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Earthquake
Faults
Salt Lake County
Earthquake Fault Map
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Fault Information || County
Fault Maps
What is a fault? A fault is a
break in the earth's crust along which movement can take place causing
an earthquake. In Utah, movement along faults is mostly vertical;
mountain blocks (for example, the Wasatch Range) move up relative
to the downward movement of valley blocks (for example, the Salt
Lake Valley).
Why are faults a concern? Faults with evidence of Holocene
(about 10,000 years ago to present) movement are the main concern
because they are most likely to generate future earthquakes. If
the earthquake is large enough, surface fault rupture can occur.
What is surface fault rupture? With a large earthquake (about
magnitude 6.5 and greater), the fault rupture can reach and displace
the ground surface, forming a fault scarp (steep break in slope).
The resulting fault scarp may be several inches to 20 feet in height,
and up to about 40 miles in length, depending on the size of the
earthquake.
What are the effects of surface fault rupture? An area hundreds
of feet wide can be affected, called the zone of deformation, which
occurs chiefly on the downthrown side of the main fault and encompasses
multiple minor faults, cracks, local tilting, and grabens (downdropped
blocks between faults). Buildings in the zone of deformation would
be damaged, particularly those straddling the main fault.
Also, anything crossing the fault, such as transportation corridors,
utilities, and other lifelines, both underground and above ground,
can be damaged or broken. The ground can be dropped below the water
table on the downdropped side, resulting in localized flooding.
Surface fault rupture can also cause tectonic subsidence, which
is the broad, permanent tilting of the valley floor down toward
the fault scarp. Tilting can cause flooding along lake and reservoir
shorelines nearest the fault; along altered stream courses; and
along canals, sewer lines, or other gravity-flow systems where slope
gradients are lessened or reversed.
Where and when is surface fault rupture likely to occur?
On the Holocene fault on which a magnitude 6.5 (approximate) or
larger earthquake occurs. On average, these earthquakes may occur
once every 120 years on various faults in the Wasatch Front region;
once every 350 years somewhere along the central part of the Wasatch
fault (between Brigham City and Nephi); once every 2,000 years at
any specific locality along the central Wasatch fault; and once
every 5,000 to 20,000 years or more on other Holocene faults in
the state.
What can be done to protect homes? Faults can be avoided
by setting homes back a safe distance. Special-study areas have
been delineated along faults where geologic studies are recommended
to assess the hazard, locate faults, and recommend setbacks. However,
the use of special-study areas in land-use ordinances varies by
county and city, as does the level of enforcement.
Therefore, buyers, particularly of older homes (pre-1985), should
personally check available fault maps to see if the home is near
a fault (within a few hundred feet) and, if so, may want a geological
site investigation performed. For newer homes, buyers should check
with the county or city to determine whether geologic studies were
performed for the site or subdivision and, if so, look at a copy
of the geologic report.
Where to get additional information. Detailed fault and
special-study-area maps used in ordinances are available at county
and city planning departments.
Quaternary
Fault and Fold Database of the United States (outside link)
Located on USGS website. Contains information on
faults and associated folds in the United States that are believed
to be sources of M>6 earthquakes during the Quaternary (the past
1,600,000 years). Maps of these geologic structures are linked to
detailed descriptions and references.
Other earthquake hazards: liquefaction
and ground shaking.
Earthquake Fault Maps
Earthquake Fault Map of Salt
Lake County; PI-3 pdf
Earthquake Fault Map of Utah
County; PI-11 pdf
Earthquake Fault Map of Davis
County; PI-2 pdf
Earthquake Fault Map of Weber
County; PI-1 pdf
Earthquake fault map of a portion of Cache
County, Utah, (pdf) PI-83
Earthquake fault map of a portion of Tooele
County, Utah, (pdf) PI-84
Earthquake fault map of a portion of Washington
County, Utah, (pdf) PI-85
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