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Journal ArticleDOI

A discussion on the structure and evolution of the Red Sea and the nature of the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and Ethiopia rift junction - The shear along the Dead Sea rift

TLDR
In this paper, it was shown that while none of the pre-Tertiary sedimentary or igneous units extend right across the rift, all of them resume a reasonable palaeographical configuration once the east side of the rift is placed 105 km south of its present position.
Abstract
Recent surface and subsurface geological investigations in Israel and Jordan provide new data for the re-examination of Dubertret’s (1932) hypothesis of the left-hand shear along the Dead Sea rift. It is found that while none of the pre-Tertiary sedimentary or igneous rock units extend right across the rift, all of them resume a reasonable palaeographical configuration once the east side of the rift is placed 105 km south of its present position. It is therefore concluded that the 105 km post-Cretaceous, left-hand shear along the Dead Sea rift is well established. The 40 to 45 km offset of Miocene rocks and smaller offsets of younger features indicate an average shear movement rate of 0.4 to 0.6 cm a -1 during the last 7 to 10 Ma. Unfortunately, the 60 km pre-Miocene movement cannot be dated yet. Along the Arava and Gulf of Aqaba and in Lebanon the shear is divided over a wide fault zone within and outside the rift.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Coastal alluvial fans (fan deltas) of the Gulf of Aqaba (Gulf of Eilat), Red Sea

A.B. Hayward
- 01 Apr 1985 - 
TL;DR: The Gulf of Aqaba is dominated by alluvial fans that prograde directly into the sea and can be subdivided into four types: (1) largely inactive fans that merge into a braided fluvial system and pass seaward into sabkha flats, lagoons, mangroves and fringing reefs; (2) large alluial fans with one major entrenched channel and a fringing reef with a large incised canyon; (3) medium-sized (1.5 km long, 3.4 km wide) moderate to highly active
Journal ArticleDOI

The sedimentary evolution of the red sea and gulf of aden

TL;DR: Onset of rifting and flooding by marine waters, occurred in the late Oligocene in the Gulf of Aden and southern Red Sea as discussed by the authors, and continued rifting established marine conditions throughout the system by the early Miocene.
Journal ArticleDOI

Uplift and a possible moho offset across the Dead Sea transform

TL;DR: In this article, a 320 km long gravity and topography profile perpendicular to the Dead Sea transform has been developed to understand the morphology and the crustal structure of the Red Sea spreading center, and the gravity field and the topography in the region surrounding the profile are generally parallel to the trend of the dead Sea transform.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geology of Mediterranean Shelf of Israel

TL;DR: The continental shelf of Israel ranges in width from 3 to 25 km as discussed by the authors and is underlain by 4,000-9,000 m of Mesozoic and Tertiary strata that in part represent a westward extension of the better known onshore sequence of post-Triassic rocks.
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Structure of the earth's crust in Jordan from potential field data

TL;DR: In this paper, gravity and magnetic data were collected and used to study the crustal structure of Jordan and three new geophysical maps of Jordan were created: a Moho discontinuity map, a crystalline basement surface map, and a map showing the lowest limit of magnetic blocks.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Age and Rate of the Sinistral Movement along the Dead Sea Rift

TL;DR: The results of geophysical and oceanographical research on the age and rate of opening of the Red Sea are compared here with the geological and palaeogeographical indications of the component of this movement along the Dead Sea Rift as mentioned in this paper.

La Géologie d’une partie du Liban Sud

TL;DR: The region haute du Liban Sud, de lun a l'Ouest sur le plateau cenomanien cotier and penetre largement a l’Est dans la Bekaa as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Problemes de la geologie du Levant

TL;DR: In this article, the authors outline problems relating to the structure and the Cretaceous-Oligocene stratigraphy of the coastal ranges (and intervening basin) bordering the Mediterranean in the Middle East.
Journal ArticleDOI

Old Shore Lines of Palestine

G. S. Blake
- 01 Feb 1937 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors brought up to date the known history of the earth's crust in the south-east Levant, and presented a map of the Levant's surface and its history.
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