Publication Date:
2003
Description:
To investigate the effect of the shallow, low-velocity sediments on the
seismic wave field in the northern San Francisco Bay, we modeled tangential component
displacement seismograms recorded during the 18 August 1999 MW 4.6 Bolinas, California,
earthquake. The modeling indicates that the velocity structure of Pleistocene horizons
in the San Francisco Bay is important for simulations of weak ground motions for Bay
Area earthquakes. Models including the Pleistocene sediments generate the 1-sec-period
surface waves observed at several stations. Modeling of Treasure and Yerba Buena Island
records requires structures approximately an order of magnitude higher in spatial
resolution than the current 3D velocity models for the region. This pair of sites,
located only 2 km apart in the bay, records a sixfold difference in peak ground
acceleration during the Bolinas earthquake. Three transects are forward modeled using 1D
frequency-wavenumber integration and 2D finite-difference methods. Generally the ground
motions are characterized by a direct shear wave (S0), a midcrustal reflection (S1), a
near-receiver multiple (S2), and surface waves. The direct S0 arrival at all six
stations requires a faster model than GIL7, the model routinely used to estimate
earthquake source parameters using the Berkeley Digital Seismic Network. In addition,
the timing of S1 indicates the possibility of a dipping midcrustal interface. S2 can be
matched with a single strong impedance contrast at 3 km depth. A thin (200-m) surface
layer of weathered rock and sediments simulates the surface waves that follow S2 at the
Richmond Field Station site. However, the surface waves at Treasure Island and the
Berkeley sites are longer in duration and higher amplitude than at Richmond and require
2D structure. A simple shallow uniform basin model for the San Francisco Bay consisting
of stiff sediments (shear-wave velocity, Vs = 400 m/sec; thickness ~100 m) over
weathered rock (Vs = 1.5 km/sec) of the Franciscan assemblage produces surface waves in
the 0.02-2 Hz passband at Treasure Island and the Berkeley sites.
Keywords:
Seismology
;
Earthquake
;
Site amplification
;
Wave propagation
;
Wave form analysis
;
USA
;
Two-dimensional
;
Finite difference method
;
Modelling
;
Velocity depth profile
;
Shear waves
;
Surface waves
;
Seismic networks
;
Reflectivity
;
noksp
;
BSSA
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