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Neotettonica del Mare di Galilea (nord-est di Israele): implicazioni per la geodinamica e la sismicità lungo il sistema di faglia del Mar Morto

Pubblicato articolo dalla rivista del Gruppo Nature con il contributo di ricercatori Ismar-Cnr

Monday 20 July 2020

Neotettonica del Mare di Galilea (nord-est di Israele): implicazioni per la geodinamica e la sismicità lungo il sistema di faglia del Mar Morto

Luca Gasperini, Michael Lazar, Adriano Mazzini, Matteo Lupi, Antoine Haddad, Christian Hensen, Mark Schmidt, Antonio Caracausi, Marco Ligi & Alina Polonia
Neotectonics of the Sea of Galilee (northeast Israel): implication for geodynamics and seismicity along the Dead Sea Fault system
Scienfic Rports, 10, Article number: 11932.  20 luglio 2020

Scientific Reports, a Nature Research Journal, has recently published a paper entitled “Neotectonics of the Sea of Galilee (northeast Israel): implication for geodynamics and seismicity along the Dead Sea Fault system”. It includes results of a geological study carried out by an international team of scientists from Israel, Italy, Switzerland, Norway and Germany, dealing with the problem of earthquake generation and tectonics in a key region along the Dead Sea Fault, a major continental transform separating the African/Sinai and Arabian plates.

The Sea of Galilee (or Lake Kinneret) fills a depression located over 200 m below sea level and constitutes an interesting opportunity for imaging deep geological processes using marine geophysical instruments, which have been proven more effective relative to their equivalent on land.

The scientists investigated the Sea of Galilee and its surroundings using different techniques, which included acoustic and seismic imaging at different resolutions, as well as geochemical and seismological analyses, in an attempt to unravel a major problem typical of areas affected by long and deep seated strike-slip faults, such as the San Andreas Fault in California and the North-Anatolian Fault in Turkey, i.e., the wide variability of temporal and spatial geological processes occurring in relatively focused areas. The research team was “lucky”, because during the 2018 field campaign, a swarm of low magnitude earthquakes occurred in the study area, allowing for a “dynamic” characterization of what was previously seen as “static” geophysical images. The team took advantage of the fact that the area is well known, since it is an important historical site intensively studied using paleoseismological/archeoseismological techniques. Final results published in the Scientific Reports article, novel and significantly different from those obtained to date, sheds light not only on the evolution of this important regional boundary, but more in general, on the understanding of the seismological behavior of similar tectonic domains in the world, typically prone to high seismic hazards.


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