Seismicity of the Garlock fault, California
- 1 December 1983
- journal article
- Published by Seismological Society of America (SSA) in Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
- Vol. 73 (6A) , 1721-1734
- https://doi.org/10.1785/bssa07306a1721
Abstract
The Garlock fault is a 265-km-long left-slip fault striking northeastward from the San Andreas fault in southern California. Relocations of earthquakes that occurred from 1932 to 1981 on and near this major fault were made using the master-event technique. The spatial distribution of seismicity along the fault is different west and east of its midpoint near Rand, where the largest en-echelon offset and a marked change in strike occur. These two segments also display distinct geologic features and different seismic and aseismic behavior. The 150-km-long segment west of Rand has shown continuous low seismic activity during the past 50 yr, well-documented aseismic creep, and has a relatively complex fault trace. In contrast, the 155-km-long segment east of Rand has very few small earthquakes, no demonstrable creep, and a simpler fault trace. P-wave first-motion studies substantiate predominantly left-slip motion along the Garlock fault. Overall energy release during this 50-yr period gives a seismic moment rate of 2.75 × 1021 dyne-cm/yr, much lower than that inferred from Holocene geologic offsets, thus indicating that the Garlock fault currently represents a temporal seismic gap, and that the potential exists for large earthquakes. If behavior of the Garlock fault is similar to that of the San Andreas, the western segment of the fault can be compared with the central creeping segment of the San Andreas, and the eastern segment with those segments broken by the 1857 and 1906 earthquakes; thus larger events might be expected on the eastern segment than on the western segment, or, if the entire fault breaks during a single event, larger displacements toward the east.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- Contemporary block tectonics: California and NevadaJournal of Geophysical Research, 1982
- Evolution of pull‐apart basins and their scale independenceTectonics, 1982
- Strain accumulation in southern California, 1973–1980Journal of Geophysical Research, 1981
- Source parameters of southern California earthquakesJournal of Geophysical Research, 1973
- San Fernando Earthquake series, 1971: Focal mechanisms and tectonicsReviews of Geophysics, 1973
- Garlock Fault: An Intracontinental Transform Structure, Southern CaliforniaGSA Bulletin, 1973
- Seismic moment, seismicity, and rate of slip along major fault zonesJournal of Geophysical Research, 1968
- LARGE LATERAL DISPLACEMENT ON GARLOCK FAULT, CALIFORNIA, AS MEASURED FROM OFFSET FAULT SYSTEMGSA Bulletin, 1966
- Gravity survey of the western Mojave Desert, CaliforniaProfessional Paper, 1960
- SAN ANDREAS, GARLOCK, AND BIG PINE FAULTS, CALIFORNIAGSA Bulletin, 1953