Tectonic inheritance from deformation fabric in the brittle and ductile
Southern California crust
Abstract
Plate motions in Southern California have undergone a transition from
compressional and extensional regimes to a dominantly strike-slip regime
in the Miocene. Strike-slip motion is most easily accommodated on
vertical faults, and major transform fault strands in the region are
typically mapped as near-vertical on the surface. However, some previous
work suggests these faults have a dipping or listric geometry at depth.
We analyze receiver function arrivals that vary harmonically with
backazimuth at all available broadband stations in the region. The
results show a dominant signal from contrasts in dipping foliation as
well as dipping isotropic contrasts from all crustal depths, including
from the ductile middle to lower crust. We interpret these receiver
function observations as a dipping fault-parallel structural fabric that
is pervasive throughout the region. The strike of these structures and
fabrics is parallel to that of nearby fault surface traces. We also plot
microseismicity on depth profiles perpendicular to major strike-slip
faults and find consistently NE-dipping lineations in seismicity
shallowing in dip from near vertical (80-85) on the Elsinore Fault near
the coastal ranges to 60-65 slightly further inland on the San Jacinto
Fault to 50-55 on the San Andreas Fault. Taken together, the dipping
features in seismicity and in rock fabric suggest
that preexisting fabrics and faults likely act as strain guides in the
modern slip regime, with reactivation-like mechanisms operating both
above and below the brittle-ductile transition.