The Concud fault is a 13-km long fault located at the eastern boundary of the Jiloca graben (Teruel, Spain)
that has been active during most of Late Pliocene and Quaternary times. Offsets measured in some dated
stratigraphic levels (3.6 Ma, Ruscinian lacustrine carbonates, displacement = 250 m; 116-169 ka, Middle
Pleistocene fluvial terrace, displacement = 39-68 m) allow to calculate the corresponding mean slip rates
since those ages: 0.07 and 0.23-0.58 mm/year, respectively. No paleoseismic study has been yet carried
out in this area. Nevertheless, through empirical correlation within fault data bases, the fault length and
the calculated slip rate allow us to approach the recurrence period (1.3 to 16.2 ka) and the coseismic
displacement (0.8 to 1.1 m). These non-directly inferred parameters are compared with observations at
an outcrop close to Teruel where deposits of the lower fluvial terrace are offset 2 m, which could represent
the latest displacement event(s) in the fault