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IUGG XXIV General Assembly July 2-13, 2007 Perugia, Italy<br />

(S) - <strong>IASPEI</strong> - International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earth's<br />

Interior<br />

JSS015 Poster presentation 2338<br />

Crustal structure and stress field for southern Apennines region from local<br />

earthquakes<br />

Dr. Annalisa Romeo<br />

Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche Universit di Napoli Federico II, RISSC-Lab<br />

Giuseppe Pasquale, Raffaella De Matteis, Giovanni Iannaccone, Aldo Zollo<br />

The Southern Apennines is one of the Italian areas characterized by most intense geodynamic activity;<br />

as evidenced by the seismic catalogues in historical time it was strucked by several destructive<br />

earthquakes (Boschi et al.,1998). The most recent one occurred on 1980, 23 november, M 6.9,<br />

producing more than 3000 casualties and extended damages in all the region. Nowadays the seismic<br />

activity is characterized by low-moderate earthquakes. In this work we present a three-dimensional P-<br />

wave velocity crustal model of Southern Apennines region using travel time of local earthquakes. In this<br />

model we re-localize the earthquakes and then we compute the focal mechanisms in order to estimate<br />

the stress field acting in the area.In order to obtain a 3D velocity model we merged the data collected<br />

from 1988 to 2003 by Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) network (Italian National<br />

Seismic Network) with arrival time of aftershocks of 1980 M 6.9 Irpinia earthquake recorded by a<br />

temporary network. Only the earthquakes which were recorded at least eight stations were considered<br />

and the final database consist of 1196 earthquakes with 15500 P and 7000 S arrival time readings.We<br />

used the linearized, iterative tomographic approach proposed by Benz et al. (1996), which allows<br />

inversion of local earthquakes first-arrival travel-time to solve simultaneous velocity model parameters<br />

and hypocentral parameters.The iterative technique takes into account the nonlinearity of the problem<br />

but in each iteration the method is based on a linear approach. This means that the starting model will<br />

influence the inversion process. In order to avoid falling in a local minimum, the final velocity model was<br />

obtained as the mean of the 250 velocity values assumed by each cell in the 3D inversions performed<br />

with different 1D reference models randomly generated in a selected range. Uncertainty associated to<br />

the velocity value for each cell has been analyzed and the model resolution has been evaluated through<br />

a standard checkerboard test.In order to give an improved representation of the seismicity pattern, we<br />

have re-localized the 1196 earthquakes in the 3D final velocity model using a probabilistic, non-linear,<br />

global-search earthquake location method (NonLinLoc code, Lomax et al., 2000). The relocated<br />

seismicity is shifted eastward caused by a low velocity zone in the eastern part of the investigated area.<br />

It is clustered around the system fault of the 1980 Irpinia earthquake and have a depth ranging<br />

between 0-20 km.For the computation of best fit double-couple focal mechanisms we used the faultplane<br />

fit grid-search algorithm (FPFIT) of Reasemberg & Oppenheir (1985). Restrictions are place on<br />

the minimum number of first arrival polarities (six polarities), maximum acceptable RMS residual (≤ 0.5<br />

s) and maximum values for ERX (≤ 0.8 km), ERY (≤ 0.8 km), ERZ (≤ 0.8 km) and gap ≤ 180. The<br />

FPFIT algorithm computes the orientation of the P and T axes, but there is no correspondence between<br />

P and T axes and the principal stress orientations. With the purpose of investigating the stress field in<br />

this region, we applied the Michael (1984) procedure to our data set of fault-plane solutions. It<br />

computes the best uniform stress field for the dataset and meaningful confidence regions using a<br />

statistical tool known as bootstrap resampling. Stress inversion shows a nearly horizontal NE-SW<br />

minimum compressive stress axis (σ3), while maximum compressive axis (σ1) is vertical. This result<br />

reveals that Southern Apennines is generally ongoing through NE-SW extension, as evidenced by the<br />

fault-plane solutions of major earthquakes occurring along the Apenninic Belt.<br />

Keywords: tomography, stress field, focal mechanism

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