Js. Deng et Lr. Sykes, TRIGGERING OF 1812 SANTA-BARBARA EARTHQUAKE BY A GREAT SAN-ANDREAS SHOCK - IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE SEISMIC HAZARDS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, Geophysical research letters, 23(10), 1996, pp. 1155-1158
We study the evolution of the stress field over the last 200 years in
southern California using the stress buildup associated with major fau
lts and stress drops associated with great earthquakes. In this report
we calculate the change in the Coulomb Failure Function (Delta CFF) a
ssociated with the great Wrightwood earthquake of Dec. 8, 1812 on the
San Andreas fault for the region near Santa Barbara that experienced a
large shock 13 days later. The rupture length constrained by paleosei
smic data is used for the Wrightwood earthquake of 1812; a uniform dis
placement of 3.5 m from the surface to seismogenic depths is assumed.
The geologic setting and focal mechanisms of earthquakes in the Santa
Barbara region are dominated by thrust, left-lateral strike-slip fault
ing and combinations of the two. For our preferred rupture model of th
e earthquake of Dec. 8 the Santa Barbara shock of Dec. 21 1812 occurre
d in a region of +0.01 to +0.1 MPa Delta CFF for reasonable fault orie
ntations, indicating that it may have been advanced by years to decade
s and triggered by the great San Andreas earthquake 13 days earlier. W
e also calculate Delta CFF on typical kinds of faults in southern Cali
fornia for a future candidate great earthquake along the San Bernardin
o and Coachella Valley segments of San Andreas fault. This earthquake
produces large positive values of Delta CFF for shallow-dipping thrust
faults beneath the greater Los Angeles area and for NW-trending right
-lateral strike-slip faults in three regions. This suggests that shock
s of magnitude similar to the M 7.1 1812 Santa Barbara earthquake coul
d be triggered by the next great event on the southern San Andreas fau
lt.