一个小型地下水湖盆(东欧阿尔卑斯山克洛佩纳湖)中地震震动的沉积和持久地球化学印记形成鲜明对比

Christoph Daxer, Katleen Wils, Arne Ramisch, M. Strasser, J. Moernaut
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摘要

在缓慢变形的构造环境中(如欧洲阿尔卑斯山),大地震发生的频率太低,无法在仪器和历史记录中得到充分体现。这导致了地震灾害估计的不确定性和不准确性。为了扩展地震记录,湖沼古地震学家通常会求助于大型湖泊的沉积档案,因为在这些湖泊中,地震可以被记录为物质迁移沉积和相关的浊积岩。在集水面积较小的小型湖泊(<2 平方公里)中,地震震痕通常更为细微,人们对其了解甚少,因此,这类沉积物匮乏的盆地在古地震学研究中往往被忽视。然而,这些盆地可能蕴藏着有关过去地震的更多信息,因此是对其他古地震数据的宝贵补充。在此,我们展示了 Klopeiner See 长达 18 ka 年的古地震记录,Klopeiner See 是东欧阿尔卑斯山脉的一个小型浅层地下水湖。反射地震剖面和沉积物岩芯显示,在沉积速率非常高(约 10 毫米/年)的晚冰期早期,几次大地震导致了大规模的物质流失。在全新世早期和中期,较低的沉积速率(约 0.2-0.5 毫米/年)可能降低了湖泊记录地震震动的灵敏度,因此没有发现根据该地区其他记录推断出的古地震印记。在大约公元前 3160 年,浊积岩出现了短暂的演替。约公元前 3160 年的浊积岩短时间的演替表明,曾发生过一次强烈的古地震活动。这可能导致流入的地下水系统发生永久性改变,沉积物的地球化学信号发生永久性转变。附近的沃瑟湖(Lake Wörthersee)也推断出了这样一个古地震活动增强的时期,但目前还不清楚这些活动是代表相同的地震,还是代表古地震活动的迁移。这项研究凸显了古地震学在小型地下水源湖泊中意想不到的潜力和特殊性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Contrasting sedimentary and long-lasting geochemical imprints of seismic shaking in a small, groundwater-fed lake basin (Klopeiner See, Eastern European Alps)
In slowly deforming tectonic settings (e.g., European Alps), large earthquakes occur too infrequently to be adequately represented in instrumental and historical records. This leads to uncertainties and inaccuracies of seismic hazard estimations. To extend the seismic record, lacustrine paleoseismologists usually resort to the sedimentary archive of large lakes where earthquakes can be recorded as mass-transport deposits and associated turbidites. The imprint of seismic shaking is generally more subtle and poorly understood in small lakes (<2 km2) with small catchments and therefore such sediment-starved basins are often neglected for paleoseismology. However, these basins might harbour additional information about past earthquakes, thus constituting a valuable supplement to other paleoseismic data. Here, we present the 18 ka-long paleoseismic record of Klopeiner See, a small and rather shallow groundwater-fed lake in the Eastern European Alps. Reflection seismic profiles and sediment cores reveal that several large earthquakes led to extensive mass-wasting in early Late-Glacial times when sedimentation rates were very high (~10 mm/yr). In the Early and Middle Holocene, low sedimentation rates (~0.2-0.5 mm/yr) may have decreased the lake´s sensitivity for recording seismic shaking and no imprints were found for paleo-earthquakes inferred from other records in the region. A short succession of turbidites at ca. 3160 cal BP suggests a burst of strong paleoseismic activity. This may have caused permanent modifications of inflowing ground water systems, archived as a permanent shift in the geochemical signal of the sediment. Such a period of enhanced paleoseismic activity was also inferred from the nearby Lake Wörthersee, but it remains unclear whether these represent the same earthquakes or migrating paleoseismicity. This study highlights the unexpected potential and peculiarities of paleoseismology on small ground-water fed lakes.
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