Monday, July 31, 2017

Huge landslide triggered rare Greenland mega-tsunami

Tsunami waves hit western Greenland after huge landslide - 01:00 UTC, June 18, 2017. 

From Nature by Quirin Schiermeier

Scientists hope studying last month’s deadly event will improve modelling of rockslides that could become more frequent with climate change.


One of the tallest tsunamis in recorded history — a 100-metre-high wave that devastated a remote settlement in Greenland last month — was caused, unusually, by a massive landslide, researchers report.

Seismologists returning from studying the rare event hope that the data they have collected will improve models of landslide mechanics in glacial areas and provide a better understanding of the associated tsunami risks.
They warn that such events could become more frequent as the climate warms.

Chunks of glacier shattered when a powerful tsunami ripped through a fjord in western Greenland in June.
(Hermann Fritz)

The landslide occurred on the evening of 17 June, in the barren Karrat Fjord on the west coast of Greenland.
It caused a sudden surge of seawater that wreaked havoc in the fishing village of Nuugaatsiaq, located on an island within the fjord about 20 kilometres away (see ‘Greenland tsunami’).
The wave washed away eleven houses, and four people are presumed dead.

 The right half of the highlighted area shows the scarred hillside in Greenland’s Karrat Fjord after a landslide fell a kilometer into the water below, causing a tsunami that reached 90 meters.
The left half shows at-risk areas.
The trip was funded by National Science Foundation and the Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance Association.
(Hermann Fritz)

The slide was so large that it generated a seismic signal suggestive of a magnitude-4.1 earthquake, confounding initial efforts to identify its cause, says Trine Dahl-Jensen, a seismologist at the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland.
But more careful examination indicated no significant tectonic activity just before the landslide.



A research team that visited the site earlier this month found that a large volume of rock had plunged — probably spontaneously — from one of the steep sides of the fjord into the water 1,000 metres below, and shattered chunks of a glacier.
That disturbance pushed water levels up by more than 90 metres along the coastline on the same side as the slide.
And although the tsunami dissipated quickly as it crossed the deep, six-kilometre-wide fjord, it still had enough energy to send water 50 metres up the hillside opposite.
The team also measured an increase in water levels of about 10 metres on shorelines 30 kilometres away.
“Landslide-generated tsunamis are much more locally limited than tsunamis produced by sea quakes, but they can be massively tall and devastating in the vicinity,” says Hermann Fritz, an environmental engineer at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta who led the research team.

 A deadly tsunami hit a remote region of Greenland, leaving four people presumed dead. Dozens more were injured and 11 homes were washed away.
The area near the small town of Nuugaatsiaq has a population of about 84.
Experts think the tsunami could have been caused by a rare 4.0 magnitude earthquake or possibly by a large landslide in the area that could have tricked sensors into registering a seismic event.

On the rocks

Fritz and his team hope to produce a 3D reconstruction of the Greenland event.


The relative positions of the landslide and Nuugaatsiaq.
Copernicus Sentinel data, 2017.
Such information is sorely needed, says Costas Synolakis, a tsunami researcher at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles who was not involved in the Greenland survey.
In cold, glacial regions, rocks and ice are held together on steep rock sides, and rising temperatures could make these slopes unstable and these events more common.

 Rink Glacier on Greenland's west coast.
John Sonntag,NASA

Synolakis says that his team has documented in detail only two landslides near glaciers.
“We need at least ten such events to be able to have some rudimentary confidence in landslide computational models to study future impacts and establish early warning criteria.”

The tsunami wreaked havoc on the small village of Nuugaatsiaq, located on an island within a fjord.
(Hermann Fritz)

Researchers have noted another potentially imminent landslide in the Karrat Fjord, says Fritz, where a slow trickle of rocks could turn into abrupt slide.
Residents of three villages in the region have been permanently evacuated to the nearby town of Uummannaq.

Fritz adds that the Greenland event is reminiscent of a 1958 tsunami — the tallest ever recorded — in Lituya Bay, Alaska.
A magnitude-8.3 quake triggered a landslide into a narrow fjord and the bay’s shallow water, causing the water to rise 500 metres above the normal tide level (a measure known as run-up).
By comparison, the 2011 quake-triggered tsunami in Japan, which killed more than 16,000 people and caused the Fukushima nuclear disaster, reached only about 40 metres at its maximum height.

And in 2015, a landslide-generated tsunami in the Taan Fjord in Icy Bay, Alaska, caused a 300-metre run-up of water, says Synolakis.
“Earlier, we didn’t really believe such extremes were possible,” he says.
“But with global warming and sea level rise, such landslides are going to be far more common.”


Links :

Sunday, July 30, 2017

Bathymetry of Mediterranean sea


published by the head department of navigation and oceanography,
Ministry of Defence, Leningrad, USSR, 1st edition, June 1981) / IOC


published by the head department of navigation and oceanography,
Ministry of Defence, Leningrad, USSR, 1st edition, June 1981) / IOC


Sismic map (CBIM-S)
published by the head department of navigation and oceanography,
Ministry of Defence, Leningrad, USSR, 1st edition, June 1981) / IOC


International bathymetric chart of the Mediterranean (IBCM) : thickness of the Plio-quatenary sediments (IBCM-PQ), compiled under the direction of P. Burollet, M. Gennesseaux, P. Kuprin, E. Tzotzolakis, and E. Winnock.

 National Geographic, dec. 1982

A map of the Mediterranean from the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco
(1875-1914 ?)


Carte Nouvelle De La Mer Mediterranee, 1694
 
Miguel Valenzuela
 

Saturday, July 29, 2017

Great white shark encounter

Johan Potgieter has an EXTREMELY close encounter with a Great White Shark off the coast of South Africa.


Film teaser : 47 Metres Down review – shark-cage thriller sinks to the bottom
This film labours unpretentiously in the shadow of Spielberg’s Jaws, before it is almost harpooned by an outrageous final twist

A follow-up to the recent great white shark cage breach accident video showing the whole story in context. It includes the original cage breach footage and an analysis.
Even though the shark gets into the cage, it's not a shark attack.
In the moment this was a horrifying shark encounter but it ended good for both the shark cage diver and the great white shark!

 A follow-up to the recent great white shark cage breach accident video showing the whole story in context. It includes the original cage breach footage and an analysis.
Even though the shark gets into the cage, it's not a shark attack.
In the moment this was a horrifying shark encounter but it ended good for both the shark cage diver and the great white shark!

Links :

Friday, July 28, 2017

Maps for makers: Representing earth through time


From Europeana Labs by Annapaula Freire de Oliveira

Get making with our favorite world maps


We can hardly imagine our daily lives without the precise location information we have at our fingertips – on the screens of our mobile phones or computers.
The last century is considered to be a golden age of map-making.
It has transformed our everyday lives and knowledge of the world, and the digital revolution continues!

However, before globetrotters could trust digital maps to guide them to faraway places, early explorers had to resort to much simpler representations of the world, often drawing the maps themselves throughout their travels.
If you’re fascinated by maps and their history, join us as we outline how early cartographers represented the world as they knew it.
Check out our selection of freely to reuse world maps below to see how cartographers found different ways to represent their understanding of our planet.

T-O maps

The T-O map represents the physical world as first described by the 7th-century scholar Isidore of Seville.
Below a detail of a 14th century 'T-O' map of the world, with Asia, Europe, and Africa marked.


Map from BL Eg 1500, f. 3v. Paolino Veneto. The British Library. Public Domain Marked.

Mappae Mundi

A mappa mundi is a medieval European map of the world.
Take a look at a reproduction of one of the world's most famous maps, named after the Hereford Cathedral in England.
Typical of many medieval maps, the center of the world is presented as the holy city of Jerusalem.
Earth is depicted as a disk and as land surrounded by seas.



Genoese map

Based on the account of the traveler Niccolo da Conti to Asia, the Genoese map is a 1457 world map that possesses a Genoese flag in its upper northwest corner, along with the coat of arms of the Spinolas, a prominent Genoese mercantile family.


Mappemonde, Genoes world map. 19th century. National Library Of France.
Public Domain Marked. Atlas

Atlas

An atlas is a collection of maps.
Find below a 16th century map from the Water Atlas of the World representing the proverbial "four winds", one from each of the cardinal points - North, South, East, West.




Next, an atlas containing 32 maps from around the world.
It’s divided in two parts: the first identical to the 1650 edition, the second one is an atlas of the ancient world dedicated to Greece and nearby regions.

Biblioteca Virtual Del Patrimonio Bibliográfico. CC BY.
Finally, check out a 17th century map with two hemispheres, one showing North and South America, the other Europe, Asia and Australia.
At the top and bottom there are illustrations depicting the elements "air","fire", "earth", and "water".


Links :

Thursday, July 27, 2017

Launch of ARGOS 4 Next generations

22,000 ARGOS beacons transmit each month

From CLS

ARGOS has always connected mobiles everywhere on the planet.
CLS, which has operated the ARGOS satellite system since its creation, thus has all the ARGOS For NEXT GENERATIONS knowledge, professional skills, infrastructures and networks needed to work on ARGOS for Next Generations.
CLS’s mission will be to offer a new system which will give connected objects an entirely new dimension.
A universal connection, which will make the IoT available all over the world. ARGOS will be radically changing its scale of operation!

The satellite-based Internet of things (IoT) will be accessible everywhere, for a sustainable planet.

From location and data collection through to processing, the new-generation ARGOS system will offer information that has been integrated especially for its users’ professions.
Ship-owners, biologists, scientists, environmental protection stakeholders and fishery administrators will all benefit from improvements that enhance their studies, performance and daily management.
To achieve this, DATA ANALYTICS, BIG DATA and DATA MAPPING will be the watchwords for this entirely new generation ARGOS system.
The future system will usher in a radical change of scale.


A revolution in scale will be undertaken while respecting the values of CNES, CLS and the ARGOS system, with a view to protecting our planet, sustainably managing its marine resources and thus protecting humanity.

The Paris-Air Show at Le Bourget was an opportunity for CLS to begin preparing the next step in ARGOS’s future, with our full support.
The ARGOS system was one of the first satellite location and data collection systems.
It contributes a great deal to our knowledge of the environment and its protection. In this context, borne by the worldwide enthusiasm during the COP21, CLS decided to name this key, future system for the environment : “ARGOS for next generations”.

While 2020 will mark the launching of the 5G offer, the current decade is that of very high speed networks, including:
  • A fixed, very high speed fibre optic network, supported and deployed in France by the “France Très Haut Débit” plan.
  • A very high speed mobile network based on 4G.
As Internet connectivity improves, its role in economic growth and human activity is becoming essential.
How then can we accept that a significant part of our own country, just like most of Africa, has no Internet access?
Likewise, how can we imagine ourselves, whether representing a company or as an individual, not being connected while sailing across the oceans or flying over the sea or over practically uninhabited territories?

Well that’s the case today!
In France, in spite of all the private and public initiatives, more than 1.2 million homes will still lack a very high speed connection in 2022.
In Africa, South America, Asia and even some European regions, it is not possible to deploy mobile networks without satellites that link the relay antennas to the rest of the network in zones where the ground infrastructures are inadequate.
As for sailing or flying over the seas or vast, practically uninhabited landmasses, satellites remain the only conceivable connectivity solution.

However, the space sector, with support from the public authorities, has been able to innovate in time and prepare these new types of satellite.
Designed especially for Internet, they will convey data at a sustainable cost for new applications.
They will be offering unprecedented throughput.

In 20 years the total capacity of communication satellites has already been increased a thousand times!
This more or less matches the doubling every two years, predicted by Moore’s law for transistors.
Clearly the space industry is a fundamental source of innovation behind the current technological and industrial revolution.

This French space team has developed new geostationary platforms, called NEO; furthermore it has generalized the use of high-powered electrical propulsion, has designed high-capacity Internet payloads and has been able to produce and deploy the corresponding ground segments.
One might add as well, the integration of advanced digital processes to enable very flexible payloads;

All these innovations are essential building blocks that have been developed by the French space team.
Of course, apart from these innovations, one should also mention Ariane 6, which will be used to launch these new-generation satellites.

So there are solutions and it is now up to be operators to grasp and deploy them.
In parallel with the development of these geostationary satellites, which have accounted for practically the whole commercial SATCOM market for more than 20 years, projects for Internet satellite constellations in low or medium Earth orbit have emerged, such as O3B, Oneweb, Leosat and others which are apparently now being developed.

The space offer has diversified and grown to rapidly meet the many new need.
For the general public, this IoT may for instance take the form of sensors worn by individuals to monitor their health.
The signals produced are transmitted by mobile telephones to servers which analyse them.
For the industrial world, the IoT is a key component of tomorrow’s factories.
For these applications, satellites are of course not the standard solution.

But the Internet of Things also includes monitoring of the environment, tracking of aircraft and ships and monitoring logistics and supply chains from Chengdu to Cedar Rapids or Bourges: for those applications, only satellites are able to provide the worldwide coverage needed, by efficiently compensating for the limits of ground- based networks.
Some first-generation space systems have already been deployed.
They partially meet the needs for satellite-based IoT. Several initiatives are now emerging, particularly in North America but also in China and Australia.

The French space team is already active in this field and, as I have already said, has the know- how for offering the most competitive solutions. It is necessary however to work together, if possible, to pool the know-how and resources to launch a major initiative in the field.

CNES is completely committed to this strategy.
The work done by CLS is the right framework for this cooperation, and ARGOS is clearly the best system around which to build a satellite-based IoT!
Satellite-based IoT... ARGOS has been doing this for more than 30 years, by collecting data for scientific and environmental purposes across the entire planet!

CLS will have the full support of CNES and its engineers.
The same engineers who invented ARGOS 30 years ago!
The same engineers who have developed it right up to its fourth generation.
And no player is more qualified than CLS, which has been operating and marketing the ARGOS system, to supervise the upgrading of the system for new applications and services.
This will be done by adding a complement to the “historical” ARGOS system, based on three polar orbits, and to which we are and will remain fully committed.
CLS will have the full support of CNES and its engineers.
These same engineers who invented ARGOS 30 years ago!
The same engineers who have developed it right up to its fourth generation.

Any industrial companies that could contribute their know-how for defining the system and the satellite constellation are thus invited to contact CLS.
Likewise, for all those with business projects in the IoT field who would like to share this system and invest in it. 

The ARGOS Goniometer is a direct receiver used to collect your data and decode GPS positions in real-time.
The CLS goniometer has been designed by CLS to specifically allow users to find active ARGOS platforms in the field.
Depending on the altitude and the reception conditions the goniometer can detect all transmitting platforms within a radius of 100 km or more. 

CNES will be carefully monitoring the progress of the project over the next few months.
IoT, the Internet of Things, is now emerging in consumer markets. With ARGOS for NEXT GENERATIONS, CNES and CLS intend to make the IoT available anywhere on Earth.
CNES, with its visionary innovation, created the ARGOS satellite-based location and data collection system in the 1980s and for the first time ever, collected data from animals, drifting buoys, hydrology stations, volcano-monitoring platforms and fishing vessels.

 The future of our fisheries depends to a large extent on our ability to preserve stocks effectively.
CLS has been certified by most of the leading seaboard nations around the world and is already operating on thousands of vessels worldwide.
 
 The ARGOS location and data collection system has always been a precursor:
  • It was the first constellation dedicated to the environment in the 1980s,
  • It became an international constellation in the 1990s,
  • It offered two-way broadband capability from 2000 on,
  • It added miniaturization in 2010; the smallest ARGOS transmitter only weighs 2 grams.
  • One of the main advantages of the system is that it requires very little power, which means small, autonomous transmitters can be manufactured.
  • The history of animal migrations has also been rewritten, with more than 100,000 animals tracked thanks to ARGOS.
  • Oceanography has become operational and is now used for weather forecasting and climate studies
  • Fishery administration has undergone a major revolution and it is now possible to track industrial ships at sea anywhere in the world, with a fully secure communications system!
Coordinates determined with ARGOS by means of Doppler location cannot be tampered with and thus enable authorities to monitor fishing vessel activities in an entirely secure way.

CLS solutions include a wide range of services based on proven and innovative space technologies. As a result of 30 years of close collaboration with governments and agencies in charge of maritime surveillance, and maritime industry operators.

ARGOS has always connected mobiles everywhere the planet.
CLS, which has operated the ARGOS satellite system since its creation, thus has all the knowledge, professional skills, infrastructures and networks needed to work on ARGOS for Next Generations.

CLS’s mission will be to offer a new system which will give connected objects an entirely new dimension.
A universal connection, which will make the IoT available all over the world.
ARGOS will be radically changing its scale of operation!

From location and data collection through to processing, the new-generation ARGOS system will offer information that has been integrated especially for its users’ professions.
Ship-owners, biologists, scientists, environmental protection stakeholders and fishery administrators will all benefit from improvements that enhance their studies, performance and daily management.


To achieve this, DATA ANALYTICS, BIG DATA and DATA MAPPING will be the watchwords for this entirely new generation ARGOS system.
The future system will usher in a radical change of scale.
Data collectors will hence become information providers.
The new ARGOS system which professionals will be able to use directly, will help them make decisions on a daily, operational basis.
A revolution in scale will be undertaken while respecting the values of CNES, CLS and the ARGOS system, with a view to protecting our planet, sustainably managing its marine resources and thus protecting humanity.

Links :