2012
DOI: 10.5194/nhess-12-2177-2012
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Local inundation distances and regional tsunami recurrence in the Indian Ocean inferred from luminescence dating of sandy deposits in Thailand

Abstract: <p><strong>Abstract.</strong> The Holocene beach-ridge plain of Phra Thong Island (Ko Phra Thong, SW Thailand) provides sedimentary evidence of several palaeotsunamis, in addition to the deposit of the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Due to poor preservation conditions, these palaeoevent layers are restricted to swales. Correlation across beach ridges, which is important e.g. to reconstruct inundation distances, remains a major challenge. A primary tool for establishing a precisely confine… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…We used single aliquot regeneration protocols (Murray and Wintle, 2003;Wintle and Murray, 2006) to estimate the apparent equivalent dose of the 250-150 μm quartz fractions in many tens of separate aliquots (Table 4; e.g., Wright et al, 2011;Brill et al, 2012;Prendergast et al, 2012). Very fine grains of sand from the upper 2 mm of sampled beds were selected for analysis because the uppermost grains are most likely to have been exposed to light following deposition.…”
Section: Datingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We used single aliquot regeneration protocols (Murray and Wintle, 2003;Wintle and Murray, 2006) to estimate the apparent equivalent dose of the 250-150 μm quartz fractions in many tens of separate aliquots (Table 4; e.g., Wright et al, 2011;Brill et al, 2012;Prendergast et al, 2012). Very fine grains of sand from the upper 2 mm of sampled beds were selected for analysis because the uppermost grains are most likely to have been exposed to light following deposition.…”
Section: Datingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1a). Although southwest Thailand is part of the tectonically relatively stable Malay-Thai Peninsula (Tjia, 1996), the seismically active subduction zone of the Sunda Arc is situated directly west of the study area and poses a major source of tsunami-generating earthquakes (Lay et al, 2005) that may trigger waves strong enough to reach the Thai coast (Jankaew et al, 2008;Brill et al, 2011Brill et al, , 2012b. Fig.…”
Section: Physical Setting Of Phra Thong Islandmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While locally generated wind waves are of minor influence, swell waves with long periods of 10-15 s are clearly dominating (NOAA WAVEWATCH III, 2014). Significantly stronger waves may occur only episodically in the form of tsunamis (2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami and several palaeotsunamis: e.g., Jankaew et al, 2008;Brill et al, 2011Brill et al, , 2012b or during tropical cyclones. Although significant storm inundation is not mentioned in historical accounts (Murty and Flather, 2004) nor archived in the geological record (Phantuwongraj and Choowong, 2012), tropical storms occur in the study area and may be associated with significant coastal erosion and barrier overwash (eyewitness reports of local residents and own observations between 2007 and 2013, Figs.…”
Section: Holocene Shoreline Evolution In Southwest Thailandmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The four older sand sheets preserved in Swales X and Y show strong sedimentological similarities (sharp erosional contacts, fining upward unimodal coarse sand to coarse silt, containing leaf or bark fragments) to the 2004 IOT deposit, but lack many of the sedimentary structures, microfauna and microflora202130. The palaeo-sand sheets from Swale Y lack preserved diatoms and carbonate microfauna (foraminifera), likely due to temperature-affected dissolution20213032, although it is unclear why the same processes would not have affected the carbonate and unabraided shell material in the intertidal deposits preserved at the base of the swale2132.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%