The 2015 INQUA International Workshop on Active Tectonics, Paleoseismology and Archaeoseismology in the Fucino Basin is over – but luckily some of the scientists have covered the meeting on Twitter! For those who missed the meeting in Italy, read and enjoy this recap – you might want to consider going to the next PATA Days.
The tweets are sorted chronologically, with the oldest tweets at the bottom and the latest tweets right below.
EDIT: I just inserted the latest tweets.
#fucino15 Official Group Photo pic.twitter.com/5IrziJNh0V
— Luca Guerrieri (@guerrieri291) April 27, 2015
On way back home from #fucino15 meeting where we had intense discussion on seismic hazard science. Now sad news on severe shaking in Nepal.
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 25, 2015
Nice to have met friends & colleagues @ #fucino15 #inqua. But #NepalEarthquake bring us back to tragic reality of active faulting
— Stéphane Baize (@stef92320) April 25, 2015
Geologists contemplate the societal effects of the 2009 earthquake, still surrounded by destruction. #Fucino15 pic.twitter.com/CYrkG99rRr
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 24, 2015
Even after 6 year a walk in downtown L'Aquila reduces you to silence … #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/L1tCYK543G
— Manuel Sintubin (@ManuelSintubin) April 24, 2015
I think this picture perfectly explains the #fucino15 meeting and why we need to study #activefaults around the world pic.twitter.com/t5UrFZVdxX
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 24, 2015
Looking at Santa Maria di Paganica Church in L'Aquila town hit by the 2009 earthquake. #fucino15 fieldtrip pic.twitter.com/E9iUvei8Kr
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 24, 2015
At the L'Aquila trench site #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/OYgsdtVcg5
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 24, 2015
Approaching L'Aquila today #fucino15 field trip
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 24, 2015
Have fun sleeping in the #hangingwall hotel . -the #footwall folks. #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/rnq5bShEt8
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 24, 2015
Trenchparty! #fucino15 field trip to the trench that was opened few days ago by Paolo Galli pic.twitter.com/4dHT6HvCpG
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 23, 2015
Fault scarp of the 1915 Fucino earthquake #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/AkwFqG6H3i
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 23, 2015
Panoramic view of the Magnola fault with 1915 earthquake surface rupture. #fucino15 fieldtrip pic.twitter.com/uThdWwryk2
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 23, 2015
Wave-cut platforms in the Fucino Basin – #fucino15 field trip #inqua #paleoseismology
— INQUA ECR (@INQUA_ECR) April 23, 2015
Gerald Roberts & colleagues provide background information for #Fucino15 field trip to active faults in Fucino Basin pic.twitter.com/hC4pZ8Kg1F
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 23, 2015
#fucino15 field trip: Gerald Roberts leads the stop focused on the Serrone faul escarpment pic.twitter.com/iXaRhYmhFo
— Luca Guerrieri (@guerrieri291) April 23, 2015
Field trip #Italy style. #fucino15 #faultscarp #piscina #birra #cosmogenicexposureage #Apennine #paleoseismology pic.twitter.com/gCh0WWIoIx
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 23, 2015
#fucino15 Prof. Gerald Roberts explains how cosmogenic dating is used to identify slip rates on faults pic.twitter.com/Dybzl1Etji
— Jenni Robertson (@GeoJenni) April 23, 2015
This is the first, wonderful PPPT (paper power point) I have ever seen! And I understood it!!! #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/XubgBiIFcZ
— Medieval Earthquakes (@ArMedEa_project) April 23, 2015
Third stop at the #fucino15 excursion: Tectonic terraces at the northern edge of the Fucino15 basin pic.twitter.com/CQa1MR9pPi
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 23, 2015
Stop 2: normal fault, fault scarp, trench site #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/0vkRqZ27RJ
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 23, 2015
Plowing away the geomorphic fault scarp as we watch. #fucino15 #paleoseismology pic.twitter.com/opVAKb65G4
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 23, 2015
Field trip to Avezzano #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/uMJrBczbHR
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 23, 2015
How often do uq see such excitement over a crack and some shifted stones? #Fucino15 #fieldtrip #1915AvezzanoQuake dmg pic.twitter.com/sCZVkHxEOr
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 23, 2015
Today: field trip to the Fucino Basin faults! #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/wiNuhoefkL
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 23, 2015
Calzone en la última cena en Pescina #Fucino15. Mañana field trip! pic.twitter.com/69bOxqPPQC
— franco sobrero (@francosobrero) April 22, 2015
#fucino15 About 180 participants from 24 countries!!! pic.twitter.com/V4uEL6AP8e
— Luca Guerrieri (@guerrieri291) April 22, 2015
@DrSeawater on 'past tsunami events in northwestern Venezuela' last talk of the day #fucino15 #inqua #Italy
— Eduardo Alarcón (@edualarcon) April 22, 2015
Now tsunamis at the #fucino15 meeting, invited talk by Witold Szczucinski
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 22, 2015
Last session: ESI2007 scale, tsunamis #fucino15 now: Ioannis Papanikolaou on two historic EQs in Greece
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 22, 2015
#fucino15 penne with garlic mhhh interesting afternoon session!! :o) pic.twitter.com/RRiSmtPU0T
— CarloAlbertoBrunori (@cabbac) April 22, 2015
Last talk of the morning session on seismic hazard before a long and sunny lunch break #fucino15 #cuisinaitaliana
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 22, 2015
New and old Pescina. An appropriate place to be discussing seismic hazard today at #Fucino15 pic.twitter.com/h2MyWRyWj3
— Eleanor Ainscoe (@EleanorA1234) April 22, 2015
@London_NERC_DTP is present at the #fucino15 conference. #QuaternaryGeology, #Paleoseismology, #SeismicHazard topics pic.twitter.com/iFMiPWpeo8
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 22, 2015
Now starting: the session on seismic and tsunami hazard at the #fucino15 meeting
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 22, 2015
Conference dinner #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/zrIEf4NWyc
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
A scarp above Pescina #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/3DAnmRFlMY
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
Great day at #Fucino15 #Italy , now getting ready for dinner with a wonderful bunch of people pic.twitter.com/cilnlBCGfw
— franco sobrero (@francosobrero) April 21, 2015
#Pescina #Italy #Fucino15 #abandoned #chapel from the #castle #castel #maybethiswouldbebettersuitedtoinstagram pic.twitter.com/TzjfJ0Ipmx
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 21, 2015
Now: EPOS & EuroGeoSurveys workshop #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
#fucino15 Inqua2015, nice EAE on the standing (and collapsed) walls of Pescina Castle @paleoseismicity pic.twitter.com/kPLaWVVFNp
— Medieval Earthquakes (@ArMedEa_project) April 21, 2015
Last talk of the session is by Patience Cowie on slip-rate variability in the Apennines #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
This clearly is the Comic Sans session at the #fucino15 meeting. A presenter conspiracy!
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 21, 2015
Afternoon session at the #fucino15 meeting: #speleoseismology – #paleoseismology in Central Italy
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
Please, tell the geologists that non-comicsans fonts are available as well! #fucino15
— Enzo Santilli (@iAmTheJoS) April 21, 2015
Speleoseismology who knew! #fucino15
— Ken McCaffrey (@k_mccaffrey) April 21, 2015
@unipait is present at #fucino15 conference… pic.twitter.com/CyIdO0jMZy
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 21, 2015
Normal fault scarp above the conference venue #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/GgmXRSvQKO
— Luke Wedmore (@LukeWedmore) April 21, 2015
Two talks by David Mackenzie and Richard Walker in today's #paleoseismology session about large EQs in Central Asia #fucino15 @EwFProject
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 21, 2015
Last talk before lunch: Richard Walker on historical and prehistorical very large EQs in the Tien Shan #fucino15 @NERC_COMET @OxUniEarthSci
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
Interesting relationship between Holocene earthquakes and landslides in Canada by Brooks G. and Gregory R. at #fucino15 conference
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 21, 2015
Carlos Costas: The absence of a scarp does not necessarily mean there's no Late Quaternary faulting in Argentina… #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
Coffee time at #fucino15 conference… pic.twitter.com/NzD2wYvqkw
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 21, 2015
#pata6, #Inqua, #Fucino15, today severe handling problems with laser pointer: turns presentations into movies
— Klaus Reicherter (@ActiveFaults) April 21, 2015
#fucino15, #pata6, inqua, Dave Schwartz on the 2014 Napa eq, good morning pic.twitter.com/XYoArPvwhe
— Klaus Reicherter (@ActiveFaults) April 21, 2015
David Mackenzie's laser pointer is officially approved tool of the day! #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
Now at #Fucino15 David Mackenzie on how to determine a slip rate for the northern front of the Kazakh Tien Shan @NERC_COMET @OxUniEarthSci
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 21, 2015
Day 2 of #fucino15 Great start so far. First Napa valley then Betics
— Ken McCaffrey (@k_mccaffrey) April 21, 2015
Second day of #fucino15 conference. Very interesting day with #paleoseismology talks…
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 21, 2015
David Schwartz on the #Napaquake – very large slip for a M6.0, plus lots of after slip. First trench results! #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
#fucino15 facts: 180 participants from 25+ countries, 150+ abstracts, 100 posters, 50 (!) talks. Today: #paleoseismology session
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 21, 2015
Traditional Apennine bagpipes at the #fucino15 traditional dinner: pic.twitter.com/QNgI71TNKc
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 20, 2015
The #Fucino15 traditional dinner is about to start: pic.twitter.com/XRUJxy3Wvx
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 20, 2015
@theearthquakes only joking the view is incred… #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/p02LzHI9JU
— Luke Wedmore (@LukeWedmore) April 20, 2015
@theearthquakes my view is pretty awesome too #Francos #faultytowers #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/CNLOdx3xXf
— Luke Wedmore (@LukeWedmore) April 20, 2015
Beautiful views over the Fucino basin in Abruzzo, Italy at the end of a great first day conferencing #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/t0ZXlcATGS
— Laura Gregory (@theearthquakes) April 20, 2015
Best conference coffee break I've ever had. #Fucino15 #paleoseismology in #Pescina #Italy #Apenines pic.twitter.com/gGv0GuMLnd
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 20, 2015
Listening to great talks on earthquake effects on historical sites #fucino15
— Ken McCaffrey (@k_mccaffrey) April 20, 2015
#fucino15 https://t.co/ZS3btw22ci
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 20, 2015
Last session today: #Archaeoseismology Opening talk by K.-G. Hinzen on quantitative results from cent. Italy. #shakingcolumn #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 20, 2015
Dus niet registreren van #aardbevingen met regionaal seismisch netwerk wijst dus niet op afwezigheid microseismische activiteit. #fucino15
— Manuel Sintubin (@ManuelSintubin) April 20, 2015
#fucino15, fucino2015, coffee break, with discussion pic.twitter.com/42RhadJMdd
— Klaus Reicherter (@ActiveFaults) April 20, 2015
Collalto Seismic Network, monitoring induced microseismicity, but finding natural seismicity … http://t.co/IFgPxVDoBw #fucino15 #Groningen
— Manuel Sintubin (@ManuelSintubin) April 20, 2015
#fucino15 PESCINA lunchtime pic.twitter.com/coMp32MR8w
— CarloAlbertoBrunori (@cabbac) April 20, 2015
From Italy to the Himalayas – interesting though not uncontroversial first session on Quaternary Geology at #fucino15
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 20, 2015
The first session's talks make clear that proper Quaternary dating (10Be, 36Cl, 14C) is crucial for #paleoseismology studies #fucino15
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 20, 2015
The Quaternary Geology session starts #fucino15 with great talks by Gerald Roberts & Laura Gregory about 36Cl dating and slip rates in Italy
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 20, 2015
#Fucino15 is officially on! In beautiful cold Pescina
— franco sobrero (@francosobrero) April 20, 2015
Did you know that the last victim of the M7.0 1915 Fucino earthquake has been found only 92 years later in Albe… #Fucino15
— Manuel Sintubin (@ManuelSintubin) April 20, 2015
About to start the #fucino15 meeting… pic.twitter.com/KtXto1WK1k
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 20, 2015
Good morning Pescina! The #fucino15 meeting starts – – – now! pic.twitter.com/ItJR6E8oEt
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 20, 2015
Was a great walk in Central Rome, now heading towards Pescina for the #fucino15 meeting on #paleoseismology
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 19, 2015
Collapsed keystones in the colosseum #fucino15 pre-conference field trip pic.twitter.com/wC4O1l1C5t
— Jenni Robertson (@GeoJenni) April 19, 2015
An archaeoseismological-historical walk through Rome #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/A9IOAmxBOK
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 19, 2015
#PreservationChoices. #fucino15 #Rome #colosseo #PiusTheSeventh pic.twitter.com/y5rt0UL9PZ
— Austin Elliott (@TTremblingEarth) April 19, 2015
A colossal earthquake record. #fucino15 pic.twitter.com/Jbl0uCTOm6
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 19, 2015
Ciao Roma. Arrived at #fucino15!
— Stéphane Baize (@stef92320) April 18, 2015
Archeoseismic evidence in Roma: precongress field trip #Fucino15 pic.twitter.com/UUvmWxD8CF
— Luca Guerrieri (@guerrieri291) April 18, 2015
On our way to Rome, heavy rush hour. #fucino15 with @TTremblingEarth pic.twitter.com/WvjnqfKnWY
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 18, 2015
Ready for #Fucino15. Looking forward to seeing you tomorrow! pic.twitter.com/LLx3h3b9Dn
— Luca Guerrieri (@guerrieri291) April 18, 2015
Are you ready for Fucino 2015? This is the new trench excavated for the field trip in Fucino. #Fucino15 pic.twitter.com/uWIi2feGvJ
— Luca Guerrieri (@guerrieri291) April 18, 2015
#EGU15 is over, #INQUA conference on #paleoseismology starts tomorrow! 150+ active tectonics people at #fucino15
— INQUA ECR (@INQUA_ECR) April 18, 2015
#pata6, #Inqua, #fucino15 at Cologne, CGN, before boarding, with Joscka and 6 posters pic.twitter.com/IZCc5GHLLc
— Klaus Reicherter (@ActiveFaults) April 18, 2015
Flying to Rome to attend the #fucino15 conference in Abruzzo. pic.twitter.com/0YxuZAB2EL
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 18, 2015
The #fucino15 meeting starts on Sunday, I am excited already! Heading to sunny Rome tomorrow.
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 17, 2015
Completing my first research poster for the #fucino15 conference. Almost ready for printing it. #QuaternaryGeology pic.twitter.com/Fu3vPy4KO7
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) April 13, 2015
What a pity I can't be there this year… "@paleoseismicity: The program for the #Fucino15 meeting is out now! http://t.co/8Tqe4XQOVZ"
— Andreas Rudersdorf (@andiwhere) April 8, 2015
The #Fucino15 conference is approaching. The program is out now! http://t.co/iz3LYMAtKc #paleoseismology
— Christoph Gruetzner (@ch_gruetze) April 8, 2015
The program for the #Fucino15 meeting is out now! http://t.co/O3FI4XHdi4 #paleoseismology #archaeoseismology
— paleoseismicity (@paleoseismicity) April 7, 2015
My #Fucino15 conference abstract has been accepted. Let's go to Pescina and talk about #marineterraces, #uplift and #quaternaryfaulting.
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) March 26, 2015
Working and defining extended abstract about #marineterraces, #faultsliprate and #upliftrate for #Fucino15 conference…
— Marco Meschis (@MarcoMeschis) January 10, 2015
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