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Active Dipping Interface of the Southern San Andreas Fault Revealed by Space Geodetic and Seismic Imaging

Ellis Vavra, Hongrui Qiu, Benxin Chi, Pieter‐Ewald Share, A. A. Allam, Matthias Morzfeld, F. L. Vernon, Yehuda Ben‐Zion, Yuri Fialko

2023Journal of Geophysical Research Solid Earth15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The Southern San Andreas Fault (SSAF) in California is one of the most thoroughly studied faults in the world, but its configuration at seismogenic depths remains enigmatic in the Coachella Valley. We use a combination of space geodetic and seismic observations to demonstrate that the relatively straight southernmost section of the SSAF, between Thousand Palms and Bombay Beach, is dipping to the northeast at 60–80° throughout the upper crust (<10 km), including the shallow aseismic layer. We constrain the fault attitude in the top 2–3 km using inversions of surface displacements associated with shallow creep, and seismic data from a dense nodal array crossing the fault trace near Thousand Palms. The data inversions show that the shallow dipping structure connects with clusters of seismicity at depth, indicating a continuous throughgoing fault surface. The dipping fault geometry has important implications for the long‐term fault slip rate, the intensity of ground shaking during future large earthquakes, and the effective strength of the southern SAF.

Topics & Concepts

GeologySeismologyGeodetic datumSan andreas faultInduced seismicityCrustFault traceFault (geology)Slip (aerodynamics)Elastic-rebound theoryGeodesyPaleontologyPhysicsThermodynamicsearthquake and tectonic studiesSeismic Waves and AnalysisGeological and Geochemical Analysis
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