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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-07-02
    Print ISSN: 0895-0695
    Electronic ISSN: 1938-2057
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-08-01
    Description: This historical seismology study examines and supplements what is currently known from written sources and archaeological literature about the earthquakes that took place in the area of L’Aquila (central Italy), struck by a damaging earthquake on 6 April 2009 ( M w  6.3), from the ancient Roman period to the late Middle Ages (first through fifteenth century A.D.). The persistence and magnitude of earthquakes in this area has had a strong bearing on the economy and culture of the communities that resided there, a fact borne out by historical accounts. The goal of this revision is to prompt thinking about earthquakes missing from the hazard estimates as well as on return periods for destructive earthquakes in the area. It presents a critical collation of data previously scattered among historical catalogs and writings. Ten earthquakes are examined for their historical and cultural background with a view to highlighting the existence of written sources and explaining both the quality of the available data and the information shortfall. We also show the limits and uncertainty of the information available, coming as it does from tersely written texts giving patchy coverage. This state of knowledge is due either to sources being lost or in certain centuries not being produced (there is a millennium of "lost" earthquakes) and to the present state of historical and archaeological research in this field. The historical and archaeological data we present are often poor/hard to quantify. Yet they are known and hence pose the problem of how to improve the earthquake catalogs and devise new quantitative approaches to hazard estimation based on multi-disciplinary dialog.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2002-12-01
    Description: This article presents the results of research aimed at enhancing our knowledge of the active faults in southwestern Sicily, which is considered a low seismic hazard zone. The Selinunte archaeological park, the largest in the Mediterranean, with its great temples and evidence of spectacular collapses, is an information source that can be analyzed using the methodological approach of archaeoseismology. Having assessed the situation concerning the interpretation of the collapse in the literature (seismic and nonseismic events), we have proceeded to identify the seismic indicators at Selinunte, which has required a detailed analysis of both old and new archaeological evidence. We have reconstructed the history of the archaeological deposits, spoliation, and excavations. These data have been reevaluated in the light of the most recent research and of methodological criteria already successfully used in previous works on archaeoseismology. By means of a detailed and systematic critical analysis of the archaeological data, we have formulated a hypothesis arguing that two seismic events had actually struck Selinunte, leading to the collapse of the temples. One of the methods for this analysis is to visualize the direction of the temples' collapse, pinpointing congruent chronological phases. The results have allowed us to date the two earthquakes to a period between the fourth and third centuries B.C. for the first, and for the second between the sixth and thirteenth century A.D. This work has provided new information for the archaeological identification of seismic events in the total absence of written information.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2003-08-01
    Description: The damage scenario for the city of Palermo has been reconstructed for the three most damaging earthquakes that have occurred since the eighteenth century (1 September 1726; 5 March 1823; 15 January 1940). Research has been carried out on the original written documents, mostly kept in the archives of administrative and clerical institutions in Sicily. The chance to collate and compare the information coming from the different coeval sources provides an assurance as to the reliability of the collected data and optimizes the information framework. All the damage episodes have been pinpointed in the ancient urban pattern of the city. The historic urban area has been divided up using a grid with square-module geometry, each grid element being 100 x 100 m in size. The resulting damage distribution shows a systematic amplification of effects in some of the grid elements. In order to formulate an interpretation of the damage anomalies in terms of near-surface geology, a geographic information system (GIS) has been used to handle a geological database of about 2000 geo-referenced soil profiles in Palermo. This approach has provided us with a quick 2D and 3D visualization of the upper-layer structure in the study area. As expected, a close correlation was found between the zones of major damage and the thickness of recent deposits characterized by weak cohesiveness and high compressibility: the damage level increases at sites where thickness exceeds a 12-m threshold. The strongest effects occur on water-saturated deposits thicker than 22 m. In terms of the macroseismic effects, a transition from the hardest (Oligo-Miocene Numidian flysch and calcarenites) to the softest ground (recent alluvial deposits and man-made fill) present in the historic center of Palermo implies a difference in Mercalli Cancani Sieberg (MCS) intensity by one to two degrees during the same earthquake. An M 5.6 earthquake occurred off the Palermo coast on 6 September 2002 subsquent to our analysis of the macroseismic data. The instrumental data from this most recent shock provide a posteriori experimental evidence of significant ground-shaking variations between the different geological formations. This validates the macroseismic results and indicates that research and applications based on crossing different datasets can be successfully performed for urban areas using GIS technology.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2007-06-01
    Description: Seismic sea waves in the eastern Mediterranean have been reported since written history first emerged several thousand years ago. We collected and investigated these ancient and modern reports to understand and model the typical tsunamigenic sources, with the ultimate purpose of characterizing tsunami hazard along the Levant coasts. Surprisingly, only 35% of the tsunami reports could be traced back to primary sources, with the balance remaining questionable. The tsunamis varied in size, from barely noticeable to greatly damaging, and their effects ranged from local to regional. Overall, we list 21 reliably reported tsunamis that occurred since the mid second century B.C. along the Levant coast, along with 57 significant historical earthquakes that originated from the "local" continental Dead Sea Transform (DST) system. An in-depth evaluation shows that 10 tsunamis are clearly associated with on-land DST earthquakes, and therefore, as formerly suggested, they probably originated from offshore, seismogenically induced slumps. Eight tsunamis arrived from the "remote" Hellenic and Cypriot Arcs, one from Italy, and two are left with as yet unrecognized sources. A major conclusion from this work is that onshore earthquakes commonly produce tsunamis along the Levant coastline, and that analogous situations are present elsewhere in the Mediterranean, as well as along the California coast and in another regions with active faults near the coast. We modeled three typical scenarios, and in light of the Sumatra experience, we examined the more likely severe magnitudes. This of course leads us toward the upper range of expected run-ups. The models show that sooner than five minutes after a strong earthquake produces an offshore slump, which occurs after close to a third of the large DST earthquakes, a 4- to 6-m run-up may flood part of the Syrian, Lebanese, and Israeli coasts. Tsunamis from remote earthquakes, however, arrive later and produce only 1- to 3-m run-ups, but are more regional in extent.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2003-01-01
    Description: The 1679 Garni earthquake was one of the most destructive seismic events in Armenia, and one of the most widely documented directly by Armenian sources, considering this is an area where historical documentation is, on the whole, rather scarce. Moreover, this earthquake appears in the literature as the result of various interpretative and research models, so there are contradictory assessments of its impact and its parameters: its magnitude oscillated between 5.5 and 7, and epicentral intensity between VIII and X degree. Even its location varied by over 40 km. This contribution aims to enhance the acquired knowledge of this earthquake by applying a methodology of analysis to the available information that has already given positive results in historical seismology in Europe. On the grounds of the new sources and with a critical review of previously known ones, the authors can provide new and more accurate data on the earthquake, along with a detailed outline of the characteristics of the buildings affected and the historical and demographic conditions under which the earthquake occured. Moreover, the data has been supplemented with a direct observation of the monuments still standing, thus revealing some of the earthquake's previously unassessed damaging effects. The authors have clearly arranged the use of data pertaining to different typologies, maintaining the evidence of such diversities even in the evaluation of the macroseismic intensity. This methodological approach has been adopted in order to evaluate the seismic effects in an area with a low density of historical documentation. As a result, the effects of this earthquake could be estimated at 34 sites (of which 20 documented from coeval sources and 14 on the grounds of direct observations). For this event there is also a good geological database regarding the active fault of Garni.̀ Hence, this study has also represented a test for comparing the results of the historical research with the known geological data.
    Print ISSN: 1383-4649
    Electronic ISSN: 1573-157X
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Springer
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2004-01-01
    Description: The aim of this study is to shed light on two important destructive seismic sequences, about 20 years apart (1138-1139 and 1156-1159), which hit the northern sector of the Dead Sea transform fault system (DSTFS), in the eastern Mediterranean region. Although some of these earthquakes were already known to the scholarly tradition, the interpretations provided until today have largely been partial and characterised by uncertainties and discrepancies among the various authors. Our study has developed through research into the original Arabic, Syriac, Armenian and Latin texts and a critical analysis relating to a territory fragmented by the presence of the Christian-Latin states. This analysis has allowed us to shed light on the already existing, albeit often uncertain, information and to add new elements of these two important series of earthquake shocks to our knowledge base. As regards the first seismic sequence (October 1138-June 1139), apart from having defined the date with greater accuracy, eight new locations affected have been identified, unknown to previous studies. The shocks jolted a vast area with destructive effects, including the territory of Aleppo (modern Halab, Syria) and the western part of the region of Edessa (modern Urfa, Turkey). The second seismic sequence (September 1156-May 1159) was much longer and devastating, and hit a huge area, included between the present-day territories of north-western Syria, northern Lebanon and the region of Antioch (modern Antakya, in southern Turkey). A detailed analysis of the primary sources has allowed to reconstruct the series of shocks with chronological detail of the effects, improving our previous knowledge. Lastly, the authors formulate an hypothesis as to the possible seismogenic zones affected.
    Print ISSN: 1383-4649
    Electronic ISSN: 1573-157X
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Springer
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1987-09-01
    Print ISSN: 0361-3666
    Electronic ISSN: 1467-7717
    Topics: Technology
    Published by Wiley
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2012-08-01
    Description: This historical seismology study examines and supplements what is currently known from written sources and archaeological literature about the earthquakes that took place in the area of L'Aquila (central Italy), struck by a damaging earthquake on 6 April 2009 (M (sub w) 6.3), from the ancient Roman period to the late Middle Ages (first through fifteenth century A.D.). The persistence and magnitude of earthquakes in this area has had a strong bearing on the economy and culture of the communities that resided there, a fact borne out by historical accounts. The goal of this revision is to prompt thinking about earthquakes missing from the hazard estimates as well as on return periods for destructive earthquakes in the area. It presents a critical collation of data previously scattered among historical catalogs and writings. Ten earthquakes are examined for their historical and cultural background with a view to highlighting the existence of written sources and explaining both the quality of the available data and the information shortfall. We also show the limits and uncertainty of the information available, coming as it does from tersely written texts giving patchy coverage. This state of knowledge is due either to sources being lost or in certain centuries not being produced (there is a millennium of "lost" earthquakes) and to the present state of historical and archaeological research in this field. The historical and archaeological data we present are often poor/hard to quantify. Yet they are known and hence pose the problem of how to improve the earthquake catalogs and devise new quantitative approaches to hazard estimation based on multi-disciplinary dialog.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2012-02-03
    Description: The climate has always been subject to changes, and these have often caused trouble and posed unexpected threats. People have had to adapt by finding socially, culturally and economically adequate answers. Based on authoritative scientific and historical studies, this book explores the civilizations that have called the Mediterranean their home during the last 3,000 years, and makes their history accessible to a wide readership. Aided by a group of researchers, the authors aim not only to delineate climatic trends and their social repercussions through the centuries, but also to address the ideas and theories set forth by thinkers since time immemorial. This book gives voice to ancient Greek and Latin philosophers, medieval encyclopedists (Christian and Arab), intellectuals of the modern era and the Enlightenment, and exponents of nineteenth-century positivism. Ancient and recent Mediterranean civilizations alike concerned themselves with weather forecasts, the climate and health, and the relationship between climate and the environment: they have elaborated on these issues and come up with answers since antiquity. Casting light on largely unexplored aspects of history, this journey through time works its way to the present global warming. The new challenge that lies before us is best assessed in a perspective of “historical climate change,” to which the doings of humankind are adding great momentum.
    Description: Published
    Description: 3.7. Dinamica del clima e dell'oceano
    Description: open
    Keywords: climate history ; climatic change ; historical Mediterranean cultures ; social answers ; 01. Atmosphere::01.01. Atmosphere::01.01.02. Climate
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: book
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