U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEOLOGIC MAP OF THE HAYWARD FAULT ZONE, CONTRA COSTA, ALAMEDA, AND SANTA CLARA COUNTIES, CALIFORNIA: A DIGITAL DATABASE By R.W. Graymer, D.L. Jones, and E.E. Brabb Open - File Report 95-597 This report is preliminary and has not been reviewed for conformity with U.S. Geological Survey editorial standards or with the North American Stratigraphic Code. Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government. This database, identified as "Geologic map of the Hayward fault zone, Contra Costa, Alameda, and Santa Clara Counties, California: A digital database," has been approved for release and publication by the Director of the USGS. Although this database has been subjected to rigorous review and is substantially complete, the USGS reserves the right to revise the data pursuant to further analysis and review. Furthermore, it is released on condition that neither the USGS nor the United States Government may be held liable for any damages resulting from its authorized or unauthorized use. 1995 Introduction This digital map database, compiled from previously open- filed U.S. Geological Survey reports (Graymer and others, 1994, Graymer, Jones, and Brabb, 1994) and unpublished data, represents the general distribution of rocks and faults in the Hayward fault zone. As described in this report, the Hayward fault zone is a zone of highly deformed rocks which trends north 30 degrees west from an area southeast of San Jose to the San Pablo Bay, and ranges in width from 2 to 10 kilometers. Although historic earthquake activity has been concentrated in the western part of the zone, the zone as a whole reflects oblique right-lateral and compressive deformation along a significant upper crustal break over the past 10 million years or more. Together with the accompanying text file (hfgeo.txt), the database provides current information on the distribution and description of faults and rock types within the fault zone. In addition, the text file discusses the development of the fault zone in the past 10 million years, the relationship of the Hayward and Calaveras fault zones, and the significance of the creeping strand of the Hayward fault (as most recently defined by Lienkaemper, 1992). The scale of the source maps limits the resolution (scale) of the database to 1:50,000, except for Alameda County which has a resolution of 1:24,000. For those interested in the geology of the Hayward fault zone who do not use an ARC/INFO compatible Geographic Information System (GIS), three Postscript plot files containing images of much of the data in the digital database have been included. The content and character of the database, as well as two methods of obtaining the database, are described below. Database Contents The digital database consists of the geologic map database itself and the supporting data, including a fault map, base maps, map explanation, geologic description, and references. The geologic map database consists of three ARC coverages: hfcc_um/ Geologic map of the Hayward fault zone in Contra Costra County hfal_um/ Geologic map of the Hayward fault zone in Alameda County hfsc_um/ Geologic map of the Hayward fault zone in Santa Clara County The database directory also includes the following supporting directory, ARC coverages, and files: Directory: info/ INFO directory containing files supporting the databases ARC Coverages: hf_um-flt/ Map of faults in the Hayward fault zone with additional database items containing fault name (if any) and fault subzone (see hfgeo.txt for explanation of subzones). hf_dr/ Drainage base map. hf_cu/ Cultural base map. hf_topo/ Topographic contours base map. Files: hfgeo.txt A text only computer file containing detailed unit descriptions and geological information, plus sources of data and references cited. hfdb.txt A text only computer file containing database specifics. hfkey.un Together, these key files produce a hfkey.ln plottable or displayable map explaination and key. hfnplt.ps A Postscript plottable file containing an image of the geologic map of the northern half of the Hayward fault zone at a scale of 1:50,000 (Sheet 1). hfsplt.ps A Postscript plottable file containing an image of the geologic map of the southern half of the Hayward fault zone at a scale of 1:50,000 (Sheet 2). hf-fplt.ps A Postscript plottable file containing an image of the map of faults within the Hayward fault zone color coded to correspond to subzone at a scale of 1:100,000 (Sheet 3, see text file hfgeo.txt for explanation of subzones). The database was compiled in ARC/INFO, a commercial Geographic Information System (Environmental Systems Research Institute, Redlands, California), and is stored in ARC coverage format (ARC/INFO version 7) in a UNIX tar file. A UNIX computer operating system is therefore required to extract the database from the tar file, and ARC/INFO is required for its use or conversion to other format. The digital compilation was done using version 7.0.2 of ARC/INFO with version 3.0 of the menu interface ALACARTE (Fitzgibbon and Wentworth, 1991, Fitzgibbon, 1991, Wentworth and Fitzgibbon, 1991). Obtaining the Digital Data An 18.6 MB compressed tar file of the database and related files can be obtained by anonymous ftp over Internet, or by sending a tape with request and return address to: Hayward fault zone Database c/o Carl M. Wentworth U.S. Geological Survey 345 Middlefield Road, M/S 975 Menlo Park, CA 94025 Do not omit any part of this address! The compressed tar file will be returned on the tape. The acceptable tape types are: 1/4 inch, 150 MB cartridge tape 2.3 or 5.0 GB, 8 mm Exabyte tape. To obtain the tar file by ftp, log in to your UNIX system and do the following: cd local_directory -go to a directory to receive the tar file ftp wrgis.wr.usgs.gov -make ftp connection with the USGS computer WRGIS Name: anonymous -use "anonymous" as your user name Password: your name -use your own user name as password cd pub/geologic -go down to the pub directory cd ca/of95-597 -go down to the open-file directory type binary -change transfer type to binary get hf_g1.tar.Z -copy the compressed tar file across Internet to your directory quit -close the ftp connection Extracting the Database from the Tar file If you obtained the database on tape: put the tape in your tape drive cd local_directory -go to a directory to receive the tar file tar xvfb /dev/rstn 20 -/dev/rstn is the tape device with n an integer, this puts the tar file in local_directory uncompress hf_g1.tar.Z -makes a 51 MB uncompressed tar file hf_g1.tar cd local_directory2 -go to the directory that will hold the workspace hfg (if different from local_directory) tar xvfb {path to tar file}/hf_g1.tar 20 -extract the hfg workspace from the tar file. If you obtained the database by anonymous ftp: uncompress hf_g1.tar.Z -makes a 51 MB uncompressed tar file hf_g1.tar cd local_directory2 -go to the directory that will hold the workspace hfg (if different from local_directory) tar xvfb {path to tar file}/hf_g1.tar 20 -extract the hfg workspace from the tar file. This process will create a workspace "/hfg" (a directory containing an INFO directory) that contains the databases and supporting files as described above. Postscript Plot Files The database is in ARC coverage format, and therefore requires use of ARC/INFO or another compatible GIS system to access the information contained within it. For those interested in the geology of the Hayward fault zone, but who don't use an ARC/INFO compatible GIS system, we have included three Postscript plot files. One contains a plot of the northern half of the map database at 1:50,000 scale, along with a map explanation (Sheet 1, hfnplt.ps). The second contains a plot of the southern half of the map database at 1:50,000 scale, along with a diagram of quadrangles traversed by the fault zone (Sheet 2, hfsplt.ps). The third contains a plot of the fault information map (explained below) at 1:100,000 scale (Sheet 3, hf-fplt.ps). Because this release is primarily a digital database, the plot files (and plots derived therefrom) have not been edited to conform to U.S. Geological Survey standards. Small units have not been labeled with leaders and in some instances map features or annotation overlap. Sample plots by the authors have proven to be quite legible and useful, however. Fault Information Map (hf_um-flt) This coverage contains additional information about the faults in the Hayward fault zone. The subzone that the fault is in is recorded in the database item "DOMAIN." The fault name, if any, is recorded in the database item "FNAME." See below for more information about database items. Subzones are fully described in the accompanying text file, hfgeo.txt. This coverage contains fault lines (arcs) from all three counties, but no contact lines (arcs) or polygon information. This coverage is intended to illustrate concepts discussed in the geologic explanation (hfgeo.txt).