Abstract

Evidence for frequent, large landslides on the flanks of the volcanic edifices forming the Canary Islands include outstanding landslide scars and their correlative submarine and subaerial rock and debris avalanche deposits. These landslides involved volumes ranging from tens to hundreds of km3. The sudden entry of large volumes of rock masses in the sea may have triggered tsunamis capable of affecting the source and neighboring islands, with the resulting huge waves dragging coastal and seabed materials and fauna and redepositing them inland. Here, we present new geological evidence and geochronological data of at least five megatsunamis in Tenerife, Lanzarote, and Gran Canaria, triggered by island flank megalandslides, and occasionally explosive eruptions, during the last 1 million years. The exceptional preservation of the megatsunami deposits and the large area they cover, particularly in Tenerife, provide fundamental data on the number of tsunami events and run-ups, and allow proposals on the sources and age of the tsunamis. Tsunami run-up heights up to 290 m above coeval sea level, some of the highest known on Earth in recent geological times, were estimated based on sedimentological, geomorphological, paleontological, and geochronological data. The research results made it possible to estimate the recurrence of tsunamis in the archipelago during the last hundreds of thousands of years, and to establish relationships between tsunami deposits and the probable triggering island flank landslides.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMegatsunami waves higher than 40 m have been attributed to voluminous subaerial and submarine landslides ( to volcanic islands giant flank landslides), explosive volcanic eruptions, and asteroid impacts

  • Megatsunami deposits that are recognized in several field locations of the Canary

  • The ages of the different tsunami deposits here described in Tenerife, Gran Canaria, and Lanzarote are discussed below using new data obtained in this study together with previously published ages of lava flows and fossils

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Megatsunami waves higher than 40 m have been attributed to voluminous subaerial and submarine landslides ( to volcanic islands giant flank landslides), explosive volcanic eruptions, and asteroid impacts. The role of large prehistoric landslides in the geological and morphological evolution of volcanic edifices in oceanic islands has been accepted worldwide in the last few decades. Until recently, they had not been recognized as responsible for the largest tsunamis on Earth [10,11,12,13,14,20,21,22], together with those caused by asteroid impacts

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call