[1] Oblique rifting is investigated through centrifuge experiments that reproduce extension of a continental lithosphere containing a preexisting weakness zone. During extension, this weakness localizes deformation, and different rift obliquity is obtained by varying its trend with respect to the stretching direction. Model results show that deformation is mostly controlled by the obliquity angle a (defined as the angle between the orthogonal to the rift trend and the extension direction). For low obliquity (a < 45°), rifting is initially characterized by activation of large, en echelon boundary faults bordering a subsiding rift depression, with no deformation affecting the rift floor. Increasing extension results in the abandonment of the boundary faults and the development of new faults within the rift depression. These faults are orthogonal to the direction of extension and arranged in two en echelon segments linked by a complex transfer zones, characterized by strike-slip component of motion. In these models, a strong strain partitioning is observed between the rift margins, where the boundary fault systems have an oblique-slip motion, and the valley floor that away from the transfer zones is affected by a pure extension. Moderate obliquity (a = 45°) still results in a two-phase rift evolution, although boundary fault activity is strongly reduced, and deformation is soon transferred to the rift depression. The fault pattern is similar to that of low-obliquity models, although internal faults become slightly oblique to the orthogonal to the direction of extension. Deformation partitioning between the rift margins and the valley floor is still observed but is less developed than for low-obliquity rifting. For high obliquity (a > 45°), no boundary faults form, and the extensional deformation affects the rift depression since early stages of extension. Dominance of the strike-slip motion over extension leads to the development of oblique-slip and nearly pure strike-slip faults, oblique to both the rift trend and the orthogonal to the extension direction, with no strain partitioning between the margins and the rift floor. These results suggest that oblique reactivation of preexisting weaknesses plays a major role in controlling rift evolution, architecture, and strain partitioning, findings that have a significant relevance for natural oblique rifts.
The Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) offers a complete record of the time-space evolution of a continental rift. We have characterized the brittle deformation in different rift sectors through the statistical analysis of a new database of faults obtained from the integration between satellite images and digital elevation models, and implemented with field controls. This analysis has been compared with the results of lithospheric-scale analogue models reproducing the kinematical conditions of orthogonal and oblique rifting. Integration of these approaches suggests substantial differences in fault architecture in the different rift sectors that in turn reflect an along-axis variation of the rift development and southward decrease in rift evolution. The northernmost MER sector is in a mature stage of incipient continental rupture, with deformation localised within the rift floor along discrete tectono-magmatic segments and almost inactive boundary faults. The central MER sector records a transitional stage in which migration of deformation from boundary faults to faults internal to the rift valley is in an incipient phase. The southernmost MER sector is instead in an early continental stage, with the largest part of deformation being accommodated by boundary faults and almost absent internal faults. The MER thus records along its axis the typical evolution of continental rifting, from fault-dominated rift morphology in the early stages of extension toward magma-dominated extension during break-up. The extrapolation of modelling results suggests that a variable rift obliquity contributes to the observed along-axis variations in rift architecture and evolutionary stage, being oblique rifting conditions controlling the MER evolution since its birth in the Late Miocene in relation to a constant post ca. 11 Mã N100°E Nubia-Somalia motion.
In this paper, the updating of the landslide inventory of Tuscany region is presented. To achieve this goal, satellite SAR data processed with persistent scatter interferometry (PSI) technique have been used. The updating leads to a consistent reduction of unclassified landslides and to an increasing of active landslides. After the updating, we explored the characteristics of the new inventory, analysing landslide distribution and geomorphological features. Several maps have been elaborated, as sliding index or landslide density map; we also propose a density-area map to highlight areas with different landslide densities and sizes. A frequency-area analysis has been performed, highlighting a classical negative power-law distribution. We also explored landslide frequency for lithology, soil use and several morphological attributes (elevation, slope gradient, slope curvature), considering both all landslides and classified landslide types (flows, falls and slides).
The Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) is a narrow continental rift characterized by an along‐axis variation in rift evolution, with early stages in the south evolving to incipient breakup in the north. Although distribution and style of Quaternary volcanotectonic deformation is well known in the northern rift sector, knowledge of these characteristics is comparatively less constrained southward. In this paper we present the results of a field structural study carried out to better constrain the time‐space distribution of faulting in the central sector of the MER (central MER). The new field structural data coupled with new 14C radiometric dating of faulted rocks suggest a localization of faulting at both rift margins of the central MER, where radiometric dating of faulted material has allowed establishing a Late Pleistocene–Holocene activity of border faults. Conversely, in‐rift faulting (Wonji Fault Belt (WFB)) is subordinate highlighting a major difference with the northern sector of the MER where deformation is essentially accommodated in the axial zone. This is consistent with an along‐axis variation in rift evolution, showing the central MER less evolved than the northern rift sector. Inversion of cumulative fault slip data reveals a variation in the extension direction between the rift margins (N105°–110°E) and the rift floor (N90°–95°E), which accords well with the current Nubia‐Somalia plate kinematics. The variation in extension direction across the rift could manifest a slip partitioning between the boundary faults and in‐rift WFB faults.
Editor: R.D. van der HilstKeywords: East African Rift continental rifting magmatic intrusion stress lithospheric extension rupturing continental lithosphere As rifting progresses to seafloor spreading, extension within the continental crust commonly is accommodated by a combination of fault slip and dike intrusion. Consistent patterns in the spatial arrangement of long-lived magma intrusion zones in the Ethiopian and Afar rift sectors, East Africa, suggest that the magma intrusions help to localize strain during repeated rifting episodes. Within the broad Main Ethiopian Rift, extensional deformation has localized since ∼ 3 m.y. in narrow magmatic segments, that are oriented oblique to the orientation of the Miocene border faults, but (sub-) orthogonal to the extension direction. Numerical models combined with geophysical and geological observations from East Africa are used to examine the viability of self-sustaining magmatic segmentation. Initiation of the magmatic segments is shown to result from magma injections, which focus strain in narrow elongated zones. During magmatic phases of segment evolution the segments are weak, and extensional stresses localize at the rift tips, promoting along-axis lengthening. During amagmatic phases of extension, the numerical models predict strain localization within the magmatic segments and, to a lesser extent, broadly distributed extension within the rift zone. This promotes segment stability; the segments remain the preferred location for magma intrusion during new magmatic phases. These results are applied to the formation and maintenance of MER segmentation. The Fentale-Dofen segment is currently in a non-magmatic phase of extension; the Dabbahu segment in the Red Sea Rift is currently experiencing a rifting episode and therefore is in a transient magmatic cycle. The observed patterns of instantaneous localized deformation, seismicity, and dike intrusions sometimes propagating beyond the tip of the magmatic segments occur as predicted by the models.
Abstract. Within the framework of FP7, an EU-funded SafeLand project, a questionnaire was prepared to collect information about the use of remote sensing for landslide study and to evaluate its actual application in landslide detection, mapping and monitoring. The questionnaire was designed using a Google form and was disseminated among end-users and researchers involved in landslide studies in Europe. In total, 49 answers from 17 different European countries were collected. The outcomes showed that landslide detection and mapping is mainly performed with aerial photos, often associated with optical and radar imagery. Concerning landslide monitoring, satellite radars prevail over the other types of data. Remote sensing is mainly used for detection/mapping and monitoring of slides, flows and lateral spreads with a preferably large scale of analysis (1:5000–1:25 000). All the compilers integrate remote sensing data with other thematic data, mainly geological maps, landslide inventory maps and DTMs and derived maps. According to the research and working experience of the compilers, remote sensing is generally considered to have a medium effectiveness/reliability for landslide studies. The results of the questionnaire can contribute to an overall sketch of the use of remote sensing in current landslide studies and show that remote sensing can be considered a powerful and well-established instrument for landslide mapping, monitoring and hazard analysis.
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