会议专题

COMBINED TSUNAMI AND EARTHQUAKE LOSS FOR WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND

Shaking damage arising from rupture of the Wellington Fault has long been regarded as being the ProbableMaximum Earthquake Loss for New Zealand. Recently, however, this has been questioned following aprobabilistic study of potential tsunami losses, which suggested that tsunami losses could greatly exceedearthquake losses for all levels of probability. With this in mind, we are aiming to estimate the combinedearthquake plus tsunami PML for New Zealand.Whereas the tsunami risk is relatively evenly spread over the length of New Zealand, the Wellington regionby far dominates the earthquake risk, hence is likely to be the location of the greatest combinedearthquake/tsunami risk. Modelling has therefore concentrated on potential tsunami-genic earthquakes in theWellington Region. Five preferred sources have been modelled, including· Wellington Fault (magnitude 7.5, highest earthquake loss of $12± 5 billion for an exposure of $77 billion),· Wairarapa Fault 1 (magnitude 8.2, high earthquake loss, last ruptured in 1855 causing a tsunami, with thisstudy calibrating well with the historical wave-height data observed).· Subduction Zone (a likely major tsunami source, various models possible, but Wellington somewhatshielded from the tsunami by topography).The overall results of the study have been confirmation that the maximum credible loss of Wellington remainsdominated by earthquake shaking damage from the Wellington fault earthquake, with additional losses fromtsunami from that event being negligible. Tsunami damage from other near field events could be appreciablebut still much less than the Wellington earthquake shaking damage.

Loss estimation tsunami earthquake combined losses

A.B King W.J Cousins W.L. Power R. Blong U.Z. Destegul B. Weir W.D. Smith

Hazards Group , GNS Science, Avalon, New Zealand Loss Modeller, Benfield, Sydney,Australia

国际会议

14th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering(第十四届国际地震工程会议)

北京

英文

2008-10-12(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)