Tectonic motion across the Los Angeles region is distributed across an intricate network of strike-slip and thrust faults that will be released in destructive earthquakes similar to or larger than the 1933M6.4 Long Beach and 1994M6.7 Northridge events. Here we show that Los Angeles regional thrust, strike-slip, and oblique faults are connected and move concurrently with measurable surface deformation, even in moderate magnitude earthquakes, as part of a fault system that accommodates north-south shortening and westerly tectonic escape of northern Los Angeles. The 28 March 2014 M5.1 La Habra earthquake occurred on a northeast striking, northwest dipping left-lateral oblique thrust fault northeast of Los Angeles. We present crustal deformatio...
Since 1920 fourteen moderate-sized (M_L = 4.9–6.4) earthquakes have been reported in the Los Angeles...
New mapping of two active transpressional fault zones in the California Continental Borderland, the ...
Geodetic data show that the Los Angeles metropolitan area is undergoing 8–9 mm/year of north‐south t...
Tectonic motion across the Los Angeles region is distributed across an intricate network of strike-s...
Geodetic data show that the Los Angeles metropolitan area is undergoing 8–9 mm/year of north‐south t...
The Sierra Madre fault, along the southern flank of the San Gabriel Mountains in the Los Angeles reg...
Abstract. We combine 6 years of Global Positioning System (GPS) data with 20 years of trilateration ...
The most costly American earthquake since 1906 struck Los Angeles on 17 January 1994. The magnitude ...
[1] The southernmost San Andreas fault has a high probability of rupturing in a large (greater than ...
Recent decades have seen dramatic improvement in the ability of earth scientists to resolve the geom...
A newly identified blind-thrust fault in the southern Los Angeles basin may have substantial implica...
UnrestrictedIn order to understand the paleo-earthquake history and structural evolution of blind-th...
We characterize the seismic hazard of the Elysian Park fault, a blind reverse fault beneath central ...
The Pasadena earthquake (ML = 4.9) occurred on 3 December 1988, at a depth of 16 km. The hypocenters...
A new analysis of the SCEC velocity field reveals that interseismic deformation in southern Californ...
Since 1920 fourteen moderate-sized (M_L = 4.9–6.4) earthquakes have been reported in the Los Angeles...
New mapping of two active transpressional fault zones in the California Continental Borderland, the ...
Geodetic data show that the Los Angeles metropolitan area is undergoing 8–9 mm/year of north‐south t...
Tectonic motion across the Los Angeles region is distributed across an intricate network of strike-s...
Geodetic data show that the Los Angeles metropolitan area is undergoing 8–9 mm/year of north‐south t...
The Sierra Madre fault, along the southern flank of the San Gabriel Mountains in the Los Angeles reg...
Abstract. We combine 6 years of Global Positioning System (GPS) data with 20 years of trilateration ...
The most costly American earthquake since 1906 struck Los Angeles on 17 January 1994. The magnitude ...
[1] The southernmost San Andreas fault has a high probability of rupturing in a large (greater than ...
Recent decades have seen dramatic improvement in the ability of earth scientists to resolve the geom...
A newly identified blind-thrust fault in the southern Los Angeles basin may have substantial implica...
UnrestrictedIn order to understand the paleo-earthquake history and structural evolution of blind-th...
We characterize the seismic hazard of the Elysian Park fault, a blind reverse fault beneath central ...
The Pasadena earthquake (ML = 4.9) occurred on 3 December 1988, at a depth of 16 km. The hypocenters...
A new analysis of the SCEC velocity field reveals that interseismic deformation in southern Californ...
Since 1920 fourteen moderate-sized (M_L = 4.9–6.4) earthquakes have been reported in the Los Angeles...
New mapping of two active transpressional fault zones in the California Continental Borderland, the ...
Geodetic data show that the Los Angeles metropolitan area is undergoing 8–9 mm/year of north‐south t...