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  • Articles  (310)
  • 04.06. Seismology  (252)
  • Climate change  (57)
  • Educación
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  • 2020-2024  (179)
  • 2020-2023  (131)
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  • 1
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    INGV
    Publication Date: 2024-02-12
    Description: Exist­-fdsn-­station is an open source software that implements the standard fdsnws/station web service, integrating the application into a native XML database containing seismic stations metadata in the StationXML file format. Through its HTTP Application Programming Interface, extended with the PUT method for writing, this software can be used as a RESTful microservice. The software is publicly available and licensed under a General Public License. This manual describes all the operational phases, from installation to distribution in a production environment, for using exist-­fdsn-­station to store a set of StationXML files and exposing them efficiently with a standard fdsnws/station webservice.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-28
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: FDSN Station webservice ; XML based database ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.02. Data dissemination
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-02-12
    Description: Nel 2018 è stato avviato il progetto FOCUS - Fiber Optic Cable Use For Seafloor Studies Of Earthquake - coordinato da Marc-André Gutscher del Laboratoire Géosciences Océan dell’Università di Brest, in Francia. Questo progetto indaga la sismicità e la struttura crostale del Mar Ionio attraverso l’analisi e l’interpretazione di dati raccolti da strumentazione sottomarina e da reti di monitoraggio disponibili o appositamente installate nelle zone di costa. In tale contesto, l’Osservatorio Nazionale Terremoti (ONT) e l’Osservatorio Etneo (OE), entrambe Sezioni dell’Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), e il Laboratorio di Sismologia dell'Università della Calabria (UniCal), hanno contribuito al progetto con l’installazione di una rete sismica temporanea lungo la costa ionica calabro-siciliana a integrazione della rete permanente presente nell’area dello Stretto di Messina. La rete temporanea, costituita da 13 stazioni, ha acquisito dal mese di dicembre 2021 al mese di giugno 2023. Nel gennaio 2022, i partner internazionali del progetto FOCUS hanno installato una rete temporanea di sismometri OBS e sensori di pressione per fondali marini. La grande quantità di dati raccolta e la loro integrazione, consentirà di migliorare il monitoraggio sismico e le conoscenze relative alla struttura terrestre dell’area con particolare attenzione alle strutture sismogenetiche con un dettaglio mai raggiunto fino a ora. Tutte le istituzioni coinvolte in FOCUS collaborano per l’acquisizione e l’elaborazione dei dati, l’imaging dell’interno della Terra attraverso l’utilizzo di tecniche avanzate, l’interpretazione e la modellazione dei dati. Il presente lavoro descrive la progettazione, la realizzazione e la gestione della rete temporanea a terra definita FXland, fornendo indicazioni relative sul suo generale funzionamento e sulle caratteristiche del dataset acquisito.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-26
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: Progetto FOCUS ; Reti sismiche temporanee ; Sismicità ; FOCUS project ; Temporary seismic networks ; Seismicity ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-02-13
    Description: In this work, we analyze 12 meteorological events that occurred in the Mediterranean Sea during the period November 2011-November 2021 from a seismic point of view. In particular, we consider 8 Medicanes and 4 more common storms. Each of these events, in spite of the marked differences between them, caused heavy rainfall, strong wind gusts and violent storm surge with significant wave heights usually 〉3 m. We deal with the relationships between these meteorological events and the features of microseism (the most continuous and widespread seismic signal on Earth) in terms of spectral content, space-time variation of the amplitude and source locations tracked employing two different methods (amplitude decay-based grid search and array techniques). By comparing the positions of the microseism sources with the areas of significant storm surges, we observe that the microseism locations align with the actual locations of the storm surges for 10 out of 12 events analyzed (two Medicanes present very low intensity in terms of meteorological parameters and the microseism amplitude does not show significant variations during these two events). We also perform two analyses that allowed us to obtain both the seismic signature of these events, by using a method that exploits the coherence of continuous seismic noise, and their strength from a seismic point of view, called Microseism Reduced Amplitude. In addition, by integrating the results obtained from these two methods, we are able to "seismically" distinguish Medicanes and common storms. Consequently, we demonstrate the possibility of creating a novel monitoring system for Mediterranean meteorological events by incorporating microseism information alongside with other commonly employed techniques for studying meteorological phenomena. The integration of microseism with the data provided by routinely used techniques in sea state monitoring (e.g., wave buoy and HF radar) has the potential to offer valuable insights into the examination of historical extreme weather events within the context of climate change.
    Description: Published
    Description: 169989
    Description: OSA4: Ambiente marino, fascia costiera ed Oceanografia operativa
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Climate change ; Common storms ; Hindcast maps ; Medicanes ; Mediterranean Sea ; Microseism ; Monitoring sea state ; Wave buoys
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-02-22
    Description: SISMIKO is the operational group within the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia responsible for deploying a temporary seismic network as a rapid response to significant seismic events [Moretti et al., 2023; https://sismiko.ingv.it/]. The purpose of the temporary seismic network is to complement the RSNi (Rete Sismica Nazionale integrata) by reducing the inter-station distances of permanent stations, where necessary. SISMIKO has a distributed structure across various INGV headquarters nationwide and in recent years has equipped itself with a consistent set of around 50 seismo-accelerometric stations and an autonomous acquisition system. This system makes the acquired data available, without restrictions, to the entire scientific community through the Italy node of the European Integrated Data Archive (EIDA [Danecek et al., 2021]) portal, ensuring a high level of data quality. To ensure a rapid response following an earthquake and rapid integration of data collected by emergency stations, a codified procedure has been established. Through this procedure, the metadata of each station is pre-configured and the data flow coming from these stations is collected within an acquisition system [D'Alema et al., 2022]. This setting allows the rapid use, if necessary, of the data obtained by SISMIKO - after a quality control - by the seismologists on duty at the INGV Operations Room [Margheriti et al., 2021]. Today, over 100 INGV personnel join SISMIKO group: technicians, technologists and researchers from each of the headquarters distributed across the national territory. A new configuration in Activity Groups allows to coordinate the distributed personnel and to cover all the aspects in the preparation of the emergency such as the technical management of the instrumentation, the field operations, to maintain contacts with the INGV Crisis Unit and the other Operational Groups and to develop automatic procedures to analyse real time seismic data (Fig 1). Besides the operational aspects, in recent years SISMIKO has promoted the recovery of continuous data recorded by temporary seismic stations installed during past seismic sequences such as in L'Aquila 2009, Po Plain 2012 and Central Italy 2016. By reconstructing the complete station's metadata, it is now possible to distribute the data to the scientific community through the EIDA portal.
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: Ferrara
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Keywords: SISMIKO ; Emergency Group ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Poster session
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-03-05
    Description: In questa tesi si intende presentare i risultati di una sperimentazione condotta sia in laboratorio che su rocce in sito, tendente a dimostrare l’esistenza di emissioni radio a bassissima frequenza (bande ELF, VF, VLF) in associazione alla sollecitazione meccanica di masse litoidi. Questo effetto supporta l’ipotesi che ha motivato sia la costruzione dell’apparecchio utilizzato nella rilevazione dei segnali che la tesi stessa: la possibilità di individuare nei segnali radiosismici un fenomeno precursore attendibile. L’effetto però si può estendere al monitoraggio della stabilità di versanti rocciosi (eventuale previsione di frane) e ad altre applicazioni geologiche di monitoraggio e prospezione. Il metodo consiste nello studio della radiazione elettromagnetica naturale in banda acustica (20 Hz – 20 kHz) in quanto questa si adatta più facilmente all’ordinaria disponibilità dei mezzi hardware e software. Ciò lo rende particolarmente accessibile a basso costo. Il fenomeno all’origine di queste emissioni può avere diversi modelli di interpretazione. Qui si farà riferimento in particolare a quello proposto dal candidato, senza tuttavia trascurare altre possibilità. Il rilevatore, chiamato “radiogeofono”, è stato costruito dal candidato appositamente per questo scopo. La sperimentazione in sito si è svolta in una cava di calcare massiccio su fronti abbattuti da volate di mine. La sperimentazione in laboratorio si è svolta su campioni di varie litologie (calc.massiccio, calcare a rudiste, scaglia variegata, porfido) sottoposti a compressione uniassiale. Oltre al radiogeofono sono stati impiegati sensori aerei e apparecchiature radio convenzionali per monitorare: onda acustica, onda di pressione, emissioni elettromagnetiche nelle bande HF e UHF. Le registrazioni analogiche sono state convertite in campionamenti digitali per poter essere sottoposte a processi software di filtraggio ed analisi numerica (oscillogrammi e spettrogrammi). Sono stati rilevati segnali emessi dalla roccia associabili alla variazione dello stato tensionale e alla successiva fratturazione sia in condizione di distensione (esperimenti in cava) che di compressione (esperimenti in laboratorio). E’ stato verificato che in banda E-VLF i segnali premonitori della rottura si possono rilevare sistematicamente. Tali emissioni hanno un’intensità massima in banda radioacustica che decresce all’aumentare della frequenza diventando quindi molto bassa sulle bande radiofoniche di maggiore utilizzazione. Il meccanismo di emissione, qualunque esso sia, si è dimostrato più o meno efficiente in funzione del tipo di roccia e delle condizioni di sforzo che la portano alla rottura. Lo studio delle emissioni elettromagnetiche naturali in banda ELF e VLF si è dimostrato dunque un metodo particolarmente promettente al fine di prevedere un sisma o comunque la rottura di una massa litoide.
    Description: Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Roma "La Sapienza".
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Keywords: terremoto ; precursori sismici ; emissione elettromagnetica ; dilatanza ; microfratturazione ; VLF ; 04.02. Exploration geophysics ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: thesis
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-03-05
    Description: Lo studio prende in esame principalmente una porzione continua di spettro EM che si estende da 20 Hz a 20 kHz attraversando le bande radio ELF e VLF. La scelta di questa banda ha consentito un’accurata discriminazione dei fenomeni attraverso l’analisi spettrale del segnale EM, resa possibile dall’adozione di tecnologie già disponibili nel campo dei segnali acustici. Il fenomeno di emissione EM associata alla sollecitazione meccanica della roccia si presenta sotto forma di segnali impulsivi. In laboratorio si sono potute distinguere due categorie di segnale impulsivo, ciascuna caratterizzata da un proprio stile riconoscibile nell’analisi comparata della distribuzione spettrale, degli eventi e delle intensità. La sorgente dell’emissione può essere attribuita alla microfratturazione attraverso il modello della frattura in un dielettrico. Il potenziale generato su ogni singola frattura sembra essere dell’ordine delle centinaia di Volt e potrebbe raggiungere il migliaio. Il primo tipo di emissione (SIO), ad alta frequenza, è associabile meccanicamente alla formazione dei crack e indipendentemente dalla scala si può suddividere in insiemi di unità: impulsi, treni di impulsi ed episodi di emissione dei treni. Il secondo e più intenso tipo di sequenza (SID) è invece a bassa frequenza e associabile all’apertura delle fratture. In questo caso nella distribuzione temporale degli eventi si possono riconoscere degli episodi legati alla rottura da una relazione di proporzionalità. La fenomenologia nel suo complesso è stata osservata in ogni tipo di litologia esaminata con differenze non dipendenti direttamente dalla mineralogia ma piuttosto riconducibili all’omogeneità strutturale e allo stile deformativo del materiale. Malgrado questa variabilità abbia influenzato anche l’intensità dell’emissione, la sequenza SID, almeno nella fase parossistica, è osservabile in ogni prova e quindi la sua occorrenza appare sistematica. Nell’ambiente naturale in tre occasioni è stato riconosciuto un segnale riconducibile alla SIO, in tutti i casi associabile ad un sisma di magnitudo ≥ 4.5 succeduto nell’arco di 3~4 giorni. Rispetto all’emissione osservata in laboratorio mostra la stessa distribuzione spettrale e una distribuzione temporale analoga su scala maggiore. L’eventuale presenza dell’emissione SID potrebbe non essere stata risolta dal dispositivo di rilevamento. In generale sono ipotizzabili l’esistenza di una soglia di magnitudo legata all’occorrenza del precursore EM e la sistematicità della successione di un sisma all’emissione EM. E’ ipotizzabile inoltre la presenza di elementi utili alla previsione temporale dell’evento catastrofico nella caratterizzazione della variabilità del fenomeno stesso e la possibilità di risalire alla posizione della sorgente del segnale indipendentemente dalla direttività del sensore. Sebbene si tratti solo di ipotesi, le caratteristiche di questo tipo di precursore sarebbero tali da giustificare l’avanzamento di nuovi studi per la loro verifica.
    Description: Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Roma "La Sapienza"
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Keywords: terremoto ; fenomeni precursori ; emissioni elettromagnetiche ; dilatanza ; microfratturazione ; VLF ; 04.02. Exploration geophysics ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: thesis
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-02-19
    Description: Foreshocks are spatially clustered seismic events preceding large earthquakes. Since the dawn of seismology, their occurrence has been identified as a possible mechanism leading to further crustal destabilization, hence, to major failures. However, several cases occurred without any previous anomalous seismic activity, so that the hypothesis of foreshocks as reliable seismic precursors fails to pass statistical tests. Here, we perform an all‐round statistical comparative analysis of seismicity in Southern California to assess whether any differences can be identified between swarms and foreshocks. Our results suggest that extremely variable seismic patterns can forerun mainshocks, even though they tend to be preceded by clusters with more numerous events spread over larger areas than swarms and with a wider range of magnitudes. We provide a physical explanation of such dissimilarity and conclude, despite it, that foreshocks can hardly be reliable short‐ term precursors of large earthquakes in California.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2023JB027337
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Foreshocks ; Earthquake prediction ; Seismic forecasting ; Earthquake ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-01-30
    Description: The widespread lack of awareness of seismic hazard and the inadequate preparedness to protect people and property explains the high cost of damage caused by earthquakes worldwide to date. Efficient communication is of paramount importance as part of effective risk mitigation strategies. Over the past twenty years, efforts have been pursued at the local, regional, national, and international level to disseminate information on seismic hazard to populations at risk.Focusing on Europe, we analyze the main features of seismic risk communication from 2000 to 2022, and present here an overview of the results obtained based on a scoping review of the scientific literature. Our review was conducted on publications selected from Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar databases and the information was gathered on the basis of the 5 ‘Ws questions’ (Who, What, When, Where, and Why). Overall, the selected publications document the relatively limited engagement of the scientific community in this risk field compared to other natural disasters. Nevertheless, the growing trend over time of publications dealing with seismic risk communication highlights the effort to attract selected targeted audiences (particularly children), using new contents, methods of implementation, and channels such as social networks and the Internet.
    Description: Published
    Description: Berlino (Germania)
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Keywords: Seismic risk ; communication ; Europe ; scoping review ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.08. Risk ; 05.02. Data dissemination
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: An effective earthquake early warning system requires rapid and reliable earthquake source detection. Despite the numerous proposed epicenter localization solutions in recent years, their utilization within the Internet of Things (IoT) framework and integration with IoT-oriented cloud platforms remain underexplored. This paper proposes a complete IoT architecture for earthquake detection, localization, and event notification. The architecture, which has been designed, deployed, and tested on a standard cloud platform, introduces an innovative approach by implementing P-wave "picking" directly on IoT devices, deviating from traditional regional earthquake early warning (EEW) approaches. Pick association, source localization, event declaration, and user notification functionalities are also deployed on the cloud. The cloud integration simplifies the integration of other services in the architecture, such as data storage and device management. Moreover, a localization algorithm based on the hyperbola method is proposed, but here, the time difference of arrival multilateration is applied that is often used in wireless sensor network applications. The results show that the proposed end-to-end architecture is able to provide a quick estimate of the earthquake epicenter location with acceptable errors for an EEW system scenario. Rigorous testing against the standard of reference in Italy for regional EEW showed an overall 3.39 s gain in the system localization speed, thus offering a tangible metric of the efficiency and potential proposed system as an EEW solution.
    Description: Published
    Description: 8431
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Internet of Things ; cloud computing ; early warning systems ; earthquake localization ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Subduction zones may be characterised by deep-seated tectonic structures whose effects propagate to the upper plate through faulting and magmatism. The overall geodynamic framework, as well as the roots of the many active faults affecting such regions, can be investigated by the study of the upper mantle anisotropic patterns, through the analysis of core-transiting teleseismic phases. Here, we discuss the results of XKS waves splitting observed in the central Mediterranean, particularly in southern Italy, which is characterised by the Adriatic-Ionian subduction system. Azimuths of polarisation of the fast wave (fast directions) were found to be generally trench-parallel, as an effect of the subducting slab, albeit a change to a perpendicular direction, in central Italy and Sicily, suggests discontinuities in the structure of the slab itself. However, while in central Italy a gradual rotation of fast directions points to a toroidal upper mantle flow through a tear in the Apenninic slab, in central-eastern Sicily, the splitting parameters show an abrupt change that matches well with the main crustal tectonic structures. There, the rapid trench migration, taking place at the transition between the subduction and continental collision domains, produced a rather complex Subduction Transform Edge Propagator fault system. The sharp variation in the pattern of the upper mantle anisotropy marks the main element of such a fault system and suggests its primary role in the segmentation process of the collisional margin. Our findings further show that the study of seismic anisotropy may be fundamental in investigating whether tectonic structures only involve the crust or extend down to the upper mantle.
    Description: Published
    Description: 20932
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Seismic Anisotropy ; Southern Itlay ; XKS waves splitting ; Active Subduction Systems ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: A catalogue of precisely located micro-seismicity is fundamental for investigating seismicity and rock physical properties in active tectonic and volcanic regions and for the definition of a ‘baseline’ seismicity, required for a safe future exploitation of georesource areas. In this study, we produce the first manually revised catalogue of micro-seismicity for Co. Donegal region (Ireland), an area of about 50K M2 of on-going deformation, aimed at localizing natural micro-seismic events occurred between 2012 and 2015. We develop a stochastic method based on a Markov chain Monte Carlo (McMC) sampling approach to compute earthquake hypocentral location parameters. Our results indicates that micro-seismicity is present with magnitudes lower than 2 (the highest magnitude is 2.8).The recorded seismicity is almost clustered along previously mapped NE-SW trending, steeply dipping faults and confined within the upper crust (focal depth less than 10 km). We also recorded anthropogenic seismicity mostly related to quarries' activity in the study area.
    Description: Published
    Description: 62-76
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2024-02-02
    Description: Over the years, seismic anisotropy characterization has become one of the most popular methods to study and understand the Earth’s deep structures. Starting from more than 20 years ago, considerable progress has been made to map the anisotropic structure beneath Italy and the Central Mediterranean area. In particular, several past and current international projects (such as RETREAT, CAT/SCAN, CIFALPS, CIFALPS-2, AlpArray) focused on retrieving the anisotropic structure beneath Italy and surrounding regions, promoting advances in the knowledge of geological and geodynamical setting of this intriguing area. All of these studies aimed at a better understanding the complex and active geodynamic evolution of both the active and remnant subduction systems characterising this region and the associated Apennines, Alps and Dinaric belts, together with the Adriatic and Tyrrhenian basins. The presence of dense high-quality seismic networks, permanently run by INGV and other institutions, and temporary seismic stations deployed in the framework of international projects, the improvements in data processing and the use of several and even more sophisticated methods proposed to quantify the anisotropy, allowed to collect a huge amount of anisotropic parameters. Here a collection of all measurements done on core refracted phases are shown and used as a measure of mantle deformation and interpreted into geodynamic models. Images of anisotropy identify well-developed mantle flows around the sinking European and Adriatic slabs, recognised by tomographic studies. Slab retreat and related mantle flow are interpreted as the main driving mechanism of the Central Mediterranean geodynamics.
    Description: Published
    Description: SE215
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Seismic Anisotropy ; 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2024-02-06
    Description: Earthquake Early Warning Systems (EEWSs) characterize seismic events in real time and estimate the expected ground motion amplitude in specific areas to send alerts before the destructive waves arrive. Together with the reliability of the results, the rapidity with which an EEWS can detect an earthquake becomes a focal point for developing efficient seismic node networks. Internet of Things (IoT) architectures can be used in EEWSs to expand a seismic network and acquire data even from low-cost seismic nodes. However, the latency and the total alert time introduced by the adopted communication protocols should be carefully evaluated. This study proposes an IoT solution based on the message queue-telemetry transport protocol for the waveform transmission acquired by seismic nodes and presents a performance comparison between it and the most widely used standard in current EEWSs. The comparison was performed in evaluation tests where different seismic networks were simulated using a dataset of real earthquakes. This study analyzes the phases preceding the earthquake detection, showing how the proposed solution detects the same events of traditional EEWSs with a total alert time of approximately 1.6 seconds lower.
    Description: Published
    Description: 43183 - 43194
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake early warning systems ; Internet of Things ; message queue telemetry transport protocol ; , SeedLink protocol ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2024-02-09
    Description: Geophysical data provide the chance to investigate a volcano's dynamics; considerable information can especially be gleaned on the stress and strain patterns accompanying the internal processes and the effect of magma ascent on the main structures triggering earthquakes. Here, we analysed in detail the seismicity recorded over the last two decades on Etna volcano (southern Italy), focusing on earthquakes distribution and focal mechanism clustering; the ground deformation pattern affecting the volcanic edifice with the inflation and deflation phases was also examined. Analysed data were compared in order to shed light on possible relationships with the volcanic activity and to better understand the internal dynamics of the volcano over time. Significant steps during or shortly before major eruptions in the seismic strain release and ground deformation temporal series highlight a straightforward relationship between seismicity occurring at shallow level, inflation/deflation and volcanism. Furthermore, at depths greater than 5-7 km, down to about 20 km, the orientation of the P- and T-axes clearly indicate the existence of a pressure source in the central part of the volcano. All the results underline that the stress field related to the volcano plumbing system interferes with the regional field, partly overriding it.
    Description: INGV-Ricerca Libera 2021 INGV-IMPACT
    Description: Published
    Description: 12951
    Description: OSV2: Complessità dei processi vulcanici: approcci multidisciplinari e multiparametrici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Mt. Etna (Italy) ; Volcano dynamics ; Seismic and deformation patterns ; Focal mechanisms ; Stress field ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.03. Geodesy
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The Tonga-Kermadec subduction zone represents one of the most active areas from both seismic and volcanic points of view. Recently, two planetary-scale geophysical events took place there: the 2019 M7.2 earthquake (EQ) with the epicentre in Kermadec Islands (New Zealand) and the astonishing 2022 eruption of Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai (HTHH) volcano. Based on the Lithosphere-Atmosphere- Ionosphere Coupling (LAIC) models, we analysed the three geolayers with a multiparametric approach to detect any effect on the occasion of the two events, through a comparison aimed at identifying the physics processes that interested phenomena of different nature but in the same tectonic context. For the lithosphere, we conducted a seismic analysis of the sequence culminating with themain shock in Kermadec Islands and the sequence of EQs preceding the HTHH volcanic eruption, in both cases considering the magnitude attributed to the released energy in the lithosphere within the respective Dobrovolsky area. Moving to the above atmosphere, the attention was focused on the parameters—gases, temperature, pressure—possibly influenced by the preparation or the occurrence of the events. Finally, the ionosphere was examined by means of ground and satellite observations, including also magnetic and electric field, finding some interesting anomalous signals in both case studies, in a wide range of temporal and spatial scales. The joint study of the effects seen before, during and after the two events enabled us to clarify the LAIC in this complex context. The observed similarities in the effects of the two geophysical events can be explained by their slightly different manifestations of releasing substantial energy resulting from a shared geodynamic origin. This origin arises from the thermodynamic interplay between a rigid lithosphere and a softer asthenosphere within the Kermadec-Tonga subduction zone, which forms the underlying tectonic context.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1267411
    Description: OSV2: Complessità dei processi vulcanici: approcci multidisciplinari e multiparametrici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 2019 Kermadec Islands earthquake ; 2022 Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai eruption ; LAIC models ; Swarm satellites ; CSES-01 satellite ; Kermadec-Tonga subduction area ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2024-01-08
    Description: “Pressure and time.” A momentous quote in a compelling movie from a few decades ago interestingly pointed at some of the ingredients that contributed to shaping the Earth. The movie set off from how to seep through masses that appeared just too vast to be shakable or vulnerable – if not by deciphering their inner core. The planetary size and time frame of the Earth may have elicited a perception of a durable, unbuckling living environment – just because “pressure and time” to really affect it would have been out of human reach – supposedly. However, the Earth and environmental sciences have long striven to alert contemporary societies that this is just not the case, as humans have been well exerting scattered yet ubiquitous, planetary-scale pressure over a relatively brief time – with consequential, durable effects. Rising global population, long-term migration shifts of continental extents – due to risks, climate, resources – and unpredicted factors – from vulnerabilities to instabilities – pressure on the environment (natural and built) in unprecedented scale throughout human history. The Earth sciences were born out of deciphering ancient life forms teeming in an aboriginal environment, unfolding on a planet that could be explained only by looking at the Solar system – and at the inception of the Universe. Cross-disciplinary by nature, the Earth and environmental sciences offer crucial tools to gauge location, economic turnout, and societal costs of those very resources and fragilities. They also are pivotal co-actors of intellectual stewardship bridging the gulf with sister disciplines well beyond the remits of the physical sciences. From economics to philosophy, and from history to literature, multiple, diverse and concurring threats call for resourceful, multi-faceted mind- and skill-sets where no single hazard may be really treated apart – not on societal terms. Adapting a famous statement from the 20th century, evolution in a time of poly-crises, multiple hazards, and accrued vulnerabilities is not going to be a dinner party for contemporary societies – especially as they dwell a world perceived as increasingly richer in risks and poorer in resources, with a growing population and across instabilities. Human Earth sciences offer a bridge towards our collective future – as societies, continents, planets.
    Description: Published
    Description: San Francisco USA
    Description: OSA2: Evoluzione climatica: effetti e loro mitigazione
    Keywords: Global change ; Climate change ; Complexity ; Earth system ; 05.03. Educational, History of Science, Public Issues ; 05.08. Risk
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2024-01-08
    Description: In this paper, we provide a characterisation of the ionosphere from April 2018 to September 2022 for 48 investigated months. We used the data of the China Seismo Electromagnetic Satellite (CSES-01), which is a sun-synchronous satellite with five days of revisit time and fixed local time of about 2 a.m. and 2 p.m. The unique orbit of CSES-01 permitted us to produce a monthly background of the ionosphere for night- and daytime with median values acquired during geomagnetic quiet time in equatorial and mid-latitude regions (i.e., between 50° S and 50° N of geographical latitude). We compared the obtained CSES-01 monthly median values with the solar activity in terms of sunspot numbers, and we found a high correlation of 0.89 for nighttime and 0.85 for daytime between the mean sunspot number and the maximum of the characterised CSES-01 Ne map values. In addition, we extracted all the anomalous positive increases in CSES-01 electron density and compared them with the Worldwide M5.5+ shallow earthquakes. We tested two different definitions of anomaly based on median and interquartile range or (mild) outliers. We tried two relationships between anomalies inside Dobrovolsky’s area before the earthquake and the magnitude of the same seismic events: one which considers distance in space and time and a second which only uses the anticipation time of the anomaly before the earthquake. Using both anomaly definitions, we searched the best coefficients for these two laws for mid-latitude and equational regions. We found that the best coefficients are independent of the anomaly definition, but better accuracy (greater than 80%) is obtained for the outlier definition. Finally, using receiving operating characteristic (ROC) curves, we show that CSES-01 increases seem statistically correlated to the incoming seismic activity.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1527
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: OSA3: Climatologia e meteorologia spaziale
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: CSES ; electron density ; earthquake ; ionosphere ; satellite background ; 01.02. Ionosphere ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.07. Space and Planetary sciences
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2024-01-08
    Description: This study is focused on fluids characterization and circulations through the crust of the Irpinia region, an active seismic zone in Southern Italy, that has experienced several high-magnitude earthquakes, including a catastrophic one in 1980 (M = 6.9 Ms). Using isotopic geochemistry and the carbon‑helium system in free and dissolved volatiles in water, this study aims to explore the processes at depth that can alter pristine chemistry of these natural fluids. Gas-rock-water interactions and their impact on CO2 emissions and isotopic composition are evaluated using a multidisciplinary model that integrates geochemistry and regional geological data. By analyzing the He isotopic signature in the natural fluids, the release of mantle-derived He on a regional scale in Southern Italy is verified, along with significant emissions of deep-sourced CO2. The proposed model, supported by geological and geophysical constraints, is based on the interactions between gas, rock, and water within the crust and the degassing of deep-sourced CO2. Furthermore, this study reveals that the Total Dissolved Inorganic Carbon (TDIC) in cold waters results from mixing between a shallow and a deeper carbon endmember that is equilibrated with carbonate lithology. In addition, the geochemical signature of TDIC in thermal carbon-rich water is explained by supplementary secondary processes, including equilibrium fractionation between solid, gas, and aqueous phases, as well as sinks such as mineral precipitation and CO2 degassing. These findings have important implications for developing effective monitoring strategies for crustal fluids in different geological contexts and highlight the critical need to understand gas-water-rock interaction processes that control fluid chemistry at depths that can affect the assessment of the CO2 flux in atmosphere. Finally, this study highlights that the emissions of natural CO2 from the seismically active Irpinia area are up to 4.08·10+9 mol·y-1, which amounts is in the range of worldwide volcanic systems.
    Description: Published
    Description: 165367
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: CO(2) output; Carbon isotopes; Degassing; Earthquakes; Noble gases; Precipitation ; 04.04 Solid Earth ; 01.01. Atmosphere ; 03.01. General ; 03.02. Hydrology ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2024-04-09
    Description: Underdetermination is a condition affecting all problems in seismic imaging. It manifests mainly in the nonuniqueness of the models inferred from the data. This condition is exacerbated if simplifying hypotheses like isotropy are discarded in favor of more realistic anisotropic models that, although supported by seismological evidence, require more free parameters. Investigating the connections between underdetermination and anisotropy requires the implementation of solvers which explore the whole family of possibilities behind nonuniqueness and allow for more informed conclusions about the interpretation of the seismic models. Because these aspects cannot be investigated using traditional iterative linearized inversion schemes with regularization constraints that collapse the infinite possible models into a unique solution, we explore the application of transdimensional Bayesian Monte Carlo sampling to address the consequences of underdetermination in anisotropic seismic imaging. We show how teleseismic waves of P and S phases can constrain upper‐mantle anisotropy and the amount of additional information these data provide in terms of uncertainty and trade‐offs among multiple fields.
    Description: In press
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2024-03-14
    Description: As the distance from an earthquake increases, the percentage of people who do not feel it also increases. The average transition distance between ‘‘felt’’ and ‘‘not felt’’ reports is mainly determined by the magnitude and depth of the earthquake, but it also depends on the observation floor and building height. Buildings act as resonators and can amplify the shaking at specific frequencies.We analyzed over 286,000 crowdsourced reports to study the effect of floor and building height on earthquake perception. We found that, compared to average values, there is an increase in the percentage of ‘‘felt’’ reports on the highest floors and a decrease in the lowest floors of buildings of all heights.We determined the range within which an observer is likely to feel an earthquake (perception boundary) and examined how it varies with magnitude. We found that as the building height increases, people on higher floors perceive medium to high magnitude earthquakes progressively better than lower magnitude ones. We compared the perception boundary with a model of seismic response spectra to estimate the vibration frequency perceived by observers on each floor/ building height combination. Our results show that the value of the fundamental period increases with building height for the top floor, and that higher vibration modes become more evident for buildings with more than 6 stories. In addition, we observed that the height of the building also affects the vibration of the basement, with the frequency tending to decrease as the building height increases. Concerning macroseismic intensity estimation, we show that in tall buildings, observations made on both the upper and lower floors must be considered outside the normal range, and that earthquake perception also changes as a function of magnitude and distance, pointing out the importance of collecting an adequate number of observations to sample different locations of observers.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1240-1254
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: earthquake perception ; building height ; floor ; natural vibration frequency ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 21
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    IOC-UNESCO | Paris, France
    Publication Date: 2024-04-06
    Description: The global ocean acidification research community responded to the Decade call by co-designing a pioneering UN Decade programme entitled “Ocean Acidification Research for Sustainability” (OARS). The programme is led by three partners: Plymouth Marine Laboratory (UK), University of Washington (USA), and IOC-UNESCO. OARS provides the blueprint to foster cooperation of ocean acidification research, improve understanding of the impacts of the phenomenon and, ultimately, develop approaches for mitigating its effects by acting on sources and identify adaptation approaches. The OARS white papers in this publication summarize where the global community currently is on this path and what should be done in the future to include the ocean acidification dimension for combatting the degradation of ocean health under various anthropogenic stressors including the changing climate.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: OARS ; Ocean acidification ; Climate change
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Report
    Format: 70pp.
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2024-04-08
    Description: Il progetto di ASL “Studiare i terremoti con un sismografo didattico” ha come obiettivo la sensibilizzazione degli studenti sui temi della pericolosità e del rischio sismico tramite un coinvolgimento attivo nello studio dei terremoti. I temi che riguardano la prevenzione del rischio sismico sono infatti solitamente trattati nelle scuole attraverso i canali tradizionali della divulgazione scientifica, ovvero tramite seminari e conferenze in cui gli studenti svolgono esclusivamente un ruolo passivo. Tuttavia numerosi studi sulla didattica delle materie scientifiche [Struyf et al., 2019; Anderson, 2007; Brush & Sye, 2000] evidenziano il contributo positivo delle attività pratiche nell’apprendimento delle 74 discipline STEM (Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics). Lo scopo principale di questo progetto è rendere gli studenti protagonisti di un processo cognitivo caratterizzato dall’esperienza diretta che rappresenta un modo efficace per consolidare l’apprendimento nel medio e lungo termine [Liu et al., 2011]. Il progetto si divide in due task principali: la costruzione di un sismometro orizzontale (garden gate) e la formazione di competenze informatiche e sismologiche per acquisire ed elaborare i segnali sismici. È stato concepito come progetto pilota di uno piú ampio e ambizioso per realizzare una rete sismometrica scolastica. Il progetto del sismometro, basato sull’utilizzo di piattaforme hardware e software open source, potrebbe infatti essere replicato con costi contenuti e installato in altre scuole del territorio regionale o nazionale. Il successo della sismologia in ambito scolastico è testimoniata dal diffondersi di esperienze analoghe che, negli ultimi anni, sono state condotte principalmente all’estero: ad esempio i progetti PEPP ­ Princeton Earth Physics Project (USA) [Steinberg and Phinney, 2000], EduSeis ­ The Educational Seismograph Project (Francia, Italia) [Cantore et al., 2005], O3E ­ Observation de l’Environnement à but Éducatif pour l’École (Francia) [Aufeuvre et al., 2009], SAE ­ Sismos à l’Ecole (Francia) [Courboulex et al., 2012], Seismology at School (Regno Unito) [Denton, 2008] e più recentemente AuSIS ­ The Australian Seismometers in Schools (Australia) [Balfour et al., 2014]. Queste iniziative hanno evidenziato estremo entusiasmo da parte di docenti e studenti verso il monitoraggio sismico a carattere didattico anche in territori in cui l’attività sismica è molto sporadica. La scuola che ha aderito alla proposta è il Polo Scientifico Tecnico Professionale E. Fermi – G. Giorgi di Lucca che comprende sia Liceo Scientifico che Istituti Tecnici con indirizzi di meccanica, elettronica e informatica. Questa pluralità di indirizzi ha consentito di individuare studenti con le competenze necessarie alla realizzazione del progetto. Un gruppo ristretto di alunni selezionati tra le classi V degli Istituti tecnici ha curato la messa in opera del sismometro mentre gli studenti di una intera classe IV del Liceo scientifico hanno seguito lezioni per acquisire competenze sull’analisi del segnale sismico. Il progetto ha avuto un successo parziale. Il sismometro è stato progettato e realizzato in tutte le sue componenti e la scuola ha finanziato la costruzione di due copie del prototipo. Gli strumenti sono stati presentati in occasione della Notte Europea dei Ricercatori a Lucca nel Settembre 2019. Tuttavia l’installazione dei sismometri all’interno del plesso scolastico non è stata ancora completata. Il lavoro svolto con la classe del Liceo Scientifico è stato meno produttivo. Le principali motivazioni che hanno impedito di conseguire i risultati attesi sono: la scarsa motivazione degli studenti, le difficoltà tecniche incontrate per effettuare le lezioni di informatica per l’analisi dei segnali sismici, un numero insufficiente di ore per acquisire le competenze base di programmazione. Teniamo a precisare inoltre che, nel pieno dello spirito dei progetti “Alternanza Scuola Lavoro” e come coronamento del progetto, uno degli studenti che hanno preso parte alla progettazione del sismometro è risultato vincitore di un bando di selezione e quindi assunto come collaboratore tecnico a tempo determinato presso la Sezione di Pisa dell’INGV.
    Description: Published
    Description: 73-97
    Description: OS: Terza missione
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: Percorsi formativi ; Analisi sismogrammi ; Sismologia sperimentale ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2024-04-30
    Description: Laser interferometry enables to remotely measure microscopical length changes of deployedtelecommunication cables originating from earthquakes. Long reach and compatibility with datatransmission make it attractive for the exploration of both remote regions and highly-populated areaswhere optical networks are pervasive. However, interpretation of its response still suffers from a limitednumber of available datasets. We systematically analyze 1.5 years of acquisitions on a land-basedtelecommunication cable in comparison to co-located seismometers, with successful detection ofevents in a broad magnitude range, including very weak ones. We determine relations between acable’s detection probability and the events magnitude and distance, introducing spectral analysis offiber data as a tool to investigate earthquake dynamics. Our results reveal that quantitative analysis ispossible, confirming applicability of this technique both for the global monitoring of our planet and thedaily seismicity monitoring of populated areas, in perspective exploitable for civilian protection
    Description: Published
    Description: 178
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Seismic monitoring ; Telecom fiber network ; Seismic detection ; Optical Fiber ; Laser interferometry ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2024-04-30
    Description: This study presents data and preliminary analysis from a temporary seismic network (SPQR), which was deployed in the urban area of Rome (Italy) for three months in early 2021. The network was designed to investigate the city’s subsurface while evaluating the feasibility of a permanent urban seismic network, and consisted of 24 seismic stations. Despite significant anthropogenic noise, the SPQR network well recorded earthquake signals, revealing clear spatial variability referable to site effects. In addition, the network’s continuous recordings allowed the use of seismic noise and earthquake signals to derive spectral ratios at sites located in different geological and lithological settings. During the experiment, there were periods of activity restrictions imposed on citizens to limit the spread of COVID‐19. Although the observed power spectral density levels at stations may not show visible noise reductions, they do cause variations in calculated spectral ratios across measurement sites. Finally, a statistical noise analysis was conducted on continuous seismic station data to evaluate their performance in terms of detection threshold for earthquakes. The results indicate that all network stations can effectively record earthquakes with a good signal‐to‐noise ratio (≥5 for P and S phases) in the magnitude range of 1.9–3.3 at distances of 10 km and 80 km, respectively. In addition, the network has the potential to record earthquakes of magnitude 4 up to 200 km, covering areas in Central Italy that are far from the city. This analysis shows that it is possible to establish urban observatories in noisy cities such as Rome, where hazard studies are of particular importance due to the high vulnerability (inherent fragility of its monumental heritage) and exposure.
    Description: The experiment was financed with funds of the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) dedicated to the institution’s open research projects (RicercaLibera) to promote free research within the INGV (Research Project: Three-dimensional shear-wave velocity imaging by ambient seismic noise tomography in the urban area of Rome city - Central Italy)
    Description: In press
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Urban seismology ; Seismic Site Effect ; Detection threshold of seismic network ; Seismic noise ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.04. Geology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2024-01-17
    Description: We have found a previously unreported later seismic phase in seismograms of European seismic stations from intermediate-depth and deep earthquakes of the Southern Tyrrhenian subduction zone. We observe this phase at stations from 6 to 9◦ from the epicentre, towards north. Only seismograms of earthquakes located in a welldefined region of the slab, in the depth range of 215–320 km, show the later x-phase. In this work, we describe the nature and possible origin of this phase, and we provide a simple 2D model to explain the observed arrival times. Our analyses reveal that the x-phase propagates downward in a high velocity layer, possibly located within the deepest part of the slab. We suggest that this layer reveals the presence of the dense hydrous magnesium silicate phase A, introduced from petrological laboratory experiments, inferred to carry water in the upper mantle and predicted to be found in cold subduction zones.
    Description: Published
    Description: 229919
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Southern Tyrrhenian subduction zone ; Mineral phase A ; Intermediate and deep seismicity ; Waveforms analyses ; Later seismic arrival/phase ; 04.06. Seismology
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Description: This study aims at developing new macroseismic intensity attenuation models valid for Italy by exploiting the most updated macroseismic dataset and earthquakes catalogue, as well as the information obtained from a critical analysis of the most recent models in the literature. Several different attenuation models have been calibrated as a function of the moment magnitude (Mw) and epicentral distance from 16,260 intensity data points, that are related to 119 earthquakes occurred after 1900. According to trends and residuals analysis, the preferred calibrated intensity attenuation function is a Log-Linear model for epicentral distance (Repi in km) and a linear model for Mw as: I(MCS) = 1.81 − 2.61LogR − 0.0039R + 1.42Mw with pseudo hypocentral distance R = √R2 + (9.87)2 ; the estimated standard deviation is epi σ=0.75. Also noteworthy is another model for macroseismic intensity attenuation that proved to be as good as the best model and shows higher sensitivity to physical parameters, such as focal depth and magnitude, especially in the epicentral area. Performance of all calibrated models was also checked on an independent set of 15 post-1900 Italian earth- quakes. One of the results of the present work is the opportunity to define earthquake sce- narios (e.g. probabilistic seismic hazard maps) in terms of Macroseismic Intensity and its related standard deviation, avoiding the uncertainties due to the conversion of various ground shaking parameters into intensity values.
    Description: In press
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Macroseismic Intensity ; Intensity Attenuation ; Macroseismic Data ; Italy ; 04.06. Seismology
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  • 27
    Publication Date: 2024-01-23
    Description: The seismic monitoring of the national territory and of the EuroMediterranean area makes use of the velocimetric, accelerometric and GPS (geodetic) data acquired by the stations of the National Seismic Network, by the RING Network and by the MedNet Network. As part of the FISR 2017 project “Integrated operating rooms and monitoring networks for the future: INGV 2.0” (2017), sensors capable of detecting both geophysical and geochemical parameters at the same time are being integrated. This technical report describes the integration of a Rn222 sensor (radon hereafter). Over the past few decades radon has found a variety of Earth Science applications, ranging from its use as a potential earthquake precursor and tectonic stress indicator to its specific role in volcanic environments, where significant changes in concentration previous or concomitant to eruptive crises are also induced by volcanic gases, CO 2 for example, which act as carriers accelerating the migration of radon through the earth’s crust and therefore its detection. In order to explore the possibility of a link between seismogenic processes and temporal variability of radon emissions, a permanent national network has been created, IRON (Italian Radon mOnitoring Network), which uses both commercial radon instruments, equipped with a proprietary system for data storage, transmission and consultation, and INGV sensors that need an interface to acquire and make data available remotely. A hardware and software interface has therefore been designed, built and tested capable of i) counting and storing the pulses in TTL format generated by the instrument which measures the 8 radon concentration in air, ii) being connected to a router for sending the acquired data to a server. A service (syncproc) was also created in PHP to query remote stations at regular intervals and collect the acquired data intended to populate a database created with MariaDB. An expressly created website allows to extract the stored data from the database and configure each installed sensor. The various software elements have been designed using open source resources.
    Description: Published
    Description: 3-18
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: Radon ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2024-01-25
    Description: Although earthquakes are a threat in many countries and considerable resources have been invested in safety regulations, communities at risk often lack awareness and preparedness. Risk communication is a key tool for building resilient communities, raising awareness, and increasing preparedness. Over the past 2 decades, seismic risk communication has evolved significantly. This has led to a reorientation from a predominantly “one-way”, top-down communication model to the promotion of new models in which people, their needs, and their participation in disaster risk management are central elements. The 2015–2030 Sendai Framework recommendations, recent disaster experiences and research have highlighted that new models can improve communication effectiveness. In this paper, we critically explore this transition by conducting a scoping review (n=109 publications) of seismic risk communication in Europe. We analyse the approaches, messages, tools, and channels used for seismic risk communication and how they have changed over time. The results reveal that the stated goals of seismic risk communication are, in decreasing order, to share information, raise awareness, change behaviours/beliefs, and increase preparedness. Pupils, students, and citizens are the primary recipients of communication activities. Over the years, two trends have emerged. First, “two-way”, transdisciplinary and bottom-up communication models prevailed over the “one-way” model. Second, communication aimed more at promoting proactive behaviours than just informing the public. Face-to-face, hands-on activities, and serious games are key tools to engage with the public. The results also reveal the emerging role of social media to target different audiences/social groups. Strikingly, only one-fifth of the analysed publications explicitly build on or tests risk communication theories. Future research could focus on comparing practices across countries and risks (e.g., earthquakes and floods) and on innovating communication theories and methodologies, especially by incorporating the role of information technologies and social media.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1155576
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Seismic risk ; communication ; Europe ; scoping review ; 05.08. Risk ; 04.06. Seismology
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2024-01-29
    Description: This catalog has been developed in the framework of the Pianeta Dinamico 2023-2025 WUnderVul Project, Progetto Dipartimentale INGV.
    Description: Published
    Description: OSV4: Preparazione alle crisi vulcaniche
    Keywords: earthquakes ; seismic events related to fluid dynamic ; Vulcano ; seismic activity ; Aeolian Islands ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 05.02. Data dissemination
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2024-01-29
    Description: A Vulcanian eruption is described as an eruptive style with strong explosive characteristics. The name derives from the island of Vulcano in Italy, the first place in which it was observed during the last eruptive activity between 1888 and 1890. In this paper we analyze the seismicity recorded at Vulcano during a seismic unrest starting in September 2021 and still present as of November 2022. The distinctive feature of this seismicity is the presence of a variety of signals, most of which have a very long period (\textasciitilde0.5 s) signature. Low frequency content is interpreted as due to fluid involvement. Therefore, the high occurrence rate of VLP seismicity is a potential indication of pressure buildup within the volcanic system, and may herald phreatomagmatic activity (usually the first stage of a Vulcanian eruption), with serious consequences for inhabitants and tourists.Our analyses exploit machine learning procedures, with particular reference to pattern classification, at the aim of identifying varying classes of seismic events and trace their evolution over time. This classification can be useful for surveillance purposes contributing, along with other early warning methods, to reduce the devastating consequences of eruptions for people and property.
    Description: Published
    Description: Berlino (Germania)
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Keywords: seismic activity ; machine learning ; events classification ; Vulcano ; Aeolian Islands ; VLP seismicity ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 05.06. Methods
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: Abstract Tomographic images of the lithosphere are the first step to constrain the evolution of mountain belts and their interaction. By inverting new high-quality P- and S-wave arrivals that sample the entire lithosphere, we determined Vp and Vp/Vs models with reliable resolution in the critical depth range (40–80 km) where plates of the central Mediterranean area interact. This data set yields homogeneous representation of the 3D structure over a critical area at a regional scale. Here, we show that the Alps derive from a laterally continuous underthrusting of the European plate and that the Adria lithosphere was delaminated after the collision. Tomograms resolve the lateral changes of the continental versus oceanic subduction along the Alpine belt and identify original evidence of fluids beneath the orogens able to facilitate the current deformation. Plain Language Summary A high resolution imaging of the lithosphere/asthenosphere system is crucial to understand tectonic processes of orogens and subductions. The Alpine chain is an exemplary case of complexity, with its lateral heterogeneity and changes. The largest seismic array ever developed in the Alpine chain (Alparray Seismic Network) has enabled the creation of a high-quality seismic data set contributing to new images of the entire central Mediterranean area. The novelty of this work lies in the enhanced resolution of velocity anomalies in a critical depth range (35–80 km) and with optimal homogeneity at the regional scale. The new 3D Vp and Vp/Vs models allow us to get insights into many open questions about the structure and evolution of the circum-Mediterranean orogens.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2023JB026411
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: We have provided the first estimate of scat- tering and intrinsic attenuation for the Gargano Prom- ontory (Southern Italy) analyzing 190 local earthquakes with M L ranging from 1.0 to 2.8. To separate the intrin- sic Q i and scattering Q s quality factors with the Wen- nerberg approach (1993), we have measured the direct S waves and coda quality factors ( Q 𝛽 , Q c ) in the same volume of crust. Q 𝛽 parameter is derived with the coda normalization method (Aki 1980) and Q c factor is derived with the coda envelope decay method (Sato 1977). We selected the coda envelope by performing an automatic picking procedure from T start = 1.5T S up to 30 s after origin time (lapse time T L ). All the obtained quality factors clearly increase with frequency. The Q c values correspond to those recently obtained for the area. The estimated Q i are comparable to the Q c at all frequencies and range between 100 and 1000. The Q s parameter shows higher values than Q i , except for 8 Hz, where the two estimates are closer. This implies a pre- dominance of intrinsic attenuation over the scattering attenuation. Furthermore, the similarity between Q i and Q c allows us to interpret the high Q c anomaly previ- ously found in the northern Gargano Promontory up to a depth of 24 km, as a volume of crust characterized by very low seismic dumping produced by conversion of seismic energy into heat. Moreover, most of the earth- quake foci fall in high Q i areas, indicating lower level of anelastic dumping and a brittle behavior of rocks.
    Description: Published
    Description: 827-846
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Seismic attenuation · Coda normalization method · Intrinsic quality factor · Scattering quality factor · Southern Italy · Gargano Promontory · OTRIONS seismic network ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: Seismic hazard assessment is particularly relevant in case of unrest of quiescent volcanoes. The case of the sudden unrest of Vulcano, Italy, in September 2021 is an example of this, due to its potential threat of phreatic explosions 131 years after the end of its last Vulcanian eruption. The geophysical (e.g., seismic activity, ground deformation) and geochemical parameters (gas composition and temperature of fumaroles) abruptly increased and remained high for several months, forcing Italian authorities to evacuate some families from areas with high values of CO2. Despite the decades-long monitoring of the Vulcano Island, it was difficult to gather information concerning old geophysical and geochemical data, as most of them were in analog format and/or dispersed in old repositories. In this light, we have reviewed available seismic data since 1985, when another unrest occurred. Our data collection focused on identifying the main characteristics of the seismic activity on and around the island, reducing uncertainties for the assessment of future seismic scenarios.
    Description: Published
    Description: Lacco Ameno, Ischia Island (Italy)
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Keywords: seismic activity ; monitoring ; Vulcano ; long-term analysis ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.08. Volcanology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Oral presentation
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  • 34
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: The macroseismic source parameters of earthquakes occurring within a sequence are strongly influenced by cumulative damage effects. When we deal with historical seismic sequences, in addition to the cumulative intensities, other intrinsic uncertainties due to the scarcity and indeterminacy of sources come into play. These issues imply that the parameterizations of the single earthquakes within a historical seismic sequence are not univocal and that all the uncertainties that are addressed when assessing macroseismic intensity should be carefully considered in the parameter estimation. In the light of these considerations, we performed some tests on the 2016–2017 and 1703 seismic sequences, which occurred in the same area in central Italy, to compute the macroseismic source parameters by means of two independent methods. Results show that the cumulative effects arising from multiple damaging earthquakes can cause biases in the intensity assessments, which affect the computed magnitude and epicentral locations. To reduce bias in macroseismic intensities due to cumulative damage, we illustrate a simple procedure, called cumulative intensity subtraction (CIS), which consists in discarding the localities strongly damaged by the early earthquakes of a sequence from the intensity distributions used for computing the macroseismic source parameters of the subsequent earthquakes. The outcomes show that, for the 2016 seismic sequence, the CIS approach provides locations in agreement with the instrumental epicenters and with the causative faults. For the 1703 sequence, the CIS approach along with explicit accounting for the indeterminacy in intensity assignments give a range of equally plausible solutions. The CIS represents an exploration of a simple strategy that stems from an attempt to give significance to macroseismic intensity in the presence of cumulative damage.
    Description: Published
    Description: 759–774
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: macroseismic intesity ; cumulative effects ; microseismic source parameters ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: We analyze the seismic signals recorded on the island of Vulcano (Italy) during a volcano unrest that started in 2021. From mid-September 2021 onward, a high number of very long-period and long-period events occurred, accompanied by large emissions of CO2 and the increased temperature of fumaroles at various sites of the island. The complexity of the seismic signals recorded during the unrest made standard amplitude-based monitoring techniques, such as RSAM, questionable, as part of the signals are not volcanogenic, such as the frequent close-by passage of ships. We therefore study the inventory of the recorded signals by exploiting machine learning procedures, in particular unsupervised classification techniques. Our studies aim at identifying varying classes of seismic events possibly related to volcanic dynamic as well as irrelevant signals, such as man-made noise. Self-Organizing Maps and Cluster Analysis were applied. As a result, we are able to visualize the development of signal characteristics efficiently. This can provide a useful contribution to volcanic surveillance purposes, which aim to identify changes heralding a “Vulcanian” eruption, an eruptive style with strong explosive characteristics.
    Description: Published
    Description: Lacco Ameno, Ischia Island (Italy)
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Keywords: seismic signals ; machine learning ; Vulcano ; classification ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.06. Methods ; 04.08. Volcanology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Oral presentation
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©:The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. All rights reserved.
    Description: We present the results from a fully unconstrained moment tensor inversion of induced seismic events in a complex and high seismic hazard region (Val d’Agri basin, Southern Italy). The study area hosts two well-documented cases of induced microseismicity linked to (i) a wastewater injection well of a giant oilfield (the largest in onshore Europe), and (ii) severe seasonal level changes of an artificial lake. In order to gather information on the non-doublecouple components of the source and to better understand the rupture mechanisms, we analyse seismic events recorded during daily injection tests in the disposal well. The computed moment tensors have significant non-double-couple components that correlate with the well-head injection pressure. The injection parameters strongly influence the rupture mechanism that can be interpreted as due to the opening/closing of a fracture network inside a fault zone of a pre-existing thrust fault. For the case of the reservoir-induced seismicity, no direct correlations are observed with the loading/unloading of the reservoir.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1617–1627
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: The occurrence of coseismic surface ruptures along fault traces in urbanised areas creates a serious hazard to the vulnerability of man-made manufactures. In order to mitigate such hazard, it is necessary to investigate the geometry, the activity and the capability of faults located close to urbanised areas. This paper presents a case study of the investigation of capable faults within a sensitive area in Italy that is characterized by a high density of population and industrial activities, high levels of seismicity and the presence of faults proven to be capable of rupturing the surface during medium-to-large earthquakes. We focused on the Luco fault (Fucino basin, Central Italy), which previous studies have suggested to cross the industrial district of the town of Avezzano. We present a multidisciplinary approach, consisting of Electrical Resistivity Tomography surveys, continuous-coring boreholes and paleoseismological trenches, aimed at accurately constraining the trace of the Luco fault and documenting the associated fault displacement. This allowed us to constrain the geometry of the Luco fault and to assess the associated fault displacement hazard. We suggest that the proposed methodology represents a pilot study for further investigations of capable faults in the Italian and other similar seismotectonic contexts.
    Description: Published
    Description: 104-121
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake geology ; capable faults ; fault displacement hazard ; fault zoning ; paleoseismology ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: The concept of macroseismic intensity arose with the purpose of measuring the strength of an earthquake by the effects it causes on buildings, people, and domestic furnishings. From this perspective, buildings can be considered seismic sensors that record the shaking. Early scales were conceived at a time when buildings were mainly in masonry and therefore they could be used as markers of the intensity in case of earthquakes. Indeed, since they were fairly homogeneous, their level of damage could be considered as an indicator of the shak- ing level. In recent decades, the evolution of construction techniques have made the MCS scale unsuitable for damage assessment of buildings of various resistance. To overcome this problem the EMS-98 scale was designed. Because the MCS scale is still used in Italy, even in the presence of many reinforced concrete buildings, the purpose of this work is to show that the EMS-98 is the most suitable tool for assessing intensity as it is more consist- ent with the built environment. Theoretical and real intensity assessments, by both MCS and EMS-98, have been determined and compared, showing that nowadays intensity is a function of the vulnerability. MCS and EMS-98 would be comparable only when the build- ing stock is composed of very vulnerable edifices (generally class A). Finally, thanks to the similarity of the two scales for old and vulnerable buildings, EMS-98 appears fully adequate to investigate historical earthquakes and represents a powerful tool to ensure con- tinuity among earthquakes of different epochs.
    Description: Open access funding provided by Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia within the CRUI- CARE Agreement. The authors declare that no funds, grants, or other support were received during the preparation of this manuscript.
    Description: Published
    Description: 4167–4189
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Intensity ; European Macroseismic Scale ; Mercalli-Cancani-Sieberg scale ; Vulnerability ; damage ; historical earthquakes ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2024-03-12
    Description: Abstract We present the first rupture models of the two mainshocks of the 2012 northern Italy sequence, determined by jointly inverting seismic and geodetic data. We aim at providing new insights into the mainshocks for which contrasting seismotectonic interpretations are proposed in literature. Sources' geometric parameters were constrained by seismic reflection profiles, 3-D relocations and focal mechanisms of mainshocks/aftershocks. Site-specific velocity profiles were used to model accelerograms affected by strong propagation effects related to the Po basin. Our source models differ significantly from previous ones relying on either seismic or geodetic data. Their comparison against geological sections and aftershock distribution provides new insights about the ruptured thrust faults. The May 20th Mw6.1 mainshock activated the Middle Ferrara thrust-ramp dipping ∼45° SSW-wards, breaking a main eastern slip patch 4–15 km deep in Mesozoic carbonates (maximum slip 0.7–0.8 m) and Paleozoic-Triassic basement rocks, and a small western patch in the basement. The May 29th Mw6.0 mainshock featured two separated asperities along the Mirandola thrustramp dipping ∼42° S-wards: an eastern asperity 4–15 km deep in Mesozoic carbonates and basement rocks (maximum slip 0.7 m) and a deeper western one (7–16 km depth) mainly in the basement (slip peak 0.8 m). On-fault aftershocks were concentrated within the basement and Mesozoic carbonates, devoiding highslip zones. Slip and aftershock distribution was controlled by the rheological transition between Mesozoic carbonates and Cenozoic sediments. Unlike previous thin-skinned tectonic interpretations, our results point to a complex rupture process along moderately dipping (40°–45°) thrust-ramps deeply rooted into the Paleozoic crystalline basement. Plain Language Summary The two M6 mainshocks of the 2012 Italy sequence are the strongest earthquakes ever observed in the Po Plain, a strategic region for the Italian economy. The mainshocks ruptured blind thrust-faults, however their source models and seismotectonic interpretation are still debated because the thrust-system architecture is controversial. Contrasting thick-skinned and thin-skinned tectonic models are proposed. In thick-skinned interpretations, shortening is accommodated by thrust-ramps rooted into the crystalline basement that represent main seismogenic structures, whereas in thin-skinned interpretations, shortening and seismicity are controlled by listric faults splaying out from dècollement levels in the sedimentary crust. A comprehensive analysis of the mainshocks' source represents an opportunity to provide new insights into the seismogenesis in northern Italy and on a broader scale into seismotectonics of thrust-and-fold belts. We get a complete picture of the mainshocks kinematics by jointly inverting, for the first time, seismic and geodetic data, and unravel rupture heterogeneities not resolved by previous studies. By integrating source models with aftershock locations and geological models, we propose a comprehensive seismotectonic interpretation of the sequence. We conclusively identify the ruptured faults that correspond to thrust-ramps rooted into the crystalline basement and evidence the key role played by lithological changes in the rupture process.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2022JB026278
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 40
    Publication Date: 2024-03-13
    Description: The incompleteness of earthquake catalogs is a well-known issue caused by our technical limitation in detecting the small-to very small-magnitude seismicity falling near or below the background seismic noise. The detection of small-magnitude events is fundamental for improving our knowledge of geometry and kinematics of seismogenic sources and the spatio-temporal characteristics of seismicity, thus leading to better models for seismic hazard. Template-matching (TM) is a powerful technique that, based on similarity measure (cross-correlation) of seismic waveforms, allows to detect hidden earthquakes that are similar to known events (called templates). The high computational effort often limits such technique to small areas and for short time frames (less than 1 year). In this work, we present the first application of template-matching at regional scale for the Italian Peninsula, focusing on the Southern Apennines. We use about 3,600 high-quality events as templates, scanning 6-year long continuous recordings (2009–2014), at more than 180 stations of the INGV network. About 20,000 new events are found, showing a comparable quality to the template catalog in terms of hypocentral solution, reaching a decrease of the magnitude of completeness of about one unit. To highlight the improved quality of the TM catalog, we report two main examples regarding the Sannio-Matese area, where TM allowed us to unravel relevant details on the spatio-temporal distribution of the local seismicity.
    Description: - PRIN-2017 project MUSE 4D (2017KT2MKE) Overtime tectonic, dynamic and rheologic control on destructive multiple seismic events—Special Italian Faults and Earthquakes: From real 4-D cases to models. - FURTHER project “The role of FlUids in the pReparaTory pHase of EaRthquakes in Southern Apennines” funded by the Strategic Earthquake Department of Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (Italy).
    Description: Published
    Description: e2023GC011160
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2024-03-13
    Description: Climate change affects human activities, including tourism across various sectors and time frames. The winter tourism industry, dependent on low temperatures, faces significant impacts. This paper reviews the implications of climate change on winter tourism, emphasising challenges for activities like skiing and snowboarding, which rely on consistent snowfall and low temperatures. As the climate changes, these once taken-for-granted conditions are no longer as commonplace. Through a comprehensive review supported by up-to-date satellite imagery, this paper presents evidence suggesting that the reliability of winter snow is decreasing, with findings revealing a progressive reduction in snow levels associated with temperature and precipitation changes in some regions. The analysis underscores the need for concerted efforts by stakeholders who must recognize the reality of diminishing snow availability and work towards understanding the specific changes in snow patterns. This should involve multi-risk and multi-instrument assessments, including ongoing satellite data monitoring to track snow cover changes. The practical implications for sports activities and the tourism industry reliant on snow involve addressing challenges by diversifying offerings. This includes developing alternative winter tourism activities less dependent on snow, such as winter hiking, nature walks, or cultural experiences.
    Description: In press
    Description: OSA2: Evoluzione climatica: effetti e loro mitigazione
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Climate change ; Adaptation ; Tourism losses ; Winter sport ; Multi-date satellite imagery ; 05.09. Miscellaneous
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2024-03-13
    Description: This article describes a dataset of acceleration signals acquired from a low-cost Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) during seismic events that occurred in Central Italy. The WSN consists of 5 low-cost sensor nodes, each embedding an ADXL355 tri-axial MEMS accelerometer with a fixed sampling frequency of 250 Hz. The data was acquired from February 2023 to the end of June 2023. During this period, several earthquake sequences affected the area where the sensor network was installed. Continuous data was acquired from the WSN and then trimmed around the origin time of seismic events that occurred near the installation site, close to the city of Pollenza (MC), Italy. A total of 67 events were selected, whose data is available at the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) Seismology data center. The traces acquired from the WSN were then manually annotated by analysts from INGV. Annotations include picking time for P and S phases, when distinguishable from the background noise, alongside an associated uncertainty level for the manual annotations. The resulting dataset consists of 328 3 × 25,001 arrays, each associated with its metadata. The metadata includes event data (hypocenter position, origin time, magnitude, magnitude type, etc.), trace-related data (mean, median, maximum, and minimum amplitudes, manual picks, and picks uncertainty), and sensor-specific data (sensor name, sensitivity, and orientation). Furthermore, a small dataset consisting of non-seismic traces is included, with the goal of providing records of noise-only traces, relative to both electronic and environmental/anthropic noise sources. The dataset holds potential for training and developing Machine Learning or signal processing algorithms for seismic data with low signal-to-noise ratios. Additionally, it is valuable for research about earthquakes, structural health monitoring, and MEMS accelerometer performance in civil and seismic engineering applications.
    Description: Published
    Description: 110174
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake early warning; Internet of things; MEMS accelerometers; Structural health monitoring; Wireless sensor network ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest ; 05.02. Data dissemination ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 43
    Publication Date: 2024-03-13
    Description: Since the 1980s various international directives and frameworks have acknowledged the potential of risk communication to foster community empowerment. However, to achieve empowerment, communication has to be effective. When it comes to natural disasters, such as earthquakes, science communication requires the involvement of communities as a whole, promoting bottom-up strategies and proactive engagement. In this light, we conducted a scoping review of scientific publications on seismic risk communication in Europe published between 2000 and 2022. We focused on how seismic risk communication has changed in that time span, looking for targeted approaches, tools, recipients and channels. Here we provide an overview of the results obtained from the analysis of 109 selected publications, also highlighting the importance of scientific communication as a transnational problem, due to the mobility of modern society. Our study reveals that seismic risk communication in Europe is becoming increasingly proactive, focusing on a bottom-up strategy that relies on youth to build the resilience of future generations. The potential for the community empowerment has been primarily addressed with seismic risk communication during the pre-crisis phase of the disaster, when risk awareness can be effectively raised. Social media are increasingly used to provide timely and actionable information in times of crisis, to engage citizens within a two-way risk communication model, in the pre-crisis time, and to provide scientific data for post-disaster processing. The future agenda of seismic risk communication in Europe should focus on building trust with the public, moving towards a three-way model of seismic risk communication and, even more importantly, taking action to curb the spread of fake news and their negative impact on disaster management. Last but not least, more efforts should be made to link practice and theory and explicitly build seismic risk communication on theoretical models.
    Description: Published
    Description: San Francisco, California, USA
    Description: OS: Terza missione
    Keywords: Seismic risk ; communication ; Europe ; scoping review ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.08. Risk ; 05.09
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Oral presentation
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2024-03-13
    Description: In mid-September 2021 there was a rapid increase in geophysical and geochemical parameters on the island of Vulcano, Italy, reaching alarming values. This phase of unrest aroused serious concern among Civil Protection, local authorities and the scientific community due to the risk of phreatomagmatic activity, with potentially serious repercussions on the inhabitants of the island and on visiting tourists. The beginning of the unrest was marked by a high occurrence rate of local micro-seismicity related to fluid dynamics within the shallower hydrothermal system (mainly Long Period and Very Long Period events); Volcano-Tectonic (VT) earthquakes increased in late October after most of the monitored parameters reached their climax. Afterwards, major episodes of VT activity were also recorded from March to April and at the end of the year 2022, when an earthquake of ML 4.6 occurred on December 4, SW of the island of Vulcano. Here, we analyze the VT earthquakes from January 2020 to December 2022, in terms of space-time distribution, energy release and focal mechanisms in the framework of the regional geodynamic context and in the light of the main characteristics of the seismic activity recorded in the Vulcano area over the past 36 years.
    Description: Published
    Description: San Francisco, California, USA
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Keywords: earthquakes ; monitoring ; volcano unrest ; Vulcano ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.08. Volcanology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2024-04-03
    Description: This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©:The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. All rights reserved.
    Description: Estimation of local seismic response plays a key role in assessing local seismic hazard and particularly in the design of shaking scenarios. Modelling local seismic response involves knowing of the shear wave velocity (Vs) and quality factor (Qs) profiles for the site in question. The many techniques that have been developed to assess Vs in surface deposits produce reliable measurements of Vs , but these rarely correspond to direct measurements of Qs . The latter is often considered through damping measures from laboratory tests on small-scale soil samples, which can provide information primarily on intrinsic attenuation, neglecting the contribution of scattering effects. In this paper, using seismic recordings obtained at the surface and in boreholes at 100 m depth, we estimate an average value of Qs of some characteristic alluvial deposits of the Po Plain (northern Italy). Data come from a microseismic network which sampled an almost uniform lithology in the central Po Plain and consisted of three surface and four borehole stations with an interstation distance of about 2 km. The average value of Qs of the shallowest 100 m of the sedimentary strata, Qs100, is estimated by considering: (1) the high-frequency attenuation of seismic waves due to propagation through the corresponding stratigraphy and (2) the interference between incident and surface-reflected waves observed at borehole stations. We parametrize the first through k0_100, the difference between the values of the spectral decay parameter kappa (k) estimated at the surface and at the boreholes depth, respectively. We use the second in order to compute Vs100, the time-averaged Vs referred to the uppermost 100 m stratigraphy. We obtain: k0_100 = (11 ± 3) ms, Vs100 = (309 ± 11) m s −1 and Qs100 = 31 ± 10. At the surface, the estimated values of the site-specific kappa, k0, are found to range from 75 to 79 ms. As expected, these results are in good agreement with studies performed in other sites characterized by sandy or clayey lithologies, and can be usefully used in site response analysis at sites where the rigidity is mainly controlled by lithostatic pressure.
    Description: Comune di Minerbio (grant: “Sperimentazione ILG Minerbio”; grant number: 0913.010).
    Description: Published
    Description: 2075–2094
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake ground motions ; Seismic attenuation ; Site effects ; Wave propagation ; Wave scattering and diffraction ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 46
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: The amount of traces that an earthquake may leave in historical records depends on many variables: its size, the relevance (political, economic, and cultural) of the area affected by it, the historical period in which it occurred, the space/time concomitance of other major geopolitical events that may overshadow the earthquake and hinder the production and circulation of information on its effects. If an earthquake is less than destructive and affects a marginal or border area, the likeliness that its memory will be quickly effaced is particularly high in wartime. Such an earthquake occurred during the French phase of the Thirty Years' War (first half of the 17th century) in the Duchy of Savoy, an Alpine region and the main Italian theatre of war. It left only vague traces in a few seismological and historical compilations (Italian and European), none of the European parametric catalogues picked it up. The chance discovery of a short description of its effects in a diplomatic dispatch recently led us to undertake its study. It was no easy feat, given the complexity of the socio-political context of the time, characterized by war events affecting all the territories where this earthquake could have been felt, but the effort was worthwhile because this earthquake currently turns out to be the most significant one in the seismic history of a major industrial city of northern Italy.
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: Berlin
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Keywords: Seismic history ; Historical seismology ; uncatalogued earthquakes ; Earthquakes in wartime ; Borderland earthquakes ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: The 18th-century European press network functioned in a non-linear way: newspapers tended to publish news from far-off countries rather than those of merely local interest. Thus, some Italian news may be only reported in non-Italian gazettes, or Italian gazettes omit to report some interesting details that reach instead – via the underground network of handwritten reports and diplomatic correspondence – some foreign gazettes. On the other hand, however, exaggerations or outright hoaxes are frequent both in Italian and non-Italian gazettes. In order to understand how journalistic communication functioned and how the traces of some earthquakes were collected and preserved by seismological compilations, we examined the output of several Italian and European gazettes in the months after the great Lisbon earthquake of 1 November 1755. During this period the European press network overflows with reports of the effects of the “big one” in Portugal and abroad, and also publish a spate of news of other earthquakes in Europe and the Mediterranean area. Some - the 9 December 1755 Valais earthquake, the 13 February 1756 Rhodos, and the 18 February Düren earthquakes - were real enough and quite strong too. Others were minor or - in some cases - even wholly fictitious events. Our survey discovers the traces of a few earthquakes still unknown to the current parametric catalogues and allows us to reevaluate an earthquake that turns out to represent the historical maximum for the city of Treviso (Veneto, Italy).
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: Berlin
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Keywords: Earthquake catalogue ; Macroseismic data ; Completeness ; Seismic history ; Historical earthquake research ; historical Seismology ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Rayleigh wave ellipticity measurements from seismic ambient noise recorded on the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) show complex and anomalous behavior at wave periods sensitive to ice (T 〈 3–4 s). To understand these complex observations, we compare them with synthetic ellipticity measurements obtained from synthetic ambient noise computed for various seismic velocity and attenuation models, including surface wave overtone effects. We find that in dry snow conditions within the interior of the GrIS, to first order the anomalous ellipticity observations can be explained by ice models associated with the accumulation and densification of snow into firn. We also show that the distribution of ellipticity measurements is strongly sensitive to seismic attenuation and the thermal structure of the ice. Our results suggest that Rayleigh wave ellipticity is well suited for monitoring changes in firn properties and thermal composition of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets in a changing climate.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2023GL103673
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 49
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: Seismic Rayleigh wave ellipticity measurements are the horizontal-to-vertical ratio of the Rayleigh wave particle motion, and are sensitive to the subsurface structure beneath a seismic station. H/V ratios measured from the ambient vibrations of the Earth are being increasingly used in glaciological applications to determine glacier and ice sheet thickness, seismic velocities and firn properties. Using the newly developed degree-of-polarisation (DOP-E) method which exploits the polarisation properties of seismic noise, we identify and extract Rayleigh waves from seismic stations in Greenland, and relate them to sea ice processes and the geology of the upper crust. Finally, we provide some suggestions for future applications of DOP-E method to gain greater insight into seasonal and long-term variability of sea ice formation and breakup as well as the monitoring of ice sheet thickness, subglacial environment and firn layers in the poles.
    Description: Published
    Description: 3-7
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: We use geophysical data together with a recent subglacial bedrock map (BEDMACHINE model) to obtain and investigate a new three-layer sediment model for Antarctica that locally improves the global sediment model. We provide a combined, continuous, sediment model for Antarctica and surrounding oceans by joining such improved continental sedimentary model with an existing global one (GlobSed). Our results reveal large differences between sedimentary basins for Antarctica due to their age and origin. The maximum thickness of sediments is reached under Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf and off the Weddell Sea coast (10–12 km); further offshore, towards the ocean, the thickness of sediments drops to 4–5 km. We divide the sediment cover into three layers to distinguish material with different velocities. The lower sediment layer (deeper than 7 km) with high P-wave velocities (4.0–4.9 km/s) is found only for Lambert Rift and Filchner-Ronne basin. The middle layer (2–7 km) has large variations for different sedimentary basins: 3.5–3.7 km/s for Lambert Basin; 4.0–4.3 km/s for Ross, Byrd and Bentley basins; 3.3–4.0 km/s for Filchner-Ronne Basin. The upper sediment layer (0–2 km) has large velocity variations, from 2.0 km/s for Ross and Lambert basins (young sediments) to 4.7 km/s for Dronning Maud Land basins. We suggest that P-wave velocities larger than 4 km/s represent old, compacted sediments which belong to the Beacon Supergroup; about 3 km/s refer to Mesozoic (rifted?) sediments; and less than 3 km/s relate to young Cenozoic sediments. According to this criterion, Dronning Maud Land, Bentley and Byrd basins belong to the Beacon Supergroup, while more complex and thicker Ross, Lambert and Filchner-Ronne basins contain sediments from Beacon Supergroup in the middle or lower layer, respectively. Other sedimentary basins with more moderate velocities possibly belong to the East Antarctic Rift System which formed later during Gondwana breakup.
    Description: Published
    Description: 229662
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2024-04-05
    Description: The Parametric Catalogue of Italian Earthquakes CPTI15 [Rovida et al., 2022] includes 241 earthquakes whose epicentral parameters are based on studies marked AMGNDT95 [Archivio Macrosismico GNDT, 1995]. These are preliminary (or, in some cases, extremely basic) studies, that were carried out in the early 1990s by the GNDT/CNR (Gruppo Nazionale per la Difesa dai Terremoti of the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche of Italy) in the frame of the “Hazard Project”, whose aim was making available the basic data required for preparing an updated hazard model, as quickly as possible and in the form of a parametric catalogue. Those AMGNDT95 studies that we define as “preliminary” derived the epicentral parameters of each studied earthquake from a data base reconstructed starting from the bibliographic references of the PFG catalogue [Postpischl, 1985] and going back, wherever possible to their original sources, according to a procedure called “Analysis Through Catalogues” [Stucchi, 1993]. The AMGNDT95 studies that we define as ‘extremely basic’, limited themselves to parameterizing the information provided by the bibliographic references of the PFG catalogue, i.e. in most cases the Baratta [1901] earthquake compilation or the seismological bulletins of the 19th-20th centuries. The AMGNDT95 studies remained unpublished and on paper only until the year 2017, when they were digitized within the framework of Annex B2 of the DPC-INGV 2016-2017 Convention, and made public via the ASMI platform [Rovida et al., 2017]. In the framework of the following triennial DPC-INGV Convention, an operation was then launched to update AMGNDT95 studies with revision priorities established according to the relevance of each earthquakes and to the potential margins for improving knowledge on each of them. As the operation was under way, the revision was extended to another 8 damaging earthquakes whose parameters in the CPTI15 catalogue were derived straight from the PFG catalogue. These earthquakes had never been studied and macroseismic data were lacking for them. The CPTI15 catalogue includes several hundred records derived directly from other parametric catalogues. In most cases they are related to earthquakes outside the national borders and their parameters are taken from the seismic catalogues of neighbouring countries (Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia, and Croatia). Only 56 of them are original records derived from the PFG catalogue [Postpischl, 1985] and mainly related to instrumental aftershocks of Italian earthquakes of the first decades of the 20th century. The 8 earthquakes mentioned above can be classified, on the contrary, as major events that had never been studied probably because the extreme poverty of the available source information made it difficult to improve in the short time allotted within the “Hazard Project” frame. A first selection of studies, related to earthquakes occurred in the 1949-1971 time window, was the subject of a communication at the 40th GNGTS conference in 2022 and was recently published [Bernardini et al., 2022]. Here we continue the presentation and discussion of the results of our work, taking into account a wider selection of AMGNDT95 studies related to earthquakes occurred from the 14th to the 20th century. These earthquakes belong to a very numerous category in the CPTI15 catalogue, i.e. they are damaging earthquake of moderate energy, with a very narrow base of data, often reduced to 1 or 2 intensity data only. The problem of the consistency of the information base from which to derive the epicentral parameters of earthquakes is very serious in the CPTI catalogue, which is nevertheless the result of an enormous amount of work carried out during more than thirty years of research. For instance, the current version of the catalogue, includes as many as 65 earthquakes with Mw≥ 5.5 (‘strong earthquakes’) that are documented by less than 11 intensity data points each ((or even, in about 20 cases, one intensity data point only). In the energy class Mw≥ 4.5, there are no less than 221 earthquakes documented by a single intensity data point only. For this reason, it is both necessary and important to improve the quality of the catalogue by producing new and better quality studies of the moderate-energy earthquakes. The results of the work are not all equally satisfactory. Overall, the revision has improved both the consistency of the intensity data that can be used to calculate epicentral parameters, and the individual intensity estimates, thanks to the availability of original sources and testimonies that allow to considerably refine the previous assessments, based as they were on second-hand seismological compilations only. Among the most significant results we include the exclusion from the catalogue of some earthquakes that turned out to be non-existent. One of them is the alleged Ischia earthquake of 1767, that was demonstrated to be a forgery generated by a 19th century local history which attributed the collapse of a small church to an earthquake, citing as its source an epigraph that does not mention any earthquake at all. The information of the local historian had been accepted ‘on trust’ by 19th century seismological compilations, and for this reason the news of this non-existent earthquake did continue to circulate - resurfacing even in recent scientific assessments and elaborations produced after the Ischian event of 21 August 2017. Now, a careful critical analysis has led to its recognition as a fake earthquake. Last but not least, it is important to know that our revision allows public and free access to all the information retrieved for each of the studied earthquakes. All available records of macroseismic effects that were retrieved during the study were transcribed and made available to the public through the Archivio Storico Macrosismico Italiano web platform [Rovida et al., 2017]. In this way, anyone wishing to take on the study of single earthquakes or groups of earthquakes will be able to start from a base of data organized in a homogeneous and transparent manner.
    Description: Published
    Description: Bologna
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Keywords: Improving quality of information ; Historical seismology ; Parametric Catalogue of Italian Earthquakes CPTI15 ; Macroseismic data ; Historical earthquake research ; Updating studies ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Extended abstract
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2024-05-03
    Description: On September 18, 2023, an earthquake with a magnitude of Ml=4.8 (Mw=4.9) occurred a few kilometers SW of Marradi (FI) at a depth of about 8 kilometers. The computed TDMT solution of the mainshock suggests a normal fault oriented NW-SE (Scognamiglio et al., 2006). The earthquake, preceded by a foreshock with a magnitude of Ml=3.3 (Mw=3.4), triggered a seismic sequence characterized, in the first two months, by approximately 700 aftershocks localized by the staff on duty in the Seismic Monitoring Room of the INGV in Rome, including 6 events with a magnitude of Ml≥3.0 occurred in the first two days. The sequence occurred in a high seismic hazard region. The two closest historical earthquakes occurred in the Mugello area about 30 km SW of Marradi (and about 25 km north of Florence): one, whose magnitude (Mw) is estimated to be about 6.0, occurred on June 13, 1542 while the other with estimated magnitude (Mw) of about 6.4 occurred on June 29, 1919. The second one is among the strongest (most significant) Italian earthquakes of the 20th century, and also one of the strongest known to date with its epicentre in the northern Apennines. The affected area was that of Mugello, with extensive damage both in the province of Florence and on the Romagna side of the Apennines. The analysts of the BSI (Italian Seismic Bulletin) reviewed the initial three days of the sequence, paying special attention to the hours directly following the mainshock. The BSI work mainly consists in revising the picking of P and S phases and assigning them appropriate weights, retrieving previously unused phases, and evaluating the maximum amplitudes necessary for calculating the value of Ml. The latter is a critical aspect of the initial phases of a seismic sequence; in fact, the occurrence of events is very close in time, making it challenging to estimate the maximum amplitudes and, consequently, the magnitude automatically. Through this analysis, they have identified an earthquake with a magnitude of Ml=3.4, occurring approximately one minute after the mainshock and overlooked during the surveillance service. Furthermore, a comprehensive effort to recover smaller seismic events not initially analyzed in the Seismic Monitoring Room resulted in the localization of 498 earthquakes, nearly a 30% increase within the first three days. In Figure 1(a-d), hypocentral parameters and time readings of the 352 earthquakes detected in the Seismic Monitoring Room have been compared with those of the same events revised by the BSI. It is evident as both the horizontal and vertical errors, as well the seismic gap associated with the location decrease for the dataset analyzed from the BSI, while the number of P and S phases increases for the same dataset. Subsequently, the events revised from BSI were initially relocated by applying the NonLinLoc code (Lomax et al., 2000) using a 1D regional velocity model from Pastori et al. (2019). Following this, a double-difference technique (Waldhauser and Schaff, 2008) was applied to improve the geometries of the activated structures (see Figure 2). Concomitantly, an analysis using the template matching technique was applied, for the period from September first to October 10th, to identify events overlooked by the Earthworm system in the Seismic Monitoring Room. The results are shown in Figure 3. It was found that the number of detections increased by approximately 60%. Furthermore, the figures 3c and 3d put in evidence as the larger number of new detected earthquakes is characterized by lower magnitude. This result highlights the value of integrating this type of analysis to complement the efforts of the Italian Seismic Bulletin (BSI).
    Description: Published
    Description: Ferrara, Italy
    Description: OST3 Vicino alla faglia
    Keywords: Marradi, Firenze ; seismic sequence ; BSI working group ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Oral presentation
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  • 53
    Publication Date: 2024-05-03
    Description: We correlated carbon dioxide (CO2) time series detected at the Gallicano site in Tuscany, Italy, with low-magnitude earthquakes occurred in the surrounding area between 2017 and 2021. The CO2 irregular component distribution was analyzed by a Pearson type VII fit, and its cumulate probability by the Gauss’s hypergeometric function, to statistically evidence anomalous fluctuations. We calculated the Matthews correlation between gas concentrations and low-magnitude earthquakes by defining a binary occurrence of CO2 anomalies and seismic events. A positive correlation was highlighted by a time lag between the digital series, which resulted in CO2 anomaly detections ahead of the earthquake time of two days. The correlated earthquakes were mainshocks of local magnitude 1.2 to 3.6, with epicenters within 40 km from the Gallicano site. Correlations among rainfalls, CO2 concentrations and earthquakes were also considered, showing that only few rainfall events were followed by a CO2 anomaly, mostly a day late.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1128949
    Description: OST5 Verso un nuovo Monitoraggio
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: Dissolved carbon dioxide ; small earthquakes ; correlation ; conditional probability ; 04.06. Seismology ; 03.02. Hydrology ; 05.08. Risk ; 05.06. Methods
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 54
    Publication Date: 2024-05-18
    Description: Climate change and land cover change often interactively affect plant species distributions. This study addresses the vulnerability of lowland and upland orchids to climate change and land cover change. Endemic orchids of New Guinea were grouped into four classes (lowland epiphyte, lowland terrestrial, upland epiphyte, upland terrestrial) based on their life form and elevation range. Forty occurrence records of endemic orchids were selected for each class, totaling 160 occurrence records. Ensemble modelling combining two machine learning algorithms was used to generate predictive current and future suitable areas for orchid classes. Model performance was evaluated using the AUC and TSS metrics. Suitable areas for both lowland and upland orchids (epiphyte and terrestrial) were predicted decrease in the future due to climate change and land cover change. The loss of suitable areas for upland terrestrial orchids was predicted to be most significant in the worst-case climate change scenario (SSP 5–8.5). Both lowland and upland orchids (epiphyte and terrestrial) tend to shift to higher elevation ranges from the present distributions. The predictive models have AUC values 〉0.90 and TSS value 〉0.80, indicating the models have excellent potential for predicting the impact of climate change and land cover change on orchid distributions.
    Keywords: Ensemble model ; Climate change ; Species distribution model ; Orchids ; Lowland ; Upland ; New Guinea
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2024-05-09
    Description: To understand the seismic hazard of a subduction zone, it is necessary to know the geometry, location and mechanical characteristics of the interplate boundary below which an oceanic plate is thrust downward. By considering the azimuthal dependence of converted P-to-S (Ps) amplitudes in receiver functions, we have detected the interplate boundary in the Makran subduction zone, revealing significant seismic anisotropy at the base of the accretionary wedge above the slab before it bends down beneath the Jaz Murian basin. This anisotropic feature aligns with a zone of reduced seismic velocity and a high primary/secondary wave velocity ratio (Vp/Vs), as documented in previous studies. The presence of this low-velocity highly anisotropic layer at the base of the accretionary wedge, likely representing a low-strength shear zone, could possibly explain the unusually wide accretionary wedge in Makran. Additionally, it may impact the location and width of the locked zone along the interplate boundary.
    Description: Iranian National Science Foundation (INSF)
    Description: Published
    Description: 64-74
    Description: OST1 Alla ricerca dei Motori Geodinamici
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake hazards, Seismic anisotropy, Crustal structure, Subduction zone processes ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2024-05-16
    Description: The “Giornata ONT 2023” arises from the will to let know within INGV how many activities do people from the Osservatorio Nazionale Terremoti (ONT), and how strong is their contribution to the INGV missions: Research, Services, Education, Communication. In the nearly seven years of the current management the ONT has experienced a continuous evolutionary, sometimes complex, path. But it is always a straight path to pursue the objective of a continuous growth of the ONT. During these years the ONT has changed its name (from Centro Nazionale Terremoti – CNT, to ONT); it has experienced the coming out of some employees that moved to create the Irpinia new Section; it has lived the novelty of incoming people (example from the Centro Allerta Tsunami). It has also faced the need to overcome the limitations due to the worldwide pandemic emergency COVID19, either for the h24 services or for the research activities. Therefore in 2020 and 2021 we have only remotely attended the ONT days. The drive to be “in presenza” comes from this latter issue. We strongly want to meet, to talk face to face, to “Welcome” the young colleagues who are the injection of new ideas and perspectives, that are the necessary fuel to evolve the knowledge. As a matter of fact it emerges from the DNA of the ONT, i.e. the inclusiveness and the multidisciplinarity. This latter is widely testified by the ONT activities that are shared among the three Departments and their strategic objectives. The agenda of the “Giornata ONT 2023” has specifically emphasized the variety of the technical and scientific contents, that for sake of simplicity have been collected in the following themes: • Infrastructures, Data­Sharing and Laboratories • Analysis, Modelling, Interpretation of Geophysical Phenomena • National and International Projects (Research Results and Products from Completed Projects; Ongoing Projects) • Society ­ Communication, Dissemination, Emergency Management • Seismic Surveillance And Tsunami Warning Overall, the contributions have been 100, most of which are posters (77) and the remaining (23) in different exhibit formats. The wide interest about the proposed contents and the positive feedback from the attendance, pushed the decision to collect and publish the contributions in a Miscellanea INGV, where the documents can be easily found. And we are finally ready to make the Miscellanea available to the reader. I would warmly thank the Authors for their enthusiastic acceptance to contribute, the Conveners of the “Giornata ONT 2023” Sessions for their availability to organise and manage the submitted poster/exhibits, the Editorial Board members for their hidden work that led to this Miscellanea. In conclusion, let me spend a few words about my personal journey as Director of the ONT. After 2504 days it has come to an end and the “Giornata ONT 2023” and the Miscellanea are, somehow, the cherry on top. It is really difficult to say “Thanks” one by one to the people who helped me along this complex and long path. So, please, let me simply say Grazie a tutti voi! Salvatore Stramondo - Director ONT (2017-2023)
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-206
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: Osservatorio Nazionale Terremoti ; GIORNATA ONT 2023 ; Research scientific and service ; 01.01. Atmosphere ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 05.09. Miscellaneous ; ; Research scientific and
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2024-05-16
    Description: Artworks play a fundamental role in the cultural and economic assets of communities, enhancing their identity and helping with social integration. Despite their importance, they are not always adequately protected against degradation, which can be induced by aging, atmospheric and human-induced occurrences, and catastrophic events. Earthquakes certainly represent one of the main risks for art objects; however, traffic, construction works, and shipment can also represent a threat to art goods. Therefore, the assessment of the vulnerability of art collections to dynamic excitations plays a crucial role in their conservation, and it has been collecting increasing attention from researchers, academics, and museum managers. This work focuses on the vulnerability of the art collections exhibited at the “Gaio Cilnio Mecenate” museum in Arezzo. Namely, it aims to assess the effective dynamic loading experienced by the artworks, which is a function of the dynamic propagation played by the foundation soil, the building, and the displayers used for the exhibition. In this study, the dynamic properties of some of the displayers used for exhibiting the art collections are investigated by performing an experimental survey. The analysis of the experimental data led to the assessment of the proper frequencies of the displayers, which were compared to those of the building and the foundation soil of the museum.
    Description: Published
    Description: 2701
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: art collections ; seismic vulnerability ; seismic safety assessment ; experimental dynamic monitoring ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 58
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    Unknown
    Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society and the German Geophysical Society
    Publication Date: 2024-05-10
    Description: Infrasound monitoring plays an important role in the framework of the surveillance of Mt. Etna, Europe’s largest active volcano. Compared to seismic monitoring, which is particularly effective for buried sources, infrasound signals mirror the activity of shallow sources like Strombolian explosions or degassing. The interpretation of infrasound signals is difficult to the untrained eye, as we have to account for volcanic and non-volcanic sources. The problem of handling large and complex data sets can be tackled with machine learning, namely pattern recognition techniques. Here, we focus on so-called ‘Unsupervised Learning’, where we identify groups of patterns being similar to each other. The degree of similarity is based on a metric measuring the distance among the features of the patterns. This work aims at the identification of typical regimes of infrasound radiation and their relation to the state of volcanic activity at Mt. Etna. For this goal, we defined features describing any infrasound pattern. These features were obtained using wavelet transform. We applied ‘Self-Organizing Maps’ (SOM) to the features projecting them to a 2-D representation space—the ‘map’. An intriguing aspect of SOM resides in the fact that the position of the patterns on the map can be expressed by a colour code, in a manner that similar patterns are assigned a similar colour code. This simplified representation of multivariate patterns allows to follow the development of their characteristics with time efficiently. During a training phase we considered a reference data set, which encompassed a large variety of scenarios. We identified typical groups of patterns which correspond to a specific regime of activity, being representative of the state of the volcano or noise conditions. These groups form areas on the 2-D maps. In a second step, we considered a test data set, which was not used during the training phase. Applying the same pre-processing as for the training data, we blindly assigned the test patterns to the regimes found before, identifying the one whose colour code is most similar to the one calculated to the test pattern. We are thus able to assess the validity of the prediction. The classification scheme presented provides a reliable assessment of the state of activity and adds useful and supplementary details to the results of the real-time automatic system in operation at Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia—Osservarorio Etneo. This is of particular importance when no visible information of the volcanic activity is available either for unfavourable meteorological conditions or during night time.
    Description: IMPACT PROJECT (INGV Department strategic Projects - 2019)
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-16
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: infrasound ; volcano monitoring ; self-organization ; time-series analysis ; machine learning ; volcanic hazards and risks ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.08. Volcanology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2024-05-11
    Description: La salud de los corales es un tema de gran importancia en el Caribe y en Cuba, ya que estos ecosistemas marinos son vitales para la biodiversidad y la economía de la región. Los arrecifes de coral albergan una gran variedad de especies. Sin embargo, constituyen un ecosistema bajo amenaza debido a la combinación de diferentes factores, como el cambio climático, la contaminación, la sobrepesca y la acidificación del océano. El Caribe es considerado un “punto caliente” para las enfermedades, debido a la rápida aparición y virulencia de nuevos síndromes en la región en las últimas décadas. Cuba no se encuentra exenta de este panorama. Aun así, los estudios realizados han demostrado que los porcentajes de afectación por enfermedades son bajos y el número de enfermedades reportado para sus arrecifes también es bajo, en comparación a lo reportado para otros sitios del Caribe. Es por lo que este trabajo tiene como objetivo recopilar información actualizada sobre el estado de salud de los corales en el Caribe y en Cuba. La sistematicidad y la constancia en el monitoreo de los arrecifes constituye una urgencia en aras de conocer el estado de salud en que se encuentran, manejarlos de manera sostenible y así evitar daños irreparables que conlleven a su pérdida definitiva. Planes de conservación que combinen un manejo efectivo con iniciativas de ciencia ciudadana han demostrado ser sostenibles y beneficiosos, tanto para los arrecifes como para la sociedad.
    Description: The health of corals is a topic of great importance in the Caribbean and in Cuba since these marine ecosystems are vital for biodiversity and the economy of the region. Coral reefs house a wide variety of species. However, they constitute an ecosystem under threat due to the combination of different factors, such as climate change, pollution, overfishing and ocean acidification. The Caribbean is considered a "hotspot" for diseases, due to the rapid appearance and virulence of new syndromes in the region in recent decades. Cuba is not exempt from this panorama, even so, studies have shown that the percentages of disease affectation are low, and the number of diseases reported for its reefs is also low compared to what is reported for other Caribbean sites. This is why this work aims to collect updated information on the health status of the corals in the Caribbean and in Cuba. The systematicity and constancy in the monitoring of the reefs constitutes an urgency to know the state of health in which they are, manage them sustainably and thus avoid irreparable damage that leads to their definitive loss. Conservation plans that combine effective management with citizen science initiatives, have proven to be sustainable and beneficial for both reefs and society.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Arrecife de coral ; Blanqueamiento ; Cambio climático ; Enfermedades ; Bleaching ; Climate change ; Diseases ; Coral reef
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Journal Contribution
    Format: 18-46pp.
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  • 60
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    Unknown
    Seismological Society of America
    In:  Das, R., M. L. Sharma, H. R. Wason, D. Choudhury, and G. Gonzales (2019). A seismic moment magnitude scale, Bull Seismol. Soc. Am. 109, no. 4, 1542–1555, doi: 10.1785/0120180338.
    Publication Date: 2024-05-21
    Description: Moment magnitude Mw was first defined by Hiroo Kanamori in the late 1970s, when the availability of new force balance seismometers made it possible to measure the seismic moment M0 with virtually no limits in the frequency passband. For this reason, Mw does not become saturated even for the largest earthquakes ever recorded. Mw has been chosen in such a way that it coincides best with the previous definitions of magnitude (Ms, ML, mb, etc.) on certain ranges of values but can deviate significantly from them within other ranges. A few years ago, Das and colleagues proposed a new moment magnitude scale Mwg with the aim of better reproducing the values of mb and Ms over their entire range and to better predict the energy ES radiated by earthquakes. We show that there was no need to define such a new scale and that Mwg is not even optimal to achieve the goal of matching ES.
    Description: In press
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: earthquake magnitude ; moment magnitude scale ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 61
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    Seismological Society of America
    In:  "Earthquake Magnitude Conversion Problem” by Ranjit Das, H. R. Wason, Gabriel Gonzalez, M. L. Sharma, Deepankar Choudhury, Conrad Lindholm, Narayan Roy, and Pablo Salazar
    Publication Date: 2024-05-21
    Description: Similar to the previous ones, the latest paper by Das and Colleagues (Das et al.,2018) on the application of the general orthogonal regression (GOR) method (Fuller, 1987; Castellaro et al.,2006), for the conversions between different types of earthquake magnitudes, is a collection of incorrect or undemonstrated assertions, most of which have already been pointed out in several contributions that have been published in the last few years (Gasperini and Lolli, 2014a, b; Gasperini et al., 2015, 2018; Pujol, 2018). We recall below only some of them. According to the recent seismological literature, we use here the term “GOR” to indicate the errors-in variable regression method described by Fuller (1987), even if such term is not fully in line with mathematical statistics as orthogonality is only given for equal errors of the dependent and independent variables.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1366-1369
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2024-05-21
    Description: We present horizontal ground motion predictions at a soft site in the Kumamoto alluvial plain for the Mj 5.9 and Mj 6.5 Kumamoto earthquakes of April 2016, in the framework of an international blind prediction exercise. Such predictions were obtained by leveraging all available information which included: (i) analysis of earthquake ground motions; (ii) processing of ambient vibration data (AMV); and (iii) 1D ground response analysis. Spectral analysis of earthquake ground-motion data were used to obtain empirical estimates of the prediction site amplification function, with evidence of an amplification peak at about 1.2 Hz. Horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio analysis of AMV confirmed this resonance frequency and pointed out also a low-frequency resonance around 0.3 Hz at the prediction site. AMV were then processed by cross-correlation, modified spatial autocorrelation and high-resolution beamforming methods to retrieve the 1D shear-wave velocity (Vs) structure at the prediction site by joint inversion of surface-wave dispersion and ellipticity curves. The use of low frequency dispersion curve and ellipticity data allowed to retrieve a reference Vs profile down to few thousand meters depth which was then used to perform 1D equivalent-linear simulations of the M 5.9 event, and both equivalent-linear and nonlinear simulations of the M 6.5 event at the target site. Adopting quantitative goodness-of-fit metrics based on time–frequency representation of the signals, we obtained fair-to-good agreement between 1D predictions and observations for the Mj 6.5 earthquake and a poor agreement for the Mj 5.9 earthquake. In terms of acceleration response spectra, while ground-motion overpredictions were obtained for the Mj 5.9 event, simulated ground motions for the Mj 6.5 earthquake severely underestimate the observations, especially those obtained by the nonlinear approach.
    Description: stituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Rome, Italy.
    Description: Published
    Description: 105
    Description: OST4 Descrizione in tempo reale del terremoto, del maremoto, loro predicibilità e impatto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology ; 04.02. Exploration geophysics
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2024-05-22
    Description: We present a new approach to estimate the predominant direction of rupture propagation during a seismic sequence. A fast estimation of the rupture propagation direction is essential to knowthe azimuthal distribution of shaking around the seismic source and the associated risks for the earthquake occurrence. The main advantage of the proposed method is that it is conceptually reliable, simple, and fast (near real time). The approach uses the empirical Green’s function technique and can be applied directly to the waveforms without requiring the deconvolution of the instrumental response and without knowing a priori the attenuation model and the orientation of the activated fault system. We apply the method to the 2016–2017 Amatrice-Visso-Norcia high-energy and long-lasting earthquake series in central Italy,which affected a large area up to 80 kmalong strike, withmore than 130,000 events of small-to-moderate magnitude recorded until the end of August 2022. Most of the selected events analyzed in this study have a magnitude greater than 4.4 and only four seismic events have a magnitude in the range of 3.3–3.7. Our results show that the complex activated normal fault system has a rupture direction mainly controlled by the pre-existing normal faults and by the orientation of the reactivated faults. In addition, the preferred direction of rupture propagation is also controlled by the presence of fluid in the pre-existing structural discontinuities. We discuss the possible role of fluids as a cause of bimaterial interface. Another important finding from our analysis is that the spatial evolution of seismicity is controlled by the directivity.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1912–1924
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: directivity ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2024-05-22
    Description: Seismology is the study of earthquakes and of the propagation of seismic waves within the Earth. Seismologists study the Earth’s—and other planets’ interiors; provide detailed information on the shallow subsurface composition, where they help find resources (e.g., oil, gas, and geothermal) or estimate the ground stability, an information that is nowadays widely used in building codes. Seismology is a relatively young science that profited enormously from the technological and computational improvements of the past 2 decades. The first analogue seismographs, weighing several tons, appeared in the late 19th century. It was not before the mid 20th century that seismometers were fully digital and of portable sizes, which resulted in much denser deployments and recordings and an explosion in research of various aspects of our Earth (Agnew, 1989; Shearer, 2019).
    Description: Published
    Description: 1328206
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2024-05-22
    Description: The stress release (or stress drop) during an earthquake is an important element of seismic hazard forecasting; high stress drop earthquakes radiate more high frequency energy, causing stronger ground shaking. The stress drop also provides information about the energy budget, and the size of fault ruptured, and consequently, earthquake triggering and rupture dynamics. Reliable estimates of stress release are difficult to make, largely because of the ambiguity in removing the distorting propagation effects experienced by waves traveling from earthquake to seismometer from recorded seismograms. Most measurements are made using frequency amplitude spectra. We use two methods to estimate earthquake stress drop for 30 of the larger earthquakes in central Italy (2016–2017) and compare them with the results of previous studies. We find that the variation between absolute values estimated in different studies is much larger than the reported formal inversion errors. The relative values are more reliable, with different studies consistently finding a particular earthquake has relatively high or low stress drop. Direct comparison of the similar-sized, damaging Amatrice and Visso earthquakes reveals that the relative spectral stress drop estimates reflect the relative strength of high-frequency ground motion, but may indicate more complex rupture rather than higher average stress release.
    Description: Estimates of spectral stress drop are fundamental to understanding the factors controlling earthquake rupture and high frequency ground motion, but are known to include large, poorly-constrained uncertainties. We use earthquakes from the 2016–2017 sequence in the Italian Appenines (largest event at Norcia, Mw 6.3) to investigate these uncertainties and their causes. The similarly-sized events near Amatrice (Mw 6.0) and Visso (Mw 5.9) enable better constrained relative analysis. We calculate S wave source spectra, corner frequencies, and spectral stress drop for 30 of the larger events. We compare both empirical and modeling approaches to isolate the source spectra and calculate source parameters; we also compare our results with those from published studies. Both random and systematic inter-study variations are larger than the standard errors reported by any individual study. The reported magnitude dependence of stress drop varies between studies, being largest for generalized inversions and smallest for more individual event based approaches. The relative spectral estimates of inter-event stress drop are more consistent; all approaches estimated higher stress drop in the Amatrice earthquake than the similar-sized Visso earthquake. In contrast, finite fault inversions of these two earthquakes found that the Visso earthquake had the larger region of concentrated, higher slip, whereas the Amatrice earthquake had multiple, lower slip, subevents. The Amatrice spectra contain more high frequency energy than those of the Visso earthquake. This comparison suggests that consistent measurement of a higher spectral stress drop indicates greater high-frequency ground motion but may correspond to greater rupture complexity rather than higher stress drop.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2022JB025022
    Description: OST2 Deformazione e Hazard sismico e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Stress Drop ; 04.06. Seismology
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2024-05-20
    Description: Meta menardi (Latreille, 1804) and M. bourneti Simon, 1922 (Araneae: Tetragnathidae) are ubiquitous inhabitants of the twilight zone of most hypogean sites across Europe. The two species are broadly distributed in Italy, including Sicily, where they show a remarkable segregation along the altitudinal gradient of Mount Etna. Thanks to our recent sampling activities in this area, we create a georeferenced dataset allowing the application of Species Distribution Modelling aiming at evaluating the current and the future habitat in light of the impacts caused by climate change on the local populations. We predicted a relatively wide suitable area for M bourneti, ranging from the sea level up to 1100 m a.sl., whereas for M. menardi the suitable area encompasses a narrow mid altitude strip, extending halfway between the areas suitable for M. bourneti, and the highly unsuitable volcanic uplands, heavily disturbed by the volcanic activity. The averaged future predictions for 2070 under RCP 8.5 scenario, show that M. bourneti will expand its range upwards, in areas that are now suitable for M. menardi. In turn, predictions for M. menardi indicate an extreme reduction of the current strip of suitable habitat, likely determining its local extinction. Our findings are further corroborated by the analysis of the bioclimatic niche of the two species assessed via multidimensional Hutchinsonian hypervolume, being much smaller in M. menardi compared to of M. bourneti. In light of our results, it seems likely that having wider climatic preference, M. bourneti will substitute M. menardi in most of its current range in Sicily. Future interventions aiming at the conservation of M. menardi on Mount Etna are strongly advised.
    Description: Published
    Description: e02699
    Description: OSA2: Evoluzione climatica: effetti e loro mitigazione
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Cave-dwelling spiders ; Mount Etna ; Lava caves ; Climate change ; Niche segregation ; Species distribution modelling
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2024-05-20
    Description: To ensure the long-term sustainable use of African Great Lakes (AGL), and to better understand the functioning of these ecosystems, authorities, managers and scientists need regularly collected scientific data and information of key environmental indicators over multi-years to make informed decisions. Monitoring is regularly conducted at some sites across AGL; while at others sites, it is rare or conducted irregularly in response to sporadic funding or short-term projects/studies. Managers and scientists working on the AGL thus often lack critical long-term data to evaluate and gauge ongoing changes. Hence, we propose a multi-lake approach to harmonize data collection modalities for better understanding of regional and global environmental impacts on AGL. Climate variability has had strong impacts on all AGL in the recent past. Although these lakes have specific characteristics, their limnological cycles show many similarities. Because different anthropogenic pressures take place at the different AGL, harmonized multilake monitoring will provide comparable data to address the main drivers of concern (climate versus regional anthropogenic impact). To realize harmonized long-term multi-lake monitoring, the approach will need: (1) support of a wide community of researchers and managers; (2) political goodwill towards a common goal for such monitoring; and (3) sufficient capacity (e.g., institutional, financial, human and logistic resources) for its implementation. This paper presents an assessment of the state of monitoring the AGL and possible approaches to realize a long-term, multi-lake harmonized monitoring strategy. Key parameters are proposed. The support of national and regional authorities is necessary as each AGL crosses international boundaries.
    Description: Published
    Description: 101988
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Fisheries ; Limnology ; Pollution ; Biodiversity ; Climate change ; Erosion
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 68
    Publication Date: 2024-05-30
    Description: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia
    Description: Published
    Keywords: Present-day stress ; Borehole breakout ; Earthquake focal mechanism ; 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.04. Geology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 69
    Publication Date: 2023-01-19
    Description: New settlements in places different from those of the original villages are widespread in the Apennines as a result of reconstruction following natural catastrophes. Particularly complex cases are double resettlements subsequent to the earthquake which in 1915 struck a vast area of central Italy (M 7.08, epicenter in the Marsica region, Abruzzi Apennines). These are manifested in the foundation of “intermediate” villages, temporarily used after the original ones and before those presently hosting the residents. Two cases here discussed can be included in this category of complex delocalizations, i.e. the villages of Sperone and Frattura. Their histories evolved against the background of adverse geological conditions and are embodied in the juxtaposition of the original village (presently made of abandoned and mostly ruined remains) to the more or less significant traces of the “intermediate” settlement and to the “final” village presently inhabited. A further case of multiple delocalization is represented by Alba Fucens-Albe, whose history evolved during a longer time interval, between the effects of slope instability during the Early Middle Ages and the destruction of the medieval village due to the 1915 earthquake. The archaeological area of Alba Fucens (where the remains of the Roman town are visible) and the ruins of the abandoned hill village of Albe narrate the complex settlement history of this Apennine area.
    Description: Published
    Description: 77-92
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Description: N/A or not JCR
    Keywords: Terremoto del 1915, faglia attiva, colata di detrito, deformazione gravitativa profonda, stabilità di versante, risposta sismica, rischio geologico, uso del territorio, pianificazione urbanistica ; 1915 earthquake, active fault, debris flow, deep seated gravitational deformation, slope stability, seismic response, geological risk, land use, urban planning ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2023-03-31
    Description: We investigate the dependence of the Gutenberg–Richter b parameter on the crustal thickness quantified by the Moho depth, for nine different regional catalogs. We find that, for all the catalogs considered in our study, the b‐value is larger in areas presenting a thicker crust. This result appears in apparent contradiction with previous findings of a b decreasing with the focal depth. However, both the results are consistent with acoustic emission experiments, indicating a b‐value inversely proportion to the applied differential stress. Our results can be indeed interpreted as the signature of a larger stress concentration in areas presenting a thinner crust. This is compatible with the scenario where postseismic deformation plays a central role in stress concentration and in aftershock triggering.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1921–1934
    Description: 6T. Studi di pericolosità sismica e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: b-value ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2023-04-18
    Description: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia
    Description: Published
    Description: 2T. Deformazione crostale attiva
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Keywords: present-day stress ; borehole breakout ; earthquake focal mechanism ; 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.04. Geology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 72
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    Azov-Black Sea Branch of Russian Federal Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography “VNIRO” (AzNIIRKH) | Rostov-on-Don, Russia
    Publication Date: 2023-12-09
    Description: Possible scenarios are given for the formation of the continental runoff and the salinity of the Azov Sea, taking into account the current and future trends in climate change. Short-term forecast are suggested for the changes in the primary production of organic matter and pollution by priority toxicants in the Azov Sea. Specific features of photometric determination of organic carbon in bottom sediments are presented. Exploitable resources of commercial invertebrates in the Azov Sea and the dynamics of their exploitation in 2000–2022 are considered. The Azov Sea populations of sturgeon fish species as a part of monitoring the catches by stationary fishing gears along the Kuban coast are investigated. Morphological characteristics and biological features of Smith's barb Puntioplites proctozystron (Bleeker, 1865) in the Mekong River Delta are studied. Artificial reproduction of semi-anadromous fish species under different development scenarios of hydrological situation in the Azov Sea is analysed. Release of juvenile sturgeons in the Azov–Kuban region by sturgeon hatcheries of the Federal Agency for Fishery in 2016–2022 is reported.
    Description: Представлены возможные сценарии формирования материкового стока и солености вод Азовского моря с учетом современных и перспективных тенденций изменения климата. Дан прогноз динамики первичной продукции органического вещества и загрязнения приоритетными токсикантами Азовского моря на краткосрочную перспективу. Обсуждаются особенности фотометрического определения органического углерода в донных отложениях. Охарактеризована сырьевая база промысловых беспозвоночных в Азовском море и динамика ее освоения в 2000–2022 гг. Исследованы азовские популяции осетровых рыб при осуществлении мониторинга промысла ставными орудиями лова у Кубанского побережья. Изучены морфологические характеристики и особенности биологии барбуса Смита Puntioplites proctozystron (Bleeker, 1865) в дельте реки Меконг. Описано искусственное воспроизводство полупроходных видов рыб при разных сценариях развития гидрологической обстановки в Азовском море. Дан отчет о выпуске молоди осетровых в Азово-Кубанском районе с рыбоводных заводов Федерального агентства по рыболовству в период с 2016 по 2022 г.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Puntioplites proctozystron ; Primary production ; Hydrology ; Artificial reproduction ; Fishing gear ; Bottom sediments ; Water salinity ; Climate change ; Прогноз ; Сырьевая база ; Морфологические характеристики ; Искусственное воспроизводство ; Выпуск молоди ; ASFA_2015::M::Marine invertebrates ; ASFA_2015::O::Organic matter ; ASFA_2015::H::Hatcheries
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings
    Format: 120pp.
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2023-02-23
    Description: The Val d’Agri basin is one of the areas of highest seismic hazard in Italy. Moreover, widespread residential buildings with high seismic vulnerability, a water reservoir, and infrastructures related to hydrocarbon exploitation contribute to increasing the local seismic risk. The basin is several kilometers wide, about 400 m deep, and filled by continental, Quaternary sediments. In this paper we analyse earthquake weak ground motions and ambient noise measurements to investigate local site effects. Data were recorded by eight seismic stations deployed along a 7 km long transect that runs SW-NE across the central part of the basin. The stations operated for three years. Four stations were installed within the basin, two near its edges, and two outside on limestone outcrops. Good quality recordings from about eighty local and regional earthquakes (with average distance from the basin 400 km and 40 km respectively, and ML in the 1.2 - 6.5 range) evidence significant ground motion amplification both in the peak values and durations for the basin stations relative to the hard-rock one. Site effects have been investigated by computing: (1) standard spectral ratios with respect to the hard-rock station (H/Hrif), (2) single-station H/V spectral ratios, (3) simplified 1-D and 2-D numerical modelling based on subsurface information. Earthquake recordings for sites within the basin show: (i) significant ground motion amplifications in a wide frequency range (0.5-7 Hz), (ii) a dominant low-frequency peak around 0.7 - 1 Hz with amplification factors between 3 and 7, (iii) secondary peaks around 1.5 Hz and 3 Hz. Single-station techniques confirm a clear peak or bump around 0.6 - 1 Hz that we therefore relate to the fundamental resonance frequency of the sites. Frequency-time and particle motion analyses performed on earthquake data indicate that the observed ground motion amplifications cannot be fully explained by simple 1-D propagation effects, so we carried out several 2-D numerical simulations in order to better investigate the basin seismic response. The results evidence a role played by basin edge effects on the observed ground motion amplifications. Besides, the response of the basin is controlled by lateral heterogeneities between coarse cemented deposits filling the eastern depocenter and low-velocity softer deposits widespread in the central-western sector.
    Description: Published
    Description: 84-102
    Description: 5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: site effects ; Val d’Agri ; spectral ratios ; 2-D modeling ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.04. Geology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: We develop a new inversion approach to construct a 3-D structural and shear-wave velocity model of the crust based on teleseismic P-to-S converted waves. The proposed approach does not require local earthquakes such as body wave tomography, nor a large aperture seismic network such as ambient noise tomography, but a three-component station network with spacing similar to the expected crustal thickness. The main features of the new method are: (1) a novel model parametrization with 3-D mesh nodes that are fixed in the horizontal directions but can flexibly vary vertically; (2) the implementation of both sharp velocity changes across discontinuities and smooth gradients; (3) an accurate ray propagator that respects Snell’s law in 3-D at any interface geometry. Model parameters are inverted using a stochastic method composed of simulated annealing followed by a pattern search algorithm. The first application is carried out over the Central Alps, where long-standing permanent and the temporary AlpArray Seismic Network stations provide an ideal coverage. For this study we invert 4 independent parameters, which are the Moho discontinuity depth, the Conrad discontinuity depth, the P-velocity change at the Conrad and the average Vp/Vs of the crust. The 3-D inversion results clearly image the roots of the Alpine orogen, including the Ivrea Geophysical Body. The lower crust's thickness appears fairly constant. Average crustal Vp/Vs ratios are relatively higher beneath the orogen, and a low-Vp/Vs area in the northern foreland seems to correlate with lower crustal earthquakes, which can be related to mechanical differences in rock properties, probably inherited. Our results are in agreement with those found by 3-D ambient noise tomography, though our method inherently performs better at localizing discontinuities. Future developments of this technique can incorporate joint inversions, as well as more efficient parameter space exploration.
    Description: Published
    Description: 529 - 562
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Computational seismology ; Receiver functions  ; Inverse theory ; Crustal imaging ; Central Alps ; 05.01. Computational geophysics ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: We present the first three-dimensional (3D) anisotropic teleseismic P-wave tomography model of the upper mantle covering the entire Central Mediterranean. Compared to isotropic tomography, it is found that including the magnitude, azimuth, and, importantly, dip of seismic anisotropy in our inversions simplifies isotropic heterogeneity by reducing the magnitude of slow anomalies while yielding anisotropy patterns that are consistent with regional tectonics. The isotropic component of our preferred tomography model is dominated by numerous fast anomalies associated with retreating, stagnant, and detached slab segments. In contrast, relatively slower mantle structure is related to slab windows and the opening of back-arc basins. To better understand the complexities in slab geometry and their relationship to surface geological phenomenon, we present a 3D reconstruction of the main Central Mediterranean slabs down to 700 km based on our anisotropic model. P-wave seismic anisotropy is widespread in the Central Mediterranean upper mantle and is strongest at 200-300 km depth. The anisotropy patterns are interpreted as the result of asthenospheric material flowing primarily horizontally around the main slabs in response to pressure exerted by their mid-to-late Cenezoic horizontal motion, while sub-vertical anisotropy possibly reflects asthenospheric entrainment by descending lithosphere. Our results highlight the importance of anisotropic P-wave imaging for better constraining regional upper mantle geodynamics.
    Description: This study is supported by the ERC StG 758199 NEWTON.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2021JB023488
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Central Mediterranean ; P‐wave tomography ; mantle dynamics ; seismic anisotropy ; slab geometry ; subduction zone ; 04.01. Earth Interior ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 76
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    Seismological Society of America
    In:  Taroni, M., J. Zhuang, and W. Marzocchi (2021). High-definition mapping of the Gutenberg–Richter b-value and its relevance: A case study in Italy, Seismol. Res. Lett. 92, 3778–3784, doi: 10.1785/0220210017.
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: Taroni et al. (2021) published a statistical framework to reliably estimate the b-value and its uncertainties, with the goal being the interpretation in a seismotectonic context and improving earthquake forecasting capabilities. In this comment, we show that the results presented for the Italian region and the conclusions drawn by the authors, are heavily biased due to quarry-blast events in the Italian earthquake catalog used in the analysis. Without removing this anthropogenic component in the data, a meaningful analysis of the earthquake- size distribution for natural seismicity is, in our opinion, not possible. This comment highlights the need for basic data quality analysis before sophisticated statistical tools are applied to a dataset.
    Description: European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under Grant Agreement Number 821115 Pianeta Dinamico-Working Earth INGV-MUR project.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1089-1094
    Description: 5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©:The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. All rights reserved.
    Description: The Western Alps shows a complex crustal organization due to the subduction of the European Plate beneath the Adriatic Plate and exhumation of the mantle wedge. The lithospheric structure of the Western Alps, that may hold significance for understanding orogenic processes and evolution, has been the subject of many geophysical studies, but the Moho profile remains unclear and this has led to controversies about the depth and extent of the European Plate beneath the Adriatic Plate. With the goal of retrieving detailed information on crustal constitution, we use autocorrelation of seismic ambient noise as a tool to map the body wave reflectivity structure at the subduction zone under the southwestern Alps. We use data recorded by the China–Italy–France Alps (CIFALPS) seismic transect, that includes 45 stations located approximately 5–10 km apart along a profile crossing the Alpine continental subduction in the Western Alps. We analyse the data set in four different frequency bands between 0.09 and 2 Hz. We automatically pick the arrival time of the Moho reflection in the second derivative of the envelope of the autocorrelation stack using prior Moho information. The 0.5–1 Hz frequency band mostly gives the best result due to the clear changes in reflectivity along the waveforms of the autocorrelation stacks after the picked arrival times of the Moho reflections. We find spatial coherence between 18 and 23 km depth in the western portion of the profile, indicating relatively homogeneous crustal rocks, and highly reflective structure under the central mountain range, due to the existence of a highly faulted zone. The very thin crust and the underlying mantle wedge known as the Ivrea body show instead high transparency to seismic waves and absence of reflections. The subduction profile of the European Plate shows a steep trend as compared to previous studies. We discuss autocorrelation stacks and Moho depths obtained from the arrival times of the picked reflectivity change in comparison with previous studies to validate the different reflection structures. Stacked ambient noise autocorrelations reliably image varied crustal properties and reflectivity structures in the highly heterogeneous region of the southwestern Alps.
    Description: Published
    Description: 298–316
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Europe ; Body waves ; Seismic Interferometry ; Seismic noise ; Crustal structure ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: The complex tectonic setting of the central-western Mediterranean has interested geoscientists for decades, but its geodynamic evolution remains a matter of debate. We rely on 807 seismometers from southern Europe and northern Africa to measure Rayleigh and Love phase velocities in the period range ∼5–200 s, based on teleseismic earthquakes and seismic ambient noise. By nonlinear joint inversion of the phase-velocity maps, we obtain a 3-D shear-wave velocity (VS) model of the study area. At shallow depths, our model correlates with surface geology and reveals the presence of a sedimentary cover in the Liguro-Provençal basin, as opposed to the Tyrrhenian basin where this is either very thin or absent. At ∼5-km depth, high velocities below the Magnaghi, Vavilov, and Marsili seamounts point to an exhumed, scarcely serpentinized mantle. These are replaced by lower velocities at larger depths, likely connected to the presence of partial melt. At 50–60-km depth, a very heterogeneous structure characterizes the Tyrrhenian basin, with low velocities pointing to the presence of fluids due to the lateral mantle inflow from the Ionian slab edges, and higher velocities associated with a relatively dry upper mantle. Such heterogeneity disappears at depths ≳75 km, replaced by more uniform velocities which are ∼2% lower than those found in the Liguro-Provençal basin. We infer that, at the same depths, the Tyrrhenian basin is characterized by a larger concentration of fluids and possibly higher temperatures.
    Description: The Grant to the Department of Science, Roma Tre University (MIUR-Italy Dipartimenti di Eccellenza, ARTICOLO 1, COMMI 314-337 LEGGE 232/2016) German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD, Grant 57030312). Projekt DEAL. Funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG - German Research Foundation) under the Individual Research Project: SI 1748/4-1.
    Description: Published
    Description: e2021JB023267
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.01. Earth Interior ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: We take advantage of the new large AlpArray Seismic Network (AASN) as part of the AlpArray research initiative (www.alparray.ethz.ch), to establish a consistent seismicity-catalogue for the greater Alpine region (GAR) for the time period 2016 January 1–2019 December 31. We use data from 1103 stations including the AASN backbone composed of 352 permanent and 276 (including 30 OBS) temporary broad-band stations (network code Z3). Although characterized by a moderate seismic hazard, the European Alps and surrounding regions have a higher seismic risk due to the higher concentration of values and people. For these reasons, the GAR seismicity is monitored and routinely reported in catalogues by a 11 national and 2 regional seismic observatories. The heterogeneity of these data set limits the possibility of extracting consistent information by simply merging to investigate the GAR's seismicity as a whole. The uniformly spaced and dense AASN provides, for the first time, a unique opportunity to calculate high-precision hypocentre locations and consistent magnitude estimation with uniformity and equal uncertainty across the GAR. We present a new, multistep, semi-automatic method to process ∼50 TB of seismic signals, combining three different software. We used the SeisComP3 for the initial earthquake detection, a newly developed Python library ADAPT for high-quality re-picking, and the well-established VELEST algorithm both for filtering and final location purposes. Moreover, we computed new local magnitudes based on the final high-precision hypocentre locations and re-evaluation of the amplitude observations. The final catalogue contains 3293 seismic events and is complete down to local magnitude 2.4 and regionally consistent with the magnitude 3+ of national catalogues for the same time period. Despite covering only 4 yr of seismicity, our catalogue evidences the main fault systems and orogens’ front in the region, that are documented as seismically active by the EPOS-EMSC manually revised regional bulletin for the same time period. Additionally, we jointly inverted for a new regional minimum 1-D P-wave velocity model for the GAR and station delays for both permanent station networks and temporary arrays. These results provide the base for a future re-evaluation of the past decades of seismicity, and for the future seismicity, eventually improving seismic-hazard studies in the region. Moreover, we provide a unique, consistent seismic data set fundamental to further investigate this complex and seismically active area. The catalogue, the minimum 1-D P-wave velocity model, and station delays associated are openly shared and distributed with a permanent DOI listed in the data availability section.
    Description: The AlpArray-Switzerland project is funded by the Swiss-AlpArray SINERGIA project CRSII2_154434/1 by Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF).
    Description: Published
    Description: 921-943
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake source observations ; Seismicity ; Tectonics ; Statistical seismology ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.01. Earth Interior
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©:The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. All rights reserved.
    Description: To improve our understanding of the Earth’s interior, seismologists often have to deal with enormous amounts of data, requiring automatic tools for their analyses. It is the purpose of this study to present SeisLib, an open-source Python package for multiscale seismic imaging. At present, SeisLib includes routines for carrying out surface-wave tomography tasks based on seismic ambient noise and teleseismic earthquakes. We illustrate here these functionalities, both from the theoretical and algorithmic point of view and by application of our library to seismic data from North America. We first show how SeisLib retrieves surface-wave phase velocities from the ambient noise recorded at pairs of receivers, based on the zero crossings of their normalized cross-spectrum. We then present our implementation of the two-station method, to measure phase velocities from pairs of receivers approximately lying on the same great-circle path as the epicentre of distant earthquakes. We apply these methods to calcu- late dispersion curves across the conterminous United States, using continuous seismograms from the transportable component of USArray and earthquake recordings from the permanent networks. Overall, we measure 144 272 ambient-noise and 2055 earthquake-based dispersion curves, that we invert for Rayleigh-wave phase-velocity maps. To map the lateral variations in surface-wave velocity, SeisLib exploits a least-squares inversion algorithm based on ray theory. Our implementation supports both equal-area and adaptive parametrizations, with the latter al- lowing for a finer resolution in the areas characterized by high density of measurements. In the broad period range 4–100 s, the retrieved velocity maps of North America are highly correlated (on average, 96 per cent) and present very small average differences (0.14 ± 0.1 per cent) with those reported in the literature. This points to the robustness of our algorithms. We also produce a global phase-velocity map at the period of 40 s, combining our dispersion measurements with those collected at global scale in previous studies. This allows us to demonstrate the reliability and optimized computational speed of SeisLib, even in presence of very large seismic inverse problems and strong variability in the data coverage. The last part of the manuscript deals with the attenuation of Rayleigh waves, which can be estimated through SeisLib based on the seismic ambient noise recorded at dense arrays of receivers. We apply our algorithm to produce an at- tenuation map of the United States at the period of 4 s, which we find consistent with the relevant literature.
    Description: Funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG - German Research Foundation) under the Individual Research Project: SI 1748/4- 1. German Science Foundation: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (www.dfg.de; SPP-2017, Project Ha 2403/21-1).
    Description: Published
    Description: 1011-1030
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Inverse theory ; Seismic tomography ; Surface waves ; free oscillations ; 04.01. Earth Interior ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2023-02-21
    Description: This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©:The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Uploaded in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. All rights reserved.
    Description: Different approaches to map seismic rupture in space and time often lead to incoherent results for the same event. Building on earlier work by our team, we ‘time-reverse’ and ‘backpropagate’ seismic surface wave recordings to study the focusing of the time-reversed field at the seismic source. Currently used source-imaging methods relying on seismic recordings neglect the information carried by surface waves, and mostly focus on the P-wave arrival alone. Our new method combines seismic time reversal approach with a surface wave ray-tracing algorithm based on a generalized spherical-harmonic parametrization of surface wave phase velocity, accounting for azimuthal anisotropy. It is applied to surface wave signal filtered within narrow-frequency bands, so that the inherently 3-D problem of simulating surface wave propagation is separated into a suite of 2-D problems, each of relatively limited computational cost. We validate our method through a number of synthetic tests, then apply it to the great 2004 Sumatra–Andaman earthquake, characterized by the extremely large extent of the ruptured fault. Many studies have estimated its rupture characteristics from seismological data (e.g. Lomax, Ni et al., Guilbert et al., Ishii et al., Krüger & Ohrnberger, Jaffe et al.) and geodetic data (e.g. Banerjee et al., Catherine et al., Vigny et al., Hashimoto et al., Bletery et al.). Applying our technique to recordings from only 89 stations of the Global Seismographic Network (GSN) and bandpass filtering the corresponding surface wave signal around 80-to-120, 50-to-110 and 40-to-90 s, we reproduce the findings of earlier studies, including in particular the northward direction of rupture propagation, its approximate spatial extent and duration, and the locations of the areas where most energy appears to be released.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1018-1035
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: 3T. Fisica dei terremoti e Sorgente Sismica
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Earthquake source observations ; Surface waves and free oscillations ; Theoretical seismology ; Wave propagation ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.01. Computational geophysics
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2023-03-22
    Description: The imaging of volcanic systems is a challenging topic that attracts the scientific community’s attention. The characterization of structures and rock properties by means of seismic active methods is becoming fundamental for providing ultra-high-resolution images of the structures of interest. The Solfatara Volcano is a quiescent volcano in the Campi Flegrei resurgent nested caldera that is continuously under investigation and monitoring for its shallow activity, such as fumaroles. The purpose of this work is to characterize the fluid accumulation zone in the first 150 m depth in the middle of the crater, using several post-stack seismic attributes and Amplitude Versus Offset (AVO) analysis to characterize the contact between the CO2 and condensed water in the shallower accumulation zone. The two 400 m-long profiles to which we refer in this work have been acquired during the active Repeated InduCed Earthquakes and Noise experiment. The profiles were deployed along with the NNE-SSW and WNW-ESE directions across the whole surface of the crater including the main surface anomalies of the fumaroles, in the eastern area, and the mud-pool of Fangaia, located in the western area. The seismic pre-processing, pre-stack processing, and post-stack analysis previously applied on the NNE-SSW profile are here performed for the first time on the WNW-ESE profile, while partial-stack AVO analysis is performed for both profiles. The post-stack attributes including time gain, envelope, energy, and root mean square have been computed and extracted for determining the maximum and minimum values of amplitude zones on the migrated post-stack seismic profiles. Such anomalies are provided by complex and geometrical attributes embedding information on faults and chaotic zones. The AVO technique has also been used as a direct gas indicator to enhance fluid discrimination and identification. Finally, the analysis of the profile, seismic attributes, and near-surface structural interpretation related to the Solfatara Volcano has been incorporated into the proposed analysis. The multi-2D image depicts fluids trapped in the Solfatara Volcano at depths ranging from 10 to 50 m below the crater’s surface, as well as their migration paths up to 150 m deep: this evidenced contact between the fluids has been probably due to the solfataric alteration of the minerals, caused by the arising plume and the abovecondensed water which decreases the permeability of the rocks and forms an argillic phase working as cap-rock and trapping the gases. The application of the AVO analysis, coupled with the seismic attribute’s investigation, provides a very detailed multi-2D image of the shallower Solfatara Volcano, which outperforms in terms of accuracy the ones obtained with different tools in previous works, and that evidences the presence and the position of the liquid and the gases in the north-east area of the Solfatara Volcano.
    Description: Published
    Description: 866534
    Description: 5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.02. Exploration geophysics ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.08. Volcanology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2023-03-27
    Description: L'Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) è componente del Servizio Nazionale di Protezione Civile, ex articolo 6 della legge 24 febbraio 1992 n. 225 ed è Centro di Competenza per i fenomeni sismici, vulcanici e i maremoti per il Dipartimento della Protezione Civile Nazionale (DPC). L’Osservatorio Vesuviano, Sezione di Napoli dell’INGV, ha nei suoi compiti il monitoraggio e la sorveglianza H24/7 delle aree vulcaniche attive campane (Vesuvio, Campi Flegrei e Ischia). Tali attività sono disciplinate dall’Accordo-Quadro (AQ) sottoscritto tra il DPC e l’INGV per il decennio 2012-2021 e sono dettagliate negli Allegati A e B del suddetto AQ. Il presente Rapporto sul Monitoraggio dei Vulcani Campani rappresenta l’attività svolta dall’Osservatorio Vesuviano e dalle altre Sezioni INGV impegnate nel monitoraggio dell’area vulcanica campana nel secondo semestre 2021.
    Description: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia Dipartimento della Protezione Civile
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: 4V. Processi pre-eruttivi
    Description: 6SR VULCANI – Servizi e ricerca per la società
    Description: 1IT. Reti di monitoraggio e sorveglianza
    Description: 2IT. Laboratori analitici e sperimentali
    Description: 4IT. Banche dati
    Keywords: Campi Flegrei ; Vesuvio ; Ischia ; Volcano Monitoring ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 04.03. Geodesy ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest ; 05.09. Miscellaneous
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: report
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2023-03-20
    Description: The deformation style of the continental lithosphere is a relevant issue for geodynamics and seismic hazard perspectives. Here we show the first evidence of two well-distinct low-angle and SW-dipping individual reverse shear zones of the Italian Outer Thrust System in Central Italy. One corresponds to the down-dip prosecution of the Adriatic Basal Thrust with its major splay and the other to a hidden independent structure, illuminated at a depth between 25 and 60 km, for an along-strike extent of ~ 150 km. Combining geological information with high-quality seismological data, we unveil this novel configuration and reconstruct a detailed 3D geometric and kinematic fault model of the compressional system, active at upper crust to upper mantle depths. In addition, we report evidence of coexisting deformation volumes undergoing well-distinguished stress fields at different lithospheric depths. These results provide fundamental constraints for a forthcoming discussion on the Apennine fold-and-thrust system's geodynamic context as a shallow subduction zone or an intra-continental lithosphere shear zone.
    Description: Published
    Description: 21066
    Description: 2T. Deformazione crostale attiva
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 85
    Publication Date: 2023-03-20
    Description: We studied the long-term features of earthquakes caused by a fault system in the northern Adriatic sea that experienced a series of quakes beginning with two main shocks of magnitude 5.5 and 5.2 on 9 November 2022 at 06:07 and 06:08 UTC, respectively. This offshore fault system, identified through seismic reflection profiles, has a low slip rate of 0.2–0.5 mm/yr. As the historical record spanning a millennium does not extend beyond the inter-event time for the largest expected earthquakes (M ' 6.5), we used an earthquake simulator to generate a 100,000-year catalogue with 121 events of Mw 5.5. The simulation results showed a recurrence time (Tr) increasing from 800 yrs to 1700 yrs as the magnitude threshold increased from 5.5 to 6.5. However, the standard deviation s of inter-event times remained at a stable value of 700 yrs regardless of the magnitude threshold. This means that the coefficient of variation (Cv = s/Tr) decreased from 0.9 to 0.4 as the threshold magnitude increased from 5.5 to 6.5, making earthquakes more predictable over time for larger magnitudes. Our study supports the use of a renewal model for seismic hazard assessment in regions of moderate seismicity, especially when historical catalogues are not available.
    Description: Published
    Description: 3746
    Description: 2T. Deformazione crostale attiva
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Description: 6T. Studi di pericolosità sismica e da maremoto
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Numerical modelling ; earthquake simulator ; statistical methods ; earthquake clustering ; northern Adriatic Sea ; 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2023-03-23
    Description: Dalla serata di ieri, 8 febbraio 2023, la Rete Sismica Nazionale ha registrato una serie di eventi sismici localizzati nelle vicinanze della città di Siena. Il terremoto di magnitudo maggiore, il primo della sequenza, è avvenuto alle ore 21:51 italiane, ML 3.5, ed è stato nettamente avvertito dalla cittadinanza. Si presenta un inquadramento della storia sismica dell'area.
    Description: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-7
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Keywords: Sismologia storica ; Storia sismica ; Siena ; Toscana ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2023-03-23
    Description: Dal pomeriggio del 9 marzo 2023, nella porzione settentrionale della Provincia di Perugia è in corso una sequenza sismica che ha avuto i suoi effetti maggiori nel territorio del Comune di Umbertide. L’epicentro della scossa più energetica finora registrata è stato localizzato a circa 6 km di distanza dal capoluogo comunale. Per il momento si ha notizia di lievi danni in alcune frazioni di Umbertide, soprattutto a Pierantonio, Pian d’Assino e Monte Corona, oltre che nella stessa Umbertide. Si presenta un sintetico inquadramento della sismicità storica dell'area.
    Description: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Description: Published
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Keywords: Terremoti ; Storia sismica ; Umbertide ; Sequenza sismica del marzo 2023 ; Storia sismica del Comune di Umbertide ; Sismologia storica ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 88
    Publication Date: 2023-03-23
    Description: Questo articolo traduce e compendia parte dei dati contenuti nel sito della Boğaziçi University Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, Department of Earthquake Engineering. Nella pagina relativa ai Rapporti sul terremoto a Kahramanmaraş – Gaziantep del 6 febbraio 2023 (ore 04:17 locali) c’è un Report preliminare dedicato ai forti terremoti storici (Large historical earthquakes of the earthquake-affected region: a preliminary report) a firma di K. Sesetyan, M. Stucchi, V. Castelli e A.A. Gomez Capera, pubblicato il 17 febbraio 2023.
    Description: Boğaziçi University Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, Department of Earthquake Engineering
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-7
    Description: 5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
    Keywords: Eastern Anatolia Fault ; Historical earthquakes ; Faglia est-anatolica ; Sismicità storica ; Historical seismicity ; Terremoti storici ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2023-02-01
    Description: The Mugello Basin (North-Eastern Tuscany) is an intermontane basin of the Northern Apennines (Italy) with a well-documented record of seismicity; the two major historical earthquakes occurred in 1542 (Mw = 6.0) and in 1919 (Mw = 6.4). In this study, we integrate different seismic catalogs spanning the 2005–2019 time interval, and complement these data with phase arrival times from a temporary network that specifically operated in the area throughout the 2019–2021 time interval. The subsequent relocation of this data set with a double-difference algorithm allows for accurate analyses of the most relevant seismic sequences which affected the study area in 2008, 2009, 2015–2017, and 2019. These sequences are associated with the activation of adjacent segments of larger NW-striking fault systems, one of which bounds the NE margin of the Mugello Basin (Ronta Fault System). For each seismic sequence, best-fit fault surfaces are derived from orthonormal regression of relocated hypocenters, yielding consistent results with that derived from fault plane solutions. The four sequences mark a significant increase in the seismicity rate with respect to what was recorded in the previous decades. This suggests that, following the 2008 renewal of seismicity, static or dynamic stress changes, or both depending on the case, played a role in advancing the time of failure of the fault segments activated subsequently.
    Description: Published
    Description: 879160
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: seismic sequence ; fault segmentation ; northern apennines ; stress transfer ; earthquake triggering ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2023-02-01
    Description: The gradual temporal shift of the spectral lines of harmonic seismic and/or acoustic tremor, known as spectral gliding, has been largely documented at different volcanoes worldwide. Despite the clear advantage of the experimental approach in providing direct observation of degassing processes and related elastic radiation, experimental studies on gliding tremor are lacking. Therefore, we investigated different episodes of gliding of acoustic and seismic tremor observed during analogue degassing experiments performed under different conditions of magma viscosity (10-1,000 Pa s), gas flux (5-180×10−3 l/s) and conduit surface roughness (fractal dimension of 2-2.99). Gliding experimental harmonic seismic and acoustic tremor was observed at high gas flux rates and viscosities, mostly associated with an increasing trend and often preceding a major burst. Decreasing secondary sets of harmonic spectral lines were observed in a few cases. Results suggest that gliding episodes are mostly related to the progressive volume variation of shallow interconnected gas pockets. Spectral analyses performed on acoustic signals provided the theoretical length of the resonator that was compared against the temporal evolution of the gas pockets, quantified from video analyses. The similarities between the observed degassing regime and churn-annular flow in high viscous fluids encourage further studies on churn dynamics in volcanic environments.
    Description: Published
    Description: 117344
    Description: 5V. Processi eruttivi e post-eruttivi
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: seismo-acoustic tremor; experimental volcanology ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
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  • 91
    Publication Date: 2023-02-01
    Description: The August 24 , 2016 M 6.0 Amatrice earthquake is the beginning of the 2016-2018 central Italy seismic sequence. One of the first places to be highly damaged is the wide territory of Amatrice municipality. Seismic Microzonation studies (SM) started during the early stages of emergency with the installation of the 3A temporary seismic network (Cara et al. 2019) and continued with an intense campaign of multidisciplinary studies (Priolo et al. 2020). On the light of the information retrieved, this work shows the results of additional geophysical investigations carried out in specific sites of Amatrice village including the historical center, the most damaged area. We applied f-k and MSPAC analysis to data collected at 5 sites to obtain dispersion curves and invert them to retrieve the subsoil Vs profile. All results were therefore integrated with the already available geological and geophysical information to better detail the subsoil model.
    Description: Published
    Description: Kyoto, Japan
    Description: 5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
    Keywords: seismic motion ; site effects ; earthquake engineering ; seismic array ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Extended abstract
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2023-02-01
    Description: L'Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) è componente del Servizio Nazionale di Protezione Civile, ex articolo 6 della legge 24 febbraio 1992 n. 225 ed è Centro di Competenza per i fenomeni sismici, vulcanici e i maremoti per il Dipartimento della Protezione Civile Nazionale (DPC). L’Osservatorio Vesuviano, Sezione di Napoli dell’INGV, ha nei suoi compiti il monitoraggio e la sorveglianza H24/7 delle aree vulcaniche attive campane (Vesuvio, Campi Flegrei e Ischia). Tali attività sono disciplinate dall’Accordo-Quadro (AQ) sottoscritto tra il DPC e l’INGV per il decennio 2012-2021 e sono dettagliate negli Allegati A e B del suddetto AQ. Il presente Rapporto sul Monitoraggio dei Vulcani Campani rappresenta l’attività svolta dall’Osservatorio Vesuviano e dalle altre Sezioni INGV impegnate nel monitoraggio dell’area vulcanica campana nel primo semestre 2021.
    Description: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia Dipartimento della Protezione Civile
    Description: Unpublished
    Description: 4V. Processi pre-eruttivi
    Description: 6SR VULCANI – Servizi e ricerca per la società
    Description: 1IT. Reti di monitoraggio e sorveglianza
    Description: 2IT. Laboratori analitici e sperimentali
    Description: 4IT. Banche dati
    Keywords: Campi Flegrei ; Vesuvio ; Ischia ; Volcano Monitoring ; 04.08. Volcanology ; 04.03. Geodesy ; 04.06. Seismology ; 05.04. Instrumentation and techniques of general interest ; 05.09. Miscellaneous
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: report
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  • 93
    Publication Date: 2023-02-01
    Description: The presence of normal fault systems in central Italy, outcropping or hidden below Quaternary covers in intra-mountain basins, is the expression of the Neogene–Quaternary evolution of the area, characterized by an extensional tectonic regime following the fold and thrust structuring of the Apennine orogen. Italian urban settlements of central Italy are developed on hills or mountains but also in lowland areas, which are often set up in sedimentary basins. In this framework, urban centers found close to fault lines are common, with strong implications on the seismic risk of the area. In this work, we performed a dense seismological passive survey (88 single-station ambient noise measurements) and used the horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVNSR) technique to investigate hidden faults in the Trasacco municipality located in the southern part of the Fucino Basin (central Italy), where microzonation studies pointed out hypothetical fault lines crossing the urban area with the Apennine orientation. These hidden structures were only suggested by previous studies based on commercial seismic lines and aerial photogrammetry; their presence in the basin area is confirmed by our measurements. This case study shows the potentiality of using the HVNSR technique in fault areas to have a preliminary indication of anomalous behaviors, to be investigated later with specific geophysical techniques. Our approach can support microzonation studies whenever fault zones are involved, especially in urban areas or in places designated for future developments.
    Description: Published
    Description: 937848
    Description: 5T. Sismologia, geofisica e geologia per l'ingegneria sismica
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: microzonation ; HVNSR ; hidden faults ; lateral heterogeneities ; subsoil reconstruction ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 94
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    Unknown
    Consiglio Nazionale degli Ingegneri
    Publication Date: 2023-07-10
    Description: È tracciato qui un sintetico percorso per descrivere la sismotettonica dell’Italia centrale e settentrionale, attraverso l’analisi delle deformazioni e delle dislocazioni oggi in atto nella litosfera, la porzione più esterna e fredda del pianeta. Usualmente non siamo non grado di renderci conto delle deformazioni crostali attualmente in corso - oggetto di studio della cosiddetta tettonica attiva - ma sappiamo che sono sempre presenti e che da queste si originano i terremoti. Descriveremo pertanto i principali sistemi di faglie ritenuti in grado di generare forti terremoti nell’Italia centrale e settentrionale. La completa parametrizzazione della geometria e della cinematica di una faglia attiva e in grado di generare terremoti viene definita sorgente sismogenetica; ci concentreremo sulle sorgenti ritenute responsabili dei terremoti più forti, in particolare dei terremoti di magnitudo superiore a 5.5. Precisiamo che la magnitudo di 5.5 è ritenuta discriminante per due principali motivi: 1. è usualmente considerata il valore “di soglia” oltre il quale la faglia assume dimensioni tali da poter – in taluni casi – essere identificata attraverso le metodologie geologiche; 2. in Italia, per via delle tipologie costruttive prevalenti, lo scuotimento generato da terremoti crostali con magnitudo superiore a 5.5 può creare danni significativi alle opere antropiche
    Description: Published
    Description: 17-22
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Keywords: 04.07. Tectonophysics ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: book chapter
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  • 95
    Publication Date: 2023-06-28
    Description: Introduction In November 2022 a seismic sequence occurred in the Marche offshore, about 29 km from the coast and the city of Fano. The sequence started on November 9 (06:07:25 UTC) with a ML=5.7 earthquake (Mw=5.5 from TDMD computation, Scognamiglio et al., 2006), immediately followed by a ML=5.2 earthquake (06:08:29 UTC) located about 8 km to the south. The two mainshocks activated a seismic sequence with about 400 aftershocks lasting the first week, 13 of them with ML〉= 3.5 (Fig. 1). Few hours after the occurrence of the mainshock, the BSI (“Bollettino Sismico Italiano”) working group started to manually analyze P and S phase arrival times and seismogram amplitudes of earthquakes with magnitude ML〉= 3.5 recorded by the the Italian National Seismic Network (Rete Sismica Nazionale, hereafter RSN) in order to better constrain hypocenter locations previously provided by the seismic surveillance room of the INGV in Rome for rapid communication to the Italian Civil Protection (Dipartimento Protezione Civile, DPC). Later, the BSI working group analyzed the seismicity of the sequence of the first weeks of seismic activity by revising hypocentral parameters of more than 500 events. The 2022 Marche offshore sequence took place along the Adriatic outer front of the northern Apennines in central Italy. Offshore seismic reflection profiles image a shallow thrust-and-fold system striking WNW–ESE to NNW–SSE. Along the coastal Adriatic area, active blind thrusts deform Plio-Quaternary siliciclastic turbidites that are few hundreds of meters to more than 2 km thick in correspondence of ramp anticlines and synclines, respectively. In a recent work, through the analysis of high-quality background seismicity data, De Nardis et al. (2022) identified two lithospheric-scale active thrusts deepening westward under the Adriatic outer front from upper- to lower-crustal depths. These new data support previous thick-skinned interpretations of seismic commercial profiles and CROP03 deep reflection data (Lavecchia et al., 2003). Focal mechanisms of weak to moderate (ML 〈 4.8) local earthquakes occurred between 2009-2017 at upper- to deep-crustal depths show prevailing reverse and reverse/oblique solutions (De Nardis et al., 2022) and subordinate strike-slip faulting (Mazzoli et al., 2014). The analysis of the 2022 Marche offshore sequence opens again the discussion on the uncertainties related to the hypocenter locations of earthquakes that occur in the Adriatic offshore domain (e.g., Di Stefano et al., 2022) and the limits of our present capability to provide an accurate seismotectonic interpretation of the instrumental seismicity in this region. Actually, the 2022 sequence area is only covered on land by RSN, with the closest seismic station located at about 28 km from the epicentral location of the mainshock. The particular geometry of the network along the Italian coast makes it difficult to correctly constrain hypocenter locations compared with other regions of Italy. Taking into account this configuration, although the INGV is able to obtain coherent earthquake information for Civil Protection purposes into the limits of the communication threshold, we note that data provided by the seismic surveillance room in terms of both seismic phase readings of arrival times for hypocenter location and waveform amplitudes for magnitude computation need to a more accurate analysis if the main goal is the correct reconstruction of the active structures involved in the sequence. This analysis should include a) a careful revision of the arrival time pickings to reduce the errors due to seismic phase misinterpretations, b) an accurate study to constrain earthquake locations with appropriate velocity models, and c) the hypocenter solution assessment through adequate tests that define which information can be inferred from earthquake location results. Data analysis and phases interpretation Through the interpretation of the seismic records, the BSI analysts have identified refracted first arrivals of P and S phases at epicentral distances of about 60 km, smaller than those expected for Pn/Sn refracted phases at the Moho discontinuity (e.g., Di Stefano and Ciaccio, 2014) whose arrivals should be observed at distances of about 90-100 km in this area. Since possible systematic misinterpretation of P and S arrivals can strongly affect the correct hypocenter locations, we have carefully revised the phase pickings provided by the INGV surveillance room by discriminating direct from refracted phases at stations located at distances greater than 60 km. This is mainly important for interpretation of weak S refracted phases that are often hidden into the arrivals after the P phase. We have taken into account these characteristics in the earthquake location process by only using clear direct/refracted S phases in our inversion procedure. The comparison of the ML〉= 3.5 hypocenter locations performed by the BSI and the INGV surveillance room (Figs. 1 and 2) shows how an accurate analysis of the pickings is necessary to obtain robust earthquake locations for seismotectonic interpretation: even using the same hypocenter location code and velocity model, we observe that the mislocation of the hypocenters in this area can range from few to about 10 kilometers (Fig. 1) while the formal errors are strongly reduced after the BSI picking revision (Fig. 2) The velocity model issue Events location in the Adriatic Sea suffers from the lack of a specific velocity model for the seismic sequence area. The use of inadequate velocity parameters during the location process can introduce systematic errors, which may result in incorrect seismotectonic interpretations. We therefore built and tested different velocity models from both available geophysical data and our inversion of the velocity structure using the arrival time readings revised by the BSI working group. In order to define deterministic 1D models suitable for earthquake location (Vp and Vp/Vs), we integrated sonic logs from local deep wells (ViDEPI Project, 2005) with literature data that include: seismic commercial profiles, deep seismic refraction surveys, the CROP03 crustal profile, Receiver Function and regional seismic tomography models, Vp/Vs reference values for mid- and lower-crustal crystalline rocks (Coward et al., 1999; Ponziani et al., 1995; Lavecchia et al., 2003; Spada et al., 2013; Di Stefano et al., 2009, Christiansen and Mooney, 1993). In order to obtain the velocity structure from our revised dataset, we first determined the Vp/Vs ratio by using the arrival time pickings of selected P and S phases. The mean velocity ratio Vp/Vs was computed through the cumulative Wadati diagram. Then, by collecting all the a priori available information regarding the structure of Adriatic Sea (velocities, layer thicknesses and Moho depth), we applied the VELEST software (Kissling, 1995) to compute a new 1D velocity model for earthquake location. Conclusions In this work we present our first analyses of the sequence and the accurate study of the velocity models that we obtained from both a revision of available data and the inversion of arrival time pickings analyzed by the BSI analists. Moreover, we will discuss our preliminary earthquake locations with a particular attention to resolution analysis and hypocenter location assessment.
    Description: Published
    Description: Bologna, Italy
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Keywords: Marche offshore ; Seismic sequence ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Conference paper
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2023-07-18
    Description: This work was carried out within the 2015 ART-IT project (Early Earthquake Alert in ITaly). Its main purpose is to investigate the performance and the critical issues of an early warning system with particular reference to the PRESTo system (PRobabilistic and Evolutionary early warning SysTem, [Iannacone et al., 2010; Satriano et al., 2011]) whose use has been tested in the framework of the above mentioned project. The correct operation of an early warning system can effectively guarantee a more effective management of a seismic emergency from the first seconds after the occurrence of a strong earthquake, allowing quick actions to reduce exposure and seismic risk. The work was substantially subdivided into two main steps. A first calibration phase, carried out in the first part of the project and aimed to identify the best values of the software configuration parameters in terms of event triggering and declaration. Once the values of the aforementioned parameters have been identified, the second phase of the work was focused on testing the software in real time configuration, on a test site area and the subsequent evaluation of its performance in terms of declaration and localization capacity. This work focuses mainly on the second part of the experimentation and is aimed describing and summarizing the analysis carried out to evaluate the response of the PRESTo software (and in general of an early warning system) after one year of experimentation and acquisition and highlight any problems and critical issues of the software and more generally of the rapid alert systems.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1-32
    Description: 8T. Sismologia in tempo reale e Early Warning Sismico e da Tsunami
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Sistema di allerta rapido, Rischio sismico, Early warning system, Seismic risk ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2023-05-25
    Description: The development of structurally controlled basins is frequently dominated by inherited geological and tectonic structures, especially when the affected region has undergone multiple tectonic phases. In this study we use physically scaled analog models to analyze the impact of inherited faults on the evolution of a new extensional fault system and its associated basin. In our experiments, we introduced inherited faults – bearing diverse geometries and orientations – cut through a homogeneous analog material (wet clay). After each experiment, we compare (a) how the inherited faults affected the inception and development of new faults and (b) the shape of the resulting basins, using a ‘reference model’ run without pre-existing faults. The results show that the orientation of pre-existing faults with respect to the extensional axis does affect the development of the new extensional structures. The main effects show up when the orientation of the pre-existing faults is closer to that expected for a fault that is optimally oriented (perpendicular) with respect to the direction of extension and has a dip close to an Andersonian extensional fault. Conversely, the impact on the resulting basin shape is more spatially complex, especially in the case of misoriented pre-existing faults. We also compare our experimental results with an analytical method based on the slip tendency theory. The application of our findings to selected natural cases demonstrates how one may interpret the occurrence, orientation, and activity of inherited faults by looking at the present-day geometry and wavelength of an extensional basin, particularly when newly formed extensional faults exhibit structurally unexpected trajectories.
    Description: Part of this work was funded by the project “The impact of an inherited structural setting on the development of extensional systems in the Amatrice-Norcia-Visso area: insights from analog modeling” (UR 0865.050; P.I.: Umberto Fracassi), part of the INGV-FISR 2016 Project - Italia centrale “Centro di studio e monitoraggio dei rischi naturali dell'Italia centrale” (cod. D82F16001180001), and by the INGV “FASTMIT” Project (UR 0850.010; P.I.: Roberto Basili – cod. D52F16001150001).
    Description: Published
    Description: 104836
    Description: 2T. Deformazione crostale attiva
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Inherited faults ; Extensional basins ; Analog modeling ; Wet clay models ; Pre-existing faults ; Fault interaction ; Fault inversion ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 98
    Publication Date: 2023-05-25
    Description: © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society.
    Description: Einstein Telescope (ET) is a proposed underground infrastructure in Europe to host future generations of gravitational-wave (GW) detectors. One of its design goals is to extend the observation band of terrestrial GW detectors from currently about 20 Hz down to 3 Hz. The coupling of a detector to its environment becomes stronger at lower frequencies, which makes it important to carefully analyze environmental disturbances at ET candidate sites. Seismic disturbances pose the greatest challenge since there are several important mechanisms for seismic vibrations to produce noise in ET, e.g., through gravitational coupling, stray light, or through harmful constraints on the design of ET’s control system. In this paper, we present an analysis of the time-variant properties of the seismic field at the Sardinia candidate site of ET connected to anthropogenic as well as natural phenomena. We find that temporal variations of source distributions and of the noise spectra generally follow predictable trends in the form of diurnal, weekly, or seasonal cycles. Specific seismic sources were identified such as road bridges, which produce observable disturbances underground. This information can be used to adapt a detector’s seismic isolation and control system.
    Description: Published
    Description: 1943–1964
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Einstein Telescope ; Seismic noise ; Gravitational waves ; Time series analysis ; Seismic instruments ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2023-05-19
    Description: In the frame of FocusX2 project INGV (Osservatorio Nazionale Terremoti and Osservatorio Etneo) and UniCal (Laboratorio di Sismologia) are deploying, from the end of 2021 to January 2023 a temporary seismic network for an active/passive seismological experiment to record regional and global seismicity in the Ionian Sea. The goal of this experiment is to improve the detection of seismicity in the Ionian Sea area and the accuracy of the locations; to better define the crustal structure of the region and find patterns related to fault systems. The seismicity in the area is possibly the result of two types of tectonic activity at different depths: a gently NW dipping subduction interface of the Calabrian subduction zone, and the strike-slip fault systems in the Ionian Sea, well expressed in the morpho-bathymetry and observed in previous seismic profiles. The deployment of 13 temporary land stations, FocusX temporary land (network code 1J) https://doi.org/10.13127/SD/O5QWM6WJCD along the coasts of eastern Sicily and SW Calabria, is going to complement the permanent networks (network codes IV, MN and IY); in the same period OBS stations are deployed at sea: FocusX temporary OBS-network (network code XH). The land stations are equipped with two different type of digitizers: Reftek 130 (12), and SaraSL06 (2); and with three different type of velocimeters: Trillium 120C (10), Le 5s (2) and ss08 60s (2). Continuous data are transmitted in real time at the INGV Rome acquisition system, used in the seismic surveillance, archived and distributed in EIDA https://eida.ingv.it/it/. In the deployment period 23rd December 2021 - 9th May 2022 regional seismicity (area between Lat 36.5-38.2 Lon 14.5-16.0) include 390 events located by the INGV seismic surveillance system, two of them with magnitude larger than 4.0 as well as 56 teleseismic earthquakes with magnitude larger than magnitude 6.0, two of them larger than 7.0. The two local events with M〉4.0 and some of their aftershocks, were analyzed by the analysts of the Italian Seismic Bulletin including all the stations of the FXland 1J network.
    Description: Published
    Description: Catania
    Description: 4T. Sismicità dell'Italia
    Keywords: Seismic network ; Seismicity ; deep structure ; Ionian Sea ; 04.06. Seismology
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: Oral presentation
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2023-05-25
    Description: In this paper we deal with statistical features of earthquakes, seeking possible correlations between the G-R magnitude distribution and the short-term clustering in an area of the Central Apennines, Italy, where significant seismicity with earthquakes exceeding magnitude 6.0 has been repeatedly observed from 1990 to the present. For this purpose, a recently developed version of the ETAS model, incorporating a threedimensional spatial triggering kernel, has been adopted. Our analysis has been carried out representing the b-value and the probability of independence of events on six vertical cross-sections suitably related to the seismic structures that are considered responsible of the seismicity observed in the study area. The results of the statistical analysis of the seismicity in the study area have shown a clear distinction between the western normal low-angle fault system, characterized by eastward dip, and the eastern normal fault systems, with westward dip. In the former (Etrurian Fault System; EFS) we found seismicity with a high b-value and high probability of independence, i.e., a scarce capacity of producing clusters and strong aftershock sequences. The eastern fault systems of our study area are distinguishable in two main distinct systems, which generated two strong seismic sequences in 1997 and 2016-2017. In the former (Colfiorito) sequence the seismicity showed a very low b-value and a modest probability of independence, while in the latter (Central Italy) sequence the bvalue was significantly higher and the probability of independence had extremely low values (manifesting a high level of clustering). The much higher b-value of the EFS than the other extensional sources could be caused by its peculiar seismotectonic role of discontinuity at the base of the normal active faulting, and its reduced capacity of accumulating stress. This circumstance may be interpreted by a difference in the rheological properties of these fault systems, possibly also in relation to their present status in the earthquake cycle and the presence of strong aftershock sequences.
    Description: Published
    Description: 2004–2020
    Description: 2T. Deformazione crostale attiva
    Description: JCR Journal
    Keywords: Seismicity and tectonics ; Probability distributions ; Statistical seismology ; Fault zone rheology ; 04.06. Seismology ; 04.07. Tectonophysics
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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