|
Re: This could be worrisome |
Hi Canie. Not for this part of the fault. This part of the fault has been like a race horse for a number of years. Fault zone properties like temperature, stress, fluids, and the type of rock help determine whether the adjacent crustal blocks of a fault move past each other in the relatively abrupt, stick-and-slip motion that causes earthquakes, or in a more gradual, smooth motion called aseismic creep. Since at least the turn of the century, the northern Hayward fault has been showing telltale signs along its surface trace--including diverted street curbs, wavering fence lines, and cracked and distorted buildings--of aseismic creep. These surface creep rates lag behind long-term slip rates for the fault, however, suggesting that the creep only extends for a shallow distance below the surface and that the fault is "locked" at a deeper level below, accumulating strain that would be released in a major earthquake. To test the extent of aseismic creep on the northern Hayward, Bürgmann and colleagues integrated data from global positioning satellite measurements along the fault with satellite radar data and information from clusters of microearthquakes deep within the fault. The researchers combined these data in a model that correlates surface movements with fault slippage at depth, says Bürgmann, allowing them a 3-D glimpse of the fault zone. Their analysis revealed a slow and aseismic creep at the bottom as well as the top of the fault zone in the northern part of the Hayward. The seismic scenario that best fits their model, say the Science researchers, is of a Hayward Fault with a split personality: a relatively immobile southern half that is locked at depth, adjacent to a freely-slipping northern segment. Although the deep creep along the northern Hayward indicates that the possibility of a major earthquake along that portion of the fault should be downgraded, Bürgmann says that these findings do not rule out large earthquakes on neighboring fault segments, like the southern half of the Hayward or the Rodgers Creek fault that lies north of the Hayward fault. "The studies that have been done clearly suggest significant earthquake hazard from these and other faults in the Bay area," says Bürgmann. Take Care…Don in creepy town. Follow Ups: ● Re: This could be worrisome - Don in Hollister 20:34:05 - 2/1/2001 (4887) (1) ● Re: This could be worrisome - Canie 22:12:31 - 2/1/2001 (4889) (0) |
|