Discovery of an Active Forearc Fault in an Urban Region: Holocene Rupture on the XEOLXELEK‐Elk Lake Fault, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada

Author:

Harrichhausen Nicolas12ORCID,Finley Theron3,Morell Kristin D.2ORCID,Regalla Christine4ORCID,Bennett Scott E. K.5ORCID,Leonard Lucinda J.3ORCID,Nissen Edwin3ORCID,McLeod Eleanor3,Lynch Emerson M.4ORCID,Salomon Guy3ORCID,Sethanant Israporn3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CNRS IRD Université Grenoble Alpes Université Savoie Mont Blanc Université Gustave Eiffel ISTerre Grenoble France

2. Department of Earth Science University of California Santa Barbara CA USA

3. School of Earth and Ocean Sciences University of Victoria Victoria BC Canada

4. School of Earth and Sustainability Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ USA

5. Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center U.S. Geological Survey Portland OR USA

Abstract

AbstractSubduction forearcs are subject to seismic hazard from upper plate faults that are often invisible to instrumental monitoring networks. Identifying active faults in forearcs therefore requires integration of geomorphic, geologic, and paleoseismic data. We demonstrate the utility of a combined approach in a densely populated region of Vancouver Island, Canada, by combining remote sensing, historical imagery, field investigations, and shallow geophysical surveys to identify a previously unrecognized active fault, the XEOLXELEK‐Elk Lake fault, in the northern Cascadia forearc, ∼10 km north of the city of Victoria. Lidar‐derived digital terrain models and historical air photos show a ∼2.5‐m‐high scarp along the surface of a Quaternary drumlinoid ridge. Paleoseismic trenching and electrical resistivity tomography surveys across the scarp reveal a single reverse‐slip earthquake produced a fault‐propagation fold above a blind southwest‐dipping fault. Five geologically plausible chronological models of radiocarbon dated charcoal constrain the likely earthquake age to between 4.7 and 2.3 ka. Fault‐propagation fold modeling indicates ∼3.2 m of reverse slip on a blind, 50° southwest‐dipping fault can reproduce the observed deformation. Fault scaling relations suggest a M 6.1–7.6 earthquake with a 13 to 73‐km‐long surface rupture and 2.3–3.2 m of dip slip may be responsible for the deformation observed in the paleoseismic trench. An earthquake near this magnitude in Greater Victoria could result in major damage, and our results highlight the importance of augmenting instrumental monitoring networks with remote sensing and field studies to identify and characterize active faults in similarily challenging environments.

Funder

Division of Earth Sciences

Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canada Research Chairs

University of Victoria

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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