“…They have been documented to impact certain coastlines, mostly specific harbours or bays, for centuries. In some bays, the meteotsunami waves have been recorded with heights of several metres and associated currents of several knots, which may pose a particular threat to low-tidal regions, like the Mediterranean and Black seas (Vilibić et al 2021) and the Great Lakes (Bechle et al 2016), where the coastal infrastructure is not adapted to such strong sea-level oscillations. A number of catastrophic meteotsunamis have been recorded in modern times: (1) The Great Lakes, USA, in 1954, killing 7 people in Chicago (Ewing et al 1954), (2) Vela Luka, Croatia, in 1978, resulting in US$7 million in damage at that time (Vučetić et al 2009), (3) Nagasaki Bay, Japan, in 1979, killing 3 people and flooding coastal cities (Hibiya and Kajiura 1982), (4) Ciutadella in the Balearic Islands, Spain, in 1984 and2006, sinking tens of yachts and boats and causing of tens of millions of euros in damage (Jansà and Ramis 2021), (5) Daytona Beach, Florida, USA, in 1992, causing at least 75 injuries and damaging several dozen vehicles on the beach (Churchill et al 1995), (6) the catastrophic 2007 event in Mostaganem (Algeria) responsible for the death of 12 people (Okal 2021), (7) the catastrophic meteotsunamis that affected the north Persian Gulf coastline, Iran, causing the death of 5 people and injuring 22 (Salaree et al 2018;Heidarzadeh et al 2020;Kazeminezhad et al 2021), and several others.…”