Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; April 1985; v. 75; no. 2;
p. 507-517
© 1985 Seismological Society of America
Aftershocks of the 22 November 1977 earthquake at Willits, California: Activity in the Maacama fault zone
DAVID H. WARREN,
CHRISTI SCOFIELD and
CHARLES G. BUFE
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, 345 MIDDLEFIELD ROAD, MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA 94025
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY NATIONAL CENTER, RESTON, VIRGINIA 22092
Abstract
In late 1977, a moderate-sized earthquake and associated aftershock sequence occurred along the Maacama fault zone in the northern Coast Ranges near Willits, California. The main shock, ML = 4.8, was located on the east side of Little Lake Valley. An 11-station temporary seismic network recorded aftershocks for 2 weeks after this event. The aftershock locations are along the southwest member of two northwest-southeast-trending seismically active lineations that are situated about 30 km apart as defined by CALNET data. Four possibly unrelated events occurred about 20 km east-northeast of the main aftershock zone, about half-way between the two seismic lineations. A b value of 1.1, typical for an aftershock sequence, was obtained for events above a magnitude of 1.35. Seismic activity was centered about 5 km east-northeast of Willits, where 83 microearthquakes define a volume of activity delimited by an epicentral area of about 20 km2 at depths from 5 to 14 km. The northwestern part of this volume is along the Rocktree Valley fault, a strand of the Maacama fault zone. Fault-plane solutions of first motion and locations for 75 events define a right-lateral, strike-slip plane striking N29°W and dipping about 76° to the northeast. A composite focal mechanism of events in a small southwestern section of the aftershock volume shows right-lateral, strike-slip planes rotated clockwise about 45° from the orientation of the composite of the main group. Projection of planes downward from mapped fault traces suggests that the aftershocks are related to a complex geometry of faulting. The Willits earthquake and its aftershocks may manifest the movement of the northeast component of a right echelon step that forms a pull-apart basin in Little Lake Valley.
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