CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
Search Results
Author : Blais-Stevens, A.; Clague, J.J.; Bobrowsky, P.T.; and Patterson, R.T.
Date : 1997
Title : Late Holocene sedimentation in Saanich Inlet, British Columbia, and its paleoseismic implications
Publication : Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
Issue : 34(10):
Page(s) : 1345-1357
Abstract
Eight piston cores of sediment spanning the last 1500 years were collected from Saanich Inlet, an anoxic fiord on southern Vancouver Island, to obtain information on sedimentation and prehistoric earthquake activity. The cores consist mainly of fine-grained varved sediments, but include massive layers deposited by subaqueous debris flows. The debris flows may have been triggered by earthquakes or by the buildup of fine sediment on the walls of the inlet. Cesium-137 and 210Pb data, 14C ages, and varve counts were used to date and correlate massive layers in two or more cores and are about 200, 440, 550, 800-850, 1050-1100, 1100-1150, and 1450-1500 years old. Two of these older layers may correlate with previously documented earthquakes in the region. There is an average of one massive layer per 116 varves in the core with the greatest number of such layers, which is broadly consistent with the expected periodicity of moderate to large earthquakes in the region, on average, one earthquake producing local Modified Mercalli Intensity VII or VIII per century. Saanich Inlet may contain a proxy record of all moderate and large earthquakes that have affected southwestern British Columbia during Holocene time, but some of the massive layers do not appear to correlate from core to core and undoubtedly are nonseismically generated deposits.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology