Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault Zone, western British Columbia

Author:

Greene H. Gary1,Barrie J. Vaughn2,Brothers Daniel S.3,Conrad James E.3ORCID,Conway Kim2,East Amy E.3,Enkin Randy2,Maier Katherine L.2ORCID,Nishenko Stuart P.4,Walton Maureen A. L.3ORCID,Rohr Kristin M. M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Moss Landing Marine Laboratories and Tombolo Mapping Laboratory, 142 Anchor Rock Lane, Eastsound, WA 98245, USA

2. Geological Survey of Canada (Pacific), 9860 West Saanich Road, Sidney, BC V8L 4B2, Canada

3. US Geological Survey, Pacific Coastal and Marine Center, 2885 Mission Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95060, USA

4. Pacific Gas & Electric Company, 77 Beale Street, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA

Abstract

AbstractMultibeam echosounder (MBES) images, 3.5 kHz seismic-reflection profiles and piston cores obtained along the southern Queen Charlotte Fault Zone are used to map and date mass-wasting events at this transform margin – a seismically active boundary that separates the Pacific Plate from the North American Plate. Whereas the upper continental slope adjacent to and east (upslope) of the fault zone offshore of the Haida Gwaii is heavily gullied, few large-sized submarine landslides in this area are observed in the MBES images. However, smaller submarine seafloor slides exist locally in areas where fluid flow appears to be occurring and large seafloor slides have recently been detected at the base of the steep continental slope just above its contact with the abyssal plain on the Queen Charlotte Terrace. In addition, along the subtle slope re-entrant area offshore of the Dixon Entrance shelf bathymetric data suggest that extensive mass wasting has occurred in the vicinity of an active mud volcano venting gas. We surmise that the relative lack of submarine slides along the upper slope in close proximity to the Queen Charlotte Fault Zone may be the result of seismic strengthening (compaction and cohesion) of a sediment-starved shelf and slope through multiple seismic events.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

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