San Andreas Fault
Transcription
San Andreas Fault
San Andreas Fault -Weak or Strong? Background Background Background Under strike-slip regime, expect stresses to have characteristic orientation Background It can be more complicated, however… distributed vs. partitioned shear Miller, (1998) Weak Fault Low heat flow in shallow depth Fault-normal horizontal compression Uplift of coast range Earthquakes’ focal mechanism Reverse faulting and folding Heat flow near fault Lachenbruch, Sass,1992 Horizontal Compression Coast range Calaveras fault Folds and reverse faulting Mount,Suppe 1987 Orientation of maximum horizontal compression Basal traction Lachenbruch, Sass,1992 Basal shear stress Zoback,1991 Implications of Transpressive Wrench Tectonics Younger folds would be close to wrench orientation Older folds would be closely parallel to the fault Miocene folds’ orientations are close to wrench orientation Pleistocene folds are nearly parallel Mount,Suppe 1987 Open Questions Was it always weak or did it weaken as it evolved? If it evolved,did driving forces persist to generate basal traction? What is the weakening caused by? What is the role of shearing-heating and weakening in the temperaturesensitive ductile zone beneath the fault? Strong Fault Stress measurements were inconclusive or misinterpreted Active structures have rotated into their current position Expected heat flow anomaly dissipated by fluid flow Stresses Weak: maximum compressive stresses nearly perpendicular to SAF everywhere Stresses Strong: Stresses rotate on approach to the fault to agree with Anderson – Byerlee ideas Structures Weak: Stress thought to be perpendicular to fault based on active structures. Structures Strong: Structures formed earlier and have rotated into parallel with fault Miller (1998) Heat Flow Weak: Not enough heat flow for expected “strong” shear stresses Heat Flow Aside: Strong fault models of transpression predict increasing shear stress near fault Heat Flow Strong: Heat flow anomaly dissipated by gravity induced fluid flow Williams and Narasimhan (1989) Open Questions Is it reasonable to say that the entire fault is weak or strong? If the SAF is weak, does that mean that all nearby faults are also weak? If stresses change rapidly in the immediate vicinity of the fault, might they also change along length? Can rotation of structures be detected geodetically? Will aridity/depth to water table affect the fluid flow argument?