Integrated Earthquake Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- The catalog of the Caucasus from the annual journal Earthquakes in the USSR 1962–1991 (hereinafter ZEMSU);
- The catalog of the North Caucasus from the annual journals Earthquakes in Northern Eurasia 1992–2017 and Earthquakes in Russia 2018–2021 (hereinafter NC);
- The catalog of Georgia from the annual journal Earthquakes in Northern Eurasia 1993–2004 (hereinafter GEOR04);
- The earthquake catalog of the Caucasus from the annual journal Seismic Bulletin of the Caucasus 1971–1986 (hereinafter GEOR71), published under the scientific and methodological guidance of the Institute of Geophysics of the Academy of Sciences of the Georgian SSR (today, the M. Nodia Institute of Geophysics);
- The catalog of the International Seismological Centre ISC 1962–2022. The ISC catalog is composite and contains data from a number of global as well as Russian agencies (Table 2).
Catalog | Period | Number of Events | Number of Earthquakes with Energy Classes and/or Magnitudes | Number of Non-Earthquakes |
---|---|---|---|---|
ZEMSU | 1962–1991 | 1258 | 1258 | 0 |
NC | 1992–2021 | 12,442 | 12,399 | 41 + 2 * |
GEOR04 | 1993–2004 | 572 | 572 | 0 |
GEOR71 | 1971–1986 | 2412 | 2412 | 0 |
ISC | 1962–2022 | 3923 | 3918 | 3 + 2 ** |
Agency Abbreviation | Agency | With Magnitude |
---|---|---|
AFAD | Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency, Turkey | 59 |
ATA | The Earthquake Research Center Ataturk University, Turkey | 1 |
AZER | Republican Seismic Survey Center of Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences, Azerbaijan | 22 |
BCIS | Bureau Central International de Sismologie, France | 1 |
CSEM | Centre Sismologique Euro-Méditerranéen (CSEM/EMSC), France | 190 |
DDA | General Directorate of Disaster Affairs, Turkey | 78 |
DRS | Dagestan Branch, Geophysical Survey, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia | 130 |
EIDC | Experimental (GSETT3) International Data Center, U.S.A. | 1 |
IDC | International Data Centre, CTBTO, Austria | 9 |
ISC | International Seismological Centre, United Kingdom | 975 |
ISK | Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, Turkey | 13 |
MOS | Geophysical Survey of Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia | 1193 |
NEIC | National Earthquake Information Center, U.S.A. | 3 |
NNC | National Nuclear Center, Kazakhstan | 1 |
NORS | North Ossetia (Alania) Branch, Geophysical Survey, Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia | 340 |
SPITAK | Armenia | 6 |
TIF | Institute of Earth Sciences/National Seismic Monitoring Center, Georgia | 896 |
TOTAL: | 3918 |
3. Results
3.1. Merging Catalogs
- Earthquakes from the ISC catalog that have magnitudes MWGCMT and/or mbISC and/or mbNEIC (ISC_CORE, 269 events);
- Earthquakes from catalogs of GS RAS: ZEMSU (1258 events) and NC (12,399 events). These catalogs do not overlap in time;
- Earthquakes from catalogs of Georgia (572 + 2412). These catalogs do not overlap in time;
- Other earthquakes from ISC (ISC_OTHER, 3649).
3.2. Magnitudes in the Integrated Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus
3.3. Statistics of the Integrated Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus
4. Conclusions
- The territory of the considered region of the Central Caucasus (Figure 1) is quite well-represented in Soviet, Russian, and Georgian catalogs (in particular in the catalogs of the GS RAS). The share of events from ISC in the integrated catalog is about 5%. At the same time, the beginning of the aftershock sequence of the Racha earthquake was significantly replenished. The estimated number of errors in identifying duplicates is about 1%;
- The integration of Soviet and modern Russian and Georgian catalogs made it possible to significantly increase the completeness and representativeness of seismic events in the studied Ossetian sector of the Greater Caucasus. Thus, for the period 1971–1986, the integrated catalog contains 71.8% from the GEOR71 catalog and 26.4% from ZEMSU, i.e., a significant number of events were found in the catalog of the regional seismological center for these years;
- The large majority of events in the integrated catalog have magnitudes MWGCMT, mbISC,NEIS and/or energy class, and less than 1% have other types of magnitude. The correlation relationships between MWGCMT, mbISC,NEIS, and energy class k are well established. Based on this, the obtained unified magnitude scale is considered reliable;
- In the studied Ossetian sector of the Greater Caucasus, the level of registration varies greatly over time. There is a significant lack of events in the periods 1967–1970 and 1988–1991. Since 1995, the catalog is complete for magnitude 3.2, and since 2005 for magnitude 2.2;
- The created integrated earthquake catalog with a unified magnitude scale can be used by a wide range of researchers studying the seismic regime and seismic hazard of the Central Caucasus [32,33,34,35,36]. The results of the present paper are important for studying the seismic regime and regional assessments of seismic hazard.
- The magnitude–frequency graphs for the integrated catalog with a unified “proxy-MW” magnitude and the GS RAS catalog of the North Caucasus for 2005–2021 were constructed and compared (Figure 16). For the events from the GS RAS catalog, the magnitude Ms is used if known or the magnitude recalculated from the energy class k using T.G. Rautian ratio M = (k − 4)/1.8 [37]. The magnitude–frequency graphs and estimates for the parameters of the Gutenberg–Richter law differ significantly, which may affect the seismic hazard assessment results.
- The results of this study once again demonstrate the fundamental importance of merging seismic data from global, national, and regional catalogs and the effectiveness of the author’s developed method.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Vorobieva, I.A.; Gvishiani, A.D.; Dzeboev, B.A.; Dzeranov, B.V.; Barykina, Y.V.; Antipova, A.O. Nearest Neighbor Method for Discriminating Aftershocks and Duplicates When Merging Earthquake Catalogs. Front. Earth Sci. 2022, 10, 820277. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zaliapin, I.; Ben-Zion, Y. A global classification and characterization of earthquake clusters. Geophys. J. Int. 2016, 207, 608–634. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Zaliapin, I.; Ben-Zion, Y. Earthquake clusters in southern California. I: Identification and stability. J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 2013, 118, 2847–2864. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gvishiani, A.; Vorobieva, I.; Shebalin, P.; Dzeboev, B.; Dzeranov, B.; Skorkina, A. Integrated Earthquake Catalog of the Eastern Sector of Russian Arctic. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 5010. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Vorobieva, I.A.; Gvishiani, A.D.; Shebalin, P.N.; Dzeboev, B.A.; Dzeranov, B.V.; Skorkina, A.A.; Sergeeva, N.A.; Fomenko, N.A. Integrated Earthquake Catalog II: The Western Sector of the Russian Arctic. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 7084. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Vorobieva, I.A.; Gvishiani, A.D.; Shebalin, P.N.; Dzeboev, B.A.; Dzeranov, B.V.; Sergeeva, N.A.; Kedrov, E.O.; Barykina, Y.V. Integrated Earthquake Catalog III: Gakkel Ridge, Knipovich Ridge and Svalbard Archipelago. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 12422. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Markušić, S.; Gülerce, Z.; Kuka, N.; Duni, L.; Ivančić, I.; Radovanović, S.; Glavatović, B.; Milutinović, Z.; Akkar, S.; Kovačević, S.; et al. An updated and unified earthquake catalogue for the Western Balkan Region. Bull. Earthq. Eng. 2016, 14, 321–343. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sawires, R.; Santoyo, M.A.; Peláez, J.A.; Fernández, R.D.C. An updated and unified earthquake catalog from 1787 to 2018 for seismic hazard assessment studies in Mexico. Sci. Data 2019, 6, 241. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Braclawska, A.; Idziak, A.F. Unification of data from various seismic catalogues to study seismic activity in the Carpathians Mountain arc. Open Geosci. 2019, 11, 837–842. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Long, F.; Jiang, C.; Qi, Y.; Liu, Z.; Fu, Y. A joint probabilistic approach for merging earthquake catalogs of two neighboring seismic networks: An example of the 2014 Ludian sequence catalog. Acta Geophys. Sin. 2018, 61, 2815–2827. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sayapina, A.A.; Bagaeva, S.S.; Dmitrieva, I.Y.; Gorozhantsev, S.V. Results of seismological observations on the territory of the Republic of North Ossetia–Alania and in adjacent areas in 2020. Russ. Seismol. J. 2021, 3, 86–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Magomedov, K.D.; Taymazov, D.G.; Adilov, Z.A.; Magomed-Kasumov, M.G.; Asmanov, O.A.; Mirzaliev, M.M.; Gadzhiev, A.M. Regional network of seismological observations on the territory of Dagestan: Status and development prospects. Russ. Seismol. J. 2022, 4, 79–96. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gabsatarova, I.P.; Mekhryushev, D.Y.; Koroletsky, L.N.; Adilov, A.Z.; Magomedov, K.D.; Sayapina, A.A.; Bagaeva, S.S.; Pokhodenko, V.P.; Ivanova, L.E. Northern Caucasus. In Earthquakes in Russia in 2020; Annual Report; GS RAS: Obninsk, Russia, 2022; pp. 17–24. (In Russian) [Google Scholar]
- Tsereteli, N.; Danciu, L.; Varazanashvili, O.; Sesetyan, K.; Qajaia, L.; Sharia, T.; Svanadze, D.; Khvedelidze, I. The 2020 National Seismic Hazard Model for Georgia (Sakartvelo). In Building Knowledge for Geohazard Assessment and Management in the Caucasus and other Orogenic Regions; Bonali, F.L., Pasquaré Mariotto, F., Tsereteli, N., Eds.; NATO Science for Peace and Security Series C: Environmental Security; Springer: Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 2021. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tan, O.; Taymaz, T. Active tectonics of the Caucasus: Earthquake source mechanisms and rupture histories obtained from inversion of teleseismic body waveforms. In Postcollisional Tectonics and Magmatism in the Mediterranean Region and Asia: Geological Society of America Special Paper 409; Dilek, Y., Pavlides, S., Eds.; Geological Society of America: Boulder, CO, USA, 2006; pp. 531–578. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Soloviev, A.A.; Novikova, O.V.; Gorshkov, A.I.; Piotrovskaya, E.P. Recognition of potential sources of strong earthquakes in the Caucasus region using GIS technologies. Dokl. Earth Sci. 2013, 450, 658–660. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lukk, A.A.; Shevchenko, V.I. Seismicity, Tectonics, and GPS Geodynamics of the Caucasus. Izv. Phys. Solid Earth. 2019, 55, 626–648. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Mumladze, T.; Forte, A.M.; Cowgill, E.S.; Trexler, C.C.; Niemi, N.A.; Yıkılmaz, M.B.; Kellogg, L.H. Subducted, detached, and torn slabs beneath the Greater Caucasus. GeoResJ 2015, 5, 36–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Karapetyan, J.K.; Gasparyan, A.S.; Shakhparonyan, S.R.; Karapetyan, R.K. Registration and spectral analysis of waveforms of 10.24.2019 earthquake in the Caucasus using the new IGES-006 seismic sensor. Russ. J. Earth Sci. 2020, 20, ES6002. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pavlenko, O.V. Regional characteristics of radiation and propagation of seismic waves in the North-Eastern Caucasus. Russ. J. Earth Sci. 2020, 20, ES5006. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Milyukov, V.K.; Mironov, A.P.; Ovsyuchenko, A.N.; Rogozhin, E.A.; Gorbatikov, A.V.; Drobyshev, V.N.; Khubaev, K.M.; Nikolaev, A.V. Velocities of Present-Day Horizontal Movements in the Central Sector of the Greater Caucasus according to GPS Observations and Their Relation to Tectonics and the Deep Structure of the Earth’s crust. Dokl. Earth Sci. 2018, 481, 879–882. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Abrehdari, S.H.; Karapetyan, J.; Rahimi, H.; Geodakyan, E. The Caucasus territory hot-cold spots determination and description using 2d surface waves tomography. Russ. J. Earth Sci. 2022, 22, ES5004. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rogozhin, E.A. Seismotectonics of the central sector of the Greater Caucasus as a basis for seismic hazard. Bull. Vladikavkaz Sci. Cent. 2009, 9, 16–22. (In Russian) [Google Scholar]
- Zaalishvili, V.B.; Rogozhin, E.A. Assessment of seismic hazard of territory on basis of modern methods of detailed zoning and seismic microzonation. Open Constr. Build. Technol. J. 2011, 5, 30–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Arefiev, S.S.; Rogozhin, E.A.; Bykova, V.V.; Dorbath, C. Deep structure of the Racha Earthquake source zone from seismic tomography data. Izv. Phys. Solid Earth. 2006, 42, 27–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gomez, J.M.; Bukchin, B.; Madariaga, R.; Rogozhin, E.A. A study of the Barisakho, Georgia, earthquake of 1992 October 23 from broad-band surface and body waves. Geophys. J. Int. 1997, 129, 613–623. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ovsyuchenko, A.N.; Larkov, A.S.; Andreeva, N.V.; Lukashova, R.N. Seismotectonics of strong earthquake sources in the Caucasus: Results of research by Evgeniy Aleksandrovich Rogozhin. Russ. Seismol. J. 2023, 5, 28–44. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kerimov, I.A.; Gaisumov, M.Y.; Badaev, S.V. Strong earthquakes in the territory of Chechnya and Ingushetia in the 18th–20th centuries. Grozny Nat. Sci. Bull. 2017, 5, 41–54. (In Russian) [Google Scholar]
- Mammadli, T.Y.; Rogozhin, E.A. Transverse Faults of the Eastern Caucasus and Their Manifestations in Seismicity. Seism. Instr. 2019, 55, 220–228. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Di Giacomo, D.; Bondár, I.; Storchak, D.A.; Engdahl, E.R.; Bormann, P.; Harris, J. ISC-GEM: Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900–2009), III. Re-computed MS and mb, proxy MW, final magnitude composition and completeness assessment. Phys. Earth Planet. Inter. 2015, 239, 33–47. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Vorobieva, I.; Shebalin, P.; Narteau, C.; Beauducel, F.; Nercessian, A.; Clouard, V.; Bouin, M.-P. Multiscale mapping of completeness magnitude of earthquake catalogs. Bull. Seism. Soc. Am. 2013, 103, 2188–2202. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Balassanian, S.; Ashirov, T.; Chelidze, T.; Gassanov, A.; Kondorskaya, N.; Molchan, G.; Pustovitenko, B.; Trifonov, V.; Ulomov, V.; Giardini, D. Seismic hazard assessment for the Caucasus test area. Ann. Geophys. 1999, 42, 3775. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Akimov, V.A.; Zaitsev, V.A.; Larkov, A.S.; Lutikov, A.I.; Ovsyuchenko, A.N.; Panina, L.V.; Rogozhin, E.A.; Rodina, S.N.; Sysolin, A.I. Seismic Hazard Maps of the Northwest and Central Caucasus on a Detailed Scale. Seism. Instr. 2020, 56, 584–598. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gorshkov, A.; Novikova, O. Estimating the validity of the recognition results of earthquake-prone areas using the ArcMap. Acta Geophys. 2018, 66, 843–853. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ulomov, V.I.; Danilova, T.I.; Medvedeva, N.S.; Polyakova, T.P.; Shumilina, L.S. Assessment of seismic hazard in the North Caucasus. Izv. Phys. Solid Earth. 2007, 43, 559–572. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dzeboev, B.A.; Gvishiani, A.D.; Agayan, S.M.; Belov, I.O.; Karapetyan, J.K.; Dzeranov, B.V.; Barykina, Y.V. System-Analytical Method of Earthquake-Prone Areas Recognition. Appl. Sci. 2021, 11, 7972. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rautian, T.G. Determination of the Energy of Earthquakes at a Distance of up to 3000 km. Exp. Seism. 1964, 199, 88–93. (In Russian) [Google Scholar]
Stage | Main Catalog | Additional Catalog | km | Threshold Value of the Metric | Estimation of the Number of Errors | Number of Duplicates | Merged Catalog |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ZEMSU 1258 events | GEOR71 2412 events | 0.05; 15; 15. | 10 | – | 654 | ZEMSU_GEOR 3016 events |
2 | NC 12,399 events | GEOR04 572 events | 0.034; 18.0; 17.6. | 9 | 1.1% | 317 | NC_GEOR 12,654 events |
3 | ZEMSU_GEOR 3016 events | NC_GEOR 12,654 | Catalogs do not overlap in time | 0% | 0 | GSR 15,670 events | |
4 | GSR 15,670 events | OTHER 3649 events | 0.037; 14.5; 14.1. | 10.5 | 0.7% | 3079 | GSR_OTHER 16,240 events |
5 | GSR_OTHER 16,240 events | CORE 269 events | 0.033; 9.8; 14.6. | 5.6 | 0.8% | 224 + 1 * | OSETIA 16,285 |
Agency | Type of Magnitude | Priority | Number of Events | Magnitude in the Integrated Catalog | Figure | Mmin– Mmax. Initial Magnitude Scale | Correlation Coefficient. Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GCMT | MW | 1 | 10 | M = MWGCMT | – | 5.1–7.0 | |
ISC | mb | 2 | 246 | M = mbISC | 10a | 3.1–5.7 | 0.719 |
NEIC, NEIS | mb | 2 | 13 | M = mbNEIC | 10b | 3.5–4.5 | 0.798 |
ZEMSU, GEOR71 | Mk | 3 | 2917 | M = Mk = k/2 – 1.1 | 10c,e | 0.563 | |
NC, GEOR04, ISC | Mk | 3 | 12,954 | M = Mk = k/2 – 1.4 | 10d,e | 0.628 | |
ZEMSU | MPV | 4 | 2 | M = MPVZEMSU – 0.4 | 11a | 4.7–5.0 | 0.596 |
MOS | mb | 4 | 48 | M = mbMOS – 0.3 | 11b | 3.5–4.8 | 0.755 |
EIDC | mb | 4 | 1 | M = mbEIDCS + 0.1 | 11c | 3.6 | 0.763 |
AFAD | ML | 4 | 15 | M = MLAFAF + 0.1 | 11d | 1.3–3.0 | 0.602 |
AZER | ML | 4 | 6 | M = 0.75MLAZER + 0.94 | 11e | 1.4–1.8 | 0.835 |
CSEM | ML | 4 | 32 | M = 0.54MLCSEM + 1.27 | 11f | 0.3–2.8 | 0.831 |
MOS | MU | 4 | 4 | M = MUMOS + 0.4 | 11g | 1.8–3.2 | 0.891 |
NORS | MU | 4 | 13 | M = MUNORS + 0.4 | 11h | 0.1–1.8 | 0.932 |
AFAD | MD | 5 | 13 | M = MDAFAD + 0.2 | 12a | 2.7–3.2 | 0.126 Unreliable few data |
DDA | MD | 5 | 9 | M = MDDDA + 0.2 | 12b | 2.4–3.3 | 0.581 Unreliable few data |
TIF | MS | 5 | 2 | M = MSTIF + 0.4 | 12c | 3.0 | 0.649 Unreliable few data |
Total | 16,285 |
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Vorobieva, I.A.; Dzeboev, B.A.; Dzeranov, B.V.; Gvishiani, A.D.; Zaalishvili, V.B.; Sergeeva, N.A.; Nikitina, I.M. Integrated Earthquake Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus. Appl. Sci. 2024, 14, 172. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14010172
Vorobieva IA, Dzeboev BA, Dzeranov BV, Gvishiani AD, Zaalishvili VB, Sergeeva NA, Nikitina IM. Integrated Earthquake Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus. Applied Sciences. 2024; 14(1):172. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14010172
Chicago/Turabian StyleVorobieva, Inessa A., Boris A. Dzeboev, Boris V. Dzeranov, Alexei D. Gvishiani, Vladislav B. Zaalishvili, Natalia A. Sergeeva, and Izabella M. Nikitina. 2024. "Integrated Earthquake Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus" Applied Sciences 14, no. 1: 172. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14010172
APA StyleVorobieva, I. A., Dzeboev, B. A., Dzeranov, B. V., Gvishiani, A. D., Zaalishvili, V. B., Sergeeva, N. A., & Nikitina, I. M. (2024). Integrated Earthquake Catalog of the Ossetian Sector of the Greater Caucasus. Applied Sciences, 14(1), 172. https://doi.org/10.3390/app14010172