Pre-Event Estimation of County-Level Human Casualty Projections in Southwestern China Based on the Spatial Aggregation of Village-Scale Lethality Data
Nan Zhang, Xiwei Fan, Chaoxu Xia, Nan Xi, Jing Wang, Gaozhong NieAn earthquake lethality model was employed to assess the casualty distribution in Yunnan, Guizhou, and Sichuan provinces, taking into account the ground motion acceleration with different 50-year exceedance probabilities. When the probability is 63%, fatalities are predominantly concentrated in central and south-western Yunnan, as well as central, southern, and western Sichuan. At a 10% probability, the peaks of the casualties are observed in southern, eastern, and central Sichuan. In Yunnan (excluding the northwest and southeast regions), the casualty density exhibits unevenness, whereas Guizhou experiences relatively low casualties (except in the eastern and western mountainous areas). Xichang incurs the most substantial losses, followed by Lancang. Xundian, Songming, and Dongchuan demonstrate a high propensity for fatalities, and the risk is relatively high in the vicinity of the Longjiang and Nujiang faults. If a destructive earthquake occurs near these areas within the next 50 years, the probability of a Level-I emergency response exceeds 10%. When the ground motion acceleration doubles (especially when the exceedance probability drops to 2% in 50 year and 0.1% in a year), the predicted number of casualties remains relatively stable. However, the grid of the casualty population exhibits a higher degree of spatial concentration of casualties, and the disaster-affected area expands. There exists no linear correlation between earthquake-induced fatalities and the ground motion level. When the 50-year exceedance probability decreases from 63% to 10%, the casualty rate may increase by several dozen times.