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THE IMPACT OF TSUNAMI ON THE COASTLINE OF JERVIS BAY,SOUTHEASTERN AUSTRALIA
Authors:Edward A. Bryant  Robert W. Young  David M. Price  David J. Wheeler  Mark I. Pease
Affiliation:1. School of Geosciences , University of Wollongong , Northfields Avenue Wollongong, New South Wales, 2522 Australia;2. 4 Roxborough Avenue Thirroul, New South Wales, 2515 Australia;3. Queensland Department of Environment , Brisbane, Queensland, 4000 Australia
Abstract:The Jervis Bay area offers a diversity of landforms that do not fit within contemporary views of coastal evolution. Field evidence indicates that catastrophic tsunami have had a significant impact on the coast and its hinterland both within and outside the embayment. Runup has overtopped cliffs 80 m above sea level and deposited chevron-shaped ridges to elevations of 130 m on the southern headland. Boulders, up to 6 m in diameter, have been deposited in an imbricated fashion against cliffs, on clifftops, and along shoreline ramps. Bed-form features and the size of transported material indicate flow depths up to 10 m and velocities around 8 m s-1. While significant Pleistocene material has been swept onto the coastline, mainly in the form of barriers, radiocarbon dating indicates that tsunami have occurred repetitively throughout the Holocene. The most recent event occurred just before European settlement over 200 years ago. [Key words: barrier beaches, coastal geomorphology, tsunami, Jervis Bay, Australia.]
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