Unlocking the Mysteries of the San Andreas Fault

Balloon platform aerial photograph shows excavations across a channel offset along the San Andreas Fault in the the Carrizo Plain at the Bidart Site. The jog in the channel between the excavations is the San Andreas Fault.
(Image credit: Ramón Arrowsmith, Arizona State University.)

This ScienceLives article was provided to LiveScience in partnership with the National Science Foundation.

Recently, Ramón Arrowsmith was part of a team of researchers studying stream-channel offsets along the San Andreas Fault, the most comprehensive analysis to date of the extremely active Carrizo Plain section of the San Andreas Fault system. The project revealed new information about fault behavior and changed scientists' understanding of the fault's potential for producing damaging earthquakes. Growing up in New Mexico, Arrowsmith gained a strong sense of the geologic beauty and fascinating cultural intersections of the southwestern U.S.  Arrowsmith graduated from the Albuquerque Academy and satisfied his "California dreamin'" by attending Whittier College (southeast Los Angeles area). He went to Stanford University for his Ph.D. in Geological and Environmental Sciences. Arrowsmith felt his first earthquake in the 1987 Whittier Narrows event, and he felt his second major earthquake in the 1989 Loma Prieta event, which disrupted the World Series in Oakland. He studied the interactions between faulting and surface processes in the sculpting of the landscape and felt numerous large aftershocks of the Landers earthquake in 1992, as he studied its surface rupture. Arrowsmith also became obsessed with the San Andreas Fault in south-central California, in particular the Carrizo Plain. His colleagues at Arizona State University overlooked his youthful cluelessness and hired him as an assistant professor in 1995. Arrowsmith has been there ever since, enjoying teaching, research, and the sun. His interests in faulting, earthquakes and geology in general have taken him to central Asia, East Africa, India, the southwestern United States, Baja California Peninsula and New Zealand, as well as into the computer to analyze faults and high-resolution topography. Arrowsmith's wife is a volcanology professor and they particularly love cats. Read more about Arrowsmith's recent discovery here, and read his responses to the ScienceLvies 10 Questions below.

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