Abstract: At Mt. Etna (Sicily, Italy), the Timpe fault system is a structurally homogeneous domain characterized by a high seismic potential; several considerations led us to assume that faults are, on average, constantly loaded in time, supporting the idea that the faults behaviour is controlled by tectonic processes more than magma-induced, transient, stresses. The seismicity rates that have been till now assigned to the fault sources are based on macroseismic and instrumental data; they can be considered complete respectively above the damage threshold during the last two centuries, and for about ten years above ML=2. We are now testing if these results are coherent with the seismicity rates that can be obtained using a geometric-kinematic approach, widely used if only geological and structural data are available. The characterization of a magnitude-size scaling relationship in volcanic environment is a key step for closing the loop, but the preliminary results are encouraging.

Is a geometric-kinematic approach valid for estimating the expected seismicity rates in volcano-tectonic areas? Ideas and results from seismogenic sources at Mt. Etna (Italy)

PACE, Bruno;
2015-01-01

Abstract

Abstract: At Mt. Etna (Sicily, Italy), the Timpe fault system is a structurally homogeneous domain characterized by a high seismic potential; several considerations led us to assume that faults are, on average, constantly loaded in time, supporting the idea that the faults behaviour is controlled by tectonic processes more than magma-induced, transient, stresses. The seismicity rates that have been till now assigned to the fault sources are based on macroseismic and instrumental data; they can be considered complete respectively above the damage threshold during the last two centuries, and for about ten years above ML=2. We are now testing if these results are coherent with the seismicity rates that can be obtained using a geometric-kinematic approach, widely used if only geological and structural data are available. The characterization of a magnitude-size scaling relationship in volcanic environment is a key step for closing the loop, but the preliminary results are encouraging.
2015
Miscellanea INGV
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11564/668808
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