TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND

New Zealand sits in a precarious position astride the boundary between the Pacific and Australian Plates. There is a wide range of potential tsunamigenic sources in this area including fault movements, submarine landslides, volcanic activity, and other mechanisms. In addition, considerable prehistor...

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Main Authors: Roy A. Walters, James Goff, Kelin Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tsunami Society International 2006-01-01
Series:Science of Tsunami Hazards
Subjects:
Online Access:http://tsunamisociety.org/245walters.pdf
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spelling doaj-c6c6a0f48ef7402db0ef4ac8565c31732021-04-02T09:12:23ZengTsunami Society InternationalScience of Tsunami Hazards8755-68392006-01-01245339357TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALANDRoy A. WaltersJames GoffKelin WangNew Zealand sits in a precarious position astride the boundary between the Pacific and Australian Plates. There is a wide range of potential tsunamigenic sources in this area including fault movements, submarine landslides, volcanic activity, and other mechanisms. In addition, considerable prehistoric information indicates that large tsunamis have inundated the coastline several times in the past. A part of our work has been directed toward using historic and prehistoric tsunami data to evaluate possible sources. Several types of dislocation models and submarine landslide models are used to simulate the displacement of the sources. A finite element numerical model is used to simulate generation, propagation and runup of the resultant tsunami. As an example, we present results for the Bay of Plenty, northeast coast of the North Island, New Zealand. The range of source types includes local faults, subduction zone rupture, volcanic eruptions, sector collapse of seamounts, and submarine landslides. A likely major source is a subduction zone event along the Tonga-Kermadec Trench. Data from paleotsunami deposits have guided the model in determining appropriate source characteristics and establishing the most significant event for this region.http://tsunamisociety.org/245walters.pdftsunamitsunami generationearthquakesfaultingBay of PlentyNew Zealandgeologytsunami wavestsunami propagationnumerical modelingtsunami propagation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roy A. Walters
James Goff
Kelin Wang
spellingShingle Roy A. Walters
James Goff
Kelin Wang
TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND
Science of Tsunami Hazards
tsunami
tsunami generation
earthquakes
faulting
Bay of Plenty
New Zealand
geology
tsunami waves
tsunami propagation
numerical modeling
tsunami propagation
author_facet Roy A. Walters
James Goff
Kelin Wang
author_sort Roy A. Walters
title TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND
title_short TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND
title_full TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND
title_fullStr TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND
title_full_unstemmed TSUNAMIGENIC SOURCES IN THE BAY OF PLENTY, NEW ZEALAND
title_sort tsunamigenic sources in the bay of plenty, new zealand
publisher Tsunami Society International
series Science of Tsunami Hazards
issn 8755-6839
publishDate 2006-01-01
description New Zealand sits in a precarious position astride the boundary between the Pacific and Australian Plates. There is a wide range of potential tsunamigenic sources in this area including fault movements, submarine landslides, volcanic activity, and other mechanisms. In addition, considerable prehistoric information indicates that large tsunamis have inundated the coastline several times in the past. A part of our work has been directed toward using historic and prehistoric tsunami data to evaluate possible sources. Several types of dislocation models and submarine landslide models are used to simulate the displacement of the sources. A finite element numerical model is used to simulate generation, propagation and runup of the resultant tsunami. As an example, we present results for the Bay of Plenty, northeast coast of the North Island, New Zealand. The range of source types includes local faults, subduction zone rupture, volcanic eruptions, sector collapse of seamounts, and submarine landslides. A likely major source is a subduction zone event along the Tonga-Kermadec Trench. Data from paleotsunami deposits have guided the model in determining appropriate source characteristics and establishing the most significant event for this region.
topic tsunami
tsunami generation
earthquakes
faulting
Bay of Plenty
New Zealand
geology
tsunami waves
tsunami propagation
numerical modeling
tsunami propagation
url http://tsunamisociety.org/245walters.pdf
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