Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Publications

Filter Total Items: 2785

Test and calibration of the Seismic Research Observatory Test and calibration of the Seismic Research Observatory

The Seismic Research Observatory (SRO) network is generating an important new data base for seismological research. The SRO systems have extended both the range and resolution of seismic measurements beyond the limits of conventional seismographs and the data are recorded in digital format making it convenient to automate processing and analysis. The SRO network now comprises 12 stations...
Authors
Jon Peterson, Charles R. Hutt, L. Gary Holcomb

Exploratory trench across the Pleasant Valley Fault, Nevada Exploratory trench across the Pleasant Valley Fault, Nevada

An exploratory trench was excavated across the 1915 trace of the Pleasant Valley fault 60 km south of Winnemucca, Nevada, to get information on the history of recent displacements on a fault that had produced a major earthquake in historic time, and on the appearance of such a fault in a trench cut in gravels, sands and silts of an alluvial fan. The trench exposed 16 mappable sedimentary...
Authors
Manuel G. Bonilla, H. A. Villalobos, R. E. Wallace

Preliminary observations of noise spectra at the SRO and ASRO stations Preliminary observations of noise spectra at the SRO and ASRO stations

The seismic noise spectra presented in this report were derived from SRO and ASRO station data for the purpose of evaluating the performance of the seismic instruments. They are also useful for constructing a spectral estimate of earth noise at a quiet site based on noise samples obtained from a network of globally distributed sites. It is hoped that the spectra will be usefull for other...
Authors
Jon Peterson

Surface faulting near Livermore, California, associated with the January 1980 earthquakes Surface faulting near Livermore, California, associated with the January 1980 earthquakes

The earthquakes of 24 January (Ms 5.8) 1980 north of Livermore, California, and 26 January (Ms 5.2), were accompanied by surface faulting in the Greenville fault zone and apparently in the Las Positas fault zone also. The surface faulting was discontinuous and of small displacement. The main rupture within the Greenville fault zone trended about N.38°W. It was at least 4.2 km long and...
Authors
Manuel G. Bonilla, James J. Lienkaemper, J. C. Tinsley

U.S. strong-motion programs U.S. strong-motion programs

No abstract available.
Authors
Roger D. Borcherdt, R. B. Matthiesen

Geodolite measurements of deformation near Hollister, California, 1971-1978 Geodolite measurements of deformation near Hollister, California, 1971-1978

A 24‐station trilateration network spanning the San Andreas and Calaveras faults near Hollister, California, has been surveyed each year between 1971 and 1978, inclusive. Two moderate (ML = 5) earthquakes have occurred within the network during the interval. No convincing preseismic or coseismic anomalies associated with those earthquakes have been identified. The deformation of the...
Authors
James C. Savage, W.H. Prescott, Michael Lisowski, N. King

Deformation across the Salton Trough, California, 1973-1977 Deformation across the Salton Trough, California, 1973-1977

A trilateration network extending across the San Andreas, San Jacinto, and Elsinore faults in the vicinity of the Salton Sea, California, has been surveyed to very high precision several times in the 5‐year interval 1973–1977. The average strain across the entire network is essentially a uniaxial north‐south contraction at the rate of about 0.3 μstrain/a. There is no substantial strain
Authors
James C. Savage, W.H. Prescott, Michael Lisowski, N. King

Strain accumulation rates in the western United States between 1970 and 1978 Strain accumulation rates in the western United States between 1970 and 1978

The rate of dilatation and the rate and direction of shear have been determined from trilateration data for 23 Geodolite networks in the western United States. Sixteen nets are located along the San Andreas fault system between Point Reyes, California, and the United States‐Mexico border. Other locations are across the Garlock fault in California; across Puget Sound near Seattle...
Authors
W.H. Prescott, James C. Savage, W. T. Kinoshita

Geodimeter measurements of strain during the Southern California Uplift Geodimeter measurements of strain during the Southern California Uplift

A review of geodimeter measurements made along the ‘big‐bend’ section of the San Andreas fault in southern California indicates no significant increment in strain during the period of major uplift (late 1959 to mid‐1963). Specifically, no evidence of an increment in compressional strain normal to the San Andreas fault at the time of the uplift was found. Geodolite measurements at four...
Authors
James C. Savage, W.H. Prescott

Results of a reconnaissance microearthquake survey of Bucaramanga, Colombia Results of a reconnaissance microearthquake survey of Bucaramanga, Colombia

Six University of Wisconsin portable, continuously‐recording seismographs were operated for 3½ days in late 1976 in the Eastern Cordillera of Colombia in a 200‐km‐diameter array around Bucaramanga, where there are also three permanent stations of the Instituto Geofísico de Los Andes Colombianos. Twenty‐seven microearthquakes were recorded. Most can be well located. Only one event...
Authors
W.D. Pennington, Walter D. Mooney, Rene van Hissenhoven, H. Meyer, J.E. Ramirez, Robert P. Meyer

A single-degree-of-freedom model for non-linear soil amplification A single-degree-of-freedom model for non-linear soil amplification

For proper understanding of soil behavior during earthquakes and assessment of a realistic surface motion, studies of the large-strain dynamic response of non-linear hysteretic soil systems are indispensable. Most of the presently available studies are based on the assumption that the response of a soil deposit is mainly due to the upward propagation of horizontally polarized shear waves...
Authors
Mustafa Ozder Erdik
Was this page helpful?