Publications
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Ground motion models used in the 2014 U.S. National Seismic Hazard Maps Ground motion models used in the 2014 U.S. National Seismic Hazard Maps
The National Seismic Hazard Maps (NSHMs) are an important component of seismic design regulations in the United States. This paper compares hazard using the new suite of ground motion models (GMMs) relative to hazard using the suite of GMMs applied in the previous version of the maps. The new source characterization models are used for both cases. A previous paper (Rezaeian et al. 2014)...
Authors
Sanaz Rezaeian, Mark Petersen, Morgan Moschetti
Seismic source characterization for the 2014 update of the U.S. National Seismic Hazard Model Seismic source characterization for the 2014 update of the U.S. National Seismic Hazard Model
We present the updated seismic source characterization (SSC) for the 2014 update of the National Seismic Hazard Model (NSHM) for the conterminous United States. Construction of the seismic source models employs the methodology that was developed for the 1996 NSHM but includes new and updated data, data types, source models, and source parameters that reflect the current state of...
Authors
Morgan Moschetti, Peter Powers, Mark Petersen, Oliver Boyd, Rui Chen, Edward Field, Arthur Frankel, Kathleen Haller, Stephen Harmsen, Charles Mueller, Russell Wheeler, Yuehua Zeng
Unusually large tsunamis frequent a currently creeping part of the Aleutian megathrust Unusually large tsunamis frequent a currently creeping part of the Aleutian megathrust
Current models used to assess earthquake and tsunami hazards are inadequate where creep dominates a subduction megathrust. Here we report geological evidence for large tsunamis, occurring on average every 300–340 years, near the source areas of the 1946 and 1957 Aleutian tsunamis. These areas bookend a postulated seismic gap over 200 km long where modern geodetic measurements indicate...
Authors
Robert C. Witter, G. Carver, Richard Briggs, Guy Gelfenbaum, R.D. Koehler, SeanPaul M. La Selle, Adrian Bender, S.E. Engelhart, E. Hemphill-Haley, Troy Hill
Effect of antecedent-hydrological conditions on rainfall triggering of debris flows in ash-fall pyroclastic mantled slopes of Campania (southern Italy) Effect of antecedent-hydrological conditions on rainfall triggering of debris flows in ash-fall pyroclastic mantled slopes of Campania (southern Italy)
Mountainous areas surrounding the Campanian Plain and the Somma-Vesuvius volcano (southern Italy) are among the most risky areas of Italy due to the repeated occurrence of rainfallinduced debris flows along ash-fall pyroclastic soil-mantled slopes. In this geomorphological framework, rainfall patterns, hydrological processes taking place within multi-layered ash-fall pyroclastic deposits...
Authors
E. Napolitano, F Fusco, Rex Baum, Jonathan Godt, P. De Vita
A one-dimensional model of solid-earth electrical resistivity beneath Florida A one-dimensional model of solid-earth electrical resistivity beneath Florida
An estimated one-dimensional layered model of electrical resistivity beneath Florida was developed from published geological and geophysical information. The resistivity of each layer is represented by plausible upper and lower bounds as well as a geometric mean resistivity. Corresponding impedance transfer functions, Schmucker-Weidelt transfer functions, apparent resistivity, and phase...
Authors
Cletus Blum, Jeffrey Love, Kolby Pedrie, Paul Bedrosian, E. Rigler
Geotechnical effects of the 2015 magnitude 7.8 Gorkha, Nepal, earthquake and aftershocks Geotechnical effects of the 2015 magnitude 7.8 Gorkha, Nepal, earthquake and aftershocks
This article summarizes the geotechnical effects of the 25 April 2015 M 7.8 Gorkha, Nepal, earthquake and aftershocks, as documented by a reconnaissance team that undertook a broad engineering and scientific assessment of the damage and collected perishable data for future analysis. Brief descriptions are provided of ground shaking, surface fault rupture, landsliding, soil failure, and
Authors
Robb E. S. Moss, Eric Thompson, D Kieffer, Binod Tiwari, Youssef Hashash, Indra Acharya, Basanta Adhikari, Domniki Asimaki, Kevin Clahan, Brian Collins, Sachindra Dahal, Randall Jibson, Diwakar Khadka, Amy Macdonald, Chris Madugo, H Mason, Menzer Pehlivan, Deepak Rayamajhi, Sital Uprety
An overview of the National Earthquake Information Center acquisition software system, Edge/Continuous Waveform Buffer An overview of the National Earthquake Information Center acquisition software system, Edge/Continuous Waveform Buffer
This document provides an overview of the capabilities, design, and use cases of the data acquisition and archiving subsystem at the U.S. Geological Survey National Earthquake Information Center. The Edge and Continuous Waveform Buffer software supports the National Earthquake Information Center’s worldwide earthquake monitoring mission in direct station data acquisition, data import...
Authors
John Patton, David C. Ketchum, Michelle R. Guy
Reactivated faulting near Cushing, Oklahoma: Increased potential for a triggered earthquake in an area of United States strategic infrastructure Reactivated faulting near Cushing, Oklahoma: Increased potential for a triggered earthquake in an area of United States strategic infrastructure
In October 2014 two moderate-sized earthquakes (Mw 4.0 and 4.3) struck south of Cushing, Oklahoma, below the largest crude oil storage facility in the world. Combined analysis of the spatial distribution of earthquakes and regional moment tensor focal mechanisms indicate reactivation of a subsurface unnamed and unmapped left-lateral strike-slip fault. Coulomb failure stress change...
Authors
Daniel McNamara, Gavin Hayes, Harley Benz, Robert Williams, Nicole McMahon, R.C. Aster, Austin Holland, T Sickbert, Robert Herrmann, Richard Briggs, Gregory Smoczyk, Eric Bergman, Paul Earle
A random-walk algorithm for modeling lithospheric density and the role of body forces in the evolution of the Midcontinent Rift A random-walk algorithm for modeling lithospheric density and the role of body forces in the evolution of the Midcontinent Rift
This paper develops a Monte Carlo algorithm for extracting three-dimensional lithospheric density models from geophysical data. Empirical scaling relationships between velocity and density create a 3D starting density model, which is then iteratively refined until it reproduces observed gravity and topography. This approach permits deviations from uniform crustal velocity-density scaling...
Authors
William Levandowski, Oliver Boyd, Richard Briggs, Ryan Gold
Ground motion-simulations of 1811-1812 New Madrid earthquakes, central United States Ground motion-simulations of 1811-1812 New Madrid earthquakes, central United States
We performed a suite of numerical simulations based on the 1811–1812 New Madrid seismic zone (NMSZ) earthquakes, which demonstrate the importance of 3D geologic structure and rupture directivity on the ground‐motion response throughout a broad region of the central United States (CUS) for these events. Our simulation set consists of 20 hypothetical earthquakes located along two faults...
Authors
L. Ramirez-Guzman, Robert Graves, Kim Olsen, Oliver Boyd, Chris Cramer, Stephen Hartzell, Sidao Ni, Paul Somerville, Robert Williams, Jinquan Zhong
Development of the Global Earthquake Model’s neotectonic fault database Development of the Global Earthquake Model’s neotectonic fault database
The Global Earthquake Model (GEM) aims to develop uniform, openly available, standards, datasets and tools for worldwide seismic risk assessment through global collaboration, transparent communication and adapting state-of-the-art science. GEM Faulted Earth (GFE) is one of GEM’s global hazard module projects. This paper describes GFE’s development of a modern neotectonic fault database...
Authors
Annemarie Christophersen, Nicola Litchfield, Kelvin Berryman, Richard Thomas, Roberto Basili, Laura Wallace, William Ries, Gavin Hayes, Kathleen M. Haller, Toshikazu Yoshioka, Richard D. Koehler, Dan Clark, Monica Wolfson-Schwehr, Margaret Boettcher, Pilar Villamor, Nick Horspool, Teraphan Ornthammarath, Ramon Zuniga, Robert Langridge, Mark Stirling, Tatiana Goded, Carlos Costa, Robert Yeats
Ionospheric current source modeling and global geomagnetic induction using ground geomagnetic observatory data Ionospheric current source modeling and global geomagnetic induction using ground geomagnetic observatory data
Long-period global-scale electromagnetic induction studies of deep Earth conductivity are based almost exclusively on magnetovariational methods and require accurate models of external source spatial structure. We describe approaches to inverting for both the external sources and three-dimensional (3-D) conductivity variations and apply these methods to long-period (T≥1.2 days)...
Authors
Jin Sun, Anna Kelbert, G. Egbert