Authors
Liliana Minelli, Antonio Vecchio, Fabio Speranza, Iacopo Nicolosi, Francesca D'Ajello Caracciolo, Stefano Chiappini, Roberto Carluccio, Massimo Chiappini
Publication date
2016/3
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume
121
Issue
3
Pages
1297-1315
Description
Southern Calabria and the NE corner of Sicily (Italy) were struck in 1783 and 1908 A.D. by two of the most catastrophic earthquakes ever in European history. Although it is generally acknowledged that the seisms were yielded by normal faults rupturing the upper crust of the Calabria‐Peloritani terrane, no consensus exists on seismogenic source location and orientation. Here we report on a high‐resolution low‐altitude aeromagnetic survey of southern Calabria and Messina Straits. In southern Calabria we document a broad weakly positive (5–10 nT) anomaly zone interrupted by three en echelon SW‐NE null to negative magnetic anomaly corridors. Euler deconvolution and magnetic modeling show that the anomaly pattern is produced by a 1–1.5 km thick crustal “layer” located within 3 km depth. This layer is offset by a 25 km long NE trending fault that corresponds to the Armo normal fault, recently inferred to …
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