Abstract

The ∼55km-long Firouzkuh fault is located in the Central Alborz Mountains of Iran. It is a left-lateral fault, which dips to the south, and possesses a small dip-slip component of motion that we interpret to result from extension. The ratio of horizontal to vertical displacement across the fault, calculated from the cumulative displacement of landscape features, is 7.6. We provide constraints on the timing of the last earthquake on the Firouzkuh fault from two trenches (T1 and T2) across the fault zone, excavated in 2004, and located east of Firouzkuh city. The trenches expose faulted sedimentary deposits. Two optically-stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages from sediments in the lower part of trench T1 date from the late Pleistocene (15.9±0.9ka and 27.1±1.7ka). The younger of the two dated units in T1 is displaced vertically across the fault by 2.2–4.4m, from which we estimate a strike-slip displacement of 18.2–33.4m, and hence a average horizontal slip-rate of 1.1–2.2mm/yr. The sediments exposed in T1 do not yield constraints on the most recent earthquake history. In trench T2, however, human skeletal remains of a middle aged male, which yield a radiocarbon age of 1159±28 BP (corresponding to a mean calendar age of 791 AD), were found within a faulted alluvial layer at a depth of 60–70cm from the surface. The existence of these medieval human places shows that a surface-rupturing earthquake occurred at some time after 1159±28 BP. The amount of slip in each earthquake on the Firouzkuh fault is difficult to estimate, but assuming the entire ∼55km fault length ruptures in each event, they will have had a maximum magnitude of 7.1. At our estimated late Quaternary slip-rate of ∼1.1–2.2mm/yr magnitude 7.1 earthquakes, involving ∼1.2m average displacement, would be expected to occur every ∼1100–540years. As the last earthquake on the Firouzkuh fault may be up to ∼700years in age we suggest that the Firouzkuh fault is a major hazard for earthquakes in the near future.

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