Title: Earthquake in israel
1Earthquake in israel
2- Israel is situated astride the Jordan Rift Valley
- the boundary between the Arabian and African
tectonic plates - slip displacement has developed along the rift at
an average rate - of about 1 cm/year
- 6 times earthquakes
3First ReferenceBible
- References to historical earthquakes find in the
Bible. - The destruction of the cities of Sodom and
Gomorrah, situated adjacent to the Dead Sea, in
the Rift Valley - Joshua led the Children of Israel across the
Jordan River In the 13th Century B.C. - Another descriptive biblical reference to an
earthquake is found in the Book of Kings
4 King Uzziah earthquake
- The earthquake occured around 760 B.C., at the
time of the prophet Amos - Destroyed the Galilee town of Hazor
- in the fourth century B.C., the prophet
Zechariah still referred to it
5Third earthquake
- The historian of the second temple period,
Josephus Flavius, described an earthquake - claimed that about 10,000 people perished in
Judea as a result of collapse of buildings.
6Destroy of Beth She'an
- It was a thriving City at the end of the 4th
century - Recent excavations uncovered some columns of the
Byzantine Colonnaded Street - The Al Aqsa mosque on the Temple Mount destroyed
twice - Jerusalem was damaged
- Catastrophic earthquakes have continued to occur
through the ages in Israel
7- A catastrophic event took place in 1759, and was
recorded in a letter written in Hebrew by a
scribe named Joseph - Another large earthquake occured in 1927, causing
considerable damage to structures, Large cracks
developed in the region of the Dead Sea
8- Physical evidence for the historic occurance of
earthquakes in and off coast Israel has been
provided by a bathymetric map of the seabed of
the Israeli continental slope
9Solutions
- In view of the seismic history of the area,
ongoing research is being carried out on
geotechnical aspects of earthquake engineering,
particularly as related to Israel.
10- Aims of the Research
- One of the primary aims of this research is to
attempt to define the most potentially dangerous
areas, so that steps can be taken to increase
safety in these regions.
11Methodology
- a study of site effects at five locations in
Israel, with typical soil profiles, has been
presented by Frydman (1993) - ---Tel Aviv (site T)
- ---Haifa Bay (site H)
- ---Ashdod (site A)
- ---Eilat (site E)
- ---Beth She'an (site B)
12The Location of sites
T---Tel Aviv H---Haifa Bay A---Ashdod
E---Eilat B---Beth She'an
13- Earthquake Records Used for Analyses
Recording site Label Date Magnitude Epicentraldist. (km) Max. accn.(g)
Haifa H Aug. 84 5.2 20 0.05
Dead Sea DS Oct. 87 4.3 6.5 0.02
Whittier W Oct. 87 6.1 19 0.19
Petrolia, Calif. C June 75 5.3 31 0.2
Taft T July 52 7.2 45 0.18
14Acceleration time histories of chosen earthquakes
15Acceleration response spectra of chosen
earthquakes (5 damping)
16EQ T H A B E 20 m
H 0.16 0.26 0.33 0.35 0.28
DS 0.16 0.31 0.35 0.40 0.37
W 0.20 0.37 0.28 0.49 0.42
C 0.19 0.29 0.30 0.44 0.42
T 0.16 0.28 0.39 0.36 0.25
- Peak Ground Surface Acceleration
17Effect of soil cover thickness on surface
acceleration (Eilat site)
T4H / Vs
18Effect of maximum rock acceleration on surface
response (Tel-Aviv site)
19Practices
- The Ministry of Housing has initiated a program
to investigate the condition of existing
buildings, and where necessary, to carry out the
appropriate steps for strengthening them, in high
risk areas (e.g. Beit She'an). Similary, studies
are being made of the seismic stability of
structures and embankments (for example in the
Dead Sea area). - In parallel, steps are being taken in order to
advance the seismic safety of new construction
an updated seismic building code has been issued,
and research into aseismic building methods
continues.