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Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area Richard Sedlock, SJSU Geology/BAESI 408 924-5020 [email protected] http://www.baesi.org -- click on “Workshop Links”

Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

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Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area. Richard Sedlock, SJSU Geology/BAESI 408 924-5020 [email protected] http://www.baesi.org -- click on “Workshop Links”. What is an Earthquake?. A release of energy stored on a fault. What is a fault?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Earthquakes:Faults, Hazards, &

the Bay AreaRichard Sedlock, SJSU Geology/BAESI

408 924-5020 [email protected]

http://www.baesi.org -- click on “Workshop Links”

Page 2: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

What is an Earthquake?A release of energy stored on a fault

What is a fault?A roughly planar surface where rock has broken and

separated

Why does an earthquake happen?Built-up energy exceeds frictional resistance on the fault

Page 3: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Earthquake Waves

Frequency0.1 Hz to 10 Hz (outside human sensory

range)

Types of Motion

P waves

S waves

surface waves

velocity amplitude

Page 4: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

How does “slip” on the fault happen?

Elastic rebound

Alternative idea: Displacement pulse (“the rug”)

Page 5: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

How do geologists.... Find faults?

Page 6: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

How do geologists find faults?

Page 7: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

How do geologists.... Find faults?

Page 8: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

How do geologists....Determine whether a fault is active?State of California (A-P act): An active fault is one that

has slipped once in the last 11,000 years (or 2 or more times in the last 700,000 years)

4,000 yr

1 m.y.

80 m.y.

Consider this schematic roadcut/seacliff:

fault #1fault #2 fault #3

Page 9: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Some of the Bay Area’s active faults

Page 10: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Spaced-based measurements (VLBI and GPS)

show that PAC-NA motion in CA is ~50 mm/yr.

Page 11: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Earthquakes in California & Nevada, 1970-2003

Page 12: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

The San Andreas is NOT “the PAC-NA plate boundary.”

This diagram applies at the

latitude of Bakersfield or

San Luis Obispo.

Red arrow: predicted

motion: 50 mm/yrBlue arrows:

subsetsof the motion that

“add up” to the predicted motion.

.

predicted at latitude of central CA

(51 ± 3 mm/yr, N32W)

San Andreas fault zone(35 ± 4 mm/yr, N34W)

Basin & Range(12 ± 1 mm/yr, N35W)

discrepancy

0

10

20

30

40

102030

velocity of PAC to W (mm/yr = km/Ma)

32°

just like on a map

North

West

Page 13: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

23

94-8?

17-23

9>6

17 96

2-5?

17? 23?

15

7-10?1-3?

FarallonIslands

~Stockton

About 36 mm/yr happens on the San Andreas in central CA, but northwest of Hollister, things are a LOT messier.

The ~36 mm/yr must be divided up

on many faults. Geologists study

each to determineindividual rates.Let’s add up the slip

on faults along four paths to see

whether we’ve found the ~36

mm/yr.

Page 14: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Seismic Hazards and Risks

Seismic hazard: A natural process caused by an EQ

Seismic risk: The potential for casualties andproperty loss due to a seismic hazard or hazards.

Example 1: Landslide in built-up Los Gatos vs.landslide in the Sierra Nevada backcountry

Example 2: Tsunami at Los Angeles harbor vs. tsunami at the Big Sur coastline.

Page 15: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Surface rupture

Landslides

Dust & Disease

Tsunamis

Liquefacton & subsidence

Ground shaking

Natural Seismic Hazards

Page 16: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Surface RuptureEarth’s surface breaks and shif

Only affects construction built directly atop the fault.

Affects the smallest area of all the seismic hazards.

Includes creep and earthquakes.How could you evaluate the level of

riskdue to surface rupture?

ts at an active fault.

Page 17: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 18: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 19: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

LandslidesDownslope movement of Earth materials due to gravity

Most affect soil or loose sediment, but some affect rock.

May be triggered by earthquakes or heavy rainfall.

How could you evaluate the level of risk

due to landslide?

Page 20: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 21: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 22: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

TsunamiDestructive sea waves (NOT tidal waves)

Caused by processes that abruptly moves ocean water:

earthquake submarine volcanic eruptioncoastal/submarine landslide ET impact

Time of arrival can be predicted—public warnings

How could you evaluate the level of risk

due to tsunami?

Page 23: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Possible tsunami“run-up” zones

Page 24: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

LiquefactionAccompanies M6+ EQs.Water escape often causes the ground surface to subside.Subsidence can damage pipes, foundations, etc.How could you evaluate the level of

riskdue to liquefaction & subsidence?

Page 25: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 26: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Ground ShakingDue to passage of P, S, and surface waves

Ground type controls amplitude and duration of shaking:

Bedrock shakes least, shortestMud-rich soil shakes most, longest

How could you evaluate the level of risk

due to ground shaking?

Page 27: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 28: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area
Page 29: Earthquakes: Faults, Hazards, & the Bay Area

Effect of Ground Type on Shaking

Seismograms for a

M4 aftershockof the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.