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2009 L'Aquila earthquake

The 2009 L'Aquila earthquake occurred in the region of Abruzzo, in central Italy. The main shock occurred at 03:32 CEST (01:32 UTC) on 6 April 2009, and was rated 5.8 or 5.9 on the Richter magnitude scale and 6.3 on the moment magnitude scale;[9] its epicentre was near L'Aquila, the capital of Abruzzo, which together with surrounding villages suffered the most damage. There have been several thousand foreshocks and aftershocks since December 2008, more than thirty of which had a Richter magnitude greater than 3.5.[9]

2009 L'Aquila earthquake
The local prefecture (a government office) damaged by the earthquake
UTC time2009-04-06 01:32:42
ISC event13438018
USGS-ANSSComCat
Local date6 April 2009 (2009-04-06)
Local time03:32 CEST[1]
MagnitudeMw6.3 (GCMT)[2]
Depth9.46 km (5.88 mi)[1]
Epicenter42°20′51″N 13°22′48″E / 42.3476°N 13.3800°E / 42.3476; 13.3800Coordinates: 42°20′51″N 13°22′48″E / 42.3476°N 13.3800°E / 42.3476; 13.3800[1]
Areas affectedAbruzzo, Italy
Total damage$16 billion[3]
Max. intensityX (Extreme)[4]
Peak acceleration0.66 g[5]
Peak velocity42.83 cm/s[5]
Casualties308 dead[6]
1,500+ injured[7]
66,000+ homeless[8]

The earthquake was felt throughout central Italy; 308 people are known to have died,[6] making this the deadliest earthquake to hit Italy since the 1980 Irpinia earthquake. In a subsequent inquiry of the handling of the disaster, seven members of the Italian National Commission for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks were accused of giving "inexact, incomplete and contradictory" information about the danger of the tremors prior to the main quake.[10][11] On 22 October 2012, six scientists and one ex-government official were convicted of multiple manslaughter for downplaying the likelihood of a major earthquake six days before it took place. They were each sentenced to six years' imprisonment,[10][11][12] but the verdict was overturned on 10 November 2014.[13] Criticism was also applied to poor building standards that led to the failure of many modern buildings in a known earthquake zone: an official at Italy's Civil Protection Agency, Franco Barberi, said that "in California, an earthquake like this one would not have killed a single person".[14]

Cause

This earthquake was caused by movement on a NW-SE trending normal fault according to moment tensor solutions.[15] Although Italy lies in a tectonically complex region, the central part of the Apennines has been characterised by extensional tectonics since the Pliocene epoch (i.e. about the last 5 million years), with most of the active faults being normal in type and NW-SE trending.[16] The extension is due to the back-arc basin in the Tyrrhenian Sea opening faster than the African Plate is colliding with the Eurasian Plate.[15]

The earthquake occurred at 03:32 CEST (01:32 UTC) at the relatively shallow depth of 9.46 kilometres (5.88 mi) and with an epicentre at 42.3476° N, 13.3800 °E,[1] approximately 90 kilometres (60 mi) north-east of Rome, near the city of L'Aquila.[17] The earthquake was reported to measure 6.3 on the moment magnitude scale.[15]

Historical context

Earthquakes mark the history of L'Aquila, a city built on the bed of an ancient lake, providing a soil structure that amplifies seismic waves. The city was struck by earthquakes in 1315, 1349, 1452, 1501, 1646, 1703, 1706 and 1958.[18] The earthquake of February 1703, which caused devastation across much of central Italy, largely destroyed the city and killed around 5,000 people.[19] In addition, a 1915 earthquake that killed more than 30,000 people and obliterated almost every building in Avezzano and several villages around it happened within 35 kilometres (22 mi) from L'Aquila.

Effects

Nationality Deaths Injured
  Italy 288 1,173
  North Macedonia 5[20]
  Romania 5[21]
  Czech Republic 2[22]
  Ukraine 2[23][24]
  Greece 1[25] 5
  France 1[26]
  Israel 1[27]
  Argentina 1[28]
  Peru 1[29]
  Moldova 1[30]
Total 308[31] about 1,500

The earthquake caused damage to between 3,000 and 11,000 buildings in the medieval city of L'Aquila.[32] Several buildings also collapsed. A total of 308 people died in the earthquake,[6] including five Macedonians,[33] five Romanians,[21] two Ukrainians,[23][24] two Czechs,[22] a Greek,[25] a Moldovan,[34] a Peruvian,[29] an Argentinian,[28] a French,[26] and an Israeli, and approximately 1,500 people were injured. Twenty of the victims were children.[35] Around 66,000 people were rendered homeless.[8]

The main earthquake was preceded by two smaller earthquakes the previous day.[32] The earthquake was felt as far away as Rome (92 kilometres (57 mi) away), in other parts of Lazio, as well as Marche, Molise, Umbria and Campania. Schools remained closed in the Abruzzo region. Most of the inhabitants of L'Aquila abandoned their homes and the city itself; in the city centre of L'Aquila, and the nearby village of Paganica which was also badly damaged, many streets were impassable due to fallen masonry. The hospital at L'Aquila, where many of the victims were brought, suffered damage in the 4.8 aftershock which followed the main earthquake an hour later. Powerful aftershocks, some only slightly weaker than the main shock, were felt throughout the following 2 days.

Villages in the valley along Strada Statale 17 just outside l'Aquila suffered the greatest damage while medieval mountain hill towns lying high above the valley suffered little damage. Onna was reported to be mostly leveled with 38 deaths among the 350 residents.[36] The villages of Villa Sant'Angelo and San Pio delle Camere were badly damaged.[37] Fatalities were reported in Poggio Picenze, Tornimparte, Fossa, Totani, San Gregorio and San Pio delle Camere.[38]

Many of L'Aquila's medieval buildings were damaged. The apse of the Basilica of Saint Bernardino of Siena, L'Aquila's largest Renaissance church, was seriously damaged, and its campanile collapsed. Almost the whole dome of the 18th-century church of Anime Sante in Piazza Duomo fell down. The 13th-century Basilica di Santa Maria di Collemaggio collapsed from the transept to the back of the church, and Porta Napoli, the oldest gate to the city, was destroyed. The third floor of Forte Spagnolo, the 16th-century castle housing the National Museum of Abruzzo, collapsed, as did the cupola of the 18th-century Baroque church of St Augustine, damaging L'Aquila's state archives. This church had been rebuilt after it was destroyed in the 1703 earthquake.[39] The Cathedral of L'Aquila has lost part of its transept and maybe more with the effects of the aftershocks. Slight damage was also reported to the Baths of Caracalla in Rome, but other Roman monuments such as the Colosseum and Roman Forum were unharmed.[40]

 
The damaged Santa Maria Church in the town of Paganica

While most of l'Aquila's medieval structures suffered damage, many of its modern buildings suffered the greatest damage, for instance, a dormitory at the university of l'Aquila collapsed. Even some buildings that were believed to be "earthquake-proof" were damaged. L'Aquila Hospital's new wing, which opened in 2000 and was thought capable of resisting almost any earthquake, suffered extensive damage and had to be closed.

Homeless camps

Around 40,000 people who were made homeless by the earthquake found accommodation in tented camps[8] and a further 10,000 were housed in hotels on the coast.[41] Others sought shelter with friends and relatives throughout Italy. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi caused a controversy when he said, in an interview to the German station n-tv, that the homeless victims should consider themselves to be on a "camping weekend" – "They have everything they need, they have medical care, hot food... Of course, their current lodgings are a bit temporary. But they should see it like a weekend of camping."[42] To clarify his thought, he also told the people in a homeless camp: "Head to the beach. It's Easter. Take a break. We're paying for it, you'll be well looked after."[43] The billionaire prime minister claimed he will offer his own house to some of the survivors.[44]

Building standards

Poor building standards or construction materials seem to have further contributed to the large number of victims. According to firefighters and other rescuers, some concrete elements of the fallen buildings "seemed to have been made poorly, possibly with sand".[45] An official at Italy's Civil Protection Agency, Franco Barberi, said that "in California, an earthquake like this one would not have killed a single person".[14] According to Italian media, L'Aquila's chief prosecutor has opened a probe into possible criminal blame for the collapses.[46]

Luminous phenomena

Many people reported seeing peculiar sightings of light glows, flashes, lightning, flames and fireballs, all of which were considered candidates for earthquake light.[47][48] 241 luminous phenomena were collected including photos and videos. At least 99 of such phenomena occurred before the main shock and other strong events of the seismic sequence, whereas globular lights, luminous clouds and diffused light were more frequent before the quakes. Flashes were mostly observed during the main shock. Electrical discharges and flames were observed principally after the main shock. Many luminous events were observed before and after the main shock without the ground shaking and were very similar to those reported about two centuries ago. An earthquake alarm system has been proposed, based on a video sensing network to capture earthquake light and provide a warning if observations match threshold characteristics preceding a main shock.[49]

Aftershocks

 
Magnitude of L'Aquila earthquake and aftershocks

The epicentral region saw dozens of significant aftershocks following the main earthquake. The strongest, which hit at 19:47 CEST on 7 April, measured magnitude 5.3 ML  and caused further damage.[50] According to the Italian National Geophysics Institute director Boschi, the aftershock epicentres migrated south-east, thus lessening the risk of further major shocks near populated areas.

Aftershocks caused safety problems for rescue crews searching for injured victims trapped in precarious structures in the historic center of L'Aquila, a medieval city. Using cranes and backhoes to remove loose bricks and broken timbers, the crews were aware that even a small aftershock could have triggered the collapse of seriously damaged walls or parapets.

The aftershocks also caused sustained psychological trauma to small children and elderly who had already been traumatized by the main earthquake of 6 April 2009. Aware of this, the Italian government temporarily relocated thousands of citizens away from the epicentral area.

As a result of aftershocks, the dome of the Anime Sante Basilica in L'Aquila, already heavily damaged by the main shock, almost entirely collapsed. Further buildings collapsed in L'Aquila and in neighbouring municipalities. The largest aftershock was strong enough to be felt in Rome, where it caused an elderly man to die of cardiac arrest.[51]

List of foreshocks and aftershocks

Only shocks with local magnitude 4.0 or higher are listed. There have been dozens of small magnitude aftershocks, ML  1–3, but these generally do not cause further structural damage. Shocks with local magnitude 5.0 or higher are highlighted in blue, and the main shock is highlighted in darker blue.[52]

Date (YYYY-MM-DD)
and time (UTC)
Time
(local)
Lat. Long. Depth ML
2009-03-30 13:38:39 15:38:39 42.321° N 13.376° E 9.8 km (6.1 mi) 4.1
2009-04-06 01:32:39 03:32:39 42.334° N 13.334° E 8.8 km (5.5 mi) 6.3
2009-04-06 01:36:29 03:36:29 42.355° N 13.342° E 9.7 km (6.0 mi) 4.7
2009-04-06 01:40:51 03:40:51 42.418° N 13.408° E 11.0 km (6.8 mi) 4.1
2009-04-06 01:41:33 03:41:33 42.387° N 13.316° E 9.1 km (5.7 mi) 4.3
2009-04-06 01:42:50 03:42:50 42.300° N 13.429° E 10.5 km (6.5 mi) 4.2
2009-04-06 02:37:04 04:37:04 42.366° N 13.340° E 10.1 km (6.3 mi) 4.6
2009-04-06 16:38:09 18:38:09 42.362° N 13.333° E 10.2 km (6.3 mi) 4.0
2009-04-06 23:15:37 01:15:37 42.451° N 13.364° E 8.6 km (5.3 mi) 4.8
2009-04-07 09:26:28 11:26:28 42.342° N 13.388° E 10.2 km (6.3 mi) 4.7
2009-04-07 17:47:37 19:47:37 42.275° N 13.464° E 15.1 km (9.4 mi) 5.3
2009-04-07 21:34:29 23:34:29 42.380° N 13.376° E 7.4 km (4.6 mi) 4.2
2009-04-08 22:56:50 00:56:50 42.507° N 13.364° E 10.2 km (6.3 mi) 4.3
2009-04-09 00:52:59 02:52:59 42.484° N 13.343° E 15.4 km (9.6 mi) 5.1
2009-04-09 03:14:52 05:14:52 42.338° N 13.437° E 18.0 km (11.2 mi) 4.2
2009-04-09 04:32:44 06:32:44 42.445° N 13.420° E 8.1 km (5.0 mi) 4.0
2009-04-09 19:38:16 21:38:16 42.501° N 13.356° E 17.2 km (10.7 mi) 4.9
2009-04-13 21:14:24 23:14:24 42.504° N 13.363° E 7.5 km (4.7 mi) 4.9
2009-04-14 20:17:27 22:17:27 42.530° N 13.288° E 10.4 km (6.5 mi) 4.1
2009-04-23 15:14:08 17:14:08 42.247° N 13.492° E 9.9 km (6.2 mi) 4.0
2009-04-23 21:49:00 23:49:00 42.233° N 13.479° E 9.3 km (5.8 mi) 4.0
2009-06-22 20:58:40 22:58:40 42.446° N 13.356° E 14.2 km (8.8 mi) 4.5
2009-07-03 11:03:07 13:03:07 42.409° N 13.387° E 8.8 km (5.5 mi) 4.1
2009-07-12 08:38:51 10:38:51 42.338° N 13.378° E 10.8 km (6.7 mi) 4.0
2009-09-24 16:14:57 18:14:57 42.453° N 13.330° E 9.7 km (6.0 mi) 4.1

Emergency and reconstruction aid

National aid

 
Emergency personnel review damaged buildings

Many Italian companies have offered some sort of help. All Italian mobile companies (Telecom Italia Mobile,[53] Vodafone Italy,[54]Wind,[citation needed] H3G[citation needed]), and some Mobile virtual network operators,[55] sent free minutes and credit to all their pre-paid customers in Abruzzo, suspended billing to all post-paid customers and extended their coverage with additional mobile base stations to cover homeless camps. In addition, some companies sent free mobile phones, SIM Cards and chargers for those who lost their mobiles, and set up a national unique number to send donations to, by placing a call or sending an SMS. Poste Italiane sent to homeless camps some mobile units acting as Postal Office, to allow people to withdraw money from their accounts as well as their retirement.[56] Many companies, such as pay-tv SKY Italia, suspended billing to all customers in Abruzzo, and offered some decoders to homeless camps to allow them to follow the funerals and the news.[57] Ferrovie dello Stato offered railway sleeping carriages to host some homeless people, and offered free tickets to all people and students living in Abruzzo. AISCAT (Associazione Italiana Società Concessionarie Autostrade e Trafori) declared that all toll-roads in Abruzzo would be free of charge.[58] All tax billing for all Abruzzo residents has been suspended by the government, as well as mortgage payments.

International aid

Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi refused foreign aid for the emergency, saying that Italians were "proud people" and had sufficient resources to deal with the crisis.[36] However he singled out the United States, announcing that he would accept aid for reconstruction: "If the United States wants to give a tangible sign of its solidarity with Italy, it could take on the responsibility of rebuilding heritage sites and churches. We would be very happy to have this support." and suggested the USA help rebuild "a small district of a town or a suburb".[59] Aid was offered by[60] Austria, Brazil, Croatia, the European Union, France, Germany, Spain, Greece, Slovakia, Israel, Portugal,[61] Iran,[62] North Macedonia,[63] Mexico,[64] Russia, Serbia,[65] Slovenia,[66] Switzerland,[67] Tunisia, the Turkish Red Crescent,[68] Ukraine,[69] and the United States.[70] Aid was also offered by various organisations, companies, sport clubs and celebrities including ACF Fiorentina,[71] Carla Bruni,[72] Madonna,[73] S.S.C. Napoli,[74] Zastava[75] and Fiat.[76]

On 20 November 2009 in Brussels, Pawel Samecki and Guido Bertolaso who, at that time, were European Commissioner for Regional Policy and commander in chief of the Italian Civil Protection department respectively, signed an agreement to provide 493.7 million euros from EU solidarity fund to help reconstruction in Abruzzo.[77]

Prior warning

Italian laboratory technician Giampaolo Giuliani claimed to have predicted[78] a major earthquake on Italian television a month before,[79][80][81] after measuring increased levels of radon emitted from the ground. He was accused of being alarmist[81] by the Director of the Civil Defence, Guido Bertolaso, and forced to remove his findings from the Internet (old data and descriptions are still online).[82] He was also reported to police a week before the main quake for "causing fear" among the local population when the mayor of Sulmona claimed that Giuliani predicted an imminent earthquake in his town,[83] about 50 km (31 mi) from L'Aquila, on 30 March, after a 4° quake happened (Sulmona later only suffered minor damages from 6 April earthquake).[84] Enzo Boschi, the head of the Italian National Geophysics Institute declared:

Every time there is an earthquake there are people who claim to have predicted it. As far as I know nobody predicted this earthquake with precision. It is not possible to predict earthquakes.[85]

Predicting earthquakes based on radon emissions has been studied by scientists since the 1970s, but enthusiasm for it had faded due to inconsistent results.[86]

Controversy on reconstruction and criminality

In the days following the tragedy, journalists reported that the reconstruction works may have been infiltrated by criminal organizations, with the Mafia and Camorra trying to infiltrate the contract procedures.

On 7 April, a few hours after the main earthquake, journalist Luca Spinelli stated:[87]

The transfers of money necessitated by such a big tragedy are huge: much the same as the cost of running a war. [...] Any company would be interested in a turnover and a potential income like this. Surely the "main Italian company" will be: a company with a ninety billion annual income, making up to 7% of Italian GDP (Gross Domestic Product): the Mafia. [...] Abruzzo and Marsica are known territories of the mafia. A region which "attracted the attention of some Camorra and Sacra Corona Unita associates too", according to Franco Forgione, President of the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission in 2007. A region which, according to the Antimafia District Public Prosecutor's Office of L'Aquila, hosts part of the hidden treasure of mafia boss Vito Ciancimino, reckoned to be around 600 million euros, a region which has seen many recent arrests for mafia infiltration; infiltration in contracts, building permits, the health system, the very things that will be needed for the reconstruction.

The week following the earthquake, on 14 April, journalist and writer Roberto Saviano, author of the bestseller Gomorrah, wrote:[88]

Data demonstrates that the Camorra invasion (in Abruzzo) during these years was enormous. In 2006 it emerged that the ambush against mafia boss Vitale was decided and settled in detail at Villa Rosa in Martinsicuro. On 10 September, Diego León Montoya Sánchez, the drug dealer deemed among the ten most wanted by the FBI, had one of his bases in Abruzzo. Nicola di Villano, cashier in a criminal-entrepreneurial organisation led by the Zagaria family of Casapesenna, repeatedly managed to escape capture and it was discovered that his shelter was located in the Abruzzo National Park, where he had the ability to move freely. Abruzzo has become a junction point for waste traffic. [...] Behind it all, obviously, the Camorra clans.

In the following weeks, even major Italian institutions talked about the danger of criminal infiltration, noting that these risks would have been avoided with adequate supervision and inspections. On 15 April, President of the Chamber of Deputies Gianfranco Fini confirmed the need to "watch out for mafia infiltrations".[89]

On 17 April, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, stated: "Exploitation will be impossible, we will reconstruct within 6 months keeping out exploitation and the mafia."[90]

State funeral

 
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone presides over the state funeral ceremony

On the morning of 10 April 2009, which was also Good Friday, a state funeral was held for 205 of the 291 victims of the earthquake. It was attended by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, President of the Republic Giorgio Napolitano, and many other politicians and church dignitaries.[91] The funeral Mass was led by the Vatican's second highest official, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone. The Vatican had earlier granted a special dispensation to hold a Mass on Good Friday, the only day on the Roman Catholic calendar on which Mass is not normally held.[92] Near the end, an Islamic rite was held for the Muslim victims. In addition Friday was declared a national day of mourning, with flags flying at half staff, shops lowering their shutters and flights stopping at the airport for one minute of silence.[93]

Pope Benedict XVI later visited the areas affected by the L'Aquila earthquake on 28 April 2009.[94]

G8 summit

The 35th G8 summit took place in the city of L'Aquila, Abruzzo, on 8–10 July 2009. It was moved from the Sardinian seaside city of La Maddalena as part of an attempt to redistribute disaster funds after the earthquake.[95]

Prosecutions

A trial, which lasted from September 2011 until October 2012, found six scientists and a former government official guilty of involuntary manslaughter.[96] According to the prosecution, they had spread "inaccurate, incomplete and contradictory" statements after preliminary tremors could be felt on the days before 6 April 2009. While scientists were found guilty for failing to give adequate warning,[97] the full text of the decision said that "science [was] not being tried for failing to predict the April 6, 2009 earthquake" ("Non è sottoposta a giudizio la scienza per non-essere riuscita a prevedere il terremoto del 6 aprile 2009").[98] The seven members of the National Commission for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks who were convicted were: Franco Barberi, head of Serious Risks Commission; Enzo Boschi, former president of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology; Giulio Lorenzo Selvaggi, director of National Earthquake Centre; Gian Michele Calvi, director of European Centre for Earthquake Engineering; Claudio Eva, physicist; Mauro Dolce, director of the Civil Protection Agency's earthquake risk office; Bernardo De Bernardinis, former vice-president of Civil Protection Agency's technical department.[10]

Boschi had called a major earthquake "unlikely", while not entirely excluding the possibility. De Bernardinis had informed the public that there was "no danger".[11] The prosecutors cited a scientific opinion that the low-level tremors ahead of 6 April quake were typical of the seismic activity preceding major convulsions, but the defendants had classified them as a "normal geological phenomenon".[12] They were criticised in court for being "falsely reassuring" and Judge Marco Billi gave them a six-year jail sentence on 22 October 2012,[10] reasoning that they had provided "an assessment of the risks that was incomplete, inept, unsuitable, and criminally mistaken".[98][99] They were also banned from ever holding public office again and had to pay court costs and damages.

Enzo Boschi, one of the convicted, said, "I thought I would have been acquitted. I still don't understand what I was convicted of."[10] His co-defendant Claudio Eva said that "it was a very Italian and medieval decision."[100] Their lawyers announced they would appeal the verdict, and it will not be finally decided until it is heard by the appellate court.

The verdicts were strongly criticised by the British media and public.[10] The journal Nature ran an editorial stating that the "verdict is perverse and the sentence ludicrous."[101] Malcolm Sperrin, a British scientist, said:

If the scientific community is to be penalised for making predictions that turn out to be incorrect, or for not accurately predicting an event that subsequently occurs, then scientific endeavour will be restricted to certainties only, and the benefits that are associated with findings, from medicine to physics, will be stalled.[10]

This position was countered by other views. David Ropeik, writing for Scientific American, contested the "trial against science" thesis, describing it as "a judgment not against science, but against a failure of science communication".[102]

During the trial, other scientists attacked the scientific conduct of the commission. Professor Francesco Giovanni Maria Stoppa, a member of the commission until 2003, said: "They should have given information proportional to our knowledge, which in 2009 spotlighted a criticality in L'Aquila. Under those conditions, there were 5–6 days before the quake to give information, and this doesn't mean forecasting earthquakes."[103]

In protest over the prison sentences handed to his seven colleagues, Luciano Maiani, the head of Italy's disaster body, resigned.[104]

In November 2014, the scientists' convictions were quashed by an appeals court, except for Bernardo De Bernardinis, whose sentence was reduced.[105][106] The result of this appeal was definitively confirmed by the Italian Supreme Court, Corte di Cassazione, on 20 November 2015.[107][108][109]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Istituto Nazionale Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV). Location of April 6, 2009 earthquake updated with all the available data. Retrieved 24 August 2009. Archived 7 September 2009.
  2. ^ International Seismological Centre. ISC-EHB Bulletin. Thatcham, United Kingdom. [Event 13438018].
  3. ^ . Fox News. 15 April 2009. Archived from the original on 19 April 2009. Retrieved 23 October 2012.
  4. ^ Gabriele Ameri; Dino Bindi; Francesca Pacor; Fabrizio Galadini (2011). "The 2009 April 6, Mw 6.3, L'Aquila (central Italy) earthquake: finite-fault effects on intensity data". Geophysical Journal International. 186 (2): 837–851. Bibcode:2011GeoJI.186..837A. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.2011.05069.x.
  5. ^ a b "Table 3 Peak ground acceleration (PGA), Velocity (PGV) and Displacement".
  6. ^ a b c Alexander D.E. (2010). "The L'Aquila Earthquake of 6 April 2009 and Italian Government Policy on Disaster Response". Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research. 2 (4): 325–342. doi:10.1080/19390459.2010.511450. S2CID 153641723.
  7. ^ "Abruzzo in ginocchio, i morti sono 272 Ancora scosse. Venerdì i funerali di Stato". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Milan. 8 April 2009. from the original on 7 July 2009.
  8. ^ a b c Hooper, John (28 April 2009). "Pope visits Italian village hit hardest by earthquake". The Guardian. London. from the original on 1 May 2009. Retrieved 19 May 2009.
  9. ^ a b Istituto Nazionale Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV). The L'Aquila seismic sequence – April 2009. Accessed 24 August 2009. 7 September 2009.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Johnston, Alan (2012). "BBC News – L'Aquila quake: Italy scientists guilty of manslaughter". bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  11. ^ a b c Pappas, Stephanie (2012). "Italian Scientists Get 6 Years for Earthquake Statements | LiveScience". livescience.com. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
  12. ^ a b Sisto, Alberto (22 October 2012). "Italian scientists convicted over earthquake warning". Reuters. London. from the original on 23 October 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2012. Alt URL
  13. ^ "L'Aquila quake: Scientists see convictions overturned". BBC News. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  14. ^ a b Aloisi, Silvia (7 April 2009). "Italy quake exposes poor building standards". Reuters. from the original on 16 April 2009. Retrieved 17 April 2009.
  15. ^ a b c USGS. "M6.3 – central Italy". United States Geological Survey.
  16. ^ Akinci, A.; Galadini, F.; Pantosti, D.; Petersen, M.; Malagnini, L.; Perkins, D. (6 April 2009). "Effect of Time Dependence on Probabilistic Seismic-Hazard Maps and Deaggregation for the Central Apennines, Italy". The Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 99 (2A): 585. Bibcode:2009BuSSA..99..585A. doi:10.1785/0120080053. from the original on 10 April 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2009.
  17. ^ Lewis, Paul (6 April 2009). "Background: Italy and earthquakes". The Guardian. London.
  18. ^ . Abruzzo2000.com. Archived from the original on 7 January 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2009.
  19. ^ Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc (1792). Buffon's Natural History. Vol. 2. London: J.S. Barr. OCLC 316760617.
  20. ^ (in Macedonian). A1 TV. 9 April 2009. Archived from the original on 11 April 2009.|
  21. ^ a b "Cinci români, printre victimele cutremurului din Italia" (in Romanian). Realitatea TV. 8 April 2009. Retrieved 7 April 2009.
  22. ^ a b . ANSA. 6 April 2009. Archived from the original on 9 April 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2009.
  23. ^ a b "Eight-year-old Ukrainian girl killed in earthquake in Italy". UNIAN. 8 April 2009. from the original on 10 April 2009.
  24. ^ a b Anna Parabok
  25. ^ a b "Trapped Greek student found dead in L' Aquila". ANA. 7 April 2009. from the original on 13 April 2009. Retrieved 7 April 2009.
  26. ^ a b "Italie/séisme: Une française tuée". Le Figaro (in French). Paris. Agence France-Presse. 7 April 2009. from the original on 19 June 2009.
  27. ^ Nahmias, Roee (8 April 2009). "Body of Israeli missing since Italy quake found". ynet. from the original on 11 April 2009. Retrieved 8 April 2009.
  28. ^ a b Gues, ed. (7 April 2009). "Murió una argentina en el sismo de Italia" (in Spanish). Retrieved 9 April 2009.
  29. ^ a b "il Centro – Le vittime del terremoto Abruzzo". Racconta.kataweb.it. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  30. ^ Grec Marina
  31. ^ "Le vittime del Terremoto". il Centro. Retrieved 2 June 2009.
  32. ^ a b "Powerful Italian quake kills many". BBC News Online. London. 6 April 2009. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
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External links

  • Pace, B.; Peruzza, L.; Boncio, P.; Lavecchia, G., "Layered Seismogenic Source Model and Probabilistic Seismic-Hazard Analyses in Central Italy", Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, vol.96, p. 107–132, February 2006.
  • Akinci, A.; Galadini, F.; Pantosti, D.; Petersen, M.D.; Malagnini, L.; Perkins, D., "Effect of Time Dependence on Probabilistic Seismic-Hazard Maps and Deaggregation for the Central Apennines, Italy" 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, vol.99, no.2A, p. 585–610, April 2009, doi:10.1785/0120080053
  • Carraro, F.; Giardino, M., "Geological evidence of recent fault evolution; examples from Camp Imperatore, L'Aquila, central Apennines", Il Quaternario, vol. 5, 1992, p. 181–200.
  • Fidani, C., "The earthquake lights (EQL) of the 6 April 2009 Aquila earthquake, in Central Italy", NHESS, vol.10, p. 967, 2010.
  • Kerr, Richard A., "After the Quake, in Search of the Science --- or Even a Good Prediction", Science Magazine, vol. 324, 17 April 2009, p. 322.
  • Koukoufikis G. 2019. Post-disaster redevelopment and the "knowledge city": limitations of an urban imaginary in L’Aquila [2]
  • The International Seismological Centre has a bibliography and/or authoritative data for this event.
  • ReliefWeb's main page for this event.

2009, aquila, earthquake, occurred, region, abruzzo, central, italy, main, shock, occurred, cest, april, 2009, rated, richter, magnitude, scale, moment, magnitude, scale, epicentre, near, aquila, capital, abruzzo, which, together, with, surrounding, villages, . The 2009 L Aquila earthquake occurred in the region of Abruzzo in central Italy The main shock occurred at 03 32 CEST 01 32 UTC on 6 April 2009 and was rated 5 8 or 5 9 on the Richter magnitude scale and 6 3 on the moment magnitude scale 9 its epicentre was near L Aquila the capital of Abruzzo which together with surrounding villages suffered the most damage There have been several thousand foreshocks and aftershocks since December 2008 more than thirty of which had a Richter magnitude greater than 3 5 9 2009 L Aquila earthquakeThe local prefecture a government office damaged by the earthquakeShow map of AbruzzoShow map of ItalyUTC time2009 04 06 01 32 42ISC event13438018USGS ANSSComCatLocal date6 April 2009 2009 04 06 Local time03 32 CEST 1 MagnitudeMw6 3 GCMT 2 Depth9 46 km 5 88 mi 1 Epicenter42 20 51 N 13 22 48 E 42 3476 N 13 3800 E 42 3476 13 3800 Coordinates 42 20 51 N 13 22 48 E 42 3476 N 13 3800 E 42 3476 13 3800 1 Areas affectedAbruzzo ItalyTotal damage 16 billion 3 Max intensityX Extreme 4 Peak acceleration0 66 g 5 Peak velocity42 83 cm s 5 Casualties308 dead 6 1 500 injured 7 66 000 homeless 8 The earthquake was felt throughout central Italy 308 people are known to have died 6 making this the deadliest earthquake to hit Italy since the 1980 Irpinia earthquake In a subsequent inquiry of the handling of the disaster seven members of the Italian National Commission for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks were accused of giving inexact incomplete and contradictory information about the danger of the tremors prior to the main quake 10 11 On 22 October 2012 six scientists and one ex government official were convicted of multiple manslaughter for downplaying the likelihood of a major earthquake six days before it took place They were each sentenced to six years imprisonment 10 11 12 but the verdict was overturned on 10 November 2014 13 Criticism was also applied to poor building standards that led to the failure of many modern buildings in a known earthquake zone an official at Italy s Civil Protection Agency Franco Barberi said that in California an earthquake like this one would not have killed a single person 14 Contents 1 Cause 2 Historical context 3 Effects 3 1 Homeless camps 3 2 Building standards 3 3 Luminous phenomena 4 Aftershocks 4 1 List of foreshocks and aftershocks 5 Emergency and reconstruction aid 5 1 National aid 5 2 International aid 6 Prior warning 7 Controversy on reconstruction and criminality 8 State funeral 9 G8 summit 10 Prosecutions 11 See also 12 Notes 13 External linksCause EditThis earthquake was caused by movement on a NW SE trending normal fault according to moment tensor solutions 15 Although Italy lies in a tectonically complex region the central part of the Apennines has been characterised by extensional tectonics since the Pliocene epoch i e about the last 5 million years with most of the active faults being normal in type and NW SE trending 16 The extension is due to the back arc basin in the Tyrrhenian Sea opening faster than the African Plate is colliding with the Eurasian Plate 15 The earthquake occurred at 03 32 CEST 01 32 UTC at the relatively shallow depth of 9 46 kilometres 5 88 mi and with an epicentre at 42 3476 N 13 3800 E 1 approximately 90 kilometres 60 mi north east of Rome near the city of L Aquila 17 The earthquake was reported to measure 6 3 on the moment magnitude scale 15 Historical context EditEarthquakes mark the history of L Aquila a city built on the bed of an ancient lake providing a soil structure that amplifies seismic waves The city was struck by earthquakes in 1315 1349 1452 1501 1646 1703 1706 and 1958 18 The earthquake of February 1703 which caused devastation across much of central Italy largely destroyed the city and killed around 5 000 people 19 In addition a 1915 earthquake that killed more than 30 000 people and obliterated almost every building in Avezzano and several villages around it happened within 35 kilometres 22 mi from L Aquila Effects EditNationality Deaths Injured Italy 288 1 173 North Macedonia 5 20 Romania 5 21 Czech Republic 2 22 Ukraine 2 23 24 Greece 1 25 5 France 1 26 Israel 1 27 Argentina 1 28 Peru 1 29 Moldova 1 30 Total 308 31 about 1 500The earthquake caused damage to between 3 000 and 11 000 buildings in the medieval city of L Aquila 32 Several buildings also collapsed A total of 308 people died in the earthquake 6 including five Macedonians 33 five Romanians 21 two Ukrainians 23 24 two Czechs 22 a Greek 25 a Moldovan 34 a Peruvian 29 an Argentinian 28 a French 26 and an Israeli and approximately 1 500 people were injured Twenty of the victims were children 35 Around 66 000 people were rendered homeless 8 The main earthquake was preceded by two smaller earthquakes the previous day 32 The earthquake was felt as far away as Rome 92 kilometres 57 mi away in other parts of Lazio as well as Marche Molise Umbria and Campania Schools remained closed in the Abruzzo region Most of the inhabitants of L Aquila abandoned their homes and the city itself in the city centre of L Aquila and the nearby village of Paganica which was also badly damaged many streets were impassable due to fallen masonry The hospital at L Aquila where many of the victims were brought suffered damage in the 4 8 aftershock which followed the main earthquake an hour later Powerful aftershocks some only slightly weaker than the main shock were felt throughout the following 2 days Villages in the valley along Strada Statale 17 just outside l Aquila suffered the greatest damage while medieval mountain hill towns lying high above the valley suffered little damage Onna was reported to be mostly leveled with 38 deaths among the 350 residents 36 The villages of Villa Sant Angelo and San Pio delle Camere were badly damaged 37 Fatalities were reported in Poggio Picenze Tornimparte Fossa Totani San Gregorio and San Pio delle Camere 38 Many of L Aquila s medieval buildings were damaged The apse of the Basilica of Saint Bernardino of Siena L Aquila s largest Renaissance church was seriously damaged and its campanile collapsed Almost the whole dome of the 18th century church of Anime Sante in Piazza Duomo fell down The 13th century Basilica di Santa Maria di Collemaggio collapsed from the transept to the back of the church and Porta Napoli the oldest gate to the city was destroyed The third floor of Forte Spagnolo the 16th century castle housing the National Museum of Abruzzo collapsed as did the cupola of the 18th century Baroque church of St Augustine damaging L Aquila s state archives This church had been rebuilt after it was destroyed in the 1703 earthquake 39 The Cathedral of L Aquila has lost part of its transept and maybe more with the effects of the aftershocks Slight damage was also reported to the Baths of Caracalla in Rome but other Roman monuments such as the Colosseum and Roman Forum were unharmed 40 The damaged Santa Maria Church in the town of Paganica While most of l Aquila s medieval structures suffered damage many of its modern buildings suffered the greatest damage for instance a dormitory at the university of l Aquila collapsed Even some buildings that were believed to be earthquake proof were damaged L Aquila Hospital s new wing which opened in 2000 and was thought capable of resisting almost any earthquake suffered extensive damage and had to be closed Homeless camps Edit Around 40 000 people who were made homeless by the earthquake found accommodation in tented camps 8 and a further 10 000 were housed in hotels on the coast 41 Others sought shelter with friends and relatives throughout Italy Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi caused a controversy when he said in an interview to the German station n tv that the homeless victims should consider themselves to be on a camping weekend They have everything they need they have medical care hot food Of course their current lodgings are a bit temporary But they should see it like a weekend of camping 42 To clarify his thought he also told the people in a homeless camp Head to the beach It s Easter Take a break We re paying for it you ll be well looked after 43 The billionaire prime minister claimed he will offer his own house to some of the survivors 44 Building standards Edit Poor building standards or construction materials seem to have further contributed to the large number of victims According to firefighters and other rescuers some concrete elements of the fallen buildings seemed to have been made poorly possibly with sand 45 An official at Italy s Civil Protection Agency Franco Barberi said that in California an earthquake like this one would not have killed a single person 14 According to Italian media L Aquila s chief prosecutor has opened a probe into possible criminal blame for the collapses 46 Luminous phenomena Edit Many people reported seeing peculiar sightings of light glows flashes lightning flames and fireballs all of which were considered candidates for earthquake light 47 48 241 luminous phenomena were collected including photos and videos At least 99 of such phenomena occurred before the main shock and other strong events of the seismic sequence whereas globular lights luminous clouds and diffused light were more frequent before the quakes Flashes were mostly observed during the main shock Electrical discharges and flames were observed principally after the main shock Many luminous events were observed before and after the main shock without the ground shaking and were very similar to those reported about two centuries ago An earthquake alarm system has been proposed based on a video sensing network to capture earthquake light and provide a warning if observations match threshold characteristics preceding a main shock 49 Aftershocks Edit Magnitude of L Aquila earthquake and aftershocks The epicentral region saw dozens of significant aftershocks following the main earthquake The strongest which hit at 19 47 CEST on 7 April measured magnitude 5 3 ML and caused further damage 50 According to the Italian National Geophysics Institute director Boschi the aftershock epicentres migrated south east thus lessening the risk of further major shocks near populated areas Aftershocks caused safety problems for rescue crews searching for injured victims trapped in precarious structures in the historic center of L Aquila a medieval city Using cranes and backhoes to remove loose bricks and broken timbers the crews were aware that even a small aftershock could have triggered the collapse of seriously damaged walls or parapets The aftershocks also caused sustained psychological trauma to small children and elderly who had already been traumatized by the main earthquake of 6 April 2009 Aware of this the Italian government temporarily relocated thousands of citizens away from the epicentral area As a result of aftershocks the dome of the Anime Sante Basilica in L Aquila already heavily damaged by the main shock almost entirely collapsed Further buildings collapsed in L Aquila and in neighbouring municipalities The largest aftershock was strong enough to be felt in Rome where it caused an elderly man to die of cardiac arrest 51 List of foreshocks and aftershocks Edit Only shocks with local magnitude 4 0 or higher are listed There have been dozens of small magnitude aftershocks ML 1 3 but these generally do not cause further structural damage Shocks with local magnitude 5 0 or higher are highlighted in blue and the main shock is highlighted in darker blue 52 Date YYYY MM DD and time UTC Time local Lat Long Depth ML2009 03 30 13 38 39 15 38 39 42 321 N 13 376 E 9 8 km 6 1 mi 4 12009 04 06 01 32 39 03 32 39 42 334 N 13 334 E 8 8 km 5 5 mi 6 32009 04 06 01 36 29 03 36 29 42 355 N 13 342 E 9 7 km 6 0 mi 4 72009 04 06 01 40 51 03 40 51 42 418 N 13 408 E 11 0 km 6 8 mi 4 12009 04 06 01 41 33 03 41 33 42 387 N 13 316 E 9 1 km 5 7 mi 4 32009 04 06 01 42 50 03 42 50 42 300 N 13 429 E 10 5 km 6 5 mi 4 22009 04 06 02 37 04 04 37 04 42 366 N 13 340 E 10 1 km 6 3 mi 4 62009 04 06 16 38 09 18 38 09 42 362 N 13 333 E 10 2 km 6 3 mi 4 02009 04 06 23 15 37 01 15 37 42 451 N 13 364 E 8 6 km 5 3 mi 4 82009 04 07 09 26 28 11 26 28 42 342 N 13 388 E 10 2 km 6 3 mi 4 72009 04 07 17 47 37 19 47 37 42 275 N 13 464 E 15 1 km 9 4 mi 5 32009 04 07 21 34 29 23 34 29 42 380 N 13 376 E 7 4 km 4 6 mi 4 22009 04 08 22 56 50 00 56 50 42 507 N 13 364 E 10 2 km 6 3 mi 4 32009 04 09 00 52 59 02 52 59 42 484 N 13 343 E 15 4 km 9 6 mi 5 12009 04 09 03 14 52 05 14 52 42 338 N 13 437 E 18 0 km 11 2 mi 4 22009 04 09 04 32 44 06 32 44 42 445 N 13 420 E 8 1 km 5 0 mi 4 02009 04 09 19 38 16 21 38 16 42 501 N 13 356 E 17 2 km 10 7 mi 4 92009 04 13 21 14 24 23 14 24 42 504 N 13 363 E 7 5 km 4 7 mi 4 92009 04 14 20 17 27 22 17 27 42 530 N 13 288 E 10 4 km 6 5 mi 4 12009 04 23 15 14 08 17 14 08 42 247 N 13 492 E 9 9 km 6 2 mi 4 02009 04 23 21 49 00 23 49 00 42 233 N 13 479 E 9 3 km 5 8 mi 4 02009 06 22 20 58 40 22 58 40 42 446 N 13 356 E 14 2 km 8 8 mi 4 52009 07 03 11 03 07 13 03 07 42 409 N 13 387 E 8 8 km 5 5 mi 4 12009 07 12 08 38 51 10 38 51 42 338 N 13 378 E 10 8 km 6 7 mi 4 02009 09 24 16 14 57 18 14 57 42 453 N 13 330 E 9 7 km 6 0 mi 4 1Emergency and reconstruction aid EditNational aid Edit Emergency personnel review damaged buildings Many Italian companies have offered some sort of help All Italian mobile companies Telecom Italia Mobile 53 Vodafone Italy 54 Wind citation needed H3G citation needed and some Mobile virtual network operators 55 sent free minutes and credit to all their pre paid customers in Abruzzo suspended billing to all post paid customers and extended their coverage with additional mobile base stations to cover homeless camps In addition some companies sent free mobile phones SIM Cards and chargers for those who lost their mobiles and set up a national unique number to send donations to by placing a call or sending an SMS Poste Italiane sent to homeless camps some mobile units acting as Postal Office to allow people to withdraw money from their accounts as well as their retirement 56 Many companies such as pay tv SKY Italia suspended billing to all customers in Abruzzo and offered some decoders to homeless camps to allow them to follow the funerals and the news 57 Ferrovie dello Stato offered railway sleeping carriages to host some homeless people and offered free tickets to all people and students living in Abruzzo AISCAT Associazione Italiana Societa Concessionarie Autostrade e Trafori declared that all toll roads in Abruzzo would be free of charge 58 All tax billing for all Abruzzo residents has been suspended by the government as well as mortgage payments International aid Edit Prime Minister of Italy Silvio Berlusconi refused foreign aid for the emergency saying that Italians were proud people and had sufficient resources to deal with the crisis 36 However he singled out the United States announcing that he would accept aid for reconstruction If the United States wants to give a tangible sign of its solidarity with Italy it could take on the responsibility of rebuilding heritage sites and churches We would be very happy to have this support and suggested the USA help rebuild a small district of a town or a suburb 59 Aid was offered by 60 Austria Brazil Croatia the European Union France Germany Spain Greece Slovakia Israel Portugal 61 Iran 62 North Macedonia 63 Mexico 64 Russia Serbia 65 Slovenia 66 Switzerland 67 Tunisia the Turkish Red Crescent 68 Ukraine 69 and the United States 70 Aid was also offered by various organisations companies sport clubs and celebrities including ACF Fiorentina 71 Carla Bruni 72 Madonna 73 S S C Napoli 74 Zastava 75 and Fiat 76 On 20 November 2009 in Brussels Pawel Samecki and Guido Bertolaso who at that time were European Commissioner for Regional Policy and commander in chief of the Italian Civil Protection department respectively signed an agreement to provide 493 7 million euros from EU solidarity fund to help reconstruction in Abruzzo 77 Prior warning Edit Wikinews has related news Scientist says he predicted Italy earthquake was ignored Italian laboratory technician Giampaolo Giuliani claimed to have predicted 78 a major earthquake on Italian television a month before 79 80 81 after measuring increased levels of radon emitted from the ground He was accused of being alarmist 81 by the Director of the Civil Defence Guido Bertolaso and forced to remove his findings from the Internet old data and descriptions are still online 82 He was also reported to police a week before the main quake for causing fear among the local population when the mayor of Sulmona claimed that Giuliani predicted an imminent earthquake in his town 83 about 50 km 31 mi from L Aquila on 30 March after a 4 quake happened Sulmona later only suffered minor damages from 6 April earthquake 84 Enzo Boschi the head of the Italian National Geophysics Institute declared Every time there is an earthquake there are people who claim to have predicted it As far as I know nobody predicted this earthquake with precision It is not possible to predict earthquakes 85 Predicting earthquakes based on radon emissions has been studied by scientists since the 1970s but enthusiasm for it had faded due to inconsistent results 86 Controversy on reconstruction and criminality EditIn the days following the tragedy journalists reported that the reconstruction works may have been infiltrated by criminal organizations with the Mafia and Camorra trying to infiltrate the contract procedures On 7 April a few hours after the main earthquake journalist Luca Spinelli stated 87 The transfers of money necessitated by such a big tragedy are huge much the same as the cost of running a war Any company would be interested in a turnover and a potential income like this Surely the main Italian company will be a company with a ninety billion annual income making up to 7 of Italian GDP Gross Domestic Product the Mafia Abruzzo and Marsica are known territories of the mafia A region which attracted the attention of some Camorra and Sacra Corona Unita associates too according to Franco Forgione President of the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission in 2007 A region which according to the Antimafia District Public Prosecutor s Office of L Aquila hosts part of the hidden treasure of mafia boss Vito Ciancimino reckoned to be around 600 million euros a region which has seen many recent arrests for mafia infiltration infiltration in contracts building permits the health system the very things that will be needed for the reconstruction The week following the earthquake on 14 April journalist and writer Roberto Saviano author of the bestseller Gomorrah wrote 88 Data demonstrates that the Camorra invasion in Abruzzo during these years was enormous In 2006 it emerged that the ambush against mafia boss Vitale was decided and settled in detail at Villa Rosa in Martinsicuro On 10 September Diego Leon Montoya Sanchez the drug dealer deemed among the ten most wanted by the FBI had one of his bases in Abruzzo Nicola di Villano cashier in a criminal entrepreneurial organisation led by the Zagaria family of Casapesenna repeatedly managed to escape capture and it was discovered that his shelter was located in the Abruzzo National Park where he had the ability to move freely Abruzzo has become a junction point for waste traffic Behind it all obviously the Camorra clans In the following weeks even major Italian institutions talked about the danger of criminal infiltration noting that these risks would have been avoided with adequate supervision and inspections On 15 April President of the Chamber of Deputies Gianfranco Fini confirmed the need to watch out for mafia infiltrations 89 On 17 April Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi stated Exploitation will be impossible we will reconstruct within 6 months keeping out exploitation and the mafia 90 State funeral Edit Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone presides over the state funeral ceremony On the morning of 10 April 2009 which was also Good Friday a state funeral was held for 205 of the 291 victims of the earthquake It was attended by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi President of the Republic Giorgio Napolitano and many other politicians and church dignitaries 91 The funeral Mass was led by the Vatican s second highest official Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone The Vatican had earlier granted a special dispensation to hold a Mass on Good Friday the only day on the Roman Catholic calendar on which Mass is not normally held 92 Near the end an Islamic rite was held for the Muslim victims In addition Friday was declared a national day of mourning with flags flying at half staff shops lowering their shutters and flights stopping at the airport for one minute of silence 93 Pope Benedict XVI later visited the areas affected by the L Aquila earthquake on 28 April 2009 94 G8 summit EditThe 35th G8 summit took place in the city of L Aquila Abruzzo on 8 10 July 2009 It was moved from the Sardinian seaside city of La Maddalena as part of an attempt to redistribute disaster funds after the earthquake 95 Prosecutions EditA trial which lasted from September 2011 until October 2012 found six scientists and a former government official guilty of involuntary manslaughter 96 According to the prosecution they had spread inaccurate incomplete and contradictory statements after preliminary tremors could be felt on the days before 6 April 2009 While scientists were found guilty for failing to give adequate warning 97 the full text of the decision said that science was not being tried for failing to predict the April 6 2009 earthquake Non e sottoposta a giudizio la scienza per non essere riuscita a prevedere il terremoto del 6 aprile 2009 98 The seven members of the National Commission for the Forecast and Prevention of Major Risks who were convicted were Franco Barberi head of Serious Risks Commission Enzo Boschi former president of the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology Giulio Lorenzo Selvaggi director of National Earthquake Centre Gian Michele Calvi director of European Centre for Earthquake Engineering Claudio Eva physicist Mauro Dolce director of the Civil Protection Agency s earthquake risk office Bernardo De Bernardinis former vice president of Civil Protection Agency s technical department 10 Boschi had called a major earthquake unlikely while not entirely excluding the possibility De Bernardinis had informed the public that there was no danger 11 The prosecutors cited a scientific opinion that the low level tremors ahead of 6 April quake were typical of the seismic activity preceding major convulsions but the defendants had classified them as a normal geological phenomenon 12 They were criticised in court for being falsely reassuring and Judge Marco Billi gave them a six year jail sentence on 22 October 2012 10 reasoning that they had provided an assessment of the risks that was incomplete inept unsuitable and criminally mistaken 98 99 They were also banned from ever holding public office again and had to pay court costs and damages Enzo Boschi one of the convicted said I thought I would have been acquitted I still don t understand what I was convicted of 10 His co defendant Claudio Eva said that it was a very Italian and medieval decision 100 Their lawyers announced they would appeal the verdict and it will not be finally decided until it is heard by the appellate court The verdicts were strongly criticised by the British media and public 10 The journal Nature ran an editorial stating that the verdict is perverse and the sentence ludicrous 101 Malcolm Sperrin a British scientist said If the scientific community is to be penalised for making predictions that turn out to be incorrect or for not accurately predicting an event that subsequently occurs then scientific endeavour will be restricted to certainties only and the benefits that are associated with findings from medicine to physics will be stalled 10 This position was countered by other views David Ropeik writing for Scientific American contested the trial against science thesis describing it as a judgment not against science but against a failure of science communication 102 During the trial other scientists attacked the scientific conduct of the commission Professor Francesco Giovanni Maria Stoppa a member of the commission until 2003 said They should have given information proportional to our knowledge which in 2009 spotlighted a criticality in L Aquila Under those conditions there were 5 6 days before the quake to give information and this doesn t mean forecasting earthquakes 103 In protest over the prison sentences handed to his seven colleagues Luciano Maiani the head of Italy s disaster body resigned 104 In November 2014 the scientists convictions were quashed by an appeals court except for Bernardo De Bernardinis whose sentence was reduced 105 106 The result of this appeal was definitively confirmed by the Italian Supreme Court Corte di Cassazione on 20 November 2015 107 108 109 See also Edit Italy portal Earth sciences portal Wikinews has related news Major magnitude 6 3 earthquake strikes central Italy List of earthquakes in 2009 List of earthquakes in Italy 1703 Apennine earthquakes 1461 L Aquila earthquakeNotes Edit a b c d Istituto Nazionale Geofisica e Vulcanologia INGV Location of April 6 2009 earthquake updated with all the available data Retrieved 24 August 2009 Archived 7 September 2009 International Seismological Centre ISC EHB Bulletin Thatcham United Kingdom Event 13438018 Italy Quake Reconstruction to Cost at Least 16 Billion Fox News 15 April 2009 Archived from the original on 19 April 2009 Retrieved 23 October 2012 Gabriele Ameri Dino Bindi Francesca Pacor Fabrizio Galadini 2011 The 2009 April 6 Mw 6 3 L Aquila central Italy earthquake finite fault effects on intensity data Geophysical Journal International 186 2 837 851 Bibcode 2011GeoJI 186 837A doi 10 1111 j 1365 246X 2011 05069 x a b Table 3 Peak ground acceleration PGA Velocity PGV and Displacement a b c Alexander D E 2010 The L Aquila Earthquake of 6 April 2009 and Italian Government Policy on Disaster Response Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research 2 4 325 342 doi 10 1080 19390459 2010 511450 S2CID 153641723 Abruzzo in ginocchio i morti sono 272 Ancora scosse Venerdi i funerali di Stato Corriere della Sera in Italian Milan 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 7 July 2009 a b c Hooper John 28 April 2009 Pope visits Italian village hit hardest by earthquake The Guardian London Archived from the original on 1 May 2009 Retrieved 19 May 2009 a b Istituto Nazionale Geofisica e Vulcanologia INGV The L Aquila seismic sequence April 2009 Accessed 24 August 2009 Archived 7 September 2009 a b c d e f g Johnston Alan 2012 BBC News L Aquila quake Italy scientists guilty of manslaughter bbc co uk Retrieved 22 October 2012 a b c Pappas Stephanie 2012 Italian Scientists Get 6 Years for Earthquake Statements LiveScience livescience com Retrieved 22 October 2012 a b Sisto Alberto 22 October 2012 Italian scientists convicted over earthquake warning Reuters London Archived from the original on 23 October 2012 Retrieved 22 October 2012 Alt URL L Aquila quake Scientists see convictions overturned BBC News Retrieved 10 November 2014 a b Aloisi Silvia 7 April 2009 Italy quake exposes poor building standards Reuters Archived from the original on 16 April 2009 Retrieved 17 April 2009 a b c USGS M6 3 central Italy United States Geological Survey Akinci A Galadini F Pantosti D Petersen M Malagnini L Perkins D 6 April 2009 Effect of Time Dependence on Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Maps and Deaggregation for the Central Apennines Italy The Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 99 2A 585 Bibcode 2009BuSSA 99 585A doi 10 1785 0120080053 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2009 Lewis Paul 6 April 2009 Background Italy and earthquakes The Guardian London L Aquila prov of L Aquila Abruzzo Abruzzo2000 com Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2009 Buffon Georges Louis Leclerc 1792 Buffon s Natural History Vol 2 London J S Barr OCLC 316760617 Hakik Baјrami shestiot makedonski graѓanin koј zagina vo Italiјa in Macedonian A1 TV 9 April 2009 Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 a b Cinci romani printre victimele cutremurului din Italia in Romanian Realitatea TV 8 April 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2009 a b Quake Over 100 dead 1 500 injured ANSA 6 April 2009 Archived from the original on 9 April 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2009 a b Eight year old Ukrainian girl killed in earthquake in Italy UNIAN 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 a b Anna Parabok a b Trapped Greek student found dead in L Aquila ANA 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 13 April 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2009 a b Italie seisme Une francaise tuee Le Figaro in French Paris Agence France Presse 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 19 June 2009 Nahmias Roee 8 April 2009 Body of Israeli missing since Italy quake found ynet Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 a b Gues ed 7 April 2009 Murio una argentina en el sismo de Italia in Spanish Retrieved 9 April 2009 a b il Centro Le vittime del terremoto Abruzzo Racconta kataweb it Retrieved 14 June 2012 Grec Marina Le vittime del Terremoto il Centro Retrieved 2 June 2009 a b Powerful Italian quake kills many BBC News Online London 6 April 2009 Retrieved 20 August 2019 Le vittime del terremoto lt Grec Marina TG1 ed 08 00 08 04 integrale in Italian TG1 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 7 April 2014 Retrieved 9 April 2009 a b Death toll rises in Italy quake BBC News Online London 7 April 2009 Italy quake kills at least 150 scores saved Agence France Presse 6 April 2009 Retrieved 7 April 2009 dead link Owen Richard Bannerman Lucy 7 April 2009 Italy in desperate race to save the buried after the earthquake The Times London Quake Huge artistic damage ANSA 6 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2009 Les Thermes de Caracalla a Rome touches par le seisme La Presse in French Montreal 6 April 2009 Berlusconi Tre mie case per gli sfollati Cronache blog in Italian Milan Corriere della Sera 10 April 2009 Archived from the original on 13 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Naughton Philippe 8 April 2009 Berlusconi gaffe as he says quake homeless should enjoy a camping weekend The Times London Donadio Rachel Povoledo Elisabetta 8 April 2009 Rescuers Scramble in Search for Quake Survivors The New York Times Aloisi Silvia 10 April 2009 Berlusconi offers own homes to quake survivors Reuters Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 13 May 2009 Investigation of building standards in quake zone Associated Press 11 April 2009 Archived from the original on 14 April 2009 Retrieved 13 May 2009 Officials to probe building standards in quake zone CTV Toronto 11 April 2009 Retrieved 22 July 2009 Fidani C 2010 The earthquake lights EQL of the 6 April 2009 Aquila earthquake in Central Italy NHESS V 10 p 967 2010 Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 10 5 967 978 doi 10 5194 nhess 10 967 2010 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 12 December 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Fidani C 6 April 2009 NHESS Abstract The earthquake lights EQL of the 6 April 2009 Aquila earthquake in Central Italy Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 10 5 967 978 doi 10 5194 nhess 10 967 2010 Aftershock hits Italy quake zone BBC News Online London 7 April 2009 Terremoto morto per infarto a Roma in Italian ANSA 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 8 April 2009 Retrieved 10 April 2009 European Mediterranean Seismological Centre EMSC Retrieved 27 February 2010 Terremoto in Abruzzo anche Tim e Fastweb si mobilitano Tecnozoom News tecnozoom it Archived from the original on 30 August 2009 Retrieved 6 July 2009 Terremoto Vodafone rinviato l invio delle bollette e saranno installate piu antenne Earthquake Vodafone delayed submission of bills and more antennas will be installed L Unione Sarda 20 November 1948 Archived from the original on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 6 July 2009 Terremoto Postemobile 10 Euro Ricarica A Clienti Provincia L Aquila Agenzia di stampa Asca ASCA 9 April 2009 Archived from the original on 12 April 2009 Retrieved 6 July 2009 Terremoto Ufficio mobile poste di paganica paga prime 3 pensioni ASCA 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 6 July 2009 L Enel per 4 mesi niente bollette della luce e Sky sospende i pagamenti Archived 15 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine ilsalvagente it 10 April 2009 Sfollati treni gratis e niente pedaggio sulla A24 e sulla A25 Internally displaced people trains free and no tolls on the A24 and A25 Il Messaggero in Italian Rome 26 June 2009 Retrieved 6 July 2009 Berlusconi may accept U S aid United Press International 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 8 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 World sends sympathy offers aid to quake hit Italy ABS CBN News and Current Affairs 8 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Proteccao Civil portuguesa pode disponibilizar ajuda a Italia em quatro horas Archived 11 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine in Portuguese Publico Lisbon 6 April 2009 Archived on 29 July 2009 Iran expresses sympathy over Italy quake Tehran Times FNA 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Macedonia offers aid to Italy after earthquake Makfax 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Viajan Topos Mexicanos a Italia El Universal in Spanish Mexico City 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Serbian leaders offer condolences to Italian earthquake victims Xinhua 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Slovenia Offers Help to Italy After Quake STA 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Switzerland offers help after quake in Italy Xinhua 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Turkey Red Crescent offers help to quake hit Italy AA 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 ChINKOVA Elena 7 April 2009 Ukraina gotova napravit v Italiyu otryad spasatelej i mobilnyj gospital Komsomolskaya Pravda in Russian Moscow Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Earthquake Obama to Berlusconi US ready to help AGI 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Fiorentina latest club to donate funds to quake victims Agence France Presse 8 April 2009 French first lady offers to help quake hospital Agence France Presse 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Sisma Madonna dona soldi alle vittime in Abruzzo in Italian Reuters 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Napoli to donate match funds to quake victims AFP 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Operai Fiat Zastava in Serbia offrono sangue per i terremotati La Repubblica in Italian Rome 8 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Terremoto Fiat 2 5 MLN per Ricstruzione Asilo Comunale A L Aquila in Italian ASCA 8 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 8 April 2009 Soren Bo Sondergaard 23 October 2013 WORKING DOCUMENT on Special Report No 24 2012 The European Union Solidarity Fund s response to the 2009 Abruzzi earthquake The relevance and cost of the operations PDF Retrieved 4 March 2014 Giampaolo Giuliani cronicle on researching quakes via radon precursor Sismic tests Network of radon concentration cells in Italy Giuliani s letter to Italian Civil Defence Archived from the original on 22 July 2011 Retrieved 31 May 2009 Lewis Aidan 6 April 2009 Row over Italian quake forecast BBC News Online London Mackey Robert 6 April 2009 Earthquake Warning Was Removed From Internet The Lede blog The New York Times Retrieved 7 April 2009 a b Why did quake cause so much damage Television production BBC News 6 April 2009 Event occurs at 1 minute 55 seconds Retrieved 6 April 2009 dead YouTube link Giampaolo Giuliani data and descriptions Archived from the original on 3 June 2009 Retrieved 31 May 2009 Falconi Marta 7 April 2009 Strong quake in Italy kills over 150 wounds 1 500 The Guardian London Associated Press Giuliani said Monday that he was placed under investigation by prosecutors for causing alarm after he sent warnings of a pending quake in the Sulmona area Italy State of emergency after deadly central quake Adnkronos International 6 April 2009 Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2009 Squires Nick Rayner Gordon 6 April 2009 Italian earthquake expert s warnings were dismissed as scaremongering The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 6 October 2012 Chang Kenneth 13 April 2009 Earthquakes Many Mysteries Stymie Efforts to Predict Them The New York Times Spinelli Luca 7 April 2009 Terremoto in Abruzzo l ombra di mafia e camorra LaNotizia in Italian Basel Archived from the original on 10 April 2009 Saviano Roberto 14 April 2009 La ricostruzione a rischio clan ecco il partito del terremoto La Repubblica in Italian Rome Archived from the original on 2 May 2009 Retrieved 30 May 2009 Sisma Fini Vigilare su infiltrazioni mafia in Italian SKY TG24 15 April 2009 Archived from the original on 18 April 2009 Retrieved 30 May 2009 Berlusconi Mafia e speculazione fuori dalla ricostruzione Berlusconi Mafia and speculation outside the reconstruction Il Tempo Rome 17 April 2009 Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 30 May 2009 TG1 TG1 Integrale Funerali in Italian TG1 10 April 2009 Retrieved 10 April 2009 dead link Donadio Rachel Thousands Mourn Quake Victims at Funeral Mass The New York Times 10 April 2009 Italy mourns earthquake victims Al Jazeera English 10 April 2009 Pope visits Italian quake zone CNN com 28 April 2009 1 permanent dead link G8 Italy wants to move summit to L Aquila in Vietnamese 6 khoa học gia lanh an vi khong cảnh bao động đất Accessed 23 June 2013 Archived 5 July 2013 Povoledo Elisabetta Fountain Henry 22 October 2012 Italy Orders Jail Terms for 7 Who Didn t Warn of Deadly Earthquake The New York Times Retrieved 28 January 2013 a b Whole text of the sentence PDF in Italian abruzzo24ore tv Nadeau Barbie Latza 22 October 2012 Scientists Found Guilty in L Aquila Earthquake Trial Daily Beast via www thedailybeast com Tom Kington 23 October 2012 Italian scientist convicted over L Aquila earthquake condemns medieval court The Guardian London Retrieved 23 October 2012 Shock and Law editorial Retrieved 27 October 2012 Scientific American The l Aquila Verdict A Judgment Not Against Science but Against A Failure of Science Communication Avrebbero dovuto dare una informazione proporzionata alle nostre conoscenze che nel 2009 mettevano in luce una criticita all Aquila Nelle condizioni che c erano 5 6 giorni prima del terremoto bisognava dare informazioni e questo non vuol dire prevedere i terremoti Il Capoluogo Archived 16 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine BBC 23 October 2012 Italy disaster head Luciano Maiani quits over L Aquila BBC L Aquila quake Scientists see convictions overturned BBC News 10 November 2014 John Hooper 10 November 2014 L Aquila earthquake scientists win appeal The Guardian Cartlidge Edwin 20 November 2015 Italy s supreme court clears L Aquila earthquake scientists for good Retrieved 30 November 2015 MacDonald Fiona 23 November 2015 Italy s earthquake scientists have been cleared for good Retrieved 30 November 2015 News Picks Italian scientists acquitted in L Aquila earthquake case 24 November 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2015 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2009 L Aquila earthquake Wikinews has related news 5 6 magnitude aftershock earthquake strikes Italy Pace B Peruzza L Boncio P Lavecchia G Layered Seismogenic Source Model and Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analyses in Central Italy Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America vol 96 p 107 132 February 2006 Akinci A Galadini F Pantosti D Petersen M D Malagnini L Perkins D Effect of Time Dependence on Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Maps and Deaggregation for the Central Apennines Italy Archived 30 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America vol 99 no 2A p 585 610 April 2009 doi 10 1785 0120080053 Carraro F Giardino M Geological evidence of recent fault evolution examples from Camp Imperatore L Aquila central Apennines Il Quaternario vol 5 1992 p 181 200 Fidani C The earthquake lights EQL of the 6 April 2009 Aquila earthquake in Central Italy NHESS vol 10 p 967 2010 Kerr Richard A After the Quake in Search of the Science or Even a Good Prediction Science Magazine vol 324 17 April 2009 p 322 Koukoufikis G 2019 Post disaster redevelopment and the knowledge city limitations of an urban imaginary in L Aquila 2 Noi L Aquila PreventionWeb 2009 L Aquila earthquake The International Seismological Centre has a bibliography and or authoritative data for this event ReliefWeb s main page for this event Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 L 27Aquila earthquake amp oldid 1148445445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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