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The sedimentology and tsunamigenic potential of the byron submarine landslide off New South Wales, Australia

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posted on 2025-05-09, 01:04 authored by Kendall Mollison, Hannah PowerHannah Power, Samantha L. Clarke, Alan T. Baxter, Emily M. Lane, Thomas C. T. Hubble
Extensive evidence for submarine landslide failure is found along the east Australian continental margin. This paper assesses the sedimentological properties and models the failure event that created the Byron landslide scar, located on the SE Australian continental margin, c. 34 km off the coast of Byron Bay, New South Wales. Sedimentological analyses and dating (radiocarbon and biostratigraphic) were conducted on three gravity cores collected from within the Byron landslide scar. A paraconformity, identified in one of the three cores by a distinct colour change, was found to represent a distinct radiocarbon age gap of at least 25 ka and probably represents the detachment surface of the slide plane. The core-derived sediment properties for the Byron landslide scar were used to inform hydrodynamic modelling using the freely available numerical modelling software, Basilisk. Model results highlight the important role of sediment rheology on the tsunamigenic potential of the slide and on the resulting inundation along the east Australian coastline, therefore providing a greater understanding of the modern hazard posed by comparable future submarine landslide events for the east Australian coastline.

History

Source title

Subaqueous Mass Movements and their Consequences: Advances in Process Understanding, Monitoring and Hazard Assessments

Pagination

27-40

Series details

Geological Society Special Publication-500

Editors

Georgiopolou, A., et al.

Publisher

The Geological Society

Place published

London

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science

School

School of Environmental and Life Sciences

Rights statement

Geological Society Special Publication, 500. https://doi.org/10.1144/SP500-2019-160. © Geological Society of London 2020.

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