Frédérique Leclerc
@frederiqueleclerc.bsky.social
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Ass. Prof. at Université Côte d'Azur - Earth Sciences - Active Tectonics
reposted by
Frédérique Leclerc
Mika McKinnon
7 months ago
File under: Whoa Cross-file under: Human-Scale Geology
add a skeleton here at some point
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reposted by
Frédérique Leclerc
Jodi Fox
9 months ago
Permanent position going….
careers.utas.edu.au/cw/en/job/50...
🧪⚒️
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Current Vacancies
https://careers.utas.edu.au/cw/en/job/500373/lecturer-or-senior-lecturer-in-marine-remote-sensing
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reposted by
Frédérique Leclerc
Javier Escartín
about 1 year ago
Back to earthquakes and ruptures underwater - and here is a blog entry for the 1956 Amorgos Earthquake and the project behind the paper by
@frederiqueleclerc.bsky.social
and her team:
communities.springernature.com/posts/lookin...
(and the original post:
bsky.app/profile/jesc...
)
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Looking for the origin of one of the largest Mediterranean tsunamigenic earthquakes : Amorgos, July 9th, 1956, Greece.
In the past few years, marine geologists have new eyes to capture seafloor in detail! Different types of deep-sea vehicles can now map the sea bed, at resolutions never reached before, and in particu...
https://communities.springernature.com/posts/looking-for-the-origin-of-one-of-the-largest-mediterranean-tsunamigenic-earthquakes-amorgos-july-9th-1956-greece
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reposted by
Frédérique Leclerc
Javier Escartín
about 1 year ago
Earthquakes ruptures at the seafloor are elusive. Using robots (autonomous & tele-operated) Fréderique Leclerc (GeoAzur) and her team identified the M. 7.5 1956 Amorgos Earthquake rupture, measuring a coseismic displacement of 9-15m:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-024-01839-0
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