2005
DOI: 10.1785/0120040219
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Effect of Local Geology on Ground Motion in the City of Palermo, Italy, as Inferred from Aftershocks of the 6 September 2002 Mw 5.9 Earthquake

Abstract: On 6 September 2002 a M w 5.9 earthquake occurred in the southern Tyrrhenian sea, 40 km off the coast of Palermo (Italy). In the days after the mainshock, eight temporary stations were installed in the city to record aftershocks on different geological formations. Seismograms of about 30 earthquakes with magnitude Ն2.8 are analyzed. The data analysis confirms the role of near-surface geology in causing locally significant variations of the ground-shaking level as already inferred by Guidoboni et al. (2003) fro… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…They are covered by residual soil, with depth ranging from 10 to 60 m. The JF consists of sedimentary rocks of Upper Triassic and lower to middle Jurassic age. The observed vibration properties of structures integrate all the complexity of these structures including the load bearing system, heavy and stiff nonstructural elements, weather [17], and also soil-structure interaction [18][19][20]. The OA consists of loose sand and fine gravel with silt and clay lenses.…”
Section: Singapore Geologymentioning
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…They are covered by residual soil, with depth ranging from 10 to 60 m. The JF consists of sedimentary rocks of Upper Triassic and lower to middle Jurassic age. The observed vibration properties of structures integrate all the complexity of these structures including the load bearing system, heavy and stiff nonstructural elements, weather [17], and also soil-structure interaction [18][19][20]. The OA consists of loose sand and fine gravel with silt and clay lenses.…”
Section: Singapore Geologymentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Thus, the results of the ratio between the horizontal and vertical spectral will eventually have the effects of attenuation and source eliminated. Di Giulio et al [20] performed measurements on the top, at the base, and half building height away from the buildings at the southern Tyrrhenian Sea, 40 km off the coast of Palermo. Castro et al [22] used the method to estimate the characteristic frequency of vibration of two dams located in Southern Italy, using spectral amplitude of 13 local earthquakes recorded by three-component digital stations installed on top of the dams and on the free field.…”
Section: Data Processingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In fact, several studies have evidenced structure-soil interaction, which may perturb H/V studies (e.g. Guéguen 2000; Chavez-Garcia and Cardenas-Soto 2002; Gallipoli et al 2004;Dunand 2005;Cornou et al 2005;Di Giulio et al 2005). However, unlike influence from other experimental conditions it is a real interaction and other peak frequencies may appear on the H/V curves due to structure-soil interaction.…”
Section: P4-conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This paper presents results for building periods and damping for 80 full-scale buildings in Italy, measured from ambient vibration data using different estimation techniques. To compare the results obtained with microtremor measurements with those of earthquakes, we used four different techniques: horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR [14][15][16]), standard spectral ratio (SSR [17]), non-parametric damping analysis (NonPaDAn [18]) and half bandwidth method (HBW [19]). The simple inspection of FFT transform at a single point could be misleading: fixed-frequency anthropic noise could propagate inside small buildings and can be considered as a structural mode.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%