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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Outer shelf sedimentary records are promising for determining the recurrence intervals of
tsunamis. However, compared to onshore deposits, offshore deposits are more difficult to access,
and so far, studies of outer shelf tsunami deposits are scarce. Here, an example of studying these
deposits is presented to infer implications for tsunami-related signatures in similar environments and
potentially contribute to pre-historic tsunami event detections. A multidisciplinary approach was
performed to detect the sedimentary imprints left by the 1755 CE tsunami in two cores, located in
the southern Portuguese continental shelf at water depths of 58 and 91 m. Age models based on
14C and 210Pbxs allowed a probable correspondence with the 1755 CE tsunami event. A multi-proxy
approach, including sand composition, grain-size, inorganic geochemistry, magnetic susceptibility,
and microtextural features on quartz grain surfaces, yielded evidence for a tsunami depositional
signature, although only a subtle terrestrial signal is present. A low contribution of terrestrial material
to outer shelf tsunami deposits calls for methodologies that reveal sedimentary structures linked to
tsunami event hydrodynamics. Finally, a change in general sedimentation after the tsunami event
might have influenced the signature of the 1755 CE tsunami in the outer shelf environment.
Description
Keywords
1755 CE tsunami Backwash Holocene sediments High-energy event Offshore tsunami sediments Quartz microtexture
Citation
Publisher
MDPI