Slope failures within and upstream of Lake Quinault, Washington, as uneven responses to Holocene earthquakes along the Cascadia subduction zoneAbstract

TitleSlope failures within and upstream of Lake Quinault, Washington, as uneven responses to Holocene earthquakes along the Cascadia subduction zoneAbstract
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsLeithold, EL, Wegmann, KW, Bohnenstiehl, DR, Smith, SG, Noren, A, O’Grady, R
JournalQuaternary Research
Volume89
Issue1
Pagination178 - 200
Date PublishedJan-01-2018
ISSN0033-5894
KeywordsCascadia, Earthquake, lakes, Paleoseismic, Sediment
Abstract

Investigation of Lake Quinault in western Washington, including a reflection seismic survey, analysis of piston cores, and preliminary mapping in the steep, landslide-prone Quinault River catchment upstream of the lake, reveals evidence for three episodes of earthquake disturbance in the past 3000 yr. These earthquakes triggered failures on the lake’s underwater slopes and delta front, as well as subaerial landsliding, partial channel blockage, and forced fluvial sediment aggradation. The ages of the three Lake Quinault disturbance events overlap with those of coseismically subsided, coastal marsh soils nearby in southwest Washington that are interpreted to record ruptures of the Cascadia megathrust. Absent from Lake Quinault, however, are signals of obvious disturbance from five additional subduction earthquakes inferred to have occurred during the period of record. The lack of evidence for these events may reflect the limitations of the data set derived from the detrital, river-dominated lake stratigraphy but may also have bearing on debates about segmentation and the distribution of slip along the Cascadia subduction zone during prior earthquakes.

URLhttps://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0033589417000965/type/journal_article
DOI10.1017/qua.2017.96