Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Earth

Megatsunami Risk On the Rise As Glacial Melt Drives Landslides (theguardian.com) 50

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Just under a year ago, the east coast of Greenland was hit by a megatsunami. Triggered by a large landslide entering the uninhabited Dickson Fjord, the resulting tsunami was 200 meters high -- equivalent to more than 40 double-decker buses. Luckily no one was hurt, though a military base was obliterated. Now analysis of the seismic data associated with the event has revealed that the tsunami was followed by a standing wave, which continued to slosh back and forth within the narrow fjord for many days.

Angela Carrillo Ponce from the German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam, analyzed the seismic data, recorded at earthquake monitoring stations more than 3,000 miles (5,000km) away, and found signals persisting long after the 16 September 2023 landslide event. Using satellite images and computer modeling, Ponce and her colleagues were able to confirm the presence of a standing wave of about 1 meter in height which lasted for more than a week.

Their findings, published in The Seismic Record, warn that climate change is accelerating the melt of Greenland's glaciers and permafrost, increasing the chance of landslides and subsequent megatsunamis. Smaller events have been observed a number of times in recent years, such as the rock avalanche into western Greenland's Karrat Fjord in 2017, which triggered a tsunami that flooded the village of Nuugaatsiaq, destroying 11 houses and killing four people.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Megatsunami Risk On the Rise As Glacial Melt Drives Landslides

Comments Filter:
  • Luckily no one was hurt, though a military base was obliterated.

    Great. If only we can get rid of all military bases.

  • The water crept 200m uphill. The actual Tsunami was more likely 10-20m high.

    • The water crept 200m uphill. The actual Tsunami was more likely 10-20m high.

      20-meter waves don't creep up 200-meter hills.

      That's nonsense.

      • by VaccinesCauseAdults ( 7114361 ) on Saturday August 24, 2024 @06:10AM (#64731380)
        The tsunami run-up near the source rockslide exceeded 200m. The wave heights were 20 metres further away from the source. From TFA: "After the first impact, the rockslide material is redirected to the north and interacts with the glacier until it enters the Dickson Fjord, where it triggers a megatsunami with a peak runâup height locally exceeding 200 m."
  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Saturday August 24, 2024 @01:52AM (#64731176)

    Whats that in Libraries of Congress?

    • Whats that in Libraries of Congress?

      TFA uses double-deck buses as units of height.

      A "Library of Congress" is normally used as a unit of information, as in gigabytes or whatever.

      If you want to use a LOC as a unit of height, the logical conversion would be 59 meters, which is the height of the dome over the main reading room in the Thomas Jefferson Building [wikipedia.org] which currently houses the LOC.

      200 meters = 40 DDB = 3.39 LOC

    • What about Empire State Buildings? It's about 1/2 Empire State Building.

  • by beowulfcluster ( 603942 ) on Saturday August 24, 2024 @04:00AM (#64731316)
    How many libraries of congress does 40 double decker buses equal?

/earth: file system full.

Working...