Buried Alive: Imaging the 9 November 2022, Mw 5.5 Earthquake Source on the Offshore Adriatic Blind Thrust Front of the Northern Apennines (Italy)

The prompt identification of faults responsible for moderate‐to‐large earthquakes is fundamental for understanding the likelihood of further, potentially damaging events. This is increasingly challenging when the activated fault is an offshore buried thrust, where neither coseismic surface ruptures...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geophysical research letters 2023-06, Vol.50 (11), p.n/a
Hauptverfasser: Maesano, F. E., Buttinelli, M., Maffucci, R., Toscani, G., Basili, R., Bonini, L., Burrato, P., Fedorik, J., Fracassi, U., Panara, Y., Tarabusi, G., Tiberti, M. M., Valensise, G., Vallone, R., Vannoli, P.
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Zusammenfassung:The prompt identification of faults responsible for moderate‐to‐large earthquakes is fundamental for understanding the likelihood of further, potentially damaging events. This is increasingly challenging when the activated fault is an offshore buried thrust, where neither coseismic surface ruptures nor GPS/InSAR deformation data are available after an earthquake. We show that on 9 November 2022, an Mw 5.5 earthquake offshore Pesaro ruptured a portion of the buried Northern Apennines thrust front (the Cornelia thrust system [CTS]). By post‐processing and interpreting the seismic reflection profiles crossing this thrust system, we determined that the activated fault (CTS) is an arcuate 30‐km‐long, NW‐SE striking, SW dipping thrust and that older structures at its footwall possibly influenced its position and geometry. The activation of adjacent segments of the thrust system is a plausible scenario that deserves to be further investigated to understand the full earthquake potential of this offshore seismogenic source. Plain Language Summary The Northern Apennines chain is characterized by thrust faults running from the Po Plain to the Adriatic Sea on the northeastern side of peninsular Italy. These thrusts are buried below ≈2,000 m cover of Plio‐Pleistocene deposits. Controversies arose about these thrust faults' activity and earthquake potential based on their hidden geological signature and the scanty seismicity that could be associated with them. The earthquake (magnitude 5.5) that occurred on 9 November 2022, offshore Pesaro revived this argument. In this work, we analyze the geological structure of the crustal volume affected by the seismic sequence, exploiting seismic reflection profiles and well‐log data to identify the earthquake causative fault. Our results demonstrate that the earthquake ruptured a well‐known fault of the Northern Apennines' buried thrust front, supporting that it is indeed active and seismogenic. The size and architecture of this thrust front suggest that it could generate even larger earthquakes (Mw > 6.5). This type of geological study is instrumental to understanding the geometry of earthquake faults, particularly in offshore areas, because they constitute reliable inputs for earthquake hazard models and, when done promptly after an earthquake, provide key elements for other studies on the seismic source and the unfolding of the ongoing seismic sequence. Key Points 9 November 2022, earthquake consistent with activity of the Corn
ISSN:0094-8276
1944-8007
DOI:10.1029/2022GL102299