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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: The Vallo di Diano is the largest intermountain basin in the Southern Apennines (Italy). The basin evolution was controlled by the Quaternary activity of a range-bounding, SW-dipping normal fault system located to the east (Vallo di Diano Fault System, VDFS). Geological and oil industry data define the sin-sedimentary activity of the VDFS up to the Middle Pleistocene. However, commercial profiles do not resolve the shallower, eastern portion of the basin, due to strong lateral heterogeneities and unfavourable surface conditions. Therefore, Late Pleistocene-Holocene activity of the VDFS and its seismogenic potential are still uncertain. To better constrain the shallow structure of the basin, we performed four high-resolution seismic surveys, along its eastern side, where slope breccias and fans cover the Mesozoic carbonate bedrock and bury the VDFS. We also investigated some NW-trending flexures affecting Late Pleistocene fans, that we had previously detected and dubitatively ascribed to recent faulting. Seismic data were acquired with a dense wide-aperture geometry. Two high-resolution (HR) NE-trending profiles, about 1.5 km long, were collected using respectively 5 m and 10 m spaced receivers and sources. Two very high-resolution (VHR) NE-trending profiles, 400 and 350 m long, with densely spaced sources (4 m) and receivers (2 m) were also collected. HR profiling was aimed at imaging alluvial fan thickness and morphology of the underlying carbonate bedrock. VHR surveys targeted the flexures and their possible origin. All lines were acquired with a HR vibroseis source, except for the shortest profile, where we used a buffalo-gun, better suited for very near-surface imaging (z 〈 50 m depth). Seismic imaging consists of reflectivity images obtained by CDP-processing of reflection data complemented by Vp images obtained by multi-scale seismic tomography. The stack sections illuminated the basin down to 0.4-0.5 s TWT and reveal an array of high-angle, generally SW-dipping faults dissecting the bedrock and the alluvial fans. Faulting created accommodation space in the hanging-wall and displaced the different fan generations. Clear reflection truncations in the stack-sections correspond to significant Vp lateral changes in the tomographic images. VHR tomography is well defined along the shortest line down to 40 m depth, where two steps within slope breccias are visible. Moreover, two low-velocity wedges (colluvial packages) are imaged in the near surface (5-20 m depth). These data support recent faulting consistently with surface geomorphic features. We interpret these fault structures as splays of the range bounding master fault. Comparison with commercial reflection profiles nearby reveals a great improvement in seismic imaging achieved by HR surveys, which allow a detailed seismostratigraphic analysis of the basin.
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: San Francisco (CA), Moscone West, Howard Street
    Description: 3.2. Tettonica attiva
    Description: open
    Keywords: tomography ; reflection seismics ; active fault ; extensional basin ; Southern Apennines ; alluvial fan ; seismicity ; Italy ; 04. Solid Earth::04.02. Exploration geophysics::04.02.06. Seismic methods
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Poster session
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: Nell’ambito dei lavori per l’inaugurazione (dicembre 2008) della “Sede Irpinia” dell’Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia ubicata a Grottaminarda (prov. di Avellino) è stato progettato e realizzato un percorso informativo sulle attività svolte dal 2004 fino ad oggi dal personale tecnico e ricercatore. Il progetto ha previsto la realizzazione di 10 pannelli illustrativi, stampati su supporti rigidi di dimensione 70x100 cm, esposti all’interno di piccoli stand/postazioni. Queste isole tematiche, attraverso l’esposizione di strumentazione, presentazioni e filmati multimediali, hanno mostrato ai visitatori i principali risultati dei Progetti CESIS e RESIS e i settori scientifici nei quali la Sede Irpinia, oggi, ricopre un ruolo fondamentale nelle attività dell’INGV. I Pannelli illustrano i risultati raggiunti nell’ambito dell’installazione e manutenzione delle stazioni della Rete Sismica Nazionale e della Rete Integrata Nazionale GPS (RING) interamente gestita a Grottaminarda; l’organizzazione della infrastruttura informatica (CED) e del Laboratorio di cartografia digitale e sistemi informativi geografici (LABGIS); le ricerche nell’ambito della sismologia, dell’ingegneria sismica e dei metodi di sismica attiva ad alta risoluzione; la sala di monitoraggio sismico che funge da disaster recovery della Sala Sismica di Roma e la struttura della Nuova Rete Sismica di Pronto Intervento. Inoltre, essendo la sede Irpinia ubicata in una delle zone maggiormente colpite dal terremoto del 23 novembre 1980, si è pensato anche di sviluppare questa tematica attraverso tre diversi pannelli che illustrano la sismicità della regione Campania, una ricostruzione storica dell’evento sismico e gli effetti geologici e geomorfologici riscontrati in superficie.
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: 5.8. TTC - Formazione e informazione
    Description: open
    Keywords: Sede Irpinia ; Grottaminarda ; 05. General::05.09. Miscellaneous::05.09.99. General or miscellaneous
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: web product
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2017-04-04
    Description: We present high-resolution Vp models of the Middle Aterno basin obtained by multi-scale non-linear controlled-source tomography. Seismic data have been collected along four dense wide-aperture profiles, that run SW-NE for a total length of ~ 6 km in the hangingwall of the Paganica - S. Demetrio Fault, source of the 6th April 2009 (Mw 6.3) L'Aquila normal-faulting earthquake. Seismic tomography expands the knowledge of the basin with high spatial resolution and depth penetration (〉 300 m), illuminating the Meso-Cenozoic substratum that corresponds to high-Vp regions (Vp 〉 3500-4000 m/s). Low Vp (1500-2000 m/s) lacustrine sediments (Early Pleistocene in age) are imaged only in the SW sector of the basin, where they are up to 200 m thick and lie below coarse fluvial and alluvial fan deposits. The overall infill consists of Early to Late Pleistocene alluvial fan and fluvial sediments between the Paganica Fault and the Bazzano ridge, with Vp reaching 3000 m/s for the oldest conglomeratic bodies. The substratum has an articulated topography. The main depocenter, ~ 350 m deep, is in the SW sector of the basin south of the Bazzano ridge. Remarkably, this depocenter and the overlying thick lacustrine body match the area of maximum coseismic subsidence observed after the 2009 earthquake. In the Paganica area, Vp images unravel large steps in the substratum related to two unreported SW-dipping buried strands, synthetic to the Paganica Fault, with ~ 250 m associated total vertical throw. This finding has important implications on the long-term history of the Paganica – S. Demetrio Fault system, whose total vertical displacement has been previously underestimated. An additional ~ 250 m vertical offset along this complex Quaternary extensional structure should therefore be considered.
    Description: Published
    Description: 373-388
    Description: 3.2. Tettonica attiva
    Description: JCR Journal
    Description: reserved
    Keywords: Non-linear Tomography ; Normal Fault System ; L’Aquila Earthquake ; Middle Aterno basin ; Central Apennines, Italy ; 04. Solid Earth::04.02. Exploration geophysics::04.02.99. General or miscellaneous
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 4
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