Strike-slip fault system in the Earth’s crust of the Bering Sea: A relic of boundary between the Eurasian and North American lithospheric plates

Geotectonics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 255-272 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. D. Chekhovich ◽  
O. G. Sheremet ◽  
M. V. Kononov
Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minhee Choi ◽  
David W. Eaton ◽  
Eva Enkelmann

The Denali fault, a transcurrent fault system that extends from northwestern Canada across Alaska toward the Bering Sea, is partitioned into segments that exhibit variable levels of historical seismicity. A pair of earthquakes (M 6.2 and 6.3) on 1 May 2017, in proximity to the Eastern Denali fault (EDF), exhibited source mechanisms and stress conditions inconsistent with expectations for strike-slip fault activation. Precise relocation of ~1500 aftershocks revealed distinct fault strands that are oblique to the EDF. Calculated patterns of Coulomb stress show that the first earthquake likely triggered the second one. The EDF parallels the Fairweather transform, which separates the obliquely colliding Yakutat microplate from North America. In our model, inboard transfer of stress is deforming and shortening the mountainous region between the EDF and the Fairweather transform. This is supported by historical seismicity concentrated southwest of the EDF, suggesting that it now represents a structural boundary that controls regional deformation but is no longer an active fault.


Geotectonics ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 515-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu. G. Leonov ◽  
Yu. A. Volozh ◽  
M. P. Antipov ◽  
T. N. Kheraskova

2021 ◽  
Vol 929 (1) ◽  
pp. 012011
Author(s):  
V G Zhemchuzhnikov ◽  
A N Sirazhev

Abstract The Main Karatau fault is a classical crustal strike-slip zone. It originated as a continental rift structure in the Late Proterozoic and had been developed incessantly for almost 1 billion years as inherited structure. The fault was subjected to polyphase deformations associated with both dextral and sinistral shifts. The Main Karatau fault crosses the Earth’s crust, including the structures of granite-metamorphic layer and granulite-basitic layer and fades without crossing the Moho discontunious. The amplitude of displacement of the Syr-Daria and Chu-Sarysu blocks relative to each other along the Main Karatau fault is estimated at approximately 200 km.


2021 ◽  
Vol 873 (1) ◽  
pp. 012097
Author(s):  
Maulidia Ain Bening ◽  
David P. Sahara ◽  
Dian Kusumawati ◽  
Wahyu Triyoso ◽  
Sri Widiyantoro ◽  
...  

Abstract The crust, when viewed over a long period, moves towards one another. Crusts might experience sudden slip on a fault plane and caused fractures or cracks. There are three different types of faults, normal, reverse, and strike-slip faults. Induced stress due to sudden rupture on fault planes capable of creating stress and need to be measured quantitatively to comprehend the earthquake process. To understand the stress that occurs in strike-slip faults in the earth’s crust, the previous researchers study the use of elastic materials as the material of the earth’s crust, so that the earth crust’s deformation is elastic. However, elastic material has linear stress and strain relationship that results in reversible deformations or returns to their original shape. This material is not suitable for modeling the earth’s crust’s long-term deformation, where the deformation of the earth’s crust can be permanent, so a model is needed to solve this problem. In this study, we will compare the stress in the strike-slip fault in the upper crust with elastic materials, while the lower crust and upper mantle have viscoelastic materials compared to purely elastic materials through numerical simulations. This comparison is made to see the comparison between the two approaches with the earth’s layers’ actual state. The two models is chosen to represent the different failure processes of the earth crust, i.e. the elastic deformation part describes the response to stress in a short period, and the viscous deformation can explain the response over a more extended period. The study of both materials above is based on plate tectonic theory, in which the lithosphere plates will relatively move to each other because the layer material underneath is solid but can flow like a liquid for a long period.


1972 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 378-380
Author(s):  
Gerald A. Mulligan ◽  
Clarence Frankton

Rumex arcticus Trautv., a species found on the mainland of northwestern North America and in northeastern U.S.S.R., contains tetraploid (2n = 40), dodecaploid (2n = 120), and perhaps 2n = 160 and 2n = 200 chromosome races. Most North American plants are tetraploid and are larger in size and have more compound and contiguous inflorescences than typical R. arcticus. Typical plants of R. arcticus occur in the arctic U.S.S.R., St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea, and at the tip of the Seward Peninsula of Alaska, and they all have 120 or more somatic chromosomes. High polyploid plants of R. arcticus that resemble North American tetraploids in appearance apparently occur on the Kamchatka Peninsula. These have been called R. kamtshadalus Komarov or R. arcticus var. kamtshadalus (Kom.) Rech. f. by some authors.


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