Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; June 2005; v. 95; no. 3; p. 844-860; DOI: 10.1785/0120040134
© 2005 Seismological Society of America
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The Most Recent Large Earthquake on the Rodgers Creek Fault, San Francisco Bay Area

Suzanne Hecker1, Daniela Pantosti2, David P. Schwartz1, John C. Hamilton1, Liam M. Reidy3 and Thomas J. Powers1

1 U.S. Geological Survey
345 Middlefield Rd., M.S. 977
Menlo Park, California 94025
shecker{at}usgs.gov
 (S.H., D.P.S., J.C.H., T.J.P.)

2 Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia
Sezione Sismologia e Tettonofisica
Via di Vigna Murata 605
I-00143 Roma, Italy
 (D.P)

3 Department of Geography
507 McCone Hall, #4740
University of California
Berkeley, California 94720
 (L.M.R.)

The Rodgers Creek fault (RCF) is a principal component of the San Andreas fault system north of San Francisco. No evidence appears in the historical record of a large earthquake on the RCF, implying that the most recent earthquake (MRE) occurred before 1824, when a Franciscan mission was built near the fault at Sonoma, and probably before 1776, when a mission and presidio were built in San Francisco. The first appearance of nonnative pollen in the stratigraphic record at the Triangle G Ranch study site on the south-central reach of the RCF confirms that the MRE occurred before local settlement and the beginning of livestock grazing. Chronological modeling of earthquake age using radiocarbon-dated charcoal from near the top of a faulted alluvial sequence at the site indicates that the MRE occurred no earlier than A.D. 1690 and most likely occurred after A.D. 1715. With these age constraints, we know that the elapsed time since the MRE on the RCF is more than 181 years and less than 315 years and is probably between 229 and 290 years. This elapsed time is similar to published recurrence-interval estimates of 131 to 370 years (preferred value of 230 years) and 136 to 345 years (mean of 205 years), calculated from geologic data and a regional earthquake model, respectively. Importantly, then, the elapsed time may have reached or exceeded the average recurrence time for the fault. The age of the MRE on the RCF is similar to the age of prehistoric surface rupture on the northern and southern sections of the Hayward fault to the south. This suggests possible rupture scenarios that involve simultaneous rupture of the Rodgers Creek and Hayward faults.

A buried channel is offset 2.2 (+1.2, –0.8) m along one side of a pressure ridge at the Triangle G Ranch site. This provides a minimum estimate of right-lateral slip during the MRE at this location. Total slip at the site may be similar to, but is probably greater than, the 2 (+0.3, –0.2) m measured previously at the nearby Beebe Ranch site.




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S. Hecker, H. Kelsey, H. AbramsonWard, J. Bawcom, J. Boatwright, T. Crampton, W. Goldberg, K. L. Hanson, V. E. Langenheim, M. Larsen, et al.
History and pre-history of earthquakes in wine and redwood country, Sonoma and Mendocino counties, California
Field Guides, April 1, 2006; 7(0): 339 - 372.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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