Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6444896 Journal of Structural Geology 2014 56 Pages PDF
Abstract
The late-Cenozoic kinematic and late-Pleistocene paleoearthquake history of the Spili Fault is examined using slip-vector measurements and in situ cosmogenic (36Cl) dating, respectively. The Spili Fault appears to have undergone at least three successive but distinct phases of extension since Messinian (∼7 Ma), with the most recent faulting resulting in the exhumation of its carbonate plane for a fault-length of ∼20 km. Earthquake-slip and age data show that the lower 9 m of the Spili Fault plane were exhumed during the last ∼16,500 years through a minimum of five large-magnitude (Mw > 6) earthquakes. The timing between successive paleoearthquakes varied by more than one order of magnitude (from 800 to 9000 years), suggesting a highly variable earthquake recurrence interval during late Pleistocene (CV = 1). This variability resulted to significant fluctuations in the displacement rate of the Spili Fault, with the millennium rate (3.5 mm/yr) being about six times faster than its late-Pleistocene rate (0.6 mm/yr). The observed variability in the slip-size of the paleoearthquakes is, however, significantly smaller (CV = 0.3). These data collectively suggest that the Spili Fault is one of the fastest moving faults in the forearc of the Hellenic subduction margin.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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