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1 Department of Geophysics, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA
Great earthquakes, like the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, perturb the regional stress field and can generate "stress shadows" that delay the occurrence of subsequent M
5.5 events. We investigate how time-dependent postseismic stress transfer between the three subparallel strike-slip faults in northern California—the San Andreas, Hayward, and Calaveras faults, and their northern extensions—depends on the presence and geometry of lower crustal shear zones. Models incorporating Maxwell viscoelastic relaxation of the mantle, a lower crustal detachment surface, and vertical shear zones beneath the seismogenic faults are compared. Short-term relaxation of lower crustal shear zones enhances the amplitude and lateral extent of the stress shadow. Conversely, longer period mantle relaxation reloads the entire crust. As a consequence, after a 1906 type event on the San Andreas fault, the stress shadow on the Hayward fault will be greater in magnitude and duration if the faults are connected via lower crustal structures with time-dependent rheologies. In addition, our results demonstrate that, for certain geometries, the total stress (tectonic plus postseismic perturbation) may actually continue to decrease during the decades immediately following a great earthquake. This effect has not been documented in prior time-dependent models of stress accumulation during the earthquake cycle.
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