4.6 Article

Boulders of MIS 5 age deposited by a tsunami on the coast of Otago, New Zealand

Journal

SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
Volume 200, Issue 3-4, Pages 222-231

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2007.01.005

Keywords

tsunami; pleistocene; wave; boulders; New Zealand

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A series of elevated imbricated boulders were investigated on the Otago coastline, southeast New Zealand, through field surveying and optical luminescence dating. By using established hydrodynamic relationships of sediment transport the energy required to move the clasts was calculated and compared to the historic record of marine inundations of that coast. The boulders are platy in shape and are over 2 in long in some cases, and are sourced from a locally outcropping conglomerate unit which appears to be the only lithology on this section of coast that erodes to produce clasts of this size. It is estimated that the boulders were deposited by a tsunami between 2 and 3 in high during the latter part of Marine Isotope Stage 5. They therefore represent the first pre-Holocene tsunami deposit and one composed of large boulders described on the New Zealand coastline. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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