Publications
Filter Total Items: 2337
A paleoseismic transect across the northwestern Basin and Range Province, northwestern Nevada and northeastern California, USA A paleoseismic transect across the northwestern Basin and Range Province, northwestern Nevada and northeastern California, USA
We use new and existing data to compile a record of ∼18 latest Quaternary large-magnitude surface-rupturing earthquakes on 7 fault zones in the northwestern Basin and Range Province of northwestern Nevada and northeastern California. The most recent earthquake on all faults postdates the ca. 18–15 ka last glacial highstand of pluvial Lake Lahontan and other pluvial lakes in the region...
Authors
Stephen Personius, Richard Briggs, J. Maharrey, Stephen Angster, Shannon Mahan
Down to Earth with an electric hazard from space Down to Earth with an electric hazard from space
In reaching across traditional disciplinary boundaries, solid-Earth geophysicists and space physicists are forging new collaborations to map magnetic-storm hazards for electric-power grids. Future progress in evaluation storm time geoelectric hazards will come primarily through monitoring, surveys, and modeling of related data.
Authors
Jeffrey Love, Paul Bedrosian, Adam Schultz
Precipitation thresholds for landslide occurrence near Seattle, Mukilteo, and Everett, Washington Precipitation thresholds for landslide occurrence near Seattle, Mukilteo, and Everett, Washington
Shallow landslides along coastal bluffs frequently occur in the railway corridor between Seattle and Everett, Washington. These slides disrupt passenger rail service, both because of required track maintenance and because the railroad owner, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, does not allow passenger travel for 48 hours after a disruptive landslide. Sound Transit, which operates...
Authors
Caroline Scheevel, Rex Baum, Benjamin Mirus, Joel Smith
Time-causal decomposition of geomagnetic time series into secular variation, solar quiet, and disturbance signals Time-causal decomposition of geomagnetic time series into secular variation, solar quiet, and disturbance signals
A theoretical basis and prototype numerical algorithm are provided that decompose regular time series of geomagnetic observations into three components: secular variation; solar quiet, and disturbance. Respectively, these three components correspond roughly to slow changes in the Earth’s internal magnetic field, periodic daily variations caused by quasi-stationary (with respect to the...
Authors
E. Rigler
Effect of hydraulic hysteresis on the stability of infinite slopes under steady infiltration Effect of hydraulic hysteresis on the stability of infinite slopes under steady infiltration
Hydraulic hysteresis, including capillary soil water retention (SWR), air entrapment SWR, and hydraulic conductivity, is a common phenomenon in unsaturated soils. However, the influence of hydraulic hysteresis on suction stress, and subsequently slope stability, is generally ignored. This paper examines the influence of each of these three types of hysteresis on slope stability using an...
Authors
Pan Chen, Benjamin Mirus, Ning Lu, Jonathan Godt
Capturing spatiotemporal variation in wildfires for improving postwildfire debris-flow hazard assessments Capturing spatiotemporal variation in wildfires for improving postwildfire debris-flow hazard assessments
Wildfires can increase the frequency and magnitude of catastrophic debris flows. Integrated, proactive natural hazard assessment would therefore characterize landscapes based on the potential for the occurrence and interactions of wildfires and postwildfire debris flows. This chapter presents a new modeling effort that can quantify the variability surrounding a key input to postwildfire...
Authors
Jessica R. Haas, Matthew Thompson, Anne Tillery, Joe Scott
Hazus® estimated annualized earthquake losses for the United States Hazus® estimated annualized earthquake losses for the United States
Large earthquakes can cause social and economic disruption that can be unprecedented to any given community, and the full recovery from these impacts may or may not always be achievable. In the United States (U.S.), the 1994 M6.7 Northridge earthquake in California remains the third costliest disaster in U.S. history; and it was one of the most expensive disasters for the federal...
Authors
Kishor Jaiswal, Doug Bausch, Jesse Rozelle, John Holub, Sean McGowan
Characterizing local variability in long‐period horizontal tilt noise Characterizing local variability in long‐period horizontal tilt noise
Horizontal seismic data are dominated by atmospherically induced tilt noise at long periods (i.e., 30 s and greater). Tilt noise limits our ability to use horizontal data for sensitive seismological studies such as observing free earth modes. To better understand the local spatial variability of long‐period horizontal noise, we observe horizontal noise during quiet time periods in the...
Authors
M.D. Rohde, Adam Ringler, Charles Hutt, David Wilson, Austin Holland, L.D Sandoval, Tyler Storm
Accelerating slip rates on the puente hills blind thrust fault system beneath metropolitan Los Angeles, California, USA Accelerating slip rates on the puente hills blind thrust fault system beneath metropolitan Los Angeles, California, USA
Slip rates represent the average displacement across a fault over time and are essential to estimating earthquake recurrence for proba-bilistic seismic hazard assessments. We demonstrate that the slip rate on the western segment of the Puente Hills blind thrust fault system, which is beneath downtown Los Angeles, California (USA), has accel-erated from ~0.22 mm/yr in the late Pleistocene...
Authors
Kristian Bergen, John Shaw, Lorraine Leon, James Dolan, Thomas Pratt, Daniel Ponti, Eric Morrow, Wendy Barrera, Edward Rhodes, Madhav Murari, Lewis Owen
Broadband seismic noise attenuation versus depth at the Albuquerque Seismological Laboratory Broadband seismic noise attenuation versus depth at the Albuquerque Seismological Laboratory
Seismic noise induced by atmospheric processes such as wind and pressure changes can be a major contributor to the background noise observed in many seismograph stations, especially those installed at or near the surface. Cultural noise such as vehicle traffic or nearby buildings with air handling equipment also contributes to seismic background noise. Such noise sources fundamentally...
Authors
Charles Hutt, Adam Ringler, Lind Gee
Unusual geologic evidence of coeval seismic shaking and tsunamis shows variability in earthquake size and recurrence in the area of the giant 1960 Chile earthquake Unusual geologic evidence of coeval seismic shaking and tsunamis shows variability in earthquake size and recurrence in the area of the giant 1960 Chile earthquake
An uncommon coastal sedimentary record combines evidence for seismic shaking and coincident tsunami inundation since AD 1000 in the region of the largest earthquake recorded instrumentally: the giant 1960 southern Chile earthquake (Mw 9.5). The record reveals significant variability in the size and recurrence of megathrust earthquakes and ensuing tsunamis along this part of the Nazca...
Authors
M. Cisternas, E Garrett, Robert Wesson, T. Dura, L. Ely
Landslide kinematics and their potential controls from hourly to decadal timescales: Insights from integrating ground-based InSAR measurements with structural maps and long-term monitoring data Landslide kinematics and their potential controls from hourly to decadal timescales: Insights from integrating ground-based InSAR measurements with structural maps and long-term monitoring data
Knowledge of kinematics is rudimentary for understanding landslide controls and is increasingly valuable with greater spatiotemporal coverage. However, characterizing landslide-wide kinematics is rare, especially at broadly ranging timescales. We used highly detailed kinematic data obtained using photogrammetry and field mapping during the 1980s and 1990s and our 4.3-day ground-based...
Authors
William Schulz, Jeffrey Coe, P.P Ricci, Gregory Smoczyk, Brett Shurtleff, J Panosky