SURFICIAL GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE LEVAN AND FAYETTE SEGMENTS OF THE WASATCH FAULT ZONE, CENTRAL UTAH
Stratigraphic data and numerical ages indicate the most recent surface-faulting earthquake on the Levan segment occurred shortly after 1000 ± 200 cal yr B.P. Numerical ages roughly constrain the timing of the penultimate surface-faulting earthquake on the Levan segment to sometime prior to 28004300 cal yr B.P., and perhaps prior to 600010,600 cal yr B.P. On the Fayette segment, cross-cutting geologic relations and empirical analysis of scarp-profile data indicate the timing of most recent surface faulting is different for the three strands of the segment: early or middle Pleistocene(?) for the northern (N) strand, latest Pleistocene for the southeastern (SE) strand, and Holocene for the southwestern (SW) strand. The timing of earlier surface-faulting earthquakes on the Fayette segment is unknown.
Our preferred maximum Holocene vertical slip rate for the Levan segment is 0.3 ± 0.1 mm/yr. Estimated middle to late Quaternary vertical slip rates are 0.020.05 mm/yr for the Levan segment and 0.010.03 mm/yr for the Fayette segment; a locally higher rate (0.060.1 mm/yr) at the north end of the SW strand of the Fayette segment may result from spillover of Levan-segment ruptures onto the Fayette segment, or additive slip from separate SW- and SE-strand Fayette-segment ruptures that overlap on this part of the fault, or some combination of these two scenarios. Additionally, the higher slip rate may reflect a component of aseismic deformation resulting from localized diapirism or dissolution-induced subsidence associated with subsurface evaporite beds in the Middle Jurassic Arapien Shale.
Structurally, the Levan-Fayette segment boundary appears to be a relay ramp, and includes fault scarps and lineaments that accommodate a left-stepping transfer of displacement between the two segments.