• Title of article

    A complex seismogenic shear zone: The Düzce segment of North Anatolian Fault (Turkey)

  • Author/Authors

    Pucci، نويسنده , , S. and Pantosti، نويسنده , , D. and Barchi، نويسنده , , M.R. and Palyvos، نويسنده , , N.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
  • Pages
    19
  • From page
    185
  • To page
    203
  • Abstract
    This work highlights how surface geological data can integrate and complete a fault characterization including its seismogenic depth. estigated the area struck by the November, 1999, Mw 7.1 earthquake that ruptured the Düzce segment of the North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ) after the August, 1999, Mw 7.4 Izmit earthquake. lore the persistency or evolution of the active fault setting at the surface, we compared detailed coseismic surface expressions with the long-term morphology and structural architecture of the Düzce zone. ntified a simple 1999 coseismic fault trace (CFT) and an older complex fault system (RFS) involving a wider zone of deformation. fferent parts of the Düzce segment were recognized. A western section presents a staircase trajectory of the coseismic fault trace that reactivated part of the older fault system. An eastern section presents a straight coseismic fault trace that cross-cuts the older and complex fault system. stern Düzce fault segment splays out from the Izmit counterpart of the NAFZ, forming a releasing fault junction. By comparing a model of its coseismic surface deformation field with the long-term morphology, we observed that the present topography of this western section results from the NAFZ activity by repeating coseismic deformations like those in 1999. The mechanical interaction in the release fault junction produces local transtension across the western Düzce fault and justifies its stable complexity. It does not evolve into a straight trace. rface boundary between the Düzce fault sections also separates at depth two fault sections: one with low slip to the west, and another with a big asperity to the east. Thus, the Izmit/Düzce interaction (1) may produce an unfavorable setting for a build-up of asperities in the western Düzce segment and (2) could delay the propagation of the Izmit rupture along the Düzce segment that nucleates mainshocks only on its eastern section. In other words, the arrangement of the fault junction may permanently control how the two sections of the Düzce fault behave and rupture.
  • Keywords
    Dislocation model , Slip distribution , releasing fault junction , tectonic geomorphology , 1999 Düzce earthquake , coseismic ruptures
  • Journal title
    Earth and Planetary Science Letters
  • Serial Year
    2007
  • Journal title
    Earth and Planetary Science Letters
  • Record number

    2326079