The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Scientists’ prize-winning work reveals a tsunami struck Scotland’s east coast

Waves up to six metres high hit the region around 8,000 years ago

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM pmeiklem@thecourier.co.uk

Scotland’s east coast was once battered by a tsunami including waves up to six metres high, researcher­s have shown.

Dundee University’s Professor Sue Dawson and Dr Simon Cook have won a national award for their work on “extreme geographic­al events” on local shores.

Prof Dawson was recorded taking soil samples from local coastlines, including Montrose Basin and Tentsmuir Forest, to show a huge wave had struck Scotland around 8,000 years ago.

A collapsing seabed close to what is now Norway sent the Storegga Tsunami racing across the North Atlantic Ocean, before the “huge, high-energy waves” struck Scotland.

She said: “In Shetland, these waves reached a height of at least 20 metres.

“Here on Scotland’s east coast, the waves were between four and six metres high.”

The geoscienti­sts from the university’s geography and environmen­tal science department won the Geographic­al Associatio­n’s Silver Publishers Award for their work to highlight the ancient waves.

The Time for Geography educationa­l videos include animations, physical models, real-life footage, and on-location shots to reveal the causes of the tsunamis and what geoscienti­sts can learn from past events.

Members of the associatio­n hailed the videos for bringing to life the “often neglected” subject.

The award was presented at its annual conference, which was hosted online.

Prof Dawson said: “These videos represent the fantastic collaborat­ion of everyone involved and a wonderful testament to the success of our partnershi­p with Time for Geography in supporting secondary education as well as showcasing the excellent coastal landscapes on our doorstep.”

Prof Dawson is a world-renowned hazard geoscienti­st and an expert on tsunamis.

She has helped to reveal the impact that historic tsunamis have had in shaping the British Isles, work highlighte­d in the award-winning films.

She said a similar event could happen again today. “As recently as 1755, Cornwall was hit by a three-metre-high tsunami. But these are rare events, and they don’t happen very often.

“It is unlikely that another large event like the Storegga Tsunami would happen today,” she added.

Dr Cook’s research work focuses on hazards and risks associated with deglaciati­on, glacial erosion and sediment transfer, as well as improving the public communicat­ion of geohazard and risk science.

“In Shetland, these waves reached a height of at least 20 metres.

PROFESSOR SUE DAWSON OF DUNDEE UNIVERSITY

 ??  ?? Dr Simon Cook from Dundee University studies “extreme geographic­al events” on local shores.
Dr Simon Cook from Dundee University studies “extreme geographic­al events” on local shores.

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