21 results on '"Pirrotta, Claudia"'
Search Results
2. New discovery of an ancient building in Akragas (Valley of Temples, Agrigento, Italy) through the integration of geophysical surveys
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Imposa, Sebastiano, Grassi, Sabrina, Morreale, Gabriele, Pirrotta, Claudia, Cavalier, Laurence, Gilotti, Angelo, Giuliano, Dario, Cayre, Emilie, and Caliò, Luigi M.
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- 2024
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3. Vibration Analysis at Castello Ursino Picture Gallery (Sicily, Italy) for the Implementation of Self-Generating AlN-MEMS Sensors.
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Pirrotta, Claudia, Gueli, Anna M., Imposa, Sebastiano, Salerno, Giuliano A., and Trigona, Carlo
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ELECTRIC power , *ENERGY levels (Quantum mechanics) , *ENERGY harvesting , *ALUMINUM nitride , *KINETIC energy - Abstract
This work explores the potential of self-powered MEMS devices for application in the preventive conservation of cultural heritage. The main objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of piezoelectric aluminum nitride MEMS (AlN-MEMS) for monitoring vibrations and to investigate its potential for harvesting energy from vibrations, including those induced by visitors. A preliminary laboratory comparison was conducted between AlN-MEMS and the commercial device Tromino®. The study was then extended to the Picture Gallery of Ursino Castle, where joint measurements with the two devices were carried out. The analysis focused on identifying natural frequencies and vibrational energy levels by key metrics, including spectral peaks and the Power Spectral Density (PSD). The results indicated that the response of the AlN-MEMS aligned well with the data collected by the commercial device, especially observing high vibrational energy around 100 Hz. Such results validate the potential of AlN-MEMS for effective vibration measurement and for converting kinetic energy into electrical power, thereby eliminating the need for external power sources. Additionally, the vibrational analysis highlighted specific locations, such as the measurement point Cu4, as exhibiting the highest vibrational energy levels. These points could be used for placing MEMS sensors to ensure efficient vibration monitoring and energy harvesting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. A Reappraisal of Seismicity and Eruptions of Pantelleria Island and the Sicily Channel (Italy)
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Spampinato, Salvatore, Ursino, Andrea, Barbano, Maria Serafina, Pirrotta, Claudia, Rapisarda, Salvatore, Larocca, Graziano, and Platania, Pier Raffaele
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- 2017
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5. Seismic Soil–Structure Interaction of Three Historical Buildings at the University of Catania (Sicily, Italy)
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Grassi, Sabrina, primary, Barbano, Maria Serafina, additional, Pirrotta, Claudia, additional, Morreale, Gabriele, additional, and Imposa, Sebastiano, additional
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- 2022
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6. Reappraisal and Analysis of Macroseismic Data for Seismotectonic Purposes: The Strong Earthquakes of Southern Calabria, Italy.
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Andrenacci, Carlo, Bello, Simone, Barbano, Maria Serafina, de Nardis, Rita, Pirrotta, Claudia, Pietrolungo, Federico, and Lavecchia, Giusy
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DATA analysis ,EARTHQUAKES ,LEGAL literature ,GEOPHYSICS ,EARTH scientists ,EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis ,NEOTECTONICS ,GEOLOGY - Abstract
In tectonically active areas, such as the Italian peninsula, studying the faults responsible for strong earthquakes is often challenging, especially when the earthquakes occurred in historical times. In such cases, geoscientists need to integrate all the available information from historical reports, surface geology, and geophysics to constrain the faults responsible for the earthquakes from a seismotectonic point of view. In this paper, we update and review, according to the EMS-98 scale, the macroseismic fields of the five main events of the 1783 Calabria sequence (5, 6, and 7 February, 1 and 28 March, M
w 5.9 to 7.1), two other destructive events within the same epicentral area of the 1783 sequence (1791, Mw 6.1 and 1894, Mw 6.1), plus the Messina Strait 1908 earthquake (Mw 7.1). For the 1783 seismic sequence, we also elaborate an updated and new catalog of coseismic effects. The new macroseismic fields were analyzed using a series of MATLAB algorithms to identify (1) the unitarity of the field or its partitioning in sub-sources and (2) the field and sub-fields' main elongation. A collection of earthquake scale laws from literature was used to compute the average source parameters (length, width, and area) with their range of variability, and an elliptical map-view representation of the source geometry was calculated and made available. The analyses of such data allow us to speculate on the earthquakes/faults association, as well as propose new interpretations and reconstruct the space–time evolution of the significant southern Calabria seismic sequences in the last five centuries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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7. Geomorphological and Morphometric Analyses of the Catanzaro Trough (Central Calabrian Arc, Southern Italy): Seismotectonic Implications
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Pirrotta, Claudia, primary, Parrino, Nicolò, additional, Pepe, Fabrizio, additional, Tansi, Carlo, additional, and Monaco, Carmelo, additional
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- 2022
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8. Analysis of deformation structures in Pliocene and Quaternary deposits of the Hyblean Plateaux (south-eastern Sicily)
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Pirrotta, Claudia and Barbano, Maria Serafina
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- 2011
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9. Landslide triggers along volcanic rock slopes in eastern Sicily (Italy)
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Barbano, Maria Serafina, Pappalardo, Giovanna, Pirrotta, Claudia, and Mineo, Simone
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- 2014
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10. Recent Activity and Kinematics of the Bounding Faults of the Catanzaro Trough (Central Calabria, Italy): New Morphotectonic, Geodetic and Seismological Data
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Pirrotta, Claudia, primary, Barberi, Graziella, additional, Barreca, Giovanni, additional, Brighenti, Fabio, additional, Carnemolla, Francesco, additional, De Guidi, Giorgio, additional, Monaco, Carmelo, additional, Pepe, Fabrizio, additional, and Scarfì, Luciano, additional
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- 2021
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11. The response of drainage basins to the late Quaternary tectonics in the Sicilian side of the Messina Strait (NE Sicily)
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Guarnieri, Pierpaolo and Pirrotta, Claudia
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- 2008
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12. Materiali per una storia sismica delle Isole Maltesi
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Barbano, Maria Serafina, Castelli, Viviana, Galea, Pauline, and Pirrotta, Claudia
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Terremoti ,Sismicità storica ,Isole Maltesi ,Earthquakes ,Historical seismicity ,Maltese Islands - Abstract
We present the results of an ItalianMaltese research, carried out to collect the macroseismic data needed to update the seismic catalogue of the Maltese Islands [Galea, 2007]. In this work we adopted the most uptodate criteria developed by Italian historical seismology, obtaining results that significantly improve knowledge, particularly for the 16501923 timewindow. Several previously unknown local earthquakes have been identified and evidence has been found of earthquake damage caused to the Maltese Islands both by earthquakes probably located in the Sicilian Channel (1658, 1780, 1861), and by some strong Greek earthquakes (1756, 1810, 1846). The European macroseismic scale 1998 (EMS98, Grünthal [1998]) was used to assign macroseismic intensities. Basic information on seismic induced natural phenomena (landslides, tsunamis) was also collected, to be used as a further constraint on the location and size of associated earthquakes, or for paleoseismological studies. As an added bonus, the study collected evidence of some Sicilian earthquakes unknown to seismological literature and data useful to improve the macroseismic database of already known Sicilian and Greek earthquakes., Presentiamo i risultati di una ricerca italomaltese svolta per raccogliere i dati macrosismici occorrenti per aggiornare il catalogo sismico delle Isole Maltesi [Galea, 2007]. Il lavoro ha seguito i più aggiornati criteri messi a punto dalla sismologia storica italiana ottenendo risultati che migliorano sensibilmente le conoscenze specialmente per la finestra cronologica 16501923. Sono stati individuati diversi eventi sismici locali finora non catalogati e almeno 6 segnalazioni di effetti di danno precedentemente sconosciuti, causati nelle Isole Maltesi sia da terremoti probabilmente localizzati nel Canale di Sicilia (1658, 1780, 1861), sia da alcuni forti terremoti greci (1756, 1810, 1846). Le intensità macrosismiche sono state assegnate mediante la scala macrosismica europea 1998 (EMS98,Grünthal [1998]). Sono state inoltre raccolte informazioni di base su fenomeni naturali sismoindotti (frane, tsunami), da utilizzare come ulteriore vincolo all'ubicazione e alle dimensioni dei terremoti associati o per studi paleosismologici. Un risultato collaterale dello studio è la riscoperta di alcuni terremoti siciliani sconosciuti alla letteratura sismologica e il miglioramento della base di dati macrosismici su terremoti siciliani e greci già conosciuti.
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- 2021
13. A Reappraisal of the 1968 Valle Del Belice Seismic Sequence (Western Sicily): A case study of Intensity Assessment with Cumulated Damage Effects
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Azzaro, Raffaele, primary, Barbano, Maria Serafina, additional, Tertulliani, Andrea, additional, and Pirrotta, Claudia, additional
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- 2019
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14. Materiali per un catalogo di eruzioni di Vulcano e di terremoti delle isole Eolie e della Sicilia nord-orientale (secc. XV-XIX)
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Barbano, Maria Serafina, Castelli, Viviana, and Pirrotta, Claudia
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eruzioni ,Vulcano, eruptions, earthquakes ,Vulcano ,eruptions ,earthquakes ,terremoti - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a historical study carried out in the frame of Task 12 of the V3 INGV-DPC Project “Multi-disciplinary analysis of the relationships between tectonic structures and volcanic activity”. The aim of the study was to collect historical data with which to compile an integrated catalogue of the eruptions occurred on the Vulcano island and the earthquakes located in the area of the Aeolian Islands, the Gulf of Patti and the north-eastern Sicilian coast. Before the study, the amount of knowledge on Vulcano historical eruptions and Aeolian seismicity was both poor and based on very old studies (the latest was published in 1922), while the historical earthquakes of north-eastern Sicily have been studied in the last thirty years. This study collected more than 200 historical descriptions written between the 15th and 19th centuries, whose consultation leads to the identification of about 100 earthquakes (almost a third of which were unknown to previous studies, of 20 eruptions occurred on the Vulcano island (mostly known to previous studies, but in some cases either doubtful or wholly fictitious) and also a few traces of Stromboli volcanic events, though these latter had not been searched for in a systematic way. The study includes a catalogue of Volcano eruptions of the 1407-1899 period and provides for each studied event a synopsis of the effected investigation and its results, with a table of the macroseismic intensities and the transcription of the available historical information on the studied event., Questo lavoro presenta i risultati di una ricerca storica svolta nell’ambito del Task 12 del Progetto V3 INGVDPC “Multi-disciplinary analysis of the relationships between tectonic structures and volcanic activity” per raccogliere i dati storici con cui compilare un catalogo integrato delle eruzioni di Vulcano e dei terremoti localizzati nell’area delle isole Eolie e della Sicilia nord-orientale-Golfo di Patti. Le conoscenze sulle eruzioni di Vulcano e la sismicità eoliana storiche sono lacunose e datate (lo studio più recente è del 1922) mentre la sismicità dell’area siciliana nord-orientale è stata oggetto di più studi nell’ultimo trentennio. Sono state raccolte più di 200 testimonianze storiche dei secoli XV-XIX che hanno permesso di individuare circa 100 terremoti (per un terzo sconosciuti agli studi precedenti) e 20 eruzioni di Vulcano (la maggior parte già conosciute ma in alcuni casi dubbie o false) e – in maniera non sistematica – anche tracce dell’attività di Stromboli. È stato compilato un catalogo delle eruzioni di Vulcano per il periodo 1407-1899 e, per ciascun evento studiato, una scheda descrittiva della ricerca svolta e dei risultati ottenuti corredati dalla tabella delle intensità macrosismiche e dalle trascrizioni delle relative testimonianze storiche.
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- 2017
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15. What we know about the earthquakes located around the Gulf of Patti?
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Barbano, Maria Serafina and Pirrotta, Claudia
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- 2016
16. Evidence of active tectonics in Southern Calabria (Italy) by geomorphic analysis: the examples of the Catona and Petrace rivers
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Pirrotta, Claudia, primary, Barbano, Maria Serafina, primary, and Monaco, Carmelo, primary
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- 2016
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17. Morphometric analysis of the western Aspromonte Mts. (southern Calabria, Italy): evidence for active tectonics
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Pirrotta, Claudia, Barbano, Maria Serafina, and Monaco, Carmelo Giovanni
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- 2013
18. Paleoseismological off- fault analyses in eastern Sicily: a contribute to the characterization of seismic sources
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Pirrotta, Claudia
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Earthquake geology ,Paleoseismology ,Tsunami deposits - Abstract
In this thesis a paleoseismological off-fault research, consisting in the analysis and dating of seismogeological effects triggered by both historical and paleo- earthquakes (seismites), was performed. Off-fault paleoseismology results particularly useful in areas, like Sicily, where the seismogenic sources are scantly defined and so they can't be directly investigated by onfault researches. Indeed, even if this study does not provide precise and direct information on the seismogenic fault and the earthquake parameters (magnitude, intensity, fault length and elapsed time), however, it can supply useful information on the epicentral distance of the site where the effects developed, the earthquake magnitude threshold and the intensity reached at the site. Moreover, the finding of structures dated before the historical records can be useful to extend the seismic catalogues back in time. Sicily was affected by strong earthquakes among the most disastrous of the seismic Italian history, with intensity Io up to XI (MCS) and equivalent moment magnitude Mw up to 7 (CPTI04, Working Group 2004). The northeastern sector was destroyed by the 1908 Messina Strait earthquake and also suffered for seismic events located in southern Calabria, such as the 1783 seismic sequence. The southeastern sector was hit by the 1169 and the January 11th 1693 earthquakes and by other minor, however damaging, events such as the 1542 one. Western Sicily suffered a destructive seismic sequence started on January 13th 1968. Nevertheless, the seismogenic sources of these earthquakes are not well constrained because they occurred in pre-instrumental time and without clear evidence of surface faulting. Recently, different seismogenic source models have been proposed on the basis of geological and geomorphological evidences, historical and instrumental seismicity data and macroseismic intensity analyses, but the debate is still opened. However, these strong earthquakes triggered several geological effects described by the historical accounts, such as landslides, liquefactions, ground deformations and fracturing, hydrological anomalies and tsunamis characterized by waves that damaged the cities along the eastern coast of Sicily. Then, given its critic seismicity and its millenary historical memory, Sicily is an optimal laboratory to test different paleoseimological off fault methods. This work was undertaken with the main aim on a side of providing new and useful data to better define the eastern Sicily seismicity, on the other side to test original multidisciplinary approaches in a region where this kind of investigations are scarce. Indeed, off-fault paleoseismology is a young and yet few tested discipline of Earthquake Geology. For this reason there is not a unique technique of investigation, instead methods need severe testing and systematization and every study case requires a specific approach related to the site conditions and to the seismite typology. The performed research follows two different main lines: first the examination of the regional seismicity and of the historical accounts has been performed; then a multi-theme research was carried out in field to investigate directly the seismites. The Italian historical bibliography reporting seismogeological effects in Sicily (original sources and previous seismic catalogues) has been analyzed. Descriptions of effects such as landslides, ground deformations, liquefactions, hydrological anomalies have been collected in a georeferenziated database embodying all the information about the causative event, as well. Interactive maps of effects distribution have been realized by the use of Gis software. These data have been also used to define empirical relationships between earthquake parameters (intensity and magnitude) and epicentral distance of the sites where the effects occurred. Then, upper bound-curves, at regional scale, have been realized. This step of the research highlighted that Sicily is a region highly prone to the seismogeological effect development, especially as it regards landslides and ground deformations, mainly clustered in the eastern flank of Mt. Etna and in the northern sector of the region characterized by critical geological and structural setting. Whereas, liquefactions and hydrological anomalies occurred more numerous in areas with specific geological and hydrological features (Belice Valley and Catania Plain). Upper bound-curve graphs also showed that seismic parameters of some events could be misinterpreted, such as the magnitude of the 1823 earthquake (M = 5.87) that could be underestimated, while the new value proposed in the literature (M = 6.7) seems to be more plausible. The same analysisindicated the happening of possible site amplifications and/or exceptional site response during some events as showed by effects occurred at unexpected long epicentral distance at Messina during the 1783 earthquake and at Calatafimi (Trapani) for the 1693 event. Off-fault paleoseimological field study was focused to the finding and examination of liquefaction- induced deformations and tsunami deposits, because their investigation in field results easier than other effects. Indeed, liquefaction structures and tsunamiites remain in the sedimentary sequence as marker of seismicity and tsunami inundations; they have well defined features and take place in areas with specific characteristics, easily recognizable after geological and geomorphological surveys. On the contrary, for instance, hydrological anomalies are transitory phenomena and seismic landslides are not well differentiable from no seismic ones. Hence, after a critical examination of the historical data indicating the localities where these effects occurred during past earthquakes, fluvial and coastal areas of eastern Sicily have been chosen. A further selection was performed using satellite imagines and aerial photos and by geological and geomorphological field surveys, aimed to define the most prone areas. In three sites (Minissale, Agnone and Vendicari) field study allowed to investigate deformational patterns linked to liquefaction mechanism. In other sites (Augusta, Pantano Morghella, Capo Campolato, Vendicari and San Lorenzo) probable tsunami deposits, both sand and boulder accumulations, were found. As it regards the examination of deformational pattern, the detailed investigation of their features and a paleo-environmental reconstruction have been performed to exclude other possible causative mechanisms different from the seismic one. In general, the method for distinguishing subsequent events is based on stratigraphic criteria and cross-cutting relationships. When possible radiocarbon dating has been carried out, on charcoals and bulks, to constrain the age of the structures and to associate them with historical or paleoearthquakes. At Minissale (eastern flank of Mt. Etna, central eastern Sicily) and Agnone (Catania Plain, central eastern Sicily) liquefaction structures have been detected on two artificial trench walls. In these sites a preliminary hand-auger coring campaign was also performedto characterize the stratigraphic sequence and to qualitatively evaluate the terrain liquefaction susceptibility. Then, the deformational patterns, consisting of lateral spreading, dikes, faults, drag folds, recumbent folds, sheet slumps, warped top levels and boudinage, have been studied by the square division method. Terrain samples have been collected for sedimentological and micro-paleontological investigations. Paleo-environmental reconstruction allowed to exclude other causative mechanisms and to associate these deformations to seismic shaking. Radiocarbon dating, combined with the upper bound curves, allowed to associate the seismites detected at Minissale site with the 1169 and 1693 earthquakes and those of the Agnone site with the 1542 and 1693 earthquakes. At Vendicari (southeastern Sicily) a singular association of structures, affecting terrains since Pliocene up to Quaternary age, has been detected. Besides soft sediment deformations (autoclastic breccias, diapyr-like injections and thyxotropic wedges), probably linked to liquefaction mechanisms, brittle deformations, consisting of fractures generally opened and filled by sediments (sedimentary dykes) have been found. Fractures have been examined by a mesostructural investigation and the detailed observation under the microscope of filling material thin sections, as well, to highlight possible relationships with the regional stress field. After a critical analysis of the forms and the paleo-environmental reconstruction, seismic shaking was proposed as the most probable cause of the deformation development. Fractures could be also linked to the regional tectonics characterized by an almost NW-SE trending' 1. The overall investigation of seismites at Vendicari highlighted at least four triggering seismic events, whose age is not precisely constrained given the lack of datable material. However, their finding mark that these events had magnitude greater than 5.0 and intensity greater than IX, that are the threshold values for which this pattern can trigger in the epicentral area. The tsunamiite study was undertaken both searching anomalous sandy deposits and examining boulder accumulations along the southeastern coast of Sicily, inland and offshore. This research required a multi-theme approach combining geological, geomorphological, paleontological, X-ray, petro-chemical, morphoscopic and magnetic examinations. Geophysical applications, analysing sonar chirp profiles, were a preciousinstrument to find deposits off-shore. In some cases wave transport equations were used jointly with statistical analysis in order to determine the extreme events' geological or meteorological' responsible for the deposition. At Augusta and Pantano Morghella (southeastern Sicily) anomalous sandy layers, whose analysis highlighted a tsunamigenic origin, were found into a fine sedimentary sequence. Augusta site probably recorded tree events inland but, given their old interval age, no correlation can be made with the historical record. Only the more recent level could be tentatively related to the 365 AD Crete tsunami. Eleven anomalous layers have been also found off-shore thanks to the geophysical investigation of sonar chirp profiles. The age of some of these layers well matches with some disastrous tsunamis that hit eastern Sicily in historical time (such as the 1169, the 1693 and the 1908 events) and with that coming from Eastern Mediterranean such as the 365 AD Crete tsunami and the event of Santorini (about 3600 BP). At Pantano Morghella three anomalous levels were found. Deep investigations on one of the layers highlighted that it can be ascribed to a tsunami and in particular to the 365 AD Crete one. Further investigations and dating are in progress to understand the tsunamigenic origin and to constrain the age of the further two levels. Boulder accumulations at Capo Campolato, Vendicari and San Lorenzo, were studied with the aim to distinguish if they were deposited by storm waves or tsunamis. This analysis showed that strong storms occurring in the Ionian Sea are capable to emplace large boulders on the coast but up to a given distance from the shoreline. Indeed, boulders very far from the shore seem to require more energetic waves, with periods longer than that of known storms, to be deposited. These waves could be extraordinary unknown storm waves or tsunamis. Dating on some very far boulders highlighted the occurrence of at least two different probable tsunami inundations. The first event could correspond to the 1169, the 1542 or the 1693 tsunami, the second inundation can be ascribed to the 1693 or the 1908 tsunami. The following research allowed to find evidences of both historical and paleoearthquakes and tsunamis in field. Results confirm the potentiality and usefulness of thepaleoseismological off- fault methods and their integration with further information, provided by ulterior studies, should help to better define the seismicity of Sicily. This thesis is divided in seven chapters. First a general definition of the geologic and tectonic setting of Sicily and of the seismic source models, proposed for the strongest earthquakes, are exposed (Chapter 1). Then, a brief treatise on paleoseismology and the investigation methods is provided (Chapters 2 and 3). Performed researches are discussed separately for each different approach, exposing methods and results in the Chapters 4, 5 and 6. Finally, in the Chapter 7 a summary and a discussion on the main matters of this thesis, the applicability and usefulness of this kind of researches are exposed, arguing on how they can contribute to the improving of the knowledge of the eastern Sicily seismicity.
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- 2011
19. Differentiating between boulders deposited by tsunamis and storm waves along the south-eastern Ionian coast of Sicily (Italy)
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Barbano, Maria Serafina, Gerardi, F, and Pirrotta, Claudia
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boulders ,tsunamis ,Sicily ,storms - Published
- 2011
20. Paleoseismic investigation of historical liquefaction along the Ionian coasts of Sicily
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Guarnieri, P, Pirrotta, Claudia, Barbano, Maria Serafina, DE MARTINI, P. M., Pantosti, D, Gerardi, F, and Smedile, A.
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Liquefaction Structures ,Paleoseismology ,Holocene Deposits ,Eastern Sicily - Published
- 2009
21. A new dataset and empirical relationships between magnitude/intensity and epicentral distance for liquefactions in central-eastern Sicily
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Pirrotta, Claudia, Barbano, Maria Serafina, Guarnieri, P, and Gerardi, F.
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seismo-induced effects ,liquefaction dataset ,magnitude-distance relationships ,geologic hazard ,Sicily - Published
- 2007
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