Vol. 21 (1997)
Grand Teton Np Report

Interseismic Hanging Wall Uplift on Teton Normal Fault, Grand Teton National Park Wyoming, 1988-1997, Measured by Precise Leveling

Arthur Gibbs Sylvester
University of California
Robert Baer Smith
University of Utah
Christopher S. Hitchcock
William Lettis & Associates, INC.
John Odette Dutton Byrd
Paradigm Geophysical

Published 1997-01-01

Abstract

The 55 km-long Teton normal fault at the eastern base of the Teton Range, Wyoming, has one the highest rates of Holocene slip of any fault in the Basin-Range, but it is seismically dormant at the M2 + level and presently lies in the center of a 50 km-long seismic gap (Byrd et al, 1993). Analyses of trenching, fault scarp heights, and fault proftles indicate earthquakes on the Teton fault are non­Poissonian, with from 5 to 10 M >7 earthquakes occurring from 7,900 to 14,000 years ago, but only two such events between 5,000 and 7,900 years ago, and none in the last 5,000 years (Byrd et al., 1994).