4.6 Article

Tsunamis as geomorphic crises: Lessons from the December 26, 2004 tsunami in Lhok Nga, West Banda Aceh (Sumatra, Indonesia)

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 104, Issue 1-2, Pages 59-72

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.05.040

Keywords

Tsunami; Indonesia; Sumatra; Geomorphic crisis; Coastal erosion; Boulder deposition

Funding

  1. Delegation Interministerielle pour l'aide Post-Tsunami [161]
  2. French Embassy in Indonesia and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in France

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Large tsunamis are major geomorphic crises, since they imply extensive erosion, sediment transport and deposition in a few minutes and over hundreds of kilometres of coast. Nevertheless, little is known about their geomorphologic imprints. The December 26. 2004 tsunami in Sumatra (Indonesia) was one of the largest and deadliest tsunamis in recorded human history. We present a description of the coastal erosion and boulder deposition induced by the 2004 tsunami in the Lhok Nga Bay, located to the West of Banda Aceh (northwest Sumatra). The geomorphological impact of the tsunami is evidenced by: beach erosion (some beaches have almost disappeared); destruction of sand barriers protecting the lagoons or at river mouths; numerous erosion escarpments typically in the order of 0.5-1.5 m when capped by soil and more than 2 ill in duties; bank erosion in the river beds (the retreat along the main river is in the order of 5-15 m, with local retreats exceeding 30 m); large scars typically 20-50 cm deep on slopes; dislodgement of blocks along fractures and Structural ramps on cliffs. The upper limit of erosion appears as a continuous trimline at 2030 In a.s.l., locally reaching 50 m. The erosional imprints of the tsunami extend to 500 m from the shoreline and exceed 2 km along riverbeds. The overall coastal retreat from Lampuuk to Leupung was 60 in (550,000 m(2)) and locally exceeded 150 m. Over 276,000 m(3) of coastal sediments were eroded by the tsunami along the 9.2 km of sandy coast. The mean erosion rate of the beaches was similar to 30 m(3)/m of coast and locally exceeded 80 m(3/)m. The most eroded coasts were tangent to the tsunami wave train, which was coming from the southwest. The fringing reefs were not efficient in reducing the erosional impact of the tsunami. The 220 boulders measured range from 0.3 to 7.2 m large (typically 0.7-1.5 m), with weights from over 50 kg up to 85 t. We found one boulder, less than 1 m large, at 1 km from the coastline, but all the others were transported less than 450 m (<7 m a.s.l.). No lining landward boulder size distribution could be detected. The coincidence of different size modes, from boulders to fine sands. with independent spatial distributions. suggests that all the material was not transported in suspension, but rather by a combination of suspension and bed load transport. Finally, the spatial and size distributions of tsunami boulder deposits mostly depend on the location and characteristics of their source (coral reef, beach rock, platform, darns), together with clast and Surface interference during transport. One year after, the coastal environment in northwest Sumatra is still in a post-tsunami dynamic. Thus, the difference between the largest tsunamis (height>30 m) and the moderate tsunamis (height<10 m) could be their long-term impact on coastal environments. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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