We provide a database of the coseismic geological surface effects following the Mw 6.5 Norcia earthquake that hit central Italy on 30 October 2016. This was one of the strongest seismic events to occur in Europe in the past thirty years, causing complex surface ruptures over an area of >400 km2. The database originated from the collaboration of several European teams (Open EMERGEO Working Group; about 130 researchers) coordinated by the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia. The observations were collected by performing detailed field surveys in the epicentral region in order to describe the geometry and kinematics of surface faulting, and subsequently of landslides and other secondary coseismic effects. The resulting database consists of homogeneous georeferenced records identifying 7323 observation points, each of which contains 18 numeric and string fields of relevant information. This database will impact future earthquake studies focused on modelling of the seismic processes in active extensional settings, updating probabilistic estimates of slip distribution, and assessing the hazard of surface faulting.
We provide a database of the coseismic geological surface effects following the Mw 6.5 Norcia earthquake that hit central Italy on 30 October 2016. This was one of the strongest seismic events to occur in Europe in the past thirty years, causing complex surface ruptures over an area of >400 km2. The database originated from the collaboration of several European teams (Open EMERGEO Working Group; about 130 researchers) coordinated by the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia. The observations were collected by performing detailed field surveys in the epicentral region in order to describe the geometry and kinematics of surface faulting, and subsequently of landslides and other secondary coseismic effects. The resulting database consists of homogeneous georeferenced records identifying 7323 observation points, each of which contains 18 numeric and string fields of relevant information. This database will impact future earthquake studies focused on modelling of the seismic processes in active extensional settings, updating probabilistic estimates of slip distribution, and assessing the hazard of surface faulting.
The central Apennines are characterized by high seismogenic potential, mostly due to shallow (5–15 km) normal-faulting earthquakes with magnitudes up to M 6.5-7 (ref. 1). The main driving mechanisms invoked for seismogenesis are the extensional regime and the large-scale uplift affecting the region since the Quaternary[2]. Analysis of geodetic data suggests that the axis of the central Apennines is undergoing NE-SW striking extension at a rate of ∼1–2.5 mm/yr[3], with relative vertical peak velocities of 2.5–3.0 mm/yr over ~100 km wavelengths[4]. Paleoseismic evidence[5] of surface faulting highlights the primary role in seismic activity played by a compound network of normal faults[6-8]. However, due to the tectonic complexity of the Apennines and the centennial/millennial recurrence times of the largest seismic events, only a few cases of clear surface faulting were documented systematically in Italy. The most relevant previously documented surface ruptures were the 1915 Mw 7.1 Avezzano[9-12] and the 1980 Mw 6.9 Campania-Basilicata earthquakes[13,14], both of which had ruptures that were several kilometres long and surface offsets of up to ∼1 m. In these events, modern advances in survey techniques including digital shared recording methods and photogrammetry (Structure from Motion) were not available. In both cases, the seismogenic significance of the extensive rupture length and surface offset in these earthquakes was only appreciated later through geologic, geomorphic, and paleoseismic studies. Before the events of 2016–2017, the central Apennines were struck by several normal-faulting earthquakes in the past thirty years. Two events ruptured the ground with offsets of a few centimetres: the Mw 6.0 (ref. 15) 1997 Colfiorito[16-18] and the Mw 6.1 (ref. 19) 2009 L’Aquila earthquakes[20,21].The 30 October 2016 Mw 6.5 earthquake (hereinafter Norcia earthquake) is the largest event in the seismic sequence[22,23] that began on the 24 August 2016 (hereinafter Amatrice earthquake), with an Mw 6.0 earthquake causing 299 fatalities and heavy damage in Amatrice and surrounding villages (Figure 1). Thousands of aftershocks including several M≥5 events (e.g. Mw 5.9 on 26 October, close to Visso) occurred along a >50 km-long fault system. Following the Amatrice earthquake, surface faulting was documented in detail along the ~5.2 km rupture length with an average of ~13 cm of displacement[24-26]. However only sparse surface data were collected from the 26 October event due to the very limited time before the following quake, and these data are inconclusive for the total rupture length and average displacement. The Norcia earthquake resulted in an impressive system of surface ruptures that overprinted those of the previous two main 2016 surface-faulting events mentioned above.
Figure 1
Geology of the 30 October 2016 Mw 6.5 Norcia earthquake area.
Simplified structural scheme of the central Apennines inner zone, showing the main Quaternary normal faults (black lines, tick on downthrown side), Miocene-Pliocene thrusts (blue lines), the location of the M>5 events of the 2016-2017 seismic sequence, together with their focal mechanisms (available at http://cnt.rm.ingv.it/tdmt). The thin red lines are the mapped coseismic surface ruptures following the 30 October 2015 Mw 6.5 Norcia earthquake along which the data on coseismic ruptures discussed in this paper have been collected.
The characterization of coseismic surface effects is crucial in earthquake geology, as it may unravel surface rupture propagated from seismogenic depth during the earthquake, its geometry and displacement amount. Such observations support studies on the mechanics of earthquake faulting, and are used to refine modelling of the seismic sources based on joint inversion of geophysical datasets (including strong motion recordings, GPS time-series and InSAR images).The EMERGEO Working Group of the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) coordinated the field surveys performed with the contribution of about 130 European earth scientists. This joint venture gave rise to the Open EMERGEO Working Group, the largest scientific collaborative effort following a big earthquake in Europe. This cooperation was necessary for several reasons: 1) the Norcia earthquake coseismic effects covered an area >400 km2 wide, with local elevations exceeding >2200 m a.s.l. (Sibillini Mts.); 2) the forthcoming winter required an urgent survey of freshly-exposed ruptures; 3) destruction throughout the epicentral region was so intense that any survey required a coordination by INGV under the agreement with the Italian Civil Protection. In this respect, we highlight how science, best products, best practices, and operations benefit enormously from the cooperation among experts, in particular within the European context.Surveys started within hours of the mainshock, aimed at documenting surface faulting and secondary coseismic phenomena[27]. This led to the recognition and mapping of the total extent of the surface ruptures, their geometry, kinematics and associated displacement. Here we summarize the most significant results in a concise and objective database, suitable for further studies.Surface-rupturing earthquakes provide new data for characterising earthquake scaling laws, which are fundamental for seismic hazard analyses. Compilations of historical and paleoseismic events relating magnitude with rupture length and displacement[28-30] can be increasingly improved with present-day observations. Our extensive and accurate database is essential in the perspective of better assessment of Fault Displacement Hazard and the building of an updated and worldwide database supporting this (INQUA project 2016–2019 SURFACE—SURface FAulting Catalogue Earthquakes; http://www.earthquakegeology.com/index.php?page=projects&s=4).
Methods
The survey of geological coseismic effects on the ground-surface following the Norcia earthquake was carried out according to classical morphotectonic and structural geology methods. Our approach focused on systematic surveys of the epicentral region searching for and documenting in detail any geomorphic feature related to coseismic surface displacement, such as: newly-formed ruptures affecting soils and loose deposits; fresh fault scarps; other indicators of tectonic disturbance such as hydrogeological anomalies directly or indirectly related to fault offset (spring discharge changes, stream deflections), or shaking (large landslides and mud volcanism). Figure 2 reports some representative pictures of the most important observed coseismic effects.
Figure 2
Examples of coseismic surface geological effects.
(a) “coseismic ribbon on bedrock”: detail of surface rupture along the Mt. Vettore fault with local throw exceeding 1.80 m (persons for scale; location 13.2545° E, 42.8172° N); (b) “coseismic rupture with offset”, here affecting unconsolidated soils (ruler for scale; approximate location: 13.2211° E, 42.8958° N); (c) “coseismic sliding”: huge coseismic rockfall along the western slope of Mt. Bove (trees for scale; helicopter view, approximate location 13.2586° E, 42.8467° N); “coseismic mud volcanism” (trees for scale; helicopter view, approximate location 13.521° E, 43.040° N).
The complete dataset in the present study was uploaded in the Pangaea repository (Data Citation 1): it is a TXT file (Villani-etal_2017.tab) consisting of 7323 records organized into 18 fields. Each record describes a single observation point. The fields have a name and a short name, and they are described as follows:ORDINAL NUMBER (short name: Ord No): integer type variable defining the object identifier;DATE/TIME (short name: date/Time): date type variable indicating the date of data collection, in the format yyyy-mm-dd;LATITUDE (short name: Latitude six decimal places): double type variable indicating the latitude of the observation, in decimal degrees (dd.mmmmmm) within a WGS_1984 Geographic Coordinate System;LONGITUDE (short name: Longitude; six decimal places): double type variable indicating the longitude of the observation point, in decimal degrees (dd.mmmmmm) within a WGS_1984 Geographic Coordinate System;ELEVATION (short name: Elevation; no decimal place): double type variable indicating the absolute elevation of the observation point in meters above the sea level; the elevation is extracted from a 10- m grid DEM described in the Methods Section;Observation (short name: Obs): text variable indicating the basic category of the geological surface effect observed; for simplicity, only six main categories are defined, as follows: “Coseismic rupture with offset” (ground break displaying a perceivable vertical offset of the ground surface >1 cm); “Coseismic fracture” (ground break with no perceivable vertical offset, i.e. << 1 cm); “Coseismic ribbon on bedrock” (fresh stripe running at the base of a bedrock fault scarp due to coseismic exhumation); “Coseismic slip vector” (lineation defining the coseismic net displacement occurred on a fault plane or along a ground break); “Coseismic sliding” (generic landslide of ascertained coseismic origin); “Coseismic mud volcanism” (mud volcanism phenomena related to the earthquake); “Coseismic dislocation” (warping of the ground surface with no perceivable fracturing);Rock type (short name: Rock): text type variable including the synthetic description of the lithological nature of the substratum where the coseismic effect was reported; the original note of the field operator has been slightly modified, simplified and/or translated from Italian or French to English;Angle (short name: Angle; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the angle of dip of a rupture or sliding surface, measured in degrees;Direction (short name: Direction; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the direction of dip of a rupture or sliding surface with respect to the North, measured in degrees;Strike (short name: Strike; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the azimuth angle of a rupture or sliding surface with respect to the North, measured in degrees;Length (short name: l; one decimal place): double type variable indicating the length measured in meters of a rupture or sliding surface;Opening (short name: Opening; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the aperture of a rupture or sliding surface measured in centimetres, orthogonal to the fracture walls;Throw (short name: Throw; one decimal place): double type variable indicating the vertical separation of a coseismic rupture measured in centimetres;Offset (short name: Offset; one decimal place): double type variable indicating the net displacement of a coseismic rupture evaluated directly on a bedrock fault plane or using piercing points when the rupture affects unconsolidated sediments measured in centimetres;Rake (short name: Rake; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the angle of the slip lineation on the fault plane measured in degrees (in the 0°-180° range): note that some geologists used the Aki and Richards[39] annotation, where normal motion is indicated with negative rake values;Vector (short name: Vec; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the direction of the slip lineation in degrees, measured clockwise with respect to the north (range 0°-360°);Vector (short name: Vec; no decimal places): double type variable indicating the plunge of the slip lineation in degrees, measured with respect to the horizontal (range 0°—90°);Group (short name: Group): text type variable indicating the geologists’ team who collected the data.Table 1 reports as an example six records from the database. Figure 3 shows the main geometric properties of the coseismic surface data, in order to provide a measure of the data partitioning and the occurrence of significant modal peaks in their frequency distribution. The pie diagram in Figure 3a displays a total of 6895 measurements of surface ruptures, subdivided in the following categories: 395 “coseismic fractures” (about 5.6%), 5503 “coseismic ruptures with offset” (about 79.8%) and 997 “coseismic ribbon on bedrock” (about 14.6%). A large sub-set of these measurements has azimuthal information. In particular, 4677 measurements of coseismic ruptures with offset indicate the occurrence of two directional peaks of strike at N135°-140° and N155°-160°, respectively (Figure 3b). Similarly, the strike of coseismic ribbons on bedrock (837 measurements) displays two modal peaks at N135°-140° and N145°-150°, respectively (Figure 3c), whereas the strike of coseismic fractures (279 measurements) displays one sharp peak at N135°-140° (Figure 3d). Thus, the large majority of the surface ruptures parallels the mapped strands of the VBFS, and the strike of the nodal planes of the focal mechanisms shown in Figure 1. Consistently with this geometric arrangement, the trend of the measured slip vectors (261 measurements; Figure 3e) displays two peaks at N55°-60° and at N230°-235°, which are almost at right angles to the surface ruptures. This indicates the occurrence of both SW-dipping and NE-dipping ruptures characterized by a dominant dip-slip motion.
Table 1
An example of 6 records extracted from the database.
Ord No
Date/Time
Latitude
Longitude
Elevation [m a.s.l.]
Obs
Rock
Angle [deg]
Direction [deg]
Strike [deg]
l [m]
Opening [cm]
Throw [cm]
Offset [m]
Rake [deg]
Vec [deg] (slip vector, trend)
Vec [deg] (slip vector, plunge)
Group
1485
2016-11-10
42.859138
13.206234
1453
Coseismic slip vector
Limestone/Debris
42
51
321
0.75
−85
44
42
Emergeo_WG
1486
2016-11-10
42.859258
13.205873
1430
Coseismic slip vector
Limestone/Debris
37
55
325
0.69
−95
61
37
Emergeo_WG
1485
2016-11-10
42.859138
13.206234
1453
Coseismic slip vector
Limestone/Debris
42
51
321
0.75
−85
44
42
Emergeo_WG
1486
2016-11-10
42.859258
13.205873
1430
Coseismic slip vector
Limestone/Debris
37
55
325
0.69
−95
61
37
Emergeo_WG
5770
2016-12-20
42.854591
13.101894
922
Coseismic rupture with offset
Soil/debris
90
45
315
12.6
5
1
ENEA
5771
2016-12-20
42.854605
13.10111
904
Coseismic rupture with offset
Soil/debris
85
248
158
1.5
16
16
ENEA
Figure 3
Statistical properties of the coseismic surface ruptures.
(a) pie diagram indicating the relative proportion of the main types of measured coseismic ruptures; (b) rose diagram of the coseismic ruptures with offset strike (bin size 5°); (c) rose diagram of the coseismic ribbons on bedrock strike (bin size 5°); (d) rose diagram of the coseismic fractures strike (bin size 5°); (e) rose diagram of the coseismic slip vectors trend; f) frequency plot histogram of the coseismic surface throw (bin size 2 cm); (g) frequency plot histogram of the coseismic surface opening (x-axis flipped, bin size 2 cm; note that the horizontal and vertical axes in panels f and g are scaled differently).
The two frequency histogram plots in Figures 3f and g indicate that measured surface throws and opening are characterized by complex multi-modal and strongly skewed distributions. The “coseismic ruptures with offset” have mean and maximum throw of 24 cm and 221 cm, respectively. The “coseismic ribbon on bedrock” measurements have an average and maximum throw of 69 cm and 260 cm, respectively. Overall, the surface ruptures affecting loose deposits and/or running at the base of bedrock fault planes have average and maximum throws of 31 cm and 260 cm, respectively. The frequency distribution of rupture opening has an average value of 17 cm and a maximum value of 182 cm.
How to cite this article: Villani F. et al. A database of the coseismic effects following the 30 October 2016 Norcia earthquake in Central Italy. Sci. Data 5:180049 doi: 10.1038/sdata.2018.49 (2018).Publisher’s note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Authors: Emanuele Tondi; Anna Maria Blumetti; Mišo Čičak; Pio Di Manna; Paolo Galli; Chiara Invernizzi; Stefano Mazzoli; Luigi Piccardi; Giorgio Valentini; Eutizio Vittori; Tiziano Volatili Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2021-04-28 Impact factor: 4.379
Authors: E Mandler; F Pintori; A Gualandi; L Anderlini; E Serpelloni; M E Belardinelli Journal: J Geophys Res Solid Earth Date: 2021-08-29 Impact factor: 4.390