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TIME January 9, 1857 / about 8:20 am PST
LOCATION 35° 43' N, 120° 19' W about 72 km (45 miles) northeast of San Luis Obispo,
about 120 km (75 miles) northwest of Bakersfield, as shown on the map (epicenter location uncertain).
MAGNITUDE MW 7.9 (approx.)
TYPE OF FAULTING right-lateral strike-slip - ANIMATION
FAULT RUPTURED San Andreas fault
LENGTH OF SURFACE RUPTURE about 360 km (225 miles)
MAXIMUM SURFACE OFFSET about 9 meters (30 feet)
The Fort Tejon earthquake of 1857 was one of the greatest earthquakes
ever recorded in the U.S., and left an amazing surface rupture scar over
350 kilometers in length along the San
Andreas fault. Yet, despite the immense scale of this quake,
only two people were reported killed by the effects of the shock --
a woman at Reed's Ranch near Fort Tejon was killed by the collapse
of an adobe house, and an elderly man fell dead in a plaza in the
Los Angeles area (?).
The fact that only two lives were lost was primarily due to the the nature
of the quake's setting; California in 1857 was sparsely populated,
especially in the regions of strongest shaking, and this fact,
along with good fortune, kept the loss of life to a minimum.
The effects of the quake were quite dramatic, even frightening.
Were the Fort Tejon shock to happen today, the damage would easily
run into billions of dollars, and the loss of life would
likely be substantial, as the present day communities of Wrightwood,
Palmdale, Frazier Park, and Taft (among others) all lie upon or near the
1857 rupture area.
As a result of the shaking, the current of the Kern River was turned
upstream, and water ran four feet deep over its banks. The waters of
Tulare Lake
were thrown upon its shores, stranding fish miles from the
original lake bed. The waters of the Mokelumne River were
thrown upon its banks, reportedly leaving the bed dry in places.
The Los Angeles River was reportedly flung out of its bed, too.
Cracks appeared in the ground near San Bernadino and in the
San Gabriel Valley. Some of the artesian wells
in Santa Clara Valley ceased to flow, and others increased in output.
New springs were formed near Santa Barbara and San Fernando. Ridges
(moletracks) several meters wide and over a meter high were formed
in several places. In Ventura, the mission sustained considerable
damage, and part of the church tower collapsed. At Fort Tejon, where
shaking was greatest, damage was severe. All around southern and central
California, the strong shaking caused by the 1857 shock was reported to
have lasted for at least one minute, possibly two or three!
The surface rupture caused by the quake was extensive.
The San Andreas fault broke the surface
continuously for at least 350 km (220 miles),
possibly as much as 400 km (250 miles), with
an average slip of 4.5 meters (15 feet), and
a maximum displacement of about 9 meters (30 feet)
(possibly greater) in the Carrizo Plain area.
Kerry Sieh (1978) noted that the Elkhorn Thrust, a low-angle
thrust
fault near the San Andreas, may have slipped
simultaneously in the 1857 quake -- an observation that a team of
researchers (1996) have recently used to support the idea that future
movements along the San Andreas fault zone
might produce simultaneous rupture on thrust faults in and near the
Los Angeles area, causing a terrible "double earthquake".
The location of the epicenter of the Fort Tejon earthquake is not known.
As the name suggests, one idea is to locate it near the area of
strongest reported shaking -- Fort Tejon. However, because there is
evidence that foreshocks to the 1857 earthquake may have occurred in the
Parkfield area, it is located on this map near the northwestern end of
the surface rupture, just southeast of Parkfield, near Cholame.
(Note: locating it near Fort
Tejon would also have caused interference on the map between this
quake's symbol and that of the 1952 Kern
County quake. Hence, for both
these reasons, the Cholame location was chosen.)
Below is a map of southern California with various place names
marked, and the surface traces of major faults drawn in blue-green.
The theoretical "Cholame" epicenter of the 1857 earthquake is marked
with the large red dot -- Fort Tejon is shown by a white "x" on
black -- and that part of the San Andreas fault which exhibited surface
rupture during the earthquake is shown in red.
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