The fine-scale structure of Long Beach, California, and its impact on
ground motion acceleration
- Jorge Castellanos,
- Robert W. Clayton
Abstract
The metropolitan Los Angeles region represents a zone of high-seismic
risk due to its proximity to several fault systems, including the San
Andreas fault. Adding to this problem is the fact that Los Angeles and
its surrounding cities are built on top of soft sediments that tend to
trap and amplify seismic waves generated by earthquakes. In this study,
we use three dense petroleum industry surveys deployed in a 16x16-km
area at Long Beach, California, to produce a high-resolution model of
the top kilometer of the crust and investigate the influence of its
structural variations on the amplification of seismic waves. Our
velocity estimates reveal substantial lateral contrasts and correlate
remarkably well with the geological background of the area, illuminating
features such as the Newport-Inglewood fault, the Silverado aquifer, and
the San Gabriel river. We then use computational modeling to show that
the presence of these small-scale structures have a clear impact on the
intensity of the expected shaking, and can cause ground-motion motion
acceleration to change by several factors over a sub-kilometer
horizontal scale. These results shed light onto the scale of variations
that can be expected in this type of tectonic settings and highlight the
importance of resolution in modern-day seismic hazard estimates.Dec 2021Published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth volume 126 issue 12. 10.1029/2021JB022462