English
 
Privacy Policy Disclaimer
  Advanced SearchBrowse

Item

ITEM ACTIONSEXPORT

Released

Conference Paper

The complex emplacement dynamics and tsunami genesis of the 1888 Ritter Island sector collapse from 3D seismic data

Authors

Karstens,  Jens
External Organizations;

Urlaub,  Morelia
External Organizations;

Berndt,  Christian
External Organizations;

Watt,  Sebastian F.
External Organizations;

Micallef,  Aaron
External Organizations;

Klaucke,  Ingo
External Organizations;

Klaeschen,  Dirk
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/brune

Brune,  Sascha
2.5 Geodynamic Modelling, 2.0 Geophysics, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Kühn,  Michel
External Organizations;

External Ressource
Fulltext (public)
There are no public fulltexts stored in GFZpublic
Supplementary Material (public)
There is no public supplementary material available
Citation

Karstens, J., Urlaub, M., Berndt, C., Watt, S. F., Micallef, A., Klaucke, I., Klaeschen, D., Brune, S., Kühn, M. (2017): The complex emplacement dynamics and tsunami genesis of the 1888 Ritter Island sector collapse from 3D seismic data - Abstracts, AGU 2017 Fall Meeting (New Orleans, USA 2017).


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_3433892
Abstract
On March 13 1888, a large sector of the subaerial and submarine edifice of Ritter Island (Papua New Guinea) collapsed and slid into the Bismarck Sea, triggering a tsunami with run-up heights of more than 25 m on the neighboring islands. The tsunami traveled for more than 600 km and caused destruction in several settlements. German colonists described in detail the timing of the arriving waves. During research cruise SO252 onboard RV Sonne, we collected a comprehensive set of multibeam and sediment echosounder data, seafloor video footage, rock samples, 2D seismic profiles, and a 60 km2 high-resolution Pcable 3D seismic cube. This dataset, combined with the historic eyewitness accounts, allows detailed reconstruction of the large-scale volcanic sector collapse and the associated tsunami genesis. The 3D seismic cube reveals a change of emplacement dynamics during the collapse of the volcanic edifice. The initial failure occurred along a deep slide plane extending from the volcanic cone up to 300 m deep into the seafloor sediments adjacent to the volcanic edifice. Movement of large, intact sediment blocks and shortening characterize this deep-rooted mass-movement. In contrast to the well-preserved mobilization structures in the deep part of the volcanic edifice related to the initial phase of mass movement, there are hardly any deposits of the upper part of the volcanic cone comprising of well-stratified volcaniclastic layers. The 2 km3 cone was mobilized in the final stage of the sector collapse and its highly energetic slide mass eroded deeply into the previously emplaced slide deposits. The fast moving mass was channelized between two volcanic ridges, transported into the basin west of Sakar Island, and then deposited more than 30 km away from its source. We interpret the separation into two phases as the result of decoupling of the sliding mass of the cone from the deeper volcanic edifice. This process may be explained by gravitational acceleration of the sliding mass or a phreatomagmatic explosion due to the contact of the magmatic conduit with seawater.