GEOL EXAM 2 TSUNAMIS
Many factors play into total tsunami risk
-Size and depth of fault rupture -Depth of water at fault rupture -Determines energy of tsunami wave and speed -Proximity of epicenter to population centers -Population density near shore -Local near-shore elevation -Local near-shore vegetation -Warning time -Education about tsunami
submarine landslides
-Subsea level collapse of the flank of an oceanic volcano such as in Hawaii or the Canary Islands. - caused by displaced water at the bottom of the sea
how do earthquakes cause tsunamis?
-The rupture of the earthquake causes the seafloor to uplift water. -seafloor can move - seafloor sits on a block of earth crust that shifts up or down during a quake -triggers a landslide
step 3 of 4 stage tsunami process
-as tsunami reaches land, water depth and velocity decrease - decrease in velocity decreases the spacing between wave crests, so the wavelength -height of wave increases bc it is squeezed upwards
Submarine Volcanic eruptions
Most lava eruptions occur under ocean (where tectonic plates move apart) explode and causes waves to go up and down less than 5% of tsunamis
Tsunami Steps
Step 1: As subducting plate descends, zone of friction creates a locked fault zone between overriding plate and subducting oceanic plate Step 2: Stress of continuous subducting motion causes strain-- spatial distortion of overriding plate as strain accumulates over time at locked fault zone -Bending Step 3: Fault rupture as strain exceeds the force of friction holding the edges of the plates together. Step 4: Wall of water pushed up from the sea floor
Tsunami speed
-behave like "shallow water waves" in the deep ocean, and thus their speed is based on the depth of the water -don't lose much energy bc the rate at which a wave loses its energy is related to its wavelength -long-wavelength waves don't lose energy
certain coasts at risk
-heightened risk comes from the geographic location of a coast in relation to potential tsunami sources such as quakes, volcanoes, and landslides - Coasts near a major subduction zone are at the greatest risk.
step 1 of the 4 stage process of tsunami
1. if an earthquake ruptures the seafloor, the water surface above the uplift initially forms an elongated dome parallel to the geologic fault. - collapses and generates a tsunami wave - aftershocks along fault create more waves - waves radiate outward like a pebble
Tsunami waves come in a series
2nd or third may be larger than the first one
where are global subduction zones
Entire pacific ocean and ring of fire
Tsunamis impacts
Flooding and coastal erosion due to earthquake-generated tsunami waves
step 2 of 4 stage tsunami process
- in the deep ocean, tsunami waves move very fast and are spaced long distances apart -reach speeds of 900 km/hr -spacing is ab 100 km -height is less than 3 ft so sailors dont notice them
4th step of 4 stage tsunami process
- wave hits land and is super high destroying everything -runup wave
Tohoku Earthquake and Tsunami
-Mar 11, 2011 -Magnitude 9.0 earthquake in subduction zone off the coast of Japan. -pacific ocean bottom was vertically displaced by 9m bc of quake -generated a large tsunami about 40 m high at shh=ore -Approx 15,000 fatalities. -Massive destruction along Japanese coast. -Ongoing problems from meltdown at Fukishima Nuclear Plant.
land-use planning
a set of policies and activities related to potential uses of land that is put in place before an area is developed principle of uniformitarianism
landslide
a slide of a large mass of dirt and rock down a mountain or cliff
Migitation tsunamis
advanced early warning system, elaborate tsunami seawall defense, informed population,
tsunami energy
affects the entire water column down to sea bed
what states have a high hazard of tsunami
alaska and hawaii
buoys
an anchored float serving as a navigation mark, to show reefs or other hazards, or for mooring.
wave shoaling
as the water gets more shallow, the shape of the wave changes, gets taller -compressed wavelengths - waves behind are speeding in
low hazard of tsunami
atlantic or gulf coasts
structural control
building codes for susceptible coastline areas - high rise hotels engineered to reduce effects of a tsunami
tsunamis create
change coastline through erosion and deposition of sediment
How fast does a tsunami travel?
depends on water depth V = (Dg)½ Where V: velocity D: water depth, g: acceleration due to gravity
tsunameter
detect small changes in the pressure exerted by the increased volume of water as a tsunami passes overhead
greatest runup
directly offshore from the quake
Tsunamis are caused by
displacement of sea water by volcanoes, earthquakes or coastal landslides, maybe even asteroids
tsunami runup map
shows the level to which the water traveled inland
How do landslides cause a tsunami
submarine landslides and large rock avalanches that fall from mountains into the sea
Runup
the furthest horizontal and vertical distance a wave moves inland
Principle of Uniformitarianism
the present is the key to the past
Velocity
the speed of an object in a particular direction
elastic rebound theory
theory that rocks that are strained past a certain point will fracture and spring back to their original shape
edge waves
travel back and forth parallel to the shore
in deep ocean
travel faster, velocity is greastest here Velocity tsunami= square root {(4000 m) x (10 m/s^2)} Velocity tsunami= 200 m/s = 720 km/hr = ~450 mi/hr
distant tsunami
travels out to sea and can travel long distances with little loss of energy
Teletsunami
tsunami that travels across an entire ocean basin
high runup elevation
tsunami waves traveled inland to high(ish) elevations
low runup elevation
tsunami waves traveled inland, but did not reach as high
wave height
vertical distance between crest and trough
rare cause for tsunami
volcanic eruptions
high hazard of tsunami
washington, oregon, cali
which best represents the amplitude of a tsunami wave?
wave height
effect a tsunami will have
wave height, run-up height, and indundation
Ghost Forest
earthquake= tsunami which caused forests to be submerged under water
most common tsunami cause
earthquakes of M 7.5 which creates seafloor displacement
what waves can tsunamis generate
edge waves
Tsunami Warning System
entail a network of sensors to detect earthquake activity and communications network to relay the warning - a network of seismographs to accurately locate and determine the depth and magnitude of submarine and coastal earthquakes, -automated tidal gauges to measure unusual rises and falls of sea level, -and a network of sensors connected to floating buoys
vegetation influences runup
estuary -Absorbs wave energy Tsunamis has to wrestle and expend energy trying to move Plants so it loses energy as it moves further and doesn't cause as much damage -Freshwater fighting tsnuami current as it comes forth
shorter wavelength
higher frequency/ amplitude = killer wave
preparation for tsunami
improved perception of the hazard, development of ways to alert the public, preparation and implementation of a tsunami-readiness plan, promotion of community awareness education concerning the hazard
subduction zone
in tectonic plates, the site at which an oceanic plate is sliding under a continental plate. ruptures create M 9 quake and extend 1000 km along subduction zone and produce uplift of seafloor
Effects of Tsunami
*Primary:* -Flooding -Erosion (landscape and human structures) >> Debris *Secondary:* -Fires (ruptured gas lines) -Contaminated water supplies -Disease -Radioactivity
Locked fault
A fault that is not slipping because frictional resistance on the fault is greater than the shear stress across the fault (it is stuck). Such faults may store strain for extended periods that is eventually released in an earthquake when frictional resistance is overcome.
Fjord
A long narrow inlet from the sea between steep cliffs or hills now recognized as a way to trigger tsunami
tsunami wave train
A tsunami is a series of waves, not just one, they are separated by a variable time period.
seismic waves in tsunamis
A tsunami is series of waves caused by a disturbance on the seafloor that displaces the overlying ocean. The disturbance must be a physical displacement of water, whether by movement along a fault, a landslide, or a volcanic explosion. This means that tsunami are caused by movement through the water column, not by seismic waves moving through water
Which site experienced the lowest wave heights during the 1946 tsunami?
D near waikiki beach 2 or 9 ft
Puerto Rico Trench
Deepest point in Atlantic Ocean
local tsunami
Heads in the opposite direction toward the nearby land and arrives quickly following an earthquake little warning time
wave crest
Highest point of a wave
Wavelength
Horizontal distance between the crests or between the troughs of two adjacent waves
Where are tsunamis most common?
Pacific Ocean or subduction zone earthquakes
Run-up height
Run-up height is the tsunami vertical height above sea level at its furthest point inland. Run-up factor is the deep-water wave amplitude divided by the run-up height. so how far out it goes
megathrust fault
The plate boundary separating a subducting slab of oceanic lithosphere and the overlying plate.
Displacement of ocean water
The upward or downward movement of the seafloor displaces the entire mass of water from the sea bottom to the ocean surface
Period of a wave
Time for one complete waveform to travel
measuring runup
UP: Runup= vertical (elevation) extent of tsunami waters above sea level ACROSS: Inundation= the horizontal (inland) extent of tsunami waters Tidal average water level at shoreline
water column
Vertical Zones of the ocean with changing conditions as depth increases.
water waves transmit energy
Wavelength: 100-300 km in the open ocean Loss of wave energy is inversely proportional to wavelength Short wavelength: pppffflt Long wavelength: Can travel over entire ocean with almost no loss in energy
less common cause of tsunami
landslides
shallow water
less energy waves and less devastating
at sea waves have
long wavelength, low amplitude
tsunami geologic history
look for marine sands and sediments
Tsunami effects exacerbated by subsidence
lpate motion can change elevation on land 1. Uplift raises elevation -Subsidence lowers elevation 2. Earthquake caused forest to drop below sea level -In a salt marsh -Saltwater rushed in, drowning and poisoning trees 3. New, lower elevation terrain became a tidal marsh
Natural Service Function of tsunamis
many chemical from land to ecosystems large volumes of sediment that develop landscape over time
Indundation
max distance inland reached by the tsunami measured from tide or shoreline
deep depth
means they can carry more energy, move faster, longer wavelength
very rare cause for tsunami
meteorite
human interaction with tsunamis
not tied to tsunamis people who live near coasts will be affected
nuclear disaster japan
nuclear reactor meltdown
Tsunami
produced by the sudden vertical displacement of ocean water fault rupture along subduction zones at tectonic boundaries
steep slope
provides protection from tall waves
runup man summarizes
run up elevations from one tsunami
Monte Carlo Simulation
selects a random sample of earthquakes of various magnitudes and determines the tsunamis that would be propagated from these quakes