6533b82efe1ef96bd129277c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Integration of HVSR measures and stratigraphic constraints for seismic microzonation studies: the case of Oliveri (ME)

P. Di StefanoDario LuzioAntonino D'alessandroGiuseppe ZarconeNicola MessinaRaffaele MartoranaSimona TodaroPatrizia CapizziPietro RendaGiuseppe Napoli

subject

geographySeismic microzonationgeography.geographical_feature_categoryHVSRSettore GEO/02 - Geologia Stratigrafica E SedimentologicaBedrockInversion (geology)BoreholemicrotremorMicrozonationAmplitudeSeismic hazardSettore GEO/11 - Geofisica ApplicataRange (statistics)Cluster analysisSeismologyGeology

description

Abstract. Because of its high seismic hazard the urban area of Oliveri has been subject of first level seismic microzonation. The town develops on a large coastal plain made of mixed fluvial/marine sediments, overlapping a complexly deformed substrate. In order to identify points on the area probably suffering relevant site effects and define a preliminary Vs subsurface model for the first level of microzonation, we performed 23 HVSR measurements. A clustering technique of continuous signals has been used to optimize the calculation of the HVSR curves. 42 reliable peaks of the H/V spectra in the frequency range 0.6–10 Hz have been identified. A second clustering technique has been applied to the set of 42 vectors, containing Cartesian coordinates, central frequency and amplitude of each peak to identify subsets which can be attributed to continuous spatial phenomena. The algorithm has identified three main clusters that cover significant parts of the territory of Oliveri. The HVSR data inversion has been constrained by stratigraphic data of a borehole. To map the trend of the roof of the seismic bedrock, from the complete set of model parameters only the depth of the seismic interface that generates peaks fitting those belonging to two clusters characterized by lower frequency has been extracted. The reconstructed trend of the top of the seismic bedrock highlight its deepening below the mouth of the Elicona Torrent, thus suggesting the possible presence of a buried paleo-valley.

10.5194/nhessd-2-2597-2014http://hdl.handle.net/10447/91123