The Deformation Field Across the Pacific-North America Plate Boundary in Northern California from EDM, GPS, and VLBI Observations
M H Murray(1,2), P Segall(1), W H Prescott(3), N E King(3), M Lisowski(4), R Burgmann(5), J T Freymueller(6), S D P Williams(7), B Romanowicz(2)
(1)Geophysics Dept., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA 94305-2215; (2)Seismographic Station, UC Berkeley, CA; (3)USGS, Menlo Park, CA; (4)USGS, Hawaiian Volcano Obs., HI; (5)Geology Dept., UC Davis, CA; (6)Geophysical Instit., UA Fairbanks, AK; (7)IGPP, SIO, La Jolla, CA
Abstract We have initiated an effort to combine geodetic observations collected over the last 25 years to determine the crustal deformation field of the Pacific-North America plate boundary in northern California. We use three principal data sets: 1) Geodolite trilateration (EDM) measurements collected by the USGS from 1973 to 1989; 2) very-long-baseline interferometry (VLBI) measurements collected by NASA from 1983 to 1992; and 3) Global Positioning System (GPS) measurements collected by the USGS and several university research groups since 1985, including from the Bay Area Regional Deformation (BARD) permanent GPS network since 1991. Solutions with weak coordinate constraints derived from these observations are combined using Kalman filter techniques to minimize biases due to inhomogeneous reference networks. We estimate average rates of interseismic deformation and co- and post-seismic displacements due to the 1989 Loma Prieta, 1992 Cape Mendocino, and other major earthquakes. The resulting deformation field allows us to address several outstanding issues, such as the stability of the Sierra Nevada/Great Valley block, the rate of convergence across the Coast Ranges, and the distribution of deformation across the San Andreas fault system from Parkfield to Cape Mendocino. We estimate three-dimensional models of surface creep and deep slip along the major faults, and investigate their uncertainty and resolution to better characterize rates of strain accumulation and provide a more realistic assessment of earthquake hazards. We also investigate time-dependent variations in crustal deformation to constrain properties of the crust and mantle beneath major fault zones.


Velocities of sites relative to stable North America with 95% confidence regions.

To be presented at the American Geophysical Union meeting, December, 1996.


Crustal Deformation and Fault Mechanics

Last modified: 22 Nov 96