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  • 04. Solid Earth::04.06. Seismology::04.06.99. General or miscellaneous  (1)
  • Angle; Compass; DATE/TIME; Direction; earthquake; ELEVATION; Etna; ETNA; Fiandaca fault; Kinematics; LATITUDE; Length; LONGITUDE; Mount Etna, Sicily, Italia; Observation; Offset; Opening; ORDINAL NUMBER; Plunge; rupture; Strike; Strike-slip; Substratum; surface faulting; Throw; Trend; volcano; Width  (1)
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  • 1
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Villani, Fabio; Pucci, Stefano; Azzaro, Raffaele; Civico, Riccardo; Cinti, Francesca Romana; Pizzimenti, Luca; Tarabusi, Gabriele; Branca, Stefano; Brunori, Carlo Alberto; Caciagli, Marco; Cantarero, Massimo; Cucci, Luigi; D'Amico, Salvatore; De Beni, Emanuela; De Martini, Paolo Marco; Mariucci, Maria Teresa; Messina, A; Montone, Paola; Nappi, Rosa; Nave, Rosella; Pantosti, Daniela; Ricci, Tullio; Sapia, Vincenzo; Smedile, Alessandra; Vallone, Roberto; Venuti, Alessandra (2020): Surface ruptures database related to the 26 December 2018, MW 4.9 Mt. Etna earthquake, southern Italy. Scientific Data, 7(1), 42, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-020-0383-0
    Publication Date: 2024-06-22
    Description: We provide a database of the coseismic surface ruptures produced by the 26 December 2018 Mw 4.9 earthquake that struck the eastern flank of Mt. Etna (southern Italy), the largest active volcano in Europe. Despite its small size, this shallow earthquake caused an impressive system of coseismic surface ruptures extending about 8.5 km, along the trace of the NNW-trending active Fiandaca Fault. We performed detailed field surveys were performed in the epicentral region to describe the ruptures geometry and kinematics. These exhibit a dominant right-oblique sense of slip with coseismic displacement peaks of 0.35 m. The Fiandaca Fault is part of a complex active faults system affecting the eastern flank of Mt. Etna. Its seismic history indicates a prominent surface-faulting potential, so our study is essential for unravelling the seismotectonics of shallow earthquakes in volcanic settings, and contributes updating empirical scaling laws relating moderate-sized earthquakes and surface faulting. The collected observations have been parsed and organized in a concise database consisting of 874 homogeneous georeferenced records. The main features describing the coseismic ruptures are the following: ID, time of sample collection, location (latitude, longitude, elevation), type of rupture, type of affected substratum, attitude (dip angle, dip direction, strike), surface offset (opening, throw, strike slip, net slip), kinematics, slip vector attitude, width of the deformation zone.
    Keywords: Angle; Compass; DATE/TIME; Direction; earthquake; ELEVATION; Etna; ETNA; Fiandaca fault; Kinematics; LATITUDE; Length; LONGITUDE; Mount Etna, Sicily, Italia; Observation; Offset; Opening; ORDINAL NUMBER; Plunge; rupture; Strike; Strike-slip; Substratum; surface faulting; Throw; Trend; volcano; Width
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 6893 data points
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: The area of the Salento peninsula (Apulia, Southern Italy) is considered the stable foreland of the Southern Apennines chain (Cinque et al., 1993), although it has been hit by several low energy and a few high energy earthquakes over the last centuries. The strongest historical earthquakes in the last 1000 years occurred on September 10, 1087, (Bari, Imax = VI-VII), on February 20, 1743, (Ionian sea, Imax = IX), and on October 26, 1826 (Manduria, Imax = VI-VII) (Guidoboni et al., 2007; Rovida et al., 2011). The instrumental recent seismicity is mainly concentrated in the western sector of the Salento peninsula and in the Strait of Otranto. The maximum recorded event occurred on October, 20, 1974 (Mw= 5.0, Rovida et al., 2011). The most severe damage in the Apulian peninsula was caused by the strong historical earthquake of 1743, that was also felt on the western coast of Greece, on the Malta island, in Southern Italy and in some localities of Central and Northern Italy. Heavy damage affected the Salento area, in the towns of Nardò (Lecce), and Francavilla Fontana (Brindisi); in Greece, it was felt in the town of Levkas and in the Ionian Islands. According to Margottini, 1981, Guidoboni et al., 2007, Rovida et al., 2011, the maximum felt intensity was IX MCS in Nardò and Levkas. The casualties were about 180, of which 150 in the town of Nardò. The earthquake is described in a large amount of historical documents and seismic catalogues (Margottini, 1981; Guidoboni et al., 2007, Rovida et al., 2011). The 1743 earthquake also generated a tsunami, the deposits of which are distributed along the southern Adriatic coastline of Salento (Mastronuzzi et al., 2007). The location and geometry of the seismogenetic source of the Mw = 6.9, 1743 Salento earthquake is still a subject of scientific debate. The aim of this study is to review this seismic event in terms of damage evaluation, taking into consideration also the seismically induced ground effects in natural environment, according to the ESI scale 2007 (Michetti et al., 2007, Guerrieri et al., 2012). Moreover it could be better evaluated the seismic potential of the Salento area, currently classified in IV category (Seismic Classification Map of the Italian territory; MPSO4 – Order PCM 3519/2006), despite the considerable damage caused by strong earthquakes occurred not only in the Strait of Otranto, but also in Greece and Albania.
    Description: Published
    Description: Milan, Italy
    Description: 2T. Tettonica attiva
    Description: open
    Keywords: Salento, historical seismicity, damage evaluation, ESI scale, tsunami. ; 04. Solid Earth::04.06. Seismology::04.06.99. General or miscellaneous
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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