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  5. Neotectonics of the Sea of Galilee (northeast Israel): implication for geodynamics and seismicity along the Dead Sea Fault system
 
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Neotectonics of the Sea of Galilee (northeast Israel): implication for geodynamics and seismicity along the Dead Sea Fault system

Author(s)
Gasperini, Luca  
ISMAR CNR  
Lazar, Michael  
University of Haifa  
Mazzini, Adriano  
University of Oslo  
Lupi, Matteo  
University of Geneva  
Haddad, Antoine  
University of Geneva  
Hensen, Christian  
GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel  
Schmidt, Mark  
GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel  
Caracausi, Antonio  
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Sezione Palermo, Palermo, Italia  
Ligi, Marco  
ISMAR CNR  
Polonia, Alina  
ISMAR CNR  
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
2T. Deformazione crostale attiva
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Journal
Scientific Reports  
Issue/vol(year)
/10 (2020)
Publisher
Nature P. G.
Pages (printed)
11932
Date Issued
July 20, 2020
DOI
10.1038/s41598-020-67930-6
URI
https://www.earth-prints.org/handle/2122/13806
Subjects

tectonics

fluids geochemistry

seismicity

helium

Abstract
The Sea of Galilee in northeast Israel is a freshwater lake filling a morphological depression along the Dead Sea Fault. It is located in a tectonically complex area, where a N-S main fault system intersects secondary fault patterns non-univocally interpreted by previous reconstructions. A set of multiscale geophysical, geochemical and seismological data, reprocessed or newly collected, was analysed to unravel the interplay between shallow tectonic deformations and geodynamic processes. The result is a neotectonic map highlighting major seismogenic faults in a key region at the boundary between the Africa/Sinai and Arabian plates. Most active seismogenic displacement occurs along NNW-SSE oriented transtensional faults. This results in a left-lateral bifurcation of the Dead Sea Fault forming a rhomb-shaped depression we named the Capharnaum Trough, located off-track relative to the alleged principal deformation zone. Low-magnitude (ML = 3-4) epicentres accurately located during a recent seismic sequence are aligned along this feature, whose activity, depth and regional importance is supported by geophysical and geochemical evidence. This case study, involving a multiscale/multidisciplinary approach, may serve as a reference for similar geodynamic settings in the world, where unravelling geometric and kinematic complexities is challenging but fundamental for reliable earthquake hazard assessments.
Type
article
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Gasperini et al., 2020ScientReports.pdf

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