On 17 August 1999, a destructive magnitude 7.4 earthquake occurred 100 km east of Istanbul, near the city of Izmit, on the North Anatolian fault. This 1,600-km-long plate boundary(1,2) slips at an average rate of 2-3 cm yr(-1) (refs 3-5), and historically has been the site of many devastating earthquakes(6,7). This century alone it has ruptured over 900 km of its length(6). Models of earthquake-induced stress change(8) combined with active fault maps(9) had been used to forecast that the epicentral area of the 1999 Izmit event was indeed a likely location for the occurrence of a large earthquake(9,10). Here we show that the 1999 event itself significantly modifies the stress distribution resulting from previous fault interactions(9,10). Our...
We calculate the probability of strong shaking in Istanbul—an urban center of 10 million people—from...
This article is interdisciplinary in nature, relevant to the fields of both earth sciences and histo...
The 1999 November 12 Duzce earthquake (M (w) = 7.1) was apparently the eastward extension of the Aug...
At 00:02 GMT (03:02 local time) on 17 August, 1999 a magnitude 7.4 (M-s) earthquake occurred 100 km ...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
[1] New earthquake probability calculations are made for the Sea of Marmara region and the city of I...
A serious question has remained as to the location of the western end of the main rupture zone assoc...
New earthquake probability calculations are made for the Sea of Marmara region and the city of Istan...
In 1999, two destructive earthquakes (M7.4 Kocaeli and M7.2 Duzce) occurred in the north west of Tur...
Abstract In 1999, the eastern coastline of the Marmara region (Turkey) witnessed increased seismic a...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
We calculate the probability of strong shaking in Istanbul—an urban center of 10 million people—from...
This article is interdisciplinary in nature, relevant to the fields of both earth sciences and histo...
The 1999 November 12 Duzce earthquake (M (w) = 7.1) was apparently the eastward extension of the Aug...
At 00:02 GMT (03:02 local time) on 17 August, 1999 a magnitude 7.4 (M-s) earthquake occurred 100 km ...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
The North Anatolian Fault (NAF) extends for about 1500 km from Karliova to the east, to the Egean Se...
[1] New earthquake probability calculations are made for the Sea of Marmara region and the city of I...
A serious question has remained as to the location of the western end of the main rupture zone assoc...
New earthquake probability calculations are made for the Sea of Marmara region and the city of Istan...
In 1999, two destructive earthquakes (M7.4 Kocaeli and M7.2 Duzce) occurred in the north west of Tur...
Abstract In 1999, the eastern coastline of the Marmara region (Turkey) witnessed increased seismic a...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
International audienceKnowledge on large earthquakes (M ≥ 7.0), geology and fault kinematics is used...
We calculate the probability of strong shaking in Istanbul—an urban center of 10 million people—from...
This article is interdisciplinary in nature, relevant to the fields of both earth sciences and histo...
The 1999 November 12 Duzce earthquake (M (w) = 7.1) was apparently the eastward extension of the Aug...