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R. A. Snay, H. C. Neugebauer, and William H. Prescott
Horizontal deformation associated with the Loma Prieta earthquake (in The 1989 Loma Prieta, California, earthquake and its effects)
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (October 1991), 81(5):1647-1659

Abstract:
Co-seismic horizontal displacements for the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake were derived from preseismic triangulation-trilateration observations and postseismic GPS observations. As part of this process, the empirical model entitled TDP-H91 was applied to "correct" the preseismic measurements for the crustal motion that occurred during the seven decades spanned by these data. These newly derived displacements were combined with previously documented geodetic results to generate a dislocation model for the earthquake. Our preferred model consists of a vertically segmented rupture surface represented by two rectangles that share a common edge at a depth of 9 km. The upper rectangle dips 90' and the lower rectangle dips 70 degrees SW. Via a trial-and-error technique, the following estimates were found for the remaining parameters: strike = 134.4+ or -0.7 degrees , fault length = 32.4+ or -0.7 km, upper depth = 4.8+ or -0.1 km, lower depth = 15.1+ or -0.3 km, right-lateral strike slip = 1.86+ or -0.06 m for the upper rectangle and 1.96+ or -0.13 m for the lower rectangle, and thrusting dip slip = 1.06+ or -0.06 m for the upper rectangle and 2.30+ or -0.18 m for the lower rectangle.

Index Terms/Descriptors:
California; deformation; displacements; earthquakes; effects; geodesy; Global Positioning System; Loma Prieta earthquake 1989; San Andreas Fault; seismology; Southern California; surveys; United States

Latitude & Longitude:
N32°30'00" - N42°00'00" and W124°30'00" - W114°15'00" (Search for maps and images at Alexandria Digital Library)

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