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Tsunamiites. Features and Implications. Edition No. 2

  • Book

  • December 2020
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5146482

Tsunamiites: Features and Implications, Second Edition, is an overview of the state-of-the art developments in sedimentology of tsunami-induced and tsunami-affected deposits, namely tsunamiites. It also highlights new problems and issues calling for additional investigation and provides insight into the direction for future tsunamiite research.

New to this edition: discussion of the impact of 2011 tsunami in Northern Japan as well as additional coverage of offshore tractive current deposition and deposition of boulders.

Please Note: This is an On Demand product, delivery may take up to 11 working days after payment has been received.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: why a book tsunamiites2. The Term "Tsunamiites�3. Tsunamis and Tsunami Sedimentology4. Bedforms and Sedimentary Structures Characterizing Tsunami Deposits5. Tsunami depositional Processes Reflecting the waveform in a Small Bay: Interpretation from the Grain-size Distribution and Sedimentary Structure6. Deposits of the 1992 Nicaragua Tsunami7. Sedimentary Characteristics and depositional Processes of Onshore Tsunami Deposits: An Example of Sedimentation Associated with the 12 July 1993 Hokkaido-Nansei-oki Earthquake Tsunami8. Distribution and Significance of the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami Deposits: Initial Results from Thailand and Sri Lanka9. Thickness and Grain-Size Distribution of Indian Ocean Tsunami Deposits at Khao Lak and Phra Thong Island, South-western Thailand10. Lessons from the 2011 Tohoku-oki Tsunami: Implications for Paleo-Tsunami Research11. Offshore Tractive Current Deposition: The forgotten Tsunami Sedimentation Process12. The geological tsunami traces of the 1700 Cascadia Giant Earthquake of North America and Descriptive Records in Old Documents in Japan13. Deep-Sea Homogenites: Sedimentary Expression of a Prehistoric Megatsunami in the Eastern Mediterranean14. Tsunami-Related Sedimentary Properties of Mediterranean Homogenites as an Example of deep-Sea Tsunamiites15. Volcanic-Induced Tsunami and Tsunamiites16. Tsunamiites?Conceptual Descriptions and a Possible case at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the Pernambuce Basin,Nortjheastern Brazil17. Deep-Sea Tsunami deposits in the Proto-Caribbean Sea at the Cretaceous / Tertiary Boundary18. The Genesis of Ocean Impact Craters and Impact Generated Tsunami Deposit19. Tsunami Boulder Deposits20. Characteristic Features of Tsunamiites21. Sedimentology of Tsunamiits Reflecting Chaotic Events in the Geological Record?Significance and Problems22. Introduction to a Tsunami-deposits Database

Authors

Tsunemasa Shiki Emeritus Professor, Kyoto University, Japan. Tsunemasa Shiki is Emeritus Professor at Kyoto University in Japan. Studies of subjects in sedimentology, marine Geology, disaster prevention. Yoshinobu Tsuji Professor, University of Tokyo, Japan. Yoshinobu Tsuji, Head of Institute of Studies of Earthquake and Tsunami Disaster Prevention. Formerly, Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Studies of Tsunami sediments with special attention to their historical documents. Teiji Yamazaki Emeritus Professor, Osaka Kyoiku University, Japan. T. Yamazaki, Emeritus Professor of Osaka Kyoiku University, Sedimentology, Volcano-stratigraphy, Lithology, Toyonaka City, Osaka, Japan Futoshi Nanayama Paleogeodynamics Research Group, Institute of Geology and Geoinformation, Geological Survey of Japan, AIST, Japan. Chief of Senior Researcher at the Geological Survey of Japan, AIST and visiting Professor at the Center for Marine Environment Studies, Kumamoto University, Japan.
Professor Nanayama specializes in the modern sedimentary process, sedimentary geology, sedimentary petrology, and earth science.