Tsunami Japanese corpses dragged Until the U.S. Oregon Coast
The body of a young man who was swept out to sea by the tsunami in Japan last month had drifted up to the Oregon coast, United States, or about 480 miles away, according to the government on Tuesday.
The body of Dustin Douglas Weber (25) was found on April 2, by someone who walked on the beach near Warrenton, Oregon, in the Upper Columbia River. "The corpse was already in the water for several weeks," said Dr. Christopher Young, deputy medical superintendent state of Oregon.
Young said the dental records used to identify the bodies because the body had started to rot. Weber's cause of death was officially declared by drowning.
The body of Dustin Douglas Weber (25) was found on April 2, by someone who walked on the beach near Warrenton, Oregon, in the Upper Columbia River. "The corpse was already in the water for several weeks," said Dr. Christopher Young, deputy medical superintendent state of Oregon.
Young said the dental records used to identify the bodies because the body had started to rot. Weber's cause of death was officially declared by drowning.
"The only thing unusual about this is the distance, where the body was found. In such cases, the bodies are usually found very close to where the bodies fell into the water," he said.
Weber drifting out to sea on 11 March, on the day of the earthquake with a strength of 9.0 on the Richter scale shook the coast of Japan and triggered a large tsunami, which crossed the Pacific.
Weber, who was born in Oregon and recently moved to California, have taken a picture of tsunami in near the mouth of Klamath River when he washed away a big wave. (Republika)
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