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Geomorphology Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2001

Geophysics

Discipline

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Geomorphology

Present Day Kinematics Of The Eastern California Shear Zone From A Geodetically Constrained Block Model, S. C. Mcclusky, S. C. Bjornstad, B. H. Hager, R. W. King, B. J. Meade, M. Meghan Miller, F. C. Monastero, B. J. Souter Sep 2001

Present Day Kinematics Of The Eastern California Shear Zone From A Geodetically Constrained Block Model, S. C. Mcclusky, S. C. Bjornstad, B. H. Hager, R. W. King, B. J. Meade, M. Meghan Miller, F. C. Monastero, B. J. Souter

All Faculty Scholarship for the College of the Sciences

We use Global Positioning System (GPS) data from 1993–2000 to determine horizontal velocities of 65 stations in eastern California and western Nevada between 35° and 37° N. We relate the geodetic velocities to fault slip rates using a block model that enforces path integral constraints over geologic and geodetic time scales and that includes the effects of elastic strain accumulation on faults locked to a depth of 15 km. The velocity of the Sierra Nevada block with respect to Nevada is 11.1±0.3 mm/yr, with slip partitioned across the Death Valley, (2.8±0.5 mm/yr), Panamint Valley (2.5±0.8 mm/yr), and Airport Lake/Owens Valley …


Refined Kinematics Of The Eastern California Shear Zone From Gps Observations, 1993-1998, M. Meghan Miller, Timothy H. Dixon, Roy K. Dokka Feb 2001

Refined Kinematics Of The Eastern California Shear Zone From Gps Observations, 1993-1998, M. Meghan Miller, Timothy H. Dixon, Roy K. Dokka

All Faculty Scholarship for the College of the Sciences

Global Positioning System (GPS) results from networks spanning the Eastern California shear zone and adjacent Sierra Nevada block, occupied annually between 1993 and 1998, constrain plate margin kinematics. We use an elastic block model to relate GPS station velocities to long‐term fault slip rate estimates. The model accounts for elastic strain accumulation on the San Andreas fault, as well as faults of the Eastern California shear zone. South of the Garlock fault, 14 mm/yr of dextral shear is distributed across the Eastern California shear zone. Some of this slip penetrates eastward into the Basin and Range, and a collective budget …