A 7.6 earthquake struck Japan’s Hokkaido region, but officials confirm there is no tsunami threat to Hawaii. Residents are advised to stay updated through official sources.
The United States is not expected to experience any tsunamis after a powerful earthquake rocked northern Japan on Dec. 8, officials said.
A powerful 7.6 magnitude earthquake shook northern Japan on Dec. 8 and prompted a tsunami warning, officials said. The Japan Meteorological Agency said a tsunami as high as 10 feet could hit Japan's ...
“Sustained lava fountains approximately 50–100 feet (15–30 meters) in height are currently erupting from the north vent,” the US Geological Services Hawaiian Volcano Observatory said in a statement, ...
Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi said the government set up an emergency task force to urgently assess the extent of ...
The offshore quake occurred at 23:15 local time, the Japan Meteorological Agency said, warning that a tsunami of up to 3 metres could reach the country's north-eastern coast, Asia, Times Now ...
The quake struck the country's north just days after a 7.5-magnitude earthquake in the same region injured 50 people.
Oprah Winfrey has refuted claims that she blocked off a private road on Hawaii property she owns, preventing tsunami evacuees from reaching higher ground.
In Alaska, a federal grant that funded seismic data collection in order to warn people about tsunamis is being cancelled. Experts say cuts like this could make tsunami warnings less reliable.
Millions of people along the coasts of the Pacific Northwest, Hawaii and Alaska rely on tsunami warnings to tell them that potentially dangerous waves are coming, sometimes in a matter of minutes.