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Olympic Mountains
Structural styles, deformation, and uplift of the Olympic Mountains, Washington: Implications for accretionary wedge deformation
Paleoseismic Trenching Reveals Late Quaternary Kinematics of the Leech River Fault: Implications for Forearc Strain Accumulation in Northern Cascadia
Repeated megaturbidite deposition in Lake Crescent, Washington, USA, triggered by Holocene ruptures of the Lake Creek-Boundary Creek fault system
Tectonic and glacial contributions to focused exhumation in the Olympic Mountains, Washington, USA
Influence of the megathrust earthquake cycle on upper-plate deformation in the Cascadia forearc of Washington State, USA
Holocene Earthquakes of Magnitude 7 during Westward Escape of the Olympic Mountains, Washington
Influence of precipitation phase on the form of mountain ranges
Geology of Seattle and the Seattle area, Washington
Abstract The city of Seattle, Washington State, lies within the Puget Sound Lowland, an elongate structural and topographic basin between the Cascade Range and Olympic Mountains. The area has been impacted by repeated glaciation in the past 2.4 m.y. and crustal deformation related to the Cascadia subduction zone. The present landscape largely results from those repeated cycles of glacial scouring and deposition and tectonic activity, subsequently modified by landsliding, stream erosion and deposition, and human activity. The last glacier to override the area, the Vashon-age glacier of the Fraser glaciation, reached the Seattle area ca. 14,500 14 C yr B.P. (17,400 cal yr B.P.) and had retreated from the area by ca. 13,650 14 C yr B.P. (16,400 cal yr B.P.). The Seattle area sits atop a complex and incomplete succession of glacial and nonglacial deposits that extends below sea level and overlies an irregular bedrock surface. These subsurface materials show spatial lithologic variability, are truncated by many unconformities, and are deformed by gentle folds and faults. Sediments that predate the last glacial–interglacial cycle are exposed where erosion has sliced into the upland, notably along the shorelines of Puget Sound and Lake Washington, along the Duwamish River valley, and along Holocene streams. The city of Seattle straddles the Seattle uplift, the Seattle fault zone, and the Seattle basin, three major bedrock structures that reflect north-south crustal shortening in the Puget Lowland. Tertiary bedrock is exposed in isolated locations in south Seattle on the Seattle uplift, and then it drops to 550 m below ground under the north half of the city in the Seattle basin. The 6-km-wide Seattle fault zone runs west to east across the south part of the city. A young strand of the Seattle fault last moved ~1100 yr ago. Seattle has also been shaken by subduction-zone earthquakes on the Cascadia subduction zone and deep earthquakes within the subducting plate. Certain postglacial deposits in Seattle are prone to liquefaction from earthquakes of sufficient size and duration. The landforms and near-surface deposits that cover much of the Seattle area record a brief period in the geologic history of the region. Upland till plains in many areas are cut by recessional meltwater channels and modern river channels. Till plains display north-south drumlins with long axes oriented in the ice-flow direction. Glacially overridden deposits underlie the drumlins and most of the uplands, whereas loosely consolidated postglacial deposits fill deep valleys and recessional meltwater channels. Ice-contact deposits are found in isolated locations across the uplands and along the margins of the uplands, and outwash deposits line upland recessional channels. Soft organic-rich deposits fill former lakes and bogs. A preliminary geologic map of Seattle was published in 1962 that is only now being replaced by a detailed geologic map. The new map utilizes a data set of 35,000 geotechnical boreholes, geomorphic analyses of light detection and ranging (LIDAR), new field mapping, excavation observations, geochronology, and integration with other geologic and geophysical information. Findings of the new mapping and recent research include recognition of Possession- and Whidbey-age deposits in Seattle, recognition that ~50% of the large drumlins are cored with pre-Vashon deposits and 50% with Vashon deposits, and that numerous unconformities are present in the subsurface. Paleotopographic surfaces display 500 m (1600 feet) of relief. The surficial deposits of Seattle can be grouped into the following categories to exemplify the distribution of geologic materials across the city: postglacial deposits 16%, late glacial deposits 12%, Vashon glacial deposits 60%, pre-Vashon deposits 9%, and bedrock 3%. of these, 49% are considered fine-grained deposits, 19% are considered intermediate or interbedded deposits, and 32% are considered coarse-grained deposits. These percentages include only the primary geologic units and not the overlying fill and colluvial deposits.
Detrital-zircon fission-track ages for the “Hoh Formation”: Implications for late Cenozoic evolution of the Cascadia subduction wedge
Debris flows as agents of morphological heterogeneity at low-order confluences, Olympic Mountains, Washington
Valley formation by fluvial and glacial erosion
Holocene strath terraces, climate change, and active tectonics: The Clearwater River basin, Olympic Peninsula, Washington State
On steady states in mountain belts
Late Cenozoic exhumation of the Cascadia accretionary wedge in the Olympic Mountains, northwest Washington State
Late Cenozoic structure and correlation to seismicity along the Olympic-Wallowa Lineament, northwestern United States: Discussion and reply
Isotopic provenance of Paleogene sandstones from the accretionary core of the Olympic Mountains, Washington
Weathering-rind thicknesses were measured on volcanic clasts in sequences of glacial deposits in seven mountain ranges in the western United States and in the Puget lowland. Because the rate of rind development decreases with time, ratios of rind thicknesses provide limits on corresponding age ratios. In all areas studied, deposits of late Wisconsinan age are obvious; deposits of late Illinoian age (ca. 140 ka) also seem to be present in each area, although independent evidence for their numerical age is circumstantial. The weathering-rind data indicate that deposits that have intermediate ages between these two are common, and ratios of rind thicknesses suggest an early Wisconsinan age (about 60 to 70 ka) for some of the intermediate deposits. Three of the seven studied alpine areas (McCall, Idaho; Yakima Valley, Washington; and Lassen Peak, California) appear to have early Wisconsinan drift beyond the extent of late Wisconsinan ice. In addition, Mount Rainier and the Puget lowland, Washington, have outwash terraces but no moraines of early Wisconsinan age. The sequences near West Yellowstone, Montana; Truckee, California; and in the southern Olympic Mountains have no recognized moraines or outwash of this age. Many of the areas have deposits that may be of middle Wisconsinan age. Differences in the relative extents of early Wisconsinan alpine glaciers are not expected from the marine oxygen-isotope record and are not explained by any simple trend in climatic variables or proximity to oceanic moisture sources. However, alpine glaciers could have responded more quickly and more variably than continental ice sheets to intense, short-lived climatic events, and they may have been influenced by local climatic or hypsometric effects. The relative sizes of early and late Wisconsinan alpine glaciers could also reflect differences between early and late Wisconsinan continental ice sheets and their regional climatic effects.