Late Quaternary slip rate of the Central Sierra Madre fault, southern California: Implications for slip partitioning and earthquake hazard

被引:10
|
作者
Burgette, Reed J. [1 ]
Hanson, Austin M. [1 ,4 ]
Scharer, Katherine M. [2 ]
Rittenour, Tammy M. [3 ]
McPhillips, Devin [2 ]
机构
[1] New Mexico State Univ, Dept Geol Sci, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA
[2] US Geol Survey, 525 S Wilson Ave, Pasadena, CA 91104 USA
[3] Utah State Univ, Dept Geol, Logan, UT 84322 USA
[4] INTERA Inc, 6000 Uptown Blvd NE,Suite 220, Albuquerque, NM 87110 USA
关键词
reverse faulting; Be-10 surface exposure dating; p-IR IRSL luminescence dating; terraces; lidar; seismic cycle deformation; METROPOLITAN LOS-ANGELES; SURFACE RUPTURE; ZONE; TECTONICS; RANGE; BASIN;
D O I
10.1016/j.epsl.2019.115907
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The Sierra Madre fault system accommodates contraction within a large restraining bend area of the San Andreas fault along the northern margin of the Los Angeles metropolitan area in southern California. Reverse slip along this fault system during earthquakes controls growth of the San Gabriel Mountains and poses a significant seismic hazard to the region. Here, we measure the late Quaternary slip rate of the Central Sierra Madre fault (CSMF) using analysis of high-resolution topography combined with cosmogenic Be-10 surface exposure dating and post-IR IRSL geochronology. We mapped terrace and fan surfaces from three drainages that cross the CSMF and correlate them based on deposit character and geomorphic position. Cosmogenic nuclide and luminescence ages are consistent amongst the three prominent surfaces offset similar to 5 to 28 m across the fault zone. Age estimates for these surfaces are 53 +21/-15 ka, 35 +/- 9 ka, and 12 +/- 5 ka based on data from two dating methods at three locations, refined by inset age relationships. Estimated slip for these geomorphic markers is more uncertain than the measured vertical separation due to uncertainties in fault dip and ranges from 7.5 +5.4/-3.1 m to 58.5 +46.3/-14.4 m. Incremental dip-slip rate estimates from different age surfaces and locations overlap within uncertainty, with median values ranging from 0.6 to 1.1 mm/yr. The average slip rate for all three generations of markers is 1.1 + 1.1/-0.4 mm/yr. This late Quaternary slip rate for the CSMF is slower than estimates based on interseismic geodetic data, and emphasizes the importance of contraction distributed across multiple structures south of the Sierra Madre fault when assessed against the geodetic shortening budget. Despite being the central portion of the broader Sierra Madre fault system, the CSMF has a slip rate similar to or lower than neighboring sections, suggesting that slip transfer onto other nearby faults control the along-strike pattern of deformation rate. Paleoseismic evidence indicates that the last earthquake on the CSMF was in the early Holocene, and the slip rate we estimate suggests that the accumulated elastic strain could produce many meters of slip in future earthquakes. (C) 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Late Pleistocene Fault Slip Rate within the Bole Basin: Insights into deformation kinematics in the Central Tian Shan
    Hu, Zongkai
    Yang, Xiaoping
    Li, An
    Yang, Haibo
    TECTONOPHYSICS, 2024, 883
  • [32] Evidence for 40-41 km of dextral slip on the southern Death Valley fault: Implications for the Eastern California shear zone and extensional tectonics
    Pavlis, Terry L.
    Trullenque, Ghislain
    GEOLOGY, 2021, 49 (07) : 767 - 772
  • [33] The Palos Verdes Fault offshore Southern California: Late Pleistocene to present tectonic geomorphology, seascape evolution, and slip rate estimate based on AUV and ROV surveys
    Brothers, Daniel S.
    Conrad, James E.
    Maier, Katherine L.
    Paull, Charles K.
    McGann, Mary
    Caress, David W.
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 2015, 120 (07) : 4734 - 4758
  • [34] Latest Quaternary slip rates of the San Bernardino strand of the San Andreas fault, southern California, from Cajon Creek to Badger Canyon
    McGill, Sally F.
    Owen, Lewis A.
    Weldon, Ray J.
    Kendrick, Katherine J.
    Burgette, Reed J.
    GEOSPHERE, 2021, 17 (05): : 1354 - 1381
  • [35] Rapid Late Quaternary Slip, Repeated Prehistoric Earthquake Rupture, and Widespread Landsliding Associated With the Karakudzhur Thrust, Central Kyrgyz Tien Shan
    Campbell, G. E.
    Walker, R. T.
    Abdrakhmatov, K.
    Carolin, S.
    Carr, A. S.
    Elliott, J. R.
    Jackson, J.
    Mackenzie, D.
    Rizza, M.
    Rodes, A.
    TECTONICS, 2019, 38 (11) : 3740 - 3764
  • [36] Holocene slip rates along the San Andreas Fault System in the San Gorgonio Pass and implications for large earthquakes in southern California
    Heermance, Richard V.
    Yule, Doug
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2017, 44 (11) : 5391 - 5400
  • [37] Structure, late Quaternary slip rate and earthquake potential of marine reverse faults along the North Westland deformation front, New Zealand
    Barnes, P. M.
    Ghisetti, F. C.
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS, 2016, 59 (01) : 157 - 175
  • [38] Late Holocene Slip Rate and Ages of Prehistoric Earthquakes along the Maacama Fault Near Willits, Mendocino County, Northern California
    Prentice, Carol S.
    Larsen, Martin C.
    Kelsey, Harvey M.
    Zachariasen, Judith
    BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2014, 104 (06) : 2966 - 2984
  • [39] Late Quaternary slip rates for the southern Elsinore fault in the Coyote Mountains, southern California from analysis of alluvial fan landforms and clast provenance, soils, and U-series ages of pedogenic carbonate
    Rockwell, T. K.
    Masana, E.
    Sharp, W. D.
    Stepancikova, P.
    Ferrater, M.
    Mertz-Kraus, Regina
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2019, 326 : 68 - 89
  • [40] Spatio-temporal behaviour of continental transform faults: implications from the late Quaternary slip history of the North Anatolian Fault, Turkey
    Zabci, Cengiz
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2019, 56 (11) : 1218 - 1238