The ILP/ICSU's Global Seismic Hazard
Assessment Program is a demonstration program of the UN/International
Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction. The GSHAP was implemented
in the 1992-1997 period and came to conclusion in occasion of
the 29th IASPEI General Assembly (Greece, 8/97). A final one-year
phase is under way to allow by 1998 the publication of GSHAP products
and materials and the compilation of a global map of seismic hazard.
Here we review the regional results of GSHAP as presented at the
closing IASPEI meeting and the ongoing activities in the 1997-1998
final phase.
Regional reports, GSHAP yearly reports,
summaries and maps of seismicity, source zones and seismic hazard
are now found on the GSHAP homepage on HTTP://SEISMO.ETHZ.CH/.
REGIONAL TEST AREAS
GSHAP implemented a regionalized strategy
for the assessment of seismic hazard based on a mosaic of multinational
test-area and regions. Following the scheduled proposed in 1992,
most of these test areas produced in 1997 a preliminary or final
SHA, complemented by regional earthquake catalogues and seismic
source zonations, presented at the final GSHAP event, the workshop
W17 at the 1997 IASPEI General Assembly in Greece (8/97).
GSHAP cooperated with several bilateral
and multinational projects in different continents. Among these
the "Eastern Asia Natural Hazards Mapping project" led
by the GSJ, the UNESCO/USGS program "Reduction of Earthquake
Losses in the Eastern Mediterranean Region", the UNESCO/IUGS
International Geological Correlation Program n.382 SESAME "Seismotectonics
and Seismic Hazard Assessment of the Mediterranean basin",
the regional seismic hazard mapping of Mexico, Caribbeans, Central
and South America supported by PAIGH/IDRC, the CIPA-CT94-0238
"Quantitative seismic zoning of the Circum-Pannonian region".
SOUTH AMERICA
The whole South American continent has
been targeted as test area by CERESIS, the GSHAP Regional Centre
for South America. CERESIS completed in 1996 a new SHA for the
whole continent, as part of PAIGH/IDRC effort; the new map is
based on an updated earthquake catalogue, extending the 1981 SISRA
catalogue to 1991, and on a new seismic source zonation.
ANDES
Five Andean countries (Bolivia to Venezuela)
and four European countries cooperated in the PILOTO program ("Test
area for earthquake monitoring and seismic hazard assessment"),
launched under GSHAP and sponsored by the European Union (Ct.94-0103)
to produce in 1997 a unified SHA for the Andean region. Activities
included the integration of national earthquake catalogues and
source zonings in common regional databases, regional workshops
held in Bogota (10/95, 1/97) and Quito (6/97) and a joint ILP/PILOTO
"Training course in paleoseismology" held in Venezuela
(2/97).
CENTRAL-NORTH AMERICA
A network of national and regional programs
in seismic hazard assessment covers Canada, the US, Mexico, Central
America and the Caribbeans. The role of GSHAP has been to promote
inter-program coordination at continental scale and to connect
activities in Central-North America with other regions. A GSHAP
working group led by USGS is merging a unified SHA map of North
America, joining the existing national and regional source zonings.
CENTRAL-NORTHERN EUROPE
The GSHAP implementation in Central-Northern
Europe was coordinated by the GFZ Regional Centre in Potsdam.
In 1996 the regional seismic catalogue has been completed with
the addition of the database for Fennoscandia and of the SIRENE
catalogue for France, for the first time released for an international
program. The final SHA map, including Fennoscandia, was presented
in 1997. In addition, a unified hazard assessment for the German
speaking countries (Germany-Austria-Switzerland) was produced
in 1996 by national teams including seismologists and engineers,
under the coordination of GFZ at Potsdam, as preparatory work
for the implementation of the new european seismic building construction
code (EC8). DACH has also been promoted as GSHAP test area.
IBERO-MAGHREB
GSHAP has promoted the reactivation
of the former ESC program. In 1996 the CNCPRST of Rabat, the regional
GSHAP centre, became the "Centre Euro-Mediterraneen d'Evaluation
et de Prevention du Risque Sismique or Seismic Hazard Assessment
(CEPRIS)" under the Open Partial Agreement on Natural Disasters
of the European Council, with the mandate of coordinating activities
in the Ibero-Maghreb and Western Mediterranean areas. In addition,
activities to produce a first generation of SHA for the Ibero-Maghreb
area by 1997 have been coordinated by the CSIC of Barcelona. Workshops
were held in Granada (5/94), Rabat (12/95) and Barcelona (12/96,
5/97), with partial support from IGCP/SESAME, the first in occasion
of the UNESCO/USGS "6th Int. Forum on Seismic Zonation: First
Ibero-Maghreb Region Conference".
ADRIA
This project includes all countries
bordering on the Adriatic Sea, from the Alps to Greece, coordinated
by OGS of Trieste. Seismic zoning map, earthquake catalogue and
PGA map have been compiled during a series of regional workshops
(Trieste 7/94, Athens 9/95, Ljubliana 10/95), and presented in
1997. The final event is scheduled for February 1998 in Pisa (Italy).
EASTERN MEDITERRANEAN
The UNESCO IGCP-382 SESAME and the UNESCO/USGS
RELEMR are coordinating their activities, leading toward a unified
hazard mapping for the whole area. In 1996 SESAME organized its
first "Training workshop on seismotectonics and seismic hazard
analysis in the Eastern Mediterranean countries" in Cairo
(12/96); a second workshop was held again in Cairo (12/97) focussing
on the compilation of the active fault map and regional SHA. RELEMR
includes hazard mapping from Turkey to the Red Sea; two workshops
were held in Cyprus (12/96, 12/97) to establish a common regional
strategy for the production of a preliminary regional PGA map,
to be completed at a technical event in Jordan (Amman, 3/98).
The PGA maps for Turkey, Greece and Iran have been independently
produced under national programs.
CAUCASUS
The Test Area for SHA in the Caucasus
is coordinated by GSHAP with IASPEI endorsement and INTAS support
(Ct.94-1644), joining seismological institutions from the Caucasian
republics, Russia, Turkey and Iran. Starting in 1994, multinational
working groups produced an integrated regional earthquake catalogue
(historical and instrumental), a new model of seismic lineaments
and seismic zoning, and comparative SHA following probabilistic,
deterministic, mixed probabilistic-deterministic and areal probabilistic
methodologies. The NATO-ARW "Historical and prehistorical
earthquakes in the Caucasus" was held in Armenia (Ct.95-1521,
7/96) and produced a comprehensive proceedings volume published
by Kluwer. Workshops were held in Tehran (1/93), Moscow (9/93),
Ashgabad (10/94), Tehran (5/95), Yerevan (7/96) and Tbilisi (7/97).
A comprehensive report has been distributed in 1997, summarizing
the results.
AFRICAN RIFT
The "Eastern and Southern Africa
Regional Seismological Working Group", with support from
Sweden, Bergen University, IASPEI and GSHAP, held periodic workshops
to compile the regional earthquake catalogue and SHA for the African
Rift area. Workshops were held in Entebbe (8/94), Addis Abeba
(1/95), Bulawayo (2/96) and Bergen (6/97), and the regional PGA
map is now available; for the first time eight of the nine participating
countries have a national seismic hazard map, including site-specific
hazard estimates for the capital cities along the Rift. In addition,
the GSHAP Regional Centre at the University of Nairobi has compiled
a seismic zonation following a historical probabilistic approach
and hosted the 1997 UNESCO/GFZ "International Training Course
in Seismology and SHA" (9/97).
NORTHERN EURASIA
The GSHAP Regional Centre in Moscow,
JIPE, is coordinating the seismic hazard mapping for the whole
territory of the former USSR. This five-year program, initiated
before the FSU break-up and interrupted during the period of more
intense political turmoil, has been restarted, leading to the
compilation of the seismic catalogue and the SHA, using for the
first time a probabilistic approach. Technical workshops are held
routinely in Moscow. The area has been subdivided in five blocks,
and the release of regional hazard maps in MSK is expected in
early 1998.
CHINA-INDIA-NEPAL
The GSHAP test area has been established
in the border region of China, India, Nepal, Myanmar and Bangla-Dash,
under the direction of the SSB of Beijing, the GSHAP Regional
Centre, in cooperation with the NGRI of Hyderabad; it is the first
time that this type of regional framework is effectively operating
in the region. Activities initiated with a planning meeting in
Beijing (10/93), followed by the preliminary compilation of regional
catalogues and by technical workshops in Beijing (10/94) and Hyderabad
(3/96), to produce the final earthquake catalogue, seismic source
zoning and SHA presented at the ASC Assembly in Tangshan (8/96).
In addition to the PGA map for the test area, a regional map comprising
the whole continental Eastern Asia has been produced in 1997 by
SSB.
OCEANIA
Activities in this vast area have progressed
in independent sub-areas (Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea,
Tonga-Fiji, Vanuatu and Solomon Is.), with a coordinating "South-West
Pacific/South-East Asia Regional Meeting" hosted by AGSO
in Melbourne (11/95). AGSO is presently coordinating the integration
of the national products and the inclusion of Indonesia and Philippines.
CLOSING PHASE: 1997-1998
A one-year phase of completion of the
GSHAP has been planned by the Steering Committee in its closing
meeting (Greece, 8/97), devoted to the publication of the GSHAP
results and to the compilation of products which could be of direct
use in the final years of the Decade implementation, following
also the recommendations by the UN/IDNDR Scientific-Technical
Committee and by the ICSU Special Committee on the IDNDR. The
closing phase initiated with the 1997 IASPEI General Assembly,
and is proceeding with the following schedule and goals:
GSHAP VOLUME AND CD-ROM
The regional reports, detailing the
compilation of the databases and of the hazard results in the
GSHAP test-areas and regions, will be collected in a special volume,
prepared following common guidelines, including also a CD-ROM
with the earthquake databases, the seismic source zones and the
regional hazard maps. Reports and databases are to be produced
by spring 1998, the volume and CD-ROM are scheduled for release
in late 1998, published by Annali di Geofisica.
GLOBAL SEISMIC ASSESSMENT MAP
The GSHAP global map of seismic hazard
(PGA) will be completed by the summer of 1998, integrating the
results obtained in the regional areas. Four of the GSHAP centres
are acting as focal points to collect and merge the existing results
in four large continental areas: USGS, Colorado, for the Americas;
GFZ, Potsdam, for Europe-Mediterranean-Africa-Middle East; SSB,
Beijing, for Central-Eastern Asia; AGSO, Canberra, for Australia-Western
Pacific margin. The final iteration of the regional products and
the transmission to these four centers is under way and scheduled
for completion by end of March 1998; the centres will then complete
the regional integration for end of May 1998; a final phase of
global reunification will then take place, to complete the map
for inclusion in the GSHAP volume and for global distribution.
An editorial commettee has prepared technical specifications for
the final compilation of the regional reports, the databases and
the hazard maps. All work is to be completed by August 1998.
INPUT FOR MEGACITIES PROGRAMS
The final years of the Decade are shifting the emphasis on the protection of megacities, moving from hazard assessment to engineering applications and risk mitigation strategies. Several UN sponsored initiatives are under way. Under request by ICSU and the IDNDR, GSHAP will include in several regional reports site-specific hazard evaluations as input for megacities programs.
Report released on January 15, 1998, by D. Giardini, GSHAP Coordinator