Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc

The Carpathian Mountainsarc is the most seismically active area in Central Europe. Analysis of the seismicity of entire Carpathian arc requires data from each of the particular catalogues which have to be properly and uniformly entered, standardized and merged. For our study we first had to prepare...

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Main Authors: Braclawska Agnieszka, Idziak Adam Filip
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-11-01
Series:Open Geosciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0065
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spelling doaj-5dc374f15f1845a291671fc0dbbfe00f2021-09-05T20:50:50ZengDe GruyterOpen Geosciences2391-54472019-11-0111183784210.1515/geo-2019-0065geo-2019-0065Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arcBraclawska Agnieszka0Idziak Adam Filip1University of Silesia, Katowice, PolandUniversity of Silesia, Katowice, PolandThe Carpathian Mountainsarc is the most seismically active area in Central Europe. Analysis of the seismicity of entire Carpathian arc requires data from each of the particular catalogues which have to be properly and uniformly entered, standardized and merged. For our study we first had to prepare a database of seismic events (ML ≥ 1.6) compiled from the data of earthquakes taken from individual national seismic networks as well as data from international seismic centers. However, a careful review of these catalogues has uncovered significant inconsistencies, particularly discrepancies in the description of the location, magnitude and completeness of seismic events. To address these inconsistencies, a newly created compound earthquake catalogue was compiled from the aforementioned seismic catalogues and included events that occurred in the Carpathian Mountains arc area between 1976 and 2017. This work is intended to point out some of the problems associated with collecting data from various seismic catalogues as well as the need for their very careful verification, in order to create a uniform set of seismic data across a large area spanning numerous countries. The results suggest that compiling a uniform and dependable earthquake catalogue is crucial for reliable seismic studies.https://doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0065earthquakescarpathiansseismic cataloguesmagnitude
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Braclawska Agnieszka
Idziak Adam Filip
spellingShingle Braclawska Agnieszka
Idziak Adam Filip
Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc
Open Geosciences
earthquakes
carpathians
seismic catalogues
magnitude
author_facet Braclawska Agnieszka
Idziak Adam Filip
author_sort Braclawska Agnieszka
title Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc
title_short Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc
title_full Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc
title_fullStr Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc
title_full_unstemmed Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc
title_sort unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the carpathians mountain arc
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Geosciences
issn 2391-5447
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The Carpathian Mountainsarc is the most seismically active area in Central Europe. Analysis of the seismicity of entire Carpathian arc requires data from each of the particular catalogues which have to be properly and uniformly entered, standardized and merged. For our study we first had to prepare a database of seismic events (ML ≥ 1.6) compiled from the data of earthquakes taken from individual national seismic networks as well as data from international seismic centers. However, a careful review of these catalogues has uncovered significant inconsistencies, particularly discrepancies in the description of the location, magnitude and completeness of seismic events. To address these inconsistencies, a newly created compound earthquake catalogue was compiled from the aforementioned seismic catalogues and included events that occurred in the Carpathian Mountains arc area between 1976 and 2017. This work is intended to point out some of the problems associated with collecting data from various seismic catalogues as well as the need for their very careful verification, in order to create a uniform set of seismic data across a large area spanning numerous countries. The results suggest that compiling a uniform and dependable earthquake catalogue is crucial for reliable seismic studies.
topic earthquakes
carpathians
seismic catalogues
magnitude
url https://doi.org/10.1515/geo-2019-0065
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