Coastal and Marine Geohazards of the U.S. West Coast and Alaska
Coastal and marine geohazards are sudden and extreme events beneath the ocean that threaten coastal populations. Such underwater hazards include earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, landslides, and tsunamis.
Southern California
USGS aims to boost knowledge about the threat of earthquakes and underwater landslides in Southern California with modern, high-resolution seafloor imaging.
Devastating earthquakes in Japan (2011) and Chile (2010) that spawned pan-oceanic tsunamis sent a sobering reminder that U.S. coastlines are also vulnerable to natural disasters that originate in the ocean. People living near coastlines may think “out of sight, out of mind” when it comes to underwater dangers. But in tectonically active regions, such as the west coast of the Americas, the potential lurks for sudden seafloor movement to cause great damage to coastal communities. Using the power of modern mapping and seismic technology to gather detailed seafloor data can directly impact human life and cities by improving earthquake and tsunami forecasts.
For many people who live near the coastlines, underwater dangers are “out of sight, out of mind.” But in tectonically active regions, such as the west coast of the Americas, the potential lurks for a surge of underwater motion that could disrupt many communities along the coast.
The 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami were vivid reminders that remote disasters can affect an entire ocean basin. Understanding how and what regions might be affected by faraway disasters is an important, yet complex problem.
In addition to remote threats, local hazards lie just off the shores of the western U.S. Such hazards include shaking by large earthquakes in subduction zones, where one tectonic plate compresses another (Cascadia, Aleutian Trench); or on strike-slip faults, where one tectonic plate moves horizontally past another (central and southern California). Related hazards include tsunamis generated by shifts in the seafloor or by underwater landslides that occur during earthquakes. Landslides can also threaten equipment on the ocean floor such as pipelines, communication cables, and oil platforms.
One barrier to measuring the true seismic risk has been the scarcity of high-resolution maps of the ocean floor. The technology for mapping large parts of the ocean floor with enough detail needed to study offshore faults has only been available for about the last 20 years, long after coastal areas had been densely developed. The USGS Coastal and Marine Geohazards team applies this technology to the seafloor off several urban regions along the west coast. For example, the San Francisco Bay Area has the highest density of active faults of any urban area in the nation; the densely populated expanse (approximately 20 million people) in southern California is threatened by the nation’s highest level of earthquake risk; and Alaska has had more large earthquakes than the rest of the U.S. combined. In addition, detailed imaging of the ocean bottom has uncovered new evidence of submarine landslides. Creating three-dimensional views of the seafloor down to depths of 12 kilometers has given scientists remarkable ways to examine how a fault works, or how fluids may follow underground paths and possibly trigger landslides.
It’s challenging to know how a fault will behave without seeing its detailed structure: its bends, connections, and branches. To discover a fault’s structure, scientists go to sea to collect streams of data that they turn into comprehensive underwater maps. This type of imaging, along with knowing the age of sediment along faults and measuring other factors such as magnetics and density, can help tell the story of when the fault last ruptured or how fast it’s moving. Since these details are seldom known or easy to calculate for offshore faults, it’s challenging to incorporate these faults into earthquake models and estimate their actual hazard risk.
Reassessing the threat of earthquake, tsunami, and landslide hazards to ports and nuclear power plants on the U.S. west coast can directly impact facility management, emergency-management planning, and plant re-licensing. The data can also affect building codes, the design of highways, bridges, and other large structures, as well as earthquake insurance rates.
Below are the current studies of the “U.S. West Coast and Alaska Marine Geohazards” Project.
Below are datsets associated with this project.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Shelf evolution along a transpressive transform margin, Santa Barbara Channel, California
The transtensional offshore portion of the northern San Andreas fault: Fault zone geometry, late Pleistocene to Holocene sediment deposition, shallow deformation patterns, and asymmetric basin growth
Investigation of late Pleistocene and Holocene activity in the San Gregorio fault zone on the continental slope north of Monterey Canyon, offshore central California
Reducing risk where tectonic plates collide—U.S. Geological Survey subduction zone science plan
Geologic controls on submarine slope failure along the central U.S. Atlantic margin: Insights from the Currituck Slide Complex
High-resolution seismic-reflection data from offshore northern California — Bolinas to Sea Ranch
Missing link between the Hayward and Rodgers Creek faults
Seismic attribute detection of faults and fluid pathways within an active strike-slip shear zone: New insights from high-resolution 3D P-Cable™ seismic data along the Hosgri Fault, offshore California
A submarine landslide source for the devastating 1964 Chenega tsunami, southern Alaska
Records of continental slope sediment flow morphodynamic responses to gradient and active faulting from integrated AUV and ROV data, offshore Palos Verdes, southern California Borderland
The Palos Verdes Fault offshore southern California: late Pleistocene to present tectonic geomorphology, seascape evolution and slip rate estimate based on AUV and ROV surveys
Quaternary tephrochronology and deposition in the subsurface Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California, U.S.A.
Below are news stories associated with this project.
Below are partners associated with this project.
Coastal and marine geohazards are sudden and extreme events beneath the ocean that threaten coastal populations. Such underwater hazards include earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, landslides, and tsunamis.
Southern California
USGS aims to boost knowledge about the threat of earthquakes and underwater landslides in Southern California with modern, high-resolution seafloor imaging.
Devastating earthquakes in Japan (2011) and Chile (2010) that spawned pan-oceanic tsunamis sent a sobering reminder that U.S. coastlines are also vulnerable to natural disasters that originate in the ocean. People living near coastlines may think “out of sight, out of mind” when it comes to underwater dangers. But in tectonically active regions, such as the west coast of the Americas, the potential lurks for sudden seafloor movement to cause great damage to coastal communities. Using the power of modern mapping and seismic technology to gather detailed seafloor data can directly impact human life and cities by improving earthquake and tsunami forecasts.
For many people who live near the coastlines, underwater dangers are “out of sight, out of mind.” But in tectonically active regions, such as the west coast of the Americas, the potential lurks for a surge of underwater motion that could disrupt many communities along the coast.
The 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami were vivid reminders that remote disasters can affect an entire ocean basin. Understanding how and what regions might be affected by faraway disasters is an important, yet complex problem.
In addition to remote threats, local hazards lie just off the shores of the western U.S. Such hazards include shaking by large earthquakes in subduction zones, where one tectonic plate compresses another (Cascadia, Aleutian Trench); or on strike-slip faults, where one tectonic plate moves horizontally past another (central and southern California). Related hazards include tsunamis generated by shifts in the seafloor or by underwater landslides that occur during earthquakes. Landslides can also threaten equipment on the ocean floor such as pipelines, communication cables, and oil platforms.
One barrier to measuring the true seismic risk has been the scarcity of high-resolution maps of the ocean floor. The technology for mapping large parts of the ocean floor with enough detail needed to study offshore faults has only been available for about the last 20 years, long after coastal areas had been densely developed. The USGS Coastal and Marine Geohazards team applies this technology to the seafloor off several urban regions along the west coast. For example, the San Francisco Bay Area has the highest density of active faults of any urban area in the nation; the densely populated expanse (approximately 20 million people) in southern California is threatened by the nation’s highest level of earthquake risk; and Alaska has had more large earthquakes than the rest of the U.S. combined. In addition, detailed imaging of the ocean bottom has uncovered new evidence of submarine landslides. Creating three-dimensional views of the seafloor down to depths of 12 kilometers has given scientists remarkable ways to examine how a fault works, or how fluids may follow underground paths and possibly trigger landslides.
It’s challenging to know how a fault will behave without seeing its detailed structure: its bends, connections, and branches. To discover a fault’s structure, scientists go to sea to collect streams of data that they turn into comprehensive underwater maps. This type of imaging, along with knowing the age of sediment along faults and measuring other factors such as magnetics and density, can help tell the story of when the fault last ruptured or how fast it’s moving. Since these details are seldom known or easy to calculate for offshore faults, it’s challenging to incorporate these faults into earthquake models and estimate their actual hazard risk.
Reassessing the threat of earthquake, tsunami, and landslide hazards to ports and nuclear power plants on the U.S. west coast can directly impact facility management, emergency-management planning, and plant re-licensing. The data can also affect building codes, the design of highways, bridges, and other large structures, as well as earthquake insurance rates.
Below are the current studies of the “U.S. West Coast and Alaska Marine Geohazards” Project.
Below are datsets associated with this project.
Below are publications associated with this project.
Shelf evolution along a transpressive transform margin, Santa Barbara Channel, California
The transtensional offshore portion of the northern San Andreas fault: Fault zone geometry, late Pleistocene to Holocene sediment deposition, shallow deformation patterns, and asymmetric basin growth
Investigation of late Pleistocene and Holocene activity in the San Gregorio fault zone on the continental slope north of Monterey Canyon, offshore central California
Reducing risk where tectonic plates collide—U.S. Geological Survey subduction zone science plan
Geologic controls on submarine slope failure along the central U.S. Atlantic margin: Insights from the Currituck Slide Complex
High-resolution seismic-reflection data from offshore northern California — Bolinas to Sea Ranch
Missing link between the Hayward and Rodgers Creek faults
Seismic attribute detection of faults and fluid pathways within an active strike-slip shear zone: New insights from high-resolution 3D P-Cable™ seismic data along the Hosgri Fault, offshore California
A submarine landslide source for the devastating 1964 Chenega tsunami, southern Alaska
Records of continental slope sediment flow morphodynamic responses to gradient and active faulting from integrated AUV and ROV data, offshore Palos Verdes, southern California Borderland
The Palos Verdes Fault offshore southern California: late Pleistocene to present tectonic geomorphology, seascape evolution and slip rate estimate based on AUV and ROV surveys
Quaternary tephrochronology and deposition in the subsurface Sacramento–San Joaquin Delta, California, U.S.A.
Below are news stories associated with this project.
Below are partners associated with this project.