[1] This paper shows how the Turkish-Iranian Plateau grows laterally by incrementally incorporating adjacent parts of the Zagros fold-and-thrust belt. The limit of significant, seismogenic, thrusting in the Zagros (Mw > 5) occurs close to the regional 1250 m elevation contour. The seismicity cutoff is not a significant bedrock geology boundary. Elevations increase northward, toward regional plateau elevations of ~2 km, implying that another process produced the extra elevation. Between the seismogenic limit of thrusting and the suture, this process is a plausibly ductile thickening of the basement, suggesting depth-dependent strain during compression. Similar depth-dependant crustal strain may explain why the Tibetan plateau has regional el...
Turkey contains a high, flat region known as the Central Anatolian Plateau, which formed in multiple...
We report five new 40Ar/39Ar ages for basaltic lavas in the Maku region of northwest Iran, between c...
A central question in structural geology is whether, and by what mechanism, active faults (and the f...
The Zagros fold-and-thrust belt is amongst the world’s most seismically active mountain ranges, and ...
This study uses geomorphic indices, including normalized channel steepness index (ksn), integrated r...
This paper was published by the Geological Society of America (GSA). Copyright 2006, GSA. See also...
The Iranian plateau is a vast inland region with a smooth average elevation of c. 1.5 km formed at t...
International audienceWe describe how thin-skinned/thick-skinned deformation in the Zagros Folded Be...
Structure varies along strike in the Zagros fold-and-thrust belt of Iran, which is a principal eleme...
International audiencehe Zagros Mountains are the result of the Arabia/Eurasia collision initiated a...
The Zagros of Iran form one of the youngest collisional orogenic belts on Earth. At shallow depths, ...
This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©: The Authors 2...
The world\u27s largest ongoing collisional orogeny is the Europe Alps-Himalayan-SE Asian belt and is...
European Geosciences Union, General Assembly 2014, Vienna , Austria , 27 April – 02 May 2014The Zagr...
Turkey contains a high, flat region known as the Central Anatolian Plateau, which formed in multiple...
Turkey contains a high, flat region known as the Central Anatolian Plateau, which formed in multiple...
We report five new 40Ar/39Ar ages for basaltic lavas in the Maku region of northwest Iran, between c...
A central question in structural geology is whether, and by what mechanism, active faults (and the f...
The Zagros fold-and-thrust belt is amongst the world’s most seismically active mountain ranges, and ...
This study uses geomorphic indices, including normalized channel steepness index (ksn), integrated r...
This paper was published by the Geological Society of America (GSA). Copyright 2006, GSA. See also...
The Iranian plateau is a vast inland region with a smooth average elevation of c. 1.5 km formed at t...
International audienceWe describe how thin-skinned/thick-skinned deformation in the Zagros Folded Be...
Structure varies along strike in the Zagros fold-and-thrust belt of Iran, which is a principal eleme...
International audiencehe Zagros Mountains are the result of the Arabia/Eurasia collision initiated a...
The Zagros of Iran form one of the youngest collisional orogenic belts on Earth. At shallow depths, ...
This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International ©: The Authors 2...
The world\u27s largest ongoing collisional orogeny is the Europe Alps-Himalayan-SE Asian belt and is...
European Geosciences Union, General Assembly 2014, Vienna , Austria , 27 April – 02 May 2014The Zagr...
Turkey contains a high, flat region known as the Central Anatolian Plateau, which formed in multiple...
Turkey contains a high, flat region known as the Central Anatolian Plateau, which formed in multiple...
We report five new 40Ar/39Ar ages for basaltic lavas in the Maku region of northwest Iran, between c...
A central question in structural geology is whether, and by what mechanism, active faults (and the f...