“…Similar seismicity, with right lateral strike-slip kinematics and deep hypocenters, was observed with the Monteleone di Puglia (ML 4.9) earthquake of the 6 May 1971 [85] (Gasparini et al, 1985), during the two sequences that struck the region around Potenza (Basilicata) between 1990 (ML 5.7) and 1991 (ML 5.2; [68]) and with the 27 September 2012, ML 4.1 Benevento earthquake [86]. Moreover, pure right-lateral slip between 10 km and 24 km depth over a nearly vertical east-west fault occurred in the 2002 San Giuliano di Puglia (eastern Molise) sequence [42] [69,86]. In fact, the Apenninic area where the Apennine units overthrust the Apulian crust is characterized by an articulated rheological layering, with two brittle layers located at different depths: a brittle upper crust (9 km to 12 km thick), with the Apennine extensional seismicity, overlaying a ductile middle and lower crust, and a thick brittle, possibly seismogenic crust (21-23 km thick, the Apulia foreland including the sedimentary cover and part of the middle crust) which overlies a ductile lower crust [69].…”