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Charlotte Fault

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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1988
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1988) 25 (11): 1857–1870.
... seismographs (OBS's) and a 32-charge explosion line recorded on the two OBS's and eight land-based seismographs (LBS's) deployed across northern Moresby Island were selected to study the structure of the predominantly transform Queen Charlotte Fault Zone and the associated offshore terrace. Two-dimensional ray...
Journal Article
Published: 05 March 2025
Seismological Research Letters (2025)
... sea, shallow marine environments with seafloor depths <0.5 km can be especially challenging for seismic experiments due to natural and anthropogenic hazards and noise sources that can affect instrument survival and data quality. The Queen Charlotte fault (QCF) is part of a transform plate boundary...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 27 November 2024
Geosphere (2025) 21 (1): 1–17.
... an average line spacing of ~18 km. Most of the lines are perpendicular to the strike of the coast, although several strike lines allow horizon interpretations to be tied. CORRESPONDENCE: [email protected] Seismicity occurs along the Queen Charlotte fault as well as in the terrace...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 24 March 2022
Geology (2022) 50 (6): 751.
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 19 January 2021
Geosphere (2021) 17 (2): 375–388.
... southeast Alaska, and with the extreme wave-dominated environment, the unconsolidated sediment that was left on the shelf was effectively removed. Temperate carbonate sands make up the few sediment deposits presently found on the shelf. The Queen Charlotte fault, which lies just below the shelf break...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 02 November 2020
Geosphere (2020) 16 (6): 1336–1357.
... can be an important indicator of crustal permeability and influence on fault-zone mechanics and hydrocarbon migration. The ∼850-km-long Queen Charlotte fault (QCF) is the dominant structure along the right-lateral transform boundary that separates the Pacific and North American tectonic plates...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 19 May 2020
Geology (2020) 48 (9): 908–912.
... on Haida Gwaii has been attributed to either dynamic uplift supported by subduction initiation or crustal shortening driven by shear adjacent the plate-bounding Queen Charlotte fault. In order to resolve how intraplate strain is accommodated, we obtained thermochronometry data from 20 bedrock samples...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 30 September 2019
DOI: 10.1144/SP477.30
EISBN: 9781786203861
... Abstract The Queen Charlotte Fault defines the Pacific–North America transform plate boundary in western Canada and southeastern Alaska for c. 900 km. The entire length of the fault is submerged along a continental margin dominated by Quaternary glacial processes, yet the geomorphology along...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 30 September 2019
DOI: 10.1144/SP477.31
EISBN: 9781786203861
... Abstract Multibeam 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...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Journal Article
Published: 14 April 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1058–1075.
...R. D. Hyndman Abstract This article provides a summary of the structure and tectonic history of the Queen Charlotte transform fault zone off western Canada, as background to understanding the 2012 M w 7.8 thrust earthquake off Haida Gwaii. There was margin subduction prior to the Eocene. The fault...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Journal Article
Published: 14 April 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1076–1089.
... analysis. Off western Canada, the strike‐slip Queen Charlotte fault ( QCF ) and Revere–Dellwood fault ( RDF ) constitute the transpressive plate boundary between the Pacific and North American plates. The southernmost 80 km of the QCF strikes at the highest angle (∼20°) to the relative plate motion, yet...
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Journal Article
Published: 14 April 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1090–1105.
...Maureen A. L. Walton; Sean P. S. Gulick; Peter J. Haeussler; Emily C. Roland; Anne M. Tréhu Abstract The Queen Charlotte fault ( QCF ) is a dextral transform system located offshore of southeastern Alaska and western Canada, accommodating ∼4.4 cm/yr of relative motion between the Pacific and North...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Published: 03 March 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1114–1128.
...Anne M. Tréhu; Maren Scheidhauer; Kristin M. M. Rohr; Basil Tikoff; Maureen A. L. Walton; Sean P. S. Gulick; Emily C. Roland Abstract The Queen Charlotte Fault ( QCF ) is a major strike‐slip fault that forms the boundary between the Pacific and North American plates from 51° to 58° N. Near 53.2° N...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1982
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1982) 19 (8): 1657–1669.
... with a model of oblique underthrusting of the deep sea floor beneath the terrace. The continental margin heat flow transition will tend to mask any thermal anomaly generated by fault motion, but the results imply that there is no large frictional heat generated by motion on the Queen Charlotte fault.Nine...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1981
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1981) 18 (4): 776–788.
...R. D. Hyndman; R. M. Ellis Abstract A temporary array of land and ocean bottom seismograph stations was used to accurately locate microearthquakes on the Queen Charlotte fault zone, which occurs along the continental margin of western Canada. The continental slope has two steep linear sections...
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 2005
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2005) 95 (5): 2001–2008.
...Charles G. Bufe Abstract Tectonic loading and Coulomb stress transfer are modeled along the right-lateral Fairweather–Queen Charlotte transform fault system using a three-dimensional boundary element program. The loading model includes slip below 12 km along the transform as well as motion...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 September 1997
Geology (1997) 25 (9): 819–822.
...Kristin M. M. Rohr; Lisel Currie Abstract The Queen Charlotte basin and adjacent Coast Mountains are paired belts of synchronous subsidence and uplift that formed inboard of the Queen Charlotte fault in Neogene time, accompanied by regional basaltic volcanism. We propose that a combination of pure...
Journal Article
Published: 14 April 2015
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2015) 105 (2B): 1129–1142.
... Charlotte–Fairweather ( QCF ) fault lies between the oceanic lithosphere of the Pacific plate and the accreted Insular superterrane of the North American continent. We use point‐source and finite‐fault modeling of teleseismic body waves to characterize the focal mechanism and the depth extent of seismic...
FIGURES | View All (8)
Image
(a) Elevation map of the Queen Charlotte fault (QCF) system with the Transform Obliquity along the Queen Charlotte Fault and Earthquake Study (TOQUES) experiment and major historic earthquakes displayed. Centroid moment tensors are from Ekström et al. (2012). Rupture lengths are compiled from several sources (Stauder, 1960; Rogers, 1983; Schell and Ruff, 1989; Doser and Lomas, 2000; Doser and Rodriguez, 2011; Lay et al., 2013; Yue et al., 2013) as presented in Brothers et al. (2020). Elevation data are from the General Bathymetric Chart of the Oceans (GEBCO) 2023 map (GEBCO Compilation Group, 2023). (Inset) Red shaded region shows area of panel (a) along the western coast of North America. (b) Local map of the TOQUES broadband ocean‐bottom seismometer (OBS) array. OBS symbol colors indicate the percent of usable data recovered from seismic (HHZ, HH1, and HH2) and differential pressure gauge (DPG) or hydrophone (EDH) channels. Isobath contours are in 500 m intervals. Displayed bathymetric data are blended between GEBCO 2023 (GEBCO Compilation Group, 2023) and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) datasets (Andrews et al., 2022). LDEO, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory; WHOI, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 05 March 2025
Figure 1. (a) Elevation map of the Queen Charlotte fault (QCF) system with the Transform Obliquity along the Queen Charlotte Fault and Earthquake Study (TOQUES) experiment and major historic earthquakes displayed. Centroid moment tensors are from Ekström et al. (2012) . Rupture lengths
Image
Bathymetry around Queen Charlotte fault (QCF) and Revere–Dellwood fault (RDF), draped over hill‐shaded relief and illuminated from the northwest. Areas with multibeam bathymetry are darker. This is the traditional interpretation of the location of the QCF (Hyndman and Ellis, 1981). The forked southern tip of the QCF is based on sidescan data (Davis et al., 1987b) and multichannel seismic reflection data (Rohr and Tryon, 2010). Structures on the continental shelf are Miocene extensional faults that have been compressed into positive flower structures during transpression on the QCF (after Rohr and Dietrich, 1992). EX, Explorer ridge; HG, Haida Gwaii archipelago; NA, North American plate; PA, Pacific plate; and W, Winona basin. Arrow indicates direction of relative plate motion using the midocean ridge velocity (MORVEL) model (DeMets et al., 2010). The striped pattern indicates the approximate width of the Pacific plate affected by the Kodiak–Bowie seamount chain, as derived from a larger map. Black rectangle indicates area shown in Figure 2. Stars indicate the epicenters of the 1949 M 8.1 strike‐slip earthquake and the 2012 Mw 7.8 thrust earthquake. Inset map shows extent of figure map in relation to Haida Gwaii. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 14 April 2015
Figure 1. Bathymetry around Queen Charlotte fault ( QCF ) and Revere–Dellwood fault ( RDF ), draped over hill‐shaded relief and illuminated from the northwest. Areas with multibeam bathymetry are darker. This is the traditional interpretation of the location of the QCF ( Hyndman and Ellis, 1981