Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published November 1993 | Published + Submitted
Journal Article Open

The 1992 Landers Earthquake Sequence: Seismological Observations

Abstract

The (M_W 6.1, 7.3, 6.2) 1992 Landers earthquakes began on April 23 with the M_W6.1 1992 Joshua Tree preshock and form the most substantial earthquake sequence to occur in California in the last 40 years. This sequence ruptured almost 100 km of both surficial and concealed faults and caused aftershocks over an area 100 km wide by 180 km long. The faulting was predominantly strike slip and three main events in the sequence had unilateral rupture to the north away from the San Andreas fault. The M_W6.1 Joshua Tree preshock at 33°N58′ and 116°W19′ on 0451 UT April 23 was preceded by a tightly clustered foreshock sequence (M≤4.6) beginning 2 hours before the mainshock and followed by a large aftershock sequence with more than 6000 aftershocks. The aftershocks extended along a northerly trend from about 10 km north of the San Andreas fault, northwest of Indio, to the east-striking Pinto Mountain fault. The M_w7.3 Landers mainshock occurred at 34°N13′ and 116°W26′ at 1158 UT, June 28, 1992, and was preceded for 12 hours by 25 small M≤3 earthquakes at the mainshock epicenter. The distribution of more than 20,000 aftershocks, analyzed in this study, and short-period focal mechanisms illuminate a complex sequence of faulting. The aftershocks extend 60 km to the north of the mainshock epicenter along a system of at least five different surficial faults, and 40 km to the south, crossing the Pinto Mountain fault through the Joshua Tree aftershock zone towards the San Andreas fault near Indio. The rupture initiated in the depth range of 3–6 km, similar to previous M∼5 earthquakes in the region, although the maximum depth of aftershocks is about 15 km. The mainshock focal mechanism showed right-lateral strike-slip faulting with a strike of N10°W on an almost vertical fault. The rupture formed an arclike zone well defined by both surficial faulting and aftershocks, with more westerly faulting to the north. This change in strike is accomplished by jumping across dilational jogs connecting surficial faults with strikes rotated progressively to the west. A 20-km-long linear cluster of aftershocks occurred 10–20 km north of Barstow, or 30–40 km north of the end of the mainshock rupture. The most prominent off-fault aftershock cluster occurred 30 km to the west of the Landers mainshock. The largest aftershock was within this cluster, the M_w6.2 Big Bear aftershock occurring at 34°N10′ and 116°W49′ at 1505 UT June 28. It exhibited left-lateral strike-slip faulting on a northeast striking and steeply dipping plane. The Big Bear aftershocks form a linear trend extending 20 km to the northeast with a scattered distribution to the north. The Landers mainshock occurred near the southernmost extent of the Eastern California Shear Zone, an 80-km-wide, more than 400-km-long zone of deformation. This zone extends into the Death Valley region and accommodates about 10 to 20% of the plate motion between the Pacific and North American plates. The Joshua Tree preshock, its aftershocks, and Landers aftershocks form a previously missing link that connects the Eastern California Shear Zone to the southern San Andreas fault.

Additional Information

© 1993 American Geophysical Union. Received April 12, 1993; revised August 10, 1993; accepted August 19, 1993. D. Oppenheimer, M. Rymer, J. Dolan, and two Journal of Geophysical Research reviewers, C. Thurber and S. Jaume, provided helpful critical reviews. We thank K. Sieh for stimulating discussions about the tectonics of the Landers earthquake and for providing a map of the surface rupture. We are grateful to the seismic analysts of Caltech and the USGS for quick and competent processing of the earthquake data. This research was partially supported by USGS grant 14-08-0001-G1761 and USGS cooperative agreement 1434-92-A-0960 to Caltech and the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) under NSF cooperative agreement EAR-8920136 and USGS cooperative agreement 14-08-0001-0899. SCEC publication 54. Contribution 5268, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.

Attached Files

Published - jgrb9241.pdf

Submitted - The_1992_Landers_Earthquake_Sequence.pdf

Files

The_1992_Landers_Earthquake_Sequence.pdf
Files (25.5 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:dee0c0cc829f88b58511a94e64f14ce7
24.1 MB Preview Download
md5:98b3e2f8f007be40a7423ace92db7f34
1.4 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023