Extensive Post-Seismic Cover-Collapse Sinkhole Opening During 2020–2021
Petrinja Earthquake Sequence (Croatia): a Unique Local Geological,
Geotechnical and Hydrological Setting
Abstract
After three foreshocks the day before (M5.0, M4.7 and M4.1,
respectively), a strong M6.4 Petrinja earthquake occurred on December
29, 2020, followed by thousands of aftershocks (the strongest was a
January 6 M5.0 earthquake). This paper presents a unique multihazard
sequence of complex events resulting in numerous cover-collapse sinkhole
failures. Although the area heavily impacted by the earthquake was
larger than 1,000 km2, all 91 sinkholes appeared
within a 4 km2 area surrounding Mečenčani and
Borojevići villages located 20–25 km SE of the epicentral area, during
the three months following the main earthquake. That area was also
previously prone to seldom sinkhole appearances, as evidenced by 45
documented fossil sinkholes. All 91 sinkholes opened as post-seismic
events; the first one (the second biggest, 10.8x9.8 m in diameter and
3.6 m deep) started to open six hours after the strongest earthquake.
The biggest sinkhole, 25x23 m in diameter and 11.7 m deep, opened seven
days after the main earthquake and one day before the strongest
aftershock; its total volume is larger than volume of all other 90 new
sinkholes combined. The Mečenčani and Borojevići villages surroundings
is the only area where a 4–15 m thick sequence of Holocene soil built
of unsaturated low plasticity clays with gravel and sand interlayers and
lenses covers the heavily karstified carbonate bedrock composed of
alternating highly porous Miocene limestones and calcarenites. The
unconfined aquifer within a soil is underlain by a well-permeable
confined karst aquifer in which the water pressure during wet periods
becomes subartesian to artesian, enabling significant erosion and
formation of numerous caverns at the soil–limestone contact. Continuous
removal of eroded sediment by groundwater flow through karstified
systems in carbonates gradually expands cavernous space until a final
cover-collapse. The 2020–2021 Petrinja earthquake sequence
significantly accelerated these processes, resulting in 91
cover-collapse sinkholes opened during a three-months period, instead of
usually one sinkhole opened every few years as reported by local people.
It is interesting to note that during the strongest earthquake the water
level in the unconfined aquifer was very close to the surface, and in
the underlying karst aquifer artesian conditions prevailed.