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In the aftermath of the June 20, 1990 Rudbar earthquake (Mw=7.4) a local surge of the Caspian Sea flooded a small portion of its southwestern corner coastlines. This "surge" which was revealed recently during a field survey I did in Iran in August 2012, could be considered a typical example of possible future tsunami scenarios in the region. As the seismic models for the generation by this event (through various dislocation patterns) fail to reproduce the reported run-ups from the fieldwork (along with other important criteria, also resulted from the 2012 fieldwork), we introduce the slump source which fits the observed run-ups to areasonable extent (see here).

Landslide case    
Map view of simulated (MOST) maximum amplitude distribution for the slump model from a 7'' bathymetry grid, interpolated from GEBCO 08).

Runups

  Run-up values corresponding to the coastlines in the map view.

This is a video of a simulation of the 1990 tsunami.