Tsunami detection using commercial cargo ships

Researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) have begun equipping commercial cargo ships with low-cost tsunami sensors to provide real-time early detection data as they move through the North Pacific. The researchers, funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, are partnering with Matson, Maersk Line and the World Ocean Council to equip 10 ships with real-time geodetic GPS systems and satellite communications to enable each vessel to act as a tide gauge and send data to SOEST to analyze for indications of a tsunami wave.

The network has the potential to  be a low-cost and widely spread complement to existing detection systems.

Sources: Huffington Post and University of Hawaii, December 2015.

Photo credit: Aushiker on Flickr.

Article in Huffington Post — ‘Scientists Cleverly Use Cargo Ships For New Tsunami Warning System’, Overview from University of Hawaii
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/cargo-ships-tsunami-warning_5678b016e4b014efe0d69ad3, http://www.hawaii.edu/news/2015/12/16/novel-tsunami-detection-network-uses-navigation-systems-on-commercial-ships/?c

Are you sure you want to delete this "resource"?
This item will be deleted immediately. You cannot undo this action.

Related Resources

Other type of resource
21 Feb 2016
The 2016 CAP Implementation Workshop, 23-24 August, will be in the Conference Center at the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT) campus in Rangsit. The Workshop is a technical meeting conducted in English without interpretation. Fifty rooms have been ...
Tags: Other type of resource, Early Warning Systems
Research
12 Mar 2018
As part of ALNAP’s Learning from the Ebola Response in cities, this paper describes approaches toquarantine in urban Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. It focuses in particular on how humanitariansnavigated the context of urban quarantine, what ...
Tags: Research, Communicable Disease, Communication As Aid, Urban Risk Reduction
Report
17 Sep 2015
A Presentation at the 2015 CAP Implementation Workshop (Rome, Italy 23-24 September)
Tags: Report, Early Warning Systems
Scroll to Top