Abstract

A multidisciplinary work integrating structural, geodetic and seismological data was performed in the Catanzaro Trough (central Calabria, Italy) to define the seismotectonic setting of this area. The Catanzaro Trough is a structural depression transversal to the Calabrian Arc, lying in-between two longitudinal grabens: the Crati Basin to the north and the Mesima Basin to the south. The investigated area experienced some of the strongest historical earthquakes of Italy, whose seismogenic sources are still not well defined. We investigated and mapped the major WSW–ENE to WNW–ESE trending normal-oblique Lamezia-Catanzaro Fault System, bounding to the north the Catanzaro Trough. Morphotectonic data reveal that some fault segments have recently been reactivated since they have displaced upper Pleistocene deposits showing typical geomorphic features associated with active normal fault scarps such as triangular and trapezoidal facets, and displaced alluvial fans. The analysis of instrumental seismicity indicates that some clusters of earthquakes have nucleated on the Lamezia-Catanzaro Fault System. In addition, focal mechanisms indicate the prevalence of left-lateral kinematics on E–W roughly oriented fault plains. GPS data confirm that slow left-lateral motion occurs along this fault system. Minor north-dipping normal faults were also mapped in the southern side of the Catanzaro Trough. They show eroded fault scarps along which weak seismic activity and negligible geodetic motion occur. Our study highlights that the Catanzaro Trough is a poliphased Plio-Quaternary extensional basin developed early as a half-graben in the frame of the tear-faulting occurring at the northern edge of the subducting Ionian slab. In this context, the strike-slip motion contributes to the longitudinal segmentation of the Calabrian Arc. In addition, the high number of seismic events evidenced by the instrumental seismicity, the macroseismic intensity distribution of the historical earthquakes and the scaling laws relating to earthquakes and seismogenic faults support the hypothesis that the Lamezia-Catanzaro Fault System may have been responsible for the historical earthquakes since it is capable of triggering earthquakes with magnitude up to 6.9.

Highlights

  • Introduction conditions of the Creative CommonsThe Calabrian Arc (CA hereafter) is an arc-shaped sector of the Apennine-Maghrebian chain structured in the frame of the NW convergence between Eurasia and the Nubia plates [1] (Figure 1A)

  • Our multidisciplinary work, which integrates structural, geodetic and seismological data acquired in the Catanzaro Trough, allows us to draw some conclusions helpful in defining the current geodynamics of the Calabrian Arc:

  • The Catanzaro Trough is a semi-graben, developed mainly by the poliphased activity of the Lamezia-Catanzaro Fault System (LCFS) that bounds the basin to the north

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction conditions of the Creative CommonsThe Calabrian Arc (CA hereafter) is an arc-shaped sector of the Apennine-Maghrebian chain structured in the frame of the NW convergence between Eurasia and the Nubia plates [1] (Figure 1A). Strike-slip tectonics, superimposed on the pre-existing collisional context [2]. Late Neogene period, part of the European margin was extruded SE-wards with respect to the adjacent collisional sectors to form the CA [3,4]. Seismological and geodetic studies, the Plio-Quaternary evolution of the CA is still a matter of debate due to the high structural complexity of the region. The origin and geodynamic link between the transversal structures (including the Catanzaro Trough), characterised by a strike-slip component of motion, and the longitudinal extensional basins, is still unclear (e.g., [8]). Both longitudinal and transversal faults are considered the source of the most destructive historical earthquakes of the Italian regions [9,10]. The CA is characterised by the largest concentration of seismic moment release [11,12,13,14]

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