Abstract

The ∼8.15ka Storegga submarine slide was a large (∼3000km3), tsunamigenic slide off the coast of Norway. The resulting tsunami had run-up heights of around 10–20m on the Norwegian coast, over 12m in Shetland, 3–6m on the Scottish mainland coast and reached as far as Greenland. Accurate numerical simulations of Storegga require high spatial resolution near the coasts, particularly near tsunami run-up observations, and also in the slide region. However, as the computational domain must span the whole of the Norwegian-Greenland sea, employing uniformly high spatial resolution is computationally prohibitive. To overcome this problem, we present a multiscale numerical model of the Storegga slide-generated tsunami where spatial resolution varies from 500m to 50km across the entire Norwegian-Greenland sea domain to optimally resolve the slide region, important coastlines and bathymetric changes. We compare results from our multiscale model to previous results using constant-resolution models and show that accounting for changes in bathymetry since 8.15ka, neglected in previous numerical studies of the Storegga slide-tsunami, improves the agreement between the model and inferred run-up heights in specific locations, especially in the Shetlands, where maximum run-up height increased from 8m (modern bathymetry) to 13m (palaeobathymetry). By tracking the Storegga tsunami as far south as the southern North sea, we also found that wave heights were high enough to inundate Doggerland, an island in the southern North Sea prior to sea level rise over the last 8ka.

Highlights

  • Around 8150 years ago the Storegga submarine slide generated a large tsunami that spread across the Norwegian-Greenland sea (Haflidason et al, 2005; Bondevik et al, 2005; Løvholt et al, 2005)

  • We demonstrate numerical convergence of the model, before using a multiscale model to show how it is possible to achieve high resolution in coastal areas in a simulation that includes the entire Norway-Greenland sea and tracks the tsunami wave for 15 h

  • Having benchmarked the implementation of the prescribed slide boundary conditions against independent models, we show how Fluidity is capable of simulating real-world scale slide-generated tsunamis with high resolution in areas of interest by recreating the Storegga slide

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Summary

Introduction

Around 8150 years ago the Storegga submarine slide generated a large tsunami that spread across the Norwegian-Greenland sea (Haflidason et al, 2005; Bondevik et al, 2005; Løvholt et al, 2005). The submarine slide had a volume of between 2400 and 3200 km, affecting a region of 95,000 km, making it one of the world’s largest exposed submarine slides (Haflidason et al, 2005). The Storegga slide is bigger than Scotland, and its headwall extends for $300 km. It dwarves even the largest slide yet found on land. Many tsunami deposits from the Storegga slide-generated wave have been found across the region, including Scotland

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