Province of Viterbo

Earthquakes in Bassano Romano

1.3
very light
LATEST QUAKE

3 km North of Vetralla

9 months ago · 20 Sept, 02:51
Depth 11 km

Seismic activity in the surroundings

30 km radius
266
days since the last quake nearby
18
quakes recorded since 2015
~8 months
on average, one quake every
2.5
The strongest within 30 km
2 km East of Viterbo
109 months ago · 26 Jun, 23:17

INGV catalogue epicentres of the last ~11 years, within the given radius from the town centre.

How seismic is this area?

Zone3
Seismic zone 3

Medium-low seismicity: strong quakes are rare, but not impossible.

Official Civil Protection classification (upd. 2025), used for building codes.

Low
Expected shaking, compared with the other Italian municipalities (INGV MPS04 model)

Hazard describes the long-term expected shaking: it is not a forecast. Technical value: ag = 0.089 g (10% probability of exceedance in 50 years, rigid soil).

Closest earthquake
Go to Nepi Earthquake details
0
In the town
total on record
0
In the town
last 12 months
1
In the area
last 12 months
M2.3
Strongest ever
In the area

The “area” is Bassano Romano plus nearby towns.

No earthquakes recorded in Bassano Romano · 4,834 inhabitants

The seismic history of Bassano Romano

The earthquakes that were actually felt in Bassano Romano over the centuries, with the intensity observed on site (Mercalli MCS scale).

  1. 2005NF15 December 2005

    Imperceptible: only instruments record it.

    Val Nerina earthquake (M4.1), epicentre 76 km away

  2. 2005III22 August 2005

    Light: felt by few people, like a passing truck.

    Costa laziale earthquake (M4.8), epicentre 96 km away

  3. 2000NF16 December 2000

    Imperceptible: only instruments record it.

    Ternano earthquake (M4.3), epicentre 49 km away

  4. 1997IV14 October 1997

    Moderate: felt by many indoors; glasses and dishes rattle.

    Valnerina earthquake (M5.6), epicentre 97 km away

  5. 1997IV26 September 1997

    Moderate: felt by many indoors; glasses and dishes rattle.

    Appennino umbro-marchigiano earthquake (M6.0), epicentre 106 km away

  6. 1997III-IV26 September 1997

    Moderate: felt by many indoors; glasses and dishes rattle.

    Appennino umbro-marchigiano earthquake (M5.7), epicentre 108 km away

  7. 1979IV19 September 1979

    Moderate: felt by many indoors; glasses and dishes rattle.

    Valnerina earthquake (M5.8), epicentre 87 km away

  8. 1969V2 July 1969

    Rather strong: felt by almost everyone; hanging objects swing.

    Monti della Tolfa earthquake (M4.8), epicentre 15 km away

  9. 1963II2 September 1963

    Very light: felt only by a few people at rest, on upper floors.

    Monti Cimini earthquake (M4.5), epicentre 21 km away

  10. 1957NF11 April 1957

    Imperceptible: only instruments record it.

    Valle del Salto earthquake (M4.9), epicentre 75 km away

Source: Italian Macroseismic Database DBMI15 (INGV, CC BY 4.0).

The great earthquakes in this area's history

Almost a thousand years of catalogues: the strongest documented events within ~50 km.

16955.8
Lazio settentrionale earthquake
11 June 1695 · 46 km from here
IXDestructive: many buildings partly or fully collapse.
17145.3
Narni earthquake
1714 · 45 km from here
VII-VIIIRuinous: partial collapses in ordinary buildings, widespread heavy damage.
19015.3
Sabina earthquake
24 April 1901 · 48 km from here
VIIIRuinous: partial collapses in ordinary buildings, widespread heavy damage.
18195.1
Tarquinia earthquake
26 May 1819 · 35 km from here
VIIVery strong: hard to stand; chimneys and roof tiles fall, serious damage to weaker buildings.

Source: Parametric Catalogue of Italian Earthquakes CPTI15 (INGV, CC BY 4.0).

The closest seismic structure

Salto Lake-Ovindoli-Barrea

The town lies about 66 km from Salto Lake-Ovindoli-Barrea, one of the seismic structures mapped by INGV geologists.

estimated maximum magnitude 7.1between 1 and 15 km deep

Faults are mapped to build better and understand the territory: knowing them says nothing about when an earthquake will occur, which remains unpredictable. Source: DISS 3.3 (INGV, CC BY 4.0).

Area over time

September 20251eventmax 1.3
Jul
Oct
Jan '25
Apr
Jul
Oct
Jan '26
Apr

Earthquake map

9 events
Magnitude:lightweakmoderatestrong

Earthquakes in the area

1.3
3 km North of Vetralla
19 km North-West · 11 km
9 months ago
20 Sept, 02:51
1.7
6 km West of Caprarola
13 km North · 7 km
33 months ago
29 Sept, 14:27
1.5
7 km North of Vetralla
23 km North-West · 10 km
79 months ago
12 Dec, 21:21
1.6
3 km East of Vetralla
16 km North-West · 10 km
86 months ago
2 Jun, 03:52
2.3
3 km West of Nepi
8 km East · 6 km
108 months ago
13 Aug, 23:43
1.3
3 km North-East of Vetralla
17 km North-West · 10 km
116 months ago
9 Dec, 20:51
1.7
3 km North-West of Vetralla
20 km North-West · 11 km
116 months ago
9 Dec, 20:24
1.9
2 km North-West of Vetralla
19 km North-West · 10 km
116 months ago
9 Dec, 20:21
1.8
124 months ago
5 Apr, 09:39

Nearby towns

How does it compare with the surroundings?

Bassano Romano is among the quietest towns of its province: very few epicentres are recorded here.

quietermore active
More epicentres than 0% of the 60 towns in the province.
Bassano Romano0
Nearby towns average0.8

Each quake is attributed to the town closest to its epicentre: the numbers describe the area, not the municipal territory alone.

Context

Province of Viterbo0 events · 30gLazio region55 events · 30g
ISTAT code: 056005

Frequently asked questions

Were there earthquakes today in Bassano Romano?

No, no quakes were recorded today in the Bassano Romano area: the latest nearby dates back to 9 months ago.

Is Bassano Romano a seismic area?

Bassano Romano is classified in seismic zone 3 by the Civil Protection. Medium-low seismicity: strong quakes are rare, but not impossible.

What was the strongest earthquake near Bassano Romano?

In the last ~11 years of INGV data, the strongest within 30 km of Bassano Romano was magnitude 2.5, in 2017.

When was the last quake near Bassano Romano?

The last quake recorded within 30 km of Bassano Romano was 9 months ago.

Tip. Click a nearby town to explore its seismicity.

Data: INGV — National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (CC-BY 4.0)

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