We suggest a working hypothesis for the geometry of the strike-slip faults that formed the boundaries between the Turkish, African and Arabian plates in the latest Miocene to Mid-Pliocene (LMMP), between ~7–6 Ma and ~3.5 Ma. This geometry differed significantly from the modern geometry; the northern Dead Sea Fault Zone (DSFZ) was located east of its present line and the TR-AR boundary was formed by the Malatya-Ovacık Fault Zone (MOFZ), located well north of the modern East Anatolian Fault Zone (EAFZ). The MOFZ is potentially the most problematic aspect of such a scheme, given the dramatically different interpretations of it that have been proposed. However, the presently-available evidence, albeit limited, is consistent with our proposed in...
The Middle Cretaceous-Late Miocene sedimentary successions that are exposed on the Arabian continent...
The Uluda\u11f Massif in northwest Turkey represents an exhumed segment of an Oligocene ductile stri...
We place the geological history since Cretaceous times in western Turkey in a context of convergence...
International audienceWe suggest a working hypothesis for the geometry of the strike-slip faults tha...
Controversy remains over when present-day configuration of the Anatolia boundary faults came into ex...
he sinistral Malatya-Ovacık Fault Zone (MOFZ) is one of the outstanding intraplate deformation bel...
The tectonics of SW Anatolia is expressed in terms of emplacement of Lycian Nappes during the Eocene...
SW Anatolian tectonics are dominated mainly by emplacement of Lycian Nappes from north to south over...
In northwest Anatolia, there is a mosaic of different morpho-tectonic fragments within the western p...
In the Eastern Mediterranean, plate convergence occurs between Africa-Arabia and Anatolia. The Afric...
A history of deformation has been determined for the Cameli Basin located in the western part of the...
In the Eastern Mediterranean, plate convergence occurs between Africa–Arabia and Anatolia. The Afric...
Data reported here demonstrate that the Misis Complex of southern Turkey comprises a major olistostr...
Five different deformation phases have been recognized in the SE Anatolian orogen and the Arabian Pl...
In the Late Cretaceous, the Eastern Mediterranean looked very different. Turkey as it is today did n...
The Middle Cretaceous-Late Miocene sedimentary successions that are exposed on the Arabian continent...
The Uluda\u11f Massif in northwest Turkey represents an exhumed segment of an Oligocene ductile stri...
We place the geological history since Cretaceous times in western Turkey in a context of convergence...
International audienceWe suggest a working hypothesis for the geometry of the strike-slip faults tha...
Controversy remains over when present-day configuration of the Anatolia boundary faults came into ex...
he sinistral Malatya-Ovacık Fault Zone (MOFZ) is one of the outstanding intraplate deformation bel...
The tectonics of SW Anatolia is expressed in terms of emplacement of Lycian Nappes during the Eocene...
SW Anatolian tectonics are dominated mainly by emplacement of Lycian Nappes from north to south over...
In northwest Anatolia, there is a mosaic of different morpho-tectonic fragments within the western p...
In the Eastern Mediterranean, plate convergence occurs between Africa-Arabia and Anatolia. The Afric...
A history of deformation has been determined for the Cameli Basin located in the western part of the...
In the Eastern Mediterranean, plate convergence occurs between Africa–Arabia and Anatolia. The Afric...
Data reported here demonstrate that the Misis Complex of southern Turkey comprises a major olistostr...
Five different deformation phases have been recognized in the SE Anatolian orogen and the Arabian Pl...
In the Late Cretaceous, the Eastern Mediterranean looked very different. Turkey as it is today did n...
The Middle Cretaceous-Late Miocene sedimentary successions that are exposed on the Arabian continent...
The Uluda\u11f Massif in northwest Turkey represents an exhumed segment of an Oligocene ductile stri...
We place the geological history since Cretaceous times in western Turkey in a context of convergence...