Underwater
Avalanche! Melting Ice Caps Could Trigger Tsunamis
16
August, 2013
If
melting ice caps trigger rapid sea level rise, the strain that the
edges of continents could experience might set off underwater
landslides, new research suggests.
Submarine
landslides happen
on every continental margin, the underwater parts of continental
plates bordering oceanic plates. These underwater avalanches, which
can happen when underwater slopes get hit by earthquakes or otherwise
have too much weight loaded onto them, can
generate dangerous tsunamis.
A
staggering half of all the Earth moved by submarine landslides over
the past 125,000 years apparently happened between 8,000 and 15,000
years ago. "This time period coincides with the period of most
rapid sea level rise following the end of the last ice age,"
said study co-author Daniel Brothers, a geophysicist at the U.S.
Geological Survey's Coastal and Marine Science Center in Woods Hole,
Mass. [10
Tsunamis That Changed History]
Since
these prehistoric disasters coincided with changes in climate,
previous research suggested natural global warming might have been
their cause, but what exactly the link might be was unclear. To learn
more, Brothers and his colleagues generated 3D computer models of the
effects of 395 feet (120 meters) of sea level rise on the continental
margins off North Carolina and Brazil's Amazon coast.
The
rapid sea level rise that happened between 8,000 and 15,000 years ago
was due to melting ice caps, which were originally hundreds to
thousands of feet high.
These glaciers placed weight on the planet's
rocky surface, building stress on faults in the Earth for millennia.
The later thinning and retreat of these glaciers raised sea levels by
about 395 feet, increasing the amount of pressure these critically
stressed faults experienced across their entire length by an amount
similar to that of the average human bite. This would be enough
pressure to set off the faults, triggering
underwater landslides,
the models showed.
The
scientists added that such underwater landslides could have helped
release vast quantities of methane, a greenhouse gas, from the
seabed. This could have, in turn, driven profound changes in the
oceans and the atmosphere, such as the warming of the climate.
Brothers
and his colleagues Karen Luttrell and Jason Chaytor detailed their
findings online July 22 in the journal Geology.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.