Abstract

Abstract. We perform numerical simulations of the coastal impact of large co-seismic tsunamis, initiated in the Puerto Rican trench, both in far-field areas along the upper US East coast (and other Caribbean islands), and in more detail in the near-field, along the Puerto Rico North Shore (PRNS). We first model a magnitude 9.1 extreme co-seismic source and then a smaller 8.7 magnitude source, which approximately correspond to 600 and 200 year return periods, respectively. In both cases, tsunami generation and propagation (both near- and far-field) are first performed in a coarse 2′ basin scale grid, with ETOPO2 bathymetry, using a fully nonlinear and dispersive long wave tsunami model (FUNWAVE). Coastal runup and inundation are then simulated for two selected areas, using finer coastal nested grids. Thus, a 15″ (450 m) grid is used to calculate detailed far-field impact along the US East Coast, from New Jersey to Maine, and a 3″ (90 m) grid (for the finest resolution), encompassing the entire PRNS, is used to compute detailed near-field impact along the PRNS (runup and inundation). To perform coastal simulations in nested grids, accurate bathymetry/topography databases are constructed by combining ETOPO2 2′ data (in deep water) and USGS' or NOAA's 15″ or 3″ (in shallow water) data. In the far-field, runup caused by the extreme 9.1 source would be severe (over 10 m) for some nearby Caribbean islands, but would only reach up to 3 m along the selected section of the East coast. A sensitivity analysis to the bathymetric resolution (for a constant 3″ model grid) of runup along the PRNS, confirms the convergence of runup results for a topographic resolution 24″ or better, and thus stresses the importance of using sufficiently resolved bathymetric data, in order to accurately predict extreme runup values, particularly when bathymetric focusing is significant. Runup (10–22 m) and inundation are found to be very large at most locations for the extreme 9.1 source. Both simulated spatial inundation snapshots and time series indicate, the inundation would be particularly severe near and around the low-lying city of San Juan. For the 8.7 source, runup along the PRNS would be much less severe (3–6 m), but still significant, while inundation would only be significant near and around San Juan. This first-order tsunami hazard analysis stresses the importance of conducting more detailed and comprehensive studies, particularly of tsunami hazard along the PRNS, for a more complete and realistic selection of sources; such work is ongoing as part of a US funded (NTHMP) tsunami inundation mapping effort in Puerto Rico.

Highlights

  • Tsunami hazard assessment is critical for coastal communities, emergency services, industry, and to develop regional contingency plans in response to catastrophic events

  • Knight assumed a simple homogenous source model, covering a 600 km by 150 km area of the Puerto Rico trench, with a fault plane orientation based on the Puerto Rican Trench (PRT) geology

  • Along the rest of the upper US East coast (New Jersey, NJ; Long Island, NY; Rhode Island and Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard (MA)), potential tsunami impact from this source would be smaller, significant, with up to 3 m maximum runup in this coarse grid

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Summary

Introduction

Tsunami hazard assessment is critical for coastal communities, emergency services, industry, and to develop regional contingency plans in response to catastrophic events. To refine grid size nearshore, where (as we shall see) it becomes essential to properly resolve salient bathymetric features in order to correctly model runup ( in areas where bathymetric focusing is important), we use a manual nesting approach, similar to that successfully used by Grilli et al (2007) and Ioualalen et al (2007), to model observed runup in Thailand from the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami This nesting method consists in using overlapping coarser and finer grid domains, with the latter being large enough to allow for the meaningful part of the incoming tsunami wave train to enter it, while its front does not significantly interact yet with important coastal bathymetric features.

Co-seismic tsunami sources for the Puerto Rico North Shore
Computation of co-seismic tsunami sources in the PRT
Far-field tsunami propagation and coastal impact
Near-field tsunami propagation and impact on PRNS
Initial conditions and numerical parameters for near-field simulations
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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