Structural Relationships Across the Sevier Gravity Slide of Southwest Utah and Implications for Catastrophic Translation and Emplacement Processes of Long Runout Landslides

Author:

Braunagel Michael J.1ORCID,Griffith W. Ashley1ORCID,Biek Robert F.2,Hacker David B.3,Rowley Peter D.4,Malone David H.5,Mayback Danika1,Rivera Tiffany A.6ORCID,Loffer Zachary3,Smith Zachary D.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth Sciences The Ohio State University Columbus OH USA

2. Retired, Utah Geological Survey Salt Lake City UT USA

3. Department of Earth Sciences Kent State University Kent OH USA

4. Geologic Mapping Inc. New Harmony UT USA

5. Department of Geology‐Geography Illinois State University Normal IL USA

6. Department of Geology Westminster College Salt Lake City UT USA

7. Earth and Planetary Science University of California at Berkeley Berkeley CA USA

Abstract

AbstractThe physical processes that facilitate long‐distance translation of large‐volume gravity slides remain poorly understood. To better understand these processes and the controls on runout distance, we conducted an outcrop and microstructural characterization of the Sevier gravity slide across the former land surface and summarize findings of four key sites. The Sevier gravity slide is the oldest of three mega‐scale (>1,000 km2) collapse events of the Marysvale volcanic field (Utah, USA). Field observations of intense deformation, clastic dikes, pseudotachylyte, and consistency of kinematic indicators support the interpretation of rapid emplacement during a single event. Furthermore, clastic dikes and characteristics of the slip zone suggest emplacement involved mobilization and pressurized injection of basal material. Across the runout distance, we observe evidence for progressive slip delocalization along the slide base. This manifests as centimeter‐ to decimeter‐thick cataclastic basal zones and abundant clastic dikes in the north and tens of meters thick basal zones characterized by widespread deformation of both slide blocks and underlying rock near the southern distal end of the gravity slide. Superimposed on this transition are variations in basal zone characteristics and slide geometry arising from interactions between slide blocks during dynamic wear and deposition processes and pre‐existing topography of the former land surface. These observations are synthesized into a conceptual model in which the presence of highly pressurized fluids reduced the frictional resistance to sliding during the emplacement of the Sevier gravity slide, and basal zone evolution controlled the effectiveness of dynamic weakening mechanisms across the former land surface.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Geological Society of America

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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