24–28 Jun 2019
Europe/Vienna timezone

ESI 2007 Earthquake Intensity Scale in help of CTBT OSI’s Verification Regime

Not scheduled
Poster Theme 2. Events and Nuclear Test Sites

Speaker

Franck Audemard (Fundacion Venezolana de Investigaciones Sismologicas (FUNVISIS))

Description

On one side, the Environmental Seismic Intensity scale (ESI-2007) is a recent intensity scale designed, implemented and tested to measure the damage level of an earthquake. ESI-2007 solely focuses on the impact of a seismic event on nature. In other words, it intends to establish the level of damage from observable Environmental Earthquake Effects (EEE) that a particular earthquake can generate on ground surface around the epicenter, which include: mass wasting/sliding, cracks, water changes, etc. In that sense, ESI was proposed with two main aims: 1) to refloat the observational study of natural effects, which past scales used to include or use; 2) to evaluate the effect of earthquakes in sparsely populated to unpopulated areas. On the other side, visual observation (VOB) is a prime approach of the OSI Verification Regime to narrow down and ultimately define the location of a nuclear explosion "ground zero". Since test sites have gone remote and underground through time, VOB must look for "suspicious" man-made installations and/or land/ground modifications, as well as for surface ground modifications characteristic of anthropogenic explosions. These latter ground observables are a commonality between ESI and OSI-VOB. Furthermore, both also targets remote areas with scarce to no population.

Primary author

Franck Audemard (Fundacion Venezolana de Investigaciones Sismologicas (FUNVISIS))

Presentation materials