Earthquake mechanisms and active tectonics of the Hellenic subduction zone

SUMMARY We use improved focal mechanisms and centroid depth estimates of earthquakes, combined with GPS velocities, to examine the tectonics of the Hellenic subduction zone, and in particular the processes occurring at both ends of the Hellenic Arc. Nubia-Aegean convergence is accommodated by shallowly dipping thrust-faulting along the subduction–zone interface, as well as by steeper splay faults in the overriding material. From a comparison of observed and expected seismic moment release over the last 100 yr, combined with existing knowledge of the longer-term documented historical record, we confirm earlier suggestions that most (80 per cent) of this convergence is accommodated aseismically, that is, that the subduction zone is uncoupled. This conclusion is robust, even allowing for rare very large earthquakes on splay faults, such as that of AD 365, and also allowing for the contribution of small earthquakes. The downgoing Nubian plate deforms by arc-parallel contraction at all depths, from 200 km seaward of Crete to at least 100 km within the subducting slab. Extensional (T) axes of earthquakes are aligned downdip within the descending slab suggesting that, even if the aseismic prolongation of the slab has reached the 670 km mantle discontinuity, it does not transmit stresses to shallower depths. Shallow thrust-faulting earthquakes on the subduction interface show a divergence of slip vectors round the arc, and GPS measurements show that this is accommodated mainly by E–W extension on normal faults in the overriding Aegean material. The eastern end of the subduction zone, south of Rhodes, displays distributed deformation in the overriding material, including a mixture of strike-slip and splay-thrust faulting, and probably involves rotations about a vertical axes. Here slip on the interface itself is by thrust faulting with slip vectors oblique to the arc but parallel to the overall Nubia-Aegean convergence: there is no evidence for slip-partitioning in the traditional sense. In the west, the subduction zone terminates in a distributed zone of parallel NE–SW strike-slip faults, of which the most prominent is the Kefalonia Transform Fault (KTF). A flexural gravity anomaly confirms that the deep bathymetric escarpment of the KTF is a lateral ramp, formed as the Ionian islands are emplaced SW onto the Apulian lithosphere, and enhanced by minor thrust faulting with slip vectors perpendicular to the scarp. Distributed parallel strike-slip faults both SW and NE of mainland central Greece terminate in E–W graben in central Greece, which accommodate the overall NE–SW shear by clockwise block rotation. Central Greece therefore acts as a relay zone between the strike-slip faulting of the NE Aegean and the Ionian Islands–western Peloponnese.

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