CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Bolton, M.K.; Rogers, G.C.; and Mulder, T.L.
Date : 2001.
Title : In-slab earthquakes at the north end of the Cascadia Subduction Zone.
Publication : AGU 2001 Fall Meeting, Moscone Centre, San Franciso, California, December 10-14, 2001.
Issue :
Page(s) :
Abstract
At the north end of the Cascadia subduction zone, in-slab earthquakes occur within the Juan de Fuca plate up to depths of 100 km and in two distinctconcentrations. One concentration, ranging in depth from 25 to 35 km, lies beneath the west coast of Vancouver Island. First motion focal mechanismsolutions from this group of earthquakes illustrate a complex pattern, indicating no prominent regional tectonic stress pattern. The second concentration lies beneath Georgia Strait and Puget Sound, Washington. These earthquakes are deeper than the first concentration. Most events are in the 45 to 65 km depth range, as they occur farther from the margin where the angle of the subducting plate increases from approximately 15 degrees to approximately 30 degrees. Most of the in-slab earthquakes in the GeorgiaStrait/Puget Sound area are dominated by normal faulting and the larger, deeper events indicate predominately down-dip tension axes, as displayed byfirst motion and moment tensor focal mechanism solutions from the recent Nisqually and Satsop earthquakes. There appears to be some systematicdifferences in magnitudes calculated for in-slab earthquakes by the Geological Survey of Canada (GSC) and the University of Washington (UW).
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology