International audienceShelf promontories exhibit very specific bathymetric features with regards to tsunamis. Because of their submerged cape morphology, a potential tsunami generated seawards of the promontory will exhibit a specific mode of propagation and coastal impact. To identify this peculiar tsunami signature, the Atacames Promontory, Ecuador, was chosen as a case study (another example is the shelf of the Nile delta, Egypt). The area is tectonically very active, hosts earthquakes among the most powerful recorded, as well as areas of slope instabilities that have triggered significant submarine landslides in the past (several cubic kilometres of volume). Both types of events are likely to be tsunamigenic. To examine the tsunami beha...
The Costa Rican coasts are at risk of local tsunamis. On both Pacific and Atlantic sides of Costa Ri...
We analyse the variations produced on tsunami propagation and impact over a straight coastline becau...
International audienceThe Western Mediterranean Sea is not considered as a high seismic region. Only...
International audienceShelf promontories exhibit very specific bathymetric features with regards to ...
Shelf promontories exhibit very specific bathymetric features with regards to tsunamis. Because of t...
International audienceThe North-Andean subduction zone generates recurrent tsunamigenic earthquakes....
International audienceHistorical earthquake records suggest that the Alboran Sea seismicity is mostl...
Tsunamis occur in the Pacific Ocean about once every 1.5 years (Berninghausen, 1962). Forty-nine Tsu...
Ecuador’s continental coastline is close to one of the most seismic areas in the world. These earthq...
A hypothetical landslide tsunami at the Nile Delta in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea is modeled in or...
International audienceThe Ligurian sea, at the France–Italy boarder of the Mediterranean Sea, has ex...
The continental coast of Ecuador is close to the subduction of the Nazca plate and the South America...
Historical tsunamis and tsunami propagation are synthesized in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea region,...
The Mediterranean basin presents specific geodynamic and morphodynamic features that allow tsun...
The Costa Rican coasts are at risk of local tsunamis. On both Pacific and Atlantic sides of Costa Ri...
We analyse the variations produced on tsunami propagation and impact over a straight coastline becau...
International audienceThe Western Mediterranean Sea is not considered as a high seismic region. Only...
International audienceShelf promontories exhibit very specific bathymetric features with regards to ...
Shelf promontories exhibit very specific bathymetric features with regards to tsunamis. Because of t...
International audienceThe North-Andean subduction zone generates recurrent tsunamigenic earthquakes....
International audienceHistorical earthquake records suggest that the Alboran Sea seismicity is mostl...
Tsunamis occur in the Pacific Ocean about once every 1.5 years (Berninghausen, 1962). Forty-nine Tsu...
Ecuador’s continental coastline is close to one of the most seismic areas in the world. These earthq...
A hypothetical landslide tsunami at the Nile Delta in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea is modeled in or...
International audienceThe Ligurian sea, at the France–Italy boarder of the Mediterranean Sea, has ex...
The continental coast of Ecuador is close to the subduction of the Nazca plate and the South America...
Historical tsunamis and tsunami propagation are synthesized in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea region,...
The Mediterranean basin presents specific geodynamic and morphodynamic features that allow tsun...
The Costa Rican coasts are at risk of local tsunamis. On both Pacific and Atlantic sides of Costa Ri...
We analyse the variations produced on tsunami propagation and impact over a straight coastline becau...
International audienceThe Western Mediterranean Sea is not considered as a high seismic region. Only...