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Mexico
Mexico Earthquake
Seismic activity occurs in many areas of Mexico, but it is of greatest
concern along the active subduction zone on Mexico’s southwestern coast.
This zone along the Middle America Trench creates repeating large
magnitude events with a frequency higher than any other subduction zone
in the world. It accounts for the majority of the large, damaging
earthquakes in Mexico.
One critical attribute of these events is their ability to cause
substantial damage in Mexico City, due to a phenomenon known as the
"Mexico City effect." Long-period seismic energy is amplified 5-20 times
by Mexico City soil, which consists mostly of reclaimed, water-saturated
lakebed deposits. This effect, coupled with the extraordinarily high
concentration of exposure in Mexico City, raises earthquakes of this
profile to the top of the list for catastrophe risk in Mexico.
The Central Guerrero segment, part of the Cocos plate boundary along
this subduction zone, currently poses the highest potential threat to
Mexico City due to its proximity and lack of major activity since 1916.
Because of its quiescence, this segment is commonly referred to as the
"Guerrero Gap." Historically, this plate boundary produced the
destructive 1985 Michoacan Earthquake M8.1, the most damaging in Mexico
City’s history causing losses of US$4 billion. Other such events over
the last few decades have reached M7.8.
The RMS® Mexico Earthquake Model contains special geocoding, hazard, and
vulnerability features to capture the most complete view of risk for
earthquakes impacting the Mexico City area. Since 1996 insurers and
reinsurers have used the model to manage earthquake catastrophe risk in
Mexico.
Model Highlights
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Differentiates between 12 distinct source
segments along the Middle America Trench subduction zone |
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Soil hazard data for the entire country, with
high resolution soil and liquefaction data for Mexico City |
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Special amplification parameters to account for
long-period effect for sites on old lake deposits in Mexico City |
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Building vulnerability curves developed using
local expert opinion and RMS research |
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Accounts for local/regional construction
differences, building code changes |
Geographic Scope
All of Mexico
Exposure Data Resolution
Data input supported at the following levels of
resolution: latitude-longitude, postal code, colonia (city district
equivalent, for Mexico City and Acapulco), city, municipio (county
equivalent), and CRESTA zone
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