Research

Landslide-Triggered Tsunamis

A landslide triggers a tsunami in this laboratory experiment.

After the 2018 Anak Krakatoa eruption, a tsunami that ricocheted through the surrounding waters, killing hundreds on nearby islands. The source of that tsunami was a small landslide. Once the air cleared and researchers could assess how much material slid into the ocean, they were shocked that such a small volume created so much destruction.

Now new efforts are revealing the linkage between landslides and the waves they make. Researchers released glass beads into a tank of water, observing the waves that form as the beads run out. Depending on the relative initial height of the beads compared to the water depth, they observed three different kinds of waves. Not only that, they were able to connect the granular mechanics of the landslide to the hydrodynamic formation of waves, allowing predictions of the waves that will form for a given landslide.

Currently, the predictive model isn’t sophisticated enough to handle a geometry as complex as that of the Anak Krakatoa landslide, but it’s an important step toward understanding — and potentially mitigating the damage of — future oceanside landslides. (Image and research credit: W. Sarlin et al.; via APS Physics; submitted by Kam-Yung Soh)

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