Strong earthquakes included «by chance» in Italian catalogues: single cases or a hint of more?

In principle, a few of the strong earthquakes (I0 >= 8/9, M >= 5.8) that affected Italy in the past may still be missing
 from parametric catalogues or be listed there as lesser events, their actual strength unrealized. This seems a
 reasonable enough inference, given t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: V. Castelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV) 2003-06-01
Series:Annals of Geophysics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.annalsofgeophysics.eu/index.php/annals/article/view/3470
Description
Summary:In principle, a few of the strong earthquakes (I0 >= 8/9, M >= 5.8) that affected Italy in the past may still be missing
 from parametric catalogues or be listed there as lesser events, their actual strength unrealized. This seems a
 reasonable enough inference, given that some strong earthquakes were listed by catalogues quite by chance,
 from information drawn, mainly or even solely, from a single source. Had this source been destroyed before catalogue
 compilers were able to consider it, or had they for any reason overlooked it, the earthquake it recorded
 could also have been missed or underestimated. This paper examines the two most peculiar Italian cases of «single-
 source earthquakes» (1561 «Vallo di Diano?»; 1639 «Amatrice?»). Is all relevant information on each event
 really tied up in a single source? And if so, why? Finally, are these cases unique or do they share any common
 features that could, by occurring elsewhere, act as markers for situations where forgotten earthquakes could still
 lurk undetected?
ISSN:1593-5213
2037-416X