Luminescence and weather data from eastern Chuckwalla Valley, Riverside County, California
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This data release contains luminescence and weather data from eastern Chuckwalla Valley, Riverside County, California. This study investigates sedimentary and geomorphic processes in eastern Chuckwalla Valley, Riverside County, California, a region of arid, basin-and-range terrain where extensive solar-energy development is planned. The objectives were to (1) measure local weather parameters and use them to model aeolian sediment transport potential; (2) identify surface sedimentary characteristics in representative localities; and (3) evaluate longer-term landscape evolution rates and processes by analyzing stratigraphy in combination with luminescence geochronology.
Data Release for Luminescence: Surficial Mapping of the Central Panamint Valley, Inyo County, California
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Several historic, multi-fault ruptures in the Eastern California Shear Zone (ECSZ) reinforce the need to understand how this rupture style contributes to seismic hazard in complex and diffuse fault zones. Several historic earthquakes in the ECSZ, the 1992 Landers, the 1999 Hector Mine, and the 2019 Ridgecrest rupture sequence, involved complex and multi-fault rupture. However, paleoseismic evidence of multi-fault ruptures in the ECSZ is poorly resolved in the rock record. Here I investigate paleoseismic evidence for complex rupture in Panamint Valley, located ~50 km northeast of the 2019 Ridgecrest ruptures. Late Holocene scarps in the 10 km-wide transtensional relay between the Ash Hill and Panamint Valley faults display surface rupture geometries analogous to those produced during the 1992 Landers and 1999 Hector Mine earthquakes. I produce a 1:4000 scale tectonogeomorphic map of the 40 km² area between the Ash Hill and Panamint Valley faults using my locally-calibrated relative-age alluvial fan chronology and using NCALM lidar DEMs and aerial imagery to identify ruptures. I bracket earthquakes with post-IR feldspar infrared-stimulated luminescence dating of offset deposits. I record vertical and lateral offsets at over 250+ locations using field mapping and backslipped reconstructions of newly generated high resolution (5 cm) drone-based structure from motion digital surface models. My mapping shows that the transtensional relay consists of 100+ fault strands that occur in parallel and en échelon arrays 5-7 km in length, with spacings of 1s to 100s of meters. Using my relative-age fan stratigraphy, geochronologic dating of offset deposits, and relative cumulative offset, I identify four late Holocene ruptures at ~0.3 – ~0.7 ka, ~0.7 – 2.4 ka, ~2.6 – 3.6 ka, and ~3.6 – 4.2 ka. Displacement magnitude per event ranges from 0.6 – 1.0 m of lateral slip and 0 – 0.2 m of dip slip. Displacement-length scaling relationships suggest that these mapped faults cannot rupture independently of a larger fault system. My results show overlap in the timing of ruptures in the transtensional relay, on the Ash Hill and Panamint faults, and that the Ash Hill and transtensional relay are kinematically similar. These similarities suggest this region acts as a zone for complex strain transfer between the Ash Hill and Panamint faults over multiple earthquake cycles. These relationships may support a geometric link at depth or the reoccupation of preexisting weaknesses at depth capable of transferring strain over larger distances.
Data Release for Luminescence: Plio-Pleistocene Hydrology and Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 4 Deep Springs Lake, Western Great Basin, Inyo County, California
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Deep Springs Valley (DSV) is a hydrologically isolated valley between the White (north and west) and Inyo (south and east) Mountains that is commonly excluded from regional paleohydrologic and paleoclimate studies. Previous studies showed that uplift of Deep Springs ridge (informal name) by the Deep Springs fault defeated streams crossing DSV and hydrologically isolating the valley sometime after eruption of the Bishop Tuff. Here we present tephrochronology, clast counts, paleontology, and infrared stimulated luminescence (IRSL) data that reaffirms interruption of the Plio-Pleistocene hydrology and formation of DSV during the Pleistocene. Fossil gastropod, ostracodes, and charophytes along with IRSL dating document the 83.3-61.5 ka freshwater Deep Springs Lake, which roughly coincides with 71-57 ka Marine Isotope State 4 (MIS 4) glacial climate period. Documentation of the MIS-4 glacial climate in southwestern North America is sparse and pluvial Deep Springs Lake is indirect evidence of the MIS 4 glaciation that is corroborated by pluvial lakes in nearby Owens and Searles Valleys. We hypothesize that the MIS-4 Deep Springs Lake overflowed into Eureka Valley via the Soldier Pass wind gap. Hydrologic evolution of DSV has potential implications for understanding Pliocene and Pleistocene biotic dispersal pathways and endemism.
DATA RELEASE for LUMINESCENCE: Mid to Late Quaternary Geomorphic and Paleoseismic Event History, Cheraw Fault, Colorado
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Despite its subdued expression and isolated location within the Great Plains of southeastern Colorado, the 80-km-long Cheraw fault may be one of the most active faults in North America east of the Southern Rocky Mountains. We present geomorphic analyses, geochronology, and paleoseismic trenching data to 1) document the rupture history of the ~45-km-long southwestern section of the Cheraw fault over the past ~19 ka, and 2) evaluate slip-rate changes for the entire fault over the past ~200 ka. Results from new trenches excavated at the Old Ranch site show evidence of four surface-rupture events since ~19 ka, each with an average vertical displacement of 0.75 m. An additional event is likely only slightly older than ~19 ka. Evidence for relatively small displacements at and near the Old Ranch site suggests that most of these earthquakes were M 7 or less and likely did not rupture the full length of the Cheraw fault. Since ~19 ka, the average slip rate is ~0.16 mm/yr near the Old Ranch site with an average interevent time of 3 - 5 kyr. New geochronologic data for mid- to late Quaternary geomorphic surfaces cut by the Cheraw fault imply rapid incision by local Arkansas River tributaries from ~145 ka to ~100 ka. Maximum vertical offsets of 7 to 9 m for these surfaces indicate that from ~19 to >200 ka the average slip rate was no greater than ~0.03 mm/yr. The accelerated slip rate since ~19 ka suggests a possible response to rapid erosional unloading and/or a limited late Cenozoic, <40 kyr, paleoseismic history for the Cheraw fault.
DATA RELEASE for LUMINESCENCE: Mid to Late Quaternary Geomorphic and Paleoseismic Event History, Cheraw Fault, Colorado
공공데이터포털
Despite its subdued expression and isolated location within the Great Plains of southeastern Colorado, the 80-km-long Cheraw fault may be one of the most active faults in North America east of the Southern Rocky Mountains. We present geomorphic analyses, geochronology, and paleoseismic trenching data to 1) document the rupture history of the ~45-km-long southwestern section of the Cheraw fault over the past ~19 ka, and 2) evaluate slip-rate changes for the entire fault over the past ~200 ka. Results from new trenches excavated at the Old Ranch site show evidence of four surface-rupture events since ~19 ka, each with an average vertical displacement of 0.75 m. An additional event is likely only slightly older than ~19 ka. Evidence for relatively small displacements at and near the Old Ranch site suggests that most of these earthquakes were M 7 or less and likely did not rupture the full length of the Cheraw fault. Since ~19 ka, the average slip rate is ~0.16 mm/yr near the Old Ranch site with an average interevent time of 3 - 5 kyr. New geochronologic data for mid- to late Quaternary geomorphic surfaces cut by the Cheraw fault imply rapid incision by local Arkansas River tributaries from ~145 ka to ~100 ka. Maximum vertical offsets of 7 to 9 m for these surfaces indicate that from ~19 to >200 ka the average slip rate was no greater than ~0.03 mm/yr. The accelerated slip rate since ~19 ka suggests a possible response to rapid erosional unloading and/or a limited late Cenozoic, <40 kyr, paleoseismic history for the Cheraw fault.
Data Release for Luminescence: Construction and modification of debris-flow alluvial fans as captured in the geomorphic and sedimentary record: examples from the western Sangre de Cristo Mountains, south-central Colorado
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The following report summarizes the dating results from the San Luis Valley-Pioneer Fan 2017-2019 dating project. Within this report, we detail the methodology used by the USGS Luminescence Geochronology Laboratory to obtain ages including sample preparation methods, luminescence measurement, equivalent dose determination, and dating-related calculations. We recommend that this report be included as the supplementary material for any publication(s) that use the ages within this report.