2019 EJRNL PP ALASTAIR DAWSON 1
Terbatas Yanti Sri Rahayu, S.Sos
» ITB
Terbatas Yanti Sri Rahayu, S.Sos
» ITB
Research in tsunami geoscience has accelerated markedly ever since the tragedy of the
Indian Ocean tsunami of Boxing Day 2004. Yet, for many decades and centuries, scholars have
been describing a multiplicity of tsunami events. Thus the Royal Society devoted a whole volume
to the effects of the Great Lisbon earthquake and tsunami of November AD 1755 while in the early
nineteenth century Charles Darwin was describing the great tsunami at Valdivia, Chile, in his
account of the Voyage of the Beagle. Today, research in tsunami geoscience is still fi nding its feet.
Thus, whereas there has been a wealth of publications on the reconstruction of Late Quaternary
and Holocene tsunamis, the literature describing evidence for tsunamis in the geological record are
rare. In this paper, we describe how our understanding of tsunamis has changed over time and we
try also to identify areas of tsunami geoscience worthy of future study.