Holocene earthquake record offshore Portugal (SW Iberia): testing turbidite paleoseismology in a slow-convergence margin.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
The SW margin of the Iberian Peninsula hosts the present-day boundary between the Eurasian and African
Plates. Convergence (4-5 mm/yr) is accommodated through a wide deformation zone characterized by
moderate magnitude seismic activity. This zone has also been the source of the most important seismic
events in Western Europe, such as the 1755 Lisbon Earthquake and Tsunami and 1969 Horseshoe Earthquake.
Despite efforts to identify active seismogenic structures in the Gulf of Cadiz in the last ten years, little
is known about its paleoseismic history. The turbidite paleoseismology approach was applied for the first
time in a low-rate convergent margin to determine the recurrence interval of large earthquake events that
occurred in SW Iberia during the Holocene. Four sediment cores collected at strategically located sites
offshore Portugal (i.e. Tagus Abyssal Plain, Infante Don Henrique Basin and Horseshoe Abyssal Plain) reveal
that these deep-sea basins preserve a record of episodic deposition of turbidites. In the SW Iberian Margin
excluding special climatic events, earthquakes are the most likely triggering mechanism for synchronous,
widely-spaced distributed turbidites during the Holocene, when the sea level was relatively stable. Age
correlation together with textural, mineralogical, physical properties and geochemical signatures of the
new cores complemented by pre-existing multicores and gravity cores reveals a total of 7 widespread
turbidite events for the Holocene. Precise dating of the most recent turbidite event (E1) based on 210Pb and
137Cs geochronology provides an age of AD 1971 3. This age corresponds to a high-magnitude instrumental
earthquake in the region: the 1969 Horseshoe Earthquake (Mw 8.0). Calibrated 14C ages of subsequent
widespread turbidite events (E3 and E5) correlate with the dates of important historical earthquakes
and paleotsunami deposits in the Gulf of Cadiz area, such as AD 1755 and 218 BC, respectively. If older
synchronous events (E6, E8, and E10) with ages ranging from 4960-5510 yr BP to 8715-9015 yr BP are also
taken into account, a great earthquake recurrence interval of about 1800 years is obtained for the Holocene.
Our correlations suggest that the turbidite record may be considered as a proxy for paleoseismic activity in
low-convergence rate margins, and a valuable complementary tool in earthquake and tsunami hazard
assessment along the coasts of the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Asioli, Alessandra
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