Publications
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Hydrothermal frictional strengths of rock and mineral samples relevant to the creeping section of the San Andreas Fault Hydrothermal frictional strengths of rock and mineral samples relevant to the creeping section of the San Andreas Fault
We compare frictional strengths in the temperature range 25–250 °C of fault gouge from SAFOD (CDZ and SDZ) with quartzofeldspathic wall rocks typical of the central creeping section of the San Andreas Fault (Great Valley sequence and Franciscan Complex). The Great Valley and Franciscan samples have coefficients of friction, μ > 0.35 at all experimental conditions. Strength is unchanged...
Authors
Diane E. Moore, David A. Lockner, Stephen H. Hickman
Faulting, damage, and intensity in the Canyondam earthquake of May 23, 2013 Faulting, damage, and intensity in the Canyondam earthquake of May 23, 2013
On Thursday evening, May 23, 2013 (0347 May 24 UTC), a moment magnitude (Mw) = 5.7 earthquake occurred northeast of Canyondam, California. A two-person team of U.S. Geological Survey scientists went to the area to search for surface rupture and to canvass damage in the communities around Lake Almanor. While the causative fault had not been identified at the time of the field survey...
Authors
K. Chapman, M.B. Gold, John Boatwright, J. Sipe, V. Quitoriano, D. Dreger, Jeanne Hardebeck
Gallery of melt textures developed in Westerly Granite during high-pressure triaxial friction experiments Gallery of melt textures developed in Westerly Granite during high-pressure triaxial friction experiments
Introduction Melting occurred during stick-slip faulting of granite blocks sheared at room-dry, room-temperature conditions in a triaxial apparatus at 200–400 megapascals (MPa) confining pressure. Petrographic examinations of melt textures focused largely on the 400-MPa run products. This report presents an overview of the petrographic data collected on those samples, followed by brief...
Authors
Diane E. Moore, David A. Lockner, Brian D. Kilgore, Nicholas M. Beeler
Characterizing potentially induced earthquake rate changes in the Brawley Seismic Zone, southern California Characterizing potentially induced earthquake rate changes in the Brawley Seismic Zone, southern California
The Brawley seismic zone (BSZ), in the Salton trough of southern California, has a history of earthquake swarms and geothermal energy exploitation. Some earthquake rate changes may have been induced by fluid extraction and injection activity at local geothermal fields, particularly at the North Brawley Geothermal Field (NBGF) and at the Salton Sea Geothermal Field (SSGF). We explore this...
Authors
Andrea L. Llenos, Andrew J. Michael
Persistent slip rate discrepancies in the eastern California (USA) shear zone Persistent slip rate discrepancies in the eastern California (USA) shear zone
Understanding fault slip rates in the eastern California shear zone (ECSZ) using GPS geodesy is complicated by potentially overlapping strain signals due to many sub-parallel strike-slip faults and by inconsistencies with geologic slip rates. The role of fault system geometry in describing ECSZ deformation may be investigated with total variation regularization, which algorithmically...
Authors
Eileen Evans, Wayne R. Thatcher, Frederick Pollitz, Jessica R. Murray
Rapid estimation of earthquake magnitude from the arrival time of the peak high-frequency amplitude Rapid estimation of earthquake magnitude from the arrival time of the peak high-frequency amplitude
We propose a simple approach to measure earthquake magnitude M using the time difference (Top) between the body‐wave onset and the arrival time of the peak high‐frequency amplitude in an accelerogram. Measured in this manner, we find that Mw is proportional to 2logTop for earthquakes 5≤Mw≤7, which is the theoretical proportionality if Top is proportional to source dimension and stress...
Authors
Shunta Noda, Shunroku Yamamoto, William L. Ellsworth
The Earthquake‐Source Inversion Validation (SIV) Project The Earthquake‐Source Inversion Validation (SIV) Project
Finite‐fault earthquake source inversions infer the (time‐dependent) displacement on the rupture surface from geophysical data. The resulting earthquake source models document the complexity of the rupture process. However, multiple source models for the same earthquake, obtained by different research teams, often exhibit remarkable dissimilarities. To address the uncertainties in...
Authors
P. Martin Mai, Danijel Schorlemmer, Morgan T. Page, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Kimiyuki Asano, Mathieu Causse, Susana Custodio, Wenyuan Fan, Gaetano Festa, Martin Galis, Frantisek Gallovic, Walter Imperatori, Martin Kaser, Dmytro Malytskyy, Ryo Okuwaki, Frederick Pollitz, Luca Passone, Hoby N. T. Razafindrakoto, Haruko Sekiguchi, Seok Goo Song, Surendra N. Somala, Kiran K. S. Thingbaijam, Cedric Twardzik, Martin van Driel, Jagdish C. Vyas, Rongjiang Wang, Yuji Yagi, Olaf Zielke
The Eastern California Shear Zone as the northward extension of the southern San Andreas Fault The Eastern California Shear Zone as the northward extension of the southern San Andreas Fault
Cluster analysis offers an agnostic way to organize and explore features of the current GPS velocity field without reference to geologic information or physical models using information only contained in the velocity field itself. We have used cluster analysis of the Southern California Global Positioning System (GPS) velocity field to determine the partitioning of Pacific-North America...
Authors
Wayne R. Thatcher, James C. Savage, Robert W. Simpson
Kinematic ground motion simulations on rough faults including effects of 3D stochastic velocity perturbations Kinematic ground motion simulations on rough faults including effects of 3D stochastic velocity perturbations
We describe a methodology for generating kinematic earthquake ruptures for use in 3D ground‐motion simulations over the 0–5 Hz frequency band. Our approach begins by specifying a spatially random slip distribution that has a roughly wavenumber‐squared fall‐off. Given a hypocenter, the rupture speed is specified to average about 75%–80% of the local shear wavespeed and the prescribed slip...
Authors
Robert Graves, Arben Pitarka
Responses of a tall building in Los Angeles, California as inferred from local and distant earthquakes Responses of a tall building in Los Angeles, California as inferred from local and distant earthquakes
Increasing inventory of tall buildings in the United States and elsewhere may be subjected to motions generated by near and far seismic sources that cause long-period effects. Multiple sets of records that exhibited such effects were retrieved from tall buildings in Tokyo and Osaka ~ 350 km and 770 km from the epicenter of the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. In California, very few tall...
Authors
Mehmet Çelebi, Hasan Ulusoy, Nori Nakata
Fortnightly modulation of San Andreas tremor and low-frequency earthquakes Fortnightly modulation of San Andreas tremor and low-frequency earthquakes
Earth tides modulate tremor and low-frequency earthquakes (LFEs) on faults in the vicinity of the brittle−ductile (seismic−aseismic) transition. The response to the tidal stress carries otherwise inaccessible information about fault strength and rheology. Here, we analyze the LFE response to the fortnightly tide, which modulates the amplitude of the daily tidal stress over a 14-d cycle...
Authors
Nicholas van der Elst, Andrew Delorey, David R. Shelly, Paul Johnson
Coseismic slip and early afterslip of the 2015 Illapel, Chile, earthquake: Implications for frictional heterogeneity and coastal uplift Coseismic slip and early afterslip of the 2015 Illapel, Chile, earthquake: Implications for frictional heterogeneity and coastal uplift
Great subduction earthquakes are thought to rupture portions of the megathrust, where interseismic coupling is high and velocity-weakening frictional behavior is dominant, releasing elastic deformation accrued over a seismic cycle. Conversely, postseismic afterslip is assumed to occur primarily in regions of velocity-strengthening frictional characteristics that may correlate with lower
Authors
William D. Barnhart, Jessica R. Murray, Richard W. Briggs, Francisco Gomez, Charles P. J. Miles, Jerry L. Svarc, Sebástian Riquelme, Bryan J. Stressler