site amplification
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The 6th Generation seismic hazard model of Canada is being developed to generate seismic design values for the 2020 National Building Code of Canada (NBCC2020). Ground-motion models (GMMs) from the Next Generation Attenuation (NGA)-West 2 and NGA-East programs are used and epistemic uncertainty in ground-motion models is captured through the use of a classical weighted logic tree framework. For the first time, seismic hazard is computed directly on primary (e.g. A-E) seismic site classes from their time-averaged shear wave velocities in the upper 30 m of the crust (VS30). This approach simplifies the way end users will determine seismic design values for a given location and site class, while having other technical advantages such as capturing epistemic uncertainty in site amplification models. It will remove the need for separate site amplification look-up tables in the building code, enabling users to simply supply their location and site class to determine seismic design values. In general, the new ground- motion models predict higher hazard in most Canadian localities due to a variable combination of changes in median ground motions, site amplification and aleatory uncertainty.