Cite abstracts as
Eos Trans. AGU, 83(47), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract xxxxx-xx,
2002
HR: 0830h AN: G71A-0952 TI: Crustal Deformation Across
the Basin and Range Province, Western United States, Measured with the
Global Positioning System, 1992-2002 AU: *
Hammond, W C EM: bhammond@usgs.gov AF:
U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd. MS/977, Menlo
Park, CA 94025 United States AU: Thatcher, W
EM: thatcher@usgs.gov AF: U.S. Geological Survey, 345 Middlefield Rd. MS/977, Menlo Park,
CA 94025 United States AB: The Basin and Range
province of the western United States lies east of the Sierra Nevada
mountains and accommodates roughly 25% of the motion between the North
American and Pacific Plates in this region. It is experiencing both active
extension and dextral shear, whose orientation is consistent with relative
plate motion, suggesting that the province is an important part of the
overall plate boundary system. We present results from recent measurement
of Basin and Range crustal motion using the Global Positioning System
(GPS). As of September 2002, ten years of deformation will have been
observed with GPS measurements in 1992,1996, 1998 and 2002. The 800 km
long east-to-west line of campaign-style geodetic benchmarks extends from
east of the Wasatch fault zone in Utah to west of the Genoa fault zone and
Lake Tahoe in California's Northern Sierra Nevada mountains, primarily
along Interstate Highway 50. In all there are velocities at 91 GPS sites,
nearly double the number previously presented (Thatcher et al. [1999]),
all of which will be measured in September 2002. Incorporating this new
data is expected to reduce the uncertainty in earlier measurements that
show the motion of the Sierra Nevada block with respect to non-deforming
North America to be accommodated by right lateral shear and extensional
deformation in Nevada and Utah. Velocity variation of about 9 mm/yr is
concentrated in the western one-third of the network, with a lesser amount
(roughly 3 mm/yr) localized to the easternmost edge of the network, in the
vicinity of the Wasatch fault zone. Recent densification of the GPS
network across these two zones will also improve the spatial resolution of
the deformation in these regions. The greatest rate of present-day
deformation occurs near the ruptures of the Fairview Peak and Rainbow
Mountain earthquakes in the Central Nevada Seismic Zone, extending west
past the Genoa fault into the Sierra Nevada. This strain rate pattern is
correlated with the concentration of historic faulting and seismicity in
the western half of Nevada and eastern California, but is less well
correlated with the relatively broad distribution of faults with Holocene
and late Quaternary age. To process the data we use the GIPSY/OASIS II and
Quasi-Observation Combination Analysis (Dong et al. [1998]) software
packages and incorporate data from continuously recording GPS stations in
California and Nevada. DE: 1208 Crustal
movements--intraplate (8110) DE: 8122 Dynamics,
gravity and tectonics DE: 8150 Plate
boundary--general (3040) DE: 9350 North
America SC: Geodesy [G] MN: 2002 Fall Meeting