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Riverdale Fault

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Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 01 January 2011
DOI: 10.1130/2011.0021(09)
EISBN: 9780813756219
.... The Riverdale normal fault offsets Bonneville deposits, but not younger Provo deposits ~25 km southeast of Zenda, Idaho. Rapid changes in water level may have induced slip on the Riverdale fault shortly before, during, or after the Bonneville flood. Although other processes may have played a role, seismicity...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Journal: Geosphere
Published: 01 December 2011
Geosphere (2011) 7 (6): 1369–1391.
... relationships suggest that the Riverdale fault produced a surface-rupturing earthquake ∼25 km southeast of Zenda shortly before, during, or after the Bonneville flood, as well as possible younger surface ruptures. Thus fluctuating stresses and pore pressure induced by changing lake levels may have triggered...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Image
Reconstructed surfaces in southern Marsh Valley before the Bonneville flood show the subaerial and submerged parts of the Zenda sill/dam. The Dayton-Oxford fault and perhaps the Riverdale fault zone cut the southern half of the sill. RRP—Red Rock Pass.
Published: 01 December 2011
Figure 10. Reconstructed surfaces in southern Marsh Valley before the Bonneville flood show the subaerial and submerged parts of the Zenda sill/dam. The Dayton-Oxford fault and perhaps the Riverdale fault zone cut the southern half of the sill. RRP—Red Rock Pass.
Image
Key features of northern Cache Valley and southern Marsh Valley. Numbered sills and drainage divides controlled lake levels and outlets of Lake Bonneville, from 1 (oldest) to 4 (youngest). Riverdale fault (+landslide?) zone is shown with a lineament symbol, and dotted at its inferred locations. Locations of deep subbasin and of basement highs are based on gravity data (Eversaul, 2004; Oaks et al., 2005). Position of Dayton-Oxford fault zone is from Carney et al. (2003).
Published: 01 December 2011
Figure 2. Key features of northern Cache Valley and southern Marsh Valley. Numbered sills and drainage divides controlled lake levels and outlets of Lake Bonneville, from 1 (oldest) to 4 (youngest). Riverdale fault (+landslide?) zone is shown with a lineament symbol, and dotted at its inferred
Image
Topographic map of northern Cache Valley shows part of the Bonneville deltas of the Bear River. Note deep parallel gullies in the foresets and distal topset of the Bonneville delta and the major contrast with the adjacent (and lower) little-dissected topset of the Provo delta. The sparse tributaries of the Bear River that cut a few deep gorges in the topset of the Provo delta of the Bear River did most of their downcutting in the 1940s and 1950s following the onset of flood irrigation facilitated by new pipelines (Clyde, 1953). The topographic lineaments of the Riverdale fault (+landslide?) zone are highlighted with arrows. Gravity data show significant southwest-down displacement across this fault. Created in GeomapApp. See Figure 1 for location.
Published: 01 December 2011
. The sparse tributaries of the Bear River that cut a few deep gorges in the topset of the Provo delta of the Bear River did most of their downcutting in the 1940s and 1950s following the onset of flood irrigation facilitated by new pipelines ( Clyde, 1953 ). The topographic lineaments of the Riverdale fault
Image
Aerial photograph shows abandoned meander belt in Round Valley with numerous relict point-bar deposits. Note the vegetation lineaments, water barriers, and low escarpments associated with the Riverdale fault zone (heavy line). One lineament in the NE parallels a road. White line denotes the deepest relict channel, and is probably the final position of the Bonneville River prior to abandonment. The acute angles at which tributaries join with the main channel and also the northward growth of successive packets of point-bar deposits indicate northward flow. The edge of Round Valley is roughly coincident with the older, higher 4775 ft (1455 m) Provo shoreline.
Published: 01 December 2011
Figure 9. Aerial photograph shows abandoned meander belt in Round Valley with numerous relict point-bar deposits. Note the vegetation lineaments, water barriers, and low escarpments associated with the Riverdale fault zone (heavy line). One lineament in the NE parallels a road. White line denotes
Image
Digital-elevation model of deltaic landforms in northern Cache Valley south of the Swan Lake terrain. RNF—Riverdale normal fault.
Published: 01 December 2011
Figure 6. Digital-elevation model of deltaic landforms in northern Cache Valley south of the Swan Lake terrain. RNF—Riverdale normal fault.
Image
Map of lake levels within Cache Valley. Deltas of the Bear River are differentiated from other lacustrine deposits. Provo shoreline is simplified west of Cache Valley. RNF—Riverdale normal fault (+landslide?). Inset map shows location within the Great Basin (modified from Morrison, 1991).
Published: 01 December 2011
Figure 1. Map of lake levels within Cache Valley. Deltas of the Bear River are differentiated from other lacustrine deposits. Provo shoreline is simplified west of Cache Valley. RNF—Riverdale normal fault (+landslide?). Inset map shows location within the Great Basin (modified from Morrison
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1942
AAPG Bulletin (1942) 26 (6): 1135–1154.
... certain reflections can be enhanced at the expense of others. Perfected, this type of selectivity will be of utmost value in solving fault problems. Among the proved fields a development program began which may ultimately be of far-reaching significance. With full approval of the Navy Department...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1945
AAPG Bulletin (1945) 29 (7): 956–1007.
... sequence of the Upper Cretaceous strata, whereas Rumsey Hills represents an isolated area faulted on the west side. FIG. 2. Figures 3 , 4 , and 5 represent lithologic character, formational divisions, and foraminiferal zones in the surface sections along the west side of the Great Valley...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1979
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1979) 69 (6): 1989–1994.
... environments of seismically active and inactive areas along the San Andreas Fault system , in Proceedings of the Conference on Geologic Problems of the San Andreas Fault System , Dickinson W. R. Grantz A. Editors Stanford University Publications, Geological Science , XI : 70 - 82...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 June 1943
AAPG Bulletin (1943) 27 (6): 862–873.
... for the year. In order of the number of completions, the following fields were most active. The foregoing data clearly indicate the effort the industry has made to develop heavy crude. The newly discovered Riverdale field is the only high-gravity field which has had any appreciable...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1982
AAPG Bulletin (1982) 66 (7): 843–859.
... and 0.19 km (0.12 mi) high to large, elongate patch reefs up to 2 km (1.24 mi) across, 5 km (3.1 mi) long, and 0.29 km (0.18 mi) high, to even larger barrier and shelf margin reefs. Fault control is evident; many reefs have grown on the upthrown side of tilted basement fault blocks, usually directly...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1988
AAPG Bulletin (1988) 72 (10B): 149–157.
... and then redrilled to a total depth of 11,135 ft. The well was tested with no results released, and was abandoned in July 1987. This wildcat was drilled on the Oakridge fault trend, along which are found several large oil fields producing from the Oligocene Sespe sands, Miocene Monterey cherts, and Pliocene Pico...
FIGURES
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 09 March 2022
DOI: 10.1144/SP518-2021-6
EISBN: 9781786205810
... Fig. 3. ( a ) Typical exposure of a Nipigon sill. ( b ) Photo of the Riverdale sill cross-cut by a dyke with Logan sill geochemistry. ( c ) Typical landscape of the Logan Basin (locally referred to as table lands), showing the Logan sills capping mesas and cuestas underlain by Rove Formation...
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Journal Article
Published: 12 September 2002
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2002) 39 (9): 1299–1312.
..., or faulted strata imaged on coincident seismic reflection data and are interpreted as representing juxtaposed units of Carboniferous strata. Other small anomalies appear to represent shallow contacts between intrusive or metasedimentary rocks visible in outcrops near the coast. A stronger, coast-parallel...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1985
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1985) 75 (5): 1285–1300.
.... With events below this threshold removed from the catalog of network seismicity, we find that about half of the earthquakes studied occurred within 10 km of the Ramapo fault system. This fault system lies about 30 km northwest of New York City and has been interpreted by several investigators to be the most...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2002
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2002) 92 (4): 1525–1542.
... Figure 3. Distribution of N–S component ground displacements of selected stations on the map of southern California with Quaternary, Tertiary, and Mesozoic geology ( Jennings, 1977 ; Park and Elrick, 1998 ). Surface fault rupture produced by the Hector Mine earthquake (shown in red) is from Treiman...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 January 1990
AAPG Bulletin (1990) 74 (1): 13–29.
... on the sedimentation record and provenance of rocks in a basin. We have used fission-track analysis to study the thermal and depositional history of the subsurface Tertiary sedimentary rocks on both sides of the active White Wolf reverse fault in the southern San Joaquin Valley. The distinctly different thermal...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1985
AAPG Bulletin (1985) 69 (3): 385–411.
..., and paleontologic data suggests that deposition of the Monterey was controlled by an interplay of basin geometry, San Andreas-related tectonics, fluctuations in sea level, and changes in climate. The basin is bounded on the east by the Sierran magmatic arc complex and on the west by the San Andreas fault. During...
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