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Structural complexities and tectonic barriers controlling recent seismic activity of the Pollino area (Calabria-Lucania, Southern Italy) - constraints from stress inversion and 3D fault model building.

Authors :
Cirillo, Daniele
Totaro, Cristina
Lavecchia, Giusy
Orecchio, Barbara
de Nardis, Rita
Presti, Debora
Ferrarini, Federica
Bello, Simone
Brozzetti, Francesco
Source :
Solid Earth Discussions; 6/11/2021, p1-45, 45p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The integration of field geology and high-resolution seismological data allowed us to reconstruct the 3D Fault Model of the sources which gave rise to the 2010-2014 Pollino seismic sequence. The model is constrained at the surface by structural geological data which provide the true attitude of the single faults and their cross-cut relationships. At depth, the fault geometry was obtained using the distributions of selected high-quality relocated hypocenters. Relocations were carried out through a non-linear Bayloc algorithm, followed by the double-difference relative location method HypoDD, applied to a 3D P-wave velocity model. Geological and seismological data converge in describing an asymmetric active extensional fault system characterized by an E to NNE-dipping low-angle detachment, with its high-angle synthetic splays, and SW- to WSW-dipping, high-angle antithetic faults. The cluster of hypocenters and the peculiar time-space evolution of the seismic activity highlight that two sub-parallel WSW-dipping seismogenic sources, namely the Rotonda-Campotenese and Morano-Piano di Ruggio faults activated during the seismic crisis. By applying to the activated structures the appropriate earthquake-scaling relationships, based on fault length and fault area, we infer that the maximum expected magnitudes calculated using the fault area are the more reliable. We estimated M<subscript>w</subscript> = 6.4 for the Rotonda-Campotenese and M<subscript>w</subscript> = 6.2 for the Morano-Piano di Ruggio deducing that both the faults did not release their seismic potential during the 2010-2014 seismic sequence. The size of the activated patches, reconstructed by projecting on the 3D seismogenic fault planes the early aftershocks of the seismicity clusters, are consistent with the observed magnitude of the associate strongest events. Finally, we point out that the western segment of the Pollino Fault, despite not being presently active, acts as a barrier to the southern propagation of the Rotonda-Campotenese and Morano-Piano di Ruggio faults, limiting their dimensions and seismogenic potential. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18699537
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Solid Earth Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150883080
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/se-2021-76