Abstract

The aim of this short note is to provide a summary over on-fault palaeoseismic works on the behavior of the Dead Sea fault (DSF). Key achievements of these studies include: the determination of slip rate of the DSF across different space and time resolutions, which converges at around 4–5 mm/a, confirmation of the sinistral relative motion between the Arabia Plate and the Sinai Subplate and of thrust motion and normal faulting associated with restraining bends and pull apart grabens respectively, and the verification of historical accounts on several strong earthquakes that were associated with surface ruptures. The comparison between the state-of-the-art slip-rate determinations along the DSF and the total motion accommodated by the known historical and instrumental earthquakes shows that current seismicity rates cannot account for the full slip rate. As previously proposed, the short-term rate of seismicity is not necessarily representative of the long-term seismic activity along the DSF. Assuming the historical records of the last two millennia are complete for strong earthquakes, we note long periods of quiescence in the sections of the northern Yammouneh, the Jordan Valley, and the southern Araba.

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