Abstract

The 2011 Great East Japan earthquake and tsunami remind us once again that these types of cascade event can occur and cause considerable damage. The scientific community realizes the need for rapid theoretical and practical progress on cascade events to provide field teams with the necessary tools and information for action during these types of events. The earthquake damage scenario for Martinique and Guadeloupe islands (French West Indies) has already been performed within the framework of French governmental projects, but these areas, in the vicinity of the French West Indies subduction zone, are also subject to tsunami events. In this study, we propose to perform a combined scenario in which an earthquake is followed by a tsunami, as it could arrive one day, considering the seismic characteristics and potential of such a subduction zone. The vulnerability of the buildings is defined considering local specific information based on several years of field inventories and inspections and is later classified into one of the 36 model building types of HAZUS. The calculation of the damages due to tsunamis follows the HAZUS methodologies. The main novelty of our study is the calculation of damage due to the two phenomena occurring one after the other, not in parallel, as is calculated in the existing literature. Therefore, for the calculation of the damages due to the second event (i.e. the tsunami), the vulnerability characteristics of the initial structure are reduced, considering the damage state of the construction after the first event (i.e. the earthquake). Hence, in our case, this calculation approach allows us to update the number of exposed elements and their changed vulnerabilities considering the damages due to the earthquake, since certain structures are already damaged by the earthquake before the arrival of the tsunami wave. The results coming from our study and our manner of treating the cascading hazards are putting into perspective with the Hazus method for combining damages coming from earthquake and the damages coming from consequently tsunami. The results expressed as the sum of the damages in both most damaged states, Extensive and Complete, are more or less in the same range of values for both studies (our study and HAZUS 2017). However, a trend of having more percentage of complete damages (and hence, less the Extensive damages) with our method than the ones obtained with the Hazus combination can be important information for crisis managing. This is a first result for the French West Indies territory, but anyway, more studies should be carried out in order to check this trend and eventually to confirm and validate this issue for others territories with others bathymetries, vulnerabilities and seismological features.

Highlights

  • Before addressing the question of the damages, due to the several quasi-simultaneous events, the methodologies for calculating the damage of each of these events should be developed and managed well

  • Some formulas for combining the results from the separated hazard calculations are proposed in the literature; the results obtained in this paper show that the number of damages is closely related to a specific area, its topography, cartography and its building physical characteristics, and it can be very difficult to generalize this combination formula to others areas

  • The relationship between the number of damaged structures and earthquakes alone and earthquake-and-tsunami cascade events was investigated in this paper from informatics, practical and realistic viewpoints

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Summary

Introduction

Before addressing the question of the damages, due to the several quasi-simultaneous events, the methodologies for calculating the damage of each of these events should be developed and managed well. The development of the methodologies for calculating the damage due to earthquakes started in the 1970s with the damage probability matrix of Whitman (Whitman et al 1974) after the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and currently continued to be improved. Based on this long experience, the methodology for performing the classic damage earthquake scenario is well known, each step of the methodology (e.g. shake maps, site effects, vulnerability assessments) can still be improved by, for example, the validation of the numerical results with the post-earthquake observed damage. Park and Cox (2016) and Park et al (2017) presented the probabilistic tsunami damage assessment and evaluated the influence of five intensity measures of tsunamis applied to Seaside, Oregon

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