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Tsunami Hazard Assessment along the Coast of Lingayen Gulf, Pangasinan, Philippines 4th International Conference on Earth Science and Climate Change 16-18 June 2015, Melia Alicante Julius M. GALDIANO PHIVOLCS Presentation Outline Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 2 Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 3 Tectonic Setting and Faults and Trenches in the Philippines EQUATOR http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learning/topics 4 Philippine Seismicity 1608-2012 For the past 400 years: 40 tsunamis Magnitude:6.0 to 8.3 Casualties:4075 Data sources: NEIC for recent earthquakes (1897-2002) Bautista and Oike (2004) for historical 5 earthquakes (1608-1896) Study Area: Lingayen Gulf, Pangasinan Province M7.6 6 May 1934 Source: Google Maps Source: NGDC; Bautista (1999) Historical Events May 6, 1934, 11:59 AM-2m tsunami in San Esteban, Ilocos Sur Figure by Bautista et al. May 16, 1924, 12:16 AM-1m tsunami in Agno, Pangasinan Source: Philippine Tsunamis and Seiches (1589-2012) by Bautista et al. Lingayen Gulf near Real-time Tsunami Warning System System Composition: - Detection Station (Wet, Dry, and Ultrasonic Tide Gauge Sensors) - Alerting System (Tridirectional loud siren, 300-400 meter range) Lingayen Gulf Tsunami Detector Alerting System Map Source: Google Image Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 9 Purpose of the Study To predict the tsunami travel time and its maximum height at forecast points To calculate the subsequent tsunami inundation height and submerged area at a target location To discuss the effectiveness of tsunami sensors for near real- time tsunami forecasting 10 Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 11 Theoretical Concepts Equations in Cartesian Coordinate System Shallow Water Wave Equation: 𝝏𝜼 𝝏𝑴 𝝏𝑵 + + =𝟎 𝝏𝒕 𝝏𝒙 𝝏𝒚 Equations of motion: 𝝏𝑴 𝝏𝒕 𝝏𝑵 𝝏𝒕 + 𝝏 𝑴𝟐 𝝏𝒚 𝑫 + 𝝏 𝑴𝑵 𝝏𝒙 𝑫 + 𝝏 𝑴𝑵 𝝏𝒚 𝑫 + 𝝏 𝑵𝟐 𝝏𝒚 𝑫 = = 𝝏𝜼 −𝒈𝑫 𝝏𝒙 𝝏𝜼 −𝒈𝑫 𝝏𝒚 − − 𝒈𝒏𝟐 𝑴 𝑫𝟕/𝟑 𝒈𝒏𝟐 𝑵 𝑫𝟕/𝟑 𝑴𝟐 + 𝑵𝟐 𝑴𝟐 + 𝑵𝟐 𝜂 : wave amplitude 𝑡 : time 𝑀, 𝑁 : discharge fluxes in the x and y directions D : total water depth n : roughness coefficient References: Imamura et al., 2006; Koshimora, 2009 12 Theoretical Concepts Equations in Spherical Coordinate System Continuity and momentum equation: 𝝏𝜼 𝝏𝒕 𝝏𝑴 𝝏𝒕 + 𝝏𝑵 𝝏𝒕 𝒈𝑫 𝝏𝜼 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝝀 + + 𝒈𝑫 𝝏 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝜽 + 𝟏 𝝏𝜼 [ 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝝀 𝟏 𝝏 𝑴𝟐 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝝀 𝑫 + 𝟏 𝝏 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝝀 + 𝝏 𝑵 𝝏𝜽 + 𝟏 𝝏 𝝏𝑴𝑵 (𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 ) 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝝀 𝑫 𝑵𝟐 𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝑫 𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 ] = 0 + + 𝒈𝒏𝟐 𝑴 𝑫𝟕/𝟑 𝟏 𝝏 𝑴𝑵 𝒈𝒏𝟐 ( ) + 𝟕/𝟑 𝑵 𝑹𝒄𝒐𝒔𝜽 𝝏𝝀 𝑫 𝑫 𝑴𝟐 + 𝑵𝟐 =0 𝑴𝟐 + 𝑵𝟐 =0 𝜂 : wave amplitude 𝑡 : time 𝑀 : discharge flux in the 𝜆 (along the latitude) 𝑁 : discharge flux in the 𝜃 (along the longitude) 𝐷 : total water depth 𝑛 : roughness coefficient 𝑅 : radius of the earth 13 Reference: Yanagisawa, 2013 Theoretical Concepts After JMA Lecture Notes (2013) 14 Theoretical Concepts Effect of the 𝒖𝒉 = Horizontal Components 𝝏𝑯 𝒖𝒙 𝝏𝒙 + 𝝏𝑯 𝒖𝒚 𝝏𝒚 𝐻 : water depth 𝑢𝑥 and 𝑢𝒚 : horizontal seafloor displacement due to faulting Total Vertical Water Displacement: 𝒖𝒉 + 𝒖𝒛 𝑢𝑧 : vertical seafloor displacement due to faulting Reference: Tanioka and Satake, 1996 15 Theoretical Concepts Numerical Stability ∆𝒕 ≤ 𝜟𝒙 𝟐𝒈𝒉𝒎𝒂𝒙 ∆𝑡 and Δ𝑥 : the temporal and spatial length of grid sizes 𝑔 : gravity acceleration (9.8 m/𝑠 2 ) ℎ𝑚𝑎𝑥 : maximum still water depth Reference: Imamura et al., 2006 16 Methods and Procedure Selection of earthquake source parameters for tsunami simulation for each case scenario from Salcedo (2010) study Numerical tsunami simulation using TUNAMI-N2 (Imamura et al., 2006; Koshimura, 2009; Yanagisawa, 2013; Fujii, 2013) Analyze the effectiveness of the existing tsunami sensor and proposed tsunami sensor project 17 Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 18 Bathymetry and Topography Data = Topography and Bathymetry Map (NAMRIA, 1952) GEBCO 30 arc-sec + Digitized Points 19 Bathymetry and Topography Data Bathymetry data for tsunami arrival times and tsunami heights calculations GEBCO 1 arc-min Bathymetry GEBCO 30 arc-sec + Digitized Bathymetry 20 Bathymetry and Topography Data Bathymetry and topography data for tsunami inundation calculations + GEBCO 30 arc-sec + Digitized Bathymetry SRTM_v2 Data (N16-17˚E120-121˚) 21 Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 22 Scenario Earthquake Manila Trench Segment 2 (Salcedo, 2010) Case 1 : Historical Initial Condition: Magnitude : 7.6 Lat, Lon : 16.06˚N,119.10˚E Fault length: 97.52 km Fault width : 53.21 km Strike angle: 1 deg Dip angle : 36 deg Rake angle : 95 deg Slip amount : 1.21 m Depth : 0 km Maximum uplift : 0.64 m Maximum subsidence: -0.26 m 23 Scenario Earthquake Manila Trench Segment 2 (Salcedo, 2010) Case 2 : Maximum Credible Initial Condition: Magnitude : 8.4 Lat, Lon : 16.06˚N,119.10˚E Fault length: 254.0 km Fault width : 91.10 km Strike angle: 1 deg Dip angle : 36 deg Rake angle : 95 deg Slip amount : 3.69 m Depth : 0 km Maximum uplift : 1.87 m Maximum subsidence: -0.31 m 24 Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 25 Computational Settings Location of Tide Stations 26 Computational Settings For Tsunami Height and Tsunami Travel Time Computational dimension: 14-20˚N,116.5-121˚E Computational time: 14400 s (4 hrs) Temporal grid size, ∆t: 3.0 s Spatial grid size: ∆x=1774.0, ∆y=1844.0 Grid points: nx=270, ny=360 ℎ𝑚𝑎𝑥 :5189 m (for GEBCO 1 arc-min) ℎ𝑚𝑎𝑥 :5183 m (for GEBCO 30 arc-sec) ℎ𝑚𝑎𝑥 :5181 m (for GEBCO 30 arc-sec + digitized map) 27 Computational Settings 28 Computational Settings For Tsunami Inundation Computation 4 Regions of Computational dimension: 14-20˚N,116.5-121˚E Computational time: 14400 s (4 hrs) Temporal grid size, ∆t: 1.0 s Spatial grid size: 1 arc-min, 20 arc-sec, 6.67 arc-sec, 2.22 arc-sec, respectively for Regions 1-4 Grid points: nx=270 to 945, ny= 360 to 972 ( 4 Regions) Topography Data: SRTM_v2 (3 arc-sec) Bathymetry Data : GEBCO 30 arc-sec + Digitized points 29 Computational Settings Region 1 Region 2 Region 3 Region 4 30 Introduction and Background Purpose of the Study Theories and Methods Bathymetry and Topography Data Scenario Earthquakes Computational Settings Results and Conclusions 31 Results 1. Tsunami Waveforms Case 1: Mw7.6 Case 2: Mw8.4 GEBCO 1 arc-min GEBCO 30 arc-sec 32 Results 1. Tsunami Waveforms Case 1: M7.6 Case 2: M8.4 GEBCO 30 arc-sec GEBCO 30 arc-sec + digitized bathymetry 33 Results 2. Tsunami Arrival Times 38 min 35 min 34 Results 3. Tsunami Maximum Heights 0.3 m 1.6 m 35 Results 3. Tsunami Maximum Heights 0.7 m Case 1(Mw7.6) 2.8 m Case 2(Mw8.4) 36 Results 4. Tsunami Inundation Case 1(Mw7.6) Max ht. : 0.7 m Inun area: 0.13 𝒌𝒎𝟐 Case 2(Mw8.4) Max ht. : 3.0 m 37 𝟐 Inun area: 0.7 𝒌𝒎 Results 4. Tsunami Inundation Vertical + horizontal effects 17% Vertical effects only 38 Results 5. Tsunami Sensor Case 1: 8 min Case 2: <1 min Case 1: 15 min Case 2: 11 min Case 1: 36 min Case 2: 37 min Case 1: 44 min Case 2: 45 min 39 Conclusions There will be a minimal tsunami effect of the case 1 (M7.6) earthquake scenario in the Lingayen Gulf coast. Anticipation of the 1.6 m tsunami height (case 2: M8.4) in the inner bay should be planned for. No enormous tsunami inundation will happen in the case 2 earthquake scenario in Dagupan City assuming that the SRTM data are accurate. Topography verification of the target area is recommended. Considering the horizontal effect in tsunami simulation is important in order to anticipate the wave height difference when it is neglected. 40 Conclusions ASTI (existing tsunami sensor) can be effective as warning system in the inner bay because there is a lead time of at least 45 min (case 2) for the people to evacuate after the tsunami will be detected while it is ineffective in Bolinao coast because there is a sudden tsunami arrival (case 1: 8 min; case 2: less than 1 min) The JICA tide gauge station (proposed tsunami sensor) detects the tsunamis earlier than the tide gauge stations set in the inner bay. Combining ASTI and JICA tide gauges as tsunami sensors will advance to a better and more robust early warning system in the Lingayen Gulf. 41 Thank you very much for your attention…