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Hawaiian legends of coastal devastation and paleotsunami reconstruction, Nu'u, Kaupō, Maui, Hawai'i

Hawaiian legends of coastal devastation and paleotsunami reconstruction, Nu'u, Kaupō, Maui, Hawai'i
Hawaiian legends of coastal devastation and paleotsunami reconstruction, Nu'u, Kaupō, Maui, Hawai'i

In Hawaiʻi, tsunamis are often described in orally transmitted legends (moʻolelo). This study examines sedimentary evidence of a possible local submarine landslide-generated tsunami, described in a legend from the south east coast of Maui which originated between the 15th Century CE and the first arrival of Europeans in 1778 CE. Physical evidence for a tsunami, found at the Nu'u Refuge, Maui, is primarily comprised of an extensive coral clast deposit (found 8.5 m above msl and 251 m inland from the shoreline) together with waterworn cobbles which form fracture-embedded wedge clasts in a local basalt escarpment (at up to 8 m above msl). U/Th dating of the coral clasts gives a maximum tsunami deposit age of 1671 CE for the event that may have inspired the local moʻolelo. This depositional sequence is used to characterize the nature of the assumed tsunami in terms of inundation distance, maximum wave runup and minimum flow velocities. A numerical model developed using GeoClaw matches well with the physical evidence. The data and modeling presented here suggest that locally-generated tsunamis from submarine landslides warrant further research attention as sources of destructive high energy marine inundation events.

Minimum flow velocities, Oral traditions, Submarine landslides, Tsunami modeling, Tsunamis, Wedge clasts
0025-3227
Fisher, Scott
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Goff, James
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Cundy, Andrew
994fdc96-2dce-40f4-b74b-dc638286eb08
Sear, David
ccd892ab-a93d-4073-a11c-b8bca42ecfd3
Terry, James
3308b2e7-357d-4f80-849c-6375acf94857
Leveque, Randall j.
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Adams, Loyce m.
36210b5d-423f-4687-b663-ad15ad87d151
Sahy, Diana
7b517882-103e-43cd-b1b8-a8b3668947d6
Fisher, Scott
ea9cc3a2-4eb4-4fc9-8228-7e6c5639016d
Goff, James
f51d7d6f-dfd7-4b5a-9e58-d28afad3b8a9
Cundy, Andrew
994fdc96-2dce-40f4-b74b-dc638286eb08
Sear, David
ccd892ab-a93d-4073-a11c-b8bca42ecfd3
Terry, James
3308b2e7-357d-4f80-849c-6375acf94857
Leveque, Randall j.
4cdf495d-77b2-4205-a951-03a318b810dc
Adams, Loyce m.
36210b5d-423f-4687-b663-ad15ad87d151
Sahy, Diana
7b517882-103e-43cd-b1b8-a8b3668947d6

Fisher, Scott, Goff, James, Cundy, Andrew, Sear, David, Terry, James, Leveque, Randall j., Adams, Loyce m. and Sahy, Diana (2024) Hawaiian legends of coastal devastation and paleotsunami reconstruction, Nu'u, Kaupō, Maui, Hawai'i. Marine Geology, 477, [107408]. (doi:10.1016/j.margeo.2024.107408).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In Hawaiʻi, tsunamis are often described in orally transmitted legends (moʻolelo). This study examines sedimentary evidence of a possible local submarine landslide-generated tsunami, described in a legend from the south east coast of Maui which originated between the 15th Century CE and the first arrival of Europeans in 1778 CE. Physical evidence for a tsunami, found at the Nu'u Refuge, Maui, is primarily comprised of an extensive coral clast deposit (found 8.5 m above msl and 251 m inland from the shoreline) together with waterworn cobbles which form fracture-embedded wedge clasts in a local basalt escarpment (at up to 8 m above msl). U/Th dating of the coral clasts gives a maximum tsunami deposit age of 1671 CE for the event that may have inspired the local moʻolelo. This depositional sequence is used to characterize the nature of the assumed tsunami in terms of inundation distance, maximum wave runup and minimum flow velocities. A numerical model developed using GeoClaw matches well with the physical evidence. The data and modeling presented here suggest that locally-generated tsunamis from submarine landslides warrant further research attention as sources of destructive high energy marine inundation events.

Text
Preprint Hawaiian legends of coastal devastation and paleotsunami reconstruction - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 4 October 2025.
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 September 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 October 2024
Published date: 1 November 2024
Keywords: Minimum flow velocities, Oral traditions, Submarine landslides, Tsunami modeling, Tsunamis, Wedge clasts

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497014
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497014
ISSN: 0025-3227
PURE UUID: d44599f7-9a8c-4495-873f-4937d287da91
ORCID for Andrew Cundy: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4368-2569
ORCID for David Sear: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0191-6179

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Date deposited: 09 Jan 2025 18:04
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Scott Fisher
Author: James Goff
Author: Andrew Cundy ORCID iD
Author: David Sear ORCID iD
Author: James Terry
Author: Randall j. Leveque
Author: Loyce m. Adams
Author: Diana Sahy

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