Predicting tsunamis: Paper says studying radiocarbon dating points to patterns

Research Geologist Rob Witter (PETER HAEUSSLER/USGS)
Geologists camped on Umnak Island in the Aleutians. (ROB WITTER/USGS)
The 1946 tsunami exhibit shows imagery of the destruction, science and history of the event as well as stories from survivors Wednesday at the Pacific Tsunami Museum in downtown Hilo.
The 1946 tsunami exhibit in the Pacific Tsunami Museum in downtown Hilo shows imagery of the destruction as well as stories from survivors. The tsunami, triggered by an earthquake in the Aleutian Islands, hit Hilo on April 1, 1946. (Photos by HOLLYN JOHNSON/Tribune-Herald)

HILO — The U.S. Geological Survey suggests that tsunamis like the one that devastated Hilo in 1946 might be predictable — and more frequent than previously believed.