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  • OceanRep  (2)
  • 2015-2019  (2)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-02-08
    Description: High-resolution acoustic and seismic data acquired 100 km offshore Cape São Vicente, image with unprecedented detail one of the largest active reverse faults of the SW Iberian Margin, the Horseshoe Fault (HF). The HF region is an area seismogenically active, source of the largest magnitude instrumental and historical earthquake (Mw〉6) occurred in the SW Iberian Margin. The HF corresponds to a N40 trending, 110 km long, and NW-verging active thrust that affects the whole sedimentary sequence and reaches up to the seafloor, generating a relief of more than 1 km. The along-strike structural variability as well as fault trend suggests that the HF is composed by three main sub-segments: North (N25), Central (N50) and South (N45). Swath-bathymetry, TOBI sidescan sonar backscatter and parametric echosounder TOPAS profiles reveal the surface morphology of the HF block, characterized by several, steep (20º) small scarps located on the hangingwall, and a succession of mass transport deposits (i.e. turbidites) on its footwall, located in the Horseshoe Abyssal Plain. A succession of pre-stack depth-migrated multichannel seismic reflection profiles across the HF and neighboring areas allowed us to constrain their seismo-stratigraphy, structural geometry, tectono-sedimentary evolution from Upper Jurassic to present-day, and to calculate their fault parameters. Finally, on the basis of segment length, surface fault area and seismogenic depth we evaluated the seismic potential of the HF, which in the worst-case scenario may generate an earthquake of magnitude Mw 7.8 ± 0.1. Thus, considering the tectonic behavior and near-shore location, the HF should be recognized in seismic and tsunami hazard assessment models of Western Europe and North Africa.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    GSL (Geological Society London)
    In:  In: Atlas of submarine glacial landforms: modern, Quaternary and ancient. , ed. by Dowdeswell, J. A., Canals, M., Jakobsson, M., Todd, B. J., Dowdeswell, E. K. and Hogan, K. A. Memoirs of the Geological Society of London, 46 . GSL (Geological Society London), London, pp. 411-412. ISBN 978-1-78620-268-0
    Publication Date: 2021-05-10
    Description: Spreading is a type of mass movement where a sediment unit is extended and broken up into coherent blocks that are displaced and tilted along a planar slip. High-resolution seafloor data demonstrate that spreading is a common style of submarine mass movement. Submarine spreading is clearly exemplified in the Storegga Slide, Norwegian margin (Fig. 1a, b). The slide occurred 8100 + 250 cal a BP as a retrogressive slope failure (Haflidason et al. 2005). It is one of the largest known submarine slides and the site of repeated sliding activity. Failures on the Norwegian margin are linked strongly to the growth and retreat of the Fennoscandian ice sheets, in particular to the alternating deposition of glacigenic debrites and basal and deformation tills during glacial maxima (e.g. O1–O2 30–15 ka and O4–O7 200–130 ka sub-units of the Naust Formation), and of fine-grained glacimarine, hemipelagic and contouritic sediments during interglacials (e.g. O3 130–30 ka sub-unit of the Naust Formation). The Naust sub-units are described in full in Berg et al. (2005). Differences in the geotechnical properties of these sediments, coupled with seismicity, rapid sediment deposition, associated high pore pressures and the regional topography and structural setting, are responsible for .20 slope failures across the region during the Quaternary (Solheim et al. 2005).
    Type: Book chapter , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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