2020
DOI: 10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-6187
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Paleoseismological trenching of the eastern Rhine Graben Boundary Fault: the Ettlingen segment

Abstract: <p>Paleoseismic data on the eastern central Rhine Graben Boundary Fault, as part of the Upper Rhine Graben (URG) fault system, revealed Holocene earthquake activity with surface rupturing faults. The URG is one of the most seismically active areas in the stable continental interiors of Central Europe north of the Alps. We opened the first paleoseismic trenches N of Basel and S of Frankfurt along the ca. 300 km long eastern Rhine Graben Boundary Fault (RGBF). After extensive shallow geophysical an… Show more

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“…The Rhine graben is the region (Figure 9) that has been the most extensively studied for paleoseismological purposes since the 1990s, with 14 paleoseismic trenches [Hürtgen, 2017 (see Table A1), the most recent ones are located on the eastern border fault in the Karlsruhe area, near Ettlingen town [Reicherter et al, 2020, Ritz et al, 2021a.…”
Section: Paleoseismicity Studies In the Urgmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Rhine graben is the region (Figure 9) that has been the most extensively studied for paleoseismological purposes since the 1990s, with 14 paleoseismic trenches [Hürtgen, 2017 (see Table A1), the most recent ones are located on the eastern border fault in the Karlsruhe area, near Ettlingen town [Reicherter et al, 2020, Ritz et al, 2021a.…”
Section: Paleoseismicity Studies In the Urgmentioning
confidence: 99%