C
Claudio Chiarabba
Researcher at National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology
Publications - 182
Citations - 8318
Claudio Chiarabba is an academic researcher from National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fault (geology) & Induced seismicity. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 166 publications receiving 7435 citations.
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A new view of Italian seismicity using 20 years of instrumental recordings
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show the seismicity of the past 20 years that occurred in Italy and surrounding regions using P-and S-wave arrival times from the INGV national and several regional permanent seismic networks.
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The 2016 central Italy seismic sequence: a first look at the mainshocks, aftershocks, and source models
Lauro Chiaraluce,R. Di Stefano,Elisa Tinti,Laura Scognamiglio,M. Michele,Emanuele Casarotti,Marco Cattaneo,P. De Gori,Claudio Chiarabba,Giancarlo Monachesi,Anna Maria Lombardi,Luisa Valoroso,Diana Latorre,Simone Marzorati +13 more
TL;DR: The 2016 central Italy seismic sequence consists so far of a series of moderate-to-large earthquakes activating within a few months along a 60 km-long and Apenninic-trending normal-fault system.
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The 2009 L'Aquila (central Italy) MW6.3 earthquake: Main shock and aftershocks
Claudio Chiarabba,Alessandro Amato,Mario Anselmi,Paola Baccheschi,Irene Bianchi,Marco Cattaneo,Gianpaolo Cecere,Lauro Chiaraluce,Maria Grazia Ciaccio,P. De Gori,G. De Luca,M. Di Bona,R. Di Stefano,Licia Faenza,Aladino Govoni,Luigi Improta,Francesco Pio Lucente,Alessandro Marchetti,Lucia Margheriti,Francesco Mariano Mele,Alberto Michelini,Giancarlo Monachesi,Milena Moretti,Marina Pastori,N. Piana Agostinetti,Davide Piccinini,P. Roselli,D. Seccia,Luisa Valoroso +28 more
TL;DR: In this article, the location and geometry of the main shock and aftershocks recorded by permanent and temporary networks are presented. But the authors focus on the distribution of the aftershock events, 712 selected events with M L > 2.3 and 20 with M l > 4.0.
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Tomographic constraints on the geodynamic evolution of the Italian region
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented P wave tomographic images of the mantle beneath Italy obtained by inverting ∼6000 teleseismic P and PKP wave arrival times, accurately repicked, recorded in the time period 1988-1994 by the stations of the National Seismic Network of the Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica.
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The 1997 Umbria‐Marche, Italy, Earthquake Sequence: A first look at the main shocks and aftershocks
Alessandro Amato,Riccardo Mario Azzara,Claudio Chiarabba,G. B. Cimini,Massimo Cocco,M. Di Bona,Lucia Margheriti,Salvatore Mazza,Francesco Mariano Mele,Giulio Selvaggi,Alberto Basili,Enzo Boschi,Françoise Courboulex,Anne Deschamps,Stéphane Gaffet,G. Bittarelli,Lauro Chiaraluce,Davide Piccinini,Maurizio Ripepe +18 more
TL;DR: A long sequence of earthquakes, six with magnitudes between 5 and 6, struck Central Italy starting on September 26, 1997, causing severe damages and loss of human lives.