Títol
Probabilistic seismic hazard assessment of the Pyrenean region
Autor/s
Secanell Gallard, Ramon; et al.,
Any
2008
Mes
-
Tesi universitat lectura
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Universitat de lectura
Tesi director
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Tesi codirector
-
Títol de la revista
Journal of seismology
Pàgines
323-341
Volum de la revista
12
Numero revista
-
Idioma
Anglès
ISBN / ISSN
-
Titol obra
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Editorial obra
-
Llocpub Obra
-
DOI
-

Accés text complet en obert
Paraules clau
Seismic hazard, Monte Carlo, Probabilistic, Seismic zonation, France, Spain, Andorra

Resum
(ENG) A unified probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA) for the Pyrenean region has been performed by an international team composed of experts from Spain and France during the Interreg IIIA ISARD project. It is motivated by incoherencies between the seismic hazard zonations of the design codes of France and Spain and by the need for input data to be used to define earthquake scenarios. A great effort was invested in the homogenisation of the input data. All existing seismic data are collected in a database and lead to a unified catalogue using a local magnitude scale. PSHA has been performed using logic trees combined with Monte Carlo simulations to account for both epistemic and aleatory uncertainties. As an alternative to hazard calculation based on seismic sources zone models, a zoneless method is also used to produce a hazard map less dependant on zone boundaries. Two seismogenic source models were defined to take into account the different interpretations existing among specialists. A new regional ground-motion prediction equation based on regional data has been proposed. It was used in combination with published ground-motion prediction equations derived using European and Mediterranean data. The application of this methodology leads to the definition of seismic hazard maps for 475- and 1,975-year return periods for spectral accelerations at periods of 0 (corresponding to peak ground acceleration), 0.1, 0.3, 0.6, 1 and 2 s. Median and percentiles 15% and 85% acceleration contour lines are represented. Finally, the seismic catalogue is used to produce a map of the maximum acceleration expected for comparison with the probabilistic hazard maps. The hazard maps are produced using a grid of 0.1°. The results obtained may be useful for civil protection and risk prevention purposes in France, Spain and Andorra.