The Yanagase fault is a remarkable active fault in central Honshu, Japan, extending north-nothwestwards from the northeast of Lake Biwa to the northeast of Tsuruga City.
Both geomorphological and geological detailed studies have been carried out along the fault zone to clarify the history of its movement especially in Quaternary time.
A linear fault line valley consisting of four different streams in a straight arrangment is developed along the fault zone over a distance of about 25km, which is recognizable as a lineament in a broad sense. Geomorphic features caused by left-lateral faulting such as shutter ridges, offset streams are detected along the southern part of the lineament. And the
west
-
side
block of the fault shows subsiding topographic features such as rather wide alluvial plain around Lake Yago, but the east-side uplifting such as elevated river terraces of two to five steps, composite alluvial fans, high triangular terminal facets and so on.
The paleozoic system consisting of slate, sandstone, chert, greenstones is sheared along the fault in a zone of a few hundred meters wide, in which rocks are strongly crushed to be transformed into fault gouge in a maximum width 50 meters or so. Porphyrite dykes within the fault zone are also crushed at some localities.
Fault displacement in late Quaternary fan deposits has been observed at several places in the southern, part of the fault zone. However no evidence of Quaternary fault movement has been found out in the northern part, although the fault zone is overlain by Quaternary fan deposits here and there. Each fault shows different sense of displacement, that is lateral-slip, east-side uplift dip slip and
west
-
side
uplift dip slip. The youngest deposit cut by the faults has been dated back to about 4, 000 years B. P. in Carbon-14 age.
Judging from the west-dip imbrication of gravels observed in the highest terrace deposits along the wind gap east of Nakanogo, the Yogo River had been running once eastward from Nokanogo through the wind gap to Shimo-niyu. The fault movement with
west
-
side
subsidence and east-side uplift occured at 80, 000 to 100, 000 years ago along the southern part, seems to have changed its direction to the south as in the present.
It is concluded the Yanagase fault has moved repeatedly since late Paleozoic time, and has been active in its southern half in late Quaternary time, on the contrary not or scarcely active in the northern part. Its dominant sense of movement in late Quaternary is supposed to be left-lateral,
west
-
side
subsidence and east-side uplift.
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