Publication | Closed Access
Slip in the 1857 and Earlier Large Earthquakes Along the Carrizo Plain, San Andreas Fault
276
Citations
20
References
2010
Year
Fault GeometryEngineeringFort Tejon EarthquakeSeismologyFault GeologyEarthquake SourceCivil EngineeringGeographySan Andreas FaultEarthquake RuptureCarrizo PlainEarlier Large EarthquakesMoment MagnitudeCarrizo Segment RuptureSeismic HazardEarth ScienceTectonics
The moment magnitude (Mw) 7.9 Fort Tejon earthquake of 1857, with a approximately 350-kilometer-long surface rupture, was the most recent major earthquake along the south-central San Andreas Fault, California. Based on previous measurements of its surface slip distribution, rupture along the approximately 60-kilometer-long Carrizo segment was thought to control the recurrence of 1857-like earthquakes. New high-resolution topographic data show that the average slip along the Carrizo segment during the 1857 event was 5.3 +/- 1.4 meters, eliminating the core assumption for a linkage between Carrizo segment rupture and recurrence of major earthquakes along the south-central San Andreas Fault. Earthquake slip along the Carrizo segment may recur in earthquake clusters with cumulative slip of approximately 5 meters.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1