The section of the North Anatolian Fault lying near the city of Izmit, at the east of the Marmara Sea, has been identified as a seismic gap and the possible site of a future major earthquake. Previously published studies of records from an earthquake swarm within the gap (TDPl and TDP2) provided the first evidence that shear-wave splitting occurs in earthquake source regions, a conclusion since verified by many studies at other locations. A third field study (TDP3) was mounted in the Izmit region during the summer of 1984. Observations were made over an eight-month period and included geomagnetic and geoelectric measurements in addition to a series of observations utilising dense arrays of three-component seismometers. Earthquake activity i...
Why do large earthquakes not always occur at regular time interval on a given fault? The observed ap...
Acknowledgments DANA (Dense Array for Northern Anatolia) is part of the Faultlab project, a collabor...
A field experiment carried out from 17 July to 2 November 1999 with a dense seismic network surround...
Summary. This is the introduction to a series of papers analysing records from three-component seism...
Abstract We perform a shear-wave splitting analysis using seismograms of after-shocks following the ...
The North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ) below the Sea of Marmara forms a ‘‘seismic gap’’ where a major...
The area of Damasi-Tyrnavos (Thessaloniki, Central Greece), in the vicinity of Larissa, was characte...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
International audienceOn 6 February 2023, an earthquake with magnitude M w c . 7.0 on the Narlı Faul...
At 00:02 GMT (03:02 local time) on 17 August, 1999 a magnitude 7.4 (M-s) earthquake occurred 100 km ...
During the past century, a series of predominantly westward migrating M>7 earthquakes broke an ~1000...
With the aim of extensively investigating the crustal structure beneath the western segment of the N...
Using offshore geodetic observations, we show that a segment of the North Anatolian Fault in the ce...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
This work highlights how surface geological data can integrate and complete a fault characterization...
Why do large earthquakes not always occur at regular time interval on a given fault? The observed ap...
Acknowledgments DANA (Dense Array for Northern Anatolia) is part of the Faultlab project, a collabor...
A field experiment carried out from 17 July to 2 November 1999 with a dense seismic network surround...
Summary. This is the introduction to a series of papers analysing records from three-component seism...
Abstract We perform a shear-wave splitting analysis using seismograms of after-shocks following the ...
The North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ) below the Sea of Marmara forms a ‘‘seismic gap’’ where a major...
The area of Damasi-Tyrnavos (Thessaloniki, Central Greece), in the vicinity of Larissa, was characte...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
International audienceOn 6 February 2023, an earthquake with magnitude M w c . 7.0 on the Narlı Faul...
At 00:02 GMT (03:02 local time) on 17 August, 1999 a magnitude 7.4 (M-s) earthquake occurred 100 km ...
During the past century, a series of predominantly westward migrating M>7 earthquakes broke an ~1000...
With the aim of extensively investigating the crustal structure beneath the western segment of the N...
Using offshore geodetic observations, we show that a segment of the North Anatolian Fault in the ce...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
This work highlights how surface geological data can integrate and complete a fault characterization...
Why do large earthquakes not always occur at regular time interval on a given fault? The observed ap...
Acknowledgments DANA (Dense Array for Northern Anatolia) is part of the Faultlab project, a collabor...
A field experiment carried out from 17 July to 2 November 1999 with a dense seismic network surround...