Category
page 1Megafloods
English Channel
arm of the Atlantic Ocean that separates southern England from northern France
deluge myth
narrative in which a great flood destroys a civilization, commonly as divine retribution
Lake Agassiz
glacial lake in North America
Black Sea deluge hypothesis
hypothetical flood scenario
Lake Bonneville
former pluvial lake in what is now Utah, Nevada, and Idaho in the United States

jökulhlaup
thumb|300x300px|A jökulhlaup
thumb|300x300px|The impounded lake a month earlier, before the same jökulhlaup
A jökulhlaup ( ) (literally "glacial run") is a type of glacial outburst flood. It is an Icelandic term that has been adopted in glaciological terminology in many languages.
It originally referred to the well-known subglacial outburst floods from Vatnajökull, Iceland, which are triggered by geothermal heating and occasionally by a volcanic subglacial eruption, but it is now used to describe any large and abrupt release of water from a subglacial or proglacial lake/reservoir.

Diluvium
thumb|upright=1.15| Diluvial terraces on Katun River Altai Scabland, [[Altai Republic]]
thumb|Giant current ripples in the Kuray Basin, Altai, Russia
Zanclean flood
theoretical refilling of the Mediterranean Sea between the Miocene and Pliocene Epochs
Channeled Scablands
barren, relatively soil-free landscape in eastern Washington, USA
Missoula Floods
floods dating from the end of the last ice age, in the USA
Tangjiashan Lake
lake in People's Republic of China
outburst flood
high-magnitude, low-frequency catastrophic flood involving the sudden release of water
Lake Ojibway
glacial lake in Canada
Giant current ripples
depositional forms in diluvial plain and mountain scablands
outflow channel
long, wide swathe of scoured ground on Mars
Altai flood
cataclysmic floods that swept along the Katun River in the Altai Republic at the end of the last ice age
Pantai Remis landslide
Landslide in Malaysia