Characteristics and regional significance of the Cremation Hill ductile fault zone at the Bronson Hill-Merrimack boundary, south-central Connecticut

1988 ◽  
Vol 288 (4) ◽  
pp. 353-375 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. London
1989 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 252-281
Author(s):  
R. V. Sharp ◽  
K. E. Budding ◽  
J. Boatwright ◽  
M. J. Ader ◽  
M. G. Bonilla ◽  
...  

Abstract The M 6.2 Elmore Desert Ranch earthquake of 24 November 1987 was associated spatially and probably temporally with left-lateral surface rupture on many northeast-trending faults in and near the Superstition Hills in western Imperial Valley. Three curving discontinuous principal zones of rupture among these breaks extended northeastward from near the Superstition Hills fault zone as far as 9 km; the maximum observed surface slip, 12.5 cm, was on the northern of the three, the Elmore Ranch fault, at a point near the epicenter. Twelve hours after the Elmore Ranch earthquake, the M 6.6 Superstition Hills earthquake occurred near the northwest end of the right-lateral Superstition Hills fault zone. Surface rupture associated with the second event occurred along three strands of the zone, here named North and South strands of the Superstition Hills fault and the Wienert fault, for 27 km southeastward from the epicenter. In contrast to the left-lateral faulting, which remained unchanged throughout the period of investigation, the right-lateral movement on the Superstition hills fault zone continued to increase with time, a behavior that was similar to other recent historical surface ruptures on northwest-trending faults in the Imperial Valley region. We measured displacements over 339 days at as many as 296 sites along the Superstition Hills fault zone, and repeated measurements at 49 sites provided sufficient data to fit with a simple power law. Data for each of the 49 sites were used to compute longitudinal displacement profiles for 1 day and to estimate the final displacement that measured slips will approach asymptotically several years after the earthquakes. The maximum right-lateral slip at 1 day was about 50 cm near the south-central part of the North strand of Superstition Hills fault, and the predicted maximum final displacement is probably about 112 cm at Imler Road near the center of the South strand of the Superstition Hills fault. The overall distributions of right-lateral displacement at 1 day and the estimated final slip are nearly symmetrical about the midpoint of the surface rupture. The average estimated final right-lateral slip for the Superstition Hills fault zone is about 54 cm. The average left-lateral slip for the conjugate faults trending northeastward is about 23 cm. The southernmost ruptured member of the Superstition Hills fault zone, newly named the Wienert fault, extends the known length of the zone by about 4 km. The southern half of this fault, south of New River, expressed only vertical displacement on a sinuous trace. The maximum vertical slip by the end of the observation period there was about 25 cm, but its growth had not ceased. Photolineaments southeast of the end of new surface rupture suggest continuation of the Superstition Hills fault zone in farmland toward Mexico.


Author(s):  
PASSAKORN PANANONT ◽  
PRINYA PUTTHAPIBAN ◽  
SUWITH KOSUWAN ◽  
PREECHA SAITHONG ◽  
KITTI KHAOWISET ◽  
...  

2014 ◽  
Vol 51 (9) ◽  
pp. 825-836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohsen Ehteshami-Moinabadi

The Mosha Fault is a multiply inverted fault in the Central Alborz. Field observations and structural data from this fault show that a footwall shortcut is the major mode of response of this fault to contractional deformation. Although the Mosha Fault is a basement-involved fault, there is no evidence of involvement of basement along its footwall shortcuts, at least in the study area. Footwall shortcuts along this fault vary in size from several hundreds of metres to tens of kilometres, suggesting that a footwall shortcut can be scale independent. It is proposed that footwall shortcuts can also occur as blind thrusts under fault-related folds in the terrains near the major inverted faults. Similar cases also exist in other regions such as Japan. Some large footwall shortcuts may be the causative fault of devastating earthquakes in the active inverted terrains such as the south Central Alborz. Incompetent layers acting as detachments may play an important role in the development of footwall shortcuts. Recumbent folding in the form of a cover nappe in the footwall of the Mosha Fault is another case of southward migration of deformation along the Mosha Fault by which the fault has responded to the Oligo-Miocene compression. This case can be considered as a newly recognized style of deforming structure that occurred along an inverted fault.


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