COORDINATED FAULT SLIP-RATE VARIATIONS OVER MULTIPLE TIME SCALES ACROSS THE SIERRA NEVADA FRONTAL FAULT ZONE
Our data from three study areas (Sonora Pass, Bridgeport Basin, and Mono Basin) define along-strike variations in deformation rates over several temporal intervals. Surface exposure dating results demonstrate that we can define tightly clustered ages of boulders on individual surfaces; that the age uncertainties can be somewhat less than 10% (setting a lower bound on the rate differences we should be able to define reliably); and that we can readily date features ranging from both the last and the penultimate glaciations, thereby spanning >100 ky. In each of three areas where multiple markers dating back 10s to 100s of thousands of years are present, we can quantify changes (if any) of slip rates across the intervals between moraine or terrace formation and the present. Furthermore, we can evaluate the synchronous or asynchronous slip history of each fault segment, and utilize a compilation of all rates to assess the regional slip distribution and its changes through time. Additionally, in each area where faults cut multiple dated units, we can assess whether intervals of slower slip on one fault are synchronously balanced by more rapid slip on another fault. In this way, we can examine spatial gradients in slip magnitude and rates along single faults, and compare them with gradients on nearby faults. Lastly, our late Quaternary data will also be compared with modern geodetic rates in this same region, thereby providing tests of key assumptions about both the temporal constancy and spatial variations of slip rates.