All Stories

  1. Archeoseismicity
  2. Preface
  3. Acknowledgments
  4. Earthquake Myths
  5. References
  6. 1900–1963 Coseismic Surface Faulting
  7. Ancient Earthquake Theories
  8. Patterns of Historical Earthquake Ruptures on the Iranian Plateau
  9. 1964–1997 Coseismic Surface Faulting
  10. Pre-1900 Coseismic Surface Faulting
  11. Earthquake-Related Inscriptions
  12. Earthquakes in Epic Literature
  13. 1998–2013 Coseismic Surface Faulting
  14. Earthquake Poems and Chronogrammatic Verses
  15. Place Names and Linguistic Traces Referring to Prehistoric Earthquakes
  16. Earthquake Folklore and Legends
  17. Active Tectonics and Geologic Setting of the Iranian Plateau
  18. Coseismic, Blind, Reverse-Fault-Related, Flexural-Slip Folding and Faulting at the Surface
  19. Earthquakes and Religious Thoughts
  20. Earthquake History of Iran
  21. Archeoseismicity and environmental crises at the Sialk Mounds, Central Iranian Plateau, since the Early Neolithic
  22. The Rudbār Mw 7.3 earthquake of 1990 June 20; seismotectonics, coseismic and geomorphic displacements, and historic earthquakes of the western ‘High-Alborz’, Iran
  23. The 2003 Bam Urban Earthquake: A Predictable Seismotectonic Pattern Along the Western Margin of the Rigid Lut Block, Southeast Iran
  24. Active tectonics of the South Caspian Basin
  25. Active tectonics of the South Caspian Basin
  26. Contribution of archaeological data to studies of earthquake history in the Iranian Plateau
  27. Seismic Sources of the Transcaucasian Historical Earthquakes
  28. Master “blind” thrust faults hidden under the Zagros folds: active basement tectonics and surface morphotectonics
  29. Coseismic fault-related folding during the South Golbaf earthquake of November 20, 1989, in southeast Iran
  30. Ground rupture of Iran's catastrophic June 20, 1990 earthquake
  31. The southern Caspian: A compressional depression floored by a trapped, modified oceanic crust"
  32. Late Cretaceous and early Miocene Andean-type plutonic activity in northern Makran and Central Iran
  33. Comment on the paper A. Mohajer-Ashjai and A. A. Nowroozi “The Tabas Earthquake of September 16, 1978 in east-central Iran”, G.R.L. No. 9L0391
  34. Towards a paleogeography and tectonic evolution of Iran: Reply
  35. THE SOURCE PARAMETERS, SURFACE DEFORMATION AND TECTONIC SETTING OF THREE RECENT EARTHQUAKES: THESSALONKI (GREECE), TABAS-E-GOLSHAN (IRAN) AND CARLISLE (U.K.)
  36. Towards a paleogeography and tectonic evolution of Iran
  37. Active faulting and tectonics of Iran
  38. Tectono-plutonic episodes in Iran
  39. Evaluation of the instrumental and relocated epicentres of Iranian earthquakes
  40. TABAS-E-GOLSHAN (IRAN) CATASTROPHIC EARTHQUAKE OF 16 SEPTEMBER 1978; A PRELIMINARY FIELD REPORT