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Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan). / Deev, Evgeny; Korzhenkov, Andrey; Turova, Irina et al.

In: Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, Vol. 166, 15.10.2018, p. 48-65.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Harvard

Deev, E, Korzhenkov, A, Turova, I, Pavlis, TL, Luzhanskii, D, Mažeika, J, Abdieva, S & Yudakhin, A 2018, 'Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan)', Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, vol. 166, pp. 48-65. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.07.019

APA

Deev, E., Korzhenkov, A., Turova, I., Pavlis, T. L., Luzhanskii, D., Mažeika, J., Abdieva, S., & Yudakhin, A. (2018). Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan). Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, 166, 48-65. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.07.019

Vancouver

Deev E, Korzhenkov A, Turova I, Pavlis TL, Luzhanskii D, Mažeika J et al. Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan). Journal of Asian Earth Sciences. 2018 Oct 15;166:48-65. doi: 10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.07.019

Author

Deev, Evgeny ; Korzhenkov, Andrey ; Turova, Irina et al. / Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan). In: Journal of Asian Earth Sciences. 2018 ; Vol. 166. pp. 48-65.

BibTeX

@article{5654726121eb463da7570cb9c45125dc,
title = "Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan)",
abstract = "New paleoseismological and archaeoseismological data from the western Issyk-Kul basin of Kyrgyzstan (northern Tien Shan) provide new insights on active fault in the actively-deforming, basement-involved thrust system of Central Asia. Newly discovered fault scarps follow south-and north-dipping thrust faults which delineate the Kyrgyz and Kungey ranges bordering the Issyk-Kul basin. Motion on these faults generated earthquakes with magnitudes 6.2–7.6 and MSK-64 shaking intensities VIII-XI. Deformation observed in the zone of the Toguz-Bulak fault results from two Holocene earthquakes and another event that occurred about 8000 yr BP. Two more events, at 13,000 and 3000 yr BP, deformed the northeastern periphery of the Kyzyl-Ompul Uplift. Archaeoseismological research in the Northern Sary-Bulun settlement in the western periphery of the Boz-Barmak Uplift, revealed traces of another earthquake of MSK-64 shaking intensity I ≥ VIII dating back to the 12th Century. The obtained data correlates well with results of previous paleoseismological and archeoseismological studies. They show that in the northern Tien Shan there were clusters of strong earthquakes with ages of 14–13, 8, 4–3 ka ago and in the 11–12th centuries AD divided by periods of 4–5 ka. We infer that coseismic slip on these faults may have formed a tectonic dam at the edge of the basin through growth of the Boz-Barmak Uplift, and this dam ultimately deflected the Chu River into its modern channel which bypasses the lake. Lacustrine sediments in the northeastern periclinal segment of the Boz-Barmak Uplift bear signatures of soft-sediment deformation structures (seismites) corresponding to seven M ≥ 5–5.5 (I ≥ VI-VII) earthquakes timed at about 20,000 yr BP.",
keywords = "Erosion/tectonic interaction, Fault scarp, Issyk-Kul basin, Northern Tien Shan, Paleoearthquake, Seismites, STRUCTURES SEISMITES, SEDIMENT DEFORMATION STRUCTURES, 1992 SUUSAMYR, CRUSTAL DEFORMATION, LACUSTRINE DEPOSITS, EMPIRICAL RELATIONSHIPS, KEMIN EARTHQUAKE, QUATERNARY DEPOSITS, CENTRAL-ASIA, CENOZOIC TECTONICS",
author = "Evgeny Deev and Andrey Korzhenkov and Irina Turova and Pavlis, {Terry L.} and Dmitry Luzhanskii and Jonas Ma{\v z}eika and Svetlana Abdieva and Alexander Yudakhin",
year = "2018",
month = oct,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.07.019",
language = "English",
volume = "166",
pages = "48--65",
journal = "Journal of Asian Earth Sciences",
issn = "1367-9120",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Large ancient earthquakes in the western Issyk-Kul basin (Kyrgyzstan, northern Tien Shan)

AU - Deev, Evgeny

AU - Korzhenkov, Andrey

AU - Turova, Irina

AU - Pavlis, Terry L.

AU - Luzhanskii, Dmitry

AU - Mažeika, Jonas

AU - Abdieva, Svetlana

AU - Yudakhin, Alexander

PY - 2018/10/15

Y1 - 2018/10/15

N2 - New paleoseismological and archaeoseismological data from the western Issyk-Kul basin of Kyrgyzstan (northern Tien Shan) provide new insights on active fault in the actively-deforming, basement-involved thrust system of Central Asia. Newly discovered fault scarps follow south-and north-dipping thrust faults which delineate the Kyrgyz and Kungey ranges bordering the Issyk-Kul basin. Motion on these faults generated earthquakes with magnitudes 6.2–7.6 and MSK-64 shaking intensities VIII-XI. Deformation observed in the zone of the Toguz-Bulak fault results from two Holocene earthquakes and another event that occurred about 8000 yr BP. Two more events, at 13,000 and 3000 yr BP, deformed the northeastern periphery of the Kyzyl-Ompul Uplift. Archaeoseismological research in the Northern Sary-Bulun settlement in the western periphery of the Boz-Barmak Uplift, revealed traces of another earthquake of MSK-64 shaking intensity I ≥ VIII dating back to the 12th Century. The obtained data correlates well with results of previous paleoseismological and archeoseismological studies. They show that in the northern Tien Shan there were clusters of strong earthquakes with ages of 14–13, 8, 4–3 ka ago and in the 11–12th centuries AD divided by periods of 4–5 ka. We infer that coseismic slip on these faults may have formed a tectonic dam at the edge of the basin through growth of the Boz-Barmak Uplift, and this dam ultimately deflected the Chu River into its modern channel which bypasses the lake. Lacustrine sediments in the northeastern periclinal segment of the Boz-Barmak Uplift bear signatures of soft-sediment deformation structures (seismites) corresponding to seven M ≥ 5–5.5 (I ≥ VI-VII) earthquakes timed at about 20,000 yr BP.

AB - New paleoseismological and archaeoseismological data from the western Issyk-Kul basin of Kyrgyzstan (northern Tien Shan) provide new insights on active fault in the actively-deforming, basement-involved thrust system of Central Asia. Newly discovered fault scarps follow south-and north-dipping thrust faults which delineate the Kyrgyz and Kungey ranges bordering the Issyk-Kul basin. Motion on these faults generated earthquakes with magnitudes 6.2–7.6 and MSK-64 shaking intensities VIII-XI. Deformation observed in the zone of the Toguz-Bulak fault results from two Holocene earthquakes and another event that occurred about 8000 yr BP. Two more events, at 13,000 and 3000 yr BP, deformed the northeastern periphery of the Kyzyl-Ompul Uplift. Archaeoseismological research in the Northern Sary-Bulun settlement in the western periphery of the Boz-Barmak Uplift, revealed traces of another earthquake of MSK-64 shaking intensity I ≥ VIII dating back to the 12th Century. The obtained data correlates well with results of previous paleoseismological and archeoseismological studies. They show that in the northern Tien Shan there were clusters of strong earthquakes with ages of 14–13, 8, 4–3 ka ago and in the 11–12th centuries AD divided by periods of 4–5 ka. We infer that coseismic slip on these faults may have formed a tectonic dam at the edge of the basin through growth of the Boz-Barmak Uplift, and this dam ultimately deflected the Chu River into its modern channel which bypasses the lake. Lacustrine sediments in the northeastern periclinal segment of the Boz-Barmak Uplift bear signatures of soft-sediment deformation structures (seismites) corresponding to seven M ≥ 5–5.5 (I ≥ VI-VII) earthquakes timed at about 20,000 yr BP.

KW - Erosion/tectonic interaction

KW - Fault scarp

KW - Issyk-Kul basin

KW - Northern Tien Shan

KW - Paleoearthquake

KW - Seismites

KW - STRUCTURES SEISMITES

KW - SEDIMENT DEFORMATION STRUCTURES

KW - 1992 SUUSAMYR

KW - CRUSTAL DEFORMATION

KW - LACUSTRINE DEPOSITS

KW - EMPIRICAL RELATIONSHIPS

KW - KEMIN EARTHQUAKE

KW - QUATERNARY DEPOSITS

KW - CENTRAL-ASIA

KW - CENOZOIC TECTONICS

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85049981631&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.07.019

DO - 10.1016/j.jseaes.2018.07.019

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85049981631

VL - 166

SP - 48

EP - 65

JO - Journal of Asian Earth Sciences

JF - Journal of Asian Earth Sciences

SN - 1367-9120

ER -

ID: 15961652