Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; June 2004; v. 94; no. 3;
p. 828-844; DOI: 10.1785/0120030122
© 2004 Seismological Society of America
Stress Triggering of Conjugate Normal Faulting: Late Aftershocks of the 1983 Ms 7.3 Borah Peak, Idaho, Earthquake
Suzette J. Payne,
James E. Zollweg and
David W. Rodgers
Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory
PO Box 1625
Idaho Falls, Idaho 83415-2025
msj1{at}inel.gov
(S.J.P)
Boise State University
1910 University Drive
Boise, Idaho 83725
jzollweg{at}hotmail.com
(J.E.Z.)
Idaho State University
Pocatello, ID 83209
rodgdavi{at}isu.edu
(D.W.R)
The 1984 Devil Canyon sequence was a late aftershock sequence of the 28
October 1983 Ms 7.3 Borah Peak, Idaho, earthquake. The
sequence began on 22 August 1984 with the ML 5.8 Devil
Canyon earthquake, which nucleated at a depth of 12.8 ± 0.7 km between
the surface traces of two normal faults, the Challis segment of the Lost River
fault and the Lone Pine fault. Two hundred thirty-seven aftershocks were
recorded by a temporary array during a 3-week period. Their focal mechanisms
and hypocenter distribution define a cross-sectional "V" pattern
whose base corresponds to the ML 5.8 event, whose tips
correspond to the exposed fault traces, and whose sides define two planar
fault zones oriented N25°W, 75°SW (Challis fault segment) and
N39°W, 58°NE (Lone Pine fault). This pattern describes a graben
bounded by conjugate normal faults. Temporal aspects of the Devil Canyon
sequence provide strong evidence that slip on conjugate normal faults occurs
sequentially. Aftershocks occurred primarily along the Challis segment until
the occurrence of the 8 September 1984 ML 5.0 earthquake along the
Lone Pine fault, after which aftershocks primarily occurred along this fault.
These observations are consistent with worldwide seismologic and geologic
observations and with physical and numerical models of conjugate normal
faulting. Aftershocks of the Devil Canyon sequence occurred immediately
northwest of the ML 5.8 Devils Canyon earthquake, which
itself was immediately northwest of the Thousand Springs segment of the Lost
River fault (the fault that slipped in association with the
Ms 7.3 Borah Peak earthquake). Coulomb failure stress
analysis indicates that stress increases resulting from both the Borah Peak
mainshock and Devil Canyon ML 5.8 earthquake were
sufficient to induce failure on the Lone Pine fault. These spacetime
patterns suggest that conjugate normal faults may transfer stress or
accommodate stress changes at the terminations of major normal faults in the
Basin and Range Province.
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