Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; August 2008; v. 98; no. 4; p. 1681-1695; DOI: 10.1785/0120070145
© 2008 Seismological Society of America
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Structure of the Eastern Seattle Fault Zone, Washington State: New Insights from Seismic Reflection Data

Lee M. Liberty

Center for Geophysical Investigation of the Shallow Subsurface (CGISS), Boise State University , 1910 University Drive, Boise, Idaho 83725-1536 lliberty{at}boisestate.edu

Thomas L. Pratt

U.S. Geological Survey, School of Oceanography, Box 357940, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195 tpratt{at}ocean.washington.edu

We identify and characterize the active Seattle fault zone (SFZ) east of Lake Washington with newly acquired seismic reflection data. Our results focus on structures observed in the upper 1 km below the cities of Bellevue, Sammamish, Newcastle, and Fall City, Washington. The SFZ appears as a broad zone of faulting and folding at the southern boundary of the Seattle basin and north edge of the Seattle uplift. We interpret the Seattle fault as a thrust fault that accommodates north–south shortening by forming a fault-propagation fold with a forelimb breakthrough. The blind tip of the main fault forms a synclinal growth fold (deformation front) that extends at least 8 km east of Vasa Park (west side of Lake Sammamish) and defines the south edge of the Seattle basin. South of the deformation front is the forelimb breakthrough fault, which was exposed in a trench at Vasa Park. The Newcastle Hills anticline, a broad anticline forming the north part of the Seattle uplift east of Lake Washington, is interpreted to lie between the main blind strand of the Seattle fault and a backthrust. Our profiles, on the northern limb of this anticline, consistently image north-dipping strata. A structural model for the SFZ east of Lake Washington is consistent with about 8 km of slip on the upper part of the Seattle fault, but the amount of motion is only loosely constrained.







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