scholarly journals The slip deficit on the North Anatolian Fault (Turkey) in the Marmara Sea: insights from paleoseismicity, seismicity and geodetic data

Author(s):  
M. Meghraoui ◽  
R. Toussaint ◽  
M. E. Aksoy
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haluk Ozener ◽  
Bahadir Aktug ◽  
Onur Yilmaz ◽  
Asli Sabuncu ◽  
Bengisu Gelin ◽  
...  

<p>Since 1766, the North Anatolian Fault Zone in the Marmara Sea has not generated a M<sub>w</sub>=7.0 earthquake. In the Marmara Sea, three different segments are located having ~25 mm slip rates and ~10 mm slip deficit per year. The faulting mechanism within the Marmara Sea has capability of generating earthquakes larger than M<sub>w</sub>7.0. We are continuously monitoring this critical region with more than 30 seismo-geodetic stations equipped with 100 Hz sampling seismographs and 1 Hz sampling GPS receivers, in order to detect fast and slow tectonic motions in and around the Marmara Sea at temporal and spatial scale from milliseconds to years and from centimeters to tens of kilometers.</p><p>The data obtained during this study provides us to identify the slip deficit along the fault, the segmentation of fault, the interaction between slip-deficit and background seismicity. Besides, these data also contribute to identify the pre-seismic seismo-geodetic behavior and co-seismic slip when Mw=7.0 type of earthquakes occurs.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seyhan Okuyan Akcan ◽  
Can Zulfikar

<p>Marmara region located on the western end of the North Anatolian Fault Zone is a tectonically active region in Turkey. There have been frequent severe earthquakes in the region and will continue to occur. There was no serious earthquake in the region after the 1999 Mw7.4 Kocaeli and Mw7.2 Düzce earthquakes. A Marmara Sea offshore earthquake Mw5.8 close to Silivri Town of Istanbul Metropolitan City has occurred on September 26, 2019 daytime at 13:59. The earthquake happened at the coordinate of 40.87N – 28.19E with a depth of 7.0km on the Kumburgaz segment of the North Anatolian Fault line. It was felt in almost all Marmara region. In some settlements in Istanbul City, slight to moderate damages were observed. A foreshock earthquake of Mw4.8 occurred on the same segment on 24 September, 2019. 150 aftershock events ranging from M1.0 to M4.1 have been recorded within the 24 hours after the mainshock. The ground motions have been recorded in the region by the several institutions including AFAD (Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency), KOERI (Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute) and IGDAS (Istanbul Gas Distribution Industry and Trade Inc.). The ground motion records and selected parameters have been examined in this study. The ground motion parameters (MMI, PGA, PGV, Sa, Sv, Sd) distribution have been achieved and checked by the recent NGA-West2 ground motion prediction equations (GMPEs); ASK2014, CY2014 and BSSA2014. The compatibility of the GMPEs for a moderate size Marmara Sea earthquake has been examined.</p>


2010 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 97-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Zattin ◽  
W. Cavazza ◽  
A.I. Okay ◽  
I. Federici ◽  
M.G. Fellin ◽  
...  

2009 ◽  
Vol 316 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Rockwell ◽  
Daniel Ragona ◽  
Gordon Seitz ◽  
Rob Langridge ◽  
M. Ersen Aksoy ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alison Seidel ◽  
Henriette Sudhaus

<p>Crustal earthquakes are events of sudden stress release throug­h rock failure, for example as a consequence of continuous and long-term stress buildup at tectonic faults that eventually exceeds the strength of rock. Before failure, under increasing stress at a fault, the surrounding crust is slowly deforming. The amount and pattern of crustal deformation carries information about location and potential magnitude of future earthquakes.</p><p>Time series of space-borne interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data can be used to precisely measure the surface motion, which corresponds to the crustal deformation, in the radar line-of-sight and across large areas. These observations open the opportunity to study fault loading in terms of location, size of locked parts at faults and their slip deficit. Here we study the North Anatolian Fault (NAF), a major right-lateral strike-slip fault zone of about 1500 km length in the north of Turkey and we create its first large-scale 3D finite-fault model based on InSAR data.</p><p>We use the InSAR time series of data recorded by ESA’s Envisat SAR satellite between 2002 and 2010 (Hussain et al., 2018 and Walters et al., 2014).<!-- Das ist nicht ganz eindeutig formuliert. rigid motion darf nicht auf die InSAR Daten bezogen werden. --> We represent the fault with several vertical, planar fault segments that trace the NAF with reasonable resolution. The medium model is a layered half space with a viscoelastic lower crust and mantle. Several GNSS velocity measurements are used to apply a trend correction and calibrate the InSAR time series data to an Eurasia-fixed-reference frame. We use the plate motion difference of the Anatolian and the Eurasian plates calculated through an Euler pole to set up a back-slip finite-fault model. We then optimize the back-slip as the slip deficit, the width and the depth of the locked fault zone at each segment to achieve a good fit to the measured surface motion.</p><p>We find shallow locking depths and small slip deficits in the eastern and westernmost regions of the NAF, while the central part shows both deeper locking depths and larger slip deficits for the observation period. <!-- So wie es jetzt ist sind es zu viele Wörter, wenn man diesen erklär-Satz rausnehmen würde, würde es gerade so passen. Für die Erdbebenaktivität im Osten hab ich bis jetzt für den Zeitraum auch noch kein entsprechendes Paper gefunden, da suche ich aber noch. -->For both parameters the trends are in an overall agreement to earlier studies. There, InSAR-time series data have been used to calculate slip deficits at the North Anatolian fault with 2D models and/or assuming a homogeneous and purely elastic medium.<!-- Passt vom flow jetzt besser hier hin, denke ich. --> Local modeled differences therefore might be connected to differences in the modeling approaches, but also remain subject to further investigations and discussions.</p><p>Our model provides a very suitable basis for future time-dependent modeling of the slip deficit at the NAF that includes also more recent InSAR time series based on data from the Sentinel-1 radar satellite mission of ESA.</p>


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