36Cl analysis of bedrock fault scarps in central Italy and western Turkey
2020
There are two major aims in my thesis. The first is primarily a methodological focus.
Cosmgenic istope dating of bedrock normal fault scarps is being increasingly used
to determine slip rates on normal faults. These slip rates often form the basis of
geodynamic and seismic hazard models, however it has not been determined that it is a
consistent method for measuring slip rate. I aim to test whether it is a robust technique
for determining slip rate by cosmogenic isotope; investigating the reproducibility of the
method at multiple sites along a single fault. This will provide greater confidence in
the method. I have chosen to undertake this study in the central Italian Apennines,
because there it has the highest concentration of existing 36Cl fault scarp studies, which
I can integrate with my studies.
To understand how fault networks behave requires information on their slip rates,
and by determining slip rates on faults that are next to each other, I may gain insight
into how faults are interacting over millennial timescales. Quaternary slip rates on faults
in western Turkey are not constrained in many areas, and it is one of the most rapidly
extending regions on earth. I aim to determine slip rates on some of these normal faults
using cosmogenic isotope dating of limestone fault scarps, and see what information
this can provide on how faults are interacting in the region. I have chosen to work in
the Mugla-Yatagan basin because no Quaternary slip rates have been determined on
the faults which lie close to a major city, and the close proximity of 3 faults may provide
insight into how faults interact over km scales. Finally there are also appropriate sample
sites on each of the major faults, allowing the 36Cl fault scarp dating method to be used.
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