EARTHQUAKE ACTIVITY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP WITH GEOLOGICALLY RECENT MOTION IN DENMARK

Citation
S. Gregersen et al., EARTHQUAKE ACTIVITY AND ITS RELATIONSHIP WITH GEOLOGICALLY RECENT MOTION IN DENMARK, Tectonophysics, 257(2-4), 1996, pp. 265-273
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Geochemitry & Geophysics
Journal title
ISSN journal
00401951
Volume
257
Issue
2-4
Year of publication
1996
Pages
265 - 273
Database
ISI
SICI code
0040-1951(1996)257:2-4<265:EAAIRW>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
Maps of Scandinavian earthquake activity show a rather abrupt cut-off towards the southwest in the middle of Denmark. The southwestern part of Denmark belongs to an inactive area. While the Danish earthquakes o ccur in response to the same stress field as those in Fennoscandia, th ey are differently connected to the geologically recent motion. The 2- 10 earthquakes per year in the Danish area, of magnitudes between 2 an d 4.5, are located in the border zone between the Fennoscandian Shield and the Danish Basin and in the central northwestern part of the Dani sh Basin. The earthquakes in Kattegat, between Sweden and Denmark, are located in the Sorgenfrei-Tornquist Zone, which was uplifted in Late Cretaceous-Tertiary times. The earthquakes of this zone have depths be tween 0 and 15 km. They occur along the edges of blocks, which have ex perienced motion within Quaternary times. Contrary to this the most ac tive area, a rather narrow NW-SE-trending zone from the shoulder of Jy lland northwestwards into the Skagerrak and the North Sea, is located approximately in the axial part of the Danish Basin, A tentative corre lation may be made with a fault zone which is thought to have been act ive from the Permian to the present. That fault zone has been a contro lling factor for the distribution of the Tertiary and possibly also th e Quaternary deposits. It seems though that no direct link exists betw een the faults observed in the pre-Upper Permian basement and shallow faults in the Tertiary and Quaternary deposits. The shallow faults are probably formed as response to movements in the Upper permian salt ma sses, which in turn may be activated by faulting at deeper levels. Fur ther investigations are necessary to establish whether and how the sha llow faults in the sediments are related to the earthquakes which occu r deeper in the crystalline rocks, some as deep as 30-40 km, i.e. belo w the Moho.