Abstract
We performed a damage survey of buildings and carried out microtremor observations in the source region of the 2015 Gorkha earthquake. Our survey area spans the Kathmandu valley and areas to the east and north of the valley. Damage of buildings in the Kathmandu valley was localized, and the percentage of the totally collapsed buildings was less than 5 %. East of the Kathmandu valley, especially in Sindhupalchok district, damage of buildings was more severe. In the center of Chautara and Bahrabise, towns in Sindhupalchok district, the percentage of the totally collapsed houses exceeded 40 %. North of the Kathmandu valley, the damage was moderate, and 20–30 % of the buildings were totally collapsed in Dhunche. Based on the past studies and our microtremor observations near the strong motion station, the H/V spectrum in Kathmandu has a peak at around 0.3 Hz, which reflects the velocity contrast of the deep sedimentary basin. The H/V spectra in Bahrabise, Chautara, and Dhunche do not show clear peaks, which suggests that the sites have stiff soil conditions. Therefore, the more severe damage outside the Kathmandu valley compared with the relatively light damage levels in the valley is probably due to the source characteristics of the earthquake and/or the seismic performance of buildings, rather than the local site conditions.
Highlights
The 2015 Gorkha earthquake on April 25 killed about 9000 people and injured more than 22,000 in across a broad region of Nepal including the capital city of Kathmandu (The Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of Nepal 2015)
Damage of buildings in the Kathmandu valley was localized (Bhaktapur, Sanku, and near the bus terminal in Kathmandu city), and the percentage of the totally collapsed buildings was less than 5 % in the entire valley
Damage of buildings in the Kathmandu valley was heterogeneous, but overall, the percentage of the totally collapsed buildings was less than 5 % in the Kathmandu valley
Summary
The 2015 Gorkha earthquake on April 25 killed about 9000 people and injured more than 22,000 in across a broad region of Nepal including the capital city of Kathmandu (The Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of Nepal 2015). The hypocenter of the earthquake is in the Gorkha district, 80 km northwest of the capital city Kathmandu at a depth of approximately 10 km (USGS 2015). According to several waveform inversion studies, the location of the largest slip was estimated to be about 80 km east of the hypocenter in the region north of Kathmandu (Galetzka et al 2015; Yagi and Okuwaki 2015; Fan and Shearer 2015; USGS 2015; Wang and Fialko 2015; He et al 2015)
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