Publications
Filter Total Items: 7494
How the continents deform: The evidence from tectonic geodesy How the continents deform: The evidence from tectonic geodesy
Space geodesy now provides quantitative maps of the surface velocity field within tectonically active regions, supplying constraints on the spatial distribution of deformation, the forces that drive it, and the brittle and ductile properties of continental lithosphere. Deformation is usefully described as relative motions among elastic blocks and is block-like because major faults are...
Authors
Wayne R. Thatcher
The July-August 2008 hydrovolcanic eruption of Okmok Volcano, Umnak Island, Alaska The July-August 2008 hydrovolcanic eruption of Okmok Volcano, Umnak Island, Alaska
No abstract available
Authors
Christina A. Neal, Jessica F. Larsen, Janet Schaefer
Assessment of the UV camera sulfur dioxide retrieval for point source plumes Assessment of the UV camera sulfur dioxide retrieval for point source plumes
Digital cameras, sensitive to specific regions of the ultra-violet (UV) spectrum, have been employed for quantifying sulfur dioxide (SO2) emissions in recent years. The instruments make use of the selective absorption of UV light by SO2 molecules to determine pathlength concentration. Many monitoring advantages are gained by using this technique, but the accuracy and limitations have not...
Authors
M.P. Dalton, I.M. Watson, P.A. Nadeau, C. Werner, W. Morrow, J.M. Shannon
Ice and water on Newberry Volcano, central Oregon Ice and water on Newberry Volcano, central Oregon
Newberry Volcano in central Oregon is dry over much of its vast area, except for the lakes in the caldera and the single creek that drains them. Despite the lack of obvious glacial striations and well-formed glacial moraines, evidence indicates that Newberry was glaciated. Meter-sized foreign blocks, commonly with smoothed shapes, are found on cinder cones as far as 7 km from the caldera...
Authors
Julie M. Donnelly-Nolan, Robert A. Jensen
Martian mud volcanism: Terrestrial analogs and implications for formational scenarios Martian mud volcanism: Terrestrial analogs and implications for formational scenarios
The geology of Mars and the stratigraphic characteristics of its uppermost crust (mega-regolith) suggest that some of the pervasively-occurring pitted cones, mounds, and flows may have formed through processes akin to terrestrial mud volcanism. A comparison of terrestrial mud volcanism suggests that equivalent Martian processes likely required discrete sedimentary depocenters, volatile...
Authors
James A. Skinner, A. Mazzini
Uplift and magma intrusion at Long Valley caldera from InSAR and gravity measurements Uplift and magma intrusion at Long Valley caldera from InSAR and gravity measurements
The Long Valley caldera (California) formed ~760,000 yr ago following the massive eruption of the Bishop Tuff. Postcaldera volcanism in the Long Valley volcanic field includes lava domes as young as 650 yr. The recent geological unrest is characterized by uplift of the resurgent dome in the central section of the caldera (75 cm in the past 33 yr) and earthquake activity followed by...
Authors
Pietro Tizzani, Maurizio Battaglia, Giovanni Zeni, Simone Atzori, Paolo Berardino, Riccardo Lanari
Reassessment of probabilistic seismic hazard in the Marmara region Reassessment of probabilistic seismic hazard in the Marmara region
In 1999, the eastern coastline of the Marmara region (Turkey) witnessed increased seismic activity on the North Anatolian fault (NAF) system with two damaging earthquakes (M 7.4 Kocaeli and M 7.2 D??zce) that occurred almost three months apart. These events have reduced stress on the western segment of the NAF where it continues under the Marmara Sea. The undersea fault segments have...
Authors
Erol Kalkan, Polat Gulkan, Nazan Yilmaz, Mehmet Çelebi
Along-Arc and Back-Arc Attenuation, Site Response, and Source Spectrum for the Intermediate-Depth 8 January 2006 M 6.7 Kythera, Greece, Earthquake Along-Arc and Back-Arc Attenuation, Site Response, and Source Spectrum for the Intermediate-Depth 8 January 2006 M 6.7 Kythera, Greece, Earthquake
An M 6.7 intermediate-depth (66 km), in-slab earthquake occurring near the island of Kythera in Greece on 8 January 2006 was well recorded on networks of stations equipped with acceleration sensors and with broadband velocity sensors. All data were recorded digitally using recording instruments with resolutions ranging from almost 11 to 24 bits. We use data from these networks to study...
Authors
David M. Boore, A.A. Skarlatoudis, B.N. Margaris, B.P. Costas, C. Ventouzi
Morphology of late Quaternary submarine landslides along the U.S. Atlantic continental margin Morphology of late Quaternary submarine landslides along the U.S. Atlantic continental margin
The nearly complete coverage of the U.S. Atlantic continental slope and rise by multibeam bathymetry and backscatter imagery provides an opportunity to reevaluate the distribution of submarine landslides along the margin and reassess the controls on their formation. Landslides can be divided into two categories based on their source areas: those sourced in submarine canyons and those...
Authors
D.C. Twichell, J.D. Chaytor, Uri S. ten Brink, B. Buczkowski
Postshield stage transitional volcanism on Mahukona Volcano, Hawaii Postshield stage transitional volcanism on Mahukona Volcano, Hawaii
Age spectra from 40Ar/39Ar incremental heating experiments yield ages of 298 ± 25ka and 310 ± 31ka for transitional composition lavas from two cones on submarine Mahukona Volcano, Hawaii. These ages are younger than the inferred end of the tholeiitic shield stage and indicate that the volcano had entered the postshield alkalic stage before going extinct. Previously reported elevated...
Authors
D.A. Clague, A.T. Calvert
Geomorphology, stability and mobility of the Currituck slide Geomorphology, stability and mobility of the Currituck slide
Over the last 100,000??years, the U.S. Atlantic continental margin has experienced various types of mass movements some of which are believed to have taken place at times of low sea level. At one of these times of low sea level a significant trigger caused a major submarine mass movement off the coast of Virginia: the Currituck slide which is believed to have taken place between 24 and...
Authors
J. Locat, H. Lee, Uri S. ten Brink, D. Twichell, E. Geist, M. Sansoucy
Premonitory acoustic emissions and stick-slip in natural and smooth-faulted Westerly granite Premonitory acoustic emissions and stick-slip in natural and smooth-faulted Westerly granite
A stick-slip event was induced in a cylindrical sample of Westerly granite containing a preexisting natural fault by loading at constant confining pressure of 150 MPa. Continuously recorded acoustic emission (AE) data and computer tomography (CT)-generated images of the fault plane were combined to provide a detailed examination of microscale processes operating on the fault. The dynamic...
Authors
B.D. Thompson, R.P. Young, David A. Lockner