词条 | Giuseppe Mercalli |
释义 |
| name = Giuseppe Mercalli | image = Osservatorio ximeniano, giuseppe mercalli sul vesuvio.JPG | image_size = | caption = Giuseppe Mercalli | birth_date = 21 May 1850 | birth_place = Milan, Italy | death_date = {{Death date and age|1914|3|19|1850|5|21|df=y}} | death_place = Naples, Italy | residence = | citizenship = | nationality = Italian | ethnicity = | field = Volcanology | work_institutions = | alma_mater = | doctoral_advisor = | doctoral_students = | known_for = Mercalli intensity scale | author_abbrev_bot = | author_abbrev_zoo = | influences = | influenced = | prizes = | religion = | footnotes = | signature = }} Giuseppe Mercalli (21 May 1850 – 19 March 1914) was an Italian volcanologist and Catholic priest. He is best remembered for the Mercalli intensity scale for measuring earthquakes. Biography{{See also|List of Roman Catholic cleric–scientists}}Born in Milan, Mercalli was ordained a Roman Catholic priest and soon became a professor of the Natural Sciences at the seminary of Milan. The Italian government appointed him a professor at Domodossola, followed by a post at Reggio di Calabria. He was professor of geology at the University of Catania in the late 1880s and finally was given a post at the Naples University. He was also director of the Vesuvius Observatory until the time of his death. He is best remembered for the Mercalli intensity scale for measuring earthquakes which, in modified form, is still used today.[1] Unlike the Richter magnitude scale, which measures the energy released by an earthquake, the Mercalli intensity scale measures the subjectively assessed effects of an earthquake. It is poorly suited for measuring earthquakes in sparsely populated areas but ideal for comparing damage done by various tremors, and is useful in earthquake engineering. The scale in use today assigns indices ranging from I - "Not felt, except by a few under favorable conditions", to XII - "Damage total; objects thrown into the air." Giuseppe Mercalli also observed eruptions of the volcanoes Stromboli and Vulcano in the Aeolian Islands. His descriptions of these eruptions became the basis for two indices in the Volcanic Explosivity Index: 1 - Strombolian eruption, and 2 - Vulcanian eruption. He also photographed Vesuvius immediately after its eruption in 1906. In 1914, Mercalli burnt to death under suspicious circumstances, allegedly after knocking over a paraffin lamp in his bedroom.[2] He is thought to have been working through the night, as he often did (he once was found working at 11 a.m. when he had set an examination, upon hearing which he replied, “It surely can't be daylight yet!”), when the fatal accident occurred. His body was found, carbonized, by his bed, holding a blanket which he attempted to use to fend off the flames. The authorities, however, stated a few days later that the professor was quite possibly murdered by strangling and soaked in petrol and burned to conceal the crime because they determined that money now worth about $1,400 was missing from the professor's apartment. Intensity scales{{See also|Seismic scale}}Mercalli devised two earthquake intensity scales, both modifications of the Rossi–Forel scale. The first,[3] now largely forgotten, had six degrees whereas the Rossi–Forel scale had ten.[4] The second, now known as the Mercalli intensity scale, had ten degrees, and expanded on the descriptions in the Rossi–Forel scale.[5] Italian physicist Adolfo Cancani expanded the ten-degree Mercalli scale with the addition of two degrees at the top of the scale: XI (catastrophe) and XII (enormous catastrophe).[6] This was later completely rewritten by the German geophysicist August Heinrich Sieberg and became known as the Mercalli–Cancani–Sieberg (MCS) scale. This was modified and published in English by Harry O. Wood and Frank Neumann in 1931 as the Mercalli–Wood–Neumann (MWN) scale. It was later improved by Charles Richter, developer of the Richter scale. The scale is known today as the Modified Mercalli intensity scale (MM or MMI). References1. ^{{citation|title=International Handbook of Earthquake & Engineering Seismology|series=Part B, Volume 81B|chapter=Biographies of interest to earthquake and engineering seismologists|first=B. F.|last=Howell, Jr.|year=2003|publisher=Academic Press|edition=First|isbn=978-0124406582|page=1761}} 2. ^{{cite news|title=PROF. G. MERCALLI BURNED TO DEATH; Famous Director of Vesuvian Observatory Upsets Oil Lamp Upon Himself|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F70B16FD3A5B13738DDDA90A94DB405B848DF1D3|date=March 20, 1914|newspaper=The New York Times}} 3. ^{{cite book|last=Mercalli|first=Giuseppe|publication-date=1883|series=Geologia d’Italia|volume=3|title=Vulcani e Fenomeni Vulcanici in Italia|publisher=Francesco Vallardi|place=Milan|pages=217–218}} 4. ^{{cite journal|last=Davison |first=C |date=1921 |title=On scales of seismic intensity and on the construction of isoseismal lines |work=Bull. Seismol. Soc. Am. |issue=11 |pages=95–129}} 5. ^{{cite journal|last=Mercalli|first=Giuseppe|date=1902|title=Sulle modificazioni proposte alla scala sismica De Rossi-Forel|work=Boll Soc Sismol Ital|issue=8|pages=184–191}} 6. ^{{cite journal|last=Cancani|first=Adolfo|date=1904|title=Sur l’emploi d’une double echelle sismique des intensitès, empirique et absolue|work=Gerlands Beitr Geophys|issue=2|pages=281–283}} External links
10 : 1850 births|1914 deaths|People from Milan|Italian geologists|Seismologists|Italian volcanologists|Earthquake engineering|Catholic clergy scientists|19th-century Roman Catholic priests|20th-century Roman Catholic priests |
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