MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Tsunami debris still heading to Washington coast

Nov 19, 2012, 8:17 AM | Updated: 9:12 am

A Seattle oceanographer says while a huge field of tsunami debris has yet to hit the Washington coa...

A Seattle oceanographer says while a huge field of tsunami debris has yet to hit the Washington coast as predicted, it's still on its way. (AP file photo)

(AP file photo)

Debris from the 2011 Japan earthquake and tsunami is still expected to hit the Washington coast, just later than previously predicted.

Retired University of Washington oceanographer Curt Ebbesmeyer of Seattle has been tracking the huge field of debris and had been predicting it to start washing up in Washington in October.

While he’s not sure why it didn’t happen yet, he says it’s still looming out in the Pacific Ocean and could start making landfall in a matter of weeks.

“It didn’t go away because we haven’t seen it,” he said. “This quiet is a little bit ominous,” he tells the Everett Herald.

There have been limited reports of tsunami debris washing up on local shores. The state Department of Ecology says other than some incidents in Willapa Bay on the Washington coast, reports have been spotty.

“It’s been pretty quiet since July and August,” says Linda Kent, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Ecology.

Curt Ebbesmeyer of Seattle, a retired University of Washington oceanographer who has been tracking the trash, was one of those predicting an October onslaught.

Ebbesmeyer says while the the coast is expected to get most of the debris, come of it could show up in the inland waters through the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

He says the debris field stretches approximately 2,000 miles across the ocean and 500 miles from north to south. It’s about 400 miles offshore

Ebbesmeyer says with it traveling about 10 miles a day, it could hit the coast around mid-December, depending on the currents and weather.

But government officials are much more conservative in their predictions, saying while they anticipate an increase in debris washing up on the West Coast, the data “doesn’t show any flotilla or mass of debris,” says National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration spokeswoman Keeley Belva in an email.

The most recent map on the NOAA marine debris website shows a wide area northeast of Hawaii about 1,000 miles across as the “highest concentration of particles.”

Belva says of 1,406 official debris reports from California to Alaska, only 15 items have been definitively traced to the tsunami. Three of these were found on the Washington coast, including a large dock that washed ashore at Cape Disappointment in June.

Ebbesmeyer says he has no doubt, even though it hasn’t hit yet, the debris is on the way in the coming months.

“One thing’s for certain,” he said. “It’s still out there.”

MyNorthwest News

Image: A Joint Base Lewis-McChord sign can be seen leading into the base....

Associated Press

Army doctor who sexually abused JBLM soldiers sentenced to more than 13 years in prison

An Army doctor who pleaded guilty to sexually abusing dozens of male soldiers at JBLM was sentenced to just over 13 years in prison.

5 hours ago

gonzaga president...

Frank Sumrall

Gonzaga University finds its next president

Katia Passerini, Ph.D., has been named Gonzaga University's next president, the Gonzaga University Board of Trustees confirmed.

9 hours ago

Image: Pez candy, which contains red dye no. 3, is on display at a store in Lafayette, California, ...

Associated Press

FDA bans red dye No. 3 from foods

U.S. regulators have banned the dye called Red 3 from the nation’s food supply, nearly 35 years after it was barred from cosmetics.

10 hours ago

edmonds police...

Frank Sumrall

Edmonds names interim police chief amid troubling city-wide financial woes

Assistant Chief Rod Sniffen will serve as the acting police chief for the Edmonds Police Department, starting in March.

11 hours ago

Image: People look at the site where six Palestinians were killed in an Israeli airstrike at the Je...

Associated Press

Israel, Hamas agree to ceasefire deal to pause war, release some hostages, mediators say

Israel and Hamas agreed to a ceasefire deal, mediators said. The agreement will pause the devastating 15-month war in the Gaza Strip.

11 hours ago

stolen gun...

Frank Sumrall

Gun owners could be charged with felonies if firearm gets stolen under new proposed bill

The owner of a gun that becomes stolen could face fines and felonies if the thief commits a violent crime with said gun.

12 hours ago

Tsunami debris still heading to Washington coast