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Roberts & Ganas 2000
Roberts, G.P. and Ganas, A. (2000). Fault-slip directions in central and southern Greece measured from striated and corrugated fault planes: Comparison with focal mechanism and geodetic data. Journal of Geophysical Research 105: doi: 10.1029/1999JB900440. issn: 0148-0227.

Fault-slip directions recorded by outcropping striated and corrugated fault planes in central and southern Greece have been measured for comparison with extension directions derived from focal mechanism and Global Positioning System (GPS) data for the last ~100 years to test how far back in time velocity fields and deformation dynamics derived from the latter data sets can be extrapolated. The fault-slip data have been collected from the basin-bounding faults to Plio-Pleistocene to recent extensional basins and include data from arrays of footwall faults formed during the early stages of fault growth. We show that the orientation of the inferred stress field varies along faults and earthquake ruptures, so we use only slip-directions from the centers of faults, where dip-slip motion occurs, to constrain regionally significant extension directions. The fault-slip directions for the Peloponnese and Gulfs of Evia and Corinth are statistically different at the 99% confidence level but statistically the same as those implied by earthquake focal mechanisms for each region at the 99% confidence level; they are also qualitatively similar to the principal strain axes derived from GPS studies. Extension directions derived from fault-slip data are 043--047¿ for the southern Peloponnese, 353¿ for the Gulf of Corinth, and 015--014¿ for the Gulf of Evia. Extension on active normal faults in the two latter areas appears to grade into strike-slip along the North Anatolian Fault through a gradual change in fault-slip directions and fault strikes. To reconcile the above with 5¿ Myr-1 clockwise rotations suggested for the area, we suggest that the faults considered formed during a single phase of extension. The deformation and formation of the normal fault systems examined must have been sufficiently rapid and recent for rotations about vertical axes to have been unable to disperse the fault-slip directions from the extension directions implied by focal mechanisms and GPS data. Thus, in central and southern Greece the velocity fields derived from focal mechanism and GPS data may help explain the dynamics of the deformation over longer time periods than the ~100 years over which they were measured; this may include the entire deformation history of the fault systems considered, a time period that may exceed 1--2 Myr. ¿ 2000 American Geophysical Union

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Abstract

Keywords
Geodesy and Gravity, Crustal movements—intraplate, Seismology, Seismicity and seismotectonics, Structural Geology, Fractures and faults, Tectonophysics, Continental tectonics—extensional
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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