Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
News

Predicting the next big wave

3 March 2005

UQ engineer Hubert Chanson is working with world experts in coastal and river hydraulics to better predict tsunami damage of coastlines.

"There are a number of models to predict tsunami propagation in deep water but the recent experience and scientific data have shown that most tsunami models poorly predict flooding of coastal plains," Dr Chanson said.

Dr Chanson has teamed up with experts from Japan, California and New Zealand to produce a new mathematical model that will predict tsunami impacts on coastal towns.

Current models underestimated the height of the Boxing Day Tsunami above sea level by up to 20 metres in Western Sumatra and overestimated by as much as 10 metres in Bangladesh.

He has been expanding on existing prediction models and analysing video, photos, surveys and aerial and satellite maps of the Boxing Day Tsunami for his project.

And he believed wetlands and coral reefs had probably absorbed much of the tsunami's force in some regions, especially in parts of Bangladesh and in the reef surrounding Mauritius.

A more accurate model which could predict tsunami spread and impact, or even flash flooding, could help emergency services and city planners.

Dr Chanson said the two big lessons from the tsunami damage were that key public buildings like hospitals needed to be built on higher ground and that accessible transport had to run to the coast, in case of emergencies.

He will give a public seminar on the assessment of the Boxing Day tsunami at the Indooroopilly Sciences Centre, Block B, 80 Meiers Road, tomorrow (Friday, March 4). The seminar starts from 2.30pm.

Dr Chanson and his colleagues are also working on an improved dam spillway which features stepped spilling to dampen the water's destructive force.

Stepped spillways were common in dams a century ago but were abandoned from the 1950s because concrete stepping was too costly.

Dr Chanson's stepped spillway could be made out of roller compacted concrete which yields up to 50 percent cheaper construction costs than conventional spillways.

Media: contact Dr Chanson (phone: 07 3365 4163, email: h.chanson@uq.edu.au) or Miguel Holland at UQ Communications (phone: 3365 2619, email: m.holland@uq.edu.au)

Related articles

A woman in pink shirt sitting at a computer holding her hands.

Australian-first study finds pregnancy reduces odds of developing rheumatoid arthritis

Women who have given birth multiple times are less likely to develop rheumatoid arthritis, while no or fewer pregnancies was a risk factor along with obesity and smoking, a University of Queensland study has found.
6 May 2026
A cricket player raises his bat in the air while celebrating scoring 100 runs.
Analysis

Cricket Australia’s Big Bash cash grab is rejected – but there are better options on the table

Cricket Australia’s plan to sell off some or all of its Big Bash franchises has been put on ice – for now.
5 May 2026

Media contact

Subscribe to UQ News

Get the latest from our newsroom.