• Contamination of 8.2 ka cold climate records by the Storegga tsunami in the Nordic Seas 

      Bondevik, Stein; Risebrobakken, Bjørg; Gibbons, Steven J.; Rasmussen, Tine Lander; Løvholt, Finn (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2024-04-04)
      The 8200-year BP cooling event is reconstructed in part from sediments in the Norwegian and North Seas. Here we show that these sediments have been reworked by the Storegga tsunami – dated to the coldest decades of the 8.2 ka event. We simulate the maximum tsunami flow velocity to be 2–5 m/s on the shelf offshore western Norway and in the shallower North Sea, and up to about 1 m/s down to a water ...
    • Holocene relative sea-level changes and deglaciation chronology in Finnmark, northern Norway 

      Bennike, Ole; Romundset, Anders; Bondevik, Stein (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel, 2010-10)
      The outer coast of Finnmark in northern Norway is where the former Fennoscandian and Barents Sea ice sheets coalesced. This key area for isostatic modelling and deglaciation history of the ice sheets has abundant raised shorelines, but only a few existing radiocarbon dates relate to them. Here we present three Holocene sea-level curves based on radiocarbon ages from deposits in isolation basins ...
    • Propagation of the Storegga tsunami into ice-free lakes along the southern shores of the Barents Sea 

      Romundset, Anders; Bondevik, Stein (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel, 2011-06-08)
      There is clear evidence that the Storegga tsunami, triggered by the giant Storegga slide offshore western Norway 8100-8200 years ago, propagated into the Barents Sea. Cores from five coastal lakes along the coast of Finnmark in northern Norway reveal major erosion and deposition from the inundation of the tsunami. The deposits rest on a distinct erosional unconformity and consist of graded sand ...
    • Some giant submarine landslides do not produce large tsunamis 

      Løvholt, Finn; Bondevik, Stein; Laberg, Jan Sverre; Kim, Jihwan; Boylan, Noel (Journal article; Tidsskriftartikkel; Peer reviewed, 2017-08-07)
      Landslides are the second-most important cause of tsunamis after earthquakes, and their potential for generating large tsunamis depend on the slide process. Among the world's largest submarine landslides is the Storegga Slide that generated an ocean-wide catastrophic tsunami, while no traces of a tsunami generated from the similar and nearby Trænadjupet Slide have been found. Previous models for ...