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Location of the focus and tectonics of the focal region of the California earthquake of 18 April 1906

Anthony Lomax
Location of the focus and tectonics of the focal region of the California earthquake of 18 April 1906 (in The 1906 San Francisco earthquake a century later, Brad T. Aagaard and Gregory C. Beroza)
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (April 2008) 98 (2): 846-860

Abstract

Modern relocation constrains the hypocenter of the 18 April 1906 California earthquake within an approximately 8X24 km, southwest-northeast trending zone to the north of San Francisco that intersects the offshore San Andreas fault system west of San Francisco. Here we further constrain the location of the 1906 focus and examine the tectonics of the focal region using recent microseismicity relocated in a 3D model along with other seismological, geological, and marine evidence. In agreement with previous work, we associate the 1906 focus with an extensional, right stepover in the San Andreas fault system--a zone of sea floor subsidence and complex, normal, and strike-slip faulting. We define a likely focal volume between Lake Merced and offshore of the Golden Gate centered near 37.77 degrees N, 122.55 degrees W, and 10-km depth. We hypothesize possible 1906 rupture in this region by normal deformation around a 10-km-long, steeply west-dipping structure trending about 20 degrees clockwise to the San Andreas fault zone, and bilateral, strike-slip fault rupture along the San Andreas fault system away from this structure: rupture to the northwest on a vertical, currently aseismic faulting structure under the Golden Gate fault and rupture to the southeast under the San Francisco peninsula either along a steeply southwest-dipping structure showing present-day extensional tectonism, or along a near-vertical, currently aseismic fault zone. All three of these structures extend from the near surface to about 10-km depth. We also identify a deeper, 15-20-km-long linear trend of clustered seismicity at 10-13-km depth, rotated about 6 degrees clockwise relative to the strike of the San Andreas fault, which connects the north end of the focal volume with the south end of the seismicity defining the southwest-dipping structure under the San Francisco peninsula. We propose that this trend shows faulting at the base of a brittle, upper crust in response to underlying shear in a ductile, lower crust. These interpretations on the focal region of the 1906 earthquake have implications for seismotectonic understanding, earthquake monitoring, and seismic hazard assessment in the San Francisco Bay Area.


ISSN: 0037-1106
EISSN: 1943-3573
Serial Title: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Serial Volume: 98
Serial Issue: 2
Title: Location of the focus and tectonics of the focal region of the California earthquake of 18 April 1906
Title: The 1906 San Francisco earthquake a century later
Author(s): Lomax, Anthony
Author(s): Aagaard, Brad T.
Author(s): Beroza, Gregory C.
Affiliation: ALomax Scientific, Mouans-Sartoux, France
Affiliation: U. S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA, United States
Pages: 846-860
Published: 200804
Text Language: English
Publisher: Seismological Society of America, Berkeley, CA, United States
References: 61
Accession Number: 2008-084526
Categories: Environmental geologySeismology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 1 table, sketch maps
N37°30'00" - N38°00'00", W122°45'00" - W122°15'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Stanford University, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Seismological Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 200825
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