Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; August 2006; v. 96; no. 4A;
p. 1305-1320; DOI: 10.1785/0120020120
© 2006 Seismological Society of America
Holocene and Latest Pleistocene Activity on the Mesquite Lake Fault near Twentynine Palms, Eastern California Shear Zone: Implications for Fault Interaction
Christopher L. Madden*,1,
Charles M. Rubin1 and
Ashley Streig1
1 Department of Geological
Sciences
Central Washington University
Ellensburg, Washington
98926
charlier{at}geology.cwu.edu
Correspondence: * Present address: Earth Consultants International, 150 El Camino Real, Suite 212, Tustin, California, 92780; madden{at}earthconsultants.com.
Paleoseismic data from the Mesquite Lake fault reveal evidence for up to four
prehistoric earthquakes since the latest Pleistocene, with three large surface-
rupturing events in about the past 10.2 ka. Three events were recorded in
trenches excavated for this investigation on Mesquite Lake playa. A buried fault
scarp bracketed by accelerator mass spectrometer radiocarbon ages of detrital
charcoal indicate that a mid to late Holocene event occurred between about 2.7
and 7.4 ka, most likely between about 3.9 and 4.6 ka. An early Holocene rupture
defined by a subtle buried scarp and upward-terminating fissures is bracketed
between about 7.7 and 10.2 ka. Evidence for an inferred late Pleistocene event
prior to about 10.2 ka includes a subtle scarp, upward termination of faults,
folding, and in-filled craters and fissures. A previous paleoseismic
investigation just south (2 km) of the playa identified at least one event in
the past 1.3 ka, although this event was not identified in this study at the
playa site. Apparent vertical offsets of about 1.0 m and 1.2 m for the last two
events at the playa site suggest a sequence of similar serial ruptures. These
separations are comparable to the height of surficial scarps just south of the
playa. Because the vertical separations produced by each event are similar, the
Mesquite Lake fault, at least locally, experiences similar slip-per-event. Since
the initiation of Holocene playa development just over 10.2 ka ago, we estimate
a horizontal slip rate of 0.7 0.9 mm yr1 that is
consistent with slip rates for other faults in the eastern California shear
zone. Despite large uncertainties, event stratigraphy at the playa site shows
that periods of quiescence up to thousands of years separated large ruptures,
similar to other faults in the eastern California shear zone. Comparison of
paleoseismic studies in the eastern California shear zone suggest that the
Mesquite Lake, and possibly the Bullion and Lavic Lake faults in the eastern
part of the shear zone may have failed during periods of seismic quiescence in
the western part of the zone, at about 1 5 ka. This suggests that
seismic strain release may vary spatially across the shear zone and that
temporal clusters of earthquakes are not necessarily spatially limited to
specific regions.
Copyright © 2009 by Seismological Society of America