Hat Kata Noi
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Hat Kata Noi ( th, หาดกะตะน้อย, ; ''Noi'' meaning 'little' in Thai) is a beach on the southwest side of the island of
Phuket Phuket (; th, ภูเก็ต, , ms, Bukit or ''Tongkah''; Hokkien:普吉; ) is one of the southern provinces (''changwat'') of Thailand. It consists of the island of Phuket, the country's largest island, and another 32 smaller islands of ...
in
Thailand Thailand ( ), historically known as Siam () and officially the Kingdom of Thailand, is a country in Southeast Asia, located at the centre of the Indochinese Peninsula, spanning , with a population of almost 70 million. The country is b ...
. It is adjacent to
Kata Beach Hat Kata ( th, หาดกะตะ, ) is a beach on the west coast of the island of Phuket. Geography Hat Kata is about 17 kilometers from Phuket Town. It faces the Andaman Sea. There are two adjacent beaches called Kata Yai and Kata Noi. ...
to the south. The beach is bordered to the north by the Mon Tri's Villa Royale Resort, and most of the beachfront is occupied by the resort of Kata Thani.


2004 earthquake and tsunami

On 26 December 2004, the area felt a mild earthquake around 07:59 local time, which later turned out to be shock waves from the massive 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake occurring at that time near Sumatra. Few people actually felt the earthquake, and no alarm was given, apart from casual mentions on local Thai radio.


First tsunami

Around 09:30, as about 20 people were playing on the beach or bathing, the sea retreated about 100 meters within the space of about 5 minutes. A few people who were bathing, seeing the water retreating around them were left standing, puzzled. Asked about the phenomenon, Thai vendors on the beach were as puzzled as tourists, having never seen such a thing. As the sea was staying at a very low level, quite far from the beach, people saw that some fish had been left stranded in pools of water, and started to play with the fish for possibly 5 to 10 minutes. Suddenly, without warning or visible signs of approaching danger, the sea rose again, inducing everyone to run to higher ground. The water continued to rise swiftly, although not as fast as the people running. Eventually the sea subsumed the beach, until it stopped almost exactly at the top of the one meter cement wall lining the beach. People who were in the sea up to their waists, were able to climb over the small wall to the safety of the gardens of the Kata Thani Resort, many leaving their possessions on the beach chairs in haste. The sea stayed at its high level for possibly 10 to 15 minutes. Some tourists actually went back in the high water to fetch their floating belongings. The sea started to retreat again slowly, dragging parasols, beach chairs, and other flotsam with the receding water.


Retreat-and-rise cycle

The retreat-and-rise cycle was repeated several times that day, a full cycle taking between 30 and 45 minutes between each peak. The third wave was the largest. It overran the small wall lining the beach, flowed into the gardens of the Kata Thani Hotel and almost instantly smashed into and destroyed the front rooms of the hotel, also inundating the central restaurant. The area at the southern end of the beach was most badly hit, and the beach restaurant was swept out to sea.


Casualties

There were some injuries, but no fatalities at Kata Noi. The waters receded and rose rather swiftly, but, owing to the steepness of the beach, remained contained and did not generate breaking waves as on flatter beaches such as
Patong Beach Patong ( th, ป่าตอง , ) refers to the beach and town on Phuket's west coast. It is the main tourist resort on the island of Phuket, and is the centre of Phuket's nightlife and shopping. The beach became popular with Western tourists, e ...
or
Khao Lak Khao Lak ( th, เขาหลัก, ) is a series of villages, now tourist-oriented, mainly in the Takua Pa District and partly in the Thai Mueang District of Phang Nga Province, Thailand. The name "Khao Lak" literally translated means 'Mai ...
. By 2014, Kata Noi beaches have returned to their pre-tsunami state.


Images

Image:KataNoiBeachWall.JPG, The first tsunami stopped exactly at the top of the beach wall Image:2ndTsunamiWave.jpg, 2nd tsunami wave, starting to retreat, 10:17 Image:KataNoiRecedingWaters.JPG, Receding waters after the 2nd tsunami, 10:20 File:Kata Noi before third tsunami.jpg, The waters at their lowest ebb, before the 3rd tsunami, 10:25 Image:KataNoiHighest.jpg, 3rd tsunami wave, 11:00 Image:KataNoi3rdwaveRetreating.JPG, The 3rd tsunami wave retreating after invading Kata Thani, 11:03 Image:KataNoi1stFloorBreakage.JPG, Smashed first-floor rooms, 11:04 Image:KataNoiFirstFloor.JPG, Smashed first-floor rooms, following the 3rd tsunami wave, 11:05 Image:KataNoiMoreWaves.JPG, More large waves followed throughout the day (4th tsunami wave), 11:22 Image:KataNoiAccess.JPG, Destroyed beach access (about 2 meters of sand were washed away, leaving the access hanging in the air).


See also

* Phuket Province * 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake *
Tsunami A tsunami ( ; from ja, 津波, lit=harbour wave, ) is a series of waves in a water body caused by the displacement of a large volume of water, generally in an ocean or a large lake. Earthquakes, volcanic eruptions and other underwater exp ...


External links

*


References

{{Coord, 7, 48, 23, N, 98, 17, 56, E, region:TH_type:city(1000), display=title Beaches of Phuket Province