EGU24-4203, updated on 08 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-4203
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Development of counterscarps by flexural toppling of schist in the Bedretto valley, Swiss Alps

Masahiro Chigira1, Satoru Kojima2, Andrea Pedrazzini3, Fei Li4, and Michel Jaboyedoff5
Masahiro Chigira et al.
  • 1Fukada Geological Institute, Tokyo, Japan (chigira@slope.dpri.kyoto-u.ac.jp)
  • 2Gifu University, Gifu, Japan (skojima729@gmail.com)
  • 3Dipartimento del Territorio Repubblica e Cantone Ticino, Switzerland (andrea.pedrazzini2@ti.ch)
  • 4Institute of Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland (li.fei@unil.ch)
  • 5Institute of Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland (michel.jaboyedoff@unil.ch)

We investigated the geological structure and the development of DGSD in the south side of the Bedretto Valley, Swiss Alps by field survey, topographic analysis, trenching, and 14C dating.

The Bedretto valley has major slope breaks approximately 300 m above the current valley bottom, which separate the area into two domains. Above the slope breaks, and in the catchments of the tributaries of the Bedretto valley, large flexural toppling occurs with counterscarps and troughs on two ridges between tributaries. Their hinges expose on the side of each ridge to suggest that the flexural toppling reaches to the depth of 200 m. The two large flexural toppling accompanied settling down of a wedge-shaped ridge top, which is bounded by two face-to-face normal faults. Below the slope breaks and on the side slopes of Bedretto valley, smaller but sharper counterscarps and terraces, which are of the incipient stage of counterscarps, develop. These counterscarps and troughs appeared by the preferential shearing along tectonic faults, which are pervasive in the area with a ~30 m average spacing. They are nearly parallel to the steeply-dipping schistosity; the faults may originate as lateral faults but reactivated as normal gravitational faults.

Deformation of the trenched sediments suggests that the flexural toppling occurred intermittently along a fault during three events, in which the first event had the largest dip slip of 30 m, much larger than the displacements of the subsequent events.

The third event at least was probably induced by an earthquake shaking, which is strongly suggested by the injection of fault gouge into the overlying sediments in the trough. Such injection should have been caused by pore pressure build up during earthquake shaking.

How to cite: Chigira, M., Kojima, S., Pedrazzini, A., Li, F., and Jaboyedoff, M.: Development of counterscarps by flexural toppling of schist in the Bedretto valley, Swiss Alps, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-4203, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-4203, 2024.