Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; February 1998; v. 88; no. 1; p. 256-269
© 1998 Seismological Society of America
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Cubic B-splines tomography at Loma Prieta

Eylon Shalev and Jonathan M. Lees

Division of Earth and Ocean Sciences, NSOE Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708
Department of Geology and Geophysics Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut 20601

Abstract

A high-resolution tomographic study, using cubic B-splines parameterization and employing a systematic approach to the choosing of appropriate damping and smoothing parameters, provided a three-dimensional P-wave velocity map of the Loma Prieta area. Used in the inversion were 11,977 high-quality raypaths from 844 aftershocks of the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. The velocity model exhibits a low-velocity feature between the San Andreas and Zayante-Vergeles faults in the top 10 km of the crust. This low-velocity feature is interpreted as a sedimentary unit exposed to the northwest and separated from the Salinian block by the Zayante-Vergeles fault. Below 10 km, no consistent change is observed between the Salinian and the Franciscan blocks. There appears to be a high correlation of aftershock activity and localized high-velocity anomalies southeast of the Loma Prieta mainshock. Whereas this anomaly may represent brittle rocks associated with a fault-zone asperity that failed after the mainshock, there is evidence to suggest it may be a body of serpentinite. The serpentinite exhibits high velocities and is potentially less competent than surrounding country rock, thus providing a sector along the fault more likely to be associated with many smaller earthquakes or creep behavior.




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J. A. Chavarria, P. Malin, R. D. Catchings, and E. Shalev
A Look Inside the San Andreas fault at Parkfield Through Vertical Seismic Profiling
Science, December 5, 2003; 302(5651): 1746 - 1748.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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