Fault plane modelling of the 2003 August 14 Lefkada Island (Greece) earthquake based on the analysis of ENVISAT SAR interferograms
On 2003 August 14, a Mw=6.2 earthquake occurred offshore the Lefkada Island in the eastern Ionian Sea, one of the most seismically active areas in Europe. The earthquake caused extended damages in the island, and a number of ground failures, especially along the north-western coast. Seven ascending...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Tectonophysics 2016-12, Vol.693, p.47-65 |
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Zusammenfassung: | On 2003 August 14, a Mw=6.2 earthquake occurred offshore the Lefkada Island in the eastern Ionian Sea, one of the most seismically active areas in Europe. The earthquake caused extended damages in the island, and a number of ground failures, especially along the north-western coast. Seven ascending ENVISAT/ASAR images are used to process six co-seismic interferograms. The ROI-PAC package is used for interferogram generation with the SRTM DEM applied in a two-pass method. The formation of the co-seismic pairs is limited due to the existence of one pre-seismic image only. Dense vegetation is covering the island, which is an obstacle in getting good coherence, since C-band images are used. Nevertheless, ground deformation, of >56mm (two fringes) in the line of sight of the satellite, is detected in all six co-seismic interferograms. By inversion of the data from the observed fringes, a best fitting model of the activated fault is calculated assuming a dislocation in an elastic half space. The inferred fault is a pure dextral strike-slip fault, dipping 59±5° eastward, 16±2km long and 10±2km wide. It is located north of the fault of the Mw=6.5 2015 November 17 earthquake, and a 10–15km gap remains between the two faults. The 2003 fault does not reach the surface and its upper edge is at a depth of 3.5±1km. No evidence is found of slip south of the Lefkada Island as suggested by some seismological studies.
•A pure strike-slip on a fault plate dipping ~60° eastward•No rupture at shallow depth (in the shallowest 3km)•A gap of 10–15km exists between the 2003 and 2015 ruptures. |
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ISSN: | 0040-1951 1879-3266 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.tecto.2016.10.021 |