Evidence of the AD 1755 tsunami consisting of the same type of accretions produced by the re-deposition of earlier sediments, has been recorded at three different height along the coast of Gibraltar: Along a shallow sandy shore, the tsunami wave reached a run-up of 2–3 m, whereas along steep, cliff–lined shores (Rosia Bay) it surpassed 5 m. An overwash deposit was also identified atthe bottom of a lagoon (The Inundation), at 0.5 m b.s.l., on the isthmus that joins the Rock with the mainland. Southern submerged platforms (Vladi’s Reef) were also affected by the erosional backwash to a depth of 22 m. The tsunamigenic sediments exhibit a bimodal granulometry, mainly composed of sands with a coarser fraction composed of marine faunal shells remains, together withlarger clasts derived from the rocky substrate. All remobilized sediments were dated by historical methods and radiocarbon dating.
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Rodríguez-Vidal, J., Cáceres, L. M., Abad, M., Ruiz, F., González-Regalado, M. L., Finlayson, C., … Bailey, G. (2011). The recorded evidence of AD 1755 Atlantic tsunami on the Gibraltar coast. Journal of Iberian Geology, 37(2). https://doi.org/10.5209/rev_jige.2011.v37.n2.7