Jeffrey Marshall, Dan Orange, and Alfred Hochstaedter; html by Joe Overton

Earthquakes occur along plate boundaries, like the one shown at right between the Pacific Plate (to the west) and the North American Plate (to the east). The yellow dots represent earthquake epicenters, which are aligned along faults. As the plates move, stress builds up along faults. When this stress is released, the blocks or plates move and an earthquake occurs. The distribution of epicenters reveals that several fault zones -- on either side of San Francisco Bay and Santa Clara Valley -- take up portions of the movement between the Pacific and North American Plates. One of these faults, the San Andreas, runs through San Juan Bautista, the Santa Cruz mountains, north through the San Francisco Peninsula, off shore from the Golden Gate, and then on-shore just east of the Pt. Reyes Peninsula. The San Andreas Fault is considered the main boundary between the Pacific and North American Plates.


At five in the afternoon on October 17, 1989 the San Andreas fault system in northern California had its first major quake since 1906. The quake was responsible for 62 deaths, 3,757 injuries, and over $6 billion in damage. Over 18,000 homes and 2,600 businesses were damaged and about 3,000 people were left homeless. This self-guided field trip takes you on a tour of the Santa Cruz region after the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake. Select a topic which interests you below by clicking on the highlighted key word.

1. Tectonics: This page investigates why and how the earthquake occured.

Damage Pages. The following pages are organized by subject, and investigate the root causes of damage caused by the quake:
2.Damged Buildings: Examines why buildings failed during the quake.
3.Liquefaction: A condition where soil flows like a liquid. This caused extensive damage in the area including the collapsed overpasses and freeways.
4.Cracks: Extensional features caused by earthquake uplift.
5.Landslides: Some up to hundreds of meters long destroyed houses and blocked roads and freeways.

6.Technical Data: Take a look at the seismogram and other interesting data.


This gets you to the next page.
This gets you back to this page.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
All of the photos in the EarthQuake fieldtrip are copyrighted by Jeff Marshall and Dan Orange. These images may not be downloaded without written permission from Jeff Marshall and Dan Orange. For more information, please contact them at:

marshall@geosc.psu.edu, or: dano@mbari.org
Copyright 1989

Please direct comments or questions to:

Alfred Hochstaedter

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