4.4 Article

Postseismic Survey of a Historic Masonry Tower and Monitoring of Its Dynamic Behavior in the Aftermath of Le Teil Earthquake (Ardeche, France)

Journal

BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume 112, Issue 2, Pages 1101-1119

Publisher

SEISMOLOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1785/0120210258

Keywords

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Funding

  1. IDEX CDP Risk@Univ.Grenoble Alpes as part of the program Investissements d'Avenir by the French National Research Agency [ANR-15-IDEX-02]
  2. Auvergne Rhone-Alpes region through the AURA PAI project
  3. Action Transversale Sismicite (ATS) of RESIF
  4. French national research agency (ANR) as part of the Investissements d'Avenir program [ANR-11-EQPX-0040]
  5. French Ministry of ecology, sustainable development and energy

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This study presents the results of a seismic monitoring survey carried out on a historic masonry tower to analyze the dynamic response of ancient masonry structures. The study reveals that different types of vibrations induce variations in the building's response, and it confirms the nonlinear elastic behavior of masonry structures under seismic and atmospheric loadings. Furthermore, the correlation between material heterogeneities and the nonlinear threshold supports the significance of such monitoring surveys in future modeling and conservation efforts.
On 11 November 2019, an M-w 4.9 earthquake struck the middle Rhone valley (South-East France) producing moderate to severe damage in the town of Le Teil and its surroundings. This unexpected event stressed the vulnerability of the French cultural built heritage to a moderate seismic hazard. Commonly applied to modern civil engineering structures, passive seismic methods are still lacking on historic constructions to understand properly the different factors driving their dynamic behavior. In this article, the results of a two-month seismic monitoring survey carried out shortly after the Le Teil mainshock in a historic masonry tower are presented and discussed. Located only 5 km south of the epicenter, the Gate Tower of Viviers (eleventh century) was instrumented with four highly sensitive seismic nodes. Ambient vibrations, as well as aftershocks and quarry blasts from the nearby Le Teil quarry, were recorded and used in the analysis. Through vibration-based analysis, the article addresses three relevant aspects of the dynamic response of ancient masonry structures. We discuss first the differences in the building's response induced by the three reported types of vibrations, focusing on the particular signal characteristics of shallow aftershocks and quarry blasts. Then, we apply the Random Decrement Technique (RDT) to track the dynamic behavior variations over two months and to discuss the role of the environmental conditions in the slight fluctuations of the structural modal parameters (natural frequencies, damping coefficients) of unreinforced masonry structures. We also show evidence of the nonlinear elastic behavior under both weak seismic and atmospheric loadings. The correlation between the presence of heterogeneities in the construction materials and the nonlinear threshold supports the relevance of such types of monitoring surveys as a valuable tool for future modeling works and conservation efforts.

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