Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Massive Greenland tsunami behind mysterious nine-day seismic event: report
Copenhagen, Sept 13 (AFP) Sep 13, 2024
A tsunami stemming from a landslide in a Greenland fjord, caused by melting ice, was behind a surprising seismic event last year that shook the earth for nine days, a researcher told AFP Friday.

According to a report recently published in the scientific journal Science, tremors that were registered in September 2023 originated from the massive wave rocking back and forth in the Dickson fjord in Greenland's remote east.

"The completely unique thing about this event is how long the seismic signal lasted and how constant the frequency was," one of the authors of the report, Kristian Svennevig, from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS), told AFP.

"Other landslides and tsunamis have produced seismic signals but only for a couple of hours and very locally. This one was observed globally all the way to the Antarctic," he said.

The phenomenon initially surprised the scientific community, which began by defining it as an "unidentified seismic object" before determining that the source was the landslide.

In September 2023, 25 million cubic metres of rock and ice fell into the fjord in the remote and uninhabited area, almost 200 kilometres (124 miles) from the ocean.

The landslide triggered a 200-metre-high mega-tsunami at its epicentre.

Seventy kilometres away, four-metre-high tsunami waves damaged a research base on the island of Ella.

The collapse was caused by the thinning of the glacier at the base of the mountain, a process accelerated by climate change, according to the report.

"With the Arctic continuing to warm we may expect the frequency and magnitude of such events to increase in the future," Svennevig said.

"We have no experience with dealing with an Arctic as warm as we observe now," he added.

He stressed the need for early warning systems to be put in place, but noted that it was a challenge in such extreme environments.


ADVERTISEMENT




Space News from SpaceDaily.com
China's Shenzhou-20 astronauts return to Earth after delay
Blue Origin launches NASA Mars mission and nails booster landing
Race for first private space station heats up as NASA set to retire ISS

24/7 Energy News Coverage
Rise of the robots: the promise of physical AI
Amazon robotics lead casts doubt on eye-catching humanoids
'Western tech dominance fading' at Lisbon's Web Summit

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
'The war of tomorrow will begin in space': Macron
UN watchdog calls on Iran to urgently allow 'long overdue' uranium stockpile verification
How drones are altering contemporary warfare

24/7 News Coverage
Largest modern crater identified in Chinas Holocene geology
Inner core of Earth found to exist in dynamic superionic phase
Carbon-rich waters are becoming even more acidic as atmospheric CO2 levels rise


All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.