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Scientists warn climate change could trigger catastrophic tsunamis

“Submarine landslides are a major geohazard with the potential to trigger tsunamis that can lead to huge loss of life."

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Large waves in the Atlantic Ocean. (Photo by César Couto via Unsplash)

By Stephen Beech via SWNS

Climate change could trigger huge underwater landslides in Antarctica that generate devastating tsunamis large enough to threaten a catastrophic loss of life as far away as New Zealand and South America, warns new research.

Such massive waves could also destroy major infrastructure, including subsea cables, causing economic havoc as well as "substantial" casualties thousands of miles from their origin, say scientists.

Researchers have discovered the cause of underwater landslides tens of thousands of years ago, which they believe may have generated waves that stretched across the Southern Ocean as far as South East Asia.

With Earth currently going through another period of extensive climate change – once again including warmer waters, rising sea levels and shrinking ice sheets – researchers believe there is the potential for such incidents to be replicated.

The international team uncovered layers of weak, fossilized and biologically-rich sediments hundreds of meters beneath the seafloor.

Those formed beneath extensive areas of underwater landslides, many of which cut more than 100 meters into the seabed.

They say those weak layers – made up of historic biological material – made the area "susceptible" to failure in the face of earthquakes and other seismic activity.

Alaska 1964 Good Friday earthquake and tsunami damage. (Photo by NOAA via Unsplash)

The researchers also found that the layers formed at a time when temperatures in Antarctica were up to three degrees Celsius warmer than they are today when sea levels were higher and ice sheets much smaller than now.

By analyzing the effects of historic underwater landslides, they say future seismic events off the coast of Antarctica might again pose a risk of tsunami waves reaching the shores of South America, New Zealand and South East Asia.

The landslides were discovered in the eastern Ross Sea in 2017 by a team of scientists during the Italian ODYSSEA expedition.

Scientists revisited the area in 2018 as part of the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 374 where they collected sediment cores extending hundreds of meters beneath the seafloor.

By analyzing those samples, they found microscopic fossils which painted a picture of what the climate was like in the region millions of years ago, and how it created the weak layers deep under the Ross Sea.

The new study, published in the journal Nature Communications, was led by Dr. Jenny Gales, Lecturer in Hydrography and Ocean Exploration at the University of Plymouth, and part of IODP Expedition 374.

Dr. Gales said: “Submarine landslides are a major geohazard with the potential to trigger tsunamis that can lead to huge loss of life.

"The landslides can also destroy infrastructure, including subsea cables, meaning in future such events would create a wide range of economic and social impacts.

"Thanks to exceptional preservation of the sediments beneath the seafloor, we have for the first time been able to show what caused these historical landslides in this region of Antarctica and also indicate the impact of such events in the future.

"Our findings highlight how we urgently need to enhance our understanding of how global climate change might influence the stability of these regions and potential for future tsunamis.”

Homes by the ocean. (Photo by Epicurrence via Unsplash)

Professor Rob McKay, Director of the Antarctic Research Centre at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, said: “The main aim of our IODP drilling project in 2018 was to understand the influence that warming climate and oceans have had on melting Antarctica’s ice sheets in the past in order to understand its future response.

"However, when Dr. Gales and her colleagues on board the OGS Explora mapped these huge scarps and landslides the year before, it was quite a revelation to us to see how the past changes in climates we were studying from drilling were directly linked to submarine landslide events of this magnitude.

"We did not expect to see this, and it is a potential hazard that certainly warrants further investigation.”

Professor Jan Sverre Laberg, from The Arctic University of Norway, said: “Giant submarine landslides have occurred both on southern and northern high latitude continental margins, including the Antarctic and Norwegian continental margins.

"More knowledge on these events in Antarctica will also be relevant for submarine geohazard evaluation offshore Norway.”

Prof. Amelia Shevenell, of the University of South Florida, added: “Large landslides along the Antarctic margin have the potential to trigger tsunamis, which may result in substantial loss of life far from their origin.

"Further, national Antarctic programs are investigating the possibility of installing submarine cables to improve communications from Antarctic research bases.

"Our study, from the slope of the Ross Sea, is located seaward of major national and international research stations, indicating that marine geological and geophysical feasibility studies are essential to the success of these projects and should be completed early in the development process before countries invest in and depend on this communication infrastructure.”

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