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Characterization of previously unidentified lunar pyroclastic deposits using Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) data Characterization of previously unidentified lunar pyroclastic deposits using Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) data

We used a Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) global monochrome Wide-angle Camera (WAC) mosaic to conduct a survey of the Moon to search for previously unidentified pyroclastic deposits. Promising locations were examined in detail using LROC multispectral WAC mosaics, high-resolution LROC Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) images, and Clementine multispectral (ultraviolet-visible or UVVIS)...
Authors
J. Olaf Gustafson, James F. Bell, Lisa R. Gaddis, B. Ray Hawke, Thomas A. Giguere

Interdisciplinary research produces results in understanding planetary dunes Interdisciplinary research produces results in understanding planetary dunes

Third International Planetary Dunes Workshop: Remote Sensing and Image Analysis of Planetary Dunes; Flagstaff, Arizona, 12–16 June 2012. This workshop, the third in a biennial series, was convened as a means of bringing together terrestrial and planetary researchers from diverse backgrounds with the goal of fostering collaborative interdisciplinary research. The small-group setting...
Authors
Timothy N. Titus, Rosalyn K. Hayward, Cynthia L. Dinwiddie

Should ground-motion records be rotated to fault-normal/parallel or maximum direction for response history analysis of buildings? Should ground-motion records be rotated to fault-normal/parallel or maximum direction for response history analysis of buildings?

In the United States, regulatory seismic codes (for example, California Building Code) require at least two sets of horizontal ground-motion components for three-dimensional (3D) response history analysis (RHA) of building structures. For sites within 5 kilometers (3.1 miles) of an active fault, these records should be rotated to fault-normal and fault-parallel (FN/FP) directions, and...
Authors
Juan C. Reyes, Erol Kalkan

Earthquake recurrence models fail when earthquakes fail to reset the stress field Earthquake recurrence models fail when earthquakes fail to reset the stress field

Parkfield's regularly occurring M6 mainshocks, about every 25 years, have over two decades stoked seismologists' hopes to successfully predict an earthquake of significant size. However, with the longest known inter-event time of 38 years, the latest M6 in the series (28 Sep 2004) did not conform to any of the applied forecast models, questioning once more the predictability of...
Authors
Thessa Tormann, Stefan Wiemer, Jeanne L. Hardebeck

Analysis of rainfall-induced slope instability using a field of local factor of safety Analysis of rainfall-induced slope instability using a field of local factor of safety

Slope-stability analyses are mostly conducted by identifying or assuming a potential failure surface and assessing the factor of safety (FS) of that surface. This approach of assigning a single FS to a potentially unstable slope provides little insight on where the failure initiates or the ultimate geometry and location of a landslide rupture surface. We describe a method to quantify a...
Authors
Ning Lu, Başak Şener-Kaya, Alexandra Wayllace, Jonathan W. Godt

A terrestrial lidar-based workflow for determining three-dimensional slip vectors and associated uncertainties A terrestrial lidar-based workflow for determining three-dimensional slip vectors and associated uncertainties

Three-dimensional (3D) slip vectors recorded by displaced landforms are difficult to constrain across complex fault zones, and the uncertainties associated with such measurements become increasingly challenging to assess as landforms degrade over time. We approach this problem from a remote sensing perspective by using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS) and 3D structural analysis. We have...
Authors
Peter O. Gold, Eric Cowgill, Oliver Kreylos, Ryan D. Gold

2014 Update of the United States National Seismic Hazard Maps 2014 Update of the United States National Seismic Hazard Maps

The U.S. National Seismic Hazard Maps are revised every six years, corresponding with the update cycle of the International Building Code. These maps cover the conterminous U.S. and will be updated in 2014 using the best-available science that is obtained from colleagues at regional and topical workshops, which are convened in 2012-2013. Maps for Alaska and Hawaii will be updated shortly...
Authors
M.D. Petersen, C.S. Mueller, K. M. Haller, M. Moschetti, S. C. Harmsen, E. H. Field, K.S. Rukstales, Y. Zeng, D. M. Perkins, P. Powers, S. Rezaeian, N. Luco, A. Olsen, R. Williams

INTERMAGNET and magnetic observatories INTERMAGNET and magnetic observatories

A magnetic observatory is a specially designed ground-based facility that supports time-series measurement of the Earth’s magnetic field. Observatory data record a superposition of time-dependent signals related to a fantastic diversity of physical processes in the Earth’s core, mantle, lithosphere, ocean, ionosphere, magnetosphere, and, even, the Sun and solar wind.
Authors
Jeffrey J. Love, Arnaud Chulliat

Comparison of soil thickness in a zero-order basin in the Oregon Coast Range using a soil probe and electrical resistivity tomography Comparison of soil thickness in a zero-order basin in the Oregon Coast Range using a soil probe and electrical resistivity tomography

Accurate estimation of the soil thickness distribution in steepland drainage basins is essential for understanding ecosystem and subsurface response to infiltration. One important aspect of this characterization is assessing the heavy and antecedent rainfall conditions that lead to shallow landsliding. In this paper, we investigate the direct current (DC) resistivity method as a tool for...
Authors
Michael S. Morse, Ning Lu, Jonathan W. Godt, André Revil, Jeffrey A. Coe

Evidence for earthquake triggering of large landslides in coastal Oregon, USA Evidence for earthquake triggering of large landslides in coastal Oregon, USA

Landslides are ubiquitous along the Oregon coast. Many are large, deep slides in sedimentary rock and are dormant or active only during the rainy season. Morphology, observed movement rates, and total movement suggest that many are at least several hundreds of years old. The offshore Cascadia subduction zone produces great earthquakes every 300–500 years that generate tsunami that...
Authors
W.H. Schulz, S.L. Galloway, J.D. Higgins

QuakeCaster, an earthquake physics demonstration and exploration tool QuakeCaster, an earthquake physics demonstration and exploration tool

A fundamental riddle of earthquake occurrence is that tectonic motions at plate interiors are steady, changing only subtly over millions of years, but at plate boundary faults, the plates are stuck for hundreds of years and then suddenly jerk forward in earthquakes. Why does this happen? The answer, as formulated by Harry F. Reid (Reid 1910, 192) is that the Earth’s crust is elastic...
Authors
K. Linton, R.S. Stein

Rootless shield and perched lava pond collapses at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i Rootless shield and perched lava pond collapses at Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i

Effusion rate is a primary measurement used to judge the expected advance rate, length, and hazard potential of lava flows. At basaltic volcanoes, the rapid draining of lava stored in rootless shields and perched ponds can produce lava flows with much higher local effusion rates and advance velocities than would be expected based on the effusion rate at the vent. For several months in...
Authors
Matthew R. Patrick, Tim R. Orr
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