快猫短视频

Wave goodbye

Get ready for widespread wipe-out when the La Palma tsunamis hit

WHEN half a Spanish island collapses, tsunamis will devastate the coastline
of countries all around the Atlantic. And all because tsunamis can turn
corners.

Last year, Simon Day of University College London and his colleagues reported
that a flank of a volcano on the island of La Palma in the Canary Islands was
unstable
(快猫短视频, 7th October 2000, p 26).

If the flank collapses, which Day expects to happen sometime in the next few
thousand years, the resulting landslide will dump a trillion tonnes of rock into
the Atlantic within minutes. Day predicted that this would probably send a huge
tsunami raging towards America鈥檚 East Coast.

Now he has teamed up with Steven Ward, a wave expert at the University of
California, Berkeley, to work out the tsunami鈥檚 size and spread. Ward has
developed a model of waves triggered by underwater earthquakes, ranging from a
mere 3 inches high for a magnitude-6.5 earthquake, to tsunamis several metres
high for a real whopper.

When the La Palma volcano caves in, Ward says it will trigger a series of
around ten waves, spaced about a hundred kilometres apart. As they reach the
shallow water near the North American coast, they will build up to about 50
metres high, enough to travel several kilometres inland. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a
significantly broad danger zone,鈥 says Day.

Although the volcano鈥檚 unstable flank points directly towards North America,
it鈥檚 not just North Americans who should be worried. Day originally estimated
that the collapse would create a shockwave travelling in a straight line across
the Atlantic, directly towards America鈥檚 East Coast. This would happen if the
speed of the landslide was faster than the speed of the waves in deep water. But
the model shows that the landslide will actually move at around 100 metres per
second, about two-thirds as fast as the waves in the water. This means the
tsunamis will spread out in an arc
(see Diagram). Shallower water near La Palma
would then slow the waves down, forcing them to curl around towards northern
Africa and northern Europe, even behind La Palma on the Spanish coast.

Areas at risk of flooding from La Palma tsunami

Gary McMurty, who works on landslides at the University of Hawaii, says
there鈥檚 no point losing sleep just yet. 鈥淭hese events are very rare and
shouldn鈥檛 worry anyone who has a lifetime of less than a hundred years,鈥 he
says.

But even if beach bums can rest easy, Day expects the result to shake up
geologists. Now they know that tsunamis can spread out and turn corners, he
hopes researchers will be more flexible in matching inland deposits of shells,
coral and sand to ancient landslides on distant continents. 鈥淣orthern Brazil is
going to be a good place to look for past evidence of collapses at the
Canaries,鈥 says Day. 鈥淲e wouldn鈥檛 have thought of that.鈥

  • More at: Geophysical Research Letters (vol 28, p 3397)

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