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Ecology & Environment
Mahesh

04/04/24 06:14 AM IST

Kallakkadal

In News
  • Hundreds of houses have been flooded in several coastal areas of Kerala due to high sea waves, also known as swell waves.
About Kallakkadal
  • Kallakkadal is essentially coastal flooding during the pre-monsoon (April-May) season by swell waves on the southwest coast of India.
  • The study was authored by P G Remya, S Vishnu, B Praveen Kumar, T M Balakrishnan Nair, and B Rohith — all from the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services, Hyderabad.
  • The term Kallakkadal, used by local fishermen, is a combination of two Malayalam words, including Kallan and Kadal.
  • Kallan means thief and Kadal means sea.
  • In spoken language, these words were combined and pronounced as Kallakkadal, meaning ocean that arrives as a thief,.
  • In 2012, the term was formally approved by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).
Causes
  • Kallakkadal is caused by waves that are formed by an ocean swell, hence the name swell surge.
  • Ocean swells occur not due to the local winds, but rather due to distant storms like hurricanes, or even long periods of fierce gale winds.
  • During such storms, huge energy transfer takes place from the air into the water, leading to the formation of very high waves. Such waves can travel thousands of kilometres from the storm centre until they strike shore.
  • Usually, Kallakkadal is a consequence of the strong winds in the southern part of the Indian Ocean, where an ocean swell is generated, and the waves then travel north to reach the coast in two or three days.
  • The latest instance took place after a low atmospheric pressure system moved over the region around March 25 from the South Atlantic Ocean — 10,000 kilometres off the Indian coast.
  • The arrival of the pressure system resulted in strong winds, which led to the formation of swell waves of up to 11 metres in height.
  • These waves have been hitting the Kerala coast and Lakshadweep.
  • Kallakkadal occurs without precursors or any kind of local wind activity and as a result, it has been very difficult for the coastal population to get an advance warning.
  • However, early warning systems like the Swell Surge Forecast System —launched by the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services (INCOIS) in 2020 — give forewaring seven days in advance.
Kallakkadal v/s Tsunami
  • Kallakkadal came under the spotlight after the 2004 tsunami that killed more than 10,000 people.
  • However, Kallakkadal is often mistaken to be a tsunami, which is a series of enormous waves created by an underwater disturbance usually associated with earthquakes occurring below or near the ocean.
Source- Indian Express

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