A 600-year-long stratigraphic record of tsunamis in south-central Chile
Document Type
Article
Department or Administrative Unit
Geological Sciences
Publication Date
1-1-2017
Abstract
The stratigraphy within coastal river valleys in south-central Chile clarifies and extends the region’s history of large, earthquakes and accompanying tsunamis. Our site at Quidico (38.1°S, 73.3°W) is located in an overlap zone between ruptures of magnitude 8–9 earthquakes in 1960 and 2010, and, therefore, records tsunamis originating from subduction-zone ruptures north and south of the city of Concepción. Hand-dug pits and cores in a 3-m-thick sequence of freshwater peat in an abandoned meander (a little-examined depositional environment for tsunami deposits) and exposures along the Quidico River show five sand beds that extend as much as 1.2 km inland. Evidence for deposition of the beds by tsunamis includes tabular sand beds that are laterally extensive ( >100 m), well sorted, fine upward, have sharp lower contacts, and contain diatom assemblages dominated by brackish and marine taxa. Using eyewitness accounts of tsunami inundation, 137Cs analyses, and 14C dating, we matched the upper four sand beds with historical tsunamis in 2010, 1960, 1835, and 1751. The oldest prehistoric bed dates to 1445–1490 CE and correlates with lacustrine and coastal records of similar-aged earthquakes and tsunamis in south-central Chile.
Recommended Citation
Hong, I., Dura, T., Ely, L. L., Horton, B. P., Nelson, A. R., Cisternas, M., Nikitina, D., & Wesson, R. L. (2016). A 600-year-long stratigraphic record of tsunamis in south-central Chile. The Holocene, 27(1), 39–51. https://doi.org/10.1177/0959683616646191
Journal
The Holocene
Rights
© The Author(s) 2016
Comments
This article was originally published in The Holocene. The full-text article from the publisher can be found here.
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