G
G. Veis
Researcher at National Technical University of Athens
Publications - 16
Citations - 3899
G. Veis is an academic researcher from National Technical University of Athens. The author has contributed to research in topics: Seismic moment & Hellenic arc. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 16 publications receiving 3722 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Global Positioning System constraints on plate kinematics and dynamics in the eastern Mediterranean and Caucasus
Simon McClusky,S. Balassanian,Aykut Barka,Coskun Demir,Semih Ergintav,Ivan Georgiev,O. Gurkan,Michael W. Hamburger,K. Hurst,Hans-Gert Kahle,Kim A. Kastens,G. Kekelidze,Robert W. King,V. Kotzev,Onur Lenk,Salah Mahmoud,A. Mishin,M. Nadariya,A. Ouzounis,Demitris Paradissis,Yannick Peter,M. Prilepin,Robert Reilinger,I. Sanli,H. Seeger,A. Tealeb,M. N. Toksoz,G. Veis +27 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present and interpret GPS measurements of crustal motions for the period 1988-1997 at 189 sites extending east-west from the Caucasus mountains to the Adriatic Sea and north-south from the southern edge of the Eurasian plate to the northern edge of Africa.
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Geodetic determination of the kinematics of central Greece with respect to Europe: Implications for eastern Mediterranean tectonics
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a new satellite laser ranging/global positioning system (SLR/GPS) solution at seven sites in Anatolia and Aegea to obtain a better definition of the extrusion motion of the Anatolian-Aegean block with respect to Europe.
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Active deformation of the Corinth rift, Greece: Results from repeated Global Positioning System surveys between 1990 and 1995
Pierre Briole,Alexis Rigo,Hélène Lyon-Caen,Jean-Claude Ruegg,K. Papazissi,C. Mitsakaki,Amalia Balodimou,G. Veis,Denis Hatzfeld,Anne Deschamps +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors carried out seven Global Positioning System (GPS) campaigns in the Corinth rift area in order to constrain the spatial and temporal crustal deformation of this active zone.
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The Ms = 6.2, June 15, 1995 Aigion earthquake (Greece): evidence for low angle normal faulting in the Corinth rift
Pascal Bernard,Pierre Briole,Bertrand Meyer,Hélène Lyon-Caen,J.-M. Gomez,Christel Tiberi,Catherine Berge,Rodolphe Cattin,Denis Hatzfeld,C. Lachet,B. Lebrun,Anne Deschamps,Françoise Courboulex,Christophe Larroque,Alexis Rigo,Didier Massonnet,P. Papadimitriou,J. Kassaras,D. Diagourtas,Konstantinos Makropoulos,G. Veis,E. Papazisi,C. Mitsakaki,Vassilios Karakostas,Eleftheria Papadimitriou,D. Papanastassiou,M. Chouliaras,G. Stavrakakis +27 more
TL;DR: In this article, a multidisciplinary study of the 6.2, 1995, June 15, Aigion earthquake (Gulf of Corinth, Greece) is presented, where all available data from seismology (local, regional and teleseismic records of the mainshock and of aftershocks), geodesy (GPS and SAR interferometry), and tectonics is used to constrain the rupture geometry.
Journal ArticleDOI
Crustal strain in central Greece from repeated GPS measurements in the interval 1989–1997
Peter Clarke,R. R. Davies,Philip England,Barry Parsons,H. Billiris,Demitris Paradissis,G. Veis,Paul Cross,Paul Denys,V. Ashkenazi,Richard Bingley,Hans-Gert Kahle,Max V. Müller,Pierre Briole +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a 66-station GPS network spanning central Greece, first observed in 1989, has been occupied fully on three occasions: June 1989, October 1991 and May 1993.