DOI: 10.3390/geosciences16070248 ISSN: 2076-3263

Identification and Characterization of Creep-Capable Faults Using Advanced HVSR Processing: Implications for Seismic Microzonation (Etna, Italy)

Sabrina Grassi, Claudia Pirrotta, Sebastiano Imposa, Gabriele Quattrocchi, Gabriele Morreale

The southeastern flank of Mt. Etna is affected by the presence of active faults capable of adapting to deformation through both seismic slip and aseismic creep, posing challenges for seismic microzonation and for land-use planning. Structural surveys in the urban area of San Gregorio di Catania revealed a ~1 km long, N–S trending secondary fracture zone with an extensional component, inducing progressive damage to buildings and infrastructure. To characterize this scarcely visible structure, passive seismic single-station surveys processed with Horizontal-to-Vertical Spectral Ratio (HVSR) tecnique were integrated with Multichannel Analysis of Surface Waves (MASW). The HVSR data enabled the mapping of the spatial distribution of resonance frequencies, tracking an anomalous trend in the seismic bedrock geometry and depth directly correlatable with the presence of the secondary fracture zone. Directional analyses exhibit systematic preferential orientations of resonance peaks near the fracture corridor, confirming a rigorous structural control and a tectonic origin for the recorded anomalies. Furthermore, reconstructed 2D impedance contrast sections show distinct discontinuities and a local westward dislocation of the main seismo-stratigraphic interface across the deformation zone. The lack of correlated instrumental seismicity supports the interpretation that the displacement is primary accommodated via aseismic fault creep. Methodologically, these findings demonstrate that the passive seismic method provides a highly effective, non-invasive approach for identifying hard-to-detect tectonic structures that remain unobliterated by dense urbanization. Ultimately, these results offer critical, actionable constraints for seismic microzonation and urban land-use setback zoning.

More from our Archive