Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9536875 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2005 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Mapping of active fault segments in the Vienna Basin using subcrop data, thickness maps of Quaternary deposits, seismological data, and geomorphological features seen in the digital elevation model shows that virtually all active faults are reactivated Miocene structures. In the southern part of the basin active faulting defines a small-scale pull-apart structure with an actively subsiding Quaternary basin, which is filled with up to 140Â m fluvial gravel, sand and paleosoils. For this basin Quaternary sinistral displacement was quantified by adopting a geometrical model for thin-skinned extensional strike-slip duplexes. Accordingly, 1.5-2Â km sinistral slip accumulated during deposition of the basin fill in the last 400 ky corresponding to a slip rate of 1.6-2.5Â mm/y. Results are in good agreement with published GPS data indicating 2Â mm slip per year. A second group of Quaternary basins is related to listric normal faulting, rollover and crestal collapse of the reactivated normal faults at the NW basin margin. Rollover also resulted in tilting and dissecting Late Pleistocene river terraces of the Danube.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Kurt Decker, Herwig Peresson, Ralph Hinsch,