Back to Search Start Over

Constant Slip Rate on the Doruneh Strike‐Slip Fault, Iran, Averaged Over Late Pleistocene, Holocene, and Decadal Timescales

Authors :
Edward J. Rhodes
R. Alastair Sloan
Alexander L. Thomas
Mohammad Mahdi Khatib
Fynn Clive
Erwan Pathier
Zahra Mousavi
Morteza Fattahi
Andrea Walpersdorf
Morteza Talebian
Richard Walker
Nicholas Dodds
Source :
Mousavi, Z, Fattahi, M, Khatib, M, Talebian, M, Pathier, E, Walpersdorf, A, Sloan, R A, Thomas, A L, Rhodes, E, Clive, F, Dodds, N & Walker, R T 2021, ' Constant Slip Rate on the Doruneh Strike-Slip Fault, Iran, Averaged Over Late Pleistocene, Holocene, and Decadal Timescales ', Tectonics, vol. 40, no. 6, e2020TC006256 . https://doi.org/10.1029/2020TC006256
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2021.

Abstract

Varying estimates of both present‐day strain accumulation and long‐term slip‐rate on the Doruneh left‐lateral strike‐slip fault, NE Iran, have led to suggestions that it exhibits large along‐strike and/or temporal changes in activity. In this paper, we make and compare estimates of slip‐rate measured using both geodesy and geomorphology, and spanning time periods ranging from decadal to 100 ka. To image the present‐day accumulation of strain we process seven years (2003‐2010) of data from six ENVISAT tracks covering the fault, with interferograms produced for 400 km‐long strips of data in order to image the long‐wavelength signals associated with interseismic strain accumulation across the locked fault. Our analysis shows that less than 4 mm/yr – and likely only 1‐3 mm/yr ‐ of slip accumulates across the fault. Using high‐resolution optical satellite imagery we make reconstructions of displacement across six alluvial fans whose surfaces cross the fault, in four separate river catchments. We determine the ages of these fans using infra‐red‐stimulated luminescence dating combined with U‐series dating of pedogenic carbonates. The six fans vary in age from ∼10‐100 kyr, and a regression line fitted to four of these yields a slip rate of 2.5 ± 0.3 mm/yr. We conclude that within the uncertainty of our measurements the slip‐rate has remained constant over the last ∼100 ka and is representative of the strain accumulation at the present‐day. The slip‐rate that we measure is consistent with the E‐W left‐lateral Doruneh fault accommodating N‐S right‐lateral faulting by 'bookshelf' faulting, with clockwise rotation about a vertical axis.

Details

ISSN :
19449194 and 02787407
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tectonics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....36c3e650e43c867b19eb33a9fcb6cc06
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1029/2020tc006256