Max V. Müller
ETH Zurich
7 Papers
58 Citations
Max V. Müller is an academic researcher from ETH Zurich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hellenic arc & Eurasian Plate. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Crustal strain in central Greece from repeated GPS measurements in the interval 1989–1997
Peter Clarke,R. R. Davies,Philip England,Barry Parsons,H. Billiris,Demitris Paradissis,G. Veis,Paul Cross,Paul Denys,V. Ashkenazi,Richard Bingley,Hans-Gert Kahle,Max V. Müller,Pierre Briole +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a 66-station GPS network spanning central Greece, first observed in 1989, has been occupied fully on three occasions: June 1989, October 1991 and May 1993.
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The Kephalonia Transform Fault and the rotation of the Apulian Platform: Evidence from satellite geodesy
TL;DR: In this paper, a collaborative GPS-project is described to determine recent crustal movements and deformations across the NE Ionian Sea, which is characterized by rifting in the African Foreland (Pelagian Sea), subduction along the Calabrian and West Hellenic Arcs, rotation of the Italian peninsula and distributed normal faulting in Central Greece.
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Monitoring West Hellenic Arc Tectonics and Calabrian Arc Tectonics (“What a Cat”) Using the Global Positioning System
Hans-Gert Kahle,Max V. Müller,Stephan Mueller,George Veis,Haris Billiris,Demitris Paradissis,Hermann Drewes,Klaus Kaniuth,K Stuber,H Tremel,Susanna Zerbini,G. Corrado,Grazia Verrone +12 more
- 17 Mar 2013
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Dynamics of the Solid Earth (DOSE): The Italian-German-Greek-Swiss Contribution to NASA's DOSE Project in the Calabrian/Hellenic Arcs
Hans-Gert Kahle,Max V. Müller,Stephan Mueller,Hermann Drewes,Klaus Kaniuth,K Stuber,H Tremel,Susanna Zerbini,George Veis,Haris Billiris,Demitris Paradissis,Chris Reigber,Gennaro Corrado,Grazia Verrone +13 more
- 01 Jan 1993
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the first analysis of the deformation field in the region of the Calabrian and West Hellenic Arcs in the Mediterranean-Alpine belt of about 5 to 10 mm/y.
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