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San_Diego_County_Active_Faults (MapServer)

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Service Description:

Active faults are those faults which are known to have been active during Holocene time within the past 11,000 years. These faults were classified as A or B in accordance with the criteria specified in 1997 Uniform Building Code Table 16-U (DMG, 1998). These faults, and their category, determine what building codes are to be employed during the permitting process. Type A faults are capable of producing magnitude 7.0 earthquakes or greater and have a high rate of seismic activity (a slip rate of at least 5 millimeters per year). Segments of the San Jacinto and Elsinore fault zones are included in this category. Near-source velocity effects need to be considered in the design of buildings within 15 kilometers of a Type A fault. Type B faults are the majority of the rest of the seismogenic faults in California, and segments of the San Jacinto, Elsinore, and Rose Canyon fault zones are included in this category. Near-source velocity effects need to be considered in the design of buildings within 10 kilometers of a Type B fault.



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Layers: Description: Active faults are those faults which are known to have been active during Holocene time within the past 11,000 years. These faults were classified as A or B in accordance with the criteria specified in 1997 Uniform Building Code Table 16-U (DMG, 1998). These faults, and their category, determine what building codes are to be employed during the permitting process. Type A faults are capable of producing magnitude 7.0 earthquakes or greater and have a high rate of seismic activity (a slip rate of at least 5 millimeters per year). Segments of the San Jacinto and Elsinore fault zones are included in this category. Near-source velocity effects need to be considered in the design of buildings within 15 kilometers of a Type A fault. Type B faults are the majority of the rest of the seismogenic faults in California, and segments of the San Jacinto, Elsinore, and Rose Canyon fault zones are included in this category. Near-source velocity effects need to be considered in the design of buildings within 10 kilometers of a Type B fault.

Service Item Id: f219b106e4f740bb965b3139a5f76141

Copyright Text: 1997 Uniform Building Code. County of San Diego, Planning & Development Services, LUEG-GIS Service

Spatial Reference: 102646  (2230)


Single Fused Map Cache: false

Initial Extent: Full Extent: Units: esriFeet

Supported Image Format Types: PNG32,PNG24,PNG,JPG,DIB,TIFF,EMF,PS,PDF,GIF,SVG,SVGZ,BMP

Document Info: Supports Dynamic Layers: true

Resampling: false

MaxRecordCount: 2000

MaxImageHeight: 4096

MaxImageWidth: 4096

Supported Query Formats: JSON, geoJSON, PBF

Supports Query Data Elements: true

Min Scale: 0

Max Scale: 0

Supports Datum Transformation: true



Child Resources:   Info   Dynamic Layer

Supported Operations:   Export Map   Identify   QueryLegends   QueryDomains   Find   Return Updates