1915 Imperial Valley earthquakes

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1915 Imperial Valley earthquakes
Relief map of California.png
Green pog.svg
El Centro
Bullseye1.png
UTC  time1915-06-23 03:59:00
 1915-06-23 04:56:00
ISC  eventn/a
USGS-ANSS ComCat
  ComCat
Local dateJune 22, 1915 (1915-06-22)
Local time19:59 PST
 20:57 PST
Duration11 seconds
Magnitude6.25 Ms [1]
 6.25 Ms [1]
Epicenter 32°48′N115°30′W / 32.8°N 115.5°W / 32.8; -115.5
Type Strike-slip
Areas affectedUnited States, Mexico
Total damage$900,000
Max. intensity VIII (Severe) [1]
Foreshocks1 recorded
Aftershocksuntil August 1915
Casualties6 dead, several injured

The 1915 Imperial Valley earthquakes were two destructive shocks centered near El Centro, California on June 22. The earthquakes measured Ms 6.25 and occurred nearly one hour apart at 19:59 and 20:57 PST. Both shocks were assigned VIII (Severe) on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale. Heavy damage occurred in the areas of Mexicali and El Centro, amounting to $900,000. At least six people were killed in the earthquakes. [2]

Contents

In November, the area was struck by another larger shock, measuring Mw 7.0 centered in Cerro Prieto, Baja California, Mexico.

Tectonic setting

Salton Trough.jpg
Salton trough fault overlay.svg
Brawley Seismic Zone and surrounding area. The red lines are simplified faults. Right-lateral direction of motion of the transform fault is shown (pink arrows). The red rhombs are pull-apart basins; the northern one is the site of the Niland geothermal field, the southern the Cerro Prieto geothermal field.

The Salton Trough is an active pull-apart basin forming due to offsets between the numerous strike-slip faults along its edges. It is a component of the much bigger San Andreas Fault System, joining the San Andreas Fault with the Imperial Fault Zone via the Brawley Seismic Zone. The San Andreas Fault is the main plate boundary that defines the margin between the Pacific and North American Plates in California. However, the plate boundary is slightly more complex; rather than a single fault structure that makes up the boundary, the region is straddled and crisscrossed with numerous shorter faults to accommodate the movement of these two plates. [3]

The Imperial Fault Zone is a 69-km-long right-lateral strike-slip fault located near the cities of Brawley, Imperial, El Centro, Calexico and Mexicali. The fault is seismically active and was responsible for two damaging earthquakes in 1940 and 1979. In 1966, it produced a magnitude 3.6 earthquake that caused a surface rupture, making it the smallest earthquake associated with such a feature. Earthquakes on the Imperial Fault Zone have a recurrence interval of ~30 years, but larger events like the case of the 1940 Mw 6.9 earthquake occur every 700 years. [4]

June events

The earthquakes may have ruptured the northern segment of the Imperial Fault Zone. No surface ruptures have been associated with the earthquakes, and very little is known about the seismic activity of the fault prior to 1940. [5]

Damage

Both shocks were equally severe; around the areas of El Centro and Calexico, buildings were heavily damaged, chimneys collapsed, and walls fell over. The first shock lasted 11 seconds and was strong enough to stop clocks and weaken many buildings in the Imperial Valley. Many people evacuated from their homes and other buildings to stay in the streets. When the second shock came, it caused unreinforced masonry structures to partially collapse, injuring some inhabitants. [1] People who reentered structurally weakened buildings after the first shock were injured during the second. In Mexicali, night entertainment was at its peak hour, so people continued to be entertained even after the first shock. The collapse of walls and falling debris killed six people when the second quake struck. [6]

The worst damage occurred at El Centro at an estimated $600,000. Serious damage was reported in Calexico, Heber, and Mexicali, but the economic losses were fewer because El Centro was a much bigger community. Nearly every brick building in the area were damaged, due to poor construction methods which could not withstand the earthquakes' intensity. The two mainshocks were felt as far as San Bernardino and Los Angeles in the north, to Parker and Yuma, Arizona in the east, and south; in Ensenada, and likely beyond. [1]

Some fissures were observed in an alluvium fan. Water irrigation installations had minor damage. Riverbanks of the Alamo and New rivers slumped into the stream. At a marsh on the New River, cracks formed. Residents in Mexico reported plumes of steam emitted from a group of mud volcanoes. Sounds of explosions were also heard. Many aftershocks were felt; continuing into August 1915. [1]

November event

The November 21 Mw 7.0 earthquake occurred in Baja California, [7] Mexico. The earthquake was assigned IX (Violent) on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale. [7] It was associated with a rupture on the Cerro Prieto Fault near a volcano of the same name. Widespread ground slumping, landslides, and liquefaction was reported around Cerro Prieto volcano, 20 km south of the epicenter. The rupture initiated on the fault and propagated bilaterally for a total length of 32 km. [8]

The earthquake caused little damage and no casualties. Plumes of steam up to 200 meters in height were reported in Laguna de los Volcanoes, an uninhabitated area. A massive fissure was reported on both sides of the New River for a length of 3 km. Two individuals at Laguna de los Volcanoes recounted that it was difficult to stand during the earthquake. A levee was damaged. [1]

See also

Related Research Articles

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Imperial Fault Zone</span>

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The Cerro Prieto Fault is a transform fault located in far northern Baja California. It runs between the Cerro Prieto spreading center located southwest of Mexicali, and the Wagner Basin, another spreading center which lies under the Gulf of California. These spreading centers are part of the East Pacific Rise, the northern leg of which has formed the Gulf of California by steadily rifting the Baja California Peninsula away from the mainland of Mexico.

The Gulf of California Rift Zone (GCRZ) is the northernmost extension of the East Pacific Rise which extends some 1,300 km (800 mi) from the mouth of the Gulf of California to the southern terminus of the San Andreas Fault at the Salton Sink.

The 1940 El Centro earthquake occurred at 21:35 Pacific Standard Time on May 18 in the Imperial Valley in southeastern Southern California near the international border of the United States and Mexico. It had a moment magnitude of 6.9 and a maximum perceived intensity of X (Extreme) on the Mercalli intensity scale. It was the first major earthquake to be recorded by a strong-motion seismograph located next to a fault rupture. The earthquake was characterized as a typical moderate-sized destructive event with a complex energy release signature. It was the strongest recorded earthquake in the Imperial Valley, causing widespread damage to irrigation systems and killing nine people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Salton Trough</span> Active tectonic pull-apart basin

The Salton Trough is an active tectonic pull-apart basin, or graben. It lies within the Imperial, Riverside, and San Diego counties of southeastern California and extends south of the Mexico–United States border into the state of Baja California.

The 1948 Desert Hot Springs earthquake occurred on December 4 at 3:43 p.m. Pacific Standard Time with a moment magnitude of 6.4 and a maximum Mercalli intensity of VII. The shock was felt from the central coast of California in the north, and to Baja California in the south, and came at a time when earthquake research in southern California resumed following the Second World War. It was one of two events in the 20th century that have occurred near a complex region of the southern San Andreas Fault system where it traverses the San Gorgonio Pass and the northern Coachella Valley. Damage was not severe, but some serious injuries occurred, and aftershocks continued until 1957.

The 1892 Laguna Salada earthquake occurred at 23:20 Pacific Standard Time on February 23. It had an estimated moment magnitude of 7.1–7.2 and a maximum perceived intensity of VIII (Severe). The shock was centered near the Mexico–United States border and takes its name from a large dry lake bed in Baja California, Mexico. There were no reported casualties, but the event affected the then largely-uninhabited areas of northern Mexico and Southern California.

The 1979 Imperial Valley earthquake occurred at 16:16 Pacific Daylight Time on 15 October just south of the Mexico–United States border. It affected Imperial Valley in Southern California and Mexicali Valley in northern Baja California. The earthquake had a relatively shallow hypocenter and caused property damage in the United States estimated at US$30 million. The irrigation systems in the Imperial Valley were badly affected, but no deaths occurred. It was the largest earthquake to occur in the contiguous United States since the 1971 San Fernando earthquake eight years earlier.

The 1981 Westmorland earthquake occurred at 05:09 Pacific Daylight Time on April 26. The moderate strike-slip shock took place in the Imperial Valley of Southern California, just north of the Mexico–United States border. No injuries or deaths occurred, but damage was estimated at $1–3 million. With a Mercalli intensity of VII, this was one of fifteen intensity VII or greater shocks in the Imperial Valley that were observed in the 20th century up until April 1981. The region experiences large stand-alone events and earthquake swarms due to its position in an area of complex conditions where faulting transitions from strike-slip movement to the north and divergence to the south.

The 1987 Superstition Hills and Elmore Ranch earthquakes were a pair of earthquakes measuring Mw  6.0 and 6.5 that rattled the Imperial Valley of California. The earthquakes caused damage in Southern California and Mexico, but was limited due to their location in a sparsely populated area. It was felt as far as Las Vegas and Phoenix. More than 90 were injured, and two people were killed in Mexico.

The 1968 Borrego Mountain earthquake occurred on April 8, at 18:28 PST in the geologically active Salton Trough of Southern California. The Salton Trough represents a pull-apart basin formed by movements along major faults. This region is dominated by major strike-slip faults one of them being the San Jacinto Fault which produced the 1968 earthquake. The mainshock's epicenter was near the unincorporated community of Ocotillo Wells in San Diego County. The moment magnitude (Mw ) 6.6 strike-slip earthquake struck with a focal depth of 11.1 km (6.9 mi). The zone of surface rupture was assigned a maximum Modified Mercalli intensity (MMI) of VII.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Stover & Coffman 1993, p. 121
  2. "Historic World Earthquakes". U.S. Geological Survey Earthquake Hazards Program. Archived from the original on November 8, 2010. Retrieved July 30, 2010.
  3. Dorsey, R.J. "San Jacinto Fault Zone in Southern California". Quaternary to Recent Basin Development and Neotectonics of the Central San Jacinto Fault Zone, Southern California. Retrieved 13 Dec 2020.
  4. "Imperial fault zone - Southern California Earthquake Data Center". Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Caltech . Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  5. Aron J. Meltzner; Thomas K. Rockwell (2004). Late Holocene Earthquake History of the Imperial and Brawley Faults, Imperial Valley, California (PDF) (Report). San Diego State University.
  6. "Imperial Valley Earthquake - Southern California Earthquake Data Center". Southern California Earthquake Data Center. Caltech . Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  7. 1 2 "M 7.0 - 3 km SSW of Ejido Doctor Alberto Oviedo Mota (El Indiviso), Mexico". earthquake.usgs.gov. U.S. Geological Survey . Retrieved 7 March 2022.
  8. Diane I. Doser (1994). "Contrasts between source parameters of M⩾5.5 earthquakes in northern Baja California and southern California". Geophysical Journal International . 116 (3): 605–617. Bibcode:1994GeoJI.116..605D. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246X.1994.tb03284.x.

Sources

Further reading