ACTIVE STRESS FIELD OF THE SOUTHERN AEGEAN SEA SUBDUCTION AREA FROM FAULT-PLANE SOLUTIONS ON THE BASIS OF DIFFERENT STRESS INVERSION APPROACHES

2021 ◽  
pp. 101813
Author(s):  
Ch. Kkallas ◽  
C.B. Papazachos ◽  
E.M. Scordilis ◽  
B.N. Margaris
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreea Craiu ◽  
Marius Craiu ◽  
Mariu Mihai ◽  
Elena Manea ◽  
Alexandru Marmureanu

<p>The Vrancea zone is an unique area with both crustal and intermediate-depth seismic activity and constitutes one of the most active seismic area in Europe.  An intense and persistent seismicity is generated between 60 and 180 km depth, within a relic slab sinking nearly vertical in the Earth’s mantle due to the increasing of the stress state within this volume. At intermediate-depths, large magnitude events are frequent, i.e. four earthquakes with moment magnitudes (Mw) >7 occurred in the last century. An unique slab geometry, likely preserved until the present, causes stress localization due to the slab bending and subsequent stress release resulting in large mantle earthquakes in the region.</p><p>In this study, we evaluate the current stress field along the Vrancea subcrustal region by computing the fault plane solutions of 422 seismic events since January 2005. The continuous development of the National Seismic Network allows us to constrain the fault plane solutions and subsequently to evaluate the current stress field.</p><p>The main style of faulting for Vrancea subcrustal events presents a predominant reverse one, with two main earthquakes categories: the first one with the nodal planes oriented NE-SW parallel with the Carpathian Arc and the second one with the nodal planes oriented NW-SE perpendicular on the Carpathian Arc. The main axis of the moment tensor may indicate a predominant compressional stress field (Tpl>45<sup>0</sup> Ppl<45<sup>0</sup>). Another characteristic of  the Vrancea subcrustal zone is the tendency of the extension axis T to be almost vertical and the compression axis P being almost horizontal.</p><p>The results of stress inversion indicate a dominant reverse faulting style, with an average stress regime index of 2.9. Other tectonic regimes were observed in the present dataset as normal and strike-slip but they are retrieved for a restrained number of events.</p><p>The stress patterns obtained from formal stress inversion of focal mechanism solutions reveal many features of the current stress field that were not captured by large-scale numerical models.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 632 ◽  
pp. 261-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Farida Ousadou ◽  
Louis Dorbath ◽  
Abdelhakim Ayadi ◽  
Catherine Dorbath ◽  
Sofiane Gharbi

2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 2817-2820 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Telesca ◽  
V. Alcaz ◽  
I. Sandu

Abstract. The fault plane solutions (FPS) of 247 seismic events were used for stress field investigation of the region. The eigenvectors t, p, b, and moment tensor M components for each FPS were defined and computed numerically. The obtained results confirm the hypothesis of subduction-type intermediate depth earthquakes for the Vrancea seismic region and this may be considered the first approximation of the stress field for the whole of the Vrancea (intermediate depth) region.


A neotectonic joint is a crack which propagated in a tectonic stress field that has persisted with little or no change of orientation until the present day. Investigating neotectonic joints is of value because the approximate orientation of the contemporary stress field can be inferred from them. Although exposed neotectonic joints in the flat-lying sedimentary rocks of some cratons are related to regional stress fields, their initiation and propagation occurred close to the Earth’s surface. For example, neotectonic joints in the centre of the Ebro basin (N. Spain) preferentially developed in a thin, near-surface channel sited within a sequence of weak Miocene limestones underlying the upper levels of plateaux. The Ebro basin joints strike uniformly NNW-SSE throughout an area of at least 10 000 km 2 and they are parallel or subparallel to the direction of greatest horizontal stress extrapolated from in situ stress measurements and fault-plane solutions of earthquakes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ch. Kkallas ◽  
C.B. Papazachos ◽  
E.M. Scordilis ◽  
B.N. Margaris

We have employed the data of EGELADOS temporary network (October 2005-April 2007) to determine 88 focal mechanism solutions from Southern Aegean Sea using the RAPIDINV algorithm (Cesca et al., 2010). The new focal mechanism solutions determined, complemented with the previously available ones for Southern Aegean Seα provide the basis for a detailed examination of the stress field, using the distribution of P and T axes. To obtain the stress field we applied the method of Gephart and Forsyth (1984), namely the grid search inversion approach of Gephart (1990a,b), which incorporates the P and T axes of selected focal mechanisms. For the inversion, the initial stress solutions were computed by the “average” kinematic P and T-axis approach of Papazachos and Kiratzi (1992). The stress-inversion allows choosing the "ideal" fault plane corresponding to the minimum misfit rotation about an axis of general orientation which is needed to match an observed fault plane/slip direction with one consistent with the final stress model.


Author(s):  
Ulrike Kastrup ◽  
Mary Lou Zoback ◽  
Nicholas Deichmann ◽  
Keith F. Evans ◽  
Domenico Giardini ◽  
...  

1979 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian E. Scheidegger

Abstract. The orientation of the Valleys in Switzerland shows a remarkable symmetry. It is the aim of this paper to represent this symmetry in numerical terms and to seek a physical cause thereof. For this purpose, the valley directions have been «rectified» (i. e. straightened) by considering them as edges in a graph. In this fashion, the distribution of orientations can be represented numerically and, in consequence, can be analyzed statistically. It is shown that the preferred orientations are ENE and SSE, which is the same as the preferred orientations of the strikes of the rock-joints in the region. Inasmuch as the joints are thought to be caused by the neotectonic stress field, the coincidence of the orientations of joints and river valleys is a strong indication that the latter are determined by the same neotectonic stress field as well. Data from fault plane solutions of earthquakes support this contention.


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