Tsunamis on Lake Geneva: Lake monsters | The Economist

IN 563AD a tsunami devastated Geneva. Two accounts of the disaster, one by Gregory of Tours and the other by Marius of Avenches, have survived. What caused the wave, and the extent of the damage that resulted, have been matters of conjecture for centuries. But over the past decade several groups of scientists have pieced together the sequence of events and one of those groups, led by Katrina Kremer of the University of Geneva, has now created a computer model of what happened. Unfortunately for the 1m people who live around the lake’s shore, the conclusion of this research is that something similar could easily happen again.

via Tsunamis on Lake Geneva: Lake monsters | The Economist.

Comments

One response to “Tsunamis on Lake Geneva: Lake monsters | The Economist”

  1. Dave Walker

    In my mind, this has a strange parallel with another ancient disaster which remained unexplained until recently – the eruption of Vesuvius in AD79. The interaction of sediment with water as described, seems related to the pyroclastic flow phenomenon of ash and other fine ejecta in air…

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