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Liquefaction caused by the 2009 Olancha, California (USA), M5.2 earthquake

January 1, 2010

The October 3, 2009 (01:16:00 UTC), Olancha M5.2 earthquake caused extensive liquefaction as well as permanent horizontal ground deformation within a 1.2 km2area earthquake in Owens Valley in eastern California (USA). Such liquefaction is rarely observed during earthquakes of M ≤ 5.2. We conclude that subsurface conditions, not unusual ground motion, were the primary factors contributing to the liquefaction. The liquefaction occurred in very liquefiable sands at shallow depth (< 2 m) in an area where the water table was near the land surface. Our investigation is relevant to both geotechnical engineering and geology. The standard engineering method for assessing liquefaction potential, the Seed–Idriss simplified procedure, successfully predicted the liquefaction despite the small earthquake magnitude. The field observations of liquefaction effects highlight a need for caution by earthquake geologists when inferring prehistoric earthquake magnitudes from paleoliquefaction features because small magnitude events may cause such features.

Publication Year 2010
Title Liquefaction caused by the 2009 Olancha, California (USA), M5.2 earthquake
DOI 10.1016/j.enggeo.2010.07.009
Authors T.L. Holzer, A. S. Jayko, E. Hauksson, J.P.B. Fletcher, T.E. Noce, M.J. Bennett, C.M. Dietel, K.W. Hudnut
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Engineering Geology
Index ID 70037542
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Earthquake Science Center