Introduction: The Dead Sea Rift as a natural laboratory for neotectonics and paleoseismology
- 1 December 2009
- journal article
- Published by Laser Pages Publishing Ltd. in Israel Journal of Earth Sciences
- Vol. 58 (3), 139-145
- https://doi.org/10.1560/ijes.58.3-4.139
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crustal deformation in northwestern Arabia from GPS measurements in Syria: Slow slip rate along the northern Dead Sea FaultGeophysical Journal International, 2010
- Dating speleoseismites near the Dead Sea Transform and the Carmel Fault: Clues to coupling of a plate boundary and its branchIsrael Journal of Earth Sciences, 2009
- Subsurface geology of the southern Lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee), Dead Sea Transform—Evidence from seismic reflection dataIsrael Journal of Earth Sciences, 2009
- Paleoseismic evidence for time dependency of seismic response on a fault system in the southern Arava Valley, Dead Sea rift, IsraelGSA Bulletin, 2002
- Salt diapirs in the Dead Sea basin and their relationship to Quaternary extensional tectonicsMarine and Petroleum Geology, 2001
- Coseismic deformation associated with the November 1995, MW = 7.1 Nuweiba earthquake, Gulf of Elat (Aqaba), detected by synthetic aperture radar interferometryJournal of Geophysical Research, 1999
- Holocene stratigraphy of the Dead Sea: Correlation of high‐resolution seismic reflection profiles to sediment coresJournal of Geophysical Research, 1999
- Soils as a tool for estimating ages of Quaternary fault scarps in a hyperarid environment — the southern Arava valley, the Dead Sea Rift, IsraelCATENA, 1996
- Four thousand years of seismicity along the Dead Sea RiftJournal of Geophysical Research, 1991
- Value of Historical Records of EarthquakesNature, 1971