Determination of Slip-Rate by Optical Dating of Lake Bed Sediments from the Dasht-E-Bayaz Fault, Ne Iran

2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Morteza Fattahi ◽  
Richard Walker ◽  
Mohammad M. Khatib ◽  
Mohammad Zarrinkoub ◽  
Morteza Talebian

Abstract The Dasht-e-Bayaz left-lateral strike-slip fault in northeastern Iran ruptured in two destructive earthquakes in 1968 and 1979. The western half of the Dasht-e-Bayaz fault cuts across the dry lake-bed in the Nimbluk valley and has no measurable relief except for at a few localised jogs in the fault trace. We provide the first quantitative constraint on the slip-rate of the Dasht-e-Bayaz fault averaged over the Holocene. The western part of the fault cuts across the Nimbluk valley; the flat surface of which is composed of lake-bed sediments. Small streams cut into the surface of the lake-beds are displaced across the fault by 26 ± 2 m. Two OSL samples of the lake-bed sediments are success-fully dated at 8.6 ± 0.6 and 8.5 ± 1.0 ka, from which we calculate a minimum slip-rate of 2.6 mm/yr. This minimum slip rate remains constant with the previously proposed Holocene slip rate of 2.5 mm/yr and within the range of the Holocene slip rate of 2.4 ± 0.3 mm/yr estimated before on the central section of the Doruneh fault.

Geosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bridget Garnier ◽  
Basil Tikoff ◽  
Omar Flores ◽  
Brian Jicha ◽  
Charles DeMets ◽  
...  

The Jalpatagua fault in Guatemala accommodates dextral movement of the Central America forearc. We present new global positioning system (GPS) data, minor fault analysis, geochronological analyses, and analysis of lineaments to characterize deformation along the fault and near its terminations. Our data indicate that the Jalpatagua fault terminates at both ends into extensional regions. The western termination occurs near the Amatitlan caldera and the southern extension of the Guatemala City graben, as no through-going structures were observed to continue west into the active volcanic arc. Along the Jalpatagua fault, new and updated GPS site velocities are consistent with a slip rate of 7.1 ± 1.8 mm yr–1. Minor faulting along the central section of the fault includes: (1) N-S–striking normal faults accommodating E-W elongation; and (2) four sets of strike-slip faults (oriented 330°, 020°, 055°, and 295°, parallel to the Jalpatagua fault trace). Minor fault arrays support dextral movement along a major fault in the orientation of the Jalpatagua fault. GPS and fault data indicate that the Jalpatagua fault terminates to the east near the Guatemala–El Salvador border. Data delineate a pull-apart basin southeast of the fault termination, which is undergoing transtension as the Jalpatagua fault transitions into the El Salvador fault system to the east. Within the basin, minor faulting and lineations trend to the NW and accommodate NE-directed elongation. This faulting differs from E-W elongation observed along the Jalpatagua fault and is more similar to minor faults within the El Salvador fault system.


1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 1940-1959 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven G. Wesnousky

Abstract Paleoearthquake and fault slip-rate data are combined with the CIT-USGS catalog for the period 1944 to 1992 to examine the shape of the magnitude-frequency distribution along the major strike-slip faults of southern California. The resulting distributions for the Newport-Inglewood, Elsinore, Garlock, and San Andreas faults are in accord with the characteristic earthquake model of fault behavior. The distribution observed along the San Jacinto fault satisfies the Gutenberg-Richter relationship. If attention is limited to segments of the San Jacinto that are marked by the rupture zones of large historical earthquakes or distinct steps in fault trace, the observed distribution along each segment is consistent with the characteristic earthquake model. The Gutenberg-Richter distribution observed for the entirety of the San Jacinto may reflect the sum of seismicity along a number of distinct fault segments, each of which displays a characteristic earthquake distribution. The limited period of instrumental recording is insufficient to disprove the hypothesis that all faults will display a Gutenberg-Richter distribution when averaged over the course of a complete earthquake cycle. But, given that (1) the last 5 decades of seismicity are the best indicators of the expected level of small to moderate-size earthquakes in the next 50 years, and (2) it is generally about this period of time that is of interest in seismic hazard and engineering analysis, the answer to the question posed in the title of the article, at least when concerned with practical implementation of seismic hazard analysis at sites along these major faults, appears to be the “characteristic earthquake distribution.”


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gonzalo Cid Villegas ◽  
Carlos Mendoza ◽  
Luca Ferrari

  We present a Geographic Information System (GIS) database that synthesizes information on the geometry, the sense of movement and the last displacement on known Quaternary faults in Mexico. Faults are classified according to the age of the last known geologic displacement and the quantity and quality of the information available. Class A faults have documented displacement in the Holocene; Class B faults have Pleistocene displacement with possible reactivation in the Holocene; and Class C faults have a last known displacement in the Pleistocene. The database includes the fault name, the type of fault, the fault geometry, the fault length, the evidence for displacement, the slip rate, the recurrence interval, and the size of the most recent earthquake associated with each fault. The database compiles Quaternary fault information for Mexico that can be readily updated as more geologic data become available.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jürgen Österle

<p>The Suckling-Dayman metamorphic core complex (SDMCC) in the Woodlark Rift of southeastern Papua New Guinea is being exhumed along the Mai’iu Fault, an active low-angle normal fault dipping ~20-22° northwards at the surface. The spectacularly smooth topography of the Mai’iu Fault footwall clearly is expressive of geologically recent uplift. The precise timing and rates of the exhumation of this continental metamorphic core complex (MCC) have, however, never been studied in detail. This thesis provides the first systematic set of U-Pb, fission track (FT), (U-Th[-Sm])/He and ²⁶Al/¹⁰Be ages from metaigneous and metasedimentary rocks of the footwall of the SDMCC, clasts and a tephra deposit contained within syn-tectonic conglomerates (the Gwoira Conglomerate) in a rider block, and modern stream sediments in the footwall and hanging wall of the Mai’iu Fault. The ages are complemented by whole-rock compositional and thermobarometric data (Al-in-amphibole, Al-in-biotite, Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material). Based on these data, the timing of the onset of extension along the Mai’iu Fault, its long-term dip-slip rate and its initial dip were constrained. These data are presented in the context of the evolution of the SDMCC from the Cretaceous to the present.  The dominant lithology of the SDMCC, the Goropu Metabasalt, formed in a marginal basin to the northeast of the Australian continent. Two zircon U-Pb ages of 103.0 ± 5.7 and 71.6 ± 3.3 Ma, indicative of maximum depositional ages, from metasedimentary intercalations (the Bonenau Schist) in the Goropu Metabasalt, suggest formation of the oceanic protolith in the Late Cretaceous. Between 60.4 ± 2.5 and 56.6 ± 2.3 Ma (zircon U-Pb), tholeiitic to mildly calc-alkaline gabbroic to tonalitic rocks of the Yau Igneous Complex intruded the Goropu Metabasalt. The age of the Yau Igneous Complex overlaps with the known timing of north-directed subduction of the oceanic lithosphere along the Owen Stanley Fault (OSF) beneath the Cape Vogel Arc and provides a minimum age for the oceanic protolith.  A second phase of magmatism, consisting of peraluminous-metaluminous calc-alkaline (Suckling Granite) and high-K (Mai’iu Monzonite, Bonua Porphyry) granitoids and basaltic andesite dikes that were cut by the Mai’iu Fault, was associated with the tectonic inversion of the OSF. Zircons from these syn-extensional intrusions suggest crystallization between 3.8 ± 0.2 and 2.0 ± 0.1 Ma. The oldest age of this range is inferred to mark the time by which the OSF had been re-activated as an extensional structure, the Mai’iu Fault. Al-in-amphibole and -biotite thermobarometry suggests crystallization of the Suckling Granite and Mai’iu Monzonite in a relatively shallow crust (~2-8 km depth) at pressures of ~0.4-2.3 kbar. Inherited zircons in the Plio-Pleistocene granitoids indicate that the Goropu Metabasalt carapace of the SDMCC is underlain by Australian-derived Cretaceous crustal material that is inferred to be the continuation of the Kagi Metamorphics in the central Papuan Peninsula.  Further constraints of the timing of unroofing of the SDMCC were determined from three quartz clasts in the Gwoira Conglomerate. ²⁶Al/¹⁰Be burial ages of these samples indicate deposition in the Pliocene between 4.6 ± 2.9 and 3.4 ± 2.1 Ma. A tephra in the upper section of the exposed conglomerates was dated employing U-Pb methods on zircon, combined with apatite, zircon and magnetite (U-Th[-Sm])/He chronometers, yielding a complex age spectrum. An eruption age of 0.6 ± 0.4 Ma was extrapolated for this tephra. FT and (U-Th[-Sm])/He low-temperature thermochronometry details a young (≤3 Ma) and rapid exhumation history. Based on the crystallization ages of the syn-extensional granitoids, the depositional age of the Gwoira Conglomerate, the extensional cooling recorded by low-temperature thermochronometry, and the backwards projection of the published Holocene dip-slip rate of the Mai’iu Fault, the timing of the onset of extension is estimated at ~4 Ma.  A minimum dip-slip rate of 8.1 ± 1.3 km/myr has been calculated from the inverse slope of zircon (U-Th)/He (ZHe) ages with slip-parallel distance from Mai’iu Fault trace. This is slightly lower than the >12 km/myr required to restore the intrusion depths (2-8 km) of the syn-extensional granitoids, now exposed 20-25 km south of the Mai’iu Fault trace at elevations up to 3.4 km. Collectively, these constraints suggest that the Mai’iu Fault has moved at cm-per-year rates since ~3 Ma.  Evidence for both a fossil zircon FT (ZFT) partial annealing zone (PAZ) and a ZHe partial retention zone (PRZ) on the footwall of the SDMCC is presented. Combining paleo-temperature estimates from the inferred bases of the zircon PAZ and PRZ, peak-metamorphic temperatures inferred from Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material (RSCM), and published peak-metamorphic temperature constraints on the extensional shear zone mylonites near the Mai’iu Fault trace, a minimum slip-parallel, down-dip paleo-temperature gradient of 9.7 ± 2.2°C/km has been estimated for the exhumed Mai’iu Fault plane. Assuming that the modern regional geothermal gradient in the Woodlark Rift is a maximum estimate of that which existed prior to extensional exhumation of the SDMCC, the paleo-temperature gradient was used to estimate an average initial dip of the Mai’iu Fault of ~44° for pre-extensional geothermal gradients ranging between 10 to 20°C/km. Presently dipping 20-22° at the surface, the constraints on the initial dip suggest that the Mai’iu Fault may have been back-rotated by >20° since the onset of extension, consistent with a rolling hinge-style evolution of this continental MCC.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jürgen Österle

<p>The Suckling-Dayman metamorphic core complex (SDMCC) in the Woodlark Rift of southeastern Papua New Guinea is being exhumed along the Mai’iu Fault, an active low-angle normal fault dipping ~20-22° northwards at the surface. The spectacularly smooth topography of the Mai’iu Fault footwall clearly is expressive of geologically recent uplift. The precise timing and rates of the exhumation of this continental metamorphic core complex (MCC) have, however, never been studied in detail. This thesis provides the first systematic set of U-Pb, fission track (FT), (U-Th[-Sm])/He and ²⁶Al/¹⁰Be ages from metaigneous and metasedimentary rocks of the footwall of the SDMCC, clasts and a tephra deposit contained within syn-tectonic conglomerates (the Gwoira Conglomerate) in a rider block, and modern stream sediments in the footwall and hanging wall of the Mai’iu Fault. The ages are complemented by whole-rock compositional and thermobarometric data (Al-in-amphibole, Al-in-biotite, Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material). Based on these data, the timing of the onset of extension along the Mai’iu Fault, its long-term dip-slip rate and its initial dip were constrained. These data are presented in the context of the evolution of the SDMCC from the Cretaceous to the present.  The dominant lithology of the SDMCC, the Goropu Metabasalt, formed in a marginal basin to the northeast of the Australian continent. Two zircon U-Pb ages of 103.0 ± 5.7 and 71.6 ± 3.3 Ma, indicative of maximum depositional ages, from metasedimentary intercalations (the Bonenau Schist) in the Goropu Metabasalt, suggest formation of the oceanic protolith in the Late Cretaceous. Between 60.4 ± 2.5 and 56.6 ± 2.3 Ma (zircon U-Pb), tholeiitic to mildly calc-alkaline gabbroic to tonalitic rocks of the Yau Igneous Complex intruded the Goropu Metabasalt. The age of the Yau Igneous Complex overlaps with the known timing of north-directed subduction of the oceanic lithosphere along the Owen Stanley Fault (OSF) beneath the Cape Vogel Arc and provides a minimum age for the oceanic protolith.  A second phase of magmatism, consisting of peraluminous-metaluminous calc-alkaline (Suckling Granite) and high-K (Mai’iu Monzonite, Bonua Porphyry) granitoids and basaltic andesite dikes that were cut by the Mai’iu Fault, was associated with the tectonic inversion of the OSF. Zircons from these syn-extensional intrusions suggest crystallization between 3.8 ± 0.2 and 2.0 ± 0.1 Ma. The oldest age of this range is inferred to mark the time by which the OSF had been re-activated as an extensional structure, the Mai’iu Fault. Al-in-amphibole and -biotite thermobarometry suggests crystallization of the Suckling Granite and Mai’iu Monzonite in a relatively shallow crust (~2-8 km depth) at pressures of ~0.4-2.3 kbar. Inherited zircons in the Plio-Pleistocene granitoids indicate that the Goropu Metabasalt carapace of the SDMCC is underlain by Australian-derived Cretaceous crustal material that is inferred to be the continuation of the Kagi Metamorphics in the central Papuan Peninsula.  Further constraints of the timing of unroofing of the SDMCC were determined from three quartz clasts in the Gwoira Conglomerate. ²⁶Al/¹⁰Be burial ages of these samples indicate deposition in the Pliocene between 4.6 ± 2.9 and 3.4 ± 2.1 Ma. A tephra in the upper section of the exposed conglomerates was dated employing U-Pb methods on zircon, combined with apatite, zircon and magnetite (U-Th[-Sm])/He chronometers, yielding a complex age spectrum. An eruption age of 0.6 ± 0.4 Ma was extrapolated for this tephra. FT and (U-Th[-Sm])/He low-temperature thermochronometry details a young (≤3 Ma) and rapid exhumation history. Based on the crystallization ages of the syn-extensional granitoids, the depositional age of the Gwoira Conglomerate, the extensional cooling recorded by low-temperature thermochronometry, and the backwards projection of the published Holocene dip-slip rate of the Mai’iu Fault, the timing of the onset of extension is estimated at ~4 Ma.  A minimum dip-slip rate of 8.1 ± 1.3 km/myr has been calculated from the inverse slope of zircon (U-Th)/He (ZHe) ages with slip-parallel distance from Mai’iu Fault trace. This is slightly lower than the >12 km/myr required to restore the intrusion depths (2-8 km) of the syn-extensional granitoids, now exposed 20-25 km south of the Mai’iu Fault trace at elevations up to 3.4 km. Collectively, these constraints suggest that the Mai’iu Fault has moved at cm-per-year rates since ~3 Ma.  Evidence for both a fossil zircon FT (ZFT) partial annealing zone (PAZ) and a ZHe partial retention zone (PRZ) on the footwall of the SDMCC is presented. Combining paleo-temperature estimates from the inferred bases of the zircon PAZ and PRZ, peak-metamorphic temperatures inferred from Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material (RSCM), and published peak-metamorphic temperature constraints on the extensional shear zone mylonites near the Mai’iu Fault trace, a minimum slip-parallel, down-dip paleo-temperature gradient of 9.7 ± 2.2°C/km has been estimated for the exhumed Mai’iu Fault plane. Assuming that the modern regional geothermal gradient in the Woodlark Rift is a maximum estimate of that which existed prior to extensional exhumation of the SDMCC, the paleo-temperature gradient was used to estimate an average initial dip of the Mai’iu Fault of ~44° for pre-extensional geothermal gradients ranging between 10 to 20°C/km. Presently dipping 20-22° at the surface, the constraints on the initial dip suggest that the Mai’iu Fault may have been back-rotated by >20° since the onset of extension, consistent with a rolling hinge-style evolution of this continental MCC.</p>


2007 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 1586 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Palyvos ◽  
D. Pantosti ◽  
L. Stamatopoulos ◽  
P. M. De Martini

In this communication we discuss reconnaissance geomorphological observations along the active Psathopyrgos and Rion-Patras (NE part) fault zones. These fault zones correspond to more or less complex rangefronts, the geomorphic characteristics of which provide hints on the details of the fault zone geometries, adding to the existing geological data in the bibliography. Aiming at the identification of locations suitable or potentially suitable for geomorphological and geological studies for the determination of fault slip rates in the Holocene, we describe cases of faulted Holocene landforms and associated surficial deposits. We also discuss problems involved in finding locations suitable for geological (paleoseismological) studies for the determination of the timing of recent earthquake ruptures, problems due to both man-made and natural causes.


Author(s):  
Robert M. Langridge ◽  
Pilar Villamor ◽  
Jamie D. Howarth ◽  
William F. Ries ◽  
Kate J. Clark ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The Alpine fault is a high slip-rate plate boundary fault that poses a significant seismic hazard to southern and central New Zealand. To date, the strongest paleoseismic evidence for the onshore southern and central sections indicates that the fault typically ruptures during very large (Mw≥7.7) to great “full-section” earthquakes. Three paleoseismic trenches excavated at the northeastern end of its central section at the Toaroha River (Staples site) provide new insights into its surface-rupture behavior. Paleoseismic ruptures in each trench have been dated using the best-ranked radiocarbon dating fractions, and stratigraphically and temporally correlated between each trench. The preferred timings of the four most recent earthquakes are 1813–1848, 1673–1792, 1250–1580, and ≥1084–1276 C.E. (95% confidence intervals using OxCal 4.4). These surface-rupture dates correlate well with reinterpreted timings of paleoearthquakes from previous trenches excavated nearby and with the timing of shaking-triggered turbidites in lakes along the central section of the Alpine fault. Results from these trenches indicate the most recent rupture event (MRE) in this area postdates the great 1717 C.E. Alpine fault rupture (the most recent full-section rupture of the southern and central sections). This MRE probably occurred within the early nineteenth century and is reconciled as either: (a) a “partial-section” rupture of the central section; (b) a northern section rupture that continued to the southwest; or (c) triggered slip from a Hope-Kelly fault rupture at the southwestern end of the Marlborough fault system (MFS). Although, no single scenario is currently favored, our results indicate that the behavior of the Alpine fault is more complex in the north, as the plate boundary transitions into the MFS. An important outcome is that sites or towns near fault intersections and section ends may experience strong ground motions more frequently due to locally shorter rupture recurrence intervals.


2006 ◽  
Vol 20 (03) ◽  
pp. 261-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
RALF HETZEL ◽  
ANDREA HAMPEL

Seismic hazard evaluations on major faults in Earth's crust are based on their slip histories, which reflect the frequency of earthquakes that ruptured a fault in the past. On a 100 000-year timescale, the slip rate of a fault can be determined by dating geomorphic surfaces that are offset by a fault. Application of this method to alluvial fan surfaces and river terraces offset by thrust faults in Tibet yields long-term slip rates of less than 1mm/a. Slip rates on a 10 000-year timescale are derived from paleoseismologic data and document that faults experience considerable slip rate variations on timescales of 100 to 1000 years. In particular, slip rates are often considerable higher in the present interglacial, the Holocene, than during the last glacial period, the Late Pleistocene. The causes of this behavior have remained enigmatic but their assessment is essential for an accurate evaluation of a fault's past and future seismicity. Numerical experiments show that the retreat of lakes and glaciers at the end of the last glacial period can cause an increase in the Holocene slip rate of a fault. Such a correlation between enhanced seismicity and climate-driven mass fluctuations on Earth's surface is best documented for the Wasatch Fault, Utah.


2013 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 559-579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dee Ninis ◽  
Timothy A. Little ◽  
Russ J. Van Dissen ◽  
Nicola J. Litchfield ◽  
Euan G. C. Smith ◽  
...  

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