Remote Sensing (Jan 2015)

The Disappearance of Helike-Classical Greece—New Remote Sensing and Geological Evidence

  • George Ferentinos,
  • George Papatheodorou,
  • Maria Geraga,
  • Dimitris Christodoulou,
  • Elias Fakiris,
  • Margarita Iatrou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs70201263
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
pp. 1263 – 1278

Abstract

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Helike, the Achaean Dodecapolis capital, in the Corinth Gulf, Greece, was, according to historical sources, devastated and disappeared from sight during an earthquake followed by sea invasion on to land in 373/372 B.C. A marine remote sensing survey, which was carried out to examine a landslide following a 6.2 R earthquake in 1995, that affected the coastal and near-shore delta plain zone on which Helike stood, accompanied by onshore borehole data, enabled us to postulate the geological processes leading to the Helike catastrophe. Helike was initially leveled during a 6 to 6.7 R earthquake; it is postulated to have then submerged following a translational landslide caused by liquefaction. This Helike catastrophe model is consistent with historical sources and current views regarding the expected geological hazards magnitude in the Gulf.

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