Long-term sedimentary earthquake records along the northern branch of the North Anatolian Fault in the Sea of Marmara (NW T\"urkiye)
M. Nam{\i}k \c{C}a\u{g}atay (IT\"U), Demet Biltekin, Nurettin Yakupo\u{g}lu (IT\"U), Emin G\"ung\"or, Nurdan G\"ung\"or, G\"ulsen U\c{c}arku\c{s} (IT\"U), Pierre Henry (CEREGE), Alina Polonia (ISMAR), Luca Gasperini (ISMAR), Celine Grall (LIENSs, LDEO), Dursun Acar

TL;DR
This study reconstructs long-term earthquake records in the Sea of Marmara using sedimentary turbidites, revealing recurrence intervals of 220-300 years, crucial for seismic risk assessment of the North Anatolian Fault.
Contribution
It provides a detailed sedimentary record of seismic activity along the northern NAF segment, extending over 5000 years, using advanced radiometric dating and geochemical analyses.
Findings
Recurrent earthquake intervals of 220-300 years identified.
Coseismic turbidites correlate with historical earthquakes.
Sedimentary records align with GPS and slip rate data.
Abstract
Geological earthquake records are important for probabilistic seismic risk assessment. Such records can be obtained from studies of turbidites triggered by seismic activity in marine and lake basins. The Sea of Marmara (SoM), located on the North Anatolian Fault (NAF), serves as an important laboratory for subaqueous palaeoseismological research. This is because it has 2500 yrs. of historical earthquake records that can be correlated with radiometrically dated sedimentary earthquake records. Additionally, the relatively high sedimentation rate (3 mm/yr) in the deep subbasins allows the recognition of individual events. Following the destructive 1912 Mw 7.4 \c{S}ark\"oy-M\"urefte and 1999 Mw 7.4 Izmit and Mw 7.2 D\"uzce earthquakes, the main submerged part of the NAF in the SoM represents a seismic gap, where the long-term earthquake history is of crucial importance for earthquake…
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Taxonomy
Topicsearthquake and tectonic studies · Geochemistry and Elemental Analysis · Geological and Geochemical Analysis
