On 6th April 2009, a moderate earthquake (Mw = 6.3; Ml=5.8) struck the Abruzzo region in Central Italy, causing more than 300 fatalities and heavy damage to L'Aquila and surrounding villages. Coseismic surface effects have been thoroughly documented by timely field surveys as well as by remote sensing analyses of satellite images. The outstanding quality of geological, seismological, geodetic and InSAR information, arguably represents the best ever dataset made available immediately after a moderate seismic event. Based on this dataset, we aim at testing the capability of coupled geological and InSAR data to map surface faulting patterns associated with moderate earthquakes. Coseismic ground ruptures have been mapped at a scale of 1:500 in the whole epicentral area. Traces of surface ruptures have been inferred from linear phase discontinuities identified in the interferogram. A very good agreement between the two methods resulted in the characterization of the main surface rupture along the Paganica fault. The same approach applied to ground ruptures hypothesized along other capable fault segments provided more questionable results. Thus, the combined field and InSAR approach appeared useful for detecting continuous surface ruptures exceeding one km in length and showing displacements greater than a few cm. These are the typical faulting parameters for moderate earthquakes (6.0 < Mw < 6.5) in Central Apennines. For continuous ground cracks shorter than a few hundred meters and/or show displacements smaller than 1-2 cm, the described approach may be less helpful, most probably due to the limited resolution of the data.

InSAR data as a field guide for mapping minor earthquake surface ruptures: Ground displacements along the Paganica Fault during the 6 April 2009 L'Aquila earthquake

MICHETTI, ALESSANDRO MARIA;SILEO, GIANCANIO;
2010-01-01

Abstract

On 6th April 2009, a moderate earthquake (Mw = 6.3; Ml=5.8) struck the Abruzzo region in Central Italy, causing more than 300 fatalities and heavy damage to L'Aquila and surrounding villages. Coseismic surface effects have been thoroughly documented by timely field surveys as well as by remote sensing analyses of satellite images. The outstanding quality of geological, seismological, geodetic and InSAR information, arguably represents the best ever dataset made available immediately after a moderate seismic event. Based on this dataset, we aim at testing the capability of coupled geological and InSAR data to map surface faulting patterns associated with moderate earthquakes. Coseismic ground ruptures have been mapped at a scale of 1:500 in the whole epicentral area. Traces of surface ruptures have been inferred from linear phase discontinuities identified in the interferogram. A very good agreement between the two methods resulted in the characterization of the main surface rupture along the Paganica fault. The same approach applied to ground ruptures hypothesized along other capable fault segments provided more questionable results. Thus, the combined field and InSAR approach appeared useful for detecting continuous surface ruptures exceeding one km in length and showing displacements greater than a few cm. These are the typical faulting parameters for moderate earthquakes (6.0 < Mw < 6.5) in Central Apennines. For continuous ground cracks shorter than a few hundred meters and/or show displacements smaller than 1-2 cm, the described approach may be less helpful, most probably due to the limited resolution of the data.
2010
surface faulting; coseismic ruptures; InSAR; earthquake; L’Aquila; Central Apennines
Guerrieri, L.; Baer, G.; Hamiel, Y.; Amit, R.; Blumetti, A. M.; Comerci, V.; Di Manna, P.; Michetti, ALESSANDRO MARIA; Salamon, A.; Mushkin, A.; Sileo, Giancanio; Vittori, E.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/1716949
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