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How climate change triggered a landslide tsunami in a Greenland fjord, vibrating Earth for 9 days 

Stephen Hicks - Seismologist
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Climate change is increasingly exposing polar regions to large landslides. Tsunamigenic landslides have occurred recently in Greenland, but none have been reported from the eastern fjords. In September 2023, we detected the start of a 9-day-long global 10.88 mHz (92 s) monochromatic very-long period (VLP) seismic signal, originating from East Greenland. We demonstrate how this event started with a 25 M m3 glacial thinning-induced rockslide plunging into Dickson Fjord, triggering a 200 m high tsunami. Simulations show the tsunami stabilized into a 7 m-high long-duration seiche with a near-identical frequency (11.45 mHz) and slow amplitude decay as the seismic signal. An oscillating, fjord-transverse single-force reproduces the seismic amplitudes and their radiation pattern relative to the fjord, demonstrating how a seiche directly caused the 9-day long seismic signal. Our findings highlight how climate change is causing cascading, hazardous feedbacks between the cryosphere, hydrosphere and lithosphere.
The study was conducted by Svennevig et al. (2024) and published in Science.
The paper is available here: www.science.or... (and without the paywall here: drive.google.c....
Music credit: "Seiche" by Isabelle Ryder ( • Seiche ; isabelleryderm...).

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9 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 149   
@room5245
@room5245 27 дней назад
Was linked to this by the Dutch NOS news, fascinating piece! Astonishing science
@tesla6422
@tesla6422 27 дней назад
*chuckles* I'm in danger
@Natogoon
@Natogoon 26 дней назад
Based NOS 🇳🇱😎💪🏻
@aroasampedro2692
@aroasampedro2692 26 дней назад
Me too!
@robertlove8064
@robertlove8064 26 дней назад
Same here from Iceland, fascinating stuff
@pieternelrodermond-vanreen3225
@pieternelrodermond-vanreen3225 26 дней назад
Also here via NOS🇳🇱
@relwalretep
@relwalretep 25 дней назад
This is the sort of science video that shows RU-vid at its best. Thanks very much!
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Thanks so much - this is great to hear - and all my efforts in making the video have paid off :)
@kiereluurs1243
@kiereluurs1243 25 дней назад
Congratulations, your views went up from 100 to 100.000. 😀 Thanks to major media linking to this.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Thanks for your comment and interest.
@bieknijst2449
@bieknijst2449 26 дней назад
Calling it a USO, and they say seismologists have no sense of humor!
@e.k.4508
@e.k.4508 26 дней назад
Voor Nederlandstalige kijkers: een "seiche" is is de internationale term voor een "haling". Dat is een oscillerende golf: een golf die heen en weer klotst in een (gedeeltelijk) ingesloten watermassa. Zoals in een fjord, meer etc.
@MarijnRoorda
@MarijnRoorda 27 дней назад
The Unsung hero's of climate change. You can blame the NOS for making me watch this. And i now have a much deeper understanding of seismology. Thanks for that!
@JeffBilkins
@JeffBilkins 27 дней назад
Solid explanation and I enjoyed watching the presentation from the source group. Usually this news comes from science channels that browse papers but today this was linked from Dutch general news about the discovery, so that's cool.
@jonathanloh1205
@jonathanloh1205 26 дней назад
Amazed that you were able to figure it all out! Extraordinary story. Thanks for the excellent video
@ilformaggiodidio
@ilformaggiodidio 27 дней назад
Great video and explanation on the event. Never crossed my mind that glaciers also hold back a lot of the land mass as well as the glacier itself. Very interesting.
@nyali2
@nyali2 Час назад
Or maybe glaciers and Ice ages to blame for the canyons in the first place? Mind you the landslide happened a few hundred meters above the glacier. It was hardly held by the ice.
@P2krwl
@P2krwl 27 дней назад
Super clear, well explained and helpful animations! Thanks!
@Frank01985
@Frank01985 26 дней назад
There's a Norwegian disaster movie called Bølgen (The Wave), which is about this kind of tsunami happening in a fjord in Norway. It's pretty good!
@Pecisk
@Pecisk 25 дней назад
It is one of scariest disaster movies according to some critics. I kinda don't want to challenge myself ot see it. I think it was made after similar events in Alaska if I am not mistaken?
@Frank01985
@Frank01985 25 дней назад
@@Pecisk Wouldn't say it's all that scary in terms of the movie itself. The fact that it's based on a real scenario makes it a lot better than most disaster movies, but it still falls into many of the same tropes. And its premise starts with looking back on a similar event that actually happened in Norway in the early 1900s if I remember correctly.
@kiereluurs1243
@kiereluurs1243 25 дней назад
No, its a ridiculous movie.
@andrehorvath7441
@andrehorvath7441 26 дней назад
Mother Earth talks to us with a subwoofer. "Thank you for listening."....
@Rebuildm3417
@Rebuildm3417 27 дней назад
Amazing explanation - very clear laymen language. Thank you
@michellemilne4359
@michellemilne4359 16 дней назад
Was linked to his by the Canadian CBC news. Thank you so much for all the work you and your 68 colleagues did to figure this. Thank you for sharing it with all of us.
@michaelhughes7668
@michaelhughes7668 27 дней назад
Great analysis, keep up the good work! 👍🏻
@tubulzr
@tubulzr 26 дней назад
Great video explanation. Much obliged.
@mattatthapon1461
@mattatthapon1461 27 дней назад
In Thai Newspaper written about this today Sep13,2024 but I'm not understand until I watched this video , thanks for the information.
@Eliza7887
@Eliza7887 27 дней назад
Agree. These people understand this stuff so good that they really can explain it to us.
@nnonotnow
@nnonotnow 18 дней назад
I've seen reports on this but what you've done is really amazing. I appreciate your work. What a fascinating event
@CorrinaJanssen
@CorrinaJanssen 27 дней назад
Great and very interesting! Thank you!
@DEEPAKRAWAT-es3tg
@DEEPAKRAWAT-es3tg 18 дней назад
Excellent work! Utilizing seismology to characterize subsurface events is a game-changer. I've personally explored its application in investigating ice-rock avalanches through seismic signals, and the potential is vast. This field holds immense promise for unraveling mysteries of remote locations, as well as the Earth's and other planets' subsurface and surface dynamics. Your research underscores the significance of seismology in advancing our understanding of complex geological processes. Looking forward to more groundbreaking discoveries.
@danielchowdhury6073
@danielchowdhury6073 26 дней назад
Great explanation. Accessible and interesting!
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
thanks so much for your nice feedback - made the effort worthwhile :)
@thomasheye7264
@thomasheye7264 27 дней назад
Awesome explanation on this event! Would love to see a 3D-animation of the landslide and 200m(!!) high wave. I'd like to learn more on how quick the big wave disappeared and how the wave kept moving under water. The navy was there 3 days after? Didn't they notice anything on their ships of that movement of the water? Very interesting stuff this!
@pjkoelemeijer
@pjkoelemeijer 26 дней назад
The quick wave disappeared pretty quickly and settled into a low amplitude wave sloshing back and forth in the fjord. When the navy went, it would have been
@JessieMaria6
@JessieMaria6 27 дней назад
Thank you for this information as it’s so fascinating.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@jerseycatmews828
@jerseycatmews828 18 дней назад
So interesting. But that piano music background was unnecessary and distracting
@e.k.4508
@e.k.4508 26 дней назад
Great video, I second every positive commend! One recommendation: don't add music, it's a bit distracting and not necessary. The video is interesting enough in itself.
11 дней назад
Merci beaucoup de vulgariser vos travaux.
@rhythmace1
@rhythmace1 21 день назад
Fascinating story and video!
@teresavera3216
@teresavera3216 День назад
Thanks very informative
@slueccroll4661
@slueccroll4661 26 дней назад
whaow! such an effect of such an event, real scary actually!
@robindabank6711
@robindabank6711 26 дней назад
Thank you for making this
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Thanks so much for your nice comment and interest.
@leonag5839
@leonag5839 27 дней назад
Thank you😊 Amazing to see and hear. Will there be any next steps or actions taken from your findings?
@delturion
@delturion 27 дней назад
Great video!
@aerodaan
@aerodaan 26 дней назад
This shows testament to the accuracy and sensitivity of the monitoring of our planet and the intelligence of the scientists that analyse these data.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Thanks so much for your comment and keen interest in our study.
@EMSCCSEM-earthquakes
@EMSCCSEM-earthquakes 27 дней назад
Love it!
@robduivis5103
@robduivis5103 24 дня назад
Very interesting study and once again a reminder of the significance of science and the human impact on our environment.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Many thanks for your nice comment and your interest - much appreciated.
@god0
@god0 25 дней назад
I found the link in Mastodon. Thanks for the great work analyzing what happened and for the excellent video.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Many thanks for your nice comment.
@klaasscholte7896
@klaasscholte7896 26 дней назад
Very interesting
@Hambone4life
@Hambone4life День назад
this is so cool. wish there was video of it but still really cool
@jukee67
@jukee67 23 дня назад
Climate change caused that piece to break away and splash down into the water beneath it? In order a rumble to travel around the globe with a hum that went on for days, is it ridiculous to disagree? Something flew by made contact with our planet in order to have such an impact. As a explanation, the climate change theory is convenient as an answer to prevent anyone from critically thinking about the size/impact that came along with this event. Maybe a volcanic release somewhere, activity from the sun, or whatever can be used from the past to compare this with. Something is not adding up. Like the anomalies occuring in the southern ocean of the coast of South Africa. Climate change is a broad statement. When used as the cause of such an event it lacks any details one would expect after a global shock felt around the world.
@betornween
@betornween 16 дней назад
Or dismissing gravity and centuries, eons even of erosion from the event. Why did they just happen to set up seismic detection equipment (3:34) in this particular fjord before this happened? Coincidence? Something to make you go... Hmm? Myself, I don't believe in coincidences but I do believe in conspiracies to make them happen. If you can question it, it is science. If you can't, it is propaganda. ~Luke Rudkoski~
@KitagumaIgen
@KitagumaIgen 8 дней назад
When there is a pair of before and after images showing the missing mountain-side, your instant suspicion is that it would have been "something flew by made contact with our planet"? My suspicion is that the missing mountain-side fell into the fjord. Reduced permafrost might well have been the cause. Anyone living in areas where the ground freezes is well aware of this type of landslide in spring - on much smaller scales - when the ground thaws.
@milliosmiles5160
@milliosmiles5160 24 дня назад
Excellent presentation.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Many thanks for your nice comment and your interest - much appreciated.
@NicolasReid___1___
@NicolasReid___1___ 27 дней назад
Could any other later seismic events (earthquakes) be related (caused) by this event? I would be surprised if this wasn't the case.
@fvmuijen
@fvmuijen 24 дня назад
Amazing report! And a shocking realization about climate change...😔
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Many thanks for your nice comment and your interest - much appreciated.
@patrick247two
@patrick247two 12 дней назад
Amazing. Subbed. Tell me more.
@huubderksen8466
@huubderksen8466 26 дней назад
at 3.03 the Danish geologist talks about 'west of the landslide', mustn't that be, because the Dickson Fjord is shown at a more widest point, 'east of the landslide' ?
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Yes, you're right that it was a mistake, but I corrected the subtitle/CCs :)
@astrophotonl
@astrophotonl 22 дня назад
Very interesting. Are the additional files also somewhere available?
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 22 дня назад
@@astrophotonl hello, which additional files do you mean exactly?
@astrophotonl
@astrophotonl 22 дня назад
@@stephenhicks9108 the supplementary texts that are mentioned. S1 to S6.
@astrophotonl
@astrophotonl 22 дня назад
I did research in geophysics in the past and now I'm a physics teacher. I showed this to my exam classes to show the relation between physics, and what they learn, and the real life. It's a great example!
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 22 дня назад
You can find our supplementary materials here: www.science.org/action/downloadSupplement?doi=10.1126%2Fscience.adm9247&file=science.adm9247_sm.pdf (let me know though if you have any problems getting this).
@assepa
@assepa 24 дня назад
Does anyone know what exactly is meant by the "destroyed cultural and archaeological heritage sites across the fjord system" mentioned in the GEUS article?
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Good question, Thule Culture Inuit archaeological sites and 20th-century trapper huts were destroyed by the tsunami which meant that no such event had occurred in at least 200 years.
@KitagumaIgen
@KitagumaIgen 8 дней назад
Great explanation! To me it is very interesting that the wave remained in the fjord for so long - I would've expected a much faster "leakage" of the wave out of the fjord, but this is pretty far from my field of knowledge...
@pixelpusher220
@pixelpusher220 25 дней назад
An interesting question given the novel nature of this signal. What effect does a *continuous* mulit-day hum of crust vibrations have on fault zones? and kudos to the calling the 200m runup a 'splash' and not just a tsunami. Very different wave types.
@NicolasReid___1___
@NicolasReid___1___ 24 дня назад
That was exactly my question, which remains unanswered. I would be surprised if it had no correlation at all with other seismic events during that time.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Many thanks for your question. Once the seismic waves leave Greenland, the ground vibrations are very minor (< micrometers displacement) and are so long in oscillation period that they are unlikely to dynamically affect any stress changes along faults. We didn't observe any increase in global seismic activity after this event.
@petergibson2318
@petergibson2318 18 дней назад
Fault zones are continuously being stressed by the sun and the moon. There are "tides" on land as well as in the sea!
@YB31234
@YB31234 27 дней назад
I bet an intern or two had a great laugh when coming up with the term Unidentified Seismic Object.
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Actually, the term came from one of our most senior and experienced coauthors :)
@betornween
@betornween 16 дней назад
It can't be an "object" if it's unidentified.
@stevek9793
@stevek9793 19 дней назад
Greenland Ice cap has only decreased by 1% in the last 30 years.
@patrickroragen1059
@patrickroragen1059 6 дней назад
Are you complaining about the lack of progress
@TalCMusic
@TalCMusic 27 дней назад
I need to see a visual representation of this
@grndkntrl
@grndkntrl 25 дней назад
Is this video not sufficient‽
@zoranlevnajic2089
@zoranlevnajic2089 24 дня назад
But how can sloshing water generate a seismic signal? Afterall, it's just water..? What am I missing?
@NicolasReid___1___
@NicolasReid___1___ 24 дня назад
'Just water'? I dare you to slap a surface of water with your hand as HARD as possible, without saying ouch!
@zoranlevnajic2089
@zoranlevnajic2089 24 дня назад
Have you ever heard of a seismic signal being generated by a wave? Seiche in a fjord, even if 7m high, is still a wave (made of sea water). Actually, the world has seen much bigger waves hitting shores due to hurricanes, etc.
@logitech4873
@logitech4873 24 дня назад
Read the paper
@stephenhicks9108
@stephenhicks9108 23 дня назад
Many thanks for your comment. So the water's centre of gravity keeps moving back and forth, essentially crashing against the fjord walls, which transfers momentum, generating seismic energy through the Earth's crust. We also see seismic signals (as a form of noise) due to approaching hurricanes and storms.
@zoranlevnajic2089
@zoranlevnajic2089 22 дня назад
@@stephenhicks9108 This for this clarification, which is very useful. So, seiche is really not a 'wave' in the usual sense, but the entire water in the fjord actually moves back and forth. Due to friction with the fjord walls, some momentum gets transferred with each bounce, which manifests itself as a detectable sesmic signal. Did I get it?
@betornween
@betornween 16 дней назад
What? Wait! What about eons worth of Earth's gravitational force, erosion and normal freeze and thaw cycles over those same eons of time before man became a thing? All the glacier did was get in the way from the rocks inevitable fall. Love all the our way or no way Science Inc. logos at the end. Nice images by the way.
@dannystilleo363
@dannystilleo363 26 дней назад
Titans are waking up
@andrewoates8723
@andrewoates8723 26 дней назад
Fascinating example! Great science and team effort! However, your claim about climate change being the "cause" was a bit wild. I agree that anthropogenic warming has enabled this event but drawing such a direct line is too much for me. I know it gets views / funding saying these things but it compromises the science.
@vastirvision
@vastirvision 26 дней назад
You believe there is *not* a direct correlation between this event and climate change? Are we even able at this point to definitively distinguish between such events, those that are and those that are not caused by anthropegenic warming? I understand there are numerous factors at play, I assume they all fall under the umbrella of climate change. Did they not establish some time ago that the deglaciation occurring in places such as the Lewis Range was attributed to a combination of both natural and non-natural causes, however, that the markedly accelerated pace of this deglaciation was in fact due to anthropogenic warming? These are sincere queries, and I greatly appreciate your reply and/or any references that could be provided to enlighten one in the matter.
@lindasandel7304
@lindasandel7304 14 дней назад
How about the fact one volcanic eruption can cause more air-pollution and climate change than man. But then they can't ban the volcano, or tax it.
@douglasengle2704
@douglasengle2704 18 дней назад
This video has the United Nations Climate Change disclaimer. Global warming was officially stated at 1.1°C in 1991 and 1.06°C in 2022. Global warming has been staled at about 1°C since 1992. The cause of global warming is not know 2024. In the early 1980s it was predicted if global warming was to rise to 1.5°C observable stronger hurricanes should take place in the Gulf of Mexico. Which was given the promotable term of Climate Change. That has not happened as of 2024. The Arctic region is getting warmer. It is scientifically impossible for greenhouse gas behavior to cause global warming. All the greenhouse radiant energy from the earth is completely absorbed in earth's greenhouse effect by greenhouse gases within 20 meters of the radiating surface that is always in saturation from the strong greenhouse gas water vapor. The back of the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) science report states it took its greenhouse gas samples at 20,000 meters altitude where it is common high school level knowledge there is no greenhouse radiant energy. This is typical practice for deceptive marketing to state legal data transparency protecting the perpetrators from fraud prosecution. The IPCC has been transparent with its data acknowledging it is not dealing with active greenhouse gases. Earth's greenhouse effect is frequently used as a primary example to high school students of a system always in saturation from the strong greenhouse gas water vapor absorbing all the greenhouse radiant energy from the earth with greenhouse gases within 20 meters of the radiating surface that is all around us everyday and can't have its overall effect changed. There is no further greenhouse radiant energy to interact with greenhouse gases. At 1% average tropospheric water vapor over 99% of earth’s greenhouse effect is from water vapor. Water vapor would hold earth's greenhouse effect in saturation if it were the only greenhouse gas in the atmosphere. The overall average temperature gain to the earth from the earth’s greenhouse effect is 5.55°C (10°F). Arctic warming is taking place with the proving mechanism being warm Atlantic Ocean waters migrating deeper and more frequently into the Arctic Ocean warming it and the region. That warmer water is causing a few weeks less of reflective snow and ice coverage resulting in more solar heat gain to the Arctic region surface. Atmospheric CO2 levels of 1200 ppm about three times what they are today would greatly invigorate C3 plants the majority of plant life on earth greatly greening the planet. 0.4% of the atmosphere is CO2 and on average 1% is H20 water vapor. (1% H20)/(0.4% CO2) = 25. Water vapor is 25 times more present in the atmosphere on average than CO2. Water vapor has an CO2e of 18, 18 X 25 = 450 CO2e total for water vapor to 1 CO2e for CO2. The Earth’s oceans have 3-1/2 million sea floor volcanic vents warming the water and changing it’s chemistry that have not been systematically accounted for.
@artysanmobile
@artysanmobile 8 дней назад
An excellent lesson here in both how and why data cherry-picking is used to deny a conclusion one doesn’t want to acknowledge. All the classic techniques are on display here. 1. Blinding them with math enumerating your counter-fact is highly effective despite failing to account for global observations you don’t like. 2. Presenting alternative causes with absolutely no data whatsoever to distract from the ones with data. 3. Comparing two wholly different mechanisms with no accounting at all for how their effect inherently differs. Fascinating post.
@TomuCow
@TomuCow 21 день назад
Climate change has been great here in England the last 10 years has turned spain into an oven that brings us more regular heat. This summer was the worst in 9 years yet still way hotter than the 70s 80s 90s. We should just let cows roam free everywhere like they do in india and make cars more affordable.
@gwynt909
@gwynt909 17 дней назад
And the worst recorded winter was in 1815 and was caused by mount Tambora blowing its lid.
@TamaraTorres-v7s
@TamaraTorres-v7s 17 дней назад
The volcanoes
@williamfowler616
@williamfowler616 18 дней назад
the climate has been changing ever since it was a thing, it will always change, tomorrow a volcano could pop and a mini ice age could begin and then you would be wanting the current weather back again.
@carolynstine3465
@carolynstine3465 27 дней назад
This tsunami wasn’t the result of an earthquake? The waves felt around the world were actually the tsunami?
@NicolasReid___1___
@NicolasReid___1___ 27 дней назад
You didn't watch the movie.
@OneWithTheOcean
@OneWithTheOcean 27 дней назад
A tsunami is a big water wave, the big water wave was in the fjord. The waves around the world were vibrations in bedrock/sediment.
@e.k.4508
@e.k.4508 26 дней назад
The tsunami was the result of the landslide from above the glacier. The glacier was thinned bc of the warmer climate. Couldn't sustain the weight of the land above it anymore . So a landslide occurred. The video explains it pretty well!
@carolynstine3465
@carolynstine3465 26 дней назад
@@OneWithTheOcean Wow! I thought I might have missed something.
@robindabank6711
@robindabank6711 26 дней назад
What I understood was, Vibrations felt around the world was of Seiche created in Dickson Fjord
@moto126ktm
@moto126ktm День назад
Climate change hahaha
@UserName-One
@UserName-One 26 дней назад
Why was this idiotic music added? Just let the speak stand by itself!
@dougs3196
@dougs3196 27 дней назад
HAARP
@anya-forger923
@anya-forger923 26 дней назад
Bless you!
@kiereluurs1243
@kiereluurs1243 25 дней назад
HAARP
@AlienSpaceAngel
@AlienSpaceAngel 25 дней назад
The climate is always changeing,, always have been,always will do,, ! ITS NOTHING NEW the earth is alive !!!!
@kiereluurs1243
@kiereluurs1243 25 дней назад
🥱🙄 Moronic.
@logitech4873
@logitech4873 24 дня назад
Grow up
@manythanks5143
@manythanks5143 26 дней назад
Pics or it didn't happened
@Eliza7887
@Eliza7887 26 дней назад
Lots of pictures of before and after in the vid. Look at what happened on Ella island (70 km from the source of the wave). And all the vegetation gone.
@kiereluurs1243
@kiereluurs1243 25 дней назад
Watch the video, or you have no clue.
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