EGU22-7305
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-7305
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

A new free software to reconstruct stress trajectories: the Atmo-stress service 

Sofia Bressan1, Olympia Gounari2, Valsamis Ntouskos2, Noemi Corti1, Fabio Luca Bonali1, Konstantinos Karantzalos2, and Alessandro Tibaldi1
Sofia Bressan et al.
  • 1Department of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Milan-Bicocca, Italy (sofia.bressan@unimib.it)
  • 2Remote Sensing Lab, National Technical University of Athens, Greece

The reconstruction of present-day stress and palaeostress trajectories is of paramount importance to study the tectonic regime and its evolution, in a specific area. Its comprehension is crucial also for seismic and volcanic hazard assessment, especially focusing on the shallow crust.

In the framework of the NEANIAS project (https://www.neanias.eu/), EU H2020 RIA, it has been developed the so called ATMO-Stress service (https://docs.neanias.eu/projects/a2-1-service/en/latest/), an open-source cloud service, currently hosted on the GARR Kubernetes platform, which allows to calculate stress trajectories in plain view, based on the concepts from Lee and Angelier (1994). It is designed to run on modern computers for both academics and non-academics purposes, spanning from research activity to oil and gas industries, natural hazard prevention and management.

The service is freely accessible at https://atmo-stress.neanias.eu/ and is designed to calculate the stress trajectories for a specific area, considering as input the same type of stress (e.g. σHmax or σHmin). Data input can be from different sources (e.g. field data, focal mechanism solutions, in-situ geotechnical measures). They must be listed in a homogeneous ASCII text file or Excel file format, including the geographic coordinates, azimuth of the stress and the angular error. The service is capable of processing data from local to regional scale. Following the principles from Lee and Angelier (1994), the trajectory calculation can be done using different parameters and settings. The outputs can be seen directly on the website and can be downloaded with file formats ready to be imported and analyzed in GIS environment and Google Earth.

How to cite: Bressan, S., Gounari, O., Ntouskos, V., Corti, N., Bonali, F. L., Karantzalos, K., and Tibaldi, A.: A new free software to reconstruct stress trajectories: the Atmo-stress service , EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-7305, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-7305, 2022.