Pop a 6" nail into the sea bed by an inch. Then take any hammer you choose and go to hit the nail on the head but stop before the hammer strikes the nail. Would the pressure drive the nail into the sea bed?
No, unless you were moving the hammer incredibly quickly and got within a micron of touching the nail. (say)
Then the water wouldn't have time to get out of the way so the water momentum/shock wave might move the nail. Water hammer! Hydraulic shock...
Impulses of pressure in pipes can do odd things like that, such as blow a sharp elbow connection off. You can get special elbows with a bracket built in for that. It has to withstand far more than the weight of the pipe.
It's similar in principle to "contre-coup" injuries to someone's head. Hit someone with a hammer/scaffold pole etc and the shock wave can move the liquid-ish contents and damage it or even fracture their skull on the opposite side. Bullets do interesting things like that, there's a certain website which has demonstrations kindly set up for you by Mexican drug gangs with a grudge.
Those are all closed systems, where the water (etc) can flow, but the shock wave is very directional so it has most effect IN that direction.
There's also a drain-clearing thing which works in a similar way. Imagine a waste pipe with water and air pockets, and a "soft blockage" or say a towel blocking it. You pump up the Thing , pull the ttrigger and it smacks the water (or air, but water works better) at your end of the pipe. The impulse travels through the water and air in the pipe, and the blockage moves a little bit. I've seen it in transparent pipes, The air doesn't visibly compress, or even move. Impressive.
I'm sure I've seen examples on ships, and or military applications. I'll be very disappoiinted if HM can't show anl array of photos!!
The common thing, is the shock being surprisingly transmitted through liquid.
I've thought of a couple more, of breaking glass under water at a distance, and boiling water in the middle of a fish tank using ultrasonics, but....