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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 100, NO. B5,
PAGES 8285–8310,
1995
The San Andreas Fault system through the Transverse Ranges as illuminated by earthquakes
Leonardo Seeber
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, New York
John G. Armbruster
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Palisades, New York
Abstract
The pattern of seismogenic faulting in the San Gorgonio Pass-San Bernardino basin area of the San Andreas fault (SAF) zone
is mapped from about 7000 quality-selected focal mechanisms (1981-Nov '92). They are derived from phase data of the southern
California network by a relocation procedure based on location-dependent station-corrections and by a grid-search procedure.
About 3/4 of the mechanisms have been interpreted as planes of rupture, or “slip planes”, that delineate many distinct faults.
One of these faults is right-lateral, dips steeply northeast and is continuous trough the San Gorgonio Pass area; we interpret
it as the main branch of the SAF. A very large earthquake seems possible on this portion of the SAF because of its continuity
and because of the unusually deep reach of the seismicity (23 km). Southwest of this fault, a volume of diffuse and persistent
seismicity has a sharp downward cut-off which may reflect a basal detachment dipping 20° northeast and intersecting the SAF
along the deepest seismicity. Northeast of the SAF, the floor of the seismicity is shallower by as much as 10 km. Stress characteristics
are derived from slip planes in 10 selected subregions. The regime is transpressional near the constricting bend of the SAF
at San Gorgonio Pass; it is dominated by horizontal extension in the San Bernardino Basin area; and it is again transpressional
in the eastern San Gorgonio Mountains north of the Cucamonga thrust. The broad features of this zonation may be related to
the intersection of the SAF with the Pinto Mountain fault and with the San Jacinto fault. A change of fault kinematics in
the Yucaipa cluster coincides with the 1992 Landers and Big Bear main shocks and may be a manifestation of static stress change.
Received 10
March
1994;
accepted 8
November
1994.
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Citation: Seeber, L., and J. G. Armbruster
(1995),
The San Andreas Fault system through the Transverse Ranges as illuminated by earthquakes,
J. Geophys. Res.,
100(B5),
8285–8310.
Copyright 1995 by the American Geophysical Union.
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