4.7 Article

Uplift and subsidence reveal a nonpersistent megathrust rupture boundary

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 41, Issue 7, Pages 2289-2296

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2014GL059380

Keywords

megathrust; rupture; Alaska; earthquake; diatom; Sitkinak Island

Funding

  1. U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Earthquake Hazards Program
  2. Multihazards Demonstration Project

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We report stratigraphic evidence of land-level change and tsunami inundation along the Alaska-Aleutian megathrust during prehistoric and historical earthquakes west of Kodiak Island. On Sitkinak Island, cores and tidal outcrops fringing a lagoon reveal five sharp lithologic contacts that record coseismic land-level change. Radiocarbon dates, Cs-137 profiles, computerized tomography scans, and microfossil assemblages are consistent with rapid uplift circa 290-0, 520-300, and 1050-790calyr B.P. and subsidence in A.D. 1964 and circa 640-510calyr B.P. Radiocarbon, Cs-137, and Pb-210 ages bracketing a sand bed traced 1.5km inland and evidence for sudden uplift are consistent with Russian accounts of an earthquake and tsunami in A.D. 1788. The mixed uplift and subsidence record suggests that Sitkinak Island sits above a nonpersistent boundary near the southwestern limit of the A.D. 1964 M-w 9.2 megathrust rupture.

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