Abstract

Abstract. Data on tsunamis occurring in the Black Sea and the Azov Sea from antiquity up to the present were updated, critically evaluated and compiled in the standard format developed since the 90's for the New European Tsunami Catalogue. Twenty nine events were examined but three of them, supposedly occurring in 557 AD, 815 AD and 1341 or 1343, were very likely falsely reported. Most of the remaining 26 events were generated in Crimea, offshore Bulgaria as well as offshore North Anatolia. For each of the 26 events examined, 22 events were classified as reliable ones receiving a score of 3 or 4 on a 4-grade reliability scale. Most of them were caused by earthquakes, such as the key event 544/545 of offshore Varna, but a few others were attributed either to aseismic earth slumps or to unknown causes. The tsunami intensity was estimated using the traditional 6-grade scale and the new 12-grade scale introduced by Papadopoulos and Imamura (2001). From 544/545 up to now, only two reliable events of high intensity K ≥ 7 have been reported, which very roughly indicates that the mean repeat time is ∼ 750 years. Five reliable tsunamis of moderate intensity 4 ≤ K < 7 have been observed from 1650 up to the present, which implies a recurrence of 72 years on the average. Although these calculations were based on a very small statistical sample of tsunami events, the repeat times found are consistent with the theoretical expectations from size-frequency relations. However, in the Black Sea there is no evidence of tsunamis of very high intensity (K ∼ 10) such as the AD 365, 1303 and 1956 ones associated with large earthquakes occurring along the Hellenic arc and trench, Greece, or the 1908 one in Messina strait, Italy. This observation, along with the relatively low tsunami frequency, indicates that the tsunami hazard in the Black Sea is low to moderate but not negligible. The tsunami hazard in the Azov Sea is very low because of the very low seismicity but also because of the shallow water prevailing there. In fact, only three possible tsunami events have been reported in the Azov Sea.

Highlights

  • The study of tsunami phenomena in the Black Sea region, including the Azov Sea, has been the subject of several papers

  • The tsunami catalogue presented here is a Quick-Look Catalogue (QLC) which consists of three sections: the Quick-Look Table (QLT), the Quick-Look Accounts File (QLAF) and the References File (RF)

  • [9], 1650, Sivash (Azov Sea) coordinates: 44◦42 N, 33◦18 E cause: ER tsunami intensity: 2–3/4–5 reliability: 3. This was an earthquake (M = 7.0±0.5) and tsunami event reported by Nikonov (1997a) to have occurred in 1650 in the western shores of the Azov Sea as well as in the Black Sea: “Sea flooded the shore to connect with the Sivash, the water receded near Genichesk and Arabat

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Summary

Introduction

The study of tsunami phenomena in the Black Sea region, including the Azov Sea, has been the subject of several papers. On the other hand, Dotsenko and Eremeev (2008) dicussed the necessity and possibility of tsunami early warning in the Black Sea. Reviews of historical events and efforts for cataloguing tsunamis in the Black Sea were published by several authors (Grigorash, 1959a; Grigorash and Korneva, 1969; Ranguelov et al, 1985; Fomicheva et al, 1991; Kuran and Yalciner, 1993; Dotsenko, 1995; Nikonov, 1997a, b; Pelinovsky, 1999; Altinok and Ersoy, 2000; Yalciner et al, 2004; Oaie, 2006a). In this paper we have compiled a new tsunami catalogue for the Black Sea and the Azov Sea by evaluating critically geological, archaeological, historical and instrumental data covering the time period from the 1st century BC up to the present.

A new tsunami catalogue
The Quick-Look Accounts File
BS South Crimea ER 44 24 34 18 15
Tsunami sources and recurrence
Conclusions and discussion
Full Text
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