Trials and Tribulations of Life on an Active Subduction Zone: Field Trips in and around Vancouver, Canada

This volume, prepared for the 126th GSA Annual Meeting in Vancouver, Canada, offers guides to trips in the Cascadia subduction zone. The active tectonism of the region has had a profound effect on the bedrock and surficial geology of the area, and on human interactions with the geologic environment. These themes are reflected in the trips associated with the meeting. Trip topics relate to bedrock geology, volcanism and Cordilleran glaciation and deglaciation, as well as human interaction with the natural environment. The trips that discuss human interaction cover archaeology, natural hazards and the urban environment, as well as the role that local geology and tectonism have played in shaping colonization of the region since the last glaciation. The field guide volume has something for everyone!
Mount Baker lahars and debris flows, ancient, modern, and future
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Published:January 01, 2014
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CiteCitation
David S. Tucker, Kevin M. Scott, Eric E. Grossman, Scott Linneman, 2014. "Mount Baker lahars and debris flows, ancient, modern, and future", Trials and Tribulations of Life on an Active Subduction Zone: Field Trips in and around Vancouver, Canada, Shahin Dashtgard, Brent Ward
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Abstract
The Middle Fork Nooksack River drains the southwestern slopes of the active Mount Baker stratovolcano in northwest Washington State. The river enters Bellingham Bay at a growing delta 98 km to the west. Various types of debris flows have descended the river, generated by volcano collapse or eruption (lahars), glacial outburst floods, and moraine landslides. Initial deposition of sediment during debris flows occurs on the order of minutes to a few hours. Long-lasting, down-valley transport of sediment, all the way to the delta, occurs over a period of decades, and affects fish habitat, flood risk, gravel mining, and drinking water.
Holocene lahars and large debris flows (>106 m3) have left recognizable deposits in the Middle Fork Nooksack valley. A debris flow in 2013 resulting from a landslide in a Little Ice Age moraine had an estimated volume of 100,000 m3, yet affected turbidity for the entire length of the river, and produced a slug of sediment that is currently being reworked and remobilized in the river system. Deposits of smaller-volume debris flows, deposited as terraces in the upper valley, may be entirely eroded within a few years. Consequently, the geologic record of small debris flows such as those that occurred in 2013 is probably very fragmentary. Small debris flows may still have significant impacts on hydrology, biology, and human uses of rivers downstream. Impacts include the addition of waves of fine sediment to stream loads, scouring or burying salmon-spawning gravels, forcing unplanned and sudden closure of municipal water intakes, damaging or destroying trail crossings, extending river deltas into estuaries, and adding to silting of harbors near river mouths.
- absolute age
- bedload
- C-14
- carbon
- Cenozoic
- dates
- debris flows
- geologic hazards
- glaciers
- Holocene
- isotopes
- jokulhlaups
- lahars
- landslides
- Little Ice Age
- mass movements
- middle Holocene
- moraines
- Mount Baker
- natural hazards
- Neoglacial
- Quaternary
- radioactive isotopes
- road log
- sediments
- seismograms
- siltation
- stratovolcanoes
- turbidity
- United States
- upper Holocene
- volcanoes
- Washington
- Whatcom County Washington
- northwestern Washington
- Bellingham Bay
- Elbow Lake
- Nooksack River
- Deming Glacier
- Ridley Creek