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SHALLOW STRUCTURE AND LATE QUATERNARY ACTIVITIES OF BRANCH FAULTS ON THE NORTHERN SIDE OF THE WEINAN TABLELAND IN THE SOUTHEASTERN MARGIN OF THE WEIHE BASIN
LI Xiao-ni, YANG Chen-yi, LI Gao-yang, FENG Xi-jie, HUANG Yin-di, LI Chen-xia, LI Miao, PEI Gen-di, WANG Wan-he
SEISMOLOGY AND GEOLOGY    2023, 45 (2): 484-499.   DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4967.2023.02.011
Abstract538)   HTML14)    PDF(pc) (8781KB)(204)       Save

The Weinan Tableland Piedmont fault is an important near-EW-trending Holocene active fault in the southeastern margin of the Weihe Basin, which is closely related to the occurrence of the 1556 Huaxian M8 earthquake. The northern branch of the fault, the northern branch fault in front of the Weinan tableland, passes through the urban area of Weinan. Therefore, finding out the distribution, shallow structure, late Quaternary activity, and seismic capacities of the northern branch fault are of great significance for local earthquake prevention and reduction. The Weihua fault zone, which is composed of F1 and F2 faults, generally strikes near east-west and has a gentle wave shape on the plane. It is a group of active normal faults rising in the south and descending in the north belt one. The Wei-Hua fault zone can be divided into two segments, east and west, and according to its spatial location and geometric distribution, strike change and the difference in geology and landforms on both sides. The eastern section is distributed in front of Huashan Mountain and is called Huashan Piedmont Fault(F2); the western section is distributed in Piedmont of Weinan tableland and is called Weinan Piedmont Fault(F1). There is a large sub-parallel branch fault about 2km to the north of the Piedmont Weinan tableland fault(F1)in the west section, which is called the branch fault on the north side of the Piedmont Weinan tableland. It is also the boundary fault between the Weinan tabland and the Gushi Sag. The Weinan tableland Piedmont Fault(F1)starts from the Weinan Xihekou in the west and extends eastwards through the Fenghe River to Mayukou, Huaxian County, with a length of about 54km; it strikes NWW from the Mayukou to Chishui River, and nearly EW from the Chishui River to the Fenghe River, the west of the Minhe River is NE to NEE, and it is mostly distributed in the form of broken lines or oblique rows. The fault plane dips northward with a dip angle of 60°~70°. The latest activity of the fault is manifested in the latest terraces and alluvial-pluvial fans faulting the Holocene strata, river valleys, and gullies; along the main fault, and a series of stepped normal faults on the north and south sides, a Holocene steep ridge belt with a width of between tens of meters and hundreds of meters, the Holocene strata are vertically faulted by 6~7m, and the vertical slip rate since the Late Pleistocene is about 0.29mm/a. In this paper, the shallow location and structural characteristics of the branch fault on the north side of the front of the Weinan tableland are determined through the combined profile detection of shallow seismic exploration and drilling, and evidence of the new activity of the fault is provided. The shallow seismic exploration results of the four survey lines all reveal the existence of a branch fault on the northern side of the front of the Weinan tableland, as well as the distribution location and cross-sectional structural characteristics of the fault new understanding. The results show that the branch fault on the north side of the Weinan Tableland Piedmont fault is a parallel branch of the main fault in front of the Weinan tabland. The branch fault on the north side of the front of the Weinan tableland is located at the front edge of the second-level terrace of the Weihe River in front of the Weinan tableland. The south end of the road, the mouth of the river, Zhangbaozi, and the outside of the north gate, have a length of at least 22km. The main section of the fault is inclined to the north, with a dip angle of about 70°~80° and a break distance of 6~20m at the upper breaking point, so it is a normal fault. Mainly concealed active faults, which have at least faulted the strata from the Middle Pleistocene to the late Pleistocene in the upward direction. In the four seismic sections, it appears as a normal fault zone with a width of 200~1 800m, including the main and secondary normal faults. Stepped structures and small grabens; secondary faults also fault up at least the Late Pleistocene strata. The combined geological profile of the Chongye Road borehole revealed that the main fault on the north side of the Weinan tableland had been faulted with many landmark strata of the Late Quaternary, and the latest fault occurred after 19ka; the average vertical activity rate since the middle of the Late Pleistocene between 0.07~0.26mm/a. Combined with phenomena such as fault ridges developed along the surface of the fault, it is judged that the fault was active in the Holocene. The branch fault on the north side of the front of the Weinan tableland has had strong activity since the late Quaternary, which means that the fault, as one of the branches of the southeastern boundary zone of the Weihe fault basin-the Weihua fault zone-obviously bears part of the deformation of the belt At the same time, the fault is located in the historically strong earthquake-prone area of the southeastern boundary of the Weihe fault basin, and it cannot be ruled out that it once participated in the rupture of the 1556 Huaxian M8 earthquake. Considering that the branch fault on the north side of the Weinan tableland passes through the urban area of Weinan, its potential seismic hazard and hazard are urgent research topics.

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SHALLOW STRUCTURE AND QUATERNARY ACTIVITY OF THE TAOCHUAN-HUXIAN FAULT, THE SUB-STRAND OF THE NORTHERN QINLING FAULT ZONE
YANG Chen-yi, LI Xiao-ni, FENG Xi-jie, HUANG Yin-di, PEI Gen-di
SEISMOLOGY AND GEOLOGY    2023, 45 (2): 464-483.   DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4967.2023.02.010
Abstract993)   HTML15)    PDF(pc) (7081KB)(207)       Save

The northern Qinling fault zone is an important active structure in the southern margin of the Weihe Graben Basin, containing many branch faults, of which the near EW striking Taochuan-Huxian Fault is located on the northern side of the fault zone, and the eastern segment is buried in the Weihe Graben Basin. Shallow seismic exploration has been carried out on the middle part of the buried segment of this fault, and the fault inferred to be a late Pleistocene fault with normal strike-slip movement, but the age and rate of the latest activity have not been determined. By conducting new shallow seismic and drilling joint exploration, we further study the shallow structure, the geometric distribution, the latest activity era and the slip rate in the Quaternary in the two segments of the Taochuan-Huxian Fault. The profile of shallow seismic exploration line TB1 reveals that the west segment of the Taochuan-Huxian Fault with NEE trend can extend at least 20km westward from Taochuan Town. The main fault plane dips to N, and the normal-slip movement has faulted the Quaternary bottom boundary and the underlying crystalline basement in the Taibai Basin. The vertical offset of the Quaternary bottom boundary is about 300m, and the remnants of the old thrust structure are still preserved in the fault zone. The shallow seismic reflection lines ZZ1 and YX1-2 reveal the location of the eastern Taochuan-Huxian Fault with the EW striking buried in the Quaternary of the Weihe Graben Basin in Zhouzhi and Huxian. The main fault plane dips to N, and the fault zone is represented by a fault depression zone of about 6km wide and a stepped structure of about 4km wide respectively. The fault up-breakpoints on both profiles offset the bottom boundary of the Holocene in the Weihe Graben Basin. The drilling joint profile exploration applied at Tanjiazhai in Zhouzhi County and Xiashimasi in Meixian County show that the Taochuan-Huxian Fault is distributed in the junction of the southern Weihe Granben Basin and the Qinling Mountains, where the Holocene marker layer S0 has been vertically offset by 4~5m, yielding an average vertical slip rate of 0.4~1.3mm/a. Combined with the results of shallow seismic surveys, it is well demonstrated that the eastern segment of the Taochuan-Huxian Fault(buried in the Weihe Graben Basin)shows Holocene activity, and it is significantly more active than the western segment(the Taibai Basin segment). This may be due to the fact that the eastern segment has been incorporated into the Weihe Graben Basin and has become part of the primary active tectonic zone on the block boundary, while the western segment has not been incorporated. Spatially, the eastern segment of the Taochuan-Huixian Fault is subparallel to the middle-eastern segment of the North Qinling Fault, which is capable of generating strong earthquakes of magnitude 7 or higher. As an important branch of the North Qinling Fault, the Taochuan-Huixian Fault may also be under the same strong seismic background. These two faults probably jointly control the important active boundary of the southern margin of the Weihe Graben Basin. Future research in seismology and geology of these two faults should be strengthened, including their interrelationships at depth, their roles in vertical and horizontal movement distribution, and their seismogenic capacity and potential seismic hazard. In particular, the activity of the Taochuan-Huoxian Fault since the late Quaternary has only recently received attention, and the level of seismo-geological research on the fault is generally low. In this paper, we conducted preliminary studies on the location, shallow tectonic structure, activity segmentation, latest activity and Holocene vertical slip rate of this fault. Future research on the seismogenic structure of the Taochuan-Huoxian Fault needs to be strengthened in order to deepen and improve the understanding of the fault activity and to provide a basis for analyzing the seismic hazard of this fault.

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THE LATE QUATERNARY AND PRESENT-DAY ACTIVITIES OF THE KOUZHEN-GUANSHAN FAULT ON THE NORTHERN BOUNDARY OF WEIHE GRABEN BASIN, CHINA
YANG Chen-yi, LI Xiao-ni, FENG Xi-jie, ZHU Lin, LI Miao, ZHANG En-hui
SEISMOLOGY AND GEOLOGY    2021, 43 (3): 504-520.   DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.0253-4967.2021.03.003
Abstract608)   HTML    PDF(pc) (6874KB)(273)       Save
The Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault trends in near E-W direction and obliquely cuts the active NEE-striking northern boundary fault zone of the Weihe Graben Basin, a fault zone that constitutes the boundary between Weihe Graben Basin and the Ordos block. Medium to small earthquakes occur frequently along the fault. Since the 1980s, a series of researches have been carried out on this fault, and certain cognition has been gained on its geometry, kinematics, tectonic evolution, recent activity and seismogenic capacity. However, most of the eastern segment of the fault is concealed in the Quaternary sediments of Weihe Graben Basin, and the corresponding research and attention are less. By conducting new field geological surveys and combining data from fault-crossing leveling and creepmeter observation, we studied the activities of the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault during the late Quaternary and in the recent decades, supplemented the geological evidence of fault activity in the late Quaternary, and analyzed the characteristics and differences of tectonic activities on the western and eastern segments of the fault. Our research provides new insights as follows: 1)For the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault, previous geological surveys were mainly carried out in the western segment with a focus on studying the vertical movement. It is considered that the fault activity has been stronger in the western segment and weaker in the eastern segment since the late Pleistocene. Our field investigation of three geologic cross-sections on the eastern bank of the Shichuan River in the eastern segment provides the understanding of the geological activity on the eastern segment. It reveals that the eastern segment of the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault has a vertical motion component since the late Pleistocene, where the late Pleistocene stratum has been vertically offset by 8.8m, yielding a vertical slip rate of >0.13mm/a. At places between the central and western segments of the fault, the offset gullies were gradually cut down after the accumulation of loess layer L1, and the age of S1 at the bottom of L1 can represent the lower limit of the left-lateral dislocation age of these gullies. The horizontally-faulted geomorphic features produced in the late Pleistocene have an average left-lateral displacement of 34m, which yields a left-lateral strike-slip rate of >0.49mm/a. These suggest that the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault is a normal-sinistral oblique-slip one dipping steeply to the south; it would also be a growing transfer fault to adjust the non-uniform horizontal extension between segments of the Weihe Basin by obliquely cutting the northern boundary fault zone of the Basin. 2)Creeping movement is found to occur continuously on two connecting segments of the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault at least in the last more than 30 years. Fault-crossing leveling observation for more than 30 years has been carried out on the Kouzhen and Jingyang sites on the western segment of the fault, respectively, and fault-crossing creepmeter observation has been carried out for nearly 7 years at Jingyang site, both of which have detected the present activity characteristics of the western segment of the fault. Among them, the two fault-crossing leveling observation time series show that the trends of vertical creep movement are basically the same since 1986. The creepmeter observation at Jingyang site shows that the fault has experienced continuously normal-sinistral creeping, and the horizontal-transverse stretching alternates with sinistral creeping since 2012. At Kangcun site on the western segment of the fault, fault-crossing leveling observation has been carried out for nearly 20 years. For the western segment, the fault creep is relatively stable with time and shows normal-sinistral oblique-creep faulting with the rates of 0.16~0.76mm/a for the vertical component, 0.42~0.78mm/a for the sinistral-creep component, and 0.15~0.26mm/a for the horizontal-transverse stretching component, respectively. Although technical means to observe or detect horizontal deformation are absent on the eastern segment of the fault, the campaign leveling surveys suggest that the fault creep on this segment has an average rate of 1.59mm/a for the vertical component(relative decline in the southern part of the fault)and shows a time series pattern of “step-like” or “episodic” creep, and the fault creep here with a rate as high as 13mm/a during the “step-like” period(2011 to 2014)may represent one slow slip event. 3)The present vertical creeping velocity of the eastern and western segments of the fault is different. The creep rate of the eastern segment is higher than that in the west, which may reflect the eastern segment of the fault is closer to the core of Weihe Graben Basin in space. This inference can be derived from the evidence that the new activity of the fault zone in the northern margin of Weihe Graben Basin, the development of ground fissures belt and seismicity along the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault are all stronger in the eastern segment. 4)Both the seismicity and the cause of ground fissures belt along the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault are closely related to the motion of normal-sinistral oblique-creep on this fault, which is controlled by the fault activity and should be the reflection of the surface macroscopic deformation of creeping. 5)The observed creeping movement on the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault, especially, the phenomenon of “episodic” creep(rarely reported in China)in the vertical motion component on the eastern segment of the fault, proves that slow slip or creep may also occur on faults in tectonically active tensional environments of mainland China. There is obvious difference of normal creep faulting in the eastern and western segments of the fault. It is further necessary to study the differences in the friction properties of the fault segments reflected by the differences in the creep characteristics of these two segments, as well as seismic tectonic and seismic precursory implications of creeping with different characteristics. We therefore suggest strengthening the monitoring of the fault motion and the study of potential seismic hazards. 6)Regarding the “step-like” or “episodic” creep of the fault, the existing research mainly comes from the strike-slip fault. It is found that the present vertical motion component of the Kouzhen-Guanshan Fault shows obvious “step-like” or “episodic” creep characteristics. Therefore, it is necessary to study the relationship between the creeping effect and the phenomenon of seismicity and ground fissures alone the fault. In the future, we intend to combine the microseismic activity and fault friction theory to study the possible mechanism of the “episodic” creep, as well as the tectonic and seismic precursory implications of slow slip events similar to those observed at Kangcun site during 2012—2014.
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