Jp. Guilbault et al., FORAMINIFERAL EVIDENCE FOR THE AMOUNT OF COSEISMIC SUBSIDENCE DURING A LATE HOLOCENE EARTHQUAKE ON VANCOUVER-ISLAND, WEST-COAST OF CANADA, Quaternary science reviews, 15(8-9), 1996, pp. 913-937
Foraminiferal data from two sites, 6 km apart, on the shores of an inl
et near Tofino on the west coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia
, allow estimates to be made of the amount of coseismic subsidence dur
ing a large earthquake 100-400 years ago. The sampled sediment success
ion at the two sites is similar; peat representing a former marsh surf
ace is abruptly overlain by intertidal mud grading upward into peat of
the present marsh. At one of the sites, a layer of sand, interpreted
to be a tsunami deposit, locally separates the buried peat from the ov
erlying intertidal mud. The abrupt peat-mud contact records sudden cru
stal subsidence during the earthquake. The paleoelevation of each foss
il sample was estimated by comparing its foraminiferal assemblage with
modern assemblages of known elevation. The modern assemblages were ob
tained from surface samples collected along transects across the marsh
near the fossil sample sites. Comparisons were made statistically usi
ng transfer functions. Estimates of coseismic subsidence, based on dif
ferences in paleoelevations just above and below the top of the buried
peat, range from 20 cm to 1 m with the most likely value in the 55-70
cm range. Post-seismic crustal rebound began soon after the earthquak
e and may have been largely complete a few decades later. Copyright (C
) 1996 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd