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TIME July 21, 1952 / 4:52 am, PDT
LOCATION 35° 00' N, 119° 02' W 37 km (23 miles)
south of Bakersfield
MAGNITUDE
MW7.5
TYPE OF FAULTING
Reverse faulting, with a left-lateral component - ANIMATION
FAULT RUPTURED White Wolf fault
MAXIMUM ELEVATION CHANGE rise of about 1.3 meters (4 feet)
The largest earthquake in southern California since the
Fort Tejon earthquake of 1857
and the Owens Valley earthquake of 1872, the Kern County
earthquake of 1952 caused immense and widespread damage. The quake
occurred on the White Wolf fault,
a reverse fault (with some
left-lateral component of slip) north of the
intersection of the Garlock
and San Andreas faults.
The area shaken by this quake was impressively large. It was felt in Reno,
Nevada, and required a construction effort in Las Vegas to realign
structural steel. In San Francisco, it was felt mainly by
people on the upper floors of tall buildings. Power outtages
occurred in Los Angeles, along with minor building damage.
It was felt in San Diego as well, and even damaged one building
there! At Owens Lake, about 200 kilometers away, the shaking broke a
pipeline and disturbed salt beds, causing damage to a mining operation.
The Kern County earthquake claimed 12 lives, was responsible for
at least 18 injuries, and caused at least $50 million in property damage.
This quake and its aftershocks (at least 20 were of magnitude 5.0 or
greater) were responsible for damaging hundreds of buildings in the
Kern County area, at least 100 of which had to be torn down. It
devestated a section of the Southern Pacific Railroad line near
Bear Mountain. It wreaked havoc on agriculture in the Arvin
area, where the land has been reclaimed from the Kern River
Delta, creating conditions which amplify the shaking of
an earthquake. Slumping and surface rupture caused irrigation breaks
and subsurface movement disturbed well output. Major relevelling
had to be done in many places.
The Kern County quake came as something of a surprise to
geologists and seismologists. Not only was the White Wolf fault
not previously considered a major threat, but the size of
the quake seemed disproportionate to the length of the fault
which ruptured. The White Wolf fault is traceable for only about 48 km
(34 miles), much less than the fault length typical thought necessary to
produce such a major earthquake (compare this to the nearly 400 km (250
miles) of the San Andreas fault which broke in the magnitude 8
Fort Tejon quake of 1857). The amount of displacement at the surface
also seemed small for the energy released. It is possible
that much of the fault is buried, leaving no surface trace.
The greatest slip may have occurred well beneath the surface,
so that only a meter or so of slip was seen at ground level.
Deep rupture and a non-vertical fault would also provide much of the
"missing" rupture needed to explain the quake's large size -- a shorter
but deeper rupture on a fault with a significant dip would release as much energy as a
lengthier, shallow rupture on a vertical fault, since it is rupture area,
not merely length, that determines the energy released in an earthquake.
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TIME August 22, 1952 / 3:41 pm, PDT
LOCATION 35° 20' N, 118° 55' W 6 miles (10 km) ESE
of Bakersfield
MAGNITUDE
ML5.8
Though only about the fifth strongest of the aftershocks of the July 21 Kern
County quake, the earthquake of August 22 caused a significant amount of
damage for three reasons. First, of the sizable aftershocks of the July
21 quake, it was the closest to Bakersfield, the largest city in
the area. Second, it occurred after at least 18 other aftershocks
of magnitude 5.0 or greater had shaken the area, weakening structures
over the course of a month. Third, the quake shook with a
high frequency, one which targetted short, rigid buildings.
In all, two people were killed and 35 injuries were reported in
the wake of this aftershock, which caused an
additional $10 million worth of property damage. Most of the damage was
confined to brick structures in a 64-block area of downtown
Bakersfield.
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A Bakersfield street after the August 22 shock. Brick parapets fell to the sidewalk -- fortunately, the streets and sidewalks were empty at the time.
(Photo: Bakersfield Police Department)
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Parked cars were not spared from the falling debris, however, as some residents were distressed to discover.
(Photo: San Francisco Examiner)
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REFERENCES
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