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Spazito

(50,269 posts)
Wed Mar 30, 2022, 04:28 PM Mar 2022

B.C. landslide triggered 100-metre tall lake tsunami, study shows

A massive landslide on B.C.'s remote central coast in 2020 triggered a lake tsunami over 100 metres tall, according to a new paper published by researchers from the University of Northern British Columbia.

Described as a rare "hazard cascade," the tsunami then sent a vast torrent of water or "outburst flood" into Elliot Creek, uprooting trees, soil and rock as it surged down the valley. The slurry was in turn propelled in the Southgate River and then Bute Inlet, leaving a devastated landscape in its wake.

snip

"The landslide displaced enough water to cause a tsunami with a wave height that exceeded 100 metres. This drained most of the lake water which then travelled down a 10-kilometre-long channel causing widespread channel erosion and loss of salmon habitat."

Rapid thinning and retreat of the glacier at the slide site set the stage for the hazard cascade, according to the study co-author.

"Once you lose the supporting structure of the ice that is backstopping and protecting these steep slopes, they are much more susceptible to failure," said UNBC geography professor Brian Menounos.

more

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/b-c-landslide-triggered-100-metre-tall-lake-tsunami-study-shows-1.6401469

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B.C. landslide triggered 100-metre tall lake tsunami, study shows (Original Post) Spazito Mar 2022 OP
100 metres tall is about 36 story building. . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Mar 2022 #1
I hope nobody was living there. applegrove Mar 2022 #2
This message was self-deleted by its author applegrove Mar 2022 #3
Lake Missoula flood central scrutinizer Mar 2022 #4

Response to Bernardo de La Paz (Reply #1)

central scrutinizer

(11,646 posts)
4. Lake Missoula flood
Wed Mar 30, 2022, 06:32 PM
Mar 2022

At the end of the last Ice Age there were stupendous floods. Rocks from Montana were deposited hundreds of feet above the level of the Willamette River in Oregon. They were embedded in ice chunks that got deposited on hillsides.

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