Areal distribution of ground effects induced by strong earthquakes in the southern Apennines (Italy)
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2002
Abstract:
Moderate to strong crustal earthquakes are generally accompanied by a distinctive pattern
of coseismic geological phenomena, ranging from surface faulting to ground cracks, landslides,
liquefaction/compaction, which leave a permanent mark in the landscape. Therefore, the repetition
of surface faulting earthquakes over a geologic time interval determines a characteristic morphology
closely related to seismic potential. To support this statement, the areal distribution and dimensions
of effects of recent historical earthquakes in the Southern Apennines are being investigated in detail.
This paper presents results concerning the 26 July 1805 earthquake in the Molise region, (I=XMCS,M
= 6.8), and the 23 November 1980 earthquake in the Campania and Basilicata regions (I=XMSK,Ms
= 6.9). Landslide data are also compared with two other historical earthquakes in the
same region with similar macroseismic intensity. The number of significant effects (either ground
deformation or hydrological anomalies) versus their minimum distance from the causative fault have
been statistically analyzed, finding characteristic relationships. In particular, the decay of the number
of landslides with distance from fault follows an exponential law, whereas it shows almost a rectilin-
ear trend for liquefaction and hydrological anomalies. Most effects fall within the macroseismic area,
landslides within intensity V to VI, liquefaction effects within VI and hydrological anomalies within
IV MCS/MSK, hence at much larger distances. A possible correlation between maximum distance
of effects and length of the reactivated fault zone is also noted. Maximum distances fit the envelope
curves for Intensity and Magnitude based on worldwide data. These results suggest that a careful
examination of coseismic geological effects can be important for a proper estimation of earthquake
parameters and vulnerability of the natural environment for seismic hazard evaluation purposes.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Active tectonics; ground effects; historical seismicity; seismic hazard; Southern Apennines
Elenco autori:
Esposito, Eliana; Porfido, Sabina
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