DEFORMED FLUVIAL TERRACES AT ROOT CREEK: IMPLICATIONS FOR DEFORMATION ALONG THE SOUTH-EASTERN EXTENT OF THE LITTLE SALMON FAULT ZONE
Recent investigations in the Root Creek area help further constrain the activity and kinematics of the south eastern termination of the LSf. Recent tectonic activity is manifest as uplifted flights of youthful fluvial terraces, a folded and faulted strath, and fault preserved coseismic colluvium. Fault striae demonstrate deformation of a youthful strath along northwest striking right oblique faults. Stratigraphic evidence suggests the most recent faulting event offset the active channel and backfilled river gravels and debris flow deposits against the scarp. A large, deep-seated landslide complex upstream is the likely source of preserved colluvium.
We map the deformation at the mouth of Root Creek extending southeast along the Root Creek drainage as a series of northwest striking lineaments and faults. The zone of faults and lineaments is south and parallel to the mapped trace of the LSf. We propose that faulting along Root Creek is part of a broad zone of deformation at the southeastern end of the LSf. This zone of deformation links CSZ related contraction to the northerly migrating dextral shear of the San Andreas fault system.