Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California

The Santa Monica fault is a 40-km-long, oblique left-lateral reverse fault that extends through the densely urbanized northwestern Los Angeles, California, area and offshore parallel to the Malibu coast. The fault exhibits near-surface strain partitioning in paleoseismologic trenches, and has underg...

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Main Authors: Sieh, Kerry, Dolan, James F., Rockwell, Thomas K.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95271
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8874
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-952712020-03-07T12:45:24Z Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California Sieh, Kerry Dolan, James F. Rockwell, Thomas K. DRNTU::Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes The Santa Monica fault is a 40-km-long, oblique left-lateral reverse fault that extends through the densely urbanized northwestern Los Angeles, California, area and offshore parallel to the Malibu coast. The fault exhibits near-surface strain partitioning in paleoseismologic trenches, and has undergone at least six surface ruptures during the past ∼50 k.y. Although events may be missing from the older part of the record, and the ages of older events are based on poorly constrained soil age estimates, at least two and probably three events occurred after the well-dated burial of a prominent paleosol ca. 16–17 ka. The resulting ∼7–8 k.y. latest Pleistocene–Holocene average recurrence interval for events large enough to cause surface rupture is much longer than the ≤1.9–3.3 k.y. maximum interval we calculate for hypothetical Mw 6.9–7.0 earthquakes generated by rupture of the entire Santa Monica fault. The pronounced disparity between the measured and calculated average recurrence intervals suggests that the Santa Monica fault undergoes infrequent, and therefore probably very large, earthquakes (Mw ≥ 7.0). If such large earthquakes have occurred, we speculate that they may have been generated by simultaneous rupture of the Santa Monica fault with other faults in the Transverse Ranges Southern Boundary fault system, such as the Hollywood or Anacapa-Dume faults. The most recent definite Santa Monica fault surface rupture occurred between ca. 10 and 17 ka, although a more recent event probably occurred between ca. 1 and 3 ka. 2012-12-21T01:18:20Z 2019-12-06T19:11:37Z 2012-12-21T01:18:20Z 2019-12-06T19:11:37Z 2000 2000 Journal Article Dolan, J. F., Sieh, K., & Rockwell, T. K. (2000). Late Quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California. Geological Society of America Bulletin, 112(10), 1559-1581. 0016-7606 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95271 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8874 10.1130/0016-7606(2000)112<1559:LQAASP>2.0.CO;2 en Geological society of America bulletin © 2000 Geological Society of America
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
Sieh, Kerry
Dolan, James F.
Rockwell, Thomas K.
Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California
description The Santa Monica fault is a 40-km-long, oblique left-lateral reverse fault that extends through the densely urbanized northwestern Los Angeles, California, area and offshore parallel to the Malibu coast. The fault exhibits near-surface strain partitioning in paleoseismologic trenches, and has undergone at least six surface ruptures during the past ∼50 k.y. Although events may be missing from the older part of the record, and the ages of older events are based on poorly constrained soil age estimates, at least two and probably three events occurred after the well-dated burial of a prominent paleosol ca. 16–17 ka. The resulting ∼7–8 k.y. latest Pleistocene–Holocene average recurrence interval for events large enough to cause surface rupture is much longer than the ≤1.9–3.3 k.y. maximum interval we calculate for hypothetical Mw 6.9–7.0 earthquakes generated by rupture of the entire Santa Monica fault. The pronounced disparity between the measured and calculated average recurrence intervals suggests that the Santa Monica fault undergoes infrequent, and therefore probably very large, earthquakes (Mw ≥ 7.0). If such large earthquakes have occurred, we speculate that they may have been generated by simultaneous rupture of the Santa Monica fault with other faults in the Transverse Ranges Southern Boundary fault system, such as the Hollywood or Anacapa-Dume faults. The most recent definite Santa Monica fault surface rupture occurred between ca. 10 and 17 ka, although a more recent event probably occurred between ca. 1 and 3 ka.
format Article
author Sieh, Kerry
Dolan, James F.
Rockwell, Thomas K.
author_facet Sieh, Kerry
Dolan, James F.
Rockwell, Thomas K.
author_sort Sieh, Kerry
title Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California
title_short Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California
title_full Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California
title_fullStr Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California
title_full_unstemmed Late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the Santa Monica fault system, Los Angeles, California
title_sort late quaternary activity and seismic potential of the santa monica fault system, los angeles, california
publishDate 2012
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/95271
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/8874
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