Dead Sea Fault
Segev A., Reznik, I., and Schattner U., 2021. Yarmouk River and vicinity, Miocene to sub-Recent magmatism on the intersection between the Dead Sea Transform and the Ash Shaam volcanic field. Geological Magazine. 1-25
Weinberger R., Schattner U., Medvedev B., Frieslander U., Sneh A., Harlavan Y. and Gros M. 2011. A spatial and temporal transition from pure to convergent strike-slip faulting imaged by high-resolution seismic reflection data across the Dead Sea Fault. Israel Journal of Earth Science, 58.
Rosenthal, M., Ben-Avraham, Z., and Schattner U., 2019. Almost a clear-cut – a case study of the cross point between a continental transform and a rift. Tectonophysics 761, 46-64. doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2019.04.012
Lazar M., Ben-Avraham Z. and Schattner U., 2006. Formation of sequential basin along a strike slip fault - geophysical observations from the Dead Sea basin. Tectonophysics, 421/1-2, 53-69.
Ben-Avraham, Z., Lazar, M., Schattner, U. and Marco S., 2005. The Dead Sea Fault and its effect on civilization. In: F. Wenzel (ed.), Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences: Perspectives in Modern Seismology, Springer Verlag Heidelberg, v. 105, p. 147-170.
Schattner U. and Weinberger R., 2008. A mid-Pleistocene deformation transition in the Hula basin, northern Israel: Implications for the tectonic evolution of the Dead Sea Fault. Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems, 9, Q07009.
Lazar M. and Schattner U., 2010. Landscape evolution and hominin dispersal. Quaternary Science Reviews, 29, 1495-1500.
Coianiz, L., Schattner, U., Ben-Avraham, Z. and Lazar, M., 2019. Between plate and salt tectonics - New stratigraphic constraints on the architecture and timing of the Dead Sea basin during the Late Quaternary. Basin Research 00: 1-16; doi.org/10.1111/bre.12387
Ginzburg A., Reshef M., Ben-Avraham Z. and Schattner U., 2006. The style of transverse faulting in the Dead Sea basin from seismic reflection data: The Amazyahu fault. Israel Journal of Earth Science, 55/3, 129-139.
Baer G., Schattner U., Wach D., Sandwell D., Wdowinski S., Friedman S., 2002. The lowest place on Earth is subsiding - An InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) perspective, Geological Society of America Bulletin, 114/1, 12-23.