Back to Search Start Over

Exposure-based risk assessment and emergency management associated with the fallout of large clasts at Mount Etna

Authors :
Sara Osman
Corine Frischknecht
Simona Scollo
Costanza Bonadonna
Eduardo Rossi
Daniele Andronico
Raffaello Cioni
Source :
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, Vol 19, Pp 589-610 (2019), Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, Vol. 19, No 3 (2019) pp. 589-610
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2019.

Abstract

Fallout of ballistic blocks and bombs ejected from eruptive vents represents a well-known hazard in areas proximal to volcanoes (mostly  km from the vent). However, fallout of large clasts sedimenting from plume margins that extend to medial areas and have the potential to produce severe injuries to people and cause damage to infrastructure, is often overlooked. Recent eruptive events at Mount Etna (Italy) provide a clear example where large-clast fallout from plume margins (>5 cm) has posed a real threat both to the many visitors reaching the summit area and to local infrastructure, and, therefore, has been selected as a case study. To quantify this hazard, a new particle sedimentation model was calibrated with field data and then used for probabilistic hazard assessments. For a fully probabilistic scenario the hazard zone covered 72 km2 and included some 125 km of paths and roads, as well as 15 buildings. Evacuation on foot to a safe area was estimated at almost 4 h, but this could be reduced to less than 3 h if two shelters were provided. Our results show the importance of integrating probabilistic hazard analysis of large-clast fallout within effective strategies of risk management and reduction, especially in the case of volcanoes where visitors can reach the summit areas.

Details

ISSN :
16849981 and 15618633
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....782b12766e58b49bc0a300ed9122af3a