4.7 Article

Fault segmentation: New concepts from the Wasatch Fault Zone, Utah, USA

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH
Volume 121, Issue 2, Pages 1131-1157

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2015JB012519

Keywords

normal fault; paleoseismology; segmentation; surface rupture; earthquake; Wasatch fault

Funding

  1. National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program
  2. URS Corporation

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The question of whether structural segment boundaries along multisegment normal faults such as the Wasatch fault zone (WFZ) act as persistent barriers to rupture is critical to seismic hazard analyses. We synthesized late Holocene paleoseismic data from 20 trench sites along the central WFZ to evaluate earthquake rupture length and fault segmentation. For the youngest (<3ka) and best-constrained earthquakes, differences in earthquake timing across prominent primary segment boundaries, especially for the most recent earthquakes on the north-central WFZ, are consistent with segment-controlled ruptures. However, broadly constrained earthquake times, dissimilar event times along the segments, the presence of smaller-scale (subsegment) boundaries, and areas of complex faulting permit partial-segment and multisegment (e.g., spillover) ruptures that are shorter (similar to 20-40km) or longer (similar to 60-100km) than the primary segment lengths (35-59km). We report a segmented WFZ model that includes 24 earthquakes since similar to 7ka and yields mean estimates of recurrence (1.1-1.3kyr) and vertical slip rate (1.3-2.0mm/yr) for the segments. However, additional rupture scenarios that include segment boundary spatial uncertainties, floating earthquakes, and multisegment ruptures are necessary to fully address epistemic uncertainties in rupture length. We compare the central WFZ to paleoseismic and historical surface ruptures in the Basin and Range Province and central Italian Apennines and conclude that displacement profiles have limited value for assessing the persistence of segment boundaries but can aid in interpreting prehistoric spillover ruptures. Our comparison also suggests that the probabilities of shorter and longer ruptures on the WFZ need to be investigated.

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