Publication | Open Access
Heterogeneous Power‐Law Flow With Transient Creep in Southern California Following the 2010 El Mayor‐Cucapah Earthquake
16
Citations
40
References
2020
Year
EngineeringBurgers AssemblyEarthquake HazardsEarthquake ScenarioSeismic HazardEarth ScienceGeophysicsCrustal DeformationEarthquake SourceInternal Earth ProcessesNonlinear Flow LawsEarthquake EngineeringSeismic CycleGeographySeismic ImagingTransient CreepGeologyEarthquake RuptureEl Mayor‐cucapah EarthquakeSouthern CaliforniaTectonicsFault GeometrySeismologyCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsRock Mechanics
Abstract The rheology of the crust and mantle and the interaction of viscoelastic flow with seismic/aseismic slip on faults control the state of stress in the lithosphere over multiple seismic cycles. The rheological behavior of rocks is well constrained in a laboratory setting, but the in situ properties of the lithosphere and its lateral variations remain poorly known. Here, we access the lower‐crustal rheology in Southern California by exploiting 8 years of geodetic postseismic deformation following the 2010 El Mayor‐Cucapah earthquake. The data illuminate viscoelastic flow in the lower crust with lateral variations of effective viscosity correlated with the geological province. We show that a Burgers assembly with dashpots following a nonlinear constitutive law can approximate the temporal evolution of stress and strain rate, indicating the activation of nonlinear transient creep before steady‐state dislocation creep. The transient and background viscosities in the lower crust of the Salton Trough are on the order of ~10 18 and ~10 19 Pa s, respectively, about an order of magnitude lower than those in the surrounding regions. We highlight the importance of transient creep, nonlinear flow laws, and lateral variations of rheological properties to capture the entire history of postseismic relaxation following the El Mayor‐Cucapah earthquake.
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