Are you sure??vina wrote:[
You ALWAYS design for a postulated scenario. When you build a bridge over say a sea or something, you look at a 100 year/150 year record to estimate the maximum you design that for. A 35 meter Tsunami has probably never happened EVER in recorded human history!
Just read a few posts before.
Japan has a history of tsunami wave reaching up to 38 mts.
This bloomberg report says with link to USGS
A 7.6-magnitude quake in 1896 off the east coast of Japan created waves as high as 38 meters, while an 8.6- magnitude temblor in 1933 led to a surge as high as 29 meters, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.
Geologist Masanobu Shishikura, a researcher under Okamura who has focused on the 869 tsunami, said he wasn’t surprised historical evidence wasn’t heeded to. When he presented to government officials from two towns on the coast north of Dai-Ichi, the urgency wasn’t clear even to him.
Today, those towns of Higashi Matshushima and Ishinomaki lie in ruins.
“At the time, we thought it was unfortunate they didn’t take us seriously, but we figured it was just a matter of making a better presentation,” Shishikura said. “If only the tsunami had waited a little longer, we might have been ready.”
2004 Tsunami reportedly reached height of 30-34 mts. 2004 tsunami destroyed coastal town Banda Aceh completely and tsunami penetrated upto 36 km inland. Distance ( arial) from Kalpakkam is 27 km approx. So if 35 mts tsunami, likes of what happened in Japan in 1896 or Indonesia in 2004, were to struck, we would have been unprepared precisely for that reason. No one would have blamed the engineers as there was no history.
Tsunami-2004, when it reached Indian shores its height was about 2 to 6 mts at different places and believe me , even that was a horrifying sight.
Additional searching the google chacha

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsunami
These phenomena rapidly displace large water volumes, as energy from falling debris or expansion transfers to the water at a rate faster than the water can absorb. Their existence was confirmed in 1958, when a giant landslide in Lituya Bay, Alaska, caused the highest wave ever recorded, which had a height of 524 metres (over 1700 feet). The wave didn't travel far, as it struck land almost immediately. Two people fishing in the bay were killed, but another boat amazingly managed to ride the wave. Scientists named these waves megatsunami.