Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16853
Authors: Del Mese, Sergio* 
Graziani, Laura* 
Meroni, Fabrizio* 
Pessina, Vera* 
Tertulliani, Andrea* 
Title: Considerations on using MCS and EMS-98 macroseismic scales for the intensity assessment of contemporary Italian earthquakes
Journal: Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering 
Series/Report no.: /21 (2023)
Publisher: Springer-Nature
Issue Date: Jul-2023
DOI: 10.1007/s10518-023-01703-0
Keywords: Intensity
European Macroseismic Scale
Mercalli-Cancani-Sieberg scale
Vulnerability
damage
historical earthquakes
Subject Classification04.06. Seismology 
Abstract: The concept of macroseismic intensity arose with the purpose of measuring the strength of an earthquake by the effects it causes on buildings, people, and domestic furnishings. From this perspective, buildings can be considered seismic sensors that record the shaking. Early scales were conceived at a time when buildings were mainly in masonry and therefore they could be used as markers of the intensity in case of earthquakes. Indeed, since they were fairly homogeneous, their level of damage could be considered as an indicator of the shak- ing level. In recent decades, the evolution of construction techniques have made the MCS scale unsuitable for damage assessment of buildings of various resistance. To overcome this problem the EMS-98 scale was designed. Because the MCS scale is still used in Italy, even in the presence of many reinforced concrete buildings, the purpose of this work is to show that the EMS-98 is the most suitable tool for assessing intensity as it is more consist- ent with the built environment. Theoretical and real intensity assessments, by both MCS and EMS-98, have been determined and compared, showing that nowadays intensity is a function of the vulnerability. MCS and EMS-98 would be comparable only when the build- ing stock is composed of very vulnerable edifices (generally class A). Finally, thanks to the similarity of the two scales for old and vulnerable buildings, EMS-98 appears fully adequate to investigate historical earthquakes and represents a powerful tool to ensure con- tinuity among earthquakes of different epochs.
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