Soft-sediment deformation structures interpreted as seismites in the kolankaya formation, denizli basin (SW Turkey)
Loading...
Files
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Open Access Color
GOLD
Green Open Access
Yes
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
The NW-trending Denizli basin of the SW Turkey is one of the neotectonic grabens in the Aegean extensional province. It is bounded by normal faults on both southern and northern margins. The basin is filled by Neogene and Quaternary terrestrial deposits. Late Miocene- Late Pliocene aged Kolankaya formation crops out along the NW trending Karakova uplift in the Denizli basin. It is a typical fluviolacustrine succession that thickens and coarsens upward, comprising poorly consolidated sand, gravelly sand, siltstone and marl. Various soft-sediment deformation structures occur in the formation, especially in fine- to medium grained sands, silts and marls: load structures, flame structures, clastic dikes (sand and gravely-sand dike), disturbed layers, laminated convolute beds, slumps and synsedimentary faulting. The deformation mechanism and driving force for the soft-sediment deformation are related essentially to gravitational instability, dewatering, liquefaction-liquidization, and brittle deformation. Field data and the wide lateral extent of the structures as well as regional geological data show that most of the deformation is related to seismicity and the structures are interpreted as seismites. The existence of seismites in the Kolankaya Formation is evidence for continuing tectonic activity in the study area during the Neogene and is consistent with the occurrence of the paleoearthquakes of magnitude >5. © 2014 Savaş Topal and Mehmet Özkul.
Description
Keywords
limestone, classification, clay, dewatering, geographic and geological parameters, gravity, liquefaction, liquid, Neogene, Review, river basin, sand, sediment, seismite, soft sediment deformation, Turkey (republic), Upper Miocene, Upper Pliocene, human, theoretical model, Geologic Sediments, Humans, Models, Theoretical, Technology, Geologic Sediments, 550, liquefaction, Science, geographic and geological parameters, Review, sand, Review Article, Turkey (republic), *Geologic Sediments; Humans; *Models, Theoretical, Theoretical, Upper Miocene, Models, Humans, liquid, human, limestone, theoretical model, T, Q, R, clay, Models, Theoretical, gravity, seismite, classification, sediment, soft sediment deformation, Upper Pliocene, Medicine, Neogene, dewatering, river basin
Fields of Science
01 natural sciences, 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Citation
WoS Q
Scopus Q

OpenCitations Citation Count
23
Source
Volume
2014
Issue
Start Page
1
End Page
13
PlumX Metrics
Citations
CrossRef : 15
Scopus : 39
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 38
SCOPUS™ Citations
40
checked on Jun 03, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
32
checked on Jun 03, 2026
Page Views
47
checked on Jun 03, 2026
Downloads
20
checked on Jun 03, 2026
Google Scholar™



