Abstract
AbstractTectonic, hydrological and industrial processes coexist in the dynamic natural environments. However, our knowledge of ground deformation associated with tectonic, hydrological and anthropogenic processes and their interactions remains limited. California represents a natural laboratory that hosts the San Andreas fault system, Central Valley and other aquifer systems, and extensive human extraction of natural resources. The attendant multi‐scale ground deformation that has been mapped using Copernicus Sentinel‐1 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)‐satellite constellation from four ascending and five descending tracks during 2015–2019. We consider the secular horizontal surface velocities and strain rates, constrained from GNSS measurements and tectonic models, as proxies for tectonic processes, and seasonal displacement amplitudes from interferometric SAR (InSAR) time series as proxies for hydrological processes. We synergize 23 types of multidisciplinary datasets, including ground deformation, sedimentary basins, precipitation, soil moisture, topography, and hydrocarbon production fields, using a machine learning algorithm–random forest, and we succeed in predicting 86%–95% of the representative data sets. High strain rates along the SAF system mainly occur in areas with a low‐to‐moderate vegetation fraction (∼0.3), suggesting a correlation of rough/high‐relief coastal range morphology and topography with the active faulting, seasonal and orographic rainfall, and vegetation growth. Linear discontinuities in the long‐term, seasonal amplitude and phase of the surface displacement fields coincide with some fault strands, the boundary zone between the sediment‐fill Central Valley and bedrock‐dominated Sierra Nevada, and the margins of the inelastically deforming aquifer in the San Joaquin Valley, suggesting groundwater flow interruptions, contrasting elastic properties, and heterogeneous hydrological units.
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