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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Atlantic Ocean
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North Atlantic
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Oresund (1)
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East Pacific Ocean Islands
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Hawaii
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Hawaii County Hawaii
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Hawaii Island
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Kilauea (1)
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Europe
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Tornquist-Teisseyre Zone (1)
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Western Europe
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Iceland (1)
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Scandinavia
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Denmark (1)
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Sweden (1)
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Oceania
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Polynesia
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Hawaii
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Hawaii County Hawaii
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Hawaii Island
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Kilauea (1)
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United States
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Hawaii
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Hawaii County Hawaii
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Hawaii Island
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Kilauea (1)
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Primary terms
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Atlantic Ocean
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North Atlantic
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Oresund (1)
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crust (1)
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earthquakes (2)
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East Pacific Ocean Islands
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Hawaii
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Hawaii County Hawaii
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Hawaii Island
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Kilauea (1)
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Europe
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Tornquist-Teisseyre Zone (1)
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Western Europe
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Iceland (1)
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Scandinavia
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Denmark (1)
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Sweden (1)
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geophysical methods (1)
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mantle (1)
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Mohorovicic discontinuity (1)
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Oceania
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Polynesia
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Hawaii
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Hawaii County Hawaii
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Hawaii Island
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Kilauea (1)
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seismology (1)
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United States
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Hawaii
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Hawaii County Hawaii
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Hawaii Island
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Kilauea (1)
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Stress change over short geological time: the case of Scandinavia over 9000 years since the Ice Age
Abstract Palaeoseismological investigations are used in many regions of the world to extend back in time the earthquake statistics of historical written or oral records as well as instrumental information. This is very valuable for discussions of earthquake hazard, but it only applies to areas of stable stress regime. Although the intraplate areas of Scandinavia and Greenland have experienced only rather small earthquakes within the human timescale, they serve as a clear warning on the application of palaeoseismology for hazard studies in regions where the stresses have changed. In a small part of Scandinavia, where recent earthquake activity is not significantly different from that of its surroundings, large faults have been discovered and several have been investigated via palaeoseismology. They are interpreted to show the occurrence of large earthquakes about 9000 years ago. Signs of this are coincident landslides as well as liquefaction in loose sediments, which are well dated through varve-counting. In contrast to this the present-day stress release in earthquakes and in surface rock deformations is mainly caused by plate motion. Regional investigations in Scandinavia and Greenland/North America, as well as those included in the World Stress Map Project of the 1990s, have shown compression within the plate, mainly in the direction of absolute plate motion. The ice cap influence has disappeared. So stress reorganization is clearly indicated over the short geological timespan of 9000 years. Into this argument goes the observation from Greenland and Antarctica, that no earthquakes occur under the ice caps. For Scandinavia the argument is that no earthquakes occurred under the ice sheet during the Ice Age, and that the stored stresses were released when the ice sheet melted 9000 years ago. This does emphasize a warning. There are regions of the globe where palaeoseismological investigations can give a fantastic extension of the short-term historical earthquake records. But in some regions stress reorganization has changed this condition.
Physical differences in the deep lithosphere of Northern and Central Europe
Abstract A number of large-scale integrated studies, including the TOR and POLONAISE'97 projects, with an emphasis on seismic methods, have been used to elucidate the southwestern boundary (suture zone) between the East European Craton and the Phanerozoic terranes of Western Europe. Results indicate that a thick slab of mantle lithosphere below the craton thins southwestwards beneath the Trans-European Suture Zone and is not seen south of the Variscan front. The thinning is not gradual, but is interrupted by at least two abrupt deep boundaries, the most significant of which corresponds to the surface position of the Tornquist Zone, a major fault. The present geometry of the lithosphere is the result of modification of the margin of the Neoproterozoic continent Baltica by Phanerozoic processes, including the development of the Tornquist Zone and the stretching of the lithosphere in a broad central block SW of this zone. Seismic results and their interpretations from the TOR tomographic project are presented and compared with results from the POLONAISE'97 controlled source project to the SE. Both investigations have shown high-angle, non-symmetrical features extending deep into the mantle.