Neotectonics and seismic hazard assessment in Hengchun Peninsula,southern Taiwan |
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Authors: | Claudio Vita-Finzi Jiun-Chuan Lin |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Mineralogy, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Rd, London SW7 5BD, UK;2. Department of Geography, National Taiwan University, Roosevelt Rd, Taipei 106, Taiwan, ROC |
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Abstract: | Neotectonic data may indicate whether stored elastic energy will be dissipated or released destructively. The Hengchun Peninsula of Taiwan is the southern extremity of the Central Range of Taiwan and thus an emergent part of the accretionary wedge resulting from subduction of Eurasia beneath the Philippine Sea plate at the Manila Trench. Radiocarbon dating of fossil shorelines on the peninsula shows that it has been uplifted at an average rate of 3.8 mm/yr during the Holocene. About of the uplift is due to deformation along the Hengchun reverse fault but, in contrast with the Chelungpu and other low angle reverse faults west of the Central Range, it accommodates strain principally by aseismic creep. To cite this article: C. Vita-Finzi, J.-C. Lin, C. R. Geoscience 337 (2005). |
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Keywords: | Taiwan Seismicity Neotectonics Geodesy Taiwan Sismicité Néotectonique Datation au carbone 14 Géodésie |
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