Title of article :
Numerical Simulations of Tsunami Waves and Currents for Southern Vancouver Island from a Cascadia Megathrust Earthquake
Author/Authors :
Josef Y. Cherniawsky، نويسنده , , Vasily V. Titov ، نويسنده , , Kelin Wang، نويسنده , , Jing-Yang Li ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The 1700 great Cascadia earthquake (M = 9) generated widespread tsunami waves that
affected the entire Pacific Ocean and caused damage as distant as Japan. Similar catastrophic waves
may be generated by a future Cascadia megathrust earthquake. We use three rupture scenarios for this
earthquake in numerical experiments to study propagation of tsunami waves off the west coast of
North America and to predict tsunami heights and currents in several bays and harbours on southern
Vancouver Island, British Columbia, including Ucluelet, located on the west coast of the island, and
Victoria and Esquimalt harbours inside Juan de Fuca Strait. The earthquake scenarios are: an 1100-km
long rupture over the entire length of the subduction zone and separate ruptures of its northern or
southern segments. As expected, the southern earthquake scenario has a limited effect over most of
the Vancouver Island coast, with waves in the harbours not exceeding 1 m. The other two
scenarios produce large tsunami waves, higher than 16 m at one location near Ucluelet and over 4 m
inside Esquimalt and Victoria harbours, and very strong currents that reach 17 m/s in narrow channels
and near headlands. Because the assumed rupture scenarios are based on a previous earthquake, direct
use of the model results to estimate the effect of a future earthquake requires appropriate qualification.
Keywords :
Tsunami waves , megathrust earthquake , numerical modelling. , Cascadia subduction zone
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics