CRESCENT
CITY -- It doesn't matter if the Earth sways in Chile, Alaska or Japan,
the formation of the sea floor along the U.S. West Coast generally aims
any tsunami surges at the tiny California port town of Crescent City.
Churning water rushes into the boat basin and then rushes out, lifting
docks off their pilings, tearing boats loose and leaving the city's main
economic engine looking as if it has been bombed.
That's what
happened in March 2011, when a Japanese earthquake sparked a tsunami
that sank 11 boats, damaged 47 others and destroyed two-thirds of the
harbor's docks.
Port officials are hoping that tsunami is among
the last of many that have forced major repairs in Crescent City, a tiny
commercial fishing village on California's northern coast. Officials
are spending $54 million to build the West Coast's first harbor able to
withstand the kind of tsunami expected to hit once every 50 years -- the
same kind that hit in 2011, when the highest surge in the boat basin
measured 8.1 feet and currents were estimated at 22 feet per second.
The
plan calls for 244 new steel pilings that will be 30 inches in diameter
and 70 feet long. Thirty feet or more will be sunk into bedrock. The
dock nearest the entrance will be 16 feet long and 8 feet deep to dampen
incoming waves. The pilings will extend 18 feet above the water so that
surges 7½ feet up and 7½ feet down will not rip docks loose.
Crescent City was not the only West
Coast port slammed by the tsunami,
which was generated by a magnitude 9.0 earthquake in Japan. The waves
ripped apart docks and sank boats in Santa Cruz and did similar damage
in Brookings, Ore., just north of Crescent City. But their geographical
location doesn't make them as vulnerable to multiple tsunamis."Normally, Crescent City takes the hit for all of us," said Brookings harbormaster Ted Fitzgerald.
Since
a tidal gauge was installed in the boat basin in 1934, this small port
has been hit by 34 tsunamis, large and small. It typically suffers the
most damage and the highest waves on the West Coast, said Lori Dengler,
professor of geology at Humboldt State University.
The sea floor
funnels surges into the mouth of Crescent City's harbor, and the
harbor's configuration magnifies them, experts say.
A wave
generated by an earthquake in Alaska in 1964 killed 11 people and wiped
out 29 city blocks. That was 10 years before the boat basin was even
built.
When the waves hit in 2011, the port was still repairing
damages from a tsunami that hit in 2006. Officials already had a plan
for dealing with future tsunamis, said Ward Stover, owner of Stover
Engineering in Crescent City, which put together the plan.
With no
tsunami building codes, Stover said the state of California and
Crescent City decided to prepare for the kind of tsunami expected to hit
every 50 years. They rejected as too expensive building a tidal gate to
close off the mouth of the harbor or trying to survive a powerful
tsunami like the one that hit in 1964. Instead, they planned to make the
docks strong enough to ride out the most likely surges.
"It's tsunami-resistant, not tsunami-proof," Stover said.
end quote from:
Crescent City building a 'tsunami-resistant' port
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