Measurement of Natural Frequencies and Damping of Speleothems
previous item
|
next item
Citation |
- Permanent Link:
- https://digital.lib.usf.edu/SFS0069940/00001
Material Information
- Title:
- Measurement of Natural Frequencies and Damping of Speleothems
- Creator:
- LACAVE, Corinne
LEVRET, Agnès
KOLLER, Martin
- Publication Date:
- 2000
- Language:
- English
Subjects
- Subjects / Keywords:
- Measurement ( local )
Natural Frequencies ( local ) Damping Of Speleothems ( local )
- Genre:
- serial ( sobekcm )
Notes
- Abstract:
- Broken speleothems (stalagmites, stalactites, soda-straws, etc.) can be interpreted as an indicator of past earthquakes. The dating of such events, up to several thousands of years, could then allow an evaluation of the seismic activity in an area, up to ages much older than that is possible from historical catalogues. This is of particular interest for the determination of long return-period events. One might also consider unbroken speleothems as an indication that no event greater than a certain level has occurred in the region. In order to evaluate the vulnerability of speleothems from earthquakes, it is necessary to know the range of their natural frequencies. However, there had been, up to now, no experimental in-situ measurements made to obtain these frequencies. The work presented here was aimed at the measurement of the fundamental natural frequencies and the damping of a representative population of speleothems. Measurements were made in the caves of Choranche and Antre de Vénus, in the Vercors Mountains (France), using a high-resolution laser interferometer. This study made it possible to show that most of the speleothems do not undergo dynamic amplification phenomena of the seismic motion, since their fundamental natural frequencies are higher than the range of seismic excitation. Only thin and long speleothems (such as long soda-straws) may suffer amplification phenomena. A fundamental frequency higher than the seismic frequencies means that the speleothem moves, with its basement, as a rigid structure. Consequently, most of the broken speleothems are a direct indicator of the peak ground acceleration. In order to use "speleoseismic" traces for seismic hazard assessment in a given area, the magnitude of the corresponding earthquake has to be evaluated. Further studies are proposed with the aim of a quantitative estimate of the confidence level that could be reached in the determination of the magnitude of "speleoseismic" events.
Record Information
- Source Institution:
- University of South Florida Library
- Holding Location:
- University of South Florida
- Rights Management:
- This object is protected by copyright, and is made available here for research and educational purposes. Permission to reuse, publish, or reproduce the object beyond the bounds of Fair Use or other exemptions to copyright law must be obtained from the copyright holder.
Postcard Information
- Format:
- serial
|
printinsert_linkshareget_appmore_horiz | |
Download Options
close
No images or PDF downloads are available for this resource.
Cite this
item
close
APA
Cras ut cursus ante, a fringilla nunc. Mauris lorem nunc, cursus sit amet enim ac, vehicula vestibulum mi. Mauris viverra nisl vel enim faucibus porta. Praesent sit amet ornare diam, non finibus nulla.
MLA
Cras efficitur magna et sapien varius, luctus ullamcorper dolor convallis. Orci varius natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Fusce sit amet justo ut erat laoreet congue sed a ante.
CHICAGO
Phasellus ornare in augue eu imperdiet. Donec malesuada sapien ante, at vehicula orci tempor molestie. Proin vitae urna elit. Pellentesque vitae nisi et diam euismod malesuada aliquet non erat.
WIKIPEDIA
Nunc fringilla dolor ut dictum placerat. Proin ac neque rutrum, consectetur ligula id, laoreet ligula. Nulla lorem massa, consectetur vitae consequat in, lobortis at dolor. Nunc sed leo odio.