The seismogenic structure of the 2013-2014 Matese seismic sequence, Southern Italy: Implication for the geometry of the Apennines active extensional belt
Seismological, geological and geodetic data have been integrated to characterize the seismogenic
structure of the late 2013-early 2014 moderate energy (maximum local magnitude
MLmax = 4.9) seismic sequence that struck the interior of the Matese Massif, part of the Southern
Apennines active extensional belt. The sequence, heralded by a ML = 2.7 foreshock, was
characterized by two main shocks with ML = 4.9 and ML = 4.2, respectively, which occurred
at a depth of ∼17–18 km. The sequence was confined in the 10–20 km depth range, significantly
deeper than the 1997–1998 sequence which occurred fewkm away on the northeastern
side of the massif above ∼15 km depth. The depth distribution of the 2013–14 sequence is
almost continuous, albeit a deeper (16–19 km) and a shallower (11–15 km) group of events
can be distinguished, the former including the main shocks and the foreshock. The epicentral
distribution formed a ∼10 km long NNW–SSE trending alignment, which almost parallels
the surface trace of late Pliocene–Quaternary southwest-dipping normal faults with a poor
evidence of current geological and geodetic deformation. We built an upper crustal model
profile for the eastern Matese massif through integration of geological data, oil exploration
well logs and seismic tomographic images. Projection of hypocentres on the profile suggests
that the seismogenic volume falls mostly within the crystalline crust and subordinately
within the Mesozoic sedimentary cover of Apulia, the underthrust foreland of the Southern
Apennines fold and thrust belt. Geological data and the regional macroseismic field of the
sequence suggest that the southwest-dipping nodal plane of the main shocks represents the
rupture surface that we refer to here as the Matese fault. The major lithological discontinuity
between crystalline and sedimentary rocks of Apulia likely confined upward the rupture extent
of the Matese fault. Repeated coseismic failure represented by the deeper group of events
in the sequence, activated in a passive fashion the overlying ∼11–15 km deep section of the
upper crustal normal faults. We consider the southwest-dipping Matese fault representative
of a poorly known type of seismogenic structures in the Southern Apennines, where extensional
seismogenesis and geodetic strain accumulation occur more frequently on NE-dipping,
shallower-rooted faults. This is the case of the Boiano Basin fault located on the northern side
of the massif, to which the 1997–1998 sequence is related. The close proximity of the two
types of seismogenic faults at the Matese Massif is related to the complex crustal architecture
generated by the Pliocene–early Pleistocene contractional and transpressional tectonics
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