英:[seɪʃ]
美:[ seʃ]
英:[seɪʃ]
美:[ seʃ]
noun
a prolonged oscillating wave in a lake, bay, or gulf caused by changes in atmospheric pressure or seismic disturbances such as earthquakes.
假潮
French
The first known use of seiche was circa 1839
1 A seiche can also be caused by wind or tides.
强风和潮汐同样可以导致湖震。
2 In addition to damage directly caused by ground shaking, secondary earthquake hazards include liquefaction, tsunamis, landslides, seiches, and elevation changes.
3 It is a type of surge termed a seiche.
4 On Nov. 1, 2019, high winds behind a cold front whipped a seiche several feet high into Buffalo, causing lakeshore flooding and prompting the Weather Service to issue warnings.
5 Richards recalled that the 2011 Japanese earthquake produced bizarre, five-foot seiche waves in an absolutely calm Norwegian fjord thirty minutes after the quake, in a place unreachable by the tsunami.
6 A seiche is a shift or oscillation of water levels on a closed lake, usually spurred by wind or air pressure differences.
7 According to Prof. Forel there are both longitudinal and transverse seiches.
8 One of them proposed that the wave might have been created by a curious phenomenon known as a seiche.
9 Devils Hole is home to the endangered pupfish, a unique breed that can face short-term challenges following the geological phenomenon, technically called a seiche.
10 The brutal shaking would have been enough to trigger a large seiche, and the first blobs of glass would have started to rain down seconds or minutes afterward.
11 Bedrock beneath Hebgen Lake warped and rotated, causing a seiche in the lake.
赫布根湖底的基岩发生了翘曲和旋转, 引起湖中浪涌.
12 Hydrologists call it a seiche.
13 The seismic waves can cause something called a seiche.
14 This caused not a tsunami but what’s known as seiche waves, the back-and-forth sloshes sometimes seen in miniature in a bathtub.
15 Bedrock beneath Lake warped and rotated, causing a seiche in the lake.
基岩发生了翘曲和旋转, 引起湖中浪涌.
16 They would have continued to fall as the seiche waves rolled in and out, depositing layer upon layer of sediment and each time sealing the tektites in place.
17 This video shows a seiche generated in a swimming pool by an earthquake in Nepal in 2015.
18 “The earthquake causes what’s called a seismic seiche, and it’s basically a sloshing of the water back and forth.”
19 Unlike tsunamis, which can take hours to reach land after an earthquake at sea, these moving water bodies, known as a seiche, surged out instantaneously after the massive asteroid crashed into the sea.
20 When the big megathrust earthquake happens here, we'll probably see seiches on Lake Washington, and they could cause some pretty substantial damage to the highway bridges, not to mention the lovely homes along the shore.