Title of article :
Erosion and Sedimentation from the 17 July, 1998 Papua New Guinea Tsunami
Author/Authors :
Guy Gelfenbaum، نويسنده , , Bruce Jaffe ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
This paper describes erosion and sedimentation associated with the 17 July 1998 Papua
New Guinea tsunami. Observed within two months of the tsunami, distinct deposits of a layer averaging
8-cm thick of gray sand rested on a brown muddy soil. In most cases the sand is normally graded, with
more coarse sand near the base and fine sand at the top. In some cases the deposit contains rip-up clasts of
muddy soil and in some locations it has a mud cap. Detailed measurements of coastal topography, tsunami
flow height and direction indicators, and deposit thickness were made in the field, and samples of the
deposit were collected for grain-size analysis in the laboratory. Four shore-normal transects were examined
in detail to assess the shore-normal and along shore distribution of the tsunami deposit. Near the shoreline,
the tsunami eroded approximately 10–25 cm of sand from the beach and berm. The sandy layer deposited
by the tsunami began 50–150 m inland from the shoreline and extended across the coastal plain to within
about 40 m of the limit of inundation; a total distance of up to 750 m from the beach. As much as 2/3 of
the sand in the deposit originated from offshore. Across most of the coastal plain the deposit thickness and
mean grain size varied little. In the along-shore direction the deposit thickness varied with the tsunami
wave height; both largest near the entrance to Sissano Lagoon.
Keywords :
Tsunami deposit , Papua New Guinea , coastal sedimentation , flow directionindicators. , Erosion
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics