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Outburst flood

In geomorphology, an outburst flood—a type of megaflood—is a high-magnitude, low-frequency catastrophic flood involving the sudden release of a large quantity of water.[1][2] During the last deglaciation, numerous glacial lake outburst floods were caused by the collapse of either ice sheets or glaciers that formed the dams of proglacial lakes. Examples of older outburst floods are known from the geological past of the Earth and inferred from geomorphological evidence on Mars. Landslides, lahars, and volcanic dams can also block rivers and create lakes, which trigger such floods when the rock or earthen barrier collapses or is eroded. Lakes also form behind glacial moraines or ice dams, which can collapse and create outburst floods.[3][4]

Definition and classification edit

Megafloods are paleofloods (past floods) that involved rates of water flow larger than those in the historical record. They are studied through the sedimentary deposits and the erosional and constructional landforms that individual megafloods have created. Floods that are known to us through historical descriptions are mostly related to meteorological events, such as heavy rains, rapid melting of snowpacks, or combination of these. In the geological past of the Earth, however, geological research has shown that much larger events have occurred.[3] In the case of outburst floods, such floods are typically linked to the collapse of a barrier which formed a lake. They fall in the following classification according to the mechanism responsible:

Examples edit

Examples where evidence for large ancient water flows has been documented or is under scrutiny include:

Overflow of lakes formed by landslides edit

An example is the lake overflow that caused one of the worst landslide-related disasters in history on June 10, 1786. A landslide dam on Sichuan's Dadu River, created by an earthquake ten days earlier, burst and caused a flood that extended 1,400 km (870 mi) downstream and killed 100,000 people.[5]

Postglacial rebound edit

Postglacial rebound changes the tilt of ground. In lakes, this means that shores sink in the direction farther away from the former maximum depth of ice. When the lake rests against an esker, water pressure increases with the increased depth. The esker may then fail under the load and burst, creating a new outflow. Lake Pielinen in Finland is an example of this.

Tectonic basins edit

The Black Sea (around 7,600 years ago) edit

 
Black Sea today (light blue) and in 5600 BC (dark blue) according to Ryan's and Pitman's theories

A rising sea flood, the proposed and much-discussed refilling of the freshwater glacial Black Sea with water from the Aegean, has been described as "a violent rush of salt water into a depressed fresh-water lake in a single catastrophe that has been the inspiration for the flood mythology" (Ryan and Pitman, 1998). The marine incursion, caused by the rising level of the Mediterranean, apparently occurred around 7,600 years ago. It remains an active subject of debate among geologists, with subsequent evidence discovered to both support and refute the existence of the flood, while the theory that it is the basis of later flood myths is not proven.

Persian Gulf Flood (24,000 to 14,000 years ago, or 12000 to 10000 years ago) edit

Flooding of this area scattered peoples to both sides of the gulf depression. It was an area fed by four rivers. Rose calls it the "Gulf Oasis" which may have been a demographic refuge fed by the Tigris, Euphrates, Karun, and Wadi Batin rivers. It was suggested to be an area of freshwater springs and rivers.[6][7]

Glacial floods in North America (15,000 to 8,000 years ago) edit

In North America, during glacial maximum, there were no Great Lakes as we know them, but "proglacial" (ice-frontage) lakes formed and shifted. They lay in the areas of the modern lakes, but their drainage sometimes passed south, into the Mississippi system; sometimes into the Arctic, or east into the Atlantic. The most famous of these proglacial lakes was Lake Agassiz. As ice-dam configurations failed, a series of great floods were released from Lake Agassiz, resulting in massive pulses of freshwater added to the world's oceans.

The Missoula Floods of Oregon and Washington states were also caused by breaking ice dams, resulting in the Channeled Scablands.

Lake Bonneville, a pluvial lake, burst catastrophically in the Bonneville Flood about 14,500 years ago, due to its water overflowing and washing away a sill composed of two opposing alluvial fans which had blocked a gorge. Lake Bonneville was not a glacial lake, but glacial age climate change determined the lake level and its overflow. The first scientific report of a megaflood (Gilbert, 1890) describes this event.[8]

The last of the North American proglacial lakes, north of the present Great Lakes, has been designated Glacial Lake Ojibway by geologists. It reached its largest volume around 8,500 years ago, when joined with Lake Agassiz. But its outlet was blocked by the great wall of the glaciers and it drained by tributaries, into the Ottawa and St. Lawrence Rivers far to the south. About 8,300 to 7,700 years ago, the melting ice dam over Hudson Bay's southernmost extension narrowed to the point where pressure and its buoyancy lifted it free, and the ice-dam failed catastrophically. Lake Ojibway's beach terraces show that it was 250 metres (820 ft) above sea level. The volume of Lake Ojibway is commonly estimated to have been about 163,000 km3 (39,000 cu mi), more than enough water to cover a flattened-out Antarctica with a sheet of water 10 metres (33 ft) deep. That volume was added to the world's oceans in a matter of months.

The detailed timing and rates of change after the onset of melting of the great ice-sheets are subjects of continuing study.

The Caspian and Black Seas (around 16,000 years ago) edit

A theory proposed by Andrey Tchepalyga of the Russian Academy of Sciences dates the flooding of the Black Sea basin to an earlier time and from a different cause. According to Tchepalyga, global warming beginning from about 16,000 BP caused the melting of the Scandinavia Ice Sheet, resulting in massive river discharge that flowed into the Caspian Sea, raising it to as much as 50 metres (160 ft) above normal present-day levels. The Sea of Azov rose so high that it overflowed into the Caspian Sea.[dubious ] The rise was extremely rapid and the Caspian basin could not contain all the floodwater, which flowed from the northwest coastline of the Caspian Sea, through the Kuma-Manych Depression and Kerch Strait into the Black Sea basin. By the end of the Pleistocene this would have raised the level of the Black Sea by some 60 to 70 metres (200 to 230 ft) 20 metres (66 ft) below its present-day level, flooding large areas that were formerly available for settlement or hunting. Tchepalyga suggests this may have formed the basis for legends of the great Deluge.[9]

Red Sea floods edit

The barrier across Bab-el-Mandeb, between Ethiopia and Yemen, seems to have been the source of outbreak flooding similar to that found in the Mediterranean. The Lake Toba event, approximately between 69,000 and 77,000 years ago, caused a massive drop in sea levels[citation needed], exposing the barrier and enabling modern Homo sapiens to leave Africa via a route other than Sinai. The finding of saline evaporites on the floor of the Red Sea confirms that this dam has functioned at various periods in the past. Rising sea levels during the Flandrian transgression (and in earlier interglacial periods) suggest that this area may have been subject to outburst flooding.[10]

English Channel floods edit

Originally there was an isthmus across the Strait of Dover. During an earlier glacial maximum, the exit from the North Sea was blocked to the north by an ice dam, and the water flowing out of rivers backed up into a vast lake with freshwater glacial melt on the bed of what is now the North Sea. A gently upfolding chalk ridge linking the Weald of Kent and Artois, perhaps some 30 metres (100 feet) higher than the current sea level, contained the glacial lake at the Strait of Dover. At some time, probably around 425,000 years ago and again around 225,000 years later the barrier failed[11] or was overtopped, loosing a catastrophic flood that permanently diverted the Rhine into the English Channel and replacing the "Isthmus of Dover" watershed by a much lower watershed running from East Anglia east then southeast to the Hook of Holland and (as at modern sea level) separated Britain from the continent of Europe; a sonar study of the sea bed of the English Channel published in Nature, July 2007,[12] revealed the discovery of unmistakable marks of a megaflood on the English Channel seabed: deeply eroded channels and braided features have left the remnants of streamlined islands among deeply gouged channels where the collapse occurred.[13][11]

The refilling of the Mediterranean Sea (5.3 million years ago) edit

A catastrophic flood refilled the Mediterranean Sea 5.3 million years ago, at the beginning of the Zanclean age that ended the Messinian salinity crisis.[14] The flood occurred when Atlantic waters found their way through the Strait of Gibraltar into the desiccated Mediterranean basin, following the Messinian salinity crisis during which it repeatedly became dry and re-flooded, dated by consensus to before the emergence of modern humans.[15]

The Mediterranean did not dry out during the most recent glacial maximum. Sea level during glacial periods within the Pleistocene is estimated to have dropped only about 110 to 120 metres (361 to 394 ft).[16][17] In contrast, the depth of the Strait of Gibraltar where the Atlantic Ocean enters ranges between 300 and 900 metres (980 and 2,950 ft).[18]

See also edit

  • Altai flood – Prehistoric event in Central Asia
  • Dam failure – Catastrophic failure of dam barrier by uncontrolled release of water
  • Flood myth – Motif in which a great flood destroys civilization
  • Glacial lake outburst flood – Type of outburst flood that occurs when the dam containing a glacial lake fails
  • Jökulhlaup – Type of glacial outburst flood
  • Lake Atna – Prehistoric lake in Alaska, formerly of Alaska
  • Lake Corcoran – Lake in the state of California, United States, formerly of California
  • Missoula Floods – Heavy floods of the last ice age (Pleistocene – First epoch of the Quaternary Period megaflood)
    • Lake Missoula – Prehistoric proglacial lake in Western Montana
    • J Harlen Bretz – American geologist who discovered the Missoula Floods
  • Outflow channels – Long, wide swathes of scoured ground on Mars
  • Zanclean flood – Theoretical refilling of the Mediterranean Sea between the Miocene and Pliocene Epochs
  • Great Flood (China) – Myth described in Chinese mythology

References edit

  1. ^ a b O'Connor, Jim E.; Beebee, Robin A. (2009). "Floods from natural rock-material dams". In Burr, Devon M.; Baker, Victor R.; Carling, Paul A. (eds.). Megaflooding on Earth and Mars. Cambridge University Press. pp. 128–71. ISBN 978-0-521-86852-5.
  2. ^ Goudie, A. (2004). Encyclopedia of Geomorphology. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-27298-8.[page needed]
  3. ^ a b Burr, Devon M.; Wilson, Lionel; Bargery, Alistair S. (2009). "floods from fossae: a review of Amazonian-aged extensional-tectonic megaflood channels on Mars". In Burr, Devon M.; Baker, Victor R.; Carling, Paul A. (eds.). Megaflooding on Earth and Mars. Cambridge University Press. pp. 194–208. ISBN 978-0-521-86852-5.
  4. ^ Li, Dongfeng; Lu, Xixi; Walling, Desmond E.; Zhang, Ting; Steiner, Jakob F.; Wasson, Robert J.; Harrison, Stephan; Nepal, Santosh; Nie, Yong; Immerzeel, Walter W.; Shugar, Dan H.; Koppes, Michèle; Lane, Stuart; Zeng, Zhenzhong; Sun, Xiaofei; Yegorov, Alexandr; Bolch, Tobias (July 2022). "High Mountain Asia hydropower systems threatened by climate-driven landscape instability". Nature Geoscience. 15 (7): 520–530. Bibcode:2022NatGe..15..520L. doi:10.1038/s41561-022-00953-y. ISSN 1752-0908. S2CID 249961353.
  5. ^ Schuster, Robert L.; Wieczorek, Gerald F. (2002). "Landslide triggers and types". In Rybar, J. (ed.). Landslides: Proceedings of the First European Conference on Landslides, Prague, Czech Republic, 24-26 June 2002. pp. 59–78. doi:10.1201/9780203749197-4. ISBN 978-90-5809-393-6.
  6. ^ Rose, Jeffrey I. (December 2010). "New Light on Human Prehistory in the Arabo-Persian Gulf Oasis". Current Anthropology. 51 (6): 849–883. doi:10.1086/657397. S2CID 144935980.
  7. ^ Lambeck, Kurt (July 1996). "Shoreline reconstructions for the Persian Gulf since the last glacial maximum". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 142 (1–2): 43–57. Bibcode:1996E&PSL.142...43L. doi:10.1016/0012-821x(96)00069-6.
  8. ^ Gilbert, Karl Grove (1890). Lake Bonneville. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.
  9. ^ Tchepalyga, Andrey (2003-11-04). . Abstracts with Programs. The Geological Society of America 2003 Seattle Annual Meeting. Vol. 35–6. Seattle, Washington. p. 460. Archived from the original on 2007-06-14. Retrieved 2007-07-24.
  10. ^ Coleman, Robert G (1998)"Geological Evolution of the Red Sea" ISBN 0-19-507048-8
  11. ^ a b Schiermeier, Quirin (16 July 2007). "The megaflood that made Britain an island". News@nature. doi:10.1038/news070716-11.
  12. ^ Gupta, Sanjeev; Collier, Jenny S.; Palmer-Felgate, Andy; Potter, Graeme (19 July 2007). "Catastrophic flooding origin of shelf valley systems in the English Channel". Nature. 448 (7151): 342–345. Bibcode:2007Natur.448..342G. doi:10.1038/nature06018. PMID 17637667. S2CID 4408290.
  13. ^ BBC News, "Megaflood' made 'Island Britain'" 2007-07-20 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Garcia-Castellanos, D.; Estrada, F.; Jiménez-Munt, I.; Gorini, C.; Fernàndez, M.; Vergés, J.; De Vicente, R. (10 December 2009). "Catastrophic flood of the Mediterranean after the Messinian salinity crisis". Nature. 462 (7274): 778–781. Bibcode:2009Natur.462..778G. doi:10.1038/nature08555. PMID 20010684. S2CID 205218854.
  15. ^ Hsu, K.J. (1983). The Mediterranean Was a Desert. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-08293-6.[page needed]
  16. ^ Lambeck, Kurt (2 January 2015). "Sea-level change and shore-line evolution in Aegean Greece since Upper Palaeolithic time". Antiquity. 70 (269): 588–611. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00083733.
  17. ^ Lambeck, Kurt; Purcell, Anthony (October 2005). "Sea-level change in the Mediterranean Sea since the LGM: model predictions for tectonically stable areas". Quaternary Science Reviews. 24 (18–19): 1969–1988. Bibcode:2005QSRv...24.1969L. doi:10.1016/j.quascirev.2004.06.025.
  18. ^ Robinson, Allan Richard; Malanotte-Rizzoli, Paola (1994). Ocean Processes in Climate Dynamics: Global and Mediterranean Examples. Springer. p. 307. ISBN 978-0-7923-2624-3.

External links edit

  • Rudoy, Alexei N (January 2002). "Glacier-dammed lakes and geological work of glacial superfloods in the Late Pleistocene, Southern Siberia, Altai Mountains". Quaternary International. 87 (1): 119–40. Bibcode:2002QuInt..87..119R. doi:10.1016/S1040-6182(01)00066-0.
  • Catastrophic floods in the English Channel - Inundations
  • Iturrizaga, Lasafam (2011). "Glacier Lake Outburst Floods". Encyclopedia of Snow, Ice and Glaciers. Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series. pp. 381–99. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-2642-2_196. ISBN 978-90-481-2641-5.

outburst, flood, geomorphology, outburst, flood, type, megaflood, high, magnitude, frequency, catastrophic, flood, involving, sudden, release, large, quantity, water, during, last, deglaciation, numerous, glacial, lake, outburst, floods, were, caused, collapse. In geomorphology an outburst flood a type of megaflood is a high magnitude low frequency catastrophic flood involving the sudden release of a large quantity of water 1 2 During the last deglaciation numerous glacial lake outburst floods were caused by the collapse of either ice sheets or glaciers that formed the dams of proglacial lakes Examples of older outburst floods are known from the geological past of the Earth and inferred from geomorphological evidence on Mars Landslides lahars and volcanic dams can also block rivers and create lakes which trigger such floods when the rock or earthen barrier collapses or is eroded Lakes also form behind glacial moraines or ice dams which can collapse and create outburst floods 3 4 Contents 1 Definition and classification 2 Examples 2 1 Overflow of lakes formed by landslides 2 2 Postglacial rebound 2 3 Tectonic basins 2 3 1 The Black Sea around 7 600 years ago 2 3 2 Persian Gulf Flood 24 000 to 14 000 years ago or 12000 to 10000 years ago 2 3 3 Glacial floods in North America 15 000 to 8 000 years ago 2 3 4 The Caspian and Black Seas around 16 000 years ago 2 3 5 Red Sea floods 2 3 6 English Channel floods 2 3 7 The refilling of the Mediterranean Sea 5 3 million years ago 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksDefinition and classification editMegafloods are paleofloods past floods that involved rates of water flow larger than those in the historical record They are studied through the sedimentary deposits and the erosional and constructional landforms that individual megafloods have created Floods that are known to us through historical descriptions are mostly related to meteorological events such as heavy rains rapid melting of snowpacks or combination of these In the geological past of the Earth however geological research has shown that much larger events have occurred 3 In the case of outburst floods such floods are typically linked to the collapse of a barrier which formed a lake They fall in the following classification according to the mechanism responsible Collapse of glacier dams that impound proglacial lakes Missoula Floods Rapid erosion melting of ice sheets jokulhlaups Collapse of earthen barriers landslides or glacial moraines Collapse of volcanic dams created by lava flows lahars or pyroclastic flows Overtopping of earthen or rock barriers Lake overtopping e g Lake Bonneville Ocean spilling over a dividing ridge into a landlocked basin e g Zanclean flood and Black Sea flood 1 A smaller scale example would be the Pantai Remis landslide Examples editExamples where evidence for large ancient water flows has been documented or is under scrutiny include Overflow of lakes formed by landslides edit An example is the lake overflow that caused one of the worst landslide related disasters in history on June 10 1786 A landslide dam on Sichuan s Dadu River created by an earthquake ten days earlier burst and caused a flood that extended 1 400 km 870 mi downstream and killed 100 000 people 5 Postglacial rebound edit Postglacial rebound changes the tilt of ground In lakes this means that shores sink in the direction farther away from the former maximum depth of ice When the lake rests against an esker water pressure increases with the increased depth The esker may then fail under the load and burst creating a new outflow Lake Pielinen in Finland is an example of this Tectonic basins edit The Black Sea around 7 600 years ago edit Main article Black Sea deluge hypothesis nbsp Black Sea today light blue and in 5600 BC dark blue according to Ryan s and Pitman s theoriesA rising sea flood the proposed and much discussed refilling of the freshwater glacial Black Sea with water from the Aegean has been described as a violent rush of salt water into a depressed fresh water lake in a single catastrophe that has been the inspiration for the flood mythology Ryan and Pitman 1998 The marine incursion caused by the rising level of the Mediterranean apparently occurred around 7 600 years ago It remains an active subject of debate among geologists with subsequent evidence discovered to both support and refute the existence of the flood while the theory that it is the basis of later flood myths is not proven Persian Gulf Flood 24 000 to 14 000 years ago or 12000 to 10000 years ago edit Flooding of this area scattered peoples to both sides of the gulf depression It was an area fed by four rivers Rose calls it the Gulf Oasis which may have been a demographic refuge fed by the Tigris Euphrates Karun and Wadi Batin rivers It was suggested to be an area of freshwater springs and rivers 6 7 Glacial floods in North America 15 000 to 8 000 years ago edit In North America during glacial maximum there were no Great Lakes as we know them but proglacial ice frontage lakes formed and shifted They lay in the areas of the modern lakes but their drainage sometimes passed south into the Mississippi system sometimes into the Arctic or east into the Atlantic The most famous of these proglacial lakes was Lake Agassiz As ice dam configurations failed a series of great floods were released from Lake Agassiz resulting in massive pulses of freshwater added to the world s oceans The Missoula Floods of Oregon and Washington states were also caused by breaking ice dams resulting in the Channeled Scablands Lake Bonneville a pluvial lake burst catastrophically in the Bonneville Flood about 14 500 years ago due to its water overflowing and washing away a sill composed of two opposing alluvial fans which had blocked a gorge Lake Bonneville was not a glacial lake but glacial age climate change determined the lake level and its overflow The first scientific report of a megaflood Gilbert 1890 describes this event 8 The last of the North American proglacial lakes north of the present Great Lakes has been designated Glacial Lake Ojibway by geologists It reached its largest volume around 8 500 years ago when joined with Lake Agassiz But its outlet was blocked by the great wall of the glaciers and it drained by tributaries into the Ottawa and St Lawrence Rivers far to the south About 8 300 to 7 700 years ago the melting ice dam over Hudson Bay s southernmost extension narrowed to the point where pressure and its buoyancy lifted it free and the ice dam failed catastrophically Lake Ojibway s beach terraces show that it was 250 metres 820 ft above sea level The volume of Lake Ojibway is commonly estimated to have been about 163 000 km3 39 000 cu mi more than enough water to cover a flattened out Antarctica with a sheet of water 10 metres 33 ft deep That volume was added to the world s oceans in a matter of months The detailed timing and rates of change after the onset of melting of the great ice sheets are subjects of continuing study The Caspian and Black Seas around 16 000 years ago edit See also West Siberian Glacial Lake A theory proposed by Andrey Tchepalyga of the Russian Academy of Sciences dates the flooding of the Black Sea basin to an earlier time and from a different cause According to Tchepalyga global warming beginning from about 16 000 BP caused the melting of the Scandinavia Ice Sheet resulting in massive river discharge that flowed into the Caspian Sea raising it to as much as 50 metres 160 ft above normal present day levels The Sea of Azov rose so high that it overflowed into the Caspian Sea dubious discuss The rise was extremely rapid and the Caspian basin could not contain all the floodwater which flowed from the northwest coastline of the Caspian Sea through the Kuma Manych Depression and Kerch Strait into the Black Sea basin By the end of the Pleistocene this would have raised the level of the Black Sea by some 60 to 70 metres 200 to 230 ft 20 metres 66 ft below its present day level flooding large areas that were formerly available for settlement or hunting Tchepalyga suggests this may have formed the basis for legends of the great Deluge 9 Red Sea floods edit The barrier across Bab el Mandeb between Ethiopia and Yemen seems to have been the source of outbreak flooding similar to that found in the Mediterranean The Lake Toba event approximately between 69 000 and 77 000 years ago caused a massive drop in sea levels citation needed exposing the barrier and enabling modern Homo sapiens to leave Africa via a route other than Sinai The finding of saline evaporites on the floor of the Red Sea confirms that this dam has functioned at various periods in the past Rising sea levels during the Flandrian transgression and in earlier interglacial periods suggest that this area may have been subject to outburst flooding 10 English Channel floods edit Originally there was an isthmus across the Strait of Dover During an earlier glacial maximum the exit from the North Sea was blocked to the north by an ice dam and the water flowing out of rivers backed up into a vast lake with freshwater glacial melt on the bed of what is now the North Sea A gently upfolding chalk ridge linking the Weald of Kent and Artois perhaps some 30 metres 100 feet higher than the current sea level contained the glacial lake at the Strait of Dover At some time probably around 425 000 years ago and again around 225 000 years later the barrier failed 11 or was overtopped loosing a catastrophic flood that permanently diverted the Rhine into the English Channel and replacing the Isthmus of Dover watershed by a much lower watershed running from East Anglia east then southeast to the Hook of Holland and as at modern sea level separated Britain from the continent of Europe a sonar study of the sea bed of the English Channel published in Nature July 2007 12 revealed the discovery of unmistakable marks of a megaflood on the English Channel seabed deeply eroded channels and braided features have left the remnants of streamlined islands among deeply gouged channels where the collapse occurred 13 11 The refilling of the Mediterranean Sea 5 3 million years ago edit Main article Zanclean flood A catastrophic flood refilled the Mediterranean Sea 5 3 million years ago at the beginning of the Zanclean age that ended the Messinian salinity crisis 14 The flood occurred when Atlantic waters found their way through the Strait of Gibraltar into the desiccated Mediterranean basin following the Messinian salinity crisis during which it repeatedly became dry and re flooded dated by consensus to before the emergence of modern humans 15 The Mediterranean did not dry out during the most recent glacial maximum Sea level during glacial periods within the Pleistocene is estimated to have dropped only about 110 to 120 metres 361 to 394 ft 16 17 In contrast the depth of the Strait of Gibraltar where the Atlantic Ocean enters ranges between 300 and 900 metres 980 and 2 950 ft 18 See also editAltai flood Prehistoric event in Central Asia Dam failure Catastrophic failure of dam barrier by uncontrolled release of water Flood myth Motif in which a great flood destroys civilization Glacial lake outburst flood Type of outburst flood that occurs when the dam containing a glacial lake fails Jokulhlaup Type of glacial outburst flood Lake Atna Prehistoric lake in Alaska formerly of Alaska Lake Corcoran Lake in the state of California United States formerly of California Missoula Floods Heavy floods of the last ice agePages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Pleistocene First epoch of the Quaternary Period megaflood Lake Missoula Prehistoric proglacial lake in Western MontanaPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets J Harlen Bretz American geologist who discovered the Missoula Floods Outflow channels Long wide swathes of scoured ground on Mars Zanclean flood Theoretical refilling of the Mediterranean Sea between the Miocene and Pliocene Epochs Great Flood China Myth described in Chinese mythologyReferences edit a b O Connor Jim E Beebee Robin A 2009 Floods from natural rock material dams In Burr Devon M Baker Victor R Carling Paul A eds Megaflooding on Earth and Mars Cambridge University Press pp 128 71 ISBN 978 0 521 86852 5 Goudie A 2004 Encyclopedia of Geomorphology London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 27298 8 page needed a b Burr Devon M Wilson Lionel Bargery Alistair S 2009 floods from fossae a review of Amazonian aged extensional tectonic megaflood channels on Mars In Burr Devon M Baker Victor R Carling Paul A eds Megaflooding on Earth and Mars Cambridge University Press pp 194 208 ISBN 978 0 521 86852 5 Li Dongfeng Lu Xixi Walling Desmond E Zhang Ting Steiner Jakob F Wasson Robert J Harrison Stephan Nepal Santosh Nie Yong Immerzeel Walter W Shugar Dan H Koppes Michele Lane Stuart Zeng Zhenzhong Sun Xiaofei Yegorov Alexandr Bolch Tobias July 2022 High Mountain Asia hydropower systems threatened by climate driven landscape instability Nature Geoscience 15 7 520 530 Bibcode 2022NatGe 15 520L doi 10 1038 s41561 022 00953 y ISSN 1752 0908 S2CID 249961353 Schuster Robert L Wieczorek Gerald F 2002 Landslide triggers and types In Rybar J ed Landslides Proceedings of the First European Conference on Landslides Prague Czech Republic 24 26 June 2002 pp 59 78 doi 10 1201 9780203749197 4 ISBN 978 90 5809 393 6 Rose Jeffrey I December 2010 New Light on Human Prehistory in the Arabo Persian Gulf Oasis Current Anthropology 51 6 849 883 doi 10 1086 657397 S2CID 144935980 Lambeck Kurt July 1996 Shoreline reconstructions for the Persian Gulf since the last glacial maximum Earth and Planetary Science Letters 142 1 2 43 57 Bibcode 1996E amp PSL 142 43L doi 10 1016 0012 821x 96 00069 6 Gilbert Karl Grove 1890 Lake Bonneville Washington D C Government Printing Office Tchepalyga Andrey 2003 11 04 Late glacial great flood in the Black Sea and Caspian Sea abstract Abstracts with Programs The Geological Society of America 2003 Seattle Annual Meeting Vol 35 6 Seattle Washington p 460 Archived from the original on 2007 06 14 Retrieved 2007 07 24 Coleman Robert G 1998 Geological Evolution of the Red Sea ISBN 0 19 507048 8 a b Schiermeier Quirin 16 July 2007 The megaflood that made Britain an island News nature doi 10 1038 news070716 11 Gupta Sanjeev Collier Jenny S Palmer Felgate Andy Potter Graeme 19 July 2007 Catastrophic flooding origin of shelf valley systems in the English Channel Nature 448 7151 342 345 Bibcode 2007Natur 448 342G doi 10 1038 nature06018 PMID 17637667 S2CID 4408290 BBC News Megaflood made Island Britain Archived 2007 07 20 at the Wayback Machine Garcia Castellanos D Estrada F Jimenez Munt I Gorini C Fernandez M Verges J De Vicente R 10 December 2009 Catastrophic flood of the Mediterranean after the Messinian salinity crisis Nature 462 7274 778 781 Bibcode 2009Natur 462 778G doi 10 1038 nature08555 PMID 20010684 S2CID 205218854 Hsu K J 1983 The Mediterranean Was a Desert Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 08293 6 page needed Lambeck Kurt 2 January 2015 Sea level change and shore line evolution in Aegean Greece since Upper Palaeolithic time Antiquity 70 269 588 611 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00083733 Lambeck Kurt Purcell Anthony October 2005 Sea level change in the Mediterranean Sea since the LGM model predictions for tectonically stable areas Quaternary Science Reviews 24 18 19 1969 1988 Bibcode 2005QSRv 24 1969L doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2004 06 025 Robinson Allan Richard Malanotte Rizzoli Paola 1994 Ocean Processes in Climate Dynamics Global and Mediterranean Examples Springer p 307 ISBN 978 0 7923 2624 3 External links editRudoy Alexei N January 2002 Glacier dammed lakes and geological work of glacial superfloods in the Late Pleistocene Southern Siberia Altai Mountains Quaternary International 87 1 119 40 Bibcode 2002QuInt 87 119R doi 10 1016 S1040 6182 01 00066 0 Catastrophic floods in the English Channel Inundations Iturrizaga Lasafam 2011 Glacier Lake Outburst Floods Encyclopedia of Snow Ice and Glaciers Encyclopedia of Earth Sciences Series pp 381 99 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 2642 2 196 ISBN 978 90 481 2641 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Outburst flood amp oldid 1204498928, 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