Mobility of continental mantle: Evidence from postseismic geodetic observations following the 1992 Landers earthquake
- 10 April 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 105 (B4) , 8035-8054
- https://doi.org/10.1029/1999jb900380
Abstract
The crust around the rupture zone of the 1992 Landers earthquake has continued to deform in the years following the earthquake at rates ∼3 times greater than pre‐earthquake rates. We use a combination of Global Positioning System (GPS) and synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) data collected during a ∼3‐year epoch following the earthquake in order to investigate postseismic mechanisms responsible for the high transient velocities. In order to maximize the potential signal from viscoelastic relaxation we evaluate and model postseismic relaxation following the first few months of documented accelerated deformation. The combination of GPS and InSAR data allows us to establish viscoelastic relaxation of the lower crust and upper mantle as the dominant postseismic process and to discriminate among possible viscoelastic models. The data particularly require the presence of a highly ductile uppermost mantle beneath the central Mojave Domain, with temperature between the wet and dry basalt solidus. This is consistent with independent seismic and geochemical inferences of a regionally warm uppermost mantle. Further consideration of seismic velocity variations in conjunction with faulting patterns within the Mojave Desert suggests that the primary faulting characteristics of the Mojave Desert, namely, the pervasive late Cenozoic deformation within the Eastern California Shear Zone versus the near absence of faults in the Western Mojave Domain, are controlled by the rheology of the uppermost mantle.Keywords
This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- Time‐dependent changes in failure stress following thrust earthquakesJournal of Geophysical Research, 1998
- GPS observations of fault afterslip and upper crustal deformation following the Northridge earthquakeJournal of Geophysical Research, 1998
- Pacific-North America Plate Tectonics of the Neogene Southwestern United States: An UpdateInternational Geology Review, 1998
- Southern California permanent GPS geodetic array: Spatial filtering of daily positions for estimating coseismic and postseismic displacements induced by the 1992 Landers earthquakeJournal of Geophysical Research, 1997
- Gravitational viscoelastic postseismic relaxation on a layered spherical EarthJournal of Geophysical Research, 1997
- Temperature and the Seismic/Aseismic Transition: Observations from the 1992 Landers EarthquakeGeophysical Research Letters, 1996
- Why is it downhill from Tonopah to Las Vegas?: A case for mantle plume support of the high northern Basin and RangeTectonics, 1995
- Stress magnitude, strain rate, and rheology of extended Middle Continental Crust inferred from quartz grain sizes in the Whipple Mountains, CaliforniaTectonics, 1992
- The distribution of stress with depth in the lithosphere: thermo-rheological and geodynamic constraintsPhilosophical Transactions A, 1991
- Effects of iron and magnetite additions in olivine-pyroxene rheologyPhysics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 1989