Title of article
Unravelling the complexity of Apenninic extensional fault systems: A review of the 2009 LʹAquila earthquake (Central Apennines, Italy)
Author/Authors
Chiaraluce، نويسنده , , L.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
17
From page
2
To page
18
Abstract
The 2009 LʹAquila sequence activated a normal fault system 50 km long in the Central Apennines, composed of two main NW-trending faults 12–16 km long: the main high angle LʹAquila segment and the Campotosto listric fault.
6.1 LʹAquila mainshock nucleated on the Paganica fault at a depth of ∼8.6 km and cut through the upper crust producing coseismic surface slip of up to 10 cm observed along a strike length of ∼13 km. Analysis of historical seismicity and data collected in paleo-seismological trenches suggest that this event filled a >500-year gap. In contrast, the blind Campotosto listric fault is composed of different fault segments displaying abrupt changes in dip at a depth where major events nucleate suggesting a rheological and geometrical control on stress concentration.
shock sequence that started around 4 months before the LʹAquila mainshock activated the deepest portion of the Paganica fault and marked the onset of large variations in elastic properties of the crustal volume. The variations have been modelled in terms of dilatancy and diffusion processes, corroborating the hypothesis that fluids play a key role in the nucleation process of extensional faults in the crust.
Keywords
Listric faults , seismicity , normal faults , fluids , LיAquila sequence
Journal title
Journal of Structural Geology
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Journal of Structural Geology
Record number
2227502
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