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Dive into the research topics where Maureen A. L. Walton is active.

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Featured researches published by Maureen A. L. Walton.


Geosphere | 2014

Dynamic response to strike-slip tectonic control on the deposition and evolution of the Baranof Fan, Gulf of Alaska

Maureen A. L. Walton; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Robert S. Reece; Ginger A. Barth; Gail L. Christeson; Harm J. A. Van Avendonk

The Baranof Fan is one of three large deep-sea fans in the Gulf of Alaska, and is a key component in understanding large-scale erosion and sedimentation patterns for southeast Alaska and western Canada. We integrate new and existing seismic reflection profiles to provide new constraints on the Baranof Fan area, geometry, volume, and channel development. We estimate the fan’s area and total sediment volume to be ∼323,000 km 2 and ∼301,000 km 3 , respectively, making it among the largest deep-sea fans in the world. We show that the Baranof Fan consists of channel-levee deposits from at least three distinct aggradational channel systems: the currently active Horizon and Mukluk channels, and the waning system we call the Baranof channel. The oldest sedimentary deposits are in the northern fan, and the youngest deposits at the fan’s southern extent; in addition, the channels seem to avulse southward consistently through time. We suggest that Baranof Fan sediment is sourced from the Coast Mountains in southeastern Alaska, transported offshore most recently via fjord to glacial sea valley conduits. Because of the translation of the Pacific plate northwest past sediment sources on the North American plate along the Queen Charlotte strike-slip fault, we suggest that new channel formation, channel beheadings, and southward-migrating channel avulsions have been influenced by regional tectonics. Using a simplified tectonic reconstruction assuming a constant Pacific plate motion of 4.4 cm/yr, we estimate that Baranof Fan deposition initiated ca. 7 Ma.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2015

Imaging evidence for Hubbard Glacier advances and retreats since the last glacial maximum in Yakutat and Disenchantment Bays, Alaska

Julie M. Zurbuchen; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Maureen A. L. Walton; John A. Goff

High-resolution 2-D multichannel seismic data, collected during the 2012 UTIG-USGS National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program survey of Disenchantment and Yakutat Bays in southeast Alaska, provide insight into their glacial history. These data show evidence of two unconformities, appearing in the form of channels, and are interpreted to be advance pathways for Hubbard Glacier. The youngest observable channel, thought to have culminated near the main phase of the Little Ice Age (LIA), is imaged in Disenchantment Bay and ends at a terminal moraine near Blizhni Point. An older channel, thought to be from an advance that culminated in the early phase of the LIA, extends from Disenchantment Bay into the northeastern edge of Yakutat Bay, turning southward at Knight Island and terminating on the southeastern edge of Yakutat Bay. Our interpretation is that Hubbard Glacier has repeatedly advanced around the east side of Yakutat Bay in Knight Island Channel, possibly due to the presence of Malaspina Glacier cutting off access to central Yakutat Bay during times of mutual advance. We observe two distinct erosional surfaces and retreat sequences of Hubbard Glacier in Yakutat Bay, supporting the hypothesis that minor glacial advances in fjords do not erode all prior sediment accumulations. Interpretation of chaotic seismic facies between these two unconformities suggests that Hubbard Glacier exhibits rapid retreats and that Disenchantment Bay is subject to numerous episodes of outburst flooding and morainal bank collapse. These findings also suggest that tidewater glaciers preferentially reoccupy the same channels in bay and marine settings during advances.


Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America | 2015

An Abrupt Transition in the Mechanical Response of the Upper Crust to Transpression Along the Queen Charlotte Fault

Anne M. Trehu; Maren Scheidhauer; Kristin M. M. Rohr; Basil Tikoff; Maureen A. L. Walton; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Emily Roland


Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America | 2015

Basement and Regional Structure Along Strike of the Queen Charlotte Fault in the Context of Modern and Historical Earthquake Ruptures

Maureen A. L. Walton; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Peter J. Haeussler; Emily Roland; Anne M. Trehu


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2018

Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault, southeastern Alaska

Brian D. Andrews; Maureen A. L. Walton; H. Gary Greene; J. Vaughn Barrie; Nathan Miller; Uri S. ten Brink; Amy E. East; Peter J. Haeussler; Jared W. Kluesner; James E. Conrad


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2018

Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault Zone, western British Columbia

H. Gary Greene; J. Vaughn Barrie; James E. Conrad; Kim W. Conway; Amy E. East; Randy Enkin; Katherine L. Maier; Stuart Nishenko; Maureen A. L. Walton; Kristin M. M. Rohr


Archive | 2017

Multibeam bathymetry and acoustic-backscatter data collected in 2016 in Catalina Basin, southern California and merged multibeam bathymetry datasets of the northern portion of the Southern California Continental Borderland

Peter Dartnell; Emily Roland; Nicole A. Raineault; Christopher M. Castillo; James E. Conrad; Renato Kane; Jared W. Kluesner; Maureen A. L. Walton


GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017

FAULT GEOMETRIES AND GLACIAL CONDUITS IN ICY BAY, ALASKA

Naoma McCall; Sean S.P. Gulick; Maureen A. L. Walton; Peter J. Haeussler; Bobby Reece; Steffen Saustrup


GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017 | 2017

EXPLORING SHALLOW FAULT AND FOLD DEFORMATION OF THE SEATTLE FAULT ZONE USING NEW HIGH-RESOLUTION MARINE GEOPHYSICAL DATA

Emily Roland; Janet T. Watt; Scott E.K. Bennett; Jared W. Kluesner; Patrick E. Hart; Emma Myers; Ralph A. Haugerud; Samuel Y. Johnson; Maureen A. L. Walton; Daniel Kennedy; Alicia F. Balster-Gee


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2015

Imaging evidence for Hubbard Glacier advances and retreats since the last glacial maximum in Yakutat and Disenchantment Bays, Alaska: HUBBARD GLACIER ADVANCES AND RETREATS

Julie M. Zurbuchen; Sean Paul Sandifer Gulick; Maureen A. L. Walton; John A. Goff

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Emily Roland

University of Washington

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James E. Conrad

United States Geological Survey

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Jared W. Kluesner

United States Geological Survey

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Peter J. Haeussler

United States Geological Survey

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Amy E. East

United States Geological Survey

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H. Gary Greene

Moss Landing Marine Laboratories

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John A. Goff

University of Texas at Austin

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Julie M. Zurbuchen

University of Texas at Austin

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