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Sonder et al. 1986
Sonder, L.J., England, P.C. and Houseman, G.A. (1986). Continuum calculations of continental deformation in transcurrent environments. Journal of Geophysical Research 91: doi: 10.1029/JB091iB05p04797. issn: 0148-0227.

A thin viscous sheet approximation is used to investigate continental deformation near a strike-slip boundary. The vertically averaged velocity field is calculated for a medium characterized by a power law rheology with stress exponent n. Driving stresses include those applied along boundaries of the sheet and those arising from buoyancy forces related to lateral differences in crustal thickness. Calculations are performed with either velocity or stress prescribed on the transcurrent boundary. Exact and approximate analytic solutions for a region with a sinusoidal strike-slip boundary condition are compared with solutions for more geologically relevant boundary conditions obtained using a finite element technique. The across-strike length scale of the deformation is approximately 1/<4&pgr;(n)1/2> times the dominant wavelength of the imposed strike-slip boundary condition for both the analytic and the numerical solutions; this result is consistent with length scales observed in continental regions of large-scale transcurrent faulting. An approximate, linear relationship between displacement and rotation is found that depends only on the deformation length scale and the rheology. Calculated displacements, finite rotations, and distribution of crustal thicknesses are consistent with those observed in the region of the Pacific-North America plate boundary in California.

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Journal of Geophysical Research
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