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Cruise report for A1-98-SC southern California Earthquake Hazards Project

October 1, 1999

The focus of the Southern California Earthquake Hazards project, within the Western Region Coastal and Marine Geology team (WRCMG), is to identify the landslide and earthquake hazards and related ground-deformation processes that can potentially impact the social and economic well-being of the inhabitants of the Southern California coastal region, the most populated urban corridor along the U.S. Pacific margin. The primary objective is to help mitigate the earthquake hazards for the Southern California region by improving our understanding of how deformation is distributed (spatially and temporally) in the offshore with respect to the onshore region. To meet this overall objective, we are investigating the distribution, character, and relative intensity of active (i.e., primarily Holocene) deformation within the basins and along the shelf adjacent to the most highly populated areas (see Fig. 1). In addition, the project will examine the Pliocene-Pleistocene record of how this deformation has shifted in space and time. The results of this study should improve our knowledge of shifting deformation for both the long-term (105 to several 106 yr) and short-term (<50 ky) time frames and enable us to identify actively deforming structures that may constitute current significant seismic hazards.

Publication Year 1999
Title Cruise report for A1-98-SC southern California Earthquake Hazards Project
DOI 10.3133/ofr99152
Authors William R. Normark, Robert G. Bohannon, Ray Sliter, Gita Dunhill, David W. Scholl, Jane Laursen, Jane A. Reid, David Holton
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Series Number 99-152
Index ID ofr99152
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center