首页> 外文期刊>Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America >Upper crustal structure from the Santa Monica Mountains to the Sierra Nevada, Southern California: Tomographic results from the Los Angeles Regional Seismic Experiment, phase II (LARSE II)
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Upper crustal structure from the Santa Monica Mountains to the Sierra Nevada, Southern California: Tomographic results from the Los Angeles Regional Seismic Experiment, phase II (LARSE II)

机译:从圣莫尼卡山脉到南加利福尼亚内华达山脉的上地壳结构:洛杉矶地区地震实验第二阶段(LARSE II)的层析成像结果

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摘要

In 1999, the U.S. Geological Survey and the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) collected refraction and low-fold reflection data along a 150-km-long corridor extending from the Santa Monica Mountains northward to the Sierra Nevada. This profile was part of the second phase of the Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment (LARSE II). Chief imaging targets included sedimentary basins beneath the San Fernando and Santa Clarita Valleys and the deep structure of major faults along the transect, including causative faults for the 1971 M 6.7 San Fernando and 1994 M 6.7 Northridge earthquakes, the San Gabriel Fault, and the San Andreas Fault. Tomographic modeling of first arrivals using the methods of Hole (1992) and Lutter et al. (1999) produces velocity models that are similar to each other and are well resolved to depths of 5-7.5 km. These models, together with oil-test well data and independent forward modeling of LARSE II refraction data, suggest that regions of relatively low velocity and high velocity gradient in the San Fernando Valley and the northern Santa Clarita Valley (north of the San Gabriel Fault) correspond to Cenozoic sedimentary basin fill and reach maximum depths along the profile of similar to4.3 km and >3 km, respectively. The Antelope Valley, within the western Mojave Desert, is also underlain by low-velocity, high-gradient sedimentary fill to an interpreted maximum depth of similar to2.4 km. Below depths of similar to2 km, velocities of basement rocks in the Santa Monica Mountains and the central Transverse Ranges vary between 5.5 and 6.0 km/sec, but in the Mojave Desert, basement rocks vary in velocity between 5.25 and 6.25 km/sec. The San Andreas Fault separates differing velocity structures of the central Transverse Ranges and Mojave Desert. A weak low-velocity zone is centered approximately on the north-dipping aftershock zone of the 1971 San Fernando earthquake and possibly along the deep projection of the San Gabriel Fault. Modeling of gravity data, using densities inferred from the velocity model, indicates that different velocity-density relationships hold for both sedimentary and basement rocks as one crosses the San Andreas Fault. The LARSE II velocity model can now be used to improve the SCEC Community Velocity Model, which is used to calculate seismic amplitudes for large scenario earthquakes.
机译:1999年,美国地质调查局和南加州地震中心(SCEC)沿从圣塔莫尼卡山脉向北延伸至内华达山脉的150公里长走廊收集了折射和低倍反射数据。该剖面是洛杉矶地区地震实验(LARSE II)第二阶段的一部分。主要的成像目标包括圣费尔南多和圣克拉丽塔河谷下方的沉积盆地以及沿断层的主要断层的深层结构,包括1971 M 6.7 San Fernando和1994 M 6.7 Northridge地震的成因断层,San Gabriel断层和San安德烈亚斯(Andreas Fault)使用Hole(1992)和Lutter等人的方法对初次到达的层析成像建模。 (1999年)产生速度模型,彼此相似,并很好地解决了5-7.5公里的深度。这些模型以及试油井数据和LARSE II折射数据的独立正演模型表明,圣费尔南多谷和北圣克拉丽塔谷(圣加布里埃尔断裂带的北部)相对低速和高梯度的区域对应于新生代沉积盆地的充填,沿剖面的最大深度分别约为4.3 km和> 3 km。莫哈韦沙漠西部的羚羊谷还被低速高梯度沉积物所覆盖,最大解释深度约为2.4 km。在大约2 km的深度以下,圣塔莫尼卡山脉和中部横向山脉的基底岩石速度在5.5到6.0 km / sec之间变化,但是在莫哈韦沙漠中,基底岩石的速度在5.25到6.25 km / sec之间变化。圣安德烈亚斯断层将中央横向山脉和莫哈韦沙漠的不同速度结构分开。弱的低速带大致位于1971年圣费尔南多地震的北倾余震区的中心,并且可能沿圣加布里埃尔断裂的深部投影集中。利用从速度模型推断出的密度对重力数据进行建模,表明当一个岩石穿过圣安德​​烈亚斯断层时,沉积岩和基底岩石都具有不同的速度-密度关系。现在可以使用LARSE II速度模型来改进SCEC社区速度模型,该模型用于计算大场景地震的地震振幅。

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