We use Global Positioning System (GPS) estimates of
horizontal site velocity to constrain slip rates on faults comprising
the Pacific-North America plate boundary in southern California
and northern Mexico. We enlist a simple elastic block model to
parameterize the distribution and sum of deformation within and across
the plate boundary. We estimate a Pacific-North America
relative plate motion rate of 49 3 mm/yr (one standard deviation),
consistent with NUVEL-1A estimates. We are able to resolve robust
slip rate estimates
for the southernmost San Andreas, San Jacinto, and Elsinore faults
(26
2 mm/yr, 9
2 mm/yr, and 6
2 mm/yr, respectively)
and for the Imperial and Cerro Prieto faults (35
2 mm/yr and 42
1 mm/yr, respectively), accounting for about 86% of the total
plate motion. The remaining 14% appears to be accommodated to the
west of these fault systems, probably via slip along
the San Clemente fault and/or the San Miguel, Vallecitos, Rose Canyon,
and Newport-Inglewood fault systems.
These results are highly consistent with paleoseismic estimates for
slip rates implying that off-fault strain accumulation within the
deforming zone of the plate boundary is largely elastic.
We estimate that the seismically quiescent, southernmost San Andreas
fault has incurred about 8.2 meters of slip deficit over the last few
hundred years, presumably to be recovered during a future large
earthquake.
AGU Index Terms: 7220 Oceanic Crust; 7220 Oceanic crust; 8150 Plate boundary-general; 8155 Plate motions-general
Keywords/Free Terms: GPS slip rates southern California
JGR-Solid Earth 96JB02488