2014-01-08T17:34:38Z
2014-01-08T17:34:38Z
2012
2014-01-08T17:34:38Z
The Bajo Segura fault zone (BSFZ) is the northern terminal splay of the Eastern Betic shear zone (EBSZ), a large left-lateral strike-slip fault system of sigmoid geometry stretching more than 450 km from Alicante to Almería. The BSFZ extends from the onshore Bajo Segura basin further into the Mediterranean Sea and shows a moderate instrumental seismic activity characterized by small earthquakes. Nevertheless, the zone was affected by large historical earthquakes of which the largest was the 1829 Torrevieja earthquake (IEMS98 X). The onshore area of the BSFZ is marked by active transpressive structures (faults and folds), whereas the offshore area has been scarcely explored from the tectonic point of view. During the EVENT-SHELF cruise, a total of 10 high-resolution single-channel seismic sparker profiles were obtained along and across the offshore Bajo Segura basin. Analysis of these profiles resulted in (a) the identification of 6 Quaternary seismo-stratigraphic units bounded by five horizons corresponding to regional erosional surfaces related to global sea level lowstands; and (b) the mapping of the active sub-seafloor structures and their correlation with those described onshore. Moreover, the results suggest that the Bajo Segura blind thrust fault or the Torrevieja left-lateral strike-slip fault, with prolongation offshore, could be considered as the source of the 1829 Torrevieja earthquake. These data improve our understanding of present deformation along the BSFZ and provide new insights into the seismic hazard in the area.
Article
Published version
English
Tectònica; Quaternari; Península Ibèrica; Tectonics; Quaternary; Iberian Peninsula
European Geosciences Union
Reproducció del document publicat a: 10.5194/nhess-12-3151-2012
Natural Hazards And Earth System Sciences, 2012, vol. 12, num. 10, p. 3151-3168
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-12-3151-2012
cc-by (c) Perea, H. et al., 2012
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es