Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA

We infer a history of three great megathrust earthquakes during the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary based on the lateral extent of sharp (≤3 mm) peat-mud stratigraphic contacts in cores and outcrops, coseismic subsidence as interpreted from fossil diatom assemblages and reconstructed wi...

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Main Authors: Nelson, Alan R., Hawkes, Andrea D., Sawai, Yuki, Engelhart, Simon E., Witter, Rob, Grant-Walter, Wendy C., Bradley, Lee-Ann, Dura, Tina, Cahill, Niamh, Horton, Benjamin Peter
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145241
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1452412023-02-28T16:40:32Z Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA Nelson, Alan R. Hawkes, Andrea D. Sawai, Yuki Engelhart, Simon E. Witter, Rob Grant-Walter, Wendy C. Bradley, Lee-Ann Dura, Tina Cahill, Niamh Horton, Benjamin Peter Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Social sciences::Geography Paleoseismology Cascadia Subduction Zone We infer a history of three great megathrust earthquakes during the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary based on the lateral extent of sharp (≤3 mm) peat-mud stratigraphic contacts in cores and outcrops, coseismic subsidence as interpreted from fossil diatom assemblages and reconstructed with foraminiferal assemblages using a Bayesian transfer function, and regional correlation of 14C-modeled ages for the times of subsidence. A subsidence contact from 1700 CE (contact A), sometimes overlain by tsunami-deposited sand, can be traced over distances of 7 km. Contacts B and D, which record subsidence during two earlier megathrust earthquakes, are much less extensive but are traced across a 700-m by 270-m tidal marsh. Although some other Cascadia studies report evidence for an earthquake between contacts B and D, our lack of extensive evidence for such an earthquake may result from the complexities of preserving identifiable evidence of it in the rapidly shifting shoreline environments of the lower river and bay. Ages (95% intervals) and subsidence for contacts are: A, 1700 CE (1.1 ± 0.5 m); B, 942–764 cal a BP (0.7 ± 0.4 m and 1.0 m ± 0.4 m); and D, 1568–1361 cal a BP (1.0 m ± 0.4 m). Comparisons of contact subsidence and the degree of overlap of their modeled ages with ages for other Cascadia sites are consistent with megathrust ruptures many hundreds of kilometers long. But these data cannot conclusively distinguish among different types or lengths of ruptures recorded by the three great earthquake contacts at the Nehalem River estuary. Published version 2020-12-15T07:47:38Z 2020-12-15T07:47:38Z 2020 Journal Article Nelson, A. R., Hawkes, A. D., Sawai, Y., Engelhart, S. E., Witter, R., Grant-Walter, W. C., . . . Horton, B. P. (2020). Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA. Open Quaternary, 6(1), 2-. doi:10.5334/oq.70 2055-298X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145241 10.5334/oq.70 1 6 en Open Quaternary © 2020 The Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Geography
Paleoseismology
Cascadia Subduction Zone
spellingShingle Social sciences::Geography
Paleoseismology
Cascadia Subduction Zone
Nelson, Alan R.
Hawkes, Andrea D.
Sawai, Yuki
Engelhart, Simon E.
Witter, Rob
Grant-Walter, Wendy C.
Bradley, Lee-Ann
Dura, Tina
Cahill, Niamh
Horton, Benjamin Peter
Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA
description We infer a history of three great megathrust earthquakes during the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary based on the lateral extent of sharp (≤3 mm) peat-mud stratigraphic contacts in cores and outcrops, coseismic subsidence as interpreted from fossil diatom assemblages and reconstructed with foraminiferal assemblages using a Bayesian transfer function, and regional correlation of 14C-modeled ages for the times of subsidence. A subsidence contact from 1700 CE (contact A), sometimes overlain by tsunami-deposited sand, can be traced over distances of 7 km. Contacts B and D, which record subsidence during two earlier megathrust earthquakes, are much less extensive but are traced across a 700-m by 270-m tidal marsh. Although some other Cascadia studies report evidence for an earthquake between contacts B and D, our lack of extensive evidence for such an earthquake may result from the complexities of preserving identifiable evidence of it in the rapidly shifting shoreline environments of the lower river and bay. Ages (95% intervals) and subsidence for contacts are: A, 1700 CE (1.1 ± 0.5 m); B, 942–764 cal a BP (0.7 ± 0.4 m and 1.0 m ± 0.4 m); and D, 1568–1361 cal a BP (1.0 m ± 0.4 m). Comparisons of contact subsidence and the degree of overlap of their modeled ages with ages for other Cascadia sites are consistent with megathrust ruptures many hundreds of kilometers long. But these data cannot conclusively distinguish among different types or lengths of ruptures recorded by the three great earthquake contacts at the Nehalem River estuary.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Nelson, Alan R.
Hawkes, Andrea D.
Sawai, Yuki
Engelhart, Simon E.
Witter, Rob
Grant-Walter, Wendy C.
Bradley, Lee-Ann
Dura, Tina
Cahill, Niamh
Horton, Benjamin Peter
format Article
author Nelson, Alan R.
Hawkes, Andrea D.
Sawai, Yuki
Engelhart, Simon E.
Witter, Rob
Grant-Walter, Wendy C.
Bradley, Lee-Ann
Dura, Tina
Cahill, Niamh
Horton, Benjamin Peter
author_sort Nelson, Alan R.
title Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA
title_short Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA
title_full Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA
title_fullStr Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA
title_full_unstemmed Identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the Nehalem River estuary, northern Oregon coast, USA
title_sort identifying the greatest earthquakes of the past 2000 years at the nehalem river estuary, northern oregon coast, usa
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145241
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