A rockslide-generated tsunami in a Greenland fjord rang Earth for 9 days.
Kristian SvennevigStephen P HicksThomas ForbrigerThomas LecocqRudolf Widmer-SchnidrigAnne MangeneyClément HibertNiels Jákup KorsgaardAntoine S LucasClaudio SatrianoRobert E AnthonyAurélien MordretSven SchippkusSøren RysgaardWieter BooneSteven J GibbonsKristen L CookSylfest GlimsdalFinn LøvholtKoen Van NotenJelle D AssinkAlexis MarboeufAnthony LomaxKris VannesteTaka'aki TairaMatteo SpagnoloRaphael S M De PlaenPaula KoelemeijerCarl W EbelingAndrea CannataWilliam D HarcourtDavid G CornwellCorentin CaudronPiero PoliPascal BernardEric LaroseÉléonore StutzmannPeter H VossBjorn LundFlavio CannavòManuel J Castro-DíazEsteban J ChavesTrine Dahl-JensenNicolas De Pinho DiasAline DéprezRoeland DevelterDouglas DregerLäslo G EversEnrique D Fernández-NietoAna M G FerreiraGareth FunningAlice-Agnes GabrielMarc HendrickxAlan L KafkaMarie KeidingJeffrey T KerbyShfaqat Abbas KhanAndreas Kjær DideriksenOliver D LambTine B LarsenBradley LipovskyIkha MagdalenaJean-Philippe MaletMikkel MyrupLuis RiveraEugenio Ruiz-CastilloSelina WetterBastien WirtzPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
Climate change is increasingly predisposing polar regions to large landslides. Tsunamigenic landslides have occurred recently in Greenland ( Kalaallit Nunaat ), but none have been reported from the eastern fjords. In September 2023, we detected the start of a 9-day-long, global 10.88-millihertz (92-second) monochromatic very-long-period (VLP) seismic signal, originating from East Greenland. In this study, we demonstrate how this event started with a glacial thinning-induced rock-ice avalanche of 25 × 10 6 cubic meters plunging into Dickson Fjord, triggering a 200-meter-high tsunami. Simulations show that the tsunami stabilized into a 7-meter-high long-duration seiche with a frequency (11.45 millihertz) and slow amplitude decay that were nearly identical to the seismic signal. An oscillating, fjord-transverse single force with a maximum amplitude of 5 × 10 11 newtons reproduced 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.