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Land-level changes from a late Holocene earthquake in the northern Puget lowland, Washington

January 1, 2004

An earthquake, probably generated on the southern Whidbey Island fault zone, caused 1-2 m of ground-surface uplift on central Whidbey Island ???2800-3200 yr ago. The cause of the uplift is a fold that grew coseismically above a blind fault that was the earthquake source. Both the fault and the fold at the fault's tip are imaged on multichannel seismic refection profiles in Puget Sound immediately east of the central Whidbey Island site. Uplift is documented through contrasting histories of relative sea level at two coastal marshes on either side of the fault. Late Holocene shallow-crustal earthquakes of Mw = 6.5-7 pose substantial seismic hazard to the northern Puget Lowland. ?? 2004 Geological Society of America.

Publication Year 2004
Title Land-level changes from a late Holocene earthquake in the northern Puget lowland, Washington
DOI 10.1130/G20361.1
Authors H.M. Kelsey, B. Sherrod, S. Y. Johnson, S.V. Dadisman
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Geology
Index ID 70027085
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse