scholarly journals Transposing an active fault database into a fault-based seismic hazard assessment for nuclear facilities – Part 2: Impact of fault parameter uncertainties on a site-specific PSHA exercise in the Upper Rhine Graben, eastern France

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (9) ◽  
pp. 1585-1593 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Chartier ◽  
Oona Scotti ◽  
Christophe Clément ◽  
Hervé Jomard ◽  
Stéphane Baize

Abstract. We perform a fault-based probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA) exercise in the Upper Rhine Graben to quantify the relative influence of fault parameters on the hazard at the Fessenheim nuclear power plant site. Specifically, we show that the potentially active faults described in the companion paper (Jomard et al., 2017, hereafter Part 1) are the dominant factor in hazard estimates at the low annual probability of exceedance relevant for the safety assessment of nuclear installations. Geological information documenting the activity of the faults in this region, however, remains sparse, controversial and affected by a high degree of uncertainty. A logic tree approach is thus implemented to explore the epistemic uncertainty and quantify its impact on the seismic hazard estimates. Disaggregation of the peak ground acceleration (PGA) hazard at a 10 000-year return period shows that the Rhine River fault is the main seismic source controlling the hazard level at the site. Sensitivity tests show that the uncertainty on the slip rate of the Rhine River fault is the dominant factor controlling the variability of the seismic hazard level, greater than the epistemic uncertainty due to ground motion prediction equations (GMPEs). Uncertainty on slip rate estimates from 0.04 to 0.1 mm yr−1 results in a 40 to 50 % increase in hazard levels at the 10 000-year target return period. Reducing epistemic uncertainty in future fault-based PSHA studies at this site will thus require (1) performing in-depth field studies to better characterize the seismic potential of the Rhine River fault; (2) complementing GMPEs with more physics-based modelling approaches to better account for the near-field effects of ground motion and (3) improving the modelling of the background seismicity. Indeed, in this exercise, we assume that background earthquakes can only host M  <  6. 0 earthquakes. However, this assumption is debatable, since faults that can host M  >  6. 0 earthquakes have been recently identified at depth within the Upper Rhine Graben (see Part 1) but are not accounted for in this exercise since their potential activity has not yet been described.

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Chartier ◽  
Oona Scotti ◽  
Christophe Clément ◽  
Hervé Jomard ◽  
Stéphane Baize

Abstract. We perform a fault-based PSHA exercise in the Upper Rhine Graben to quantify the relative influence of fault parameters on the hazard at the Fessenheim Nuclear Power Plant site. Specifically, we show that the potentially active faults described in Part A of this paper (Jomard et al., submitted this issue) are the dominant factor in hazard estimates at the low annual probability of exceedance relevant for the safety assessment of nuclear installations. Geological information documenting the activity of the faults in this region, however, remains sparse, controversial and affected by a high degree of uncertainty. A logic tree approach is thus implemented to explore the epistemic uncertainty and quantify its impact on the seismic hazard estimates. Disaggregation of the Peak Ground Acceleration (PGA) hazard at 10,000 years return period shows that the Rhine River Fault is the main seismic source controlling the hazard level at the site. The choice of Ground Motion Prediction Equations (GMPE) is the major source of uncertainty. Nonetheless the parameters describing the geometry and the seismic activity of the faults (dip, width, slip rate) also have an impact on the result depending on the GMPE used. The uncertainty on the slip rate of the Rhine River Fault is the second most dominant factor controlling the uncertainty on the seismic hazard level. Uncertainty on slip rate estimates from 0.04 mm/yr to 0.1 mm/yr results in up to 40 % increase in hazard levels at the 10,000 years return period target depending on the GMPE used and the spectral frequency of interest. Reducing epistemic uncertainty in future fault-based PSHA studies at this site will thus require (1) performing in-depth field studies to better characterize the seismic potential of the Rhine River Fault; (2) complementing GMPEs with more physics-based modeling approaches to better account for the near-field effects of ground motion and (3) improving the modeling of the background seismicity. Indeed, in this exercise, we assume that background earthquakes can only host M  6.0 earthquakes have been recently identified at depth within the Upper Rhine Graben (see Part A) but are not accounted for in this exercise since their potential activity has not yet been described.


Geomorphology ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 204 ◽  
pp. 573-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roy M. Frings ◽  
Nicole Gehres ◽  
Markus Promny ◽  
Hans Middelkoop ◽  
Holger Schüttrumpf ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 203 (1) ◽  
pp. 614-631 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Fuhrmann ◽  
M. Caro Cuenca ◽  
A. Knöpfler ◽  
F.J. van Leijen ◽  
M. Mayer ◽  
...  

PalZ ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 365-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bettina Reichenbacher München ◽  
Jean Gaudant Paris ◽  
Thomas W. Griessemer

2009 ◽  
Vol 57 (3/4) ◽  
pp. 382-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joachim Wedel

Abstract. Cores cut in the research boreholes at Viernheim and Parkinsel P34 and P35 in Ludwigshafen were analysed to investigate their fossil content, and particularly the remains of molluscs. The selected material was suitable for reconstructing the palaeoclimatic conditions and simplifies the chronostratigraphic classification of individual beds. Two mollusc species and one rodent species from the Lower Pleistocene (Lower Biharium) were identified in the northern Upper Rhine Graben for the first time (in the Viernheim borehole). The fossils from the Lower Pleistocene sections of the Viernheim borehole are clearly related to the Uhlenberg fauna from Bavarian Swabia dated as Upper Villanium/Tegelen.


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