolulu reported a figure from the National Weather Service that the water off Hilo Bay on the Big Island fluctuated by 3 feet in 20 minutes.

KGMB-TV reported that the water at Hilo Bay started to recede about 45 minutes after the tsunami was expected to hit the Hawaii coast. The television station reported that the first sign of the impending tsunami was when the tide dramatically dropped by about a half foot, exposing rocks.

The tsunami caused a series of surges that were about 20 minutes apart, and the waves arrived later and smaller than originally predicted. The highest wave at Hilo measured 5.5 feet high, while Maui saw some as high as 6.5 feet.

"We clearly had a tsunami in the water, and we had to evacuate," Fryer said.

CBS "Early Show" Weatherman Dave Price was vacationing in Hawaii Saturday. Kaaumoana Tozer, a staff member at the Four Seasons hotel, was helping the hotel evacuate. He had lived through the same horror many Hawaiians feared because he was in Phuket, Thailand, for the Christmas Indonesian Tsunami of 2004.

"It's not a game," Tozer said. "I saw three SUV's stacked on two-story buildings in Phuket Island, and it's like literally bombs going off all along the coast."

Gov. Linda Lingle said no damage was reported in any county. "It's just wonderful that nothing happened and no one was hurt or injured," she said.

More coverage of the earthquake in Chile

Death Toll Rises from Massive Chile Quake
Small Tsunami Hits Japan; Big Threat Looms
Chile Quake Doesn't Compare to 1960 Horror
Hawaii's 1960 Tsunami
Chile Shock Released 500x Energy of Haiti Quake
Quake Witness: A Roar Like a Freight Train
Obama: U.S. "Will Be There" For Chile
Images From Chile Earthquake

The first waves in Hawaii were expected to hit shortly after 11 a.m. local time Saturday (4 p.m. Eastern time) and measure roughly 8 feet at Hilo. A look at the shoreline at that time showed little abnormal wave activity, but officials continued to urge caution.

Honolulu resident Alice Miller, 58, said the day of a preparation for the tsunami reminded her of what she might need if a natural disaster were to hit the islands.

"It's a good thing to remind us to store up," Miller said.

Unlike other tsunamis in recent years in which residents had little warning, emergency officials along the Pacific on Saturday had hours to prepare and decide on getting people out of the potential disaster area.

Earlier, sirens blared in Hawaii to alert residents to the potential waves. As the waves expected arrival drew near, roads into the tourist-heavy Waikiki were closed off. Police patrolled main roads, telling tourists to get off the streets.

On several South Pacific islands hit by a tsunami last fall, police evacuated tens of thousands of coastal residents.

The Hilo International Airport, located along the coast, was closed, and people filled a local SackNSave grocery store, where shelves with water were mostly empty, save a few bottles.

"They are buying everything we got," said clerk Memory Phillik.

Cars lined up 15 long at several gas stations.

In Honolulu, Teney Takahashi, 70, loaded three days of food and water into his car trunk, preparing to leave his prime beachfront home in the Wailupe neighborhood with his wife and two dogs. They had wanted to be gone before any tsunami waves might arrive and planned to go to a friend's house just up the hill.

"You don't have to go far," Takahashi said. "All you got to do is stay out of the surge height."

In Waikiki, where police and fire trucks went through the streets, every TV showed the news Saturday morning. On the horizon were hundreds of boats that headed out of port to ride out the potential waves. All traffic was headed out of the city. Those without vehicles hunkered down.

Among people visiting in Waikiki, there was some nervous laughter and joking about preparing for a possible emergency while on vacation.

"I would not have written this on the list of 99 things to do in Hawaii," said Stephanie Barro, of Austin, Texas, who was waiting for a convenience store to open to buy water and snacks. "Instead of sitting on the beach, I'll be up on the 13th floor looking at the beach."

KGMB-TV reported throughout the tsunami's surges how well the warning center predicted the tsunami's behavior as a series of big waves, rather than a wall of water and "a lot like a fast high tide," as Charles McCreery, the director of the center, said.

Special Section: Earthquake in Chile
Tsunami Warning for Hawaii (NOAA Alert, 2.27.10)
Hawaii's 1960 Tsunami

Tsunami warnings - the highest alert level - are also in effect for Guam, American Samoa and dozens of other Pacific islands, as well as Australia and New Zealand, Japan, the Philippines and Russia.

In Hawaii, boats and people near the coast were being evacuated. Hilo International Airport, located along the coast, was closed.

"These are dangerous, dangerous events," said John Cummings, spokesman for the Honolulu Emergency Management Department.

CBS News Pentagon correspondent David Martin reports that the U.S. Navy had sent ships to evacuate four low-lying facilities - one of them a hospital - on the Hawaiian island of Oahu.

The Navy moved more than a half dozen vessels Saturday to try to avoid damage from the tsunami.

A frigate, three destroyers and two smaller vessels were sent out of Pearl Harbor and a cruiser out of Naval Base San Diego. At the Pentagon, Navy spokesman Lt. Myers Vasquez said the ships will be safer out on the sea than if they were tied to piers where they could be banged around by the waves, meaning damage to the vessels as well as the piers.

Elsewhere in Hawaii, many private boats also left their docks to ride out the tsunami at sea.

In a statement, FEMA Administrator Craig Fugate said officials were closely monitoring the situation: "FEMA stands ready to assist should a request for assistance be made, and does have pre-deployed assets in Hawaii, including food, water, generators and other resources. We urge all individuals to follow the direction provided by local officials."

(CBS)

Authorities closing beaches in Northern California's San Mateo County, including beaches in Pacifica and Half Moon Bay, where the National Weather Service has predicted strong currents and choppy waves for several hours starting around 1 p.m. PT.

In Tonga, where nine people died in a Sept. 29 tsunami, police and defense forces began evacuating people from low-lying coastal areas as they warned residents that tsunami waves about three feet high could wash ashore within three hours.

"I can hear the church bells ringing to alert the people," National Disaster Office deputy director Mali'u Takai said. "We will move up to 50,000 people to the interior and away from the coasts."

Waves 6 feet above normal hit near Concepcion, Chile, shortly after the quake.

A tsunami warning - the highest alert level - was also in effect for Guam, American Samoa, Samoa and dozens of other Pacific islands. An advisory - the lowest level - has been extended to include Oregon, Washington state, parts of Alaska, and coastal British Colombia.

The White House kept close watch on the Chilean quake. Presidential press secretary Robert Gibbs said the U.S. stands ready to help the Chilean people "in this hour of need."

American Samoa Lt. Gov. Aitofele Sunia activated emergency services and called on residents of shoreline villages to move to higher ground. Police in Samoa issued a nationwide alert to begin coastal evacuations. The tsunami is expected to reach the islands Saturday morning.

In French Polynesia, tsunami waves up to 6 feet high swept ashore, but no damage was immediately reported.

Catastrophic 8.8-Mag. Quake Strikes Chile
Images From Chile Earthquake
Video: Chile in a "State of Catastrophe"

Meanwhile, disaster management officials in Fiji said they have been warned to expect waves of as high as 7.5 feet to hit the northern and eastern islands of the archipelago and the nearby Tonga islands.

A lower-grade tsunami advisory was in effect for the coast of California and an Alaskan coastal area from Kodiak to Attu islands. Tsunami Center officials said they did not expect the advisory would be upgraded to a warning.

Waves were likely to hit Asian, Australian and New Zealand shores within 24 hours of Saturday's quake. A tsunami wave can travel at up to 600 mph, said Jenifer Rhoades, tsunami program manager at the National Weather Service in Washington, DC.

McCreery said he didn't know how big the waves will be, but expected them to be the largest to hit Hawaii since 1964.

"If you're in an evacuation zone, police or civil defense volunteers would instruct you to evacuate, or instructions will come out over the radio and TV," said Shelly Ichishita, spokeswoman for the state's civil defense.

If coastal areas are evacuated, visitors in Waikiki would be moved to higher floors in their hotels, rather than moved out of the tourist district, which could cause gridlock.

Some Pacific nations in the warning area were heavily damaged by a tsunami last year.

On Sept. 29, a tsunami spawned by a magnitude-8.3 earthquake killed 34 people in American Samoa, 183 in Samoa and nine in Tonga. Scientists later said that wave was 46 feet high.

Past South American earthquakes have had deadly effects across the Pacific.

A tsunami after a magnitude-9.5 quake that struck Chile in 1960, the largest earthquake ever recorded, killed about 140 people in Japan, 61 in Hawaii and 32 in the Philippines.

That tsunami was about 3.3 to 13 feet in height, Japan's Meteorological Agency said.

Japanese public broadcaster NHK quoted earthquake experts as saying the tsunami would likely be tens of inches high and reach Japan in about 22 hours.

A tsunami of 11 inches was recorded after a magnitude-8.4 earthquake near Chile in 2001.

The Meteorological Agency said it was still investigating the likelihood of a tsunami in Japan and did not issue a formal coastal warning.

Australia, meanwhile, was put on a tsunami watch.

The Joint Australian Tsunami Warning Center issued a tsunami warning Saturday night for a "potential tsunami threat" to New South Wales state, Queensland state, Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island.

Any potential wave would not hit Australia until Sunday morning local time, it said.

New Zealand officials warned that "non-destructive" tsunami waves of less than three feet could hit the entire east coast of the country's two main islands and its Chatham Islands territory, some 300 miles east of New Zealand.

The Philippine Institute of Vulcanology and Seismology issued a low-level alert saying people should await further notice of a possible tsunami. It did not recommend evacuations.

Seismologist Fumihiko Imamura, of Japan's Tohoku University, told NHK that residents near ocean shores should not underestimate the power of a tsunami even though they may be generated by quakes on the other side of the ocean.

"There is the possibility that it could reach Japan without losing its strength," he said.

(NOAA/USGS/AP)

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 43 Comments
by navysailor73 February 28, 2010 7:42 PM EST
Pensecola, thank you. You make sense. For all the bible thumpers, it was King Neptune, he got mad...
Reply to this comment
by pensacola8-2009 February 28, 2010 6:24 AM EST
The size of any tsunami is not necessarily correlated to the earthquake strength on the Richter scale, instead, it is more about relative vertical displacement between the plates at the fault zone underwater.

Land quakes don't transmit the vertical force well into the sea, even when they occur near it, because the subduction arrangement already has the land plate above the sea plate.

When a fault zone is located out in the sea and the fracture motion was horizontal, no tsunami usually results. When the fracture motion is vertical, leaving a newly formed wall or step on the sea floor, a tsunami will form.

Since the weight of water is greater than the weight of land, it is the quake strength on the Richter Scale, during a vertical motion fracture, in the scenario which can be the clue to correlating the tsunami size.

A one-foot uplift on the sea floor a few miles off shore can become a 8-9 foot wave on the beach, depending on the slope of the sea floor. Wind force can do the same thing.

A ten-foot uplift on the sea floor a hundred miles away or more can become the monster tsunami that is feared. Those usually occur when a plate passes over an ancient large asteroid of meteorite impact site, where crust density in discontinuous. Take a glimpse at the moon and notice the craters and colors and you can visualize the discontinuities in the crust densities.
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by wdh3007 February 28, 2010 12:34 AM EST
It is written in the book of Revelation their will be famines, earthquakes in various places wars and rumors of wars. These are the begging signs of the end times and these things must happen and will happen before the second comming of Christ's return. We are all witnesses to these events that are occuring in our everyday lives. We are all to be judged by God both living and non living on the great day and he has given his word written in the Bible on what we need to do in order to prepare ourselves for this judgement.
Reply to this comment
by HGOODGUY February 28, 2010 8:42 AM EST
When are all you Bible Thumpers stop throwing all this mindless BS around???
by brooky22 February 27, 2010 11:37 PM EST
The rapture is false. We shall all go are separate ways.
Reply to this comment
by Dgunner February 27, 2010 6:54 PM EST
Overruled 1 , If you are a believer of a so called rapture then you need to study and try to understand revealationa again or change churches you are being prophesyed by a ignorant teacher.No where in the entire bible is the word rapture. Hopefully you won't be fooled by the antichrist.You only get one chance to learn the message and in the millineum you might get a chance but rapturist are doomed to bne collected by the antichrist.Please prove me wrong . show me where the word rapture is printed in the bible or even mentioned.
Reply to this comment
by brooky22 February 27, 2010 11:32 PM EST
What is, is, Know one knows whaT IS GOING TO HAPPEN NEXT
by of11of February 27, 2010 6:27 PM EST
not a good time to explore the newly exposed reef
Reply to this comment
by joule18 February 27, 2010 6:25 PM EST
dwilson59: No one has to TRY to make Obama look bad. He is rather successful at doing it all by himself.
Reply to this comment
by mary-miami February 27, 2010 4:55 PM EST
This is no joke. If the authorities ask you to evacuate, do so. Lives are at stake. Thank you to the press for a good job in informing the people.
Reply to this comment
by merlinskiss February 27, 2010 3:26 PM EST
Forest Gump said it best... "It happens!" I am more concerned about the fall of Greece, Rome, and every other great civilization. The fall of America has already started if you follow history. What's a Tsunami or two in the overall scheme of things... Besides, they cleans the beaches... Kinda like scrubbing the bathtub ring of humanity... Our coasts and shoreline need it.

I think I will get back to loving my life, living simply and being happy!
Reply to this comment
by ilyaquiss February 27, 2010 4:54 PM EST
whoever said that america was a great civilization?
by hateisafourletterword February 27, 2010 1:47 PM EST
Hope the residents in Hawaii are much smarter than the residents in NO were 4.5 years ago. You do not have 4-5 days warning like NO residents did, but hopefully you are seeking higher ground just in case it hits your beautiful state.
Reply to this comment
by retiredgustav February 27, 2010 2:23 PM EST
20% of the people of N.O. did not have the ability to leave and 1/2 of the national guard that could help them, were overseas fighting that stupid war. If you have never evacuated ( I have done so 6 time in the last 20 years) you do not have a clue of what you are talking about.
by hateisafourletterword February 27, 2010 3:08 PM EST
I saw Houston evacuate rather well a year later. They used school buses and people listened to the authorities. Me thinks the biggest problem in NO was people not wanting to listen to authorities and then authorities blaming the President when he had no legal standing to intercede. The mayor and governor did not do their jobs.
Gee our home is 20 feet below sea level and we live next to the sea, lets stay and party!
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