Effects of source faulting and fringing reefs on the 2009 South Pacific
tsunami inundation in southeast Upolu, Samoa
- Cyprien Bosserelle,
- Shaun Williams,
- Kwok Fai Cheung,
- Titimanu Simi,
- Yoshiki Yamazaki,
- Volker Roeber,
- Thorne Lay,
- Emily M. Lane,
- Ryan Paulik,
- Lameko Simanu
Cyprien Bosserelle
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Author ProfileShaun Williams
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Corresponding Author:[email protected]
Author ProfileKwok Fai Cheung
University of Hawaii at Manoa, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Author ProfileYoshiki Yamazaki
University of Hawaii at Manoa, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Author ProfileVolker Roeber
Univ Pau & Pays Adour, Univ Pau & Pays Adour
Author ProfileThorne Lay
University of California Santa Cruz, University of California Santa Cruz
Author ProfileEmily M. Lane
National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research, National Institute for Water and Atmospheric Research
Author ProfileRyan Paulik
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research
Author ProfileLameko Simanu
Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment
Author ProfileAbstract
The subduction zone along the northern Tonga Trench has the highest
plate convergence rate in the world, but limited records of its seismic
and tsunamigenic activities. In 2009, a tsunami generated by an MW 8.1
earthquake doublet caused severe impacts in the region including damage
and loss of life on the south shores of Upolu and Savaii Islands, Samoa.
Here we use numerical modeling aided by recorded data and eyewitness
accounts to evaluate which of the published source models in the Tonga
Trench region most suitably represents the 2009 event for use in hazard
assessment around Samoa. We show that only a few of the published
sources are suitable to reproduce large inundation observed in Samoa and
none reproduces runup as high as observed in areas that were most
severely impacted on the southeast Upolu coast. The distribution and
intensity of inundation is dependent on local topographic and
bathymetric features, configuration of coastal geomorphology, and
trapping of short-period waves over the reef flats. For one of the
sources, comparison of the relative contributions of the normal and
thrust faulting components of the doublet to the southeast Upolu
inundation indicates that the initial intraplate normal faulting
dominated the east-northeastward tsunami propagation and inundation
compared with the subsequent interplate thrust faulting. Overall, two
key source models are discussed and identified for future refinement.Dec 2020Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans volume 125 issue 12. 10.1029/2020JC016537