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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; August 2009; v. 99; no. 4; p. 2594-2598; DOI: 10.1785/0120080030
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Comment and Reply

Comment on "Late Holocene Rupture of the Northern San Andreas Fault and Possible Stress Linkage to the Cascadia Subduction Zone" by Chris Goldfinger, Kelly Grijalva, Roland Bürgmann, Ann E. Morey, Joel E. Johnson, C. Hans Nelson, Julia Gutiérrez-Pastor, Andrew Ericsson, Eugene Karabanov, Jason D. Chaytor, Jason Patton, and Eulàlia Gràcia

Ganapathy Shanmugam

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Texas at Arlington, P.O. Box 19049, Arlington, Texas 76019-0049 shanshanmugam@aol.com

The first 300 words of the full text of this article appear below.


    Introduction
 
Goldfinger et al. (2008) conclude that in the northern San Andreas fault and Cascadia margins, Holocene turbidites (i.e., deposits of turbidity currents) were triggered by earthquakes. However, their conclusion falters because of (1) selective data sets that were used for establishing seismicity as the sole triggering mechanism of turbidites, (2) flawed sedimentological concepts and criteria that were applied for interpreting turbidites, and (3) faulty methodologies that were employed for correlating turbidites over long distances. This same turbidite (i.e., sedimentological) theme has also been published previously by Goldfinger et al. (2003a,b, 2006, 2007). As with the recent article in BSSA, their previous publications on the subject matter were published in journals that are concerned primarily with geophysical topics. As a result, critical sedimentological conclusions, which are an integral part of the articles by Goldfinger et al., have not been subjected to a rigorous scrutiny. Therefore, I would like to comment on the following three issues.


    Triggering Mechanisms
 
Along the Washington–Oregon–California margin, potential triggering mechanisms of sediment failures and related turbidity currents are (1) earthquake (Adams, 1990), (2) tectonic oversteepening (Greene et al., 2006), (3) tsunami (Adams, 1990; Geist, 2005), (4) cyclone (Adams, 1990; Shanmugam, 2008a, fig. 4), (5) ebb tidal current (Puig et al., 2003), (6) submarine volcanic activity (Davis et al., 2002), (7) sediment loading (Adams, 1990), and (8) gas hydrates (Chapman et al., 2004). The link between gas-hydrate decomposition and mass movements on the Norwegian margin was discussed by Mienert et al. (2005). In the Cascadia margin, a total of 40 cyclones along the Oregon coast were reported for the 1984–2006 period (Moritz and Moritz, 2006). A total of 24 tsunamis were reported along the Oregon coast for the 1868–1994 period (Table 1). Cyclones and tsunamis are powerful . . . [Full Text of this Article]


    Sedimentological Concepts and Criteria
 

    Correlation Methodologies
 

    Concluding Remarks
 

    Data and Resources
 

Related articles in Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America:

Late Holocene Rupture of the Northern San Andreas Fault and Possible Stress Linkage to the Cascadia Subduction Zone
Chris Goldfinger, Kelly Grijalva, Roland Bürgmann, Ann E. Morey, Joel E. Johnson, C. Hans Nelson, Julia Gutiérrez-Pastor, Andrew Ericsson, Eugene Karabanov, Jason D. Chaytor, Jason Patton, and Eulàlia Gràcia
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 2008 98: 861-889. [Abstract] [Full Text]  

Reply to "Comment on ‘Late Holocene Rupture of the Northern San Andreas Fault and Possible Stress Linkage to the Cascadia Subduction Zone’ by Chris Goldfinger, Kelly Grijalva, Roland Bürgmann, Ann E. Morey, Joel E. Johnson, C. Hans Nelson, Julia Gutiérrez-Pastor, Andrew Ericsson, Eugene Karabanov, Jason D. Chaytor, Jason Patton, and Eulàlia Gràcia" by Ganapathy Shanmugam
C. Goldfinger, J. Patton, A. Morey, and C. Hans Nelson
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 2009 99: 2599-2606. [Extract] [Full Text]  



This article has been cited by other articles:


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C. Goldfinger, J. Patton, A. Morey, and C. H. Nelson
Reply to "Comment on 'Late Holocene Rupture of the Northern San Andreas Fault and Possible Stress Linkage to the Cascadia Subduction Zone' by Chris Goldfinger, Kelly Grijalva, Roland Burgmann, Ann E. Morey, Joel E. Johnson, C. Hans Nelson, Julia Gutierrez-Pastor, Andrew Ericsson, Eugene Karabanov, Jason D. Chaytor, Jason Patton, and Eulalia Gracia" by Ganapathy Shanmugam
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, August 1, 2009; 99(4): 2599 - 2606.
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