Rossi-Forel scale

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rossi-Forel scale was one of the first seismic scales to reflect earthquake intensities. Developed by Michele Stefano Conte de Rossi of Italy and François-Alphonse Forel of Switzerland in the 1800s, it was used for about two decades until the introduction of the Mercalli intensity scale in 1902.

The 1873 version of the Rossi-Forel scale had 10 intensity levels:

  • I. Microseismic shock. Recorded by a single seismograph or by seismographs of the same model, but not by several seismographs of different kinds. The shock felt by an experienced observer.
  • II. Extremely feeble shock. Recorded by several seismographs of different kinds. Felt by a small number of persons at rest.
  • III. Very feeble shock. Felt by several persons at rest. Strong enough for the direction or duration to be appreciable.
  • IV. Feeble shock. Felt by persons in motion. Disturbance of movable objects, doors, windows, cracking of ceilings.
  • V. Shock of moderate intensity. Felt generally by everyone. Disturbance of furniture, ringing of some bells.
  • VI. Fairly strong shock. General awakening of those asleep. General ringing of bells. Oscillation of chandeliers, stopping of clocks, visible agitation of trees and shrubs. Some startled persons leaving their dwellings.
  • VII. Strong shock. Overthrow of movable objects, fall of plaster, ringing of church bells. General panic. No damage to buildings.
  • VIII. Very strong shock. Fall of chimneys, cracks in the walls of buildings.
  • IX. Extremely strong shock. Partial or total destruction of some buildings.
  • X. Shock of extreme intensity. Great disaster, ruins, disturbance of the strata, fissures in the ground, rock falls from mountains.

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

  • Earthquakes and Volcanic Eruptions. A Handbook on Risk Assessment by Herbert Tiedemann. Swiss Reinsurance Company, Zurich, 1992.
Seismic scales
view  talk  edit
Modern scales
Intensity scales
European Macroseismic Scale (EMS) | INQUA | Medvedev-Sponheuer-Karnik (MSK) | Modified Mercalli (MM) | Shindo
Magnitude scales
Local magnitude (Richter scale) | Moment magnitude
Historical scales
Mercalli-Cancani-Sieberg (MCS) | Mercalli-Wood-Neuman (MWN) | Omori | Rossi-Forel
In other languages