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environmental geosciences
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environmental geosciences
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Special seminar: Maxime HENRIQUET, CEREGE

21 March 2023 @ 1.30pm - 14h30

"Seismic cycle of faults in the intra-continental domain: example of the Petrinja fault and earthquake (2020, Croatia) from morphotectonic and geodetic analyses".

Summary :

On 29 December 2020, central Croatia was hit by an earthquake of Mw 6.4, causing extensive damage in the region of Petrinja, a small town located ~ 40 km southeast of the capital Zagreb. The earthquake was the strongest in Croatia in the last 100 years and among the largest in Europe on a strike-slip fault.

In order to better constrain the seismic cycle associated with young and reactivated unstripping faults in an intraplate context, the work I will present is based on the Petrinja fault and the 2020 earthquake. The focus is on the modalities of stress accumulation and release at complementary time scales, from coseismic rupture to topographically recorded cumulative deformation.

The surface coseismic deformation field related to the 2020 earthquake is constrained by GNSS measurements from civilian near-field networks, but also InSAR data and optical image correlation (Pleiades and Worldview satellites). These geodetic data are inverted in order to characterise the seismic source, and compared to surface ruptures collected in the field in order to assess the location of the deformation. Elastic inversion of the geodetic benchmarks reveals that the rupture occurred on a sub-vertical fault, at shallow depth ( 70% of the slip is likely to be distributed at the surface. The joint inversion of geodetic landmarks, optical image correlation and InSAR data will allow us to strengthen our understanding of the source of the 2020 earthquake.

In parallel, the morphotectonic analysis of the Petrinja fault allows us to quantify the cumulative deformation along this fault, and thanks to the dating of certain geomorphological markers (alluvial cones and terraces) we seek to constrain its loading speed. Based on field observations and high resolution topographic data (LiDAR and Pleiades tri-stereo DTM), we have accurately mapped the fault trace, highlighted in several places by the offset of geomorphological markers (incisions, terraces and alluvial fans) which have recorded cumulative displacements ranging from 5 to > 50 m and potentially up to ~180 m. The mapped fault is discontinuous, with deformation absorbed by a series of small segments (< 5 km). This probably reflects recent transpressive deformation marked by an immature fault system, consistent with the seismologically derived source parameters of the 2020 earthquake. Some markers were dated (14C on coals and cosmogenic nuclide 36Cl for carbonate deposits) to estimate the slip rate of the fault, and preliminary results still suggest a long-term slip rate of the order of 1 mm/yr in the central zone.

Finally, the 2020 surface rupture mainly affected the northern section of the Petrinja Fault, while the mapped cumulative displacements appear to be larger along the southern section. A better knowledge of the seismic history of the whole fault system is therefore crucial for the assessment of seismic risk in this region.

This seminar is open to everyone and will also be accessible via zoom with the following link: https://univ-amu-fr.zoom.us/j/85025661948?pwd=K09LZGx5OWF6cm11UXYxSEFmVm9oZz09

This seminar is part of the series of seminars for candidates for the position of Senior Lecturer open in section 35 (Profile: Dynamics of continental surfaces in response to tectonic and/or climatic forcing) for CEREGE this year

Location: Room 205

Details

Date:
21 March 2023
Time:
1.30 - 2.30 pm
Website:
https://humhub.osupytheas.fr/s/cerege/calendar/entry/view?id=1456

Organiser

CEREGE
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Venue

Technopôle de l'Arbois
Aix-en-Provence, BP80 13 545 France + Google Map
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