Title of article
Normal fault corrugation: implications for growth and seismicity of active normal faults
Author/Authors
Ferrill، نويسنده , , David A and Stamatakos، نويسنده , , John A and Sims، نويسنده , , Darrell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
12
From page
1027
To page
1038
Abstract
Large normal faults are corrugated. Corrugations appear to form from overlapping or en échelon fault arrays by two breakthrough mechanisms: lateral propagation of curved fault-tips and linkage by connecting faults. Both mechanisms include localized fault-parallel extension and eventual abandonment of relay ramps. These breakthrough mechanisms produce distinctive hanging wall and footwall geometries indicative of fault system evolution. From such geometries, we can estimate the positions of tilted relay ramps or ramp segments and ramp internal deformation in incompletely exposed or poorly imaged fault systems. We examine the evolution of normal fault corrugations at Fish Slough (California), Yucca Mountain (Nevada), and Pleasant Valley (Nevada), in the Basin and Range province. We discuss how evolution of the Pleasant Valley and Yucca Mountain systems relates to seismicity. For example, the 1915 Pleasant Valley earthquake produced four en échelon ruptures that appeared as overlapping segments of a single immature fault at depth. At Yucca Mountain, we argue that an en échelon array, which includes the Solitario Canyon and Iron Ridge faults, should be considered a single source, such that western Yucca Mountain could experience up to a Mw 6.9 earthquake compared to Mw 6.6 estimates for the largest individual segment.
Journal title
Journal of Structural Geology
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Journal of Structural Geology
Record number
2223459
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