Puget Lowland Paleoseismology
Contact: Alan Nelson (USGS Golden, Colorado)
Knowledge of when, where, and how often large earthquakes occur is crucial for evaluating the seismic hazards. Through field study of the geologic record of prehistoric earthquakes, geologists are developing a database of the times and magnitudes of large prehistoric crustal earthquakes and their effects in the Puget Lowland region. Information on studies of coastal deposits at specific sites is available in the following Atlas. Information on more detailed studies on the first Holocene fault scarp discovered in the Puget Lowland and paleoliquefaction features near the mouth of the Snohomish River follow.
Atlas of USGS Paleoseismic Studies - Puget Sound
- Contacts
- References Cited
- Site Map (GIF)
- SiteTable with Links to individual site reports
Multiple sources for late-Holocene tsunamis at Discovery Bay, Washington State, USA
Earthquake History of the Seattle Fault on Bainbridge Island
Great Cascadia earthquake of 1700
Differences in great-earthquakes rupture extent inferred from tidal marshes at Alsea Bay, Oregon
Multiple large earthquakes in the past 1500 years on a fault in metropolitan Manila, The Philippine