Central and Western Anatolia form a continental back-arc region related to the Hellenic-Cyprus convergent plate boundary of the Anatolian and African Plates. The Akşehir-Afyon Graben (AAG), the easternmost extension of the west Anatolian horstgraben system, is located at the junction of Central Anatolia and eastern limb of the Isparta Angle. The AAG is 4–20 km wide and 90 km long. It trends west-northwest-east-southeast and is an actively growing rift containing two sedimentary infills of continental fluviolacustrine origin bounded on both sides by oblique-slip normal faults. The older infill is folded, thrust faulted and early Late Miocene in age. The younger infill, which is nearly horizontally bedded, is Plio-Quaternary in age and rests on the older infill with angular unconformity. The deformation of the older infill and the angular unconformity indicate a Late Miocene phase of compression, which separates two extensional periods. The second phase of extension has lasted since the Pliocene and is part of the current extensional neotectonic regime of both west Central Anatolia and the Isparta Angle, despite being previously reported as a compressional neotectonic regime.The graben-bounding Akşehir Fault Zone (AFZ) and the Karagöztepe Fault Zone display well-preserved fault surfaces and slickenlines. Although stereographic plots of the fault slip data show that the graben-bounding structures are oblique-slip normal faults, the AFZ has also been described as a single reverse fault. Both the field and seismic data, particularly the 1921 Argıthanı-Akşehir and 1946 Ilgın-Argıthanı earthquakes, indicate that the AAG is an active neotectonic structure. However, it can also be interpreted to lie in a seismic gap when its rate of seismicity is compared with that of the Gediz-Simav Graben forming its west-northwestern extension.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.