International audienceThe continuous record of large surface-rupturing earthquakes along the Dead Sea fault brings unprecedented insights for paleoseismic and archaeoseismic research. In most recent studies, paleoseismic trenching documents the late Holocene faulting activity, while tectonic geomorphology addresses the long-term behavior (> 10 ka), with a tendency to smooth the effect of individual earthquake rupture events (M w > 7). Here, we combine historical, archaeological, and paleoseismic investigations to build a consolidated catalog of destructive surface-rupturing earthquakes for the last 14 ka along the left-lateral Jordan Valley fault segment. The 120-km-long fault segment limited to the north and the south by major pull-apart b...
The DSW 2009 - Field Trip & Workshop "The Dead Sea Rift as natural laboratory for earthquake behavio...
An edited version of this paper was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters by Elsevier Sci...
Archaeological structures built across active faults and ruptured by earthquakes have been used as m...
International audienceAbstract The continuous record of large surface-rupturing earthquakes along th...
International audienceWe present new results from a paleoseismic trenching campaign at a site across...
International audienceS U M M A R Y The 1000-km-long left-lateral Dead Sea fault is a major tectonic...
International audienceSUMMAR Y The Dead Sea fault zone is a major left-lateral strike-slip fault. So...
The 1000-km-long left-lateral Dead Sea fault is a major tectonic structure of the oriental Mediterra...
International audienceTemporal distribution of earthquakes is key to seismic hazard assessment. Howe...
The Dead Sea Fault (DSF) is a plate-boundary where large earthquakes are expected, but there is a la...
The Dead Sea Transform (DST) is a continental transform representing the boundary between Arabia and...
we bring together and analyze new coseismic data from field survey and historical pictures, critica...
The Araba valley lies between the southern tip of the Dead Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba. This depressio...
The DSW 2009 - Field Trip & Workshop "The Dead Sea Rift as natural laboratory for earthquake behavio...
An edited version of this paper was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters by Elsevier Sci...
Archaeological structures built across active faults and ruptured by earthquakes have been used as m...
International audienceAbstract The continuous record of large surface-rupturing earthquakes along th...
International audienceWe present new results from a paleoseismic trenching campaign at a site across...
International audienceS U M M A R Y The 1000-km-long left-lateral Dead Sea fault is a major tectonic...
International audienceSUMMAR Y The Dead Sea fault zone is a major left-lateral strike-slip fault. So...
The 1000-km-long left-lateral Dead Sea fault is a major tectonic structure of the oriental Mediterra...
International audienceTemporal distribution of earthquakes is key to seismic hazard assessment. Howe...
The Dead Sea Fault (DSF) is a plate-boundary where large earthquakes are expected, but there is a la...
The Dead Sea Transform (DST) is a continental transform representing the boundary between Arabia and...
we bring together and analyze new coseismic data from field survey and historical pictures, critica...
The Araba valley lies between the southern tip of the Dead Sea and the Gulf of Aqaba. This depressio...
The DSW 2009 - Field Trip & Workshop "The Dead Sea Rift as natural laboratory for earthquake behavio...
An edited version of this paper was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters by Elsevier Sci...
Archaeological structures built across active faults and ruptured by earthquakes have been used as m...