Authors
John M Fletcher, Orlando J Teran, Thomas K Rockwell, Michael E Oskin, Kenneth W Hudnut, Karl J Mueller, Ronald M Spelz, Sinan O Akciz, Eulalia Masana, Geoff Faneros, Eric J Fielding, Sébastien Leprince, Alexander E Morelan, Joann Stock, David K Lynch, Austin J Elliott, Peter Gold, Jing Liu-Zeng, Alejandro González-Ortega, Alejandro Hinojosa-Corona, Javier González-García
Publication date
2014/8/1
Journal
Geosphere
Volume
10
Issue
4
Pages
797-827
Publisher
Geological Society of America
Description
The 4 April 2010 moment magnitude (Mw) 7.2 El Mayor–Cucapah earthquake revealed the existence of a previously unidentified fault system in Mexico that extends ∼120 km from the northern tip of the Gulf of California to the U.S.–Mexico border. The system strikes northwest and is composed of at least seven major faults linked by numerous smaller faults, making this one of the most complex surface ruptures ever documented along the Pacific–North America plate boundary. Rupture propagated bilaterally through three distinct kinematic and geomorphic domains. Southeast of the epicenter, a broad region of distributed fracturing, liquefaction, and discontinuous fault rupture was controlled by a buried, southwest-dipping, dextral-normal fault system that extends ∼53 km across the southern Colorado River delta. Northwest of the epicenter, the sense of vertical slip reverses as rupture propagated through …
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