Latest Quaternary slip rates of the San Bernardino strand of the San Andreas fault, southern California, from Cajon Creek to Badger Canyon
Author:
McGill Sally F.1ORCID, Owen Lewis A.2, Weldon Ray J.3, Kendrick Katherine J.4, Burgette Reed J.5
Affiliation:
1. Department of Geological Sciences, California State University, 5500 University Parkway, San Bernardino, California 92407-2397, USA 2. Department of Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695, USA 3. Department of Earth Science, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1272, USA 4. U.S. Geological Survey, 525 South Wilson Avenue, Pasadena, California 91106, USA 5. Department of Geological Sciences/MSC 3AB, New Mexico State University, P.O. Box 30001, Las Cruces, New Mexico 88003, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Four new latest Pleistocene slip rates from two sites along the northwestern half of the San Bernardino strand of the San Andreas fault suggest the slip rate decreases southeastward as slip transfers from the Mojave section of the San Andreas fault onto the northern San Jacinto fault zone. At Badger Canyon, offsets coupled with radiocarbon and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) ages provide three independent slip rates (with 95% confidence intervals): (1) the apex of the oldest dated alluvial fan (ca. 30–28 ka) is right-laterally offset ~300–400 m yielding a slip rate of 13.5 +2.2/−2.5 mm/yr; (2) a terrace riser incised into the northwestern side of this alluvial fan is offset ~280–290 m and was abandoned ca. 23 ka, yielding a slip rate of 11.9 +0.9/−1.2 mm/yr; and (3) a younger alluvial fan (13–15 ka) has been offset 120–200 m from the same source canyon, yielding a slip rate of 11.8 +4.2/−3.5 mm/yr. These rates are all consistent and result in a preferred, time-averaged rate for the past ~28 k.y. of 12.8 +5.3/−4.7 mm/yr (95% confidence interval), with an 84% confidence interval of 10–16 mm/yr. At Matthews Ranch, in Pitman Canyon, ~13 km northwest of Badger Canyon, a landslide offset ~650 m with a 10Be age of ca. 47 ka yields a slip rate of 14.5 +9.9/−6.2 mm/yr (95% confidence interval). All of these slip rates for the San Bernardino strand are significantly slower than a previously published rate of 24.5 ± 3.5 mm/yr at the southern end of the Mojave section of the San Andreas fault (Weldon and Sieh, 1985), suggesting that ~12 mm/yr of slip transfers from the Mojave section of the San Andreas fault to the northern San Jacinto fault zone (and other faults) between Lone Pine Canyon and Badger Canyon, with most (if not all) of this slip transfer happening near Cajon Creek. This has been a consistent behavior of the fault for at least the past ~47 k.y.
Publisher
Geological Society of America
Subject
Stratigraphy,Geology
Reference79 articles.
1. Dose-rate conversion factors: Update: Ancient TL;Adamiec,1998 2. Constraints on fault slip rates of the southern California plate boundary from GPS velocity and stress inversions;Becker;Geophysical Journal International,2005 3. Uncertainties in slip-rate estimates for the Mission Creek strand of the southern San Andreas fault at Biskra Palms Oasis;Behr,2010 4. Codependent histories of the San Andreas and San Jacinto fault zones from inversion of fault displacement rates;Bennett;Geology,2004 5. Bevis, M., Hudnut, K., Sanchez, R., Toth, C., Grejner-Brzezinska, D., Kendrick, E., Caccamise, D., Raleigh, D., Zhou, H., Shan, S., Shindle, W., Yong, A., Harvey, J., Borsa, A., Ayoub, F., Shrestha, R., Carter, B., Sartori, M., Phillips, D., and Coloma, F., 2005, The B4 Project: Scanning the San Andreas and San Jacinto Fault Zones: Abstract H34B-01presented at 2005 Fall Meeting, San Francisco, California, American Geophysical Union, 5–9 December.
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|