Publications
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Triggered tremor sweet spots in Alaska Triggered tremor sweet spots in Alaska
To better understand what controls fault slip along plate boundaries, we have exploited the abundance of seismic and geodetic data available from the richly varied tectonic environments composing Alaska. A search for tremor triggered by 11 large earthquakes throughout all of seismically monitored Alaska reveals two tremor “sweet spots”—regions where large-amplitude seismic waves...
Authors
Joan Gomberg, Stephanie Prejean
The impact environment of the Hadean Earth The impact environment of the Hadean Earth
Impact bombardment in the first billion years of solar system history determined in large part the initial physical and chemical states of the inner planets and their potential to host biospheres. The range of physical states and thermal consequences of the impact epoch, however, are not well quantified. Here, we assess these effects on the young Earth's crust as well as the likelihood...
Authors
Oleg Abramov, David A. Kring Kring, Stephen J. Mojzsis
Ambient seismic noise interferometry in Hawai'i reveals long-range observability of volcanic tremor Ambient seismic noise interferometry in Hawai'i reveals long-range observability of volcanic tremor
The use of seismic noise interferometry to retrieve Green's functions and the analysis of volcanic tremor are both useful in studying volcano dynamics. Whereas seismic noise interferometry allows long-range extraction of interpretable signals from a relatively weak noise wavefield, the characterization of volcanic tremor often requires a dense seismic array close to the source. We here...
Authors
Silke Ballmer, Cecily J. Wolfe, Paul G. Okubo, Matthew M. Haney, Clifford H. Thurber
Limiting the immediate and subsequent hazards associated with wildfires Limiting the immediate and subsequent hazards associated with wildfires
Wildfire is a unique natural hazard because it poses immediate threats to life and property as well as creating conditions that can lead to subsequent debris flows. In recent years, the immediate destructive force of wildfires has been decreased through better understanding of fire behavior. Lightning detection networks now identify the number and locations of this common ignition source
Authors
Jerome V. DeGraff, Susan H. Cannon, Mario Parise
The effect of sampling rate and anti-aliasing filters on high-frequency response spectra The effect of sampling rate and anti-aliasing filters on high-frequency response spectra
The most commonly used intensity measure in ground-motion prediction equations is the pseudo-absolute response spectral acceleration (PSA), for response periods from 0.01 to 10 s (or frequencies from 0.1 to 100 Hz). PSAs are often derived from recorded ground motions, and these motions are usually filtered to remove high and low frequencies before the PSAs are computed. In this article...
Authors
David M. Boore, Christine Goulet
Assessing the location and magnitude of the 20 October 1870 Charlevoix, Quebec, earthquake Assessing the location and magnitude of the 20 October 1870 Charlevoix, Quebec, earthquake
The Charlevoix, Quebec, earthquake of 20 October 1870 caused damage to several towns in Quebec and was felt throughout much of southeastern Canada and along the U.S. Atlantic seaboard from Maine to Maryland. Site‐specific damage and felt reports from Canadian and U.S. cities and towns were used in analyses of the location and magnitude of the earthquake. The macroseismic center of the...
Authors
John E. Ebel, Megan Dupuy, William H. Bakun
A statistical analysis of the global historical volcanic fatalities record A statistical analysis of the global historical volcanic fatalities record
A new database of volcanic fatalities is presented and analysed, covering the period 1600 to 2010 AD. Data are from four sources: the Smithsonian Institution, Witham (2005), CRED EM-DAT and Munich RE. The data were combined and formatted, with a weighted average fatality figure used where more than one source reports an event; the former two databases were weighted twice as strongly as...
Authors
Melanie Rose Auker, Robert Stephen John Sparks, Lee Siebert, H. S. Crosweller, John W. Ewert
New Zealand’s deadliest quake sounds alarm for cities on fault lines New Zealand’s deadliest quake sounds alarm for cities on fault lines
The catastrophic Christ Church Earthquake is a strong reminder to engineers and scientists of the hazards pose by fault lines, both mapped and unknown, near major cities. In February 2011, the relatively moderate earthquake that struck the cities of Christchurch and Lyttleton in the Canterbury region of New Zealand's South Island surprised many with its destructive power. The magnitude 6...
Authors
Erol Kalkan
Aftershocks halted by static stress shadows Aftershocks halted by static stress shadows
Earthquakes impart static and dynamic stress changes to the surrounding crust. Sudden fault slip causes small but permanent—static—stress changes, and passing seismic waves cause large, but brief and oscillatory—dynamic—stress changes. Because both static and dynamic stresses can trigger earthquakes within several rupture dimensions of a mainshock, it has proven difficult to disentangle...
Authors
Shinji Toda, Ross S. Stein, Gregory C. Beroza, David Marsan
Significant motions between GPS sites in the New Madrid region: implications for seismic hazard Significant motions between GPS sites in the New Madrid region: implications for seismic hazard
Position time series from Global Positioning System (GPS) stations in the New Madrid region were differenced to determine the relative motions between stations. Uncertainties in rates were estimated using a three‐component noise model consisting of white, flicker, and random walk noise, following the methodology of Langbein, 2004. Significant motions of 0.37±0.07 (one standard error) mm...
Authors
Arthur Frankel, Robert Smalley, J. Paul
Sources of shaking and flooding during the Tohoku-Oki earthquake: a mixture of rupture styles Sources of shaking and flooding during the Tohoku-Oki earthquake: a mixture of rupture styles
Modeling strong ground motions from great subduction zone earthquakes is one of the great challenges of computational seismology. To separate the rupture characteristics from complexities caused by 3D sub-surface geology requires an extraordinary data set such as provided by the recent Mw9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. Here we combine deterministic inversion and dynamically guided forward...
Authors
Shengji Wei, Robert Graves, Don Helmberger, Jean-Philippe Avouac, Junle Jiang