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040 |aCaOODSP|beng|erda|cCaOODSP
0410 |aeng|beng|bfre
043 |an-cn-bc|apn-----
0861 |aFs97-18/361E-PDF
1001 |aThomson, Richard E., |eauthor.
24510|aEffect of global sea level rise over the near, intermediate and long-term on tsunami waves at the Seal Cove coast guard station in northwestern British Columbia / |cRichard Thomson, Alexander Rabinovich, Lauren Lupton, Stephen Mundschutz, and Nicky Hastings.
264 1|aSidney, BC : |bFisheries and Oceans Canada, Institute of Ocean Sciences, |c2023.
264 4|c©2023
300 |a1 online resource (v, 75 pages) : |bcolour illustrations, colour maps.
336 |atext|btxt|2rdacontent
337 |acomputer|bc|2rdamedia
338 |aonline resource|bcr|2rdacarrier
4901 |aCanadian technical report of hydrography and ocean sciences, |x1488-5417 ; |v361
504 |aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 69-75).
5203 |a"The coast of British Columbia is susceptible to flooding and strong currents from trans-oceanic tsunamis. Global sea level rise and vertical tectonic land motions further compound the effects of future tsunamigenic events. The present study centres on the Seal Cove Coast Guard Station and environ located in Prince Rupert Harbour. We examine historical tsunamis observed at this location and the results of numerical modelling of the two potentially most dangerous Seal Cove tsunamis – a 1964-type Alaska and a 1700-type Cascadia Subduction Zone (CSZ) tsunami – and estimate the risk for the region taking into account vertical tectonic motion and climatic sea level change. Of the seven major tsunamis recorded between 1909 and 2021, only the 1964 event caused hazardous conditions in the Prince Rupert area. Centuries earlier, the magnitude Mw = 9.0 CSZ earthquake of 26 January 1700 generated a trans-oceanic tsunami that also strongly affected the British Columbia coast. Such an event is likely to occur again sometime in the next 500 to 700 years. Based on reports by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), James et al. [2015; 2021] and Lemmen et al. [2016] examined sea level rise in western Canada that takes into account both climatic effects and vertical tectonic motions for low, moderate and high global sea level rise scenarios. These findings enabled us to estimate the effect that sea-level changes will have on future tsunamis impacting the entire British Columbia coast. Detailed results focus on the Seal Cove Coast Guard Station in the northwest corner of the province"--Abstract, page iv.
546 |aIncludes abstracts in English and French.
650 0|aTsunamis|zBritish Columbia|zPrince Rupert Harbour Region.
650 0|aTsunamis|zBritish Columbia|zPrince Rupert Harbour Region|xMathematical models.
650 0|aTsunamis|xRisk assessment|zBritish Columbia|zPrince Rupert Harbour Region.
650 0|aSea level|xEnvironmental aspects|zBritish Columbia|zPacific Coast.
650 0|aSea level|xEnvironmental aspects|zBritish Columbia|zPrince Rupert Harbour Region.
650 6|aTsunamis|zColombie-Britannique|zPrince Rupert, Région du port de.
650 6|aTsunamis|zColombie-Britannique|zPrince Rupert, Région du port de|xModèles mathématiques.
650 6|aTsunamis|xÉvaluation du risque|zColombie-Britannique|zPrince Rupert, Région du port de.
650 6|aMer|xNiveau|xAspect de l'environnement|zColombie-Britannique|zPacifique, Côte du.
650 6|aMer|xNiveau|xAspect de l'environnement|zColombie-Britannique|zPrince Rupert, Région du port de.
7101 |aCanada. |bDepartment of Fisheries and Oceans, |eissuing body.
7102 |aInstitute of Ocean Sciences, Patricia Bay, |eissuing body.
7760#|tEffect of global sea level rise over the near, intermediate and long-term on tsunami waves at the Seal Cove Coast Guard station in northwestern British Columbia.|w(CaOODSP)9.928933
830#0|aCanadian technical report of hydrography and ocean sciences ;|v361.|w(CaOODSP)9.504781
85640|qPDF|s5.58 MB|uhttps://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2023/mpo-dfo/Fs97-18-361-eng.pdf