Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6432885 Geomorphology 2012 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

At the Skokomish River delta in Washington State's Puget Lowland, coseismic uplift and tilting trapped the river against a valley wall, resulting in little to no channel migration for the last 1000 years. The most recent earthquake occurred before AD 780-990, based on stratigraphic evidence such as sand blows and abrupt facies changes. Since the hypothesized tilting a 5-km-long section of the river has not migrated laterally or avulsed, resulting in reduced migration and a muddy intertidal flat that is 2 km wider in the east than on the west side of Annas Bay. A ridge running perpendicular to the river may also have restricted channel mobility. The ridge may be either the surface expression of a blind thrust fault or a relict, uplifted and tilted shoreline. The uplift and tilting of the delta can be ascribed to any of three nearby active fault zones, of which the most likely, based on the orientation of deformation, is the Saddle Mountain fault zone, which produced a surface rupture 1000-1300 years ago. The delta has experienced submergence since the earthquake. A forest that colonized an uplifted part of the delta about 800-1200 years ago was later submerged by at least 1.6 m and is now a brackish-water marsh.

► Sedimentary and geomorphic evidence of reduced channel mobility by thrust faulting ► Millennial-scale impacts an earthquake on delta morphology and river dynamics. ► New evidence of an earthquake on a potentially unknown fault

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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