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AGU: Geophysical Research Letters

 

Index Terms

  • Seismology: Continental crust
  • Seismology: Earthquake parameters
  • Seismology: Seismicity and seismotectonics
  • Tectonophysics: Continental contractional orogenic belts
  • Tectonophysics: Continental neotectonics

Abstract

Contribution to the seismotectonics of Eastern Turkey from moderate and small size events

Gonca Örgülü

Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, Bogaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey

Mustafa Aktar

Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, Bogaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey

Niyazi Türkelli

Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute, Bogaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey

Eric Sandvol

Department of Geological Sciences, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, Missouri, USA

Muawia Barazangi

Institute for the Study of the Continents, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA

Source properties of small-to-moderate magnitude events in eastern Turkey were studied using high quality waveform data produced by the Eastern Turkey Seismic Experiment (ETSE). A data set of fault plane solutions was obtained for 134 earthquakes using the regional moment tensor inversion technique for 34 events with magnitude 3.7 and above, and first motion analysis for 115 earthquakes with magnitude 3.0 and higher (for 15 events both techniques were used). Most of the events studied had strike slip mechanisms in agreement with nearby local fault structures. Reverse mechanisms were more scarce and were restricted to certain areas, such as in the eastern Anatolian plateau and southwest of the Karliova junction along the Arabian plate boundary. Our results indicate a difference in the deformational style east and west of the Karliova junction which results in internal deformation in the east and westward extrusion of the Anatolian plate with no or very little internal deformation in the west. Our results also suggest that in eastern Turkey, most of the collision is taken up by strike slip faults of varying types and sizes, suggesting that the northward convergence of Arabia is being accommodated by escape tectonics. Compressive features, such as thrust faulting, which were obviously the primary faulting during the earliest stages of continental collision, are still active but are of lesser importance.

Received 26 July 2003; accepted 21 October 2003; published 10 December 2003.

Citation: Örgülü, G., M. Aktar, N. Türkelli, E. Sandvol, and M. Barazangi (2003), Contribution to the seismotectonics of Eastern Turkey from moderate and small size events, Geophys. Res. Lett., 30(24), 8040, doi:10.1029/2003GL018258.

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