--> Abstract: Geometry and Active Tectonics of the Los Osos-Hosgri Fault Intersection, by Watt, J.T.; Johnson, S.Y.; and Hartwell, S.R.; #90162 (2013)
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Geometry and Active Tectonics of the Los Osos-Hosgri Previous HitFaultNext Hit Intersection

Watt, J.T.; Johnson, S.Y.; and Hartwell, S.R.
[email protected]

The ~400 km-long San Gregorio – Hosgri Previous HitFaultNext Hit System forms the western boundary of the tectonically active central California Coast Ranges. The geometry and connectivity of active faults within the Coast Ranges remain poorly understood. The ability of recent large earthquakes to rupture through Previous HitfaultNext Hit intersections has underscored the need to re-examine the seismic hazard of these areas in California. We combine high-resolution seismic-reflection, potential-field, and multibeam bathymetry data with existing geologic and seismicity data to investigate the Previous HitfaultNext Hit geometry and active tectonics of the Los Osos – Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit intersection.

The Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit is a northwest-trending, steeply-dipping dextral strike-slip Previous HitfaultNext Hit where it converges with the Los Osos Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone in Estero Bay. The offshore extension of the Los Osos Previous HitfaultNext Hit, as imaged with multibeam and high-resolution seismic data, is characterized by a west-northwest-trending zone (1-3 km wide) of near vertical active faulting. Three distinct strands (northern, central, and southern) are visible on shallow seismic reflection profiles. The Previous HitfaultNext Hit zone is interpreted as predominantly strike-slip based on variable amounts of contractional and extensional deformation along strike and the prevalence of associated strike-slip first motion focal mechanisms within Estero Bay. The onshore Los Osos Previous HitfaultNext Hit connects to the offshore Previous HitfaultNext Hit structures through a ~4 km-wide releasing stepover. The central and northern strands become progressively more northwest-trending as they converge with the Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit, while the southern strand dies out within a few kilometers of the Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit. The northern strand runs subparallel to the Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit along the edge of a magnetic anomaly. Geophysical modeling of this anomaly suggests the northern strand is steeply northeast dipping. The central strand bends northward and intersects the Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit directly west of Morro Rock, corresponding to an area of compressional deformation and uplift of Tertiary strata along the Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit to the south and subsidence to the north. The geometry of the Los Osos – Hosgri Previous HitfaultNext Hit intersection can be used in dynamic models of Previous HitfaultNext Hit branching to determine whether or not a joint Los Osos – Hosgri Previous HitfaultTop rupture is likely.

 

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90162©2013 Pacific Section AAPG, SPE and SEPM Joint Technical Conference, Monterey, California, April 19-25, 2013