ISC-GEM: Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900–2009), I. Data collection from early instrumental seismological bulletins

•A multitude of printed seismological bulletins between 1904 and 1971 are digitized.•About 1,000,000 arrivals and 110,000 amplitudes are now part of the ISC database.•The newly available data relates to global large earthquakes during 1904–1971.•The digitized data allowed us to re-asses earthquake l...

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Published in:Physics of the earth and planetary interiors Vol. 239; pp. 14 - 24
Main Authors: Di Giacomo, Domenico, Harris, James, Villaseñor, Antonio, Storchak, Dmitry A., Engdahl, E. Robert, Lee, William H.K.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-02-2015
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Summary:•A multitude of printed seismological bulletins between 1904 and 1971 are digitized.•About 1,000,000 arrivals and 110,000 amplitudes are now part of the ISC database.•The newly available data relates to global large earthquakes during 1904–1971.•The digitized data allowed us to re-asses earthquake locations and magnitudes. In order to produce a new global reference earthquake catalogue based on instrumental data covering the last 100+years of global earthquakes, we collected, digitized and processed an unprecedented amount of printed early instrumental seismological bulletins with fundamental parametric data for relocating and reassessing the magnitude of earthquakes that occurred in the period between 1904 and 1970. This effort was necessary in order to produce an earthquake catalogue with locations and magnitudes as homogeneous as possible. The parametric data obtained and processed during this work fills a large gap in electronic bulletin data availability. This new dataset complements the data publicly available in the International Seismological Centre (ISC) Bulletin starting in 1964. With respect to the amplitude-period data necessary to re-compute magnitude, we searched through the global collection of printed bulletins stored at the ISC and entered relevant station parametric data into the database. As a result, over 110,000 surface and body-wave amplitude-period pairs for re-computing standard magnitudes MS and mb were added to the ISC database. To facilitate earthquake relocation, different sources have been used to retrieve body-wave arrival times. These were entered into the database using optical character recognition methods (International Seismological Summary, 1918–1959) or manually (e.g., British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1913–1917). In total, ∼1,000,000 phase arrival times were added to the ISC database for large earthquakes that occurred in the time interval 1904–1970. The selection of earthquakes for which data was added depends on time period and magnitude: for the early years of last century (until 1917) only very large earthquakes were selected for processing (M⩾7.5), whereas in the periods 1918–1959 and 1960–2009 the magnitude thresholds are 6.25 and 5.5, respectively. Such a selection was mainly dictated by limitations in time and funding. Although the newly available parametric data is only a subset of the station data available in the printed bulletins, its electronic availability will be important for any future study of earthquakes that occurred during the early instrumental period.
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ISSN:0031-9201
1872-7395
DOI:10.1016/j.pepi.2014.06.003