Aerial view of the coast of Banda Aceh, Indonesia, in January 2005. CHOO YOUN-KONG / AP “It’s as if my village had been razed by an atomic bomb. » Better than long descriptions, this testimony from a survivor of the tsunami which, on December 26, 2004, devastated the Indonesian city of Banda Aceh and its surroundings reveals the cataclysmic power of the phenomenon. Two decades have passed and we have partly forgotten these hallucinatory images of the coastal town whose buildings were swept away like the straw and wood houses in the story of The Three Little Pigs. The most devastating tsunami recorded in human history also hit Thailand, India and Sri Lanka hard. In total, it caused 230,000 deaths (including nearly 170,000 in Indonesia alone), and some estimates suggest up to 290,000 victims. Organized in Thiais (Val-de-Marne) on December 12 and 13 by the Physical Geography Laboratory, a conference took stock of the research carried out over twenty years on tsunamis, recalling that the 2004 event had triggered both international awareness of the risk linked to these phenomena and strong mobilization of researchers. You have 84.25% of this article left to read. The rest is reserved for subscribers.
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How the science of tsunamis has progressed, twenty years after the cataclysm in Indonesia
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