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NARROW
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GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Agua Blanca Fault (1)
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Asia
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Far East
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China (2)
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Japan (2)
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Philippine Islands (1)
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Malay Archipelago (1)
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Mexico
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South America
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United States
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California
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Imperial County California
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Los Angeles County California
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Monterey County California
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geologic age
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Primary terms
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Asia
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United States
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California
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Banning Fault (2)
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Coyote Creek Fault (1)
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Imperial County California
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Imperial Fault (1)
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Los Angeles County California
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Monterey County California
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Parkfield California (1)
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Riverside County California
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Mission Creek Fault (1)
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Salton Sea (1)
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San Bernardino County California
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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Evidence for Unusually Strong Near-field Ground Motion on the Hanging Wall of the San Fernando Fault during the 1971 Earthquake
Earthquake Hazard Assessment: Has Our Approach Been Modified in the Light of Recent Earthquakes?
Field study of a highly active fault zone: The Xianshuihe fault of southwestern China
Citation
The Elmore Ranch and Superstition Hills earthquakes of 24 November 1987: Introduction to the special issue
Slip on the Superstition Hills fault and on nearby faults associated with the 24 November 1987 Elmore Ranch and Superstition Hills earthquakes, southern California
Triggered slip along the San Andreas fault after the 8 July 1986 North Palm Springs earthquake
Charles F. Richter: A personal tribute
The North Palm Springs, California, earthquake sequence of July 1986
Fault slip in southern California
Rupture complexity of the 1970 Tonghai and 1973 Luhuo earthquakes, China, from P -wave inversion, and relationship to surface faulting
Seismicity of the Garlock fault, California
Earthquake prediction—1982 overview
Responsibilities in earthquake prediction: To the Seismological Society of America, delivered in Edmonton, Alberta, May 12, 1976
Geological Criteria for Evaluating Seismicity: Address as Retiring President of The Geological Society of America, Miami Beach, Florida, November 1974
A low-stress-drop, low-magnitude earthquake with surface faulting: The Imperial, California, earthquake of March 4, 1966
A micro-earthquake survey of the San Andreas fault system in southern California
Parkfield earthquakes of June 27-29, 1966, Monterey and San Luis Obispo Counties, California—Preliminary report
Abstract More than 3,000 gravity observations in the Northern Gulf province, including an underwater gravity survey of the Salton Sea, show the over-all trend of isogal contours to be northwest, parallel to the tectonic pattern dominated by the San Andreas fault system. Contours northeast of the trough trend east, probably reflecting Transverse Range structures in this area. A prominent and linear gradient of 5 mgal/km marks the Banning-Mission Creek fault in the Coachella Valley but dies out southeastward at about the same point the surface trace disappears. The San Jacinto fault zone is characterized by a series of maxima and minima that tend to confirm continuity of this fault zone to the Gulf of California. A 15-20 mgal maximum over the Obsidian Buttes suggests a large anomalous mass at depth, or may be related to contemporaneous metamorphism of the Tertiary sedimentary section that has recently been observed in nearby steam wells. The regional gravity gradient indicates a crustal thickening northwest from the Gulf of California; inferred crustal thicknesses are 32 km at the International Border and 40 km at San Gorgonio Pass. Ten seismic refraction profiles in the Imperial and Coachella Valleys indicate several throughgoing velocity zones, but we are unable to correlate these with known stratigraphic units. The maximum thickness of sediments in the trough appears to be about 6.4 km (21,000 ft) just south of the International Border, with basement becoming shallower both to the north and south. The Salton trough has many geophysical and structural similarities to the Dead Sea rift, but the markedly en echelon pattern of major faults in the Salton trough and Gulf of California appears unique. A particular problem is presented by their orientation, which would suggest left-lateral displacement across the zone rather than the right-lateral displacement that is known to characterize at least the northern end of the province.