Affiliation:
1. Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Abstract
In the Coast Mountains of western British Columbia, an anomalous seismicity concentration exists near the intersection of the Coast Shear Zone, a major northwest–southeast trending Eocene-age shear zone that accommodated deformation between the Pacific and North America plates, with the Anahim Volcanic Belt, an east-northeast–west-northwest trending zone of volcanic features that decrease in age to the east. To better characterize seismicity in the Coast Mountains, we augment the existing Natural Resources Canada seismicity catalogue by applying an automatic detection and location algorithm to both permanent Canadian National Seismic Network stations and temporary stations from the 2005–2006 BATHOLITHS deployment, resulting in 837 relocated events with at least three paired P- and S-phase picks. Double-difference relocation reveals several small-scale linear strands subparallel to the Coast Shear Zone and within the Anahim Volcanic Belt and three clusters of events striking at a high angle to the Coast Shear Zone that occurred as swarms in 2015 and 2017. First-motion focal mechanisms exhibit extensional and strike-slip faulting. Our observations indicate that most of these events are not associated with surficial processes such as landslides, but rather, we hypothesize that the interaction of the Anahim Volcanic Belt and Coast Shear Zone has weakened the lithosphere in this region, leading to current-day strain localization and high heat flow that manifest seismicity, including swarm-like activity.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
1 articles.
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