Quite an impressive event, and thankfully, no one was harmed. And it's probably a good reminder of why ongoing work to better understand and track these events matters!
And thanks to @geophysichick.bsky.social for letting all of us know about the event!
13.08.2025 02:29 β π 17 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0
(3) There was a seiche that lasted roughly an hour after the slide, similar to past events like the 2023 Greenland landslide and tsunami.
Here's our story about this event, likely to evolve in the upcoming days: earthquake.alaska.edu/major-landsl...
13.08.2025 02:29 β π 16 π 4 π¬ 3 π 0
(2) We saw remarkable precursor activity starting ~18 hours before the main slide. These smaller events came from the same area, which might be one of the best examples of landslide precursors that have ever been recorded.
13.08.2025 02:29 β π 17 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
A day later, the confirmed location came pointing to the glacier's terminus. Three things really stand out.
(1) The seismic signal was recorded more than 1,000 km away, and even the high-frequency moveout could be tracked statewideβclear signs of a big landslide.
13.08.2025 02:29 β π 11 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
The location pointed to ~7 km east of South Sawyer Glacier, and we got a rather large volume estimate -- range of 30 - 290 million cubic meters. Thatβs bigger than anything weβve used to build our size-estimation method, so thereβs a lot of uncertainty.
13.08.2025 02:29 β π 11 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
It has been a busy couple of days! There was a large landslide and tsunami in SE Alaska, in Tracy Arm, Sunday morning. Luckily, no injuries or casualties were reported. This region is outside of our current landslide coverage, but we were able to get a quick location after hearing about the event. π§΅
13.08.2025 02:29 β π 57 π 26 π¬ 5 π 5
Quite an impressive event, and thankfully, no one was harmed. And it's probably a good reminder of why we should continue researching and monitoring these kinds of emerging hazards!
13.08.2025 02:21 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
(3) The slide set off a seiche that lasted around 5 hours, similar to events like the 2023 Greenland landslide & tsunami.
Here's our story about this event, likely to evolve in the upcoming days: earthquake.alaska.edu/major-landsl...
13.08.2025 02:21 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
(2) We saw remarkable precursor activity starting ~18 hours before the main slide. These smaller events came from the same area, which might be one of the best examples of landslide precursors that have ever been recorded.
13.08.2025 02:21 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
A day later, the confirmed location came pointing to the glacier's terminus. Three things really stand out.
(1) The seismic signal was recorded more than 1,000 km away, and even the high-frequency moveout could be tracked statewideβclear signs of a big landslide.
13.08.2025 02:21 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
The location pointed to ~7 km east of South Sawyer Glacier, and we got a rather large volume estimate -- range of 30 - 290 million cubic meters. Thatβs bigger than anything weβve used to build our size-estimation method, so thereβs a lot of uncertainty.
13.08.2025 02:21 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
M8.8 earthquake strikes offshore Kamchatka
A dangerous subduction megathrust ruptures once again
βοΈ π§ͺ
A M8.8 earthquake just ruptured the subduction zone offshore Russiaβs Kamchatka peninsula. This is one of the worldβs truly huge earthquakes, and a triggered tsunami is currently traveling across the Pacific ocean.
This same fault ruptured on July 20th in a M7.4, and last August in a M7.1.
30.07.2025 04:05 β π 177 π 89 π¬ 2 π 9
Thereβs more: the largest of the three landslides triggered a modest tsunami β a 4 cm wave recorded at a nearby tide gauge.
To our knowledge, this is the first time a landslide in this region has been detected in real time and confirmed to have generated a tsunami.
22.07.2025 19:54 β π 1 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
Check out our new paper in GRL! On September 20, 2024, we detected three large landslides in real time at the terminus of Surprise Glacier using seismic data.
Weβve been running a test real-time landslide detection algorithm in this region for two years, and have detected 30 landslides since then.
22.07.2025 19:54 β π 2 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
Barry Arm was clearly showing off today!
18.07.2025 06:15 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
M6.2 earthquake shakes Istanbul
It's not the big one... yet.
π§ͺβοΈ
A M6.2 earthquake below the Sea of Marmara shook Istanbul today. While damage in this event was limited, a large earthquake on this fault system is one of the worldβs most serious, and most anticipated, seismic disasters.
Learn more: earthquakeinsights.substack.com/p/m62-earthq...
23.04.2025 20:42 β π 61 π 28 π¬ 2 π 0
Looking forward to seeing everyone!
14.04.2025 01:56 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Studying This Slow-Moving Alaskan Landslide May Help Avert Future Disaster
If the landslide at the Barry Arm fjord collapses, its falling ice and rock could generate a devastating 650-foot-high tsunami
Hereβs a recent piece I was part of on Alaskaβs landslide hazards and the threats they pose to coastal communities.
It also highlights something bigger: why we need more scientists working on these kinds of hazardsβand why supporting that work matters.
www.smithsonianmag.com/science-natu...
24.03.2025 22:12 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Transforming the science of cascading geohazards to enable a resilient society.
Explore more on our website: https://www.geoclash.org/
I make ice cream and do science and suck at fly fishing. YYC
glaciers - geohazards - climate - geomorphology - geomatics - gelato
He/him
Fellow, @rcgssgrc.bsky.social
Researching earthquakes, active faults and seismic risk π𫨠at the Geological Survey of Canada π¨π¦ | Adjunct professor at UBC and UVic | Opinions are my own
Director of the Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center (@cascadiaeqs.bsky.social) and Associate Professor of geophysics at University of Oregon. I research big earthquakes and tsunamis.
Neuigkeiten zu aktuellen Erdbeben weltweit und Neues aus der Welt der Erdbebenforschung
Seismologist. Views my own.
Proud husband and father. High school teacher (Chemistry-Physics). Variable star observer @AAVSO. Auroras. Researcher in Historical Seismology @SeismoSocietyAm.
Esposende, PORTUGAL
earthquake scientist with lots of faults, mommy, wife, beach volleyball enthusiast, foodie
PhD Student at University of Canterbury, NZ.
Historical seismologist, United Kingdom & Aotearoa New Zealand.
Love history, botany, books, fantasy, science fiction & sports
I currently work as a Post-Doctoral researcher at the University of Patras (TRANSFORMΒ² project) and the Seismological Laboratory of the NKUA, Section of Geophysics-Geothermy.
Prof. of Earthquake Geology and Natural Hazards @RWTH Aachen University, opinions are my own, consulting and ProgRock
Senior research fellow in volcano seismology at Victoria University of Wellington. Studying Aotearoa's restless volcanoes one quake at a time
www.finniganillsleykemp.com
Seismologist, geophysicist, structural geologist, geoconservationist, not necessarily in that order.
Earthquake physicist in Los Angeles; uses computer models to study how faults behave/interact
University of California graduate; Cal State faculty
cats | homebrewing | viola, bluegrass fiddle, Javanese gamelan | D&D | Γ©g er aΓ° lΓ¦ra Γslensku
he/him | aroace
Iβm a bot real-time posting/skeeting M 1.0+ earthquakes in the San Francisco Bay Area.
Built by @djcentos7.bsky.social
Caltech Seismological Laboratory | A focal point and source for earthquake science, discovery, and research in Southern California for over 100 years!
Planetary seismologist in Pasadena. Project Scientist for InSight (sigh) and PI for Farside Seismic Suite. Somewhat nerdy. Opinions are, of course, my own. he/him
We measure the physical, mechanical, and hydraulic properties of rocks πͺ¨
Studying how alteration influences volcanic hazards π ERC SYNERGY ROTTnROCK
Strasbourg Institute of Earth & Environment, University of Strasbourg (France)
Posts: Prof. Mike Heap
Canadian-New Zealand seismologist in New Zealand. Mostly following and posting about earthquakes and seismology-related things, but occasionally other things that interest me.