“…Soft-sediment deformation structures related to earthquakes (i.e., seismites) are often preserved in deposits with contrasting granulo metry, such as the alternating sands and argiUaceous beds that characterize many alluvial plains, lacustrine environments, coastal and deltaic systems, and turbidite settings (e.g., Ringrose, 1989;Obermeier et al, 1989Obermeier et al, , 1993Seth et al, 1990;Alfaro et al, 1997;Enzel et al, 2000;Alfaro et al, 2002;Rossetti and Santos, 2003;jewell and Ettensohn, 2004;Singh and jain, 2007;Fortuin and Dabrio, 2008;Perucca et al, 2009). More rarely, they have been described from more homogeneous sediments, such as fine aeolian sands (e.g., Moretti, 2000), sabkha evaporites (Bachmann and Aref, 2005), peritidal carbonates (Kahle, 2002), or lacustrine laminated deposits (e.g., Calvo et al, 1998).…”