Earth:Hurricane Fault

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Short description: Geologic formation in Arizona and Utah, United States

Template:Infobox fault

The Hurricane Fault is an intracrustal seismic fault that runs along the boundary between the Colorado Plateau block and the Basin and Range geologic province of western North America. It is a 250-km-long, north–south striking, high-angle, down-to-the-west normal fault, running from about Cedar City, Utah southward into northwestern Arizona. The fault is named for the community of Hurricane.

The 1992 St. George earthquake (magnitude 5.8), which triggered a damaging landslide, has been attributed to the Hurricane Fault.[1]

References

  1. Stewart, Meg E.; Taylor, Wanda J.; Pearthree, Philip A.; Solomon, Barry J.; Hurlow, Hugh A. (1997). "Neotectonics, fault segmentation, and seismic hazards along the Hurricane fault in Utah and Arizona". Brigham Young University Geology Studies 42: 235–278. http://geology.byu.edu/home/sites/default/files/volume-42-part-2-stewart-taylor-pearthree-solomon-hurlow1.pdf. Retrieved 14 June 2020.