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Earthquake-triggered tsunami sweeps the shore as Sendai Airport is surrounded by waters in Miyagi prefecture (state), Japan, Friday, March 11, 2011. The ferocious tsunami spawned by one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded slammed Japan's eastern coasts. (Kyodo News) People watch the aftermath of tsunami tidal waves covering a port at Kesennuma in Miyagi Prefecture, northern Japan, after strong earthquakes hit the area Friday, March 11, 2011. (Keichi Nakane / The Yomiuri Shimbun) Tsunami swirls near a port in Oarai, Ibaraki Prefecture (state) after Japan was struck by a strong earthquake off its northeastern coast Friday, March 11, 2011. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) Tsunami hits Japan

Tsunami speed comparable to clip of jumbo jet

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CTV News Video

Extended: Earthquake sparks oil refinery blaze
Friday: An aerial view of a fire at an oil refinery near Tokyo that was triggered by a massive 8.9 magnitude earthquake that rattled Japan.
Extended: Massive tsunami slams ashore
Friday: A 4-metre tsunami washes away cars and buildings following a massive, magnitude-8.9 earthquake off Japan's northeastern coast, about 24 km down.
Extended: Tsunami delivers deadly punch
Friday: A tsunami roars inland and engulfs several cities alongside the river, sweeping away homes and farms and anything else in its path.
Extended: Tsunami tosses cars around
Friday: A tsunami flips and tosses thousands of roads, homes, cars, boats as it leaves hundreds of towns floating out to sea.
Extended: Tsunami leaves path of destruction
Friday: An aerial view of a massive tsunami as it races towards villages, sweeping away cars, houses and everything else in its path.
Extended: Wave of water hits the coast in Sendai
Friday: Stunning aerial video from NHK of the massive tsunami picking up everything in its path and pushing it inland in Sendai, Miyaki Prefecture, Japan.
Extended: Powerful quake rocks nuclear plant
Friday: This extended footage shows a nuclear power plant in Japan as it shakes during a massive earthquake off the Japanese coast.
Extended: Aftermath of earthquake in Japan
Friday: This extended video shows flattened houses, debris strewn roads and buildings reduced to rubble after a massive quake off the northeast coast Japan.
Extended: Newsroom shakes during quake
Friday: Office workers run for cover in this extended video showing the NHK newsroom and other cracked buildings as they shake violently during the earthquake.
Extended: Quake shakes parliament in Tokyo
Friday: Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan and members of the Diet feel the 8.9 magnitude earthquake during a parliament session in Tokyo.
CTV National News: Lisa LaFlamme on the quake
Friday: Japan is ripped apart by a deadly earthquake, one of the strongest in recorded history. The violent shaking unleashed the awesome power of the ocean, sending a wall of water seven metres high into the northern coast, devastating everything in its path.
CTV National News: Todd Battis on earth science
Friday: The massive tremor is what geologists call a subduction quake, the most powerful kind of earthquake. It happens when one of the earth's tectonic plates gets suddenly shoved under another, this time resulting in one of the largest earthquakes in history.
CTV News: Joy Malbon on the devastation
6:00 p.m. ET: Cameras capture the chaos on the streets and in buildings as the worst earthquake in Japan's recorded history hits devastates the country. Over a thousand people are feared dead and hundreds are missing.
CTV News Channel: Christian B-Cote, teacher
6:10 p.m. ET: a Canadian teacher in Japan on a school trip explains where he was when the earthquake hit.
CTV News Channel: Dan Sloan, Reuters
6:00 p.m. ET: A Reuters reporter in Tokyo gives an update on the death toll in Japan, saying there are missing trains and boats that can not be accounted for.
CTV News Channel: Murat Saatcioglu, engineer
4:15 p.m. ET: An earthquake engineer says although that industry is thriving in Japan, it is still relatively new there. Buildings created before current standards are still vulnerable, which is why so many of them crumbled.
CTV News Channel: Allan Bonner, consultant
4:23 p.m. ET: A crisis management professional says the average person in Japan sleeps with shoes under his or her bed. Japanese people are well prepared for earthquakes having food, water, and a bag of sand near their gas stoves at home.
CTV News Channel: Dr. Katy Kamkar, psychologist
3:40 p.m. ET: A psychologist with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health discusses the severe distress associated with natural disasters and trauma the earthquake victims face.
CTV News Channel: Kohei Murayama, editor
3:02 p.m. ET: An editor at Kyoto News in Tokyo says there are reports the death toll has reached 1,000, and he is frightened by what images he will see when daylight breaks.
CTV News Channel: Janie Eudy from Pineville, LA.
2:00 p.m. ET: The wife of a man who was evacuated from a nuclear in power plant in Japan details her husband's experience. Eudy says he fears some co-workers were swept away by the tsunami.
CTV News Channel: AP's Tomoko Hosaka in Tokyo
1:35 p.m. ET: Hosaka says it was terrifying to experience the ground shaking throughout the day and discusses the shock she felt by the quake's impact.
CTV News Channel: Rosa Yum in Tokyo
1:15 p.m. ET: A journalist in Tokyo says she knew the earthquake was a devastating when tremors continued for more than a minute. Staff on the ninth floor hid under desks as the office building swayed.
CTV News Channel: John Cassidy, seismologist
12:17 p.m. ET: Aftershocks in Japan will continue for months -- even up to one year. Also, this type of 'seduction' earthquake will always produce a tsunami.
CTV News Channel: Mike Fern in Tokyo
10:30 a.m. ET: A correspondent reports from Japan, where he describes the chaotic situation on the ground nine hours after the quake hit.
CTV News Channel: Chris Johnson in Tokyo
10:05 a.m. ET: Tokyo-based journalist Christopher Johnson gives a first-hand account of the situation, and explains the damage and approximate death toll.
Canada AM: Eric Due in Tokyo
7:01 a.m. ET: A member of The Japan Times says the death toll is unknown, but expected to be high, and explains the extensive damage caused by the quake.
Canada AM: John Luxat, McMaster University
7:15 a.m. ET: A nuclear safety expert says Japan's nuclear plants have extensive earthquake emergency plans, so they were likely prepared to withstand such a seismic event.
Canada AM: Mark Miller, Discovery
7:17 a.m. ET: A host of a Discovery Channel show explains how exactly nuclear plants are prepared for earthquakes.

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Earthquake-triggered tsunami sweeps the shore as Sendai Airport is surrounded by waters in Miyagi prefecture (state), Japan, Friday, March 11, 2011. The ferocious tsunami spawned by one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded slammed Japan's eastern coasts. (Kyodo News) People watch the aftermath of tsunami tidal waves covering a port at Kesennuma in Miyagi Prefecture, northern Japan, after strong earthquakes hit the area Friday, March 11, 2011. (Keichi Nakane / The Yomiuri Shimbun) Tsunami swirls near a port in Oarai, Ibaraki Prefecture (state) after Japan was struck by a strong earthquake off its northeastern coast Friday, March 11, 2011. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) Tsunami hits Japan

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Earthquake-triggered tsunami sweeps the shore as Sendai Airport is surrounded by waters in Miyagi prefecture (state), Japan, Friday, March 11, 2011. The ferocious tsunami spawned by one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded slammed Japan's eastern coasts. (Kyodo News)

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Date: Fri. Mar. 11 2011 11:37 AM ET

Experts say the combination of a brawny earthquake and its close proximity to mainland Japan triggered a tsunami that advanced too quickly to warn residents about the dangers washing towards them on Friday.

The pending disaster began when the record 9.0-magnitude quake struck off Japan's eastern coast on Friday.

It was the most powerful temblor to strike the country in more than a century and it triggered a tsunami that rapidly made its way towards Japan.

Simon Boxall of Britain's National Oceanography Centre said the tsunami quickly roared through the Pacific Ocean at comparable speeds to a jumbo jet flying in the sky.

Only 10 or 15 minutes elapsed before the tsunami and its seven-metre waves hit the Japanese coast after the massive quake.

"No time to respond, no time to get to high ground," Boxall told CTV's Canada AM by telephone from Southampton, England.

In a telephone interview, Ioan Nistor, an associate professor of engineering at the University of Ottawa, told CTV.ca that if a tsunami forms in deep water "the waves travel at hundreds of kilometres per hour."

That's exactly what happened in the Pacific Ocean about 125 kilometres off the coast of Japan on Friday, where the quake struck and the tsunami was initiated.

How a tsunami begins

Nistor said a tsunami is triggered by an earthquake when the seismic trembling causes the vertical lift of water above the sea level of the ocean.

The displaced water begins to propagate into the ocean and the tsunami is on its way.

As the tsunami gets close to land, the massive wave of water breaks and advances towards the shoreline.

When it hits land it is "almost like a freight train that smashes everything in its path," said Nistor, usually in a sequence of two or three waves.

On Friday, the incoming tsunami waves carried fishing boats into Japanese cities, made cars float like fish and washed away roads, power lines and hundreds of homes.

Shakes and quakes

Before and after the tsunami came and went, the Earth continued to shake. Officials say that Japan has felt more than 50 aftershocks since the quake first hit on Friday. Many of these subsequent quakes have been of magnitude 6.0 or higher.

American Jesse Johnson was eating at a sushi restaurant north of Tokyo when the quake began.

"At first it didn't feel unusual, but then it went on and on. So I got myself under the table," Johnson said in an interview with The Associated Press.

"I've lived in Japan for 10 years and I've never felt anything like this before. The aftershocks keep coming. It's gotten to the point where I don't know whether it's me shaking or the earthquake."

The initial quake was quickly determined to be one of the worst in modern history, what Boxall described as a temblor that would rank "right up there in the top-10 earthquakes worldwide, I'm afraid."

Friday's quake was felt as far away as Tokyo, which lies hundreds of kilometers from the epicentre.

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan said the quake caused "major damage" and officials have confirmed more than 130 deaths in the hours after the disasters hit. But hundreds are presumed to have perished and police in the city of Sendai say they have found at least 200 bodies.

Prior quakes, prior tragedies

The U.S. Geological Survey says the Friday's quake appears to be the most major to strike Japan since officials began keeping records in the late 1800s.

The USGS website maintains a list of historic earthquakes, including those recorded in Japan.

According to the USGS website, the worst known quake for fatalities in Japan occurred in September 1923, when 143,000 people died in a 7.9-magnitude quake. More than half the homes in the Tokyo-Yokohama area were destroyed in the disaster. The second-most deadly event occurred in June 1896, when an 8.5-magnitude quake struck off the coast of Sanriku and brought on a tsunami that killed more than 27,000 people.

Ninety per cent of the world's earthquakes occur in a range of earthquake and volcanic zones known as the Ring of Fire, which stretches around the Pacific Ocean and includes Japan.

Kevin McCue, a seismologist with the Australian Seismological Centre, said residents of other Pacific Ocean countries should take heed from the disasters in Japan and know the signs of a pending tsunami. Because there may not always be time to get a warning out to the public.

"It's one of the golden rules, I think. If you've felt a strong earthquake and it lasts more than about 30 seconds, then you should high-tail it for high land, at least 10 to 20 metres above high-water mark," McCue told CTV's Canada AM from Canberra, Australia.

With files from The Associated Press

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Earthquake in Japan

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