“…Where most tsunami evidence stems from the marine domain, tsunamis in lakes have recently been recognized as a considerable natural hazard with high magnitudes and low recurrence rates (Hilbe & Anselmetti, 2015; Kremer et al., 2015, 2021; Nigg, Wohlwend, et al., 2021; Strupler, Danciu, et al., 2018; Strupler, Hilbe, et al., 2018). The most common mechanism that generate tsunamis in freshwater environments are large subaqueous and subaerial mass movements (Hilbe & Anselmetti, 2015; Kremer et al., 2021; Mountjoy et al., 2019; Nigg, Wohlwend, et al., 2021; Roberts et al., 2013; Strupler, Bacigaluppi, et al., 2020). Historic chronicles document that lacustrine tsunamis have caused fatalities, severe lake‐shore erosion, and inundation in various lakes around the world (e.g., Lake Geneva, Switzerland [563 CE Tauredunum rockfall event (Favrod, 1991; Montandon, 1925]), Lake Lucerne, Switzerland (1601 CE Unterwalden earthquake (Cysat, 1969) and 1687 CE Muota Delta collapse (Bünti, 1973; Billeter, 1923; Dietrich, 1689)), Lake Baikal, Russia (1861 CE Tsagan earthquake (Klyuchevskii et al., 2012)).…”