In this paper I report an attempt to interpret several observations about the depth distribution of earthquakes in the region of southern California containing the southern San Andreas and San Jacinto fault zones. These observations are as follows: (1) Earthquakes in the major fault zones are predominantly deep (maximum, 22 km; characteristic, 11--18 km). (2) Earthquakes in the crustal blocks bounding the fault zones are predominantly shallow (maximum, 17 km; characteristic, 1--6 km). (3) In the San Jacinto fault zone, maximum earthquake depths correlate with surface heat flow. These relations together with focal mechanisms, geodetic strain measurements, and fault zone models are consistent with the following ideas: (1) Interseismic plate motion is accommodated by aseismic slip along an extension of the major fault zone below a brittle zone that is locked between large earthquakes. (2) The aseismic slip in a narrow fault zone in the brittle-plastic transition region concentrates strain at the base of the brittle fault zone. (3) Deep earthquakes occur in the lower part of the brittle fault zone due to stick-slip failure of highly stressed patches. (4) Background earthquakes and aftershocks that occur several kilometers deeper than large earthquake hypocenters suggest that a zone of mixed slip behavior may exist between the stable sliding (deep) and stick-slip (shallow) regions of the fault zone. This zone of mixed slip may fail predominantly by stable sliding, analogous to the central San Andreas and Calaveras faults of California. Seismic precursor to large earthquakes may occur in this zone, and large earthquakes may nucleate near the upper edge of this zone. Furthermore, the difference in seismicity between the San Jacinto and southern San Andreas faults suggests that the nature of this mixed zone may evolve as total displacement in the fault zone increases. (5) Shear stress may be less in the crustal blocks than in the deep brittle fault zones and generally at a level sufficient to cause brittle failure only shallow in the crustal blocks. (6) In the stress field produced by plate motion and slip in the deep fault zone, the upper brittle fault zone is not oriented favorably for shear failure. Lack of shallow earthquakes in the fault zones and the predominance of shallow earthquakes on favorably oriented fractures in the adjacent crustal blocks suggest that either stress in the upper brittle fault zone is relatively low or the upper fault zone is effectively strong due to its orientation. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1990 |