Short communication: Recognising the perils of landslide-generated tsunamis in the Asia–Pacific region

Author First name, Last name, Institution

James P. TerryFollow
James Goff
Nigel Winspear
Vena Pearl Bongolan

Document Type

Article

Source of Publication

Natural Hazards

Publication Date

7-15-2019

Abstract

© 2019, Springer Nature B.V. Two recent tsunamis in Indonesia highlight the importance of submarine landslides. Although both events had different origins (volcanic, seismic), submarine landsliding was probably the key component in tsunamigenesis. While a few recent submarine landslide-generated tsunamis have been discussed in the literature, these types of events have not been seriously scrutinised by geoscientists or hazard modellers. This is most likely because of both a lack of awareness and also the common perception that such events are too remote a possibility to be of major concern. However, by catching us off-guard, these two Indonesian events have brought slope-failure tsunamigenesis into sharper focus. It is hoped that this will stimulate greater scholarship on the issue of slope-failure tsunamigenesis worldwide, with an aim to better understanding event characteristics, probabilities, and ultimately better inform existing risk reduction strategies.

ISSN

0921-030X

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Volume

97

Issue

3

First Page

1413

Last Page

1416

Disciplines

Life Sciences

Keywords

Asia–Pacific region, Hazard, Risk, Submarine landslides, Tsunamigenesis

Scopus ID

85070281008

Indexed in Scopus

yes

Open Access

no

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