Active faulting on the Wallula fault zone within the Olympic-Wallowa lineament, Washington State, USA

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Abstract

The Wallula fault zone is an integral feature of the Olympic-Wallowa lineament, an ~500-km-long topographic lineament oblique to the Cascadia plate boundary, extending from Vancouver Island, British Columbia, to Walla Walla, Washington. The structure and past earthquake activity of the Wallula fault zone are important because of nearby infrastructure, and also because the fault zone defines part of the Olympic-Wallowa lineament in south-central Washington and suggests that the Olympic-Wallowa lineament may have a structural origin. We used aeromagnetic and ground magnetic data to locate the trace of the Wallula fault zone in the subsurface and map a quarry exposure of the Wallula fault zone near Finley, Washington, to investigate past earthquakes along the fault. We mapped three main packages of rocks and unconsolidated sediments in an ~10-m-high quarry exposure. Our mapping suggests at least three late Pleistocene earthquakes with surface rupture, and an episode of liquefaction in the Holocene along the Wallula fault zone. Faint striae on the master fault surface are subhorizontal and suggest reverse dextral oblique motion for these earthquakes, consistent with dextral offset on the Wallula fault zone inferred from offset aeromagnetic anomalies associated with ca. 8.5 Ma basalt dikes. Magnetic surveys show that the Wallula fault actually lies 350 m to the southwest of the trace shown on published maps, passes directly through deformed late Pleistocene or younger deposits exposed at Finley quarry, and extends uninterrupted over 120 km.

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Sherrod, B. L., Blakely, R. J., Lasher, J. P., Lamb, A., Mahan, S. A., Foit, F. F., & Barnett, E. A. (2016). Active faulting on the Wallula fault zone within the Olympic-Wallowa lineament, Washington State, USA. Bulletin of the Geological Society of America, 128(11–12), 1636–1659. https://doi.org/10.1130/B31359.1

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