4.7 Article

Quaternary uplift of palaeoshorelines in southwestern Crete: the combined effect of extensional and compressional faulting

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QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
卷 316, 期 -, 页码 -

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PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.quascirev.2023.108240

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Pleistocene palaeoshorelines; Western europe; Cl-36 cosmogenic exposure dating; 365 CE crete earthquake; Active faults; Marine terraces

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This study conducts spatio-temporal analysis on Pleistocene palaeoshorelines in southwestern Crete. By using Cl-36 exposure dating on wave-cut platforms and mapping of palaeoshorelines, it is found that the Late Quaternary uplift rates increase from west to east, suggesting that an offshore extensional fault may also contribute to the uplift.
We undertake spatio-temporal analysis on sequences of Pleistocene palaeoshorelines in southwestern Crete where deformed Holocene marine notches have predominantly been suggested to be linked to coseismic uplift from the 365 CE Mw > 8 earthquake. Previous investigations into the Holocene notches have been used to infer that the dominant mechanism of uplift may be slip either on a reverse crustal fault or on the subduction interface. However, seismic reflection studies attest to the presence of numerous active offshore extensional faults whose role in the long-term deformation is unclear. The relative contributions of upper-plate extensional and compressional faults to the overall deformation can be assessed through the study of uplifted and deformed Late Quaternary palaeoshorelines. New Cl-36 exposure dating on wave-cut platforms and palaeoshoreline mapping are combined with existing age controls to facilitate investigation into the deformed Late Quaternary palaeoshorelines. We observe that the Late Quaternary uplift rates increase from west (0.61 mm/yr) to east (0.83 mm/yr) over similar to 20 km, a spatial uplift pattern that is inconsistent with published vertical deformation models of slip solely on the subduction interface or on a reverse crustal fault. Elastic half-space modelling suggests that an offshore extensional fault may also contribute to the uplift. We conclude that a combination of active extensional and compressional faults may be responsible for Late Quaternary uplift across southwestern Crete.

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