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Style and timing of late Quaternary faulting on the Lake Edgar fault, southwest Tasmania, Australia: Implications for hazard assessment in intracratonic areas

D Clark, M Cupper, M Sandiford, K Kiernan

Special Paper of the Geological Society of America | GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER INC | Published : 2011

Abstract

Geomorphic analysis of the ∼30-km-long Lake Edgar fault scarp in southwestern Tasmania suggests that three large surface-rupturing events with vertical displacements of 2.4 m to 3.1 m have occurred in late Quaternary time. Optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) age estimates from a sequence of three periglacial fluvial terraces associated with faulting constrain these events to ca. 18 ka, ca. 28 ka, and ca. 48-61 ka. A similar amount of vertical displacement during each faulting event suggests that surface-breaking earthquakes on this fault are characteristically of magnitude M W 6.8-7.0. Estimates for the average slip rate calculated over two complete seismic cycles range from 0.11 to 0.24..

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University of Melbourne Researchers