Affiliation:
1. Department of Geological Engineering, Active Tectonics and Earthquake Research Laboratory, Middle East Technical University, 06800 Ankara, Turkey
Abstract
he Sarıköy-Đnova and the Çan-Bayramiç-Ezine fault zones (SIFZ, ÇBEFZ) comprise the southern strand of the North Anatolian Fault System in the Biga Peninsula. They are located in the area between Sarıköy to northeast and the Dalyan settlement around Bozcaada in the North Aegean Sea to southwest. Both of the fault zones are active. This is evidenced by the 6 March 1737 (Ms =7.0) Đnova, 1st February 1809 Hurma (Ms = 6.1), and the 8 February 1826 Güllüce (Ms = 6.2) historical earthquakes resulted from these fault zones. Maximum lengths of fault segments comprising the SIFZ and the ÇBEFZ are 14 km and 15 km, respectively. Based on the maximum lengths of fault segments, the magnitude of the peak earthquakes to be originated from these faults are Mw = 6.3 and 6.6, respectively. Based on both the geological and geographic markers, the total right lateral offsets accumulated on the SIFZ and ÇBEFZ are 12 km and 20 km, respectively. These offset values imply to the slip rates of 4.6 mm/yr and 7.7 mm/yr, respectively. Five pull-apart basins were developed on both fault zones. These are the Sarıköy, Đnova, Kazabat, Çan and Ezine-Bayramiç basins. The first three of them are pure strike-slip pull-apart basins, while the type of the rest basins is superimposed. The angular unconformity between the nondeformed basin fill of Quaternary age and the folded to thrust-faulted basement rocks of pre-Quaternary age reveals strongly that the pull-apart basins have formed during the Quaternary time. This relationship also reveals that the commencement age of the strike-slip neotectonic regime and formation of associated fault zones are the Early Quaternary.
Publisher
Bulletin of the Mineral Research and Exploration
Subject
Geology,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Reference87 articles.
1. Aksoy, E., İnceöz, M., Koçyiğit, A. 2007. Lake Hazar basin: a negative flower structure on the East Anatolian fault system (EAFS), SE Turkey. Turkish Journal of Earth Sciences 16, 319-338.
2. Ambraseys, N. N. 2002. The seismic activity of the Marmara Sea Region for last 2000 years. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 92 (1), 1-18.
3. Armijo, R., Meyer, B., King, G. C. P., Rigo, A., Papanastassiou, D., 1996. Quaternary evolution of the Corinth Rift and its implication for the late Cenozoic evolution of the Aegean, Geophysical Journal International, 126, 11-53.
4. Armijo, R., Meyer, B., Navarro, S., King, G., Barka, A. 2002. Asymmetric slip partitioning in the Sea of Marmara pull-apart: a clue to propagation processes of the North Anatolian fault? Terra Nova 14 (2), 80-86.
5. Ayhan, E., Koçyiğit, A. 2010. Displacement and Kinematics of February 1, 1944 Gerede Earthquake (North Anatolian Fault System, Turkey: Geodetic and Geological Constraints. Turkish Journal of Earth Sciences 19, 295-311.