Group B, Poster #084, Plate Boundary System (PBS)
Tectonic corridors of the northern San Andreas plate boundary system: Developing a new framework crustal deformation model
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Poster Presentation
2025 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #084, SCEC Contribution #14843 VIEW PDF
ult and the lithospheric-scale transform plate boundary that extends below the Maacama-Rodgers Creek-Hayward fault system; and (iii) the Mendocino Crustal Conveyor corridor east of the lithospheric-scale plate boundary, where slab window effects occur. A key feature of this model is a horizontal detachment extending across the Pioneer Corridor that separates shallow Franciscan crust (on the North America plate) from the Pioneer fragment, a remnant of the Farallon plate that moves northward with the Pacific plate. Further south, the detachment separates Franciscan crust from mafic material in the wake of the Pioneer fragment. Whether this detachment is seismogenic depends on a variety of properties including its kinematics, the temperature structure, and the associated rheology. Recent analyses of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake suggest it may have been seismogenically involved in that event. We are exploring the role of this crustal-scale structure on the seismic potential in northern California using a new 3-D deformation model for the San Andreas plate boundary that includes the horizontal detachment, as well as the other major fault structures in the region. With this model, we can investigate the patterns of inter-seismic loading and potential earthquake scenarios. One preliminary result from this ongoing work is that if the detachment is seismogenic and ruptures simultaneously with other regional crustal faults, slip on those features can be enhanced, including on the San Andreas and Maacama-Rodgers Creek-Hayward faults.
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