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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2148/520

Title: Active faulting and quaternary paleohydrology of the Truckee fault zone north of Truckee, California
Authors: Melody, Aaron
Thesis Advisor: Hemphill-Haley, Mark
Keywords: Holocene faulting
Quaternary hydrology
Sierra Nevada tectonics
Northwest Walker Lane tectonics
Sierra Nevada Holocene climate
Issue Date: Sep-2009
Publisher: Humboldt State University
Abstract: Active faulting has been documented along the northwest-striking Mohawk Valley fault zone (2-3 normal-dextral rupture events in the Holocene with geologic slip rates of ~0.2mm/yr) and in the Lake Tahoe basin (mostly on north-striking normal faults with geologic slip rates of up to 0.4 mm/yr). Evidence for Holocene faulting in the region between these zones; for example along the Truckee fault zone, has been sparse to absent. Soil cores and trenches were hand-dug in a meadow north of Truckee, California bound by a low (~1m) north-south trending, east-facing scarp. Radiocarbon age estimates of organic sediment indicate the meadow was a marsh during the Late Quaternary and was abruptly infilled and/or desiccated with the deposition of the ~7,000 yr B.P Tsoyowata tephra (Mt. Mazama). Both the tephra and the marsh sediment are offset ~50-100 cm across a vertical fault striking sub-parallel with the scarp. This study provides evidence for at least one surface-faulting event during the Holocene and possibly another in the late Pleistocene along the Truckee fault zone. These findings may aid in the identification of other seismic sources capable of significant ground rupture in the area.
Description: Thesis (M.S.)--Humboldt State University, Environmental Systems: Geology, 2009
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2148/520
Appears in Collections:HSU Masters Theses

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