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"path": "/articles/the-forensics-of-a-skyscraper-sized-tsunami",
"publishedAt": "2026-05-06T13:15:42.000Z",
"site": "https://eos.org",
"tags": [
"News",
"Alaska",
"Climate Change",
"Earth science",
"EGU",
"glaciers & ice sheets",
"Hazards & Disasters",
"landslides",
"Natural hazards",
"SAR & inSAR",
"tsunamis & storm surges"
],
"textContent": "This aerial photo shows the north side of Alaska’s Tracy Arm Fjord in the aftermath of the 2025 landslide and tsunami. The lighter-colored rock is the exposed surface, where the mountainside collapsed and fell into the water. The foot of South Sawyer Glacier is visible at lower right; in decades past, the ice extended much farther and was thick enough to hold the rock slopes in place. Credit: Cyrus Read/U.S. Geological Survey",
"title": "The Forensics of a Skyscraper-Sized Tsunami"
}