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Journal Article

Citation

Lamontagne M, Dascal O. Can. Geotech. J. 2006; 43(10): 1015-1027.

Affiliation

Natural Resources Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0Y7, Canada

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, National Research Council of Canada)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Post-earthquake inspection is required by many dam safety regulations. Typically, based on the magnitude of the earthquake, the guidelines define an area within which dams should be inspected. The areas are established on ground-motion relations derived for the western United States. In eastern North America (ENA), the attenuation is slower with distance from the earthquake epicentre, and as a consequence the inspection area should be significantly larger than that recommended by the current guidelines. We review the state of knowledge on earthquake damage to dams, the factors used to define post-earthquake inspections, and the earthquake characteristics used to define the guidelines. We recommend new radii of inspections for dams applicable in ENA, including the Province of Quebec. Derived from historical earthquake information, the proposed new radii of inspections are twofold to sixfold larger than the 1988 guidelines of the International Commission on Large Dams. It is also suggested that a half-magnitude unit be added to every magnitude "rapidly" released by seismological organizations to include the intrinsic uncertainty in magnitude values and types. Our proposed approach is only one avenue that dam owners can follow to comply with dam safety regulations. Irrespective of the avenue chosen, however, this paper emphasizes the need for dam owners to consider the lower ground motion attenuation in ENA.

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