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51.
Earthquake imprints on a lacustrine deltaic system: The Kürk Delta along the East Anatolian Fault (Turkey) 下载免费PDF全文
Aurélia Hubert‐Ferrari Meriam El‐Ouahabi David Garcia‐Moreno Ulaş Avşar Sevgi Altınok Sabine Schmidt Nathalie Fagel M. Namık Çağatay 《Sedimentology》2017,64(5):1322-1353
Deltas contain sedimentary records that are not only indicative of water‐level changes, but also particularly sensitive to earthquake shaking typically resulting in soft‐sediment‐deformation structures. The Kürk lacustrine delta lies at the south‐western extremity of Lake Hazar in eastern Turkey and is adjacent to the seismogenic East Anatolian Fault, which has generated earthquakes of magnitude 7. This study re‐evaluates water‐level changes and earthquake shaking that have affected the Kürk Delta, combining geophysical data (seismic‐reflection profiles and side‐scan sonar), remote sensing images, historical data, onland outcrops and offshore coring. The history of water‐level changes provides a temporal framework for the depositional record. In addition to the common soft‐sediment deformation documented previously, onland outcrops reveal a record of deformation (fracturing, tilt and clastic dykes) linked to large earthquake‐induced liquefactions and lateral spreading. The recurrent liquefaction structures can be used to obtain a palaeoseismological record. Five event horizons were identified that could be linked to historical earthquakes occurring in the last 1000 years along the East Anatolian Fault. Sedimentary cores sampling the most recent subaqueous sedimentation revealed the occurrence of another type of earthquake indicator. Based on radionuclide dating (137Cs and 210Pb), two major sedimentary events were attributed to the ad 1874 to 1875 East Anatolian Fault earthquake sequence. Their sedimentological characteristics were determined by X‐ray imagery, X‐ray diffraction, loss‐on‐ignition, grain‐size distribution and geophysical measurements. The events are interpreted to be hyperpycnal deposits linked to post‐seismic sediment reworking of earthquake‐triggered landslides. 相似文献
52.
Earthquake, as disastrous events in geological history, can be recorded as soft-sediment deformation. In the Palaeogene of
the East China Sea shelf, the soft-sediment deformation related to earthquake event is recognized as seismic micro-fractures,
micro-corrugated laminations, liquefied veins, ‘vibrated liquefied layers’, deformed cross laminations and convolute laminations,
load structures, flame structures, brecciation, slump structures and seismodisconformity. There exists a lateral continuum,
the wide spatial distribution and the local vertical continuous sequences of seismites including slump, liquefaction and brecciation.
In the Palaeogene of East China Sea shelf, where typical soft-sediment deformation structures were developed, clastic deposits
of tidal-flat, delta and river facies are the main background deposits of Middle-Upper Eocene Pinghu Formation and Oligocene
Huagang Formation. This succession also records diagnostic marks of event deposits and basinal tectonic activities in the
form of seismites. 相似文献