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European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 EGU06-A-07129; TS4.3-1WE2O-002 From mapping faults to delineating seismogenic sources: version 3.0 of the Database of Individual Seismogenic Sources (DISS) Roberto Basili and the DISS Working Group Gianluca Valensise Roberto Basili Paola Vannoli Sofia Mariano Pierfrancesco Burrato INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 Motivations Present the largest repository of data on Earthquake Geology in Europe Stimulate discussions on the peculiarities of the database and its application to seismic hazard studies Encourage contributions from the community of European earthquake geologists INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 Hazards Associated with Active Faults ground shaking surface deformation seismogenic layer surface rupture INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 Hazards Associated with Active Faults ground shaking: happens always but is transient affects the widest area is responsible for most of the damage may trigger other geological effects (liquefaction, landslides, secondary ruptures) surface deformation: happens always and is permanent affects a wide area (fault size x2) produce limited damage (critical facilities) trigger other geological effects (stream avulsion, slope instability, tsunami) surface rupture: happens only if fault is not blind but is permanent affects a limited area (smaller than fault length) may produce significant damage trigger other geological effects (water ponding, damming) INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 DISS’s History DISS 1.0 (2000): circulation limited within INGV; DISS 2.0 (2001): standalone version (MapInfo) published in Annali di Geofisica, with CD-ROM (Valensise and Pantosti, 2001); DISS 3.0 (2005): web and standalone versions, updated semi-annually by DISS WG. INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 What is DISS? (1) DISS is a georeferenced repository of tectonic, fault and paleoseismological information. The core objects of DISS are: (1) the individual seismogenic source, a simplified and threedimensional representation of a fault plane. Seismogenic sources are assumed to exhibit "characteristic" behaviour with respect to rupture length/width and expected magnitude; (2) the seismogenic area, an elongated region containing an unspecified number of aligned seismogenic sources that cannot be singled out. Seismogenic areas are not associated with a specific set of earthquakes or earthquake distribution. INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 3D View of an Individual Source and its Parameters Fault projection to ground surface UL SL Strike LL UR SR LR Fault plane Rake Dip INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 3D View of a Seismogenic Area and its Parameters N Strike min polygon that encloses the projection at the ground surface of an entire fault system N Strike max Dip min Rake max Rake min branches of the fault system This is a branching point, NOT a segment boundary Dip max Effective Depth INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 DISS content INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 Information behind each Seismogenic Source INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 What is DISS? (2) DISS presently contains information on the Italian territory and its surrounding regions but it’s structured to include data from anywhere. theme #2 theme #1 thematic layers fault database regional databases cropped on the fly INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 What is DISS? (3) DISS is expressly devoted to many potential applications in the assessment of seismic hazard at regional and national scale. • it represents faults in 3D • all its records are fully parameterized • it tends to completeness DISS content is ready to use and does not require any further manipulation of fault data by analysts and modelers. INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 Where is DISS? DISS is available online @ http://www.ingv.it/DISS/ INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy European Geosciences Union General Assembly 2006 Vienna, Austria, 02 – 07 April 2006 Examples of earthquake geology studies, analyses and applications of DISS @ EGU See our posters on ... earthquake geology of NE Italy earthquake geology of S Italy earthquake geology of offshore S Italy TS4.3 TS4.3 TS4.3 XY0933 XY0953 XY0938 regional seismotectonic view of Italy TS4.3 XY0944 application of DISS to CFF analysis application of DISS to tsunami scenarios TS1.6 XY0874 NH6.01 XY0626 You can download this presentation from http://www.earth-prints.org/ INGV - Sezione di Sismologia e Tettonofisica, Roma, Italy