Shaken and Stirred: A Comparative Study of Earthquake‐Triggered Soft‐Sediment Deformation Structures in Lake Sediments

Author:

Molenaar Ariana1ORCID,Wils Katleen12,Van Daele Maarten2ORCID,Daxer Christoph1ORCID,Dubois Nathalie34ORCID,Grießer Anja1,Oswald Patrick1ORCID,Ramisch Arne1ORCID,Strasser Michael1ORCID,Moernaut Jasper1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Geology University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

2. Renard Centre of Marine Geology Ghent University Ghent Belgium

3. Surface Waters‐Research and Management Eawag Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology Dübendorf Switzerland

4. Department of Earth Sciences ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractSubaqueous paleoseismic studies used soft sediment deformation structures (SSDS) to discern the shaking strength of past earthquakes, as the deformation degree of SSDS related to Kelvin Helmholtz Instability evolves from disturbed lamination and folds to intraclast breccia with higher peak ground accelerations (PGA). We lack comparative studies of different sediment types with SSDS related to earthquakes from different seismogenic sources to comprehend how these factors modulate earthquake‐induced deformation. Here, we compile sediment records with seven earthquake‐triggered SSDS from 10 lakes with organic‐, carbonate‐, siliciclastic‐, and diatom‐rich sediment from three subduction zones and one collisional setting. We target basin sequences with slope angles <0.65° to reduce the influence of gravitational downslope stress. We find that even minimal increases in slope angle, maximal 1°, lead to higher deformation degrees and, for some earthquakes, SSDS are only present at >0.65°. Fine‐grained clastics enhance sediment susceptibility to deformation, whereas abundant diatoms reduce it, demonstrating the influence of composition. Deformation correlates best with PGA and the vicinity of the earthquakes, suggesting that high frequency shaking promotes deformation. In addition, deformation only occurs above a minimum magnitude dependent on sediment composition, and higher deformation degrees in our studied basin sedimentary sequences only above Mw 4.9 for all sediment types, suggesting that sufficient duration of shaking—magnitude correlates with duration—is essential for SSDS development. We advise taking multiple cores on gentle slopes to study SSDS—additional to basin cores—to resolve small magnitude local earthquakes and relative differences in frequency content of past events.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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