Options
Highly variable recurrence of tsunamis in the 7,400 years before the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
Date Issued
2017-07-19
Date Available
2018-01-15T13:40:49Z
Abstract
The devastating 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami caught millions of coastal residents and the scientific community off-guard. Subsequent research in the Indian Ocean basin has identified prehistoric tsunamis, but the timing and recurrence intervals of such events are uncertain. Here we present an extraordinary 7,400 year stratigraphic sequence of prehistoric tsunami deposits from a coastal cave in Aceh, Indonesia. This record demonstrates that at least 11 prehistoric tsunamis struck the Aceh coast between 7,400 and 2,900 years ago. The average time period between tsunamis is about 450 years with intervals ranging from a long, dormant period of over 2,000 years, to multiple tsunamis within the span of a century. Although there is evidence that the likelihood of another tsunamigenic earthquake in Aceh province is high, these variable recurrence intervals suggest that long dormant periods may follow Sunda megathrust ruptures as large as that of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
Sponsorship
Science Foundation Ireland
Other Sponsorship
National Research Foundation Singapore
Singapore Ministry of Education
National Science Foundation
Asia Research Institute
National University of Singapore
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer Nature
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
8
Subjects
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
Loading...
Name
insight_publication.pdf
Size
6.84 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
b441715413d00b8c5af0281a2187d6a8
Owning collection
Mapped collections