535 research outputs found

    The seismicity of Tunis

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    Very little is known regarding tlie seisniicity of Tunisia and in particulartliat of the Tunis area. We know tliat Tunis was sliaken a fewtimes in the past but it is rather difficult to say witli certainty whateffect tliese earthquakes had on structures and what their intensitieswere. Information is partieularly lacking about tliose earthquakes beforethe 19tli century. It may, however, be signiflcant tliat liistorical record»for the area of Tunis indicate intense seismic activity during the 9th and18th centuries, altliough one must make some allowances for naturaiexaggerations in early statements.In order to disclose the seismic potentiality of suoli a poorly documentedarea it is, therefore, essential to resort to its geotectonic historyfor informatici!

    Near-field horizontal and vertical earthquake ground motions

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    Strong-motion attenuation relationships are presented for peak ground acceleration, spectral acceleration, energy density, maximum absolute input energy for horizontal and vertical directions and for the ratio of vertical to horizontal of these ground motion parameters. These equations were derived using a worldwide dataset of 186 strong-motion records recorded with 15 km of the surface projection of earthquakes between Ms = 5:8 and 7.8. The effect of local site conditions and focal mechanism is included in some of these equations

    Seismicity and associated strain of central Greece between 1890 and 1988

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    We examined the seismicity of central Greece between 1890 and 1988, using macroseismic and instrumental data, to ask two questions: (1) does the seismicity of this period reveal all the major tectonic structures that are known to be active?; and (2) what are the likely strains associated with the seismicity over this period? Many known active structures have been effectively aseismic for the last hundred years, and even the inclusion of all known large events earlier than 1890 reveals no activity associated with the NE coast of Evia, Gulf of Argos, or graben NE of Mt Parnassos. It is clear that even 100 years' data are inadequate for either a reasonable assessment of seismic risk or for a confident estimation of maximum magnitude. However, we are aware of no earthquakes in central Greece during the last 200 yr that were larger than Ms 7.0. It is probable that the maximum magnitude is restricted by the maximum length of fault segments, which appears to be around 15-20 km. The earthquakes of Ms ≥ 5.8 during 1890-1988 can account for a N-S displacement of around 45-70 cm (with maximum and minimum estimates a factor of two greater and smaller than this) across part of a 1890-1900 triangulation network in central Greece that was resurveyed in 1988. The contribution of smaller events may increase this displacement by about 50 per cent. This cumulative seismic displacement is similar to that estimated from the geodetic work (about 100 cm), but a detailed comparison of the two sets of observations will be reported elsewhere. A re-evaluation of all the important earthquakes of 1890-1988 in central Greece is presented in the Appendix, which summarizes information of use to both earth scientists and engineers

    SHORT COMMUNICATION A DAMAGING SEAQUAKE

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    The term seaquake is used to mean shaking caused exclusively by an earthquake but felt on board a vessel at sea, excluding effects from tsunamis. Thousands of such occurrences are known which are occasionally listed in the casualty reports of Lloyd's List and in other sources, causing considerable concern to mariners but rarely serious structural damage to seaworthy vessels. Seaquakes, because the sensation they often create is one of the ship running aground, have been responsible for some of the fictitious reefs and shoals shown in early navigation charts. This research note brings to attention a little known case of a damaging seaquake which is of interest for the study of the vulnerability of offshore engineering structures and marine vessels, particularly submarines, as well as containers for the disposal of nuclear waste, and also provides information on the earthquake source responsible for the seaquake, that with the data available cannot be obtained by normal seismological methods. On the 28th February 1969 the motor tanker 'Ida Knudsen', a 32,000-tonne vessel built in 1958, was sailing in ballast from Lisbon to the Persian Gulf when it experienced a 'violent vertical shock'. This happened at about 02 h 45 min (GMT) when the ship was at a position 36-12"N-10.70"W in 2,700 fathoms of water. At the time the general state of the sea in this part of the Atlantic was 3 to 4 with moderate swell, and the windforce was 4 to 5. From the available log-extracts, maritime declaration and other survey documents it appears that as a result of the shock the vessel sustained very serious structural damage. In the wheelhouse, chartroom and radio station binnacles, compasses and permanent instruments were torn loose and collapsed. Doors and fixtures in the superstructure were torn loose and thrown about. The signal mast with the radarscanner was distorted and all its cross-bars were broken. Damage in the superstructure was more serious at midship than at the aft peak. From eyewitness accounts it appears that the vessel was lifted up bodily, the bow moving up faster than the bridge, and then the whole ship slammed back with violent vibrations, the whole event lasting about ten seconds. Serious damage was also caused both to the machinery and hull where piping was broken and leakage developed between tanks. After hours of drifting and with a misaligned propeller shaft the ship returned to Lisbon where it was drydocked and surveyed. ' The surveys proved that the hull, machinery and other equipment had sustained great damage and, on account of the permanent deformation and breaks, the ship had lost a substantial part of her longitudinal strength. The complete surface of the vessel's skin from cofferdam to cofferdam buckled, in places with permanent sets of 4cm and the hull was twisted to port by 18cm. Bulkheads, hull frames and girders were buckled or torn apart and all the wing tanks leaked. Moreover, the bottom parts of the side platings were torn away from the girders, in places by as much as 5cm, effects resembling those from an underwater mine explosion. The ship was condemned as a total loss. Later, she was rebuilt as 'Petros Hajikyriakos' (see Lloyd's Register of Ships). All this was apparently the result of an earthquake at 02 h 40mm 33 s (GMT) with an epicentre offshore of Gibraltar at 35.97"N-10.59"W (ISC normal depth determination), i.e. 20 km from where the ship was damaged. No other ships are known to have been in the near-field of this major earthquake (M, = 7.8, M , = 6.0 x loz7 dyn-cm).' A number of vessels further away

    Equations for the estimation of strong ground motions from shallow crustal earthquakes using data from Europe and the Middle East : horizontal peak ground acceleration and spectral acceleration

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    This article presents equations for the estimation of horizontal strong ground motions caused by shallow crustal earthquakes with magnitudes Mw ≥ 5 and distance to the surface projection of the fault less than 100km. These equations were derived by weighted regression analysis, used to remove observed magnitude-dependent variance, on a set of 595 strong-motion records recorded in Europe and the Middle East. Coefficients are included to model the effect of local site effects and faulting mechanism on the observed ground motions. The equations include coefficients to model the observed magnitude-dependent decay rate. The main findings of this study are that: short-period ground motions from small and moderate magnitude earthquakes decay faster than the commonly assumed 1/r, the average effect of differing faulting mechanisms is not large and corresponds to factors between 0.8 (normal and odd) and 1.3 (thrust) with respect to strike-slip motions and that the average long-period amplification caused by soft soil deposits is about 2.6 over those on rock sites. Disappointingly the standard deviations associated with the derived equations are not significantly lower than those found in previous studies

    Statistical modeling of ground motion relations for seismic hazard analysis

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    We introduce a new approach for ground motion relations (GMR) in the probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA), being influenced by the extreme value theory of mathematical statistics. Therein, we understand a GMR as a random function. We derive mathematically the principle of area-equivalence; wherein two alternative GMRs have an equivalent influence on the hazard if these GMRs have equivalent area functions. This includes local biases. An interpretation of the difference between these GMRs (an actual and a modeled one) as a random component leads to a general overestimation of residual variance and hazard. Beside this, we discuss important aspects of classical approaches and discover discrepancies with the state of the art of stochastics and statistics (model selection and significance, test of distribution assumptions, extreme value statistics). We criticize especially the assumption of logarithmic normally distributed residuals of maxima like the peak ground acceleration (PGA). The natural distribution of its individual random component (equivalent to exp(epsilon_0) of Joyner and Boore 1993) is the generalized extreme value. We show by numerical researches that the actual distribution can be hidden and a wrong distribution assumption can influence the PSHA negatively as the negligence of area equivalence does. Finally, we suggest an estimation concept for GMRs of PSHA with a regression-free variance estimation of the individual random component. We demonstrate the advantages of event-specific GMRs by analyzing data sets from the PEER strong motion database and estimate event-specific GMRs. Therein, the majority of the best models base on an anisotropic point source approach. The residual variance of logarithmized PGA is significantly smaller than in previous models. We validate the estimations for the event with the largest sample by empirical area functions. etc

    Developments in Ground Motion Predictive Models and Accelerometric Data Archiving in the Broader European Region

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    This paper summarizes the evolution of major strong-motion databases and ground-motion prediction equations (GMPEs) for shallow active crustal regions (SACRs) in Europe and surrounding regions. It concludes with some case studies to show the sensitivity of hazard results at different seismicity levels and exceedance rates for local (developed from country-specific databases) and global (based on databases of multiple countries) GMPEs of the same region. The case studies are enriched by considering other global GMPEs of SACRs that are recently developed in the USA. The hazard estimates computed from local and global GMPEs from the broader Europe as well as those obtained from global GMPEs developed in the US differ. These differences are generally significant and their variation depends on the annual exceedance rate and seismicity. Current efforts to improve the accelerometric data archives in the broader Europe as well as more refined GMPEs that will be developed from these databases would help the researchers to understand the above mentioned differences in seismic hazard

    Is the Shroud of Turin in Relation to the Old Jerusalem Historical Earthquake?

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    Phillips and Hedges suggested, in the scientific magazine Nature (1989), that neutron radiation could be liable of a wrong radiocarbon dating, while proton radiation could be responsible of the Shroud body image formation. On the other hand, no plausible physical reason has been proposed so far to explain the radiation source origin, and its effects on the linen fibres. However, some recent studies, carried out by the first author and his Team at the Laboratory of Fracture Mechanics of the Politecnico di Torino, found that it is possible to generate neutron emissions from very brittle rock specimens in compression through piezonuclear fission reactions. Analogously, neutron flux increments, in correspondence to seismic activity, should be a result of the same reactions. A group of Russian scientists measured a neutron flux exceeding the background level by three orders of magnitude in correspondence to rather appreciable earthquakes (4th degree in Richter Scale). The authors consider the possibility that neutron emissions by earthquakes could have induced the image formation on Shroud linen fibres, trough thermal neutron capture by Nitrogen nuclei, and provided a wrong radiocarbon dating due to an increment in C(14,6)content. Let us consider that, although the calculated integral flux of 10^13 neutrons per square centimetre is 10 times greater than the cancer therapy dose, nevertheless it is100 times smaller than the lethal dose.Comment: 13 pages, 1 figur
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