May 8, 2025 - Investigating areas of unexpectedly high KSN-q in Utah (D7)
Got a little lazy with posting the the academic daily journal, but I did work (about 5 hours).
I also installed a 46/36 new Ultegra crank on my road bike to help me hold higher cadences on climbs (paired with an 11-40 XT cassette) for a sub 0.9 gear ratio. I suspect this is going to make me a better climber overall. Stay tuned for tomorrow's test on South Fork.
On Thursday May 8th, I finally got Parker four figures for him to choose from as he constructs our poster examining Ksn-q across Utah, prospecting lidar for active faults in Ranges with high Ksn values. One site of interest was along the Wasatch Monocline, where there are high Ksn-q values and a bedrock fault, but no mapped Q-fault. Looks like that bedrock fault jus to the west of the Monocline may have a Q-signal of uplift:
Here is another example of high Ksn-q in the Raft River Range where there is a cool low angle detachments fault that has brought up really old/hard rocks yielding high Ksn values, but no Q-faulting appears evident:
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