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Simulated tsunami inundation for a range of Cascadia megathrust earthquake scenarios at Bandon, Oregon, USA

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Title Simulated tsunami inundation for a range of Cascadia megathrust earthquake scenarios at Bandon, Oregon, USA
Names Witter, Robert C. (creator)
Zhang, Yinglong J. (creator)
Wang, Kelin (creator)
Priest, George R. (creator)
Goldfinger, Chris (creator)
Stimely, Laura (creator)
English, John T. (creator)
Ferro, Paul A. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-12 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Geological Society of America and can be found at: http://geosphere.geoscienceworld.org/.
Abstract Characterizations of tsunami hazards
along the Cascadia subduction zone hinge
on uncertainties in megathrust rupture
models used for simulating tsunami inundation.
To explore these uncertainties, we
constructed 15 megathrust earthquake scenarios
using rupture models that supply the
initial conditions for tsunami simulations
at Bandon, Oregon. Tsunami inundation
varies with the amount and distribution
of fault slip assigned to rupture models,
including models where slip is partitioned to
a splay fault in the accretionary wedge and
models that vary the updip limit of slip on a
buried fault. Constraints on fault slip come
from onshore and offshore paleoseismological
evidence. We rank each rupture model
using a logic tree that evaluates a model’s
consistency with geological and geophysical
data. The scenarios provide inputs to a
hydrodynamic model, SELFE, used to
simulate tsunami generation, propagation,
and inundation on unstructured grids with
<5–15 m resolution in coastal areas. Tsunami
simulations delineate the likelihood
that Cascadia tsunamis will exceed mapped
inundation lines. Maximum wave elevations
at the shoreline varied from ~4 m to
25 m for earthquakes with 9–44 m slip and
M[subscript w] 8.7–9.2. Simulated tsunami inundation
agrees with sparse deposits left by the A.D.
1700 and older tsunamis. Tsunami simulations
for large (22–30 m slip) and medium
(14–19 m slip) splay fault scenarios encompass
80%–95% of all inundation scenarios
and provide reasonable guidelines for land-use
planning and coastal development. The
maximum tsunami inundation simulated for the greatest splay fault scenario (36–44 m slip) can help to guide development of
local tsunami evacuation zones.
Genre Article
Identifier Witter, R. C., Zhang, Y. J., Wang, K., Priest, G. R., Goldfinger, C., Stimely, L., ... & Ferro, P. A. (2013). Simulated tsunami inundation for a range of Cascadia megathrust earthquake scenarios at Bandon, Oregon, USA. Geosphere, 9(6), 1783-1803. doi:10.1130/GES00899.1

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