International audienceContrary to other examples, like Death Valley, California, and the Sea of Marmara, Turkey, the Dead Sea-type pull-apart basins form within a narrow transform corridor between strike-slip faults that are less than 10 km apart, much smaller than the crustal thickness of 35 km. In this paper we investigate the role of fault zone width versus thickness and rheology on the mechanics of pull-apart basins through a series of laboratory experiments. Results show that pull-apart basins that develop above a small step over (i.e., smaller than the thickness of the brittle layer") are narrow and elongated parallel to the overall motion. This is enhanced by increased decoupling along a basal ductile layer. The experiment with the h...
Site effect is the specific response to earthquakes that is characteristic of the attributes of a si...
Whereas the Dead Sea Fault is a major continental transform, active since ca. 13-18 Ma ago, it has a...
This material has been published in The Journal of the Geological Society of London, Volume 158, the...
Contrary to other examples, like Death Valley, California, and the Sea of Marmara, Turkey, the Dead ...
Analyses and modeling of gravity data in the Dead Sea pull-apart basin reveal the geometry of the ba...
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geo...
The Dead Sea Basin displays a broad range of salt-related structures that developed in a sinistral s...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
Abstract: Although offshore multi-channel seismic reflection and multi-beam bathymetric studies were...
[1] We analyzed geologic structures adjacent to the Dead Sea Fault (DSF) along the margins of the Si...
A multi-channel seismic reflection survey consisting of 20 lines with a total length of 180 km was c...
We interpret large-scale subsidence (5^6 km depth) with little attendant brittle deformation in the ...
As part of the DEad Sea Integrated REsearch project (DESIRE) a 235 km long seismic wide-angle reflec...
Pull-apart basins are structural features linked to the interactions between strike-slip and extensi...
Pull‐apart basins are structural features linked to the interactions between strike‐slip and extensi...
Site effect is the specific response to earthquakes that is characteristic of the attributes of a si...
Whereas the Dead Sea Fault is a major continental transform, active since ca. 13-18 Ma ago, it has a...
This material has been published in The Journal of the Geological Society of London, Volume 158, the...
Contrary to other examples, like Death Valley, California, and the Sea of Marmara, Turkey, the Dead ...
Analyses and modeling of gravity data in the Dead Sea pull-apart basin reveal the geometry of the ba...
This paper is not subject to U.S. copyright. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geo...
The Dead Sea Basin displays a broad range of salt-related structures that developed in a sinistral s...
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2006. This article is posted here by permission of Am...
Abstract: Although offshore multi-channel seismic reflection and multi-beam bathymetric studies were...
[1] We analyzed geologic structures adjacent to the Dead Sea Fault (DSF) along the margins of the Si...
A multi-channel seismic reflection survey consisting of 20 lines with a total length of 180 km was c...
We interpret large-scale subsidence (5^6 km depth) with little attendant brittle deformation in the ...
As part of the DEad Sea Integrated REsearch project (DESIRE) a 235 km long seismic wide-angle reflec...
Pull-apart basins are structural features linked to the interactions between strike-slip and extensi...
Pull‐apart basins are structural features linked to the interactions between strike‐slip and extensi...
Site effect is the specific response to earthquakes that is characteristic of the attributes of a si...
Whereas the Dead Sea Fault is a major continental transform, active since ca. 13-18 Ma ago, it has a...
This material has been published in The Journal of the Geological Society of London, Volume 158, the...