A unique, wide-angle approach to earthquakes and their effects
PrefaceAcknowledgmentsIntroductionPart One: Earthquake Hazard Warning in Oral Tradition and Literature on the Iranian Plateau1. Place Names and Linguistic Traces Referring to Pre-Historic Earthquakes; Earthquake Hazard Warning in Oral Traditions2. Earthquake Myths3. Earthquakes and Religious Thoughts4. Ancient Earthquake Theories5. Earthquake Folklores and Legends6. Earthquakes in Epic Literature7. Earthquake Poems and Chronogrammatic Verses8. Earthquake Related InscriptionsPart Two: Dynamic Phenomena Associated with the Earthquakes on the Iranian Plateau9. Active Tectonics and Geologic Setting of the Iranian Plateau10. Archaeoseismicity11. Pre-1900 Coseismic Surface Faulting12. 1900-1963 Coseismic Surface Faulting13. 1964-1997 Coseismic Surface Faulting14. 1998-2013 Coseismic Surface Faulting15. Coseismic Blind-Fault Related Flexural-Slip Folding and Faulting at the Surface16. Patterns of the Historical Earthquake Ruptures on the Iranian Plateau17. Earthquake History of the Iranian PlateauReferences
Manuel Berberian was born on October 27, 1945 into an immigrant
Armenian ethnic-religious minority in Tehran. He received a BSc
degree in geology from the University of Tehran in 1968, and a PhD
degree in earthquake seismology and active tectonics from the
University of Cambridge, United Kingdom in June 1981. He was the
first Armenian and the second Iranian earth scientist ever to be
accepted at the University of Cambridge, UK. He is Emeritus
Professor of Geosciences at the Tehran and Tarbiat Modarres
Universities, and at present teaches at the Ocean County College,
Toms River, NJ, USA. He is a certified professional geologist in
the USA and a member of the New York Academy of Sciences and
American Geophysical Union. He is a leading international
earthquake expert on the Iranian Plateau and the Middle East. With
his wife and son he immigrated to the USA in 1990.
He is a world renowned research scientist on seismotectonics,
earthquake seismology, historical earthquakes, archaeoseismicity,
palaeo- and active-tectonics, geology, and geologic hazards of the
Iranian plateau, with 43 years of academic and research experience.
He pioneered the study of plate tectonics and seismotectonics in
Iran and was the founder of the ‘Tectonics and Seismotectonics
Research Department’ of the Geological Survey of Iran in Tehran in
1971; the first research center established in this field in the
Middle East. He has been a pioneer in the application of plate
tectonics to Iranian geology and seismology, and has been
responsible for much of what is known about the geology, tectonics,
seismotectonics, archaeoseismicity, active faulting/folding, and
seismicity of the Iranian Plateau, as well as human aspects of
earthquakes, earthquake-fault hazard and risk assessment, and
history and mythology of the ancient Iranian-Armenian ancient
civilizations.
He has authored more than 300 reports and books; out of which about
110 research studies were published as peer reviewed papers in
Europe and the USA, and 10 books in English and Persian; and has
prepared over 193 technical reports for seismic hazard and risk
assessments of major projects such as nuclear power plants,
hydroelectric dams, refineries, lifelines, and large urban
developments. He began studying archaeology and the ancient history
of Iran to use the rich archaeological and historical records to
expand the knowledge of Iranian seismicity, active faulting, and
their hazards and risks to the society. Lately he entered the
domain of environmental science and engineering in the States.
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