Seismotectonic model and probabilistic seismic hazard assessment for Papua New Guinea

Authors

Ghasemi, Hadi
Cummins, Phil
Weatherill, Graeme
McKee, Chris
Hazelwood, Martyn
Allen, Trevor

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Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Netherlands

Abstract

Papua New Guinea (PNG) lies in a belt of intense tectonic activity that experiences high levels of seismicity. Although this seismicity poses signifcant risks to society, the Building Code of PNG and its underpinning seismic loading requirements have not been revised since 1982. This study aims to partially address this gap by updating the seismic zoning map on which the earthquake loading component of the building code is based. We performed a new probabilistic seismic hazard assessment for PNG using the OpenQuake software developed by the Global Earthquake Model Foundation (Pagani et al. in Seism Res Lett 85(3):692–702, 2014). Among other enhancements, for the frst time together with background sources, individual fault sources are implemented to represent active major and microplate boundaries in the region to better constrain the earthquake-rate and seismic-source models. The seismic-source model also models intraslab, Wadati–Beniof zone seismicity in a more realistic way using a continuous slab volume to constrain the fnite ruptures of such events. The results suggest a high level of hazard in the coastal areas of the Huon Peninsula and the New Britain–Bougainville region, and a relatively low level of hazard in the southwestern part of mainland PNG. In comparison with the seismic zonation map in the current design standard, it can be noted that the spatial distribution of seismic hazard used for building design does not match the bedrock hazard distribution of this study. In particular, the high seismic hazard of the Huon Peninsula in the revised assessment is not captured in the current building code of PNG.

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Source

Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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