The Ligurian sea, at the France–Italy boarder of the Mediterranean Sea, has experienced in the past numerous submarine landslides within its very near continental slope, the continental shelf being very narrow. The most recent occurred on the 1979 October 16 near Nice international airport and generated tsunami waves of order 3 m of amplitude...
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March 30, 2010 (v1)Journal articleUploaded on: December 4, 2022
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December 2006 (v1)Conference paper
The eastern part of the French Mediterranean coast represents a moderate but sustained seismogenic region. This area comprises both the Alpine Arc and the Liguria See geological provinces. In the last half century, destructive earthquakes with intensities ranging between VII and IX have been experienced several times. Among them, the biggest...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
2006 (v1)Journal article
In the Eastern Mediterranean, offshore Egypt, the Nile continental margin is characterized by a large deep water turbiditic system known as the Nile Deep Sea Fan. This post-Miocene terrigenous construction covers an approximately 10 km-thick sedimentary pile, including 1–3 km of Messinian salt layers. Systematically collected swath bathymetric...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
2007 (v1)Book section
A large-scale mass-transport deposit (MTD) called Sl6 was recognized on the upper slope of the western Nile margin, downslope from of a 30 km-long scarp located along the outer shelf. Regional mapping indicated that this MTD extends on nearly 505 km2 and involved about 14 km3 of Pleistocene-Holocene sediment. Sl6 was triggered between 10 and 9...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
April 2, 2008 (v1)Conference paper
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Uploaded on: December 4, 2022