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Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis , I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Department of Civil Engineering, Laboratory of Geodesy, GR-54006 Thessaloniki

Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

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Page 1: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at

the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece

P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

Department of Civil Engineering,

Laboratory of Geodesy, GR-54006 Thessaloniki

Page 2: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

• the western termination of the North Anatolian fault, that accommodates lateral motion of Anatolia to the west

• an N-S extension that could result from the spreading of the Aegean region over the subducted oceanic Mediterranean lithosphere

The present-day active geodynamics of the Northern Aegean is governed

by :

GREECE - ΕΛΛΑΣ

Page 3: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

The Mygdonian graben in the northern part of the Aegean region is one of the active structures that accommodate the N-S extension.

The formation of the graben is recent and active, as demonstrated by the important historical seismicity on this structure.

Page 4: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

• In 1978, severe earthquakes damaged an extensive area of Northern Greece including the city of Thessaloniki.

• 45 people killed

• 220 injured

• 9,480 buildings collapsed

• 91,000 buildings with moderate to minor damages

Page 5: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

The main shocks came from the seismic zone of Volvi, NE

of the city of Thessaloniki.

The main shocks came from the seismic zone of Volvi, NE

of the city of Thessaloniki.

Page 6: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

• The main shock

(Ms = 6.5) occurred on June 20, 1978

• It was preceded by several foreshocks the largest of which occurred on May 23, 1978 (Ms = 5.8)

and June 19, 1978 (Ms = 5.2)

The epicentres were located in the region between the Langada and Volvi lakes

Page 7: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

The first family of cracks followed the southern boundary of the graben, striking roughly N80 from Loutra Volvi in the east to Stivos, Nikomedino and Yerakarou in the west.

The other two fault zones, striking N130 and N110 respectively, cut the Mygdonian valley from Stivos in the SSE towards the Langada lake in the WNW near Skolari and as far as Analipsis

Three particular fault zones were observed after the earthquakes:

Page 8: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

• A 16 station geodetic control network was established in 1979 using classical geodetic techniques

• The measurements were repeated in 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1989, and 1990

Page 9: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

• In 1994, a new survey of the Volvi network was carried out using GPS technology

European Project «EURO-SEISTEST: Volvi – Thessaloniki, a European Test Site for Engineering Seismology, Earthquake Engineering and Seismology».

Page 10: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

• In 1997 the GPS network was further extended with the addition of six more stations and re-measured,

now covering the area from the outskirts of the city of Thessaloniki to the east, near to the boundary of

the Mygdonian graben. EURO-SEISTEST

Page 11: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

Comparison of epochs 1979 and 1994:

8 cm of N – S extension corresponding to a horizontal deformation rate of more than 5 mm/year

Comparison of epochs 1994 and 1997: Indication of a N - S motion of the order of 1.5 cm

Page 12: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

The results of the terrestrial and GPS campaigns suggest that a motion has been continuous with time since 1978

This observed displacement field could be explained by different approaches (e.g. long term postseismic relaxation on the 1978 rupture plane, or continuous aseismic motion on the fault etc.), but in all cases more measurement data are needed

Page 13: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

In 1999, the decision was taken for the

establishment of a permanent monitoring GPS network in the area under investigation. This

network, the

VOLVI Array

would consist of a limited number of permanent GPS receivers continuously monitoring data in

locations, which have shown evidence of motion

Page 14: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

STEP 1

Establishment and initialisation of a Continuous Reference GPS Station in the area of Thessaloniki

STEP 2

Establishment of two permanent GPS stations at the north and south of the area between the lakes

STEP 3

Addition of two more permanent GPS stations in the area

Page 15: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

A Continuous Reference GPS Station started to operate at the facilities of the Laboratory of Geodesy in autumn 1999

Raw data are collected at hourly intervals and stored for future computations

RTCM corrections are being transmitted through a UHF radio network for Real Time Kinematic GPS applications covering the area of greater Thessaloniki

STEP 1

Page 16: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

A preliminary estimation of the current ITRF co-ordinates of station "THES" was done using data from selected IGS sites in the surrounding region

The ITRF coordinates of THES (upd. 3/2000):

X = 4463666.6966 ± 0.008 m

Y = 1890982.2682 ± 0.006 m Z = 4131186.0218 ± 0.007 m

Page 17: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

Stivos

Profitis

Station (THES)

ISDN

STEP 2

Wide Area Computer Network

Page 18: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

Profitis

Stivos

Evangelismos

Yerakarou

STEP 3

Page 19: Employment of a Permanent Monitoring GPS Network at the Seismic Area of Volvi, Greece P. D. Savvaidis, I. M. Ifadis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki,

SUMMARY The Volvi GPS array will consist of five permanent

monitoring GPS receivers, one of them being the Continuous Reference GPS Station THES in operation at the Laboratory of Geodesy

At present, another GPS receiver is in experimental operation at Stivos and the wide area computer network is being tested for optimum performance

It is expected that in a few months the array will be operational and the measurements will be used for the computation of ground deform-ation in the area of Volvi