Recurrent storms, floods, landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis challenge the development of resilient infrastructure and communities in coastal northwestern British Columbia. Vulnerability assessment first requires extended and improved understanding of geohazards in the Pacific Basin to constrain modelling of future events. An investigation of soils and bedrock structures in the Douglas Channel provides insight into the distribution of deposits attributed to geohazards in the region. Newly discovered marine inundation deposits corroborate numerical models and suggest that Pacific-sourced storms and earthquake-triggered tsunamis expend much of their energy in the outer coast and rarely reach far up the mainland fjords. Small-volume Foli-sol...
The morphometric analysis of submarine landslides on the continental slope of Oregon provides insigh...
The lower Mainland of southwest British Columbia (BC) hosts about 3.5 million people and significant...
During the 1964 Great Alaska earthquake (Mw 9.2), several fjords, straits, and bays throughout south...
Recurrent storms, floods, landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis challenge the development of resilien...
Bathymetric data reveal abundant submarine landslides along the deformation front of the northern Ca...
We present a summary of geological tsunami sources with the potential to threaten the coasts of Cana...
We present a preliminary probabilistic tsunami hazard assessment of Canadian coastlines from local a...
Virtually all of the geological evidence for historic and prehistoric tsunamis in British Columbia h...
Strong evidence suggests that the Cascadia subduction zone, off the west coast of Canada and the Uni...
ReportThe Canadian coastline is the longest of any country in the world, and is at risk from tsunami...
Natural geohazards, such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, landslides, and volcanic collapse, are ...
The 2007 Mw 6.2 earthquake in Aysén fjord caused widespread basin-plain deformation and has had preh...
Tsunamis from earthquakes of various magnitudes have affected Cascadia in the past. Simulations of M...
The Cascadia subduction zone is understood to produce large, Mw 9.0, earthquakes every 300-1000 year...
We describe and model the evolution of a recent landslide, tsunami, outburst flood, and sediment plu...
The morphometric analysis of submarine landslides on the continental slope of Oregon provides insigh...
The lower Mainland of southwest British Columbia (BC) hosts about 3.5 million people and significant...
During the 1964 Great Alaska earthquake (Mw 9.2), several fjords, straits, and bays throughout south...
Recurrent storms, floods, landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis challenge the development of resilien...
Bathymetric data reveal abundant submarine landslides along the deformation front of the northern Ca...
We present a summary of geological tsunami sources with the potential to threaten the coasts of Cana...
We present a preliminary probabilistic tsunami hazard assessment of Canadian coastlines from local a...
Virtually all of the geological evidence for historic and prehistoric tsunamis in British Columbia h...
Strong evidence suggests that the Cascadia subduction zone, off the west coast of Canada and the Uni...
ReportThe Canadian coastline is the longest of any country in the world, and is at risk from tsunami...
Natural geohazards, such as earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, landslides, and volcanic collapse, are ...
The 2007 Mw 6.2 earthquake in Aysén fjord caused widespread basin-plain deformation and has had preh...
Tsunamis from earthquakes of various magnitudes have affected Cascadia in the past. Simulations of M...
The Cascadia subduction zone is understood to produce large, Mw 9.0, earthquakes every 300-1000 year...
We describe and model the evolution of a recent landslide, tsunami, outburst flood, and sediment plu...
The morphometric analysis of submarine landslides on the continental slope of Oregon provides insigh...
The lower Mainland of southwest British Columbia (BC) hosts about 3.5 million people and significant...
During the 1964 Great Alaska earthquake (Mw 9.2), several fjords, straits, and bays throughout south...