This has the potential for causing damage in populated areas of Kamchatka, but with the "iron curtain" Putin set in motion around Russia since 2022, ? if we'll ever know.
All I can find out on Russian-language X is "A tsunami threat has been declared for a number of populated areas in Kamchatka, the regional Ministry of Emergency Situations reported." (Google Translate: X did not offer to translate the tweets.)
All I know about southern Kamchatka is from reading up on the dual Decade Volcano there, Avachinsky-Koryaksky.
Petropavlovsk sounds and looks like a pretty cool place, but let's face it: Russia's got military stuff there, too. There is also at least one fairly large town -- Yelizovo -- but I'm not sure if it's on the bay or not.
There are also a number of small communities. This is the "urban" part of Siberia's Kamchatka Peninsula, and the Global Volcanism Program website lists more than a quarter million people within 60-some miles of A and K volcanoes -- not all of them will be vulnerable to tsunamis, of course, but they still must have gotten some shaking.
The USGS Pager, however, is mostly green, which is good.
All I can find out on Russian-language X is "A tsunami threat has been declared for a number of populated areas in Kamchatka, the regional Ministry of Emergency Situations reported." (Google Translate: X did not offer to translate the tweets.)
All I know about southern Kamchatka is from reading up on the dual Decade Volcano there, Avachinsky-Koryaksky.
Petropavlovsk sounds and looks like a pretty cool place, but let's face it: Russia's got military stuff there, too. There is also at least one fairly large town -- Yelizovo -- but I'm not sure if it's on the bay or not.
There are also a number of small communities. This is the "urban" part of Siberia's Kamchatka Peninsula, and the Global Volcanism Program website lists more than a quarter million people within 60-some miles of A and K volcanoes -- not all of them will be vulnerable to tsunamis, of course, but they still must have gotten some shaking.
The USGS Pager, however, is mostly green, which is good.