Izmit (Kocaeli), Turkey, Earthquake of August 17, 1999 Including Duzce Earthquake of November 12, 1999


Book Description

Prepared by the Earthquake Investigation Committee of the Technical Council of Lifeline Earthquake Engineering of ASCE. On August 17, 1999, the Izmit (Kocaeli) earthquake tore through Kocaeli, Turkey, resulting in more than 15,000 deaths and 27,000 injuries; 200,000 people were left homeless. The electric power system, nearly destroyed, sustained more than US$70 million in damage. Another earthquake on November 12, to the east of Izmit at Duzce, added to the lifeline systems damage, impacting the communications system, water and wastewater system, ports, railway, road, and bridges. This TCLEE Monograph provides information for practitioners to improve the performance of the lifeline systems. Topics include: seismology, geology, and geotechnical issues; electric power; airports; telecommunications; water and wastewater; transportation (highways and bridges); liquid fuel facilities; railway; ports; hospitals; social impacts; and emergency response and recovery.







Main Shock and Aftershock Records of the 1999 İzmit & Düzce, Turkey Earthquakes


Book Description

Following the 7.4 earthquake in Izmit, Turkey on Aug. 17, 1999, and the 7.2 earthquake in Duzce, Turkey on Nov. 12 1999, several organizations from Turkey, Japan, France and the USA deployed temporary ground-motion recording networks. The number of recording stations in the earthquake-affected area was quadrupled to about 130. This CD-ROM set was prepared with information contributed by eight organizations tht collected ground-motion data fro the two main events and their aftershocks. This publication contains more than 60,000 channels of data files.







Integration of Earth Science Research on the Turkish and Greek 1999 Earthquakes


Book Description

In 1999, two earthquakes occurred in the Istanbul-Marmara region of Turkey and the Athens-Corinth region of Greece, and an increased risk of further events caused great concern among the earth science community. This book presents and discusses the latest results from studies of the Izmit-Düzce and Athens earthquakes and assesses the data that are available and relevant to the geology, seismology, tectonics, geodesy and other fields related to earthquake studies and to evaluate earthquake hazard potential.