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Ocean observations required to minimize uncertainty in global tsunami forecasts, warnings, and emergency response
Angove, M.; Arcas, D.; Bailey, R.; Carrasco, P.; Coetzee, D.; Fry, B.; Gledhill, K.; Harada, S.; von Hillebrandt-Andrade, C.; Kong, L.; McCreery, C.; McCurrach, S.-J.; Miao, Y.; Sakya, A.E.; Schindelé, F. (2019). Ocean observations required to minimize uncertainty in global tsunami forecasts, warnings, and emergency response. Front. Mar. Sci. 6: 350. https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00350
In: Frontiers in Marine Science. Frontiers Media: Lausanne. ISSN 2296-7745; e-ISSN 2296-7745, more
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 

Keywords
    Detection
    Water waves > Surface water waves > Tsunamis
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    forecast, warning, mitigation, near field, uncertainty

Authors  Top 
  • Angove, M.
  • Arcas, D.
  • Bailey, R.
  • Carrasco, P.
  • Coetzee, D.
  • Fry, B.
  • Gledhill, K.
  • Harada, S.
  • von Hillebrandt-Andrade, C.
  • Kong, L.
  • McCreery, C.
  • McCurrach, S.-J.
  • Miao, Y.
  • Sakya, A.E.
  • Schindelé, F.

Abstract
    It is possible that no catastrophe has mobilized the global ocean science and coastal emergency management communities more than the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Though the Pacific tsunami threat was recognized, and a warning system had been in place since 1965, there was no warning system in the Indian Ocean, and almost 230,000 people perished. More broadly, the event highlighted critical gaps in global tsunami science and observation systems. In 2004, real-time coastal and deep-ocean observation systems were almost non-existent. Tsunami sources were inferred based on rough seismic parameters. Since then, tremendous strides have been made under the auspices of IOC/UNESCO toward better understanding tsunami mechanisms, deploying advanced real-time tsunami observation systems, and establishing tsunami warning and mitigation systems for the four main ocean basins at risk from tsunamis. Nevertheless, significant detection, measurement, and forecast uncertainties remain to meet emergency response and community needs. A new generation of ocean sensing capabilities presents an opportunity to address several of these uncertainties. Ocean bottom pressures can be measured over dense, multisensor grids linking stand-alone buoy systems with emerging capabilities like fiber-optic cables. The increasing number of coastal sea-level stations provides the higher time and space resolution needed tobetter verify forecasts and account for local variability. In addition, GNSS sensors may be able to provide solid-earth data needed to define seismic tsunami sources more precisely in the short timescales required. When combined with advances in seismology, other emerging techniques, and state-of-the-art modeling and computational resources, these capabilities will enable more timely and accurate tsunami detection, measurement, and forecasts. Because of these advances in detection and measurement, theopportunity exists to greatly reduce and/or quantify uncertainties associated with forecasting tsunamis. Providing more timely and accurate information related to tsunami location, arrival time, height, inundation, and duration would improve public trust and confidence and fundamentally alter tsunami emergency response. Additionally, this capability could be integrated with related fields (e.g., storm surge, sea-level rise, tidepredictions, and ocean forecasting) to develop and deploy one continuous, real-time, accurate depiction of the always moving boundary that separates ocean from coast and, sometimes, life from death.

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