April 1923 Kamchatka earthquake and tsunami

On April 14, 1923, at 02:31 local time, an earthquake occurred off the northern coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula in the USSR, present-day Russia.[7] The earthquake occurred off the Kamchatka Peninsula's east coast, which runs parallel to the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, the area where the Pacific and Okhotsk Sea plates converge.[6] In another study by Bourgeois and Pinegina published in 2018, the source area of the April earthquake is north of the February rupture but southwest of Bering Island and in Kamchatka Bay [ru].However, a study published in Pure and Applied Geophysics found that no numerical modelling of the earthquake could reproduce the unusually large tsunami.Despire confirming the tsunamigenic earthquake source characteristic using the available seismograph readings, it did not account for the local tsunami observations.[16] Fifteen minutes later, an 11 m (36 ft) wave began advancing onshore, washing away structures at a nearby settlement and flowing upstream by 7 km (4.3 mi) on the Kamchatka River.[18] A small cutter belonging to the Nichiro cannery was found 1–2 km (0.62–1.24 mi) inland, 30 m (98 ft) above sea level.The extent of damage decreased abruptly eastwards along a 10 km (6.2 mi) portion of a spit that separated Lake Nerpichye from Kamchatka Bay.On the United States west coast, a 0.15 m (5.9 in) wave was recorded at San Francisco while at the Port of Los Angeles, some swirls were observed between 06:00 and 10:00.Some of the remaining inhabitants of Ust-Kamchatsk later founded the village of Krutoberegovo [ru] because the tsunami had badly affected the main city.
Petropavlovsk-KamchatskiyUst-KamchatskKamchatka KraiKamchatkaRussiasurface-wave magnitudemoment magnitudeforeshockstsunamiKuril-Kamchatka TrenchPacificOkhotsk Sea platessubductsconvergent boundarytrenchsubductionKamchatka earthquakesmegathrustmagnitude 9.0 earthquakemegathrust earthquakeshypocenterModified Mercalli intensity scaleBeno GutenbergCharles RichterInternational Seismological SummaryBering Islandtsunami earthquakePure and Applied Geophysicssubmarine landslideKamchatka RiverNichiro canneryLake NerpichyeHonoluluTofinoUnited States west coastSan FranciscoPort of Los Angelesswirlsraised beachLos Angeles TimesKoreanSydney Morning HeraldList of earthquakes in RussiaList of earthquakes in 1923List of tsunamisBibcodeInternational Seismological CentreNational Geophysical Data CenterVeracruzGarfagnanaHaiyuanMendozaMassawaSevier Valley1st KamchatkaTorbat-e HeydariehGreat KantōCharlevoix–KamouraskaMontanaSanta BarbaraLjubinjeKita TangoGulangJerichoCrimeaLompocChirpan–PlovdivChachapoyasCumanáArthur's PassKopet DagSuşehriMurchisonGrand BanksEarthquakes in Russia1737 Kamchatka1840 Ahora1841 Kamchatka1887 Verny1889 Chilik1902 Turkestan1907 Qaratog1911 Kebin1911 SarezFebruary 1923 Kamchatka1926 Kars earthquake1927 Crimean1929 Kopet Dag1931 Zangezur1946 Chatkal1948 Ashgabat1949 Khait1952 Severo-Kurilsk1959 Kamchatka1963 Kuril Islands1966 Tashkent1970 Dagestan1976 Osmussaar1988 Armenian1983 Hindu Kush1990 Hindu Kush1991 Hindu Kush1991 Racha1994 Kuril Islands1995 Neftegorsk1997 Kamchatka2003 Altai2006 Kamchatka2006 Kuril Islands2007 Kuril Islands2007 Nevelsk2008 Chechnya2013 Okhotsk Sea2017 Komandorski IslandsKuril–Kamchatka Trench