Active tectonics along the submarine slope of south-eastern Sicily and the source of the 11 January 1693 earthquake and tsunami
-
Published:2012-05-07
Issue:5
Volume:12
Page:1311-1319
-
ISSN:1684-9981
-
Container-title:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Argnani A.,Armigliato A.,Pagnoni G.,Zaniboni F.,Tinti S.,Bonazzi C.
Abstract
Abstract. South-eastern Sicily has been affected by large historical earthquakes, including the 11 January 1693 earthquake, considered the largest magnitude earthquake in the history of Italy (Mw = 7.4). This earthquake was accompanied by a large tsunami (tsunami magnitude 2.3 in the Murty-Loomis scale adopted in the Italian tsunami catalogue by Tinti et al., 2004), suggesting a source in the near offshore. The fault system of the eastern Sicily slope is characterised by NNW–SSE-trending east-dipping extensional faults active in the Quaternary. The geometry of a fault that appears currently active has been derived from the interpretation of seismic data, and has been used for modelling the tsunamigenic source. Synthetic tide-gauge records from modelling this fault source indicate that the first tsunami wave polarity is negative (sea retreat) in almost all the coastal nodes of eastern Sicily, in agreement with historical observations. The outcomes of the numerical simulations also indicate that the coastal stretch running from Catania to Siracusa suffered the strongest tsunami impact, and that the highest tsunami waves occurred in Augusta, aslo in agreement with the historical accounts. A large-size submarine slide (almost 5 km3) has also been identified along the slope, affecting the footwall of the active fault. Modelling indicates that this slide gives non-negligible tsunami signals along the coast; though not enough to match the historical observations for the 1693 tsunami event. The earthquake alone or a combination of earthquake faulting and slide can possibly account for the large run up waves reported for the 11 January 1693 event.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Reference41 articles.
1. Adam, J., Reuther, C.-D., Grasso, M., and Torelli, L.: Active fault kinematics and crustal stresses along the Ionian margin of the southeastern Sicily, Tectonophysics, 326, 217–239, 2000. 2. Argnani, A.: Evolution of the southern Tyrrhenian slab tear and active tectonics along the western edge of the Tyrrhenian subducted slab, in: Collision and Collapse at the Africa-Arabia-Eurasia Subduction Zone, edited by: Van Hinsbergen, D. J. J., Edwards, M. A., and Govers, R., Geol. Soc., Spec. Publ., 311, 193–212, 2009. 3. Argnani, A. and Bonazzi, C.: Malta Escarpment fault zone offshore eastern Sicily: Pliocene-Quaternary tectonic evolution based on new multichannel seismic data, Tectonics, 24, TC4009, https://doi.org/10.1029/2004TC001656, 2005. 4. Argnani, A., Brancolini, G., Bonazzi, C., Rovere, M., Accaino, F., Zgur, F., and Lodolo, E.: The results of the Taormina 2006 seismic survey: Possible implications for active tectonics in the Messina Straits, Tectonophysics, 476, 159–169, 2009a. 5. Argnani, A., Chiocci, F. L., Tinti, S., Bosman, A., Lodi, M. V., Pagnoni, G., and Zaniboni, F.: Comment on "On the cause of the 1908 Messina tsunami, southern Italy" by Andrea Billi et al., Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L13307, https://doi.org/10.1029/2009GL037332, 2009b.
Cited by
50 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|