We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Assessment of seismic hazard associated with the Meishan fault in Central Taiwan.
- Authors
Wang, Jui-Pin; Huang, Duruo; Chang, Su-Chin
- Abstract
According to the Central Geological Survey Taiwan (CGST), the Meishan fault in Central Taiwan, which induced a catastrophic earthquake in 1906, is considered capable of triggering equivalent events with a return period of 162 years. Therefore, as the next event is expected around 2070, the Meishan fault poses a high level of earthquake risk in Central Taiwan, especially for those cities and townships very close to the fault. However, the best-estimate return period (162 years) and earthquake magnitude (7.1 M) reported by the CGST must be subject to some uncertainty, because such an event is very unlikely to recur every 162 years. Therefore, this study carried out a series of seismic hazard assessments for three major cities close to the Meishan fault, with the uncertainty of the best-estimate information being determined using the Rosenblueth algorithm. The results show that for Chaiyi city, which the Meishan fault passes through, the probability of the current design value (i.e., PGA = 0.33 g) being exceeded by the earthquake motion induced by the Meishan fault in the next 50 years would be as high as 55 %. Therefore, further studies should be carried out to obtain a better understanding of the Meishan fault, to develop a robust hazard mitigation plan for nearby cities.
- Subjects
TAIWAN; EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis; GEOLOGIC faults; PROBABILITY theory; UNCERTAINTY; EARTHQUAKES
- Publication
Bulletin of Engineering Geology & the Environment, 2013, Vol 72, Issue 2, p249
- ISSN
1435-9529
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10064-013-0471-x