Building techniques from the Roman Age using earth, stone and wood are frequently found in North Italy in town centres and in high-class residential buildings, as in smaller centres or n~ravl illages. In Italy, a study of building techniques has begun only very recently and little is known about the response of these techniques to seismic events. This paper deals with a fortified alpine settlement, located in a highly seismic area, whose buildings were constructed with the Roman techniques and may in two subsequent stages have been destroyed by earthquakes. The archaeological evidence is, however, ambiguous: we have no knowledge of the state of repair of the buildings at the time of collapse, and the stratigraphy has been upset by subsequen...
The record of historical seismicity of Catania (Southern Italy) and its neighbourhood during the fir...
none4noIn May 2012, two seismic events hit the Emilia-Romagna Region, in Northern Italy. The earthqu...
A major hazard during an earthquake is the overturning of slender and vulnerable walls, often made o...
Building techniques from the Roman Age using earth, stone and wood are frequently found in North Ita...
Deposits that result from the collapse of buildings are usual in geoarchaeological records. Depositi...
The 346 A.D. earthquake is known through sparse historical sources. It is mentioned by Hyeronimus as...
After the earthquake of 13th January 1915, the archaeologist Giacomo Boni (1859-1925), inspired by a...
The transformation of Rome during the Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages has been investigate...
none9The Italian territory is rich in archaeological heritage, located in hilly, plain or coastal ar...
Simultaneous collapse of ancient historical buildings followed by sudden reconstruction, deduced fro...
The knowledge of the seismic risk in ancient Roman cities is mainly based on textual sources that mo...
This historical seismology study examines and supplements what is currently known from written sourc...
In ancient written sources earthquakes were mostly interpreted as a divine punishment for human sins...
In this paper, we present archaeological evidence of seismic damage in the ancient Roman town of Ost...
Knowledge of the urban seismic scenario raises complex elements for technical and cultural considera...
The record of historical seismicity of Catania (Southern Italy) and its neighbourhood during the fir...
none4noIn May 2012, two seismic events hit the Emilia-Romagna Region, in Northern Italy. The earthqu...
A major hazard during an earthquake is the overturning of slender and vulnerable walls, often made o...
Building techniques from the Roman Age using earth, stone and wood are frequently found in North Ita...
Deposits that result from the collapse of buildings are usual in geoarchaeological records. Depositi...
The 346 A.D. earthquake is known through sparse historical sources. It is mentioned by Hyeronimus as...
After the earthquake of 13th January 1915, the archaeologist Giacomo Boni (1859-1925), inspired by a...
The transformation of Rome during the Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages has been investigate...
none9The Italian territory is rich in archaeological heritage, located in hilly, plain or coastal ar...
Simultaneous collapse of ancient historical buildings followed by sudden reconstruction, deduced fro...
The knowledge of the seismic risk in ancient Roman cities is mainly based on textual sources that mo...
This historical seismology study examines and supplements what is currently known from written sourc...
In ancient written sources earthquakes were mostly interpreted as a divine punishment for human sins...
In this paper, we present archaeological evidence of seismic damage in the ancient Roman town of Ost...
Knowledge of the urban seismic scenario raises complex elements for technical and cultural considera...
The record of historical seismicity of Catania (Southern Italy) and its neighbourhood during the fir...
none4noIn May 2012, two seismic events hit the Emilia-Romagna Region, in Northern Italy. The earthqu...
A major hazard during an earthquake is the overturning of slender and vulnerable walls, often made o...