Artigo Revisado por pares

Damage Patterns in Port-au-Prince during the 2010 Haiti Earthquake

2011; SAGE Publishing; Volume: 27; Issue: 1_suppl1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1193/1.3637056

ISSN

8755-2930

Autores

Ellen M. Rathje, Jeff Bachhuber, Ranon Dulberg, Brady R. Cox, Albert Kottke, Clinton M. Wood, Russell A. Green, Scott M. Olson, Donald Wells, Glenn J. Rix,

Tópico(s)

Seismic Imaging and Inversion Techniques

Resumo

The 2010 Haiti earthquake represents one of the most devastating earthquakes in history. Damage to structures was widespread across the city of Port-au-Prince, but its intensity varied considerably from neighborhood to neighborhood. This paper integrates damage statistics with geologic data, shear wave velocity measurements, and topographic information to investigate the influence of these conditions on the damage patterns in the city. The results indicate that the most heavily damaged areas in downtown Port-au-Prince are underlain by Holocene alluvium with shear wave velocities that average about 350 m/s over the top 30 m. The remainder of Port-au-Prince is underlain mostly by older geologic units with higher shear wave velocities. Damage was also concentrated on hillsides around Port-au-Prince. These pockets of damage appear to have been caused by a combination of factors, including topographic amplification, soil amplification, and failure of weakly cemented, steep hillsides.

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