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A 25,000-year record of earthquakes on the Owens Valley Fault near Lone Pine, California; implications for recurrence intervals, slip rates, and segmentation models

Steven N. Bacon and Silvio K. Pezzopane
A 25,000-year record of earthquakes on the Owens Valley Fault near Lone Pine, California; implications for recurrence intervals, slip rates, and segmentation models
Geological Society of America Bulletin (July 2007) 119 (7-8): 823-847

Abstract

Seven trenches in eastern California across the Owens Valley fault near Lone Pine expose two episodes of faulting since early Holocene time in the form of approximately 1 m throw in lacustrine beds with liquefaction that were buried and then faulted again approximately 1 m by the M 7.5 to 7.75 A.D. 1872 Owens Valley earthquake. Geomorphic maps, applications of sequence stratigraphy, and analyses of radiocarbon from charcoal and tufa deposits indicate that the paleoearthquake, the penultimate event here, occurred between 10,200+ or -200 and 8800+ or -200 cal yr B.P. The cumulative vertical displacement from these last two earthquakes in three trenches averages 2.4+ or -0.3 m (2sigma ), and the penultimate event has slightly larger displacements. A synthesis of available data indicates that the antepenultimate event was probably as large and occurred between ca. 24,000 and 14,000 cal yr B.P. (2sigma ). Thus, the two interseismic intervals between the last three surface-faulting earthquakes on the southern Owens Valley fault are each approximately 10,000 yr. This approximately 25,000-year record indicates that the "two-event" normal-oblique slip rate on the Owens Valley fault near Lone Pine is 1.0+ or -0.5 m/k.y. This result is similar to that of several previous geological studies here, yet it is still slower than slip rates on the northern Owens Valley fault and several factors slower than contemporary geodetic measurements. This study attempts to account for different dating methods and interpretational uncertainties, to acknowledge how little is known about the slip history of the Owens Valley fault and adjacent faults, and to consider the role of segmentation, as well as splay and distributed faulting, in comparisons of displacement data among different sites along the entire approximately 100+ or -10 km length of the Owens Valley fault.


ISSN: 0016-7606
EISSN: 1943-2674
Coden: BUGMAF
Serial Title: Geological Society of America Bulletin
Serial Volume: 119
Serial Issue: 7-8
Title: A 25,000-year record of earthquakes on the Owens Valley Fault near Lone Pine, California; implications for recurrence intervals, slip rates, and segmentation models
Affiliation: Humboldt State University, Department of Geology, Arcata, CA, United States
Pages: 823-847
Published: 200707
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 86
Accession Number: 2007-084807
Categories: SeismologyStructural geology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: With GSA Data Repository Item 2007167
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sects., 3 tables, geol. sketch map
N36°30'00" - N36°42'00", W118°07'00" - W118°00'00"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 200719
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