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U.S. Geological Survey
345 Middlefield Road, MS 977
Menlo
Park, California 94025
(J.B., M.J.R., L.C.S.)
Department of Geological Sciences
California State
University
Northridge, California 91330
(J.D.Y.)
Seismological Laboratory
California Institute of
Technology
Pasadena, California 91125
(J.L.)
Surface fracturing occurred along the southern San Andreas, Superstition
Hills, and Imperial faults in association with the 16 October 1999
(Mw 7.1) Hector Mine earthquake, making this at least the
eighth time in the past 31 years that a regional earthquake has triggered slip
along faults in the Salton Trough. Fractures associated with the event formed
discontinuous breaks over a 39-km-long stretch of the San Andreas fault, from
the Mecca Hills southeastward to Salt Creek and Durmid Hill, a distance from
the epicenter of 107 to 139 km. Sense of slip was right lateral; only locally
was there a minor (
1 mm) vertical component of slip. Dextral slip ranged
from 1 to 13 mm. Maximum slip values in 1999 and earlier triggered slips are
most common in the central Mecca Hills. Field evidence indicates a transient
opening as the Hector Mine seismic waves passed the southern San Andreas
fault. Comparison of nearby strong-motion records indicates several periods of
relative opening with passage of the Hector Mine seismic wavea similar
process may have contributed to the field evidence of a transient opening.
Slip on the Superstition Hills fault extended at least 9 km, at a distance
from the Hector Mine epicenter of about 188 to 196 km. This length of slip is
a minimum value, because we saw fresh surface breakage extending farther
northwest than our measurement sites. Sense of slip was right lateral; locally
there was a minor (
1 mm) vertical component of slip. Dextral slip ranged
from 1 to 18 mm, with the largest amounts found distributed (or skewed) away
from the Hector Mine earthquake source. Slip triggered on the Superstition
Hills fault commonly is skewed away from the earthquake source, most notably
in 1968, 1979, and 1999.
Surface slip on the Imperial fault and within the Imperial Valley extended
about 22 km, representing a distance from the Hector Mine epicenter of about
204 to 226 km. Sense of slip dominantly was right lateral; the right-lateral
component of slip ranged from 1 to 19 mm. Locally there was a minor
(
12 mm) vertical component of slip; larger proportions of vertical
slip (up to 10 mm) occurred in Mesquite basin, where scarps indicate long-term
oblique-slip motion for this part of the Imperial fault. Slip triggered on the
Imperial fault appears randomly distributed relative to location along the
fault and source direction. Multiple surface slips, both primary and triggered
slip, indicate that slip repeatedly is small at locations of structural
complexity.
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