The
1783 Calabrian earthquakes were a sequence of five
strong earthquakes that hit the region of
Calabria in southern Italy
(then part
of the Kingdom of Two
Sicilies), the first two of which produced significant tsunami. The epicenters form
a clear alignment extending nearly 100 km from the Straits of
Messina
to about 18 km SSW of Catanzaro
. The earthquakes occurred over a period of
nearly two months, all with estimated
magnitudes of 5.9 or
greater. Estimates of the total number of deaths lie in the range
32,000 to 50,000.
Tectonic setting
The southwestern part of Calabria and the eastern part of Sicily
are areas of active
crustal extension within the
Siculo–Calabrian Rift Zone. This 350 km long zone
developed within the Apennine chain during the
Pleistocene and takes up WNW-ESE directed
extension.
The events
February 5

Contemporary print of the February 5
earthquake
This earthquake, with an estimated magnitude of 7.0, affected a
large area including most of the southern Italian peninsula and
shook the whole of
Sicily. Many villages were
damaged and as many as 180 almost completely destroyed, with more
than 25,000 casualties.
A tsunami affected the coastline on both
sides of the Straits of Messina, destroying the harbour walls at
Messina
.
Near the epicenter the ground shaking was so intense that people
were knocked off their feet and heavy stones were found to be
dislodged and overturned.
Large landslides
caused major destruction at Terranova and Molochio
but even
well-constructed buildings not thus affected were almost completely
destroyed, such as in Oppido Mamertina
and Casalnuovo.
The earthquake is thought to have involved rupturing of the
Galatro, Cittanova and Sant'Eufemia
faults, which form the southeastern boundary
to the Gioia Basin.
February 6
This magnitude 6.2 event occurred during the night following the
first event and struck the area just to the southwest.
Most of the damage and
casualties appear to have been caused by a tsunami that was set off
by a major collapse of Monte PacĂ into the sea near Scilla
shortly after the earthquake. Many of
Scilla's residents, frightened by the tremors of the previous day
had moved onto the open beach for the night, where they were
overwhelmed by the waves. The tsunami caused severe flooding in the
town, reaching as far as 200 m inland, and there were more than
1500 deaths.
The earthquake is thought to have involved rupturing of the Scilla
fault, which defines the coast around Scilla.
February 7
This event occurred at about midday 40 km NE of the first mainshock
on the 5th.
Severe damage extended 15 km along the front
of the Serre Mountains, levelling all the villages between Acquaro
and Soriano Calabro
.
The earthquake is thought to have involved rupturing of the
southern segment of the Serre fault that bounds the Mesima Basin.
March 1
This earthquake was the weakest of the sequence and caused
relatively little damage.
The earthquake is thought to have involved rupturing of the
northern segment of the Serre fault.
March 28
The final event of the sequence was of similar magnitude to the
first and had an epicenter about 20 km east of the fourth, near
Borgia in the Catanzaro Basin.
The earthquake lasted for about ten seconds,
and many villages were destroyed with many hundreds dead in Borgia,
Maida
and Cortale
.
Landslides
were common and sand volcanoes were
seen, particularly on the banks of the Amato
river.
This earthquake has not been tied to a particular fault, but a
recent re-evaluation of the intensity data indicates that the
isoseismal areas are elongated NE-SW,
suggesting faulting of similar trend to that observed for the other
earthquakes in the sequence.
Summary of earthquakes
The earthquake parameters shown below are taken from the CFTI4
online catalogue, the epicentral locations are here related to the
nearest large village or town.
{| class=wikitable
Relationship between earthquakes
All the earthquakes in this sequence are thought to be linked by a
process of triggering caused by stress redistribution following
each individual event.
See also
References
| Location |
Date |
Time |
Latitude |
Longitude |
Magnitude |
Intensity |
|
near
Oppido
Mamertina |
| February 5 |
| 12:00 |
| 38.30 |
| 15.97 |
| 7.0 |
| XI |
|
7 km
NE of Messina |
| February 6 |
| 00:20 |
| 38.22 |
| 15.63 |
| 6.2 |
| VIII-IX |
|
3 km
SW of Soriano
Calabro |
| February 7 |
| 13:10 |
| 38.58 |
| 16.20 |
| 6.6 |
| X |
|
2 km
SE of Filadelfia |
| March 1 |
| 01:40 |
| 38.77 |
| 16.30 |
| 5.9 |
| IX |
|
near
Vallefiorita |
| March 28 |
| 18:55 |
| 38.78 |
| 16.47 |
| 7.0 |
| X |
|