Active Normal Faulting in the Upper Rhine Graben and Paleoseismic Identification of the 1356 Basel Earthquake

We have identified an active normal fault in the epicentral area of the Basel (Switzerland) earthquake of 18 October 1356, the largest historical seismic event in central Europe. The event of 1356 and two prehistoric events have been characterized on the fault with geomorphological analysis, geophysical prospecting, and trenching. Carbon-14 dating indicates that the youngest event occurred in the interval 610 to 1475 A.D. and may correspond to the 1356 Basel earthquake. The occurrence of the three earthquakes induced a total of 1.8 meters of vertical displacement in the past 8500 years for a mean uplift rate of 0.21 millimeters per year. These successive ruptures on the normal fault indicate the potential for strong ground movements in the Basel region and should be taken into account to refine the seismic hazard estimates along the Rhine graben.

[1]  J. W. Beck,et al.  INTCAL98 Radiocarbon Age Calibration, 24,000–0 cal BP , 1998, Radiocarbon.

[2]  D. Mayer-Rosa,et al.  A review of the 1356 Basel earthquake: Basic data , 1979 .

[3]  K. Bonjer,et al.  The stress field in the Rhine Graben area inferred from earthquake focal mechanisms and estimation of frictional parameters , 1997 .

[4]  Christopher Bronk Ramsey,et al.  Probability and Dating , 1997, Radiocarbon.

[5]  K. Bonjer Seismicity pattern and style of seismic faulting at the eastern borderfault of the southern Rhine Graben , 1997 .

[6]  Thierry Camelbeeck,et al.  Geological and geophysical evidence for large palaeo-earthquakes with surface faulting in the Roer Graben (northwest Europe) , 1998 .

[7]  D. Jongmans,et al.  Active faulting and paleoseismology along the Bree fault, lower Rhine graben, Belgium , 2000 .

[8]  L. Rivera,et al.  Stress tensor determination in France and neighbouring regions , 1993 .

[9]  D. Wells,et al.  New empirical relationships among magnitude, rupture length, rupture width, rupture area, and surface displacement , 1994, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America.

[10]  L. Ahorner,et al.  Present-day stress field and seismotectonic block movements along major fault zones in Central Europe , 1975 .

[11]  Zuheir Altamimi,et al.  Intraplate deformation in western Europe deduced from an analysis of the International Terrestrial Reference Frame 1997 (ITRF97) velocity field , 2001 .

[12]  D. L. Anderson,et al.  Theoretical Basis of Some Empirical Relations in Seismology by Hiroo Kanamori And , 1975 .