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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Earth Sciences

The University of Southern Mississippi

Faculty Publications

Series

2017

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Highly Variable Recurrence Of Tsunamis In The 7,400 Years Before The 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, Charles M. Rubin, Benjamin P. Horton, Kerry Sieh, Jessica E. Pilarczyk, Patrick Daly, Nazli Ismail, Andrew C. Parnell Jul 2017

Highly Variable Recurrence Of Tsunamis In The 7,400 Years Before The 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami, Charles M. Rubin, Benjamin P. Horton, Kerry Sieh, Jessica E. Pilarczyk, Patrick Daly, Nazli Ismail, Andrew C. Parnell

Faculty Publications

The devastating 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami caught millions of coastal residents and the scientific community off-guard. Subsequent research in the Indian Ocean basin has identified prehistoric tsunamis, but the timing and recurrence intervals of such events are uncertain. Here we present an extraordinary 7,400 year stratigraphic sequence of prehistoric tsunami deposits from a coastal cave in Aceh, Indonesia. This record demonstrates that at least 11 prehistoric tsunamis struck the Aceh coast between 7,400 and 2,900 years ago. The average time period between tsunamis is about 450 years with intervals ranging from a long, dormant period of over 2,000 years, to …


The Potential Effects Of Percolating Snowmelt On Palynological Records From Firn And Glacier Ice, Michael E. Ewin, Carl A. Reese, Matthew A. Nolan Jul 2017

The Potential Effects Of Percolating Snowmelt On Palynological Records From Firn And Glacier Ice, Michael E. Ewin, Carl A. Reese, Matthew A. Nolan

Faculty Publications

The effects of meltwater percolation on pollen in snow, firn and glacial ice are not fully understood and currently hamper the use of pollen in ice-core studies of paleoclimate. Several studies have suggested that, due to grain size, pollen is not mobilized by meltwater transport. However, these findings contradict many ice-core pollen studies that show pollen concentrations in snow and firn are much higher than concentrations found in the ice layers they eventually form. This study addresses one aspect of this question by investigating whether meltwater percolation can effectively transport pollen within a snowpack. We used nine Styrofoam coolers filled …