Deposits of large boulders above modern limits of storm waves along the coast of southern New South Wales record catastrophic wave action. The largest boulders that were moved weigh 80-90 tonnes, and the maximum height of wave action was 32 m. Hydraulic reconstruction indicates flow depths of 3.4 and perhaps \u3e 4 m and velocities of 5.5 m/s to 10.3 m/s. Cavitation features on some rock surfaces support the estimates of maximum velocities. A remarkably limited range in the orientation of imbricated boulders along 150 km indicates that the deposits record a single event that approached from the SE. to SSE. The fabric and size of the deposits point to a tsunami wave train rather than to exceptional storm waves. The most probable so...
Sand barriers along the coast of southern New South Wales, dating from the last interglacial, have b...
The largest of several detached boulders on top of the 33 m high cliffs at Little Beecroft Head meas...
In the coastal region, the highest magnitude storms cannot always be invoked to account for large-sc...
Well-imbricated large boulders of quartzite, greater than 100 tonnes weight, occur along the crest o...
Well-imbricated large boulders of quartzite, greater than 100 tonnes weight, occur along the crest o...
Well-imbricated large boulders of quartzite, greater than 100 tonnes weight, occur along the crest o...
Along 2500 km of the Western Australian coast, prehistoric ephemeral marine inundations (storm surge...
Along 2500 km of the Western Australian coast, prehistoric ephemeral marine inundations (storm surge...
Along 2500 km of the Western Australian coast, prehistoric ephemeral marine inundations (storm surge...
Tsunami waves can produce four general categories of depositional and erosional signatures that diff...
Tsunami waves can produce four general categories of depositional and erosional signatures that diff...
Detailed analyses of boulder deposits along 8000 km of coastal tropical Australia shows that prehist...
Detailed analyses of boulder deposits along 8000 km of coastal tropical Australia shows that prehist...
Abstract. Tsunami waves can produce four general categories of depositional and erosional signa-ture...
Jacks Waterhole at the Durack River in the Kimberley region of north west Australia is an exposed be...
Sand barriers along the coast of southern New South Wales, dating from the last interglacial, have b...
The largest of several detached boulders on top of the 33 m high cliffs at Little Beecroft Head meas...
In the coastal region, the highest magnitude storms cannot always be invoked to account for large-sc...
Well-imbricated large boulders of quartzite, greater than 100 tonnes weight, occur along the crest o...
Well-imbricated large boulders of quartzite, greater than 100 tonnes weight, occur along the crest o...
Well-imbricated large boulders of quartzite, greater than 100 tonnes weight, occur along the crest o...
Along 2500 km of the Western Australian coast, prehistoric ephemeral marine inundations (storm surge...
Along 2500 km of the Western Australian coast, prehistoric ephemeral marine inundations (storm surge...
Along 2500 km of the Western Australian coast, prehistoric ephemeral marine inundations (storm surge...
Tsunami waves can produce four general categories of depositional and erosional signatures that diff...
Tsunami waves can produce four general categories of depositional and erosional signatures that diff...
Detailed analyses of boulder deposits along 8000 km of coastal tropical Australia shows that prehist...
Detailed analyses of boulder deposits along 8000 km of coastal tropical Australia shows that prehist...
Abstract. Tsunami waves can produce four general categories of depositional and erosional signa-ture...
Jacks Waterhole at the Durack River in the Kimberley region of north west Australia is an exposed be...
Sand barriers along the coast of southern New South Wales, dating from the last interglacial, have b...
The largest of several detached boulders on top of the 33 m high cliffs at Little Beecroft Head meas...
In the coastal region, the highest magnitude storms cannot always be invoked to account for large-sc...