Esmaeil Shabanian
Aix-Marseille University
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Featured researches published by Esmaeil Shabanian.
Tectonics | 2009
Esmaeil Shabanian; Olivier Bellier; Lionel Siame; Nicolas Arnaud; Mohammad Reza Abbassi; Jean-Jacques Cochemé
In this paper, a combined approach of geomorphic analyses, detailed geological mapping on SPOT 5 satellite images and field surveys, complemented by radiometric dating (Ar-40/Ar-39) allows proposing a new and consistent tectonic configuration for the northeastern Arabia-Eurasia collision zone. It favors a simple strike-slip faulting mechanism in NE Iran accommodating the northward motion of central Iran with respect to Eurasia between the Binalud and Kopeh Dagh mountains. Our results demonstrate that similar to 2 mm/a (similar to 25%) of this northward motion has been transferred from the Binalud to the Kopeh Dagh through the Meshkan Transfer Zone since similar to 5 Ma. The modern state of stress deduced from fault kinematics analyses shows N30 degrees E trending maximum stress axis and confirms a dominant strike-slip faulting mechanism. Combining our geological data with other available data, we conclude that kinematics of deformation can be appropriately described by rigid block faulting in NE Iran; instead, the continuous deformation as it has been thought during the last 3 decades.
Geology | 2009
Lionel Siame; Esmaeil Shabanian; Olivier Bellier
[Hollingsworth et al. (2008)][1] proposed a “new” kinematic model for the complicated tectonic pattern in the eastern South Caspian Sea region. Our Comment is focused on the Ashkhabad fault and the Kopeh Dagh Mountains, examining the data and hypothesis used by the authors to support their model
Tectonics | 2016
Yassaman Farbod; Esmaeil Shabanian; Olivier Bellier; Mohammad Reza Abbassi; Régis Braucher; Lucilla Benedetti; Didier Bourlès; Khaled Hessami
The Doruneh Fault System (DFS) is one of the major active strike-slip faults in the Arabia-Eurasia collision zone. Despite its geological activity, no large (M ≥ 6.5) historical or instrumental earthquakes have been recorded along it. To date, the rate and distribution of slip, as well as the seismic behavior of the DFS, have been unknown. We reconstructed 67 geomorphic offsets recorded by three successive alluvial abandonment surfaces (Q1, Q2, and Q3) displaced along the western (WFZ) and central (CFZ) fault zones. The determined ages of ~12, ~36, and ~120 ka, using in situ-produced 10 Be and 36 Cl cosmogenic nuclides for theses surfaces, allowed to estimate three sets of individual left-lateral slip rates and consequently to describe the spatiotemporal distribution of slip along the CFZ and WFZ. The slip rates averaged over time intervals of ~36 and ~120 ka reveal variable slip rates along length but similar slip rates at a point with a maximum rate of ~8.2 mm/yr. During the Holocene, however, the fault slip behavior appears more complex, with a maximum rate of ~5.3 mm/yr. The CFZ is divided into two ~4 km apart segments, with symmetrical slip distributions relative to a persistent boundary, which has not been ruptured over the last ~12 ka. The maximum length of seismic fault segments varies from 70 to 100 km, which could produce earthquakes with a magnitude of M w 7.2–7.4. This emphasizes the necessity of segmentation models for long strike-slip faults that may not necessarily rupture along their whole length during a single earthquake.
Geophysical Journal International | 2009
Esmaeil Shabanian; Lionel Siame; Olivier Bellier; Lucilla Benedetti; Mohammad Reza Abbassi
Tectonophysics | 2010
Esmaeil Shabanian; Olivier Bellier; Mohammad Reza Abbassi; Lionel Siame; Yassaman Farbod
Tectonics | 2012
Esmaeil Shabanian; Valerio Acocella; Anna Gioncada; Habibollah Ghasemi; Olivier Bellier
Geophysical Journal International | 2009
Christine Authemayou; Olivier Bellier; Dominique Chardon; Lucilla Benedetti; Zaman Malekzade; Christelle Claude; Bernard Angeletti; Esmaeil Shabanian; Mohammad Reza Abbassi
Tectonics | 2011
Yassaman Farbod; Olivier Bellier; Esmaeil Shabanian; Mohammad Reza Abbassi
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology | 2012
Morteza Djamali; Alex Baumel; Simon Brewer; Stephen T. Jackson; Joachim W. Kadereit; Sara López-Vinyallonga; Iraj Mehregan; Esmaeil Shabanian; Aleksandra N. Simakova
Tectonophysics | 2011
Bita Javidfakhr; Olivier Bellier; Esmaeil Shabanian; Seiran Ahmadian; Abdollah Saidi