The observation of waves (sea level oscillations) in the coastal water area of the southeastern coast of Sakhalin
Island was carried out from November 2021 to May 2022 using bottom-mounted high-precision ARW 14 K
devices with one second discreteness. The analysis of the obtained time series revealed the presence of
anomalous waves in the range of tsunami waves in January 2022. It is shown that the waves detected on
15 January 2022 with periods of 15 minutes–4 hours, significantly standing out above the background, are
associated with volcanic tsunami waves. Spectral analysis of the time series showed that the maximum in
the spectra of sea level oscillations found after the volcanic eruption is close to the period of the first mode
of the shelf seiche. This indicates that incoming tsunami waves excite shelf seiches in the coastal zone and
contribute to the generation of longshore and transverse seiches into Mordvinov Bay. Time series analysis made
it possible to establish that the spectral density of sea level oscillations for the time interval of the beginning
of the eruption of the Hunga–Tonga–Hunga–Ha’apai volcano from 21 December 2021 to 11 January 2022
significantly differs from the spectral density for the time of the Plinian volcanic eruption. An analysis of
the statistical characteristics of sea level oscillations performed on two–day series in the range of periods
1 min–4 h for background waves and tsunamis showed an increase in the rms by 3.5 times for a time series containing tsunami waves. It has been established that for background time series containing tsunami waves,
the coefficients of asymmetry and kurtosis differ little from“Gaussia” values. This indicates that the arrival
of tsunami waves from distant sources does not significantly disrupt the stationarity of the wave field in the
observation area.