Publications
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Aspect-dependent soil saturation and insight into debris-flow initiation during extreme rainfall in the Colorado Front Range Aspect-dependent soil saturation and insight into debris-flow initiation during extreme rainfall in the Colorado Front Range
Hydrologic processes during extreme rainfall events are poorly characterized because of the rarity of measurements. Improved understanding of hydrologic controls on natural hazards is needed because of the potential for substantial risk during extreme precipitation events. We present field measurements of the degree of soil saturation and estimates of available soil-water storage during...
Authors
Brian Ebel, Francis K. Rengers, Gregory Tucker
On a report that the 2012 M 6.0 earthquake in Italy was predicted after seeing an unusual cloud formation On a report that the 2012 M 6.0 earthquake in Italy was predicted after seeing an unusual cloud formation
Several recently published reports have suggested that semi-stationary linear-cloud formations might be causally precursory to earthquakes. We examine the report of Guangmeng and Jie (2013), who claim to have predicted the 2012 M 6.0 earthquake in the Po Valley of northern Italy after seeing a satellite photograph (a digital image) showing a linear-cloud formation over the eastern...
Authors
J.N. Thomas, F. Masci, Jeffrey Love
Geotechnical soil characterization of intact Quaternary deposits forming the March 22, 2014 SR-530 (Oso) landslide, Snohomish County, Washington Geotechnical soil characterization of intact Quaternary deposits forming the March 22, 2014 SR-530 (Oso) landslide, Snohomish County, Washington
During the late morning of March 22, 2014, a devastating landslide occurred near the town of Oso, Washington. The landslide with an estimated volume of 10.9 million cubic yards (8.3 x 106 m3) of both intact glacially deposited and previously disturbed landslide sediments, reached speeds averaging 40 miles per hour (64 kilometers per hour) and crossed the entire 2/3-mile (~1100 m) width...
Authors
Michael Riemer, Brian Collins, Thomas Badger, Csilla Toth, Yat Yu
By
Geology, Energy, and Minerals Mission Area, Natural Hazards Mission Area, Energy Resources Program, Groundwater and Streamflow Information Program, Landslide Hazards Program, Mineral Resources Program, National Laboratories Program, Science and Decisions Center, Geologic Hazards Science Center, Geology, Minerals, Energy, and Geophysics Science Center
Self-noise models of five commercial strong-motion accelerometers Self-noise models of five commercial strong-motion accelerometers
Strong‐motion accelerometers provide onscale seismic recordings during moderate‐to‐large ground motions (e.g., up to tens of m/s2 peak). Such instruments have played a fundamental role in improving our understanding of earthquake source physics (Bocketal., 2011), earthquake engineering (Youdet al., 2004), and regional seismology (Zollo et al., 2010). Although strong‐motion accelerometers...
Authors
Adam Ringler, John Evans, Charles Hutt
Variability of intertidal foraminferal assemblages in a salt marsh, Oregon, USA Variability of intertidal foraminferal assemblages in a salt marsh, Oregon, USA
We studied 18 sampling stations along a transect to investigate the similarity between live (rose Bengal stained) foraminiferal populations and dead assemblages, their small-scale spatial variations and the distribution of infaunal foraminifera in a salt marsh (Toms Creek marsh) at the upper end of the South Slough arm of the Coos Bay estuary, Oregon, USA. We aimed to test to what extent
Authors
Yvonne Milker, Benjamin Horton, Alan Nelson, Simon Engelhart, Robert C. Witter
Characterizing ground motions that collapse steel special moment-resisting frames or make them unrepairable Characterizing ground motions that collapse steel special moment-resisting frames or make them unrepairable
This work applies 64,765 simulated seismic ground motions to four models each of 6- or 20-story, steel special moment-resisting frame buildings. We consider two vector intensity measures and categorize the building response as “collapsed,” “unrepairable,” or “repairable.” We then propose regression models to predict the building responses from the intensity measures. The best models for...
Authors
Anna Olsen, Thomas Heaton, John Hall
Incorporating induced seismicity in the 2014 United States National Seismic Hazard Model: results of the 2014 workshop and sensitivity studies Incorporating induced seismicity in the 2014 United States National Seismic Hazard Model: results of the 2014 workshop and sensitivity studies
The U.S. Geological Survey National Seismic Hazard Model for the conterminous United States was updated in 2014 to account for new methods, input models, and data necessary for assessing the seismic ground shaking hazard from natural (tectonic) earthquakes. The U.S. Geological Survey National Seismic Hazard Model project uses probabilistic seismic hazard analysis to quantify the rate of...
Authors
Mark Petersen, Charles S. Mueller, Morgan Moschetti, Susan Hoover, Justin Rubinstein, Andrea Llenos, Andrew Michael, William Ellsworth, Arthur McGarr, Austin Holland, John Anderson
A sea-level database for the Pacific coast of central North America A sea-level database for the Pacific coast of central North America
A database of published and new relative sea-level (RSL) data for the past 16 ka constrains the sea-level histories of the Pacific coast of central North America (southern British Columbia to central California). Our reevaluation of the stratigraphic context and radiocarbon age of sea-level indicators from geological and archaeological investigations yields 600 sea-level index points and...
Authors
Simon Engelhart, Matteo Vacchi, Benjamin Horton, Alan Nelson, Robert Kopp
Coastal evidence for Holocene subduction-zone earthquakes and tsunamis in central Chile Coastal evidence for Holocene subduction-zone earthquakes and tsunamis in central Chile
The ∼500-year historical record of seismicity along the central Chile coast (30–34°S) is characterized by a series of ∼M 8.0–8.5 earthquakes followed by low tsunamis (10 m), but the frequency of such large events is unknown. We extend the seismic history of central Chile through a study of a lowland stratigraphic sequence along the metropolitan coast north of Valparaíso (33°S). At this...
Authors
Tina Dure, Marco Cisternas, Benjamin Horton, Lisa Ely, Alan Nelson, Robert Wesson, Jessica Pilarczyk
UCERF3: A new earthquake forecast for California's complex fault system UCERF3: A new earthquake forecast for California's complex fault system
With innovations, fresh data, and lessons learned from recent earthquakes, scientists have developed a new earthquake forecast model for California, a region under constant threat from potentially damaging events. The new model, referred to as the third Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast, or "UCERF" (http://www.WGCEP.org/UCERF3), provides authoritative estimates of the...
Authors
Edward Field
The data quality analyzer: a quality control program for seismic data The data quality analyzer: a quality control program for seismic data
The U.S. Geological Survey's Albuquerque Seismological Laboratory (ASL) has several initiatives underway to enhance and track the quality of data produced from ASL seismic stations and to improve communication about data problems to the user community. The Data Quality Analyzer (DQA) is one such development and is designed to characterize seismic station data quality in a quantitative...
Authors
Adam Ringler, M.T. Hagerty, James F. Holland, A. Gonzales, Lind Gee, J.D. Edwards, David Wilson, Adam Baker
Long‐term time‐dependent probabilities for the third Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast (UCERF3) Long‐term time‐dependent probabilities for the third Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast (UCERF3)
The 2014 Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities (WGCEP 2014) presents time-dependent earthquake probabilities for the third Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast (UCERF3). Building on the UCERF3 time-independent model, published previously, renewal models are utilized to represent elastic-rebound-implied probabilities. A new methodology has been developed that...
Authors
Edward H. Field, Glenn Biasi, Peter Bird, Timothy Dawson, Karen Felzer, David Jackson, Kaj Johnson, Thomas Jordan, Christopher Madden, Andrew Michael, Kevin Milner, Morgan Page, Thomas Parsons, Peter Powers, Bruce E. Shaw, Wayne Thatcher, Ray Weldon, Yuehua Zeng