Abstract
<p>The Alpine orogen and the Apennine system are part of the complex tectonic setting in the Mediterranean Sea caused by the convergence between Africa and Eurasia. Between 30 Ma and 15 Ma the Calabrian subduction retreated in a southeast direction pulling Corsica and Sardinia away from the Eurasian landmass. In this extensional setting, the Ligurian Sea was formed as a back-arc basin. The rifting jumped 15 Ma ago in the Tyrrhenian Sea leaving Corsica and Sardinia in a stable position relative to Eurasia.</p><p>Within the framework of the AlpArray research initiative a long-term seismological experiment was conducted in the Ligurian Sea to investigate the lithospheric structure and the seismicity in the Ligurian basin. The passive seismic network consisted of 29 broad-band ocean bottom stations from Germany and France. It was in operation between June 2017 and February 2018.</p><p>Two seismicity clusters occurred in the centre of the Ligurian Basin. The 18 earthquakes are located in the lower crust and in the upper-most mantle at depths between 10 km and 16 km. Re-location was performed only using picks from the OBS in the centre of the Ligurian Sea to avoid artifacts from the complex 3D velocity structure of the basin. Mantle refractions Pn and Sn have apparent velocities of 8.2 km/s and 4.7 km/s. The low Vp-Vs-ratio of 1.72 indicates a more brittle behaviour of the mantle material.</p><p>Fault plane solutions were determined for four events using also the data of land stations in southern France, Corsica, Sardinia and northern Italy. The focal mechanisms are thrust faulting. Fault planes strike in a NE-SW direction, coinciding with the alignment of the events and the direction of the basin axis.</p><p>We interprete the two earthquake clusters related to the inversion of the Ligurian Basin where the basin’s centre is under compression and stresses are taken up by reactivated faults in the crust and uppermost mantle. The compressional forces could be caused by the convergence of Africa and Europe. In general, observations of earthquakes in continental mantle lithosphere are rare and they reveal on the one hand a strengthening of the crust and uppermost mantle during rifting and on the other hand they support the interpretation that rifting failed in the northern Ligurian Basin.</p><p> </p>
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