Ancient Tsunami Devastated Lake Geneva Shoreline 41
ananyo writes "In ad 563, more than a century after the Romans gave up control of what is now Geneva, Switzerland, a deadly tsunami on Lake Geneva poured over the city walls. Originating from a rock fall where the River Rhône enters at the opposite end of the lake to Geneva, the tsunami destroyed surrounding villages, people and livestock, according to two known historical accounts. Researchers now report the first geological evidence from the lake to support these ancient accounts. The findings suggest that the region would be wise to evaluate the risk today, with more than one million inhabitants living on the lake's shores, including 200,000 people in Geneva alone. The researchers cannot say exactly what created the tsunami (nothing suggests it was an earthquake), but they propose that the falling rock caused an accumulated heap of sediment in the Rhône delta to collapse. This would have launched the wave and carried the sediment from the delta to the center of the lake, where the researchers detected it. The researchers used the geological information gathered in the study to recreate how the wave might have behaved. Their model predicted that a 13-meter-high wave would have hit Lausanne 15 minutes after the rock fall, with an 8-meter-high wave reaching Geneva after 70 minutes."
Oh, cool! (Score:5, Funny)
Finally, something that explains what the Deep Purple song "Smoke on the Water" is actually about!
Re:Oh, cool! (Score:4, Funny)
Finally, something that explains what the Deep Purple song "Smoke on the Water" is actually about!
Please keep 93 Escort Wagon away from the flare locker.
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I'm pretty sure this is the only time I've ever felt the need to say "me too", so I apologize, but: me too.
I have the bassline firmly stuck in my head now. Thanks a frelling lot, slashdot! (Well, it's sharing the space with Enter Sandman, what with them having similar basslines. One gets in my head, the other goes along with it.)
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I'm pretty sure this is the only time I've ever felt the need to say "me too", so I apologize, but: me too.
I have the bassline firmly stuck in my head now. Thanks a frelling lot, slashdot! (Well, it's sharing the space with Enter Sandman, what with them having similar basslines. One gets in my head, the other goes along with it.)
Ha! Not long after that song was released, I got an alarm clock radio for my birthday - one with a timer plug in the back (likely intended for morning coffee brewing). Being something like 12 or 13, I had the bright idea it'd be cool to wake up to my favorite tune... at the time, Smoke on the Water. So I loaded up my cassette player, set what I thought would be a reasonable volume, plugged it into the back of the alarm clock, and went to sleep.
You would not believe how FREAKING LOUD that song was blasting f
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Re:Oh, cool! (Score:5, Funny)
Frank Zappa was at the best place around when it happened...
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(which was later fortuitously extinguished by said tsunami)
Re:Oh, cool! (Score:5, Informative)
Wikipedia is your friend. [wikipedia.org]
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"In ad 563, more than a century after the Romans gave up control of what is now Geneva, Switzerland, a deadly tsunami on Lake Geneva poured over the city walls.
Pics or it didn't happen.
What caused it? (Score:1)
Was it an earthquake or did something fall into the lake?
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Re:What caused it? (Score:5, Funny)
Base DC is 10, really weird story so +20, DC would be 30, not 40.
You'd also add their Bluff skills to the roll, you'd add a d20 roll, 30, and your Sense Motive to see who wins the opposed check. Sense Motive is Wisdom-based, not Charisma based. Some feats, notably Keen Intellect, allow the swapping of another stat, but you would still use Sense Motive.
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The researchers cannot say exactly what created the tsunami (nothing suggests it was an earthquake), but they propose that the falling rock caused an accumulated heap of sediment in the Rhône delta to collapse.
Right there in the summary.
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Re:What caused it? (Score:4, Funny)
Duh, it's in the first sentence.
"In ad 563, more than a century after the Romans gave up control of what is now Geneva
It was clearly caused by the Romans leaving Geneva.
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They were just lazy.
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I hear (Score:2)
Actually several candidates for "Tauredunum" (Score:5, Informative)
In this year, the enormous mountain of Tauredunum in the territory of the Valais, collapsed so suddenly that it engulfed the neighboring fortress as well as the villages and all the inhabitants thereof. The lake was so engorged that along the length of 60 miles and width of 20 miles on both sides of the river there was great loss of life in the ancient towns, both of man and beast. It destroyed also many sanctuaries with the people and violently destroyed the bridge in Geneva, the mills and even penetrated into the city where many people died
(Quick translation from P.C. Basilii anno XXII. Ind. XI) What the mountain 'Tauredunum' corresponds too in modern geographical terms is somewhat disputed.
Re:Actually several candidates for "Tauredunum" (Score:5, Informative)
In any case the area was quite strategic for the Romans, and the passage of St. Maurice was not very far away. It must have been a disaster of untold scale in a very critical region of the Roman empire - most of the traffic out of Italy would have passed through these regions (Martigny is not far away, once a fort city of the Emperor, the Theban legion was massacred not far from there). In a certain way this disaster probably spelled the end of an already weakened Roman civilization north of Italy by the fact that it destroyed most of the service towns along the way to the two major pathways into and out of Italy.
In any case it was a big deal. The Swiss are still talking about it.
Re:Actually several candidates for "Tauredunum" (Score:4, Informative)
By ad 563, there was no West Roman Empire anymore, but your arguments still stand for whoever controlled the region at that time.
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St-Maurice is 20 km away and the Rhone is here 25 m higher than at Port-Valais, the more likely location of the event. This make very unlikely that St-Maurice was affected by the event.
The article is focused on the geologic simulation finding, but there is others papers on the press here based on the ongoing archaeologic finding caused by the construction of a new bridge. There found a tomb in a near vertical orientation, indicating a massive event here.
What is not clear is how so much material could have b
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Swiss geography and geology is very interesting.
In more recent times, at the scenic Vajont Dam (Score:5, Interesting)
In 1963, a landslide into the reservoir behind the Vajont Dam caused a massive wave to jump the dam, causing massive damage and casualties: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vajont_Dam [wikipedia.org].
So worrying about stuff falling into lakes in Switzerland, is probably a good idea.
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In 1963, a landslide into the reservoir behind the Vajont Dam caused a massive wave to jump the dam, causing massive damage...
Maybe they should stop using giant enemy crabs to hold up their dams.
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This probably applies to non-swiss lakes as well.
glacial tsunamis in Lituya Bay, Alaska (Score:3)
Also BBC Nature [youtube.com]: Mega Tsunami - Alaskan Super Wave - Amazing Survival
Re:glacial tsunamis in Lituya Bay, Alaska (Score:4, Informative)
Could occur again (Score:2)
The biggest hazard for the lake Geneva (Leman lake actually) would be from the various large dams in the upper Rhône valley. Should one of them collapse, it would be ad 563 all over again.