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Geophysical Journal International 189 (2012) 6-18
New evidence for large earthquakes on the Central Iran plateau: palaeoseismology of the Anar fault
M. Foroutan 1, 2, Michel Sébrier 2, H. Nazari 3, Bertrand Meyer 2, M. Fattahi 4, 5, 6, A. Rashidi 7, Kristell Le Dortz 2, D. Bateman 5
(2012)

The Central Iran plateau appears aseismic during the last few millenniums based on instru- mental and historical seismic records. Nevertheless, it is sliced by several strike-slip faults that are hundreds of kilometres long. These faults display along-strike, horizontal offsets of inter- mittent gullies that suggest the occurrence of earthquakes in the Holocene. Establishing this is crucial for accurately assessing the regional seismic hazard. The first palaeoseismic study performed on the 200-km long, NS striking Anar fault shows that this right-lateral fault hosted three large (Mw ≈ 7) earthquakes during the Holocene or possibly Uppermost Pleistocene for the older one. These three seismic events are recorded within a sedimentary succession, which is not older than 15 ka, suggesting an average recurrence of at most 5 ka. The six optically stimulated luminescence ages available provide additional constraints and allow estimating that the three earthquakes have occurred within the following time intervals: 4.4 ± 0.8, 6.8 ± 1 and 9.8 ± 2 ka. The preferred age of the more recent event, ranging between 3600 and 5200 yr, suggests that the fault is approaching the end of its seismic cycle and the city of Anar could be under the threat of a destructive earthquake in the near future. In addition, our results confirm a previous minimum slip rate estimate of 0.8 ± 0.1 mm yr−1 for the Anar fault indicating that the westernmost prominent right-lateral faults of the Central Iran plateau are characterized by slip rates close to 1 mm yr−1. These faults, which have repeatedly produced destructive earthquakes with large magnitudes and long recurrence interval of several thousands of years during the Holocene, show that the Central Iran plateau does not behave totally as a rigid block and that its moderate internal deformation is nonetheless responsible for a significant seismic hazard.
1 :  Research Institute for Earth Sciences
Geological Survey of Iran
2 :  Institut des Sciences de la Terre de Paris (iSTeP)
CNRS : UMR7193 – Université Pierre et Marie Curie (UPMC) - Paris VI
3 :  Research Institute for Earth Sciences
Geological Survey of Iran
4 :  The Institute of Geophysics
University of Tehran
5 :  Sheffield Centre for International Drylands Research, Department of Geography
University of Sheffield
6 :  The School of Geography
University of Oxford
7 :  Geological Survey
Geological Survey of Iran
Planète et Univers/Sciences de la Terre
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