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thumb|right|upright=1.3|Diagram of the 1958 Lituya Bay earthquake and megatsunami|1958 Lituya Bay megatsunami, which proved the existence of megatsunamis A megatsunami is an extremely large wave created by a substantial and sudden displacement of material into a body of water.
thumb|right|upright=1.3|Diagram of the 1958 Lituya Bay earthquake and megatsunami|1958 Lituya Bay megatsunami, which proved the existence of megatsunamis A megatsunami is an extremely large wave created by a substantial and sudden displacement of material into a body of water.
Megatsunamis have different features from ordinary tsunamis. Ordinary tsunamis are caused by underwater tectonic activity (movement of the earth's plates) and therefore occur along plate boundaries and as a result of earthquakes and the subsequent rise or fall in the sea floor that displaces a volume of water. Ordinary tsunamis exhibit shallow waves in the deep waters of the open ocean that increase dramatically in height upon approaching land to a maximum run-up height of around in the cases of the most powerful earthquakes. By contrast, megatsunamis occur when a large amount of material suddenly falls into water or anywhere near water (such as via a landslide, meteor impact, or volcanic eruption). They can have extremely large initial wave heights in the hundreds of metres, far beyond the height of any ordinary tsunami. These giant wave heights occur because the water is "splashed" upwards and outwards by the displacement.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).