Preliminary Investigation and Surficial Mapping of the Faults North and South of Blacktail Butte, Teton County, Wyoming
Abstract
The Wyoming State Geological Survey has focused on surficial mapping and examination of the location and offset of faults north and south of Blacktail Butte in eastern Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The fault strands south of Blacktail Butte are classified as Late Quaternary, the faults north of the butte are considered Class B structures by the USGS. Little to no detailed studies, including paleoseismic investigations or fault scarp morphology, have been conducted on these fault strands. The acquisition of LiDAR for the Grand Teton National Park and recent aerial photographs provided data necessary for revised mapping and geomorphic interpretation of fault-related features north and south of Blacktail Butte. New fault traces and geomorphic features were identified in the LiDAR data which had not been previously mapped. Mapped fault traces are intermittent, forming a 1.5 km-long graben that extends south from Blacktail Butte and crosses a loess-mantle late-Pleistocene terrace generated from the Pinedale glaciation. Other lineaments were identified that continued for another 0.5 km to the south. With very little vertical offset across the system and comparatively short fault strands, the faults may represent secondary features related to movement on another unidentified fault within the basin. The secondary faults north of Blacktail Butte were mapped based on geomorphic features and through LiDAR-based spatial analysis. The fault scarps are relatively short and are present on alluvial fan and/or terrace deposits related to the Pinedale glaciation or on undated Holocene deposits. The scarps have little net vertical offset, suggesting they could also be secondary features related to movement from another unidentified fault within the basin. Improved understanding of these fault strands is significant because of the vicinity to populated areas within Jackson Hole and the possible relevance to the Teton Fault system. To our knowledge, these fault strands have not been proposed as antithetic to the Teton fault. The faults are located on the eastern edge of the valley, approximately 8-16 km from the Teton fault, and based on their orientation and sense of slip, the Teton fault may be the unidentified fault within the basin. Detailed paleoseismic surveys, including fault trenching, may shed light on the question in the future.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFM.T41B2919W
- Keywords:
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- 8107 Continental neotectonics;
- TECTONOPHYSICSDE: 8118 Dynamics and mechanics of faulting;
- TECTONOPHYSICSDE: 8123 Dynamics: seismotectonics;
- TECTONOPHYSICSDE: 8175 Tectonics and landscape evolution;
- TECTONOPHYSICS