SCEC2022 Plenary Talk, San Andreas Fault System (SAFS)
A Few Good Bends: Bridging earthquakes and mountain building along the Santa Cruz Mountains Restraining Bend in northern California
Oral Presentation
2022 SCEC Annual Meeting, SCEC Contribution #12594
e along a restraining bend in the plate-bounding San Andreas fault. First, we use a 3D finite element model to predict the accumulation of tectonic deformation surrounding the restraining bend since the range began to uplift at 4 Ma. We then couple this tectonic model with a geomorphic model that predicts how isostatically compensated rock uplift, exhumation, relief, and erosion evolve along the length of the mountain range as strike-slip motion along the San Andreas fault accumulates. We use this coupled model framework to compare predicted and observed quantities for geologically constrained rock uplift, apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology, topographic relief, 10Be-based erosion rates, and interseismic surface velocities. This approach reconciles these disparate records of mountain-building processes, allowing us to explicitly bridge decadal measures of deformation with that produced by millions of years of plate motion. Our results suggest that deformation accrued over geologic timescales influences the distribution of deformation that develops during and in between earthquakes today. Therefore, careful geologic investigations that record measurements of long-term rock uplift, exhumation, and erosion rates in actively uplifting mountain ranges may be leveraged to further understand distributions of earthquake cycle deformation.
SHOW MORE
SHOW MORE