| |


The University of Western Australia School of Earth Sciences is pleased to invite you to a Lecture in the SES Seminar Series given by visiting Gledden Fellow Professor Christophe Lecuyer.
Professor Christophe Lecuyer received his PhD in petrology and geochemistry from the University of Rennes (France) in 1989. and also obtained a position at CNRS. He has worl<ed as a Research Associate at the University of Michigan (1990-1991) where his research began on past global dimate change. In 1996, he obtained his ‘Habilination’ at the Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon. He became Professor at the University of Lyon in 1999 where he managed the Department of Earth Sciences until 2010. Christophe is now a member of the lnstitut Universitaire de France and leads the stable isotope geochemistry team at the University of Lyon. His current research interests include stable isotope studies of palaeo-meteoric and marine waters to reconstruct climate and water cydes from the geological record.
Earthquakes and explosive eruptions generate tsunami waves at the origin of thick and chaotic coastal sediments. These commonly fossliferous deposits are formed instantaneously within historical or geological timescales, and therefore have the potential to provide snapshot records of past climates. In Crete, near Palaikastro, a thick sedimentary layer (1 to 9 m) was deposrted by huge tsunami waves (~10 m). Volcanic ash, the geometry, and archaeological and faunal contents of the sedimentary deposrt along with radiocarbon dating indicate that the tsunamite was coeval with the Minoan Santorini (Thera) eruption 3,350 years BP. The devastating tsunami wave deposited large rocky blocks and a muddy matrix containing diverse faunas (marine molluscs. cattle skeletons) and artefacts from the Minoan civilization. Oxygen isotope measurements of both marine shells and terrestrial vertebrate teeth and bones revealed that sea surface and air temperatures were higher than today (-2°C), but with similarly warm summers (26°C) and much milder winters (16°C). The eruptions and tsunami events are also discussed in the contex1 of the fall of the Minoan civilisation
Click here for the lecture brochure.