Browsing by Author "Bezzeghoud, Mourad"
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- The Arraiolos – Portugal – Moderate-Sized 2018 (M = 4.9) earthquake of January 15 and aftershocks: preliminary resultsPublication . Borges, José; Caldeira, Bento; Fontiela, João; Custódio, Susana; Dias, Nuno; Waschilala, Piedade; Oliveira, Rui; Vales, Dina; Bezzeghoud, Mourad; Araújo, Alexandre; Carrilho, Fernando; Corela, Carlos; Rio, Inês; Vaz, José; Matias, LuísOn 15 January 2018 at 11:51 UTC, an earthquake of 4.9 ML occurred in the Northeast of Arraiolos region near Aldeia da Serra village. The hypocentral location, determined by Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera (IPMA), has coordinates 38.79 N, 7.93 W at 11 km depth. The focal mechanisms determined by P-wave first motion polarities and waveforms inversion indicate a dominance of strike-slip events with nodal plans near NS (left lateral) and EW (right lateral) directions. Due to the lower magnitude, the earthquake didn’t cause damage but was widely felt in the Centre and South of Portugal mainland. In the vicinity of the epicentre, at the Aldeia da Serra village, it reached a maximum intensity VI, having been felt with intensity IV/V in the city of Évora, about 20 km from the epicentre. The event was also felt with intensity III in Lisbon at more than 100 km from the epicentre. This event caused alarm in the population that haven’t felt an earthquake for several decades. It also raised the media attention with many reports and interviews on TV and newspapers. The main ear thquake was immediatel y followed by a sequence of aftershocks of which the largest one, with ML=3.1, occurred the 1st February, fifteen days after the main shock and was largely felt by the population in the region of Arraiolos.
- The Portuguese national seismic network: products and servicesPublication . Carrilho, Fernando; Custodio, Susana; Bezzeghoud, Mourad; Oliveira, Carlos; Marreiros, Célia; Vales, Dina; Alves, Paulo; Pena, Areosa; Madureira, Guilherme; Escuer, Maria; Silveira, Graça; Corela, Carlos; Matias, Luis; Silva, Matilde; Veludo, Idalina; Dias, Nuno; Loureiro, Afonso; Borges, J. F.; Caldeira, Bento; Wachilala, Piedade; Fontiela, JoaoPortugal, located in the southwest region of the Eurasian plate, has been affected by several destructive earthquakes throughout its history, the most well-known being the 1755 Great Lisbon earthquake. The seismicity of the territory, both in the mainland and in the Azores and Madeira islands, has prompted the continuous development of seismic monitoring, from the first known macroseismic inquiry, following the 1755 Great Lisbon earthquake, to the current state-of-the-art seismic network. Once scattered in separate efforts, at present, most seismic stations in Portugal relay its data to a common data center, at Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera, where data are automatically processed for the downstream generation of both manually revised and automatically generated products and services. In this article, we summarize the evolution of the permanent seismic network, its current status, the products and services that are publicly available, a recent effort of rapid deployment of a dense network following a mainshock, and state-of-the-art ocean-bottom seismometer developments.