Publication | Open Access
Heat flow in the SAFOD pilot hole and implications for the strength of the San Andreas Fault
87
Citations
22
References
2004
Year
GeophysicsParkfield Earthquake RuptureFault GeometryEngineeringAerospace EngineeringSeismologySafod Pilot HoleCivil EngineeringGeographySeismic ImagingHeat FlowEarthquake SourceEarthquake HazardsSan Andreas FaultEarthquake RuptureSeismic HazardEarth ScienceTectonics
Detailed thermal measurements have been acquired in the 2.2‐km‐deep SAFOD pilot hole, located 1.8 km west of the SAF near Parkfield, California. Heat flow from the basement section of the borehole (770 to 2160 m) is 91 mW m −2 , higher than the published 74 mW m −2 average for the Parkfield area. Within the resolution of the measurements, heat flow is constant across faults that intersect the borehole, suggesting that fluid flow does not alter the conductive thermal regime. Reanalysis of regional heat flow reveals an increase in heat flow along the SAF northwest of Parkfield. This transition corresponds to a shallowing base of seismicity and a change in fault behavior near the northern terminus of the M6 1966 Parkfield earthquake rupture. The persistence of elevated heat flow in the Coast Ranges to the west appears to rule out frictional heating on the SAF as the source of the SAFOD value.
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