Abstract

Seismic hazard in continental rifts varies as a function of strain accommodation by tectonic or magmatic processes. The nature of faulting in the Sevier Desert, located in eastern Basin and Range of central Utah, and how this faulting relates to the Sevier Desert Detachment low-angle normal fault, have been debated for nearly four decades. Here, we show that the geodetic signal of extension across the eastern Sevier Desert is best explained by magma-assisted rifting associated with Plio-Pleistocene volcanism. GPS velocities from 14 continuous sites across the region are best-fit by interseismic strain accumulation on the southern Wasatch Fault at c. 3.4 mm yr−1 with a c. 0.5 mm yr−1 tensile dislocation opening in the eastern Sevier Desert. The characteristics of surface deformation from field surveys are consistent with dike-induced faulting and not with faults soling into an active detachment. Geologic extension rates of c. 0.6 mm yr−1 over the last c. 50 kyr in the eastern Sevier Desert are consistent with the rates estimated from the geodetic model. Together, these findings suggest that Plio-Pleistocene extension is not likely to have been accommodated by low-angle normal faulting on the Sevier Desert Detachment and is instead accomplished by strain localization in a zone of narrow, magma-assisted rifting.

Highlights

  • Demonstrated or inferred association with cogenetic volcanic rocks; faults buried in near-vent areas by cogenetic volcanic rocks[11]

  • The localized strain interpretation predicts concentration of most or all of the regional extension on the southern WFZ26,33, while the broad strain interpretation suggests distributed deformation on multiple Quaternary faults across the WFZ and Sevier Desert, including the SDD25,34,35. These analyses are revisited with velocity estimates derived from decade-long GPS time series collected from 14 continuous GPS stations operated as part of the Plate Boundary Observatory, spanning from the Colorado Plateau in eastern Utah into Nevada

  • We interpret the contractional signal in the Sevier Desert, which is well fit by the addition of a tensile dislocation (Fig. 2C), as being the result of a narrow zone of magma-assisted rifting in the Sevier Desert superimposed on an area of interseismic strain accumulation on the southern WFZ

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Summary

No particular association with any rock type

10–1 to 100 kilometer-wide fault zones at surface (depending on fault maturity and basement depth). Tensional fissures are most abundant feature with little net vertical displacement across the graben[11,49]

Normal faults in unconsolidated sediments are most abundant feature
Association with asymmetric geophysical anomalies
GPS models
Methods
Findings
Additional Information
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