Opzioni
Large earthquakes along slow converging plate margins: Calabrian Arc paleoseismicity based on the submarine turbidite record
2023
Periodico
GEOSCIENCE FRONTIERS
Abstract
The Calabrian Arc subduction-rollback system hosts seismogenic faults capable of generating earth-
quakes exceeding magnitude 7. Since earthquakes are the result of long-term geodynamic processes, doc-
umenting seismic activity during a sufficiently long time interval is of fundamental importance for
hazard scenarios. Instrumental and historical data provide critical information on seismogenesis, but they
cover time periods shorter than the recurrence times of large earthquakes, especially in areas with low
deformation rates such as Calabria. If onshore paleoseismological studies are fundamental to compile
earthquake catalogs, they are sometime affected by the relatively poor continuity of sedimentation in
the subaerial environment.
In this study we applied the paleoseismological approach to the submarine environment to reconstruct
the record of high-energy sedimentary events triggered by seismic activity. We analyzed three gravity
cores collected in disconnected sedimentary basins to reconstruct resedimentation processes during
the Holocene, integrating inland information for a better assessment of tectonic activity and seismogen-
esis. Multiproxy analyses of the sedimentary record constrained by radiometric dating allowed recon-
structing event stratigraphy and linking resedimented deposits to specific earthquakes.
Onshore and offshore data allow to identify large-magnitude earthquakes in the central Calabrian Arc
subduction system during the Holocene, with inferred epicenters located either along normal faults
onshore and/or related to the slab dynamics. The turbidite record reveals 20 major events during the last
10 ka, with sources including crustal faults in Calabria (i.e. Lakes, Rossano and Cittanova faults). Analyses
of sediment samples and high-resolution seismic reflection images allowed identification of different
types of resedimented deposits during the last 30–50 ka. The basin-wide occurrence of three megatur-
bidites/homogenites suggests they are related to megatsunamis sourced by far field earthquakes along
the Hellenic Arc. Megaturbidites with a more limited spatial extent are interpreted as subduction-type
events in the Calabrian Arc, while thinner seismo-turbidites record the activity of crustal structures
including faults onshore. Results suggest a recurrence time of 2–3 ka for major Calabrian Arc events that
needs to be considered for a reliable hazard assessment in the Mediterranean region.
Diritti
open access
license:creative commons
license:creative commons
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/