Authors
Gilles Peltzer, Fréderic Crampé, Scott Hensley, Paul Rosen
Publication date
2001/11/1
Journal
Geology
Volume
29
Issue
11
Pages
975-978
Publisher
Geological Society of America
Description
Satellite synthetic aperture radar interferometry reveals transient strain accumulation along the Blackwater–Little Lake fault system within the Eastern California shear zone. The surface strain map obtained by averaging eight years (1992–2000) of Earth Resource Satellite (ERS) radar data shows a 120-km-long, 20-km- wide zone of concentrated shear between the southern end of the 1872 Owens Valley earthquake surface break and the northern end of the 1992 Landers earthquake surface break. The observed shear zone is continuous through the Garlock fault, which does not show any evidence of left-lateral slip during the same time period. A dislocation model of the observed shear indicates right-lateral slip at 7 ± 3 mm/yr on a vertical fault below ∼5 km depth, a rate that is two to three times greater than the geologic rates estimated on northwest-trending faults in the eastern Mojave area. This transient slip …
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