Holocene slip rates along the San Andreas Fault System in the San Gorgonio Pass and implications for large earthquakes in southern California

Doug Yule, & Richard V. Heermance

Published June 9, 2017, SCEC Contribution #7349

The San Gorgonio Pass (SGP) in southern California contains a 40 km long region of structural complexity where the San Andreas Fault (SAF) bifurcates into a series of oblique-slip faults with unknown slip history. We combine new 10Be exposure ages (Qt4: 8600 (+2100, 2200) and Qt3: 5700 (+1400, 1900) years B.P.) and a radiocarbon age (1260 ± 60 years B.P.) from late Holocene terraces with scarp displacement of these surfaces to document a Holocene slip rate of 5.7 (+2.7, 1.5) mm/yr combined across two faults. Our preferred slip rate is 37–49% of the average slip rates along the SAF outside the SGP (i.e., Coachella Valley and San Bernardino sections) and implies that strain is transferred off the SAF in this area. Earthquakes here most likely occur in very large, throughgoing SAF events at a lower recurrence than elsewhere on the SAF, so that only approximately one third of SAF ruptures penetrate or originate in the pass.

Key Words
slip rates, San Andreas Fault

Citation
Yule, D., & Heermance, R. V. (2017). Holocene slip rates along the San Andreas Fault System in the San Gorgonio Pass and implications for large earthquakes in southern California. Geophysical Research Letters, 44(11), 5391-5400. doi: 10.1002/2017GL072612. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2017GL072612/abstract


Related Projects & Working Groups
San Gorgonio Pass Special Study Area, San Gorgonio Pass Special Study Area