Geology Times
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to GeologyTimes.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Stronger coastal winds due to climate change may have far-reaching effects 1/3/2009

Trapped water cause of regular tremors under Vancouver Island 1/2/2009

6 North American sites hold 12,900-year-old nanodiamond-rich soil 1/2/2009

Climate change could dramatically affect water supplies 12/31/2008

Some climate impacts happening faster than anticipated 12/30/2008

Lifecycles of tropical cyclones predicted in global computer model 12/29/2008

To improve forecasting earthquakes, mathematician studies grains 12/26/2008

New 'seawater' -- the way ahead for ocean science 12/25/2008

Abrupt climate change: United States report findings 12/24/2008

CAT scan reveals inner workings of volcano island 12/23/2008

No quick or easy technological fix for climate change, researchers say 12/23/2008

Abrupt climate shifts may move faster than thought 12/22/2008

Professor 'follows the elements' to understand evolution in ancient oceans 12/22/2008

The year of the Alaska volcano: Eruptions keep observatory busy 12/21/2008

Researchers use satellites to measure inland floods 12/20/2008

Mediterranean 'due a tsunami' research suggests (3/12/2008)

Tags:
tsunami, mediterranean, earthquakes

Calculation of the sea wave (tsunami) caused by the AD 365 earthquake at 30 minutes after the earthquake. Red and blue shades correspond to peaks and troughs of about 50 cm.
Calculation of the sea wave (tsunami) caused by the AD 365 earthquake at 30 minutes after the earthquake. Red and blue shades correspond to peaks and troughs of about 50 cm.
Studying an ancient earthquake has enabled Oxford University researchers to quantify the likelihood of a tsunami in the Eastern Mediterranean.

They estimate that a ring of faults around the south of Greece and the Aegean Sea generates tsunami earthquakes approximately once every 800 years and, because the last such earthquake took place in 1303, the probability of a tsunami affecting the region is much higher than had been thought.

The Oxford researchers - working with colleagues from the Universities of Cambridge, Nice and Imperial College London - identified the cause of an earthquake that generated a tsunami that destroyed Alexandria on 21 July AD 365. Reporting in Nature Geoscience, the group describe how they tracked down the origin of this ancient quake to a fault beneath western Crete. Very precise radiocarbon dates of uplifted shorelines show that western Crete was lifted by about ten metres within a few decades of AD 365, and the shape of the uplifted shorelines is diagnostic of distortion of the land surface by an earthquake.

The researchers then used GPS stations to take very precise measurements of how the Earth's surface is being slowly compressed all around the southern Aegean Sea today. From these measurements they predict that the energy being built up will be released in tsunami-earthquakes somewhere along this fault approximately every 800 years.

Professor Philip England, Head of Oxford's Department of Earth Sciences and a co-author of the paper, said: 'The AD 365 event is important because it is the only earthquake in the Mediterranean where the evidence can be studied on land, rather than being hidden under the ocean. It was one of the most devastating events in the ancient world: destroying cities and drowning thousands of people in coastal regions from the Nile Delta to modern day Dubrovnik.'

Calculations suggest that, as it crossed the open ocean, the wave height of the AD 365 tsunami was similar to that of the 2004 Sumatra tsunami - around one metre high. This leads the researchers to believe that, when it hit the shore, this sea wave would have been highly destructive.

'This is our first real stab at quantifying the risk of a tsunami event in the Eastern Mediterranean,' said Professor England. 'What we can say for sure is that if the AD 365 earthquake were to be repeated it would have a devastating impact on the Mediterranean region.'

This work was supported by the UK's Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and by Oxford University.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Oxford

Loans - United Specialties - Renegade Motorhomes - Credit Counseling

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2010 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.