Affiliation:
1. 1The Helike Society and the Helike Project, Athens, Greece
2. 2Department of Geology, University of Patras, Patras, Greece
Abstract
Abstract
We are writing this comment because the presentation and the conclusions reached by Stiros (2022) regarding the catastrophic Helike earthquake of 373 B.C. neglect significant historical sources and scientific data from longstanding geoarchaeological work and excavations in the Helike region and offer an incomplete picture of the knowledge acquired about this famous earthquake of Classical Greece. In particular, the attempted re-examination of ancient sources is incomplete and subjective, serving the author’s a priori view that accounts of the 373 B.C. earthquake are later fabrications from Roman times. To this end, Stiros neglects published archaeological data dated from soon after the 373 B.C. catastrophe and wrongly concludes that the area did not experience repeated earthquake phenomena. Furthermore, his proposal that the Helike and Aigion faults are identical is an evident geological error. Instead, the two faults are 5 km apart, and their seismological evolution and tectonic geomorphology are quite different.
Publisher
Seismological Society of America (SSA)
Cited by
2 articles.
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