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New and intriguing information identified by the U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS) and its partners has been published in the Journal of
Geophysical Research. For the first time, researchers
have identified large-scale surface uplift and expansion in the San
Gabriel Valley directly caused by groundwater recharge, due to
near-record rainfall in 2004-2005. The San Gabriel Valley rose almost 2
inches (47 mm) in less than four months, and the margins of the basin
were pushed outward by almost half an inch (10 mm). The expansion was
five times larger than slight oscillations observed since 1998.
Released: 4/5/2007 11:11:46 AM
This surface deformation was discovered through a dense array of Global
Positioning System (GPS) instruments to study how the land surface
slowly moves due to steady deep slip on faults in southern California.
In the San Gabriel Valley in 2005, the land-surface motion due to
rainfall-induced groundwater recharge temporarily exceeded the motion
due to fault slip. The instruments were installed by USGS, NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and
the Southern California Earthquake Center.
"This is an unexpected benefit and challenge to our existing study
of fault slip," said Dr. Nancy King, a geophysicist in the USGS
Southern California Earthquake Hazards Program and lead author of the
new research. "We know that faults slip slowly and steadily over time,
building up strain that can accumulate until an earthquake occurs. GPS
has given us an important new tool in understanding this process. Now
it is clear that there is other information to take into consideration.
These new findings offer a more complex picture of natural events that
influence both the study of fault slip and the hydrology of groundwater
basins."
Surface deformation measurements identified by GPS instruments were
also confirmed by Dr. Gerald Bawden of the USGS California Water
Science Center, using high-tech Interferometric Synthetic Aperture
(InSAR) images.
The new report follows a study of data from the San Gabriel Valley
accumulated during the exceptionally heavy rainfall in the winter
2004-2005. A team was put together that included hydrologists and
geophysicists from USGS, JPL, Scripps, Stanford University and the
Southern California Earthquake Center, led by Dr. Nancy King.
The San Gabriel Valley was the only hydrological basin in the area
showing surface deformation from increases in groundwater. The Southern
California area is relatively densely instrumented with GPS due to the
deployment of an array of 250 instruments completed by the Southern
California Earthquake Center in 2001.
Previously, separate studies led by Dr. Bawden and JPL's Dr. Donald
Argus showed that the surface of the San Gabriel Valley has risen and
fallen due to groundwater pumping.
EDITORS: Please note that the mobile contact number
for Stephanie Hanna, USGS Communications Director for the Western
Region, has changed. The new number is 206-818-7411.
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Contact Information:
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
Office of Communication
119 National Center
Reston, VA 20192 | Nancy King
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Phone: 626-583-7815
Stephanie Hanna
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Phone: 206-818-7411
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