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We have thus a theory of those waves which seem almost invariably to have accompanied the great earthquakes; supposing these to have been occasioned by submarine elevations.
J. Hall, On the Revolutions of the Earth’s Surface
I can almost hear someone saying, “Do we really need yet another book about tsunamis?” The answer to that is quite simple. Yes, we do. We actually need many more books about tsunamis, if only for education and awareness.
This book is slightly different to the normal tsunami book, if there is such a thing. It is really a story about how we go about finding evidence for past tsunamis. How do scientists identify these things? During this finding out process in the book we learn not only about some of the techniques scientists use but also about the events themselves, and in the telling we learn a bit about the person who does the work and the places that work is done in, and we dip our toes into the odd anecdote or two about the trials and tribulations of a tsunami researcher. So yes, it is educational, but it is told from the perspective of a researcher essentially charting his progress through this new field of research as it has developed. I learn, you learn.
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