Publications
Filter Total Items: 2337
User needs assessment for postfire debris-flow inundation hazard products User needs assessment for postfire debris-flow inundation hazard products
Debris flows are a type of mass movement that is more likely after wildfires, and while existing hazard assessments evaluate the rainfall intensities that are likely to trigger debris flows, no operational hazard assessment exists for identifying the areas where they will run out after initiation. Fifteen participants who work in a wide range of job functions associated with southern...
Authors
Katherine Barnhart, Veronica Romero, Katherine Clifford
Magnitude conversion and earthquake recurrence rate models for the central and eastern United States Magnitude conversion and earthquake recurrence rate models for the central and eastern United States
Development of Seismic Source Characterization (SSC) models, which is an essential part of Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analyses (PSHA), can help forecast the temporal and spatial distribution of future damaging earthquakes (𝑀w≥ 5) in seismically active regions. Because it is impossible to associate all earthquakes with known faults, seismic source models for PSHA often include sources...
Authors
Rasool Anooshehpoor, Thomas Weaver, Jon Ake, Cliff Munson, Morgan Moschetti, David Shelly, Peter Powers
Dense geophysical observations reveal a triggered, concurrent multi-fault rupture at the Mendocino Triple Junction Dense geophysical observations reveal a triggered, concurrent multi-fault rupture at the Mendocino Triple Junction
A central question of earthquake science is how far ruptures can jump from one fault to another, because cascading ruptures can increase the shaking of a seismic event. Earthquake science relies on earthquake catalogs and therefore how complex ruptures get documented and cataloged has important implications. Recent investments in geophysical instrumentation allow us to resolve...
Authors
William Yeck, David Shelly, Dara Goldberg, Kathryn Materna, Paul Earle
High-pass corner frequency selection for implementation in the USGS automated ground motion processing tool High-pass corner frequency selection for implementation in the USGS automated ground motion processing tool
Earthquake ground motion processing for next-generation attenuation (NGA) projects required human inspection to select high-pass corner frequencies (fcHP), which is time-intensive and subjective. With growth in the number of recordings per event and interest in enhancing repeatability, we sought to develop automated procedures for fcHP selection. These procedures consider signal-to-noise...
Authors
María E. Ramos-Sepulveda, Grace Parker, Eric Thompson, Scott Brandenberg, Meibai Li, Okan Ilhan, Youssef Hashash, Ellen Rathje, Jonathan Stewart
Prolonged influence of urbanization on landslide susceptibility Prolonged influence of urbanization on landslide susceptibility
Landslides pose a threat to life and infrastructure and are influenced by anthropogenic modifications associated with land development. These modifications can affect susceptibility to landslides, and thus quantifying their influence on landslide occurrence can help design sustainable development efforts. Although landslide susceptibility has been shown to increase following urban...
Authors
Tyler Rohan, Eitan Shelef, Benjamin B. Mirus, Tim Coleman
Uses of epistemic uncertainties in the USGS National Seismic Hazard Models Uses of epistemic uncertainties in the USGS National Seismic Hazard Models
The need for US Geological Survey (USGS) National Seismic Hazard Models (NSHMs) to report estimates of epistemic uncertainties in the hazard (e.g. fractile hazard curves) in all forthcoming releases is increasing. With fractile hazard curves as potential new outputs from the USGS 2023 NSHM, a simultaneous need is to help end-users better understand these epistemic uncertainties and...
Authors
N. Kwong, Kishor Jaiswal
A review of common natural disasters as analogs for asteroid impact effects and cascading hazards A review of common natural disasters as analogs for asteroid impact effects and cascading hazards
Modern civilization has no collective experience with possible wide-ranging effects from a medium-sized asteroid impactor. Currently, modeling efforts that predict initial effects from a meteor impact or airburst provide needed information for initial preparation and evacuation plans, but longer-term cascading hazards are not typically considered. However, more common natural disasters...
Authors
Timothy Titus, D. G. Robertson, Joel B. Sankey, Larry Mastin, Francis Rengers
Revising supraglacial rock avalanche magnitudes and frequencies in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska Revising supraglacial rock avalanche magnitudes and frequencies in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska
The frequency of large supraglacial landslides (rock avalanches) occurring in glacial environments is thought to be increasing due to feedbacks with climate warming and permafrost degradation. However, it is difficult to (i) test this; (ii) establish cause–effect relationships; and (iii) determine associated lag-times, due to both temporal and spatial biases in detection rates. Here we...
Authors
William Smith, Stuart Dunning, Neil Ross, Jon Telling, Erin K. Bessette-Kirton, Dan H. Shugar, Jeffrey Coe, M. Geertsema
Investigations of ambient noise velocity variations in a region of induced seismicity near Greeley, Colorado Investigations of ambient noise velocity variations in a region of induced seismicity near Greeley, Colorado
Wastewater injection has induced earthquakes in Northeastern Colorado since 2014. We apply ambient noise correlation techniques to determine temporal changes in seismic velocities in the region. We find no clear correlation between seismic velocity fluctuations and either injection volumes or seismicity patterns. We do observe apparent annual variations in velocity that may be associated...
Authors
Thomas Clifford, Anne Sheehan, Morgan Moschetti
Estimating geomagnetically induced currents in southern Brazil using 3-D Earth resistivity model Estimating geomagnetically induced currents in southern Brazil using 3-D Earth resistivity model
Geomagnetically induced currents (GICs) result from the interaction of the time variation of ground magnetic field during a geomagnetic disturbance with the Earth's deep electrical resistivity structure. In this study, we simulate induced GICs in a hypothetical representation of a low-latitude power transmission network located mainly over the large Paleozoic Paraná basin (PB) in...
Authors
Karen Espinosa Sarmiento, Antonio Padilha, Livia Alves, Adam Schultz, Anna Kelbert
Damage amplification during repetitive seismic waves in mechanically loaded rocks Damage amplification during repetitive seismic waves in mechanically loaded rocks
Cycles of stress build-up and release are inherent to tectonically active planets. Such stress oscillations impart strain and damage, prompting mechanically loaded rocks and materials to fail. Here, we investigate, under uniaxial conditions, damage accumulation and weakening caused by time-dependent creep (at 60, 65, and 70% of the rocks’ expected failure stress) and repeating stress...
Authors
Anthony Lamur, Jackie Kendrick, Lauren Schaefer, Yan Lavallee, Ben Kennedy
Simulating debris flow and levee formation in the 2D shallow flow model D-Claw: Channelized and unconfined flow Simulating debris flow and levee formation in the 2D shallow flow model D-Claw: Channelized and unconfined flow
Debris flow runout poses a hazard to life and infrastructure. The expansion of human population into mountainous areas and onto alluvial fans increases the need to predict and mitigate debris flow runout hazards. Debris flows on unconfined alluvial fans can exhibit spontaneous self-channelization through levee formation that reduces lateral spreading and extends runout distances compared...
Authors
Ryan Jones, Francis Rengers, Katherine Barnhart, David George, Dennis Staley, Jason Kean