Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

earth and planetary sciences

Global Positioning System constraints on plate kinematics and dynamics in the eastern Mediterranean and Caucasus

Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, Volume 105, No. B3, Article 1999JB900351, Year 2000

We present and interpret Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements of crustal motions for the period 1988-1997 at 189 sites extending east-west from the Caucasus mountains to the Adriatic Sea and north-south from the southern edge of the Eurasian plate to the northern edge of the African plate. Sites on the northern Arabian platform move 18 ± 2 mm/yr at N25° ± 5° W relative to Eurasia, less than the NUVEL-1A circuit closure rate (25 ± 1 mm/yr at N21° ± 7° W). Preliminary motion estimates (1994-1997) for stations located in Egypt on the northeastern part of Africa show northward motion at 5-6 ± 2 mm/yr, also slower than NUVEL-1A estimates (10 ± 1 mm/yr at N2° ± 4° E). Eastern Turkey is characterized by distributed deformation, while central Turkey is characterized by coherent plate motion (internal deformation of <2 mm/yr) involving westward displacement and counterclockwise rotation of the Anatolian plate. The Anatolian plate is de-coupled from Eurasia along the right-lateral, strike-slip North Anatolian fault (NAF). We derive a best fitting Euler vector for Anatolia-Eurasia motion of 30.7° ± 0.8° N, 32.6° ± 0.4° E, 1.2° ± 0.1°/Myr. The Euler vector gives an upper bound for NAF slip rate of 24 ± 1 mm/yr. We determine a preliminary GPS Arabia-Anatolia Euler vector of 32.9° ± 1.2° N, 40.3° ± 1.1° E, 0.8° ± 0.2°/Myr and an upper bound on left-lateral slip on the East Anatolian fault (EAF) of 9 ± 1 mm/yr. The central and southern Aegean is characterized by coherent motion (internal deformation of <2 mm/yr) toward the SW at 30 ± 1 mm/yr relative to Eurasia. Stations in the SE Aegean deviate significantly from the overall motion of the southern Aegean, showing increasing velocities toward the trench and reaching 10 ± 1 mm/yr relative to the southern Aegean as a whole. Copyright 2000 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Citations: 1,925
Authors: 28
Affiliations: 15
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Study Locations
Egypt