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William Lettis & Associates, Inc.
1777 Botelho Drive,
Suite 262
Walnut Creek, California
94596
baldwin{at}lettis.com
(J.
N. B., K. I. K., C. E. R.)
Paleoseismic investigation of the Northridge Hills fault in the northern
San Fernando Valley, California, helps assess the timing and style of
near-surface late Quaternary deformation in the epicentral area of the 1994
Northridge earthquake. The Northridge Hills fault, a 15-km-long, north-dipping
reverse fault, exhibits geomorphic evidence of late Quaternary surface
deformation, including topographic scarps across late Quaternary fluvial
terraces and aligned alluvial-fan apices on the footwall block. We excavated
one 40-m-long trench and six test pits, and drilled nine boreholes across a
2-m-high scarp developed on a probable Holocene fluvial terrace adjacent to
Aliso Canyon Wash. A continuous clayey gravel identified in the trench, test
pits, and boreholes defines a south-facing monocline with 6 ± 1 m of
vertical separation across the Northridge Hills fault. Based on
pedochronology, the clayey gravel ranges in age from 6 to 30 ka. The borehole
data also suggest that an unconformity developed on the Plio-Pleistocene
Saugus Formation is warped into a monocline that has 13 ± 2 m of
vertical separation across the fault. These preliminary data yield a dip-slip
rate of 1.0 ± 0.7 mm/yr for the Northridge Hills fault. The absence of
distinct scarp-derived colluvium in trench exposures at the base of the scarp
and secondary brittle fracturing or faulting suggests that the monocline is
related to folding during small, incremental uplifts rather than large uplifts
that generate distinct scarp relief. We postulate that such uplift could be
produced via moderate-magnitude earthquakes (MW 6
)
on the Northridge Hills fault, or secondary deformation induced by earthquakes
on other faults. For instance, evidence of surface uplift near the trench site
during or following the 1994 earthquake suggests that all or part of the
observed deformation is a result of secondary slip on the Northridge Hills
fault produced by movement on the underlying Northridge blind reverse fault or
other nearby large structures. Based on our geologic investigations, the
distribution of aftershocks following the 1994 earthquake, and pre- and
post-1994 leveling and geodetic surveys, we interpret that the Northridge
Hills fault underwent triggered slip during the 1994 earthquake.
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Comment on "Late Quaternary Fold Deformation along the Northridge Hills Fault, Northridge, California: Deformation Coincident with Past Northridge Blind-Thrust Earthquakes and Other Nearby Structures?" by J. N. Baldwin, K. I. Kelson, and C. E. Randolph Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, December 1, 2001; 91(6): 1930 - 1932. |
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