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Featured researches published by Raffaele Azzaro.


Archive | 2016

DBMI15, the 2015 version of the Italian Macroseismic Database

Mario Locati; Romano Camassi; Andrea Rovida; Emanuela Ercolani; Filippo Bernardini; Viviana Castelli; Carlos Hector Caracciolo; Andrea Tertulliani; Antonio Rossi; Raffaele Azzaro; Salvatore D'Amico; Stefania Conte; Enrico Rocchetti

Provides homogeneous set of macroseismic intensity data collected from several sources, for Italian earthquakes with maximum intensity ≥ 5 in the period 1000-2014.


Journal of Geodynamics | 2000

First study of fault trench stratigraphy at Mt. Etna volcano, Southern Italy: understanding Holocene surface faulting along the Moscarello fault

Raffaele Azzaro; Domenico Bella; Luca Ferreli; Alessandro Maria Michetti; Federica Santagati; Leonello Serva; Eutizio Vittori

Paleoseismology, the study of past earthquakes based on their geological record in the stratigraphy and landscape, is a successful newly developing field of research. The application of fault trench studies in volcanic environments is one of the youngest branches of paleoseismology. In this paper, we present the results of the first exploratory trenches excavated at Mt. Etna in Sicily, the largest European volcano. Modern surface faulting at Etna is a very well known feature, which poses significant hazard to the local community, both in terms of ground displacement of essential lifelines and ground shacking from frequent damaging earthquakes. However, while the geomorphology and the seismicity of the active fault in the Etna region consistently show very high rates of tectonic activity, the Holocene cumulative throw and slip-rates, along with the nature (coseismic vs. creeping fault slip), dimension and timing of the displacement events, are still poorly constrained. For this purpose, we selected as a sample area the Moscarello fault, one of the most outstanding segment of the Timpe system of active normal faults in the volcano’s lower eastern flank. Displaced landforms and volcanic units at the Fondo Macchia basin, in the central sector of this fault, indicate some hundreds of meters of vertical offset in the last ca. 80 kyr, with a long-term slip-rate substantially higher than 1.5–2.0 mm/yr. According to the historical sources and instrumental observations, the Moscarello fault ruptured four times in the last 150 years during shallow (H < 5 km) and moderate magnitude (M < 4.8) earthquakes. These events were associated with severe damage in a narrow epicentral area (macroseismic intensities up to the IX–X grade of the MSK scale) and extensive surface faulting (end-to-end rupture length up to 6 km, vertical offsets up to 90 cm). This clearly indicates very high modern rates of deformation along this fault. We conducted trench investigations at the Fondo Macchia site, in a point where eyewitnesses observed ca. 20 cm of coseismic vertical displacement after the April 21, 1971, , earthquake. The excavated sections provided direct stratigraphic evidence for a vertical slip-rate of 1.4–2.7 mm/yr in the last ca. 6 kyr. This should be regarded as a minimum slip-rate for the central section of the fault. We explored a single scarp at a single site, while we know from recent historical observations that several parallel scarps may rupture coseismically at Fondo Macchia. Thus, the relevant deformation rate documented for the modern period might be likely extended back in the past to a time-span of some thousands of years at least. As expected, for such a volcanic environment, the activity rates of the Moscarello fault are also significantly higher than for the Apennines normal faults, typically showing slip-rates lower than 1 mm/yr. The agriculturally reworked trench hangingwall stratigraphy did not allow to recognize individual displacement events. Nevertheless, the sedimentary structures observed in the trench footwall strongly suggest that, as for the last 150–200 years of detailed historical record, fault behavior at Fondo Macchia is governed by coseismic surface displacement rather than fault creep. This research confirms that paleoseismology techniques can be effectively applied also in active volcanic environments, typically characterized by rheology and, consequently, seismicity and fault dynamics very different from those of other tectonic environments in which paleoseismology has been firstly developed and is today extensively applied.


Natural Hazards | 1995

The Pollina (northern Sicily-Italy) earthquake of 26 June 1993: an application of the new European Macroseismic Scale 1992

Raffaele Azzaro; Maria Serafina Barbano

The new European Macroseismic Scale 1992 (EMS) is applied to intensity estimation of data collected in field investigations of the 26 June 1993 Pollina (northern Sicily) earthquake and the results are compared with those obtained using the MSK-81 scale. The highest intensity estimated (VI–VII) fits with the low magnitude value (ML = 4.7) and the low resistance level of buildings is responsible for some unexpected severe damage, thus raising the seismic vulnerability of the area. The tectonic framework shows significant elements of recent activity accounting for the frequent seismicity. The study also evaluated the validity of using vulnerability classes of buildings as defined in the EMS scale in the intensity assessment of historical earthquakes of the area.


Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences | 2017

When probabilistic seismic hazard climbs volcanoes: the Mt Etna case, Italy. Part I: model components for sources parametrization

Raffaele Azzaro; Graziella Barberi; Salvatore D'Amico; Bruno Pace; Laura Peruzza; Tiziana Tuvè

The volcanic region of Mt. Etna (Sicily, Italy) represents a perfect lab for testing innovative approaches to seismic hazard assessment. This is largely due to the long record of historical and recent observations of seismic and tectonic phenomena, the high quality of various geophysical monitoring and particularly the rapid geodynamics clearly demonstrate some seismotectonic processes. We present here the model components and the procedures adopted for defining seismic sources to be used in a new generation of probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA), the first results and maps of which are presented in a companion paper, Peruzza et al. (2017). The sources include, with increasing complexity, seismic zones, individual faults and gridded point sources that are obtained by integrating geological field data with long and short earthquake datasets (the historical macroseismic catalogue, which covers about 3 centuries, and a highquality instrumental location database for the last decades). The analysis of the frequency–magnitude distribution identifies two main fault systems within the volcanic complex featuring different seismic rates that are controlled essentially by volcano-tectonic processes. We discuss the variability of the mean occurrence times of major earthquakes along the main Etnean faults by using an historical approach and a purely geologic method. We derive a magnitude–size scaling relationship specifically for this volcanic area, which has been implemented into a recently developed software tool – FiSH (Pace et al., 2016) – that we use to calculate the characteristic magnitudes and the related mean recurrence times expected for each fault. Results suggest that for the Mt. Etna area, the traditional assumptions of uniform and Poissonian seismicity can be relaxed; a time-dependent fault-based modeling, joined with a 3-D imaging of volcano-tectonic sources depicted by the recent instrumental seismicity, can therefore be implemented in PSHA maps. They can be relevant for the retrofitting of the existing building stock and for driving risk reduction interventions. These analyses do not account for regionalM > 6 seismogenic sources which dominate the hazard over long return times (≥ 500 years).


International Conference on Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics | 2017

From Seismic Input to Damage Scenario: An Example for the Pilot Area of Mt. Etna Volcano (Italy) in the KnowRISK Project

Raffaele Azzaro; Salvatore D 'Amico; Horst Langer; Fabrizio Meroni; Thea Squarcina; Giuseppina Tusa; Tiziana Tuvè; Rajesh Rupakhety

In this paper we present a multidisciplinary approach aimed at assessing seismic risk regarding non-structural damage. The study has been carried out in the framework of the European KnowRISK Project and focuses on the pilot area of Mt. Etna volcano (Italy). Both instrumental data and as well as macroseismic observations provide unique opportunities for testing innovative and classical approaches for assessing seismic risk. Starting from the seismic hazard analysis, we first identify a test site (Zafferana) affected by non-structural damage. We produce seismic scenarios based on macroseismic and ground-motion data and finally obtain the relevant risk map using the Italian census data to classify buildings into vulnerability classes and a model to predict damage distribution.


Archive | 2007

DBMI04, il database delle osservazioni macrosismiche dei terremoti italiani utilizzate per la compilazione del catalogo parametrico CPTI04

M. Stucchi; Romano Camassi; Andrea Rovida; Mario Locati; Emanuela Ercolani; Carlo Meletti; P. Migliavacca; Filippo Bernardini; Raffaele Azzaro


Annali Di Geofisica | 2000

Analysis of the seismicity of Southeastern Sicily: a proposed tectonic interpretation

Raffaele Azzaro; Maria Serafina Barbano


Natural Hazards | 1998

Environmental Hazard of Capable Faults: The Case of the Pernicana Fault (Mt. Etna, Sicily

Raffaele Azzaro; Luca Ferreli; Alessandro Maria Michetti; Leonello Serva; Eutizio Vittori


Archive | 2000

Macroseismic catalogue of Mt. Etna earthquakes from 1832 to 1998

Raffaele Azzaro; Maria Serafina Barbano; B. Antichi; Rosaria Rigano


Annals of Geophysics | 2006

The attenuation of seismic intensity in the Etna region and comparison with other Italian volcanic districts

Raffaele Azzaro; M. S. Barbano; Salvatore D 'Amico; Tiziana Tuvè

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Mario Locati

National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology

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Alessandra Maramai

National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology

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Gaetano Zonno

National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology

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