Poster #208, Seismology
Internal structure of the Garlock fault zone from Ridgecrest aftershocks data recorded by dense linear arrays
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Poster Presentation
2021 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #208, SCEC Contribution #11428 VIEW PDF
d various apertures (Catchings et al., SRL, 2020) recorded continuously at 500 Hz for about a one-month period (July-August of 2019). In this study, we analyze seismic waveforms recorded by a ~8-km-long linear array (B4) ~5 km north of the Garlock fault crossing surface ruptures of the Mw 7.1 Ridgecrest earthquake and a ~2-km-long linear array (A5) centered on the surface trace of the Garlock fault. Clear P waves reflected from the Garlock fault are observed at array B4 and identified for 7 events with depths ranging from 4 to 10 km. The polarity of fault zone reflected waves suggests that P waves travel faster in the crustal block north of the Garlock fault. This is in agreement with large-scale tomography models, and results of P-wave delay times of local and teleseismic events along with fault zone head waves resolved at array A5. We hand-pick good quality reflected signals and image a vertical dipping angle of the fault interface between 2-6 km via Kirchhoff migration using a velocity model recently developed for the region (White et al., GJI, 2021). In addition to the velocity contrast across the Garlock fault, we find a ~300-m-wide low-velocity zone to the south of the fault surface trace beneath array A5 that significantly delays P waves, amplifies S waveforms, and produces clear fault zone trapped waves (FZTWs). The high-quality FZTWs will be inverted for parameters of the trapping structure at the site. Updated results will be presented in the meeting.
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