Publications
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Lower crustal deformation beneath the central Transverse Ranges, southern California: Results from the Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment Lower crustal deformation beneath the central Transverse Ranges, southern California: Results from the Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment
We present a P wave velocity model derived from active source seismic data collected during the 1994 Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment. Our model extends previously published upper crustal velocity models to mantle depths. Our model was developed by both ray tracing through a layered model and calculating travel times through a gridded model. It includes an 8-km-thick crustal root...
Authors
N. J. Godfrey, Gary S. Fuis, Victoria E. Langenheim, David A. Okaya, Thomas M. Brocher
Shallow seismic imaging of folds above the Puente Hills blind-thrust fault, Los Angeles, California Shallow seismic imaging of folds above the Puente Hills blind-thrust fault, Los Angeles, California
High-resolution seismic reflection profiles image discrete folds in the shallow subsurface (
Authors
Thomas L. Pratt, John H. Shaw, James F. Dolan, Shari A. Christofferson, Robert Williams, Jack K. Odum, Andreas Plesch
Drowned reefs and antecedent karst topography, Au'au channel, S.E. Hawaiian Islands Drowned reefs and antecedent karst topography, Au'au channel, S.E. Hawaiian Islands
During the last glacial maximum (LGM), about 21,000 years ago, the Hawaiian Islands of Maui, Lanai, and Molokai were interconnected by limestone bridges, creating a super-island known as Maui-Nui. Approximately 120 m of sea-level rise during the Holocene Transgression flooded, and then drowned, these bridges separating the islands by inter-island channels. A new multibeam high-resolution
Authors
R.W. Grigg, E. E. Grossman, S.A. Earle, S.R. Gittings, D. Lott, J. McDonough
Fault structure and kinematics of the Long Valley Caldera region, California, revealed by high-accuracy earthquake hypocenters and focal mechanism stress inversions Fault structure and kinematics of the Long Valley Caldera region, California, revealed by high-accuracy earthquake hypocenters and focal mechanism stress inversions
We have determined high-resolution hypocenters for 45,000+ earthquakes that occurred between 1980 and 2000 in the Long Valley caldera area using a double-difference earthquake location algorithm and routinely determined arrival times. The locations reveal numerous discrete fault planes in the southern caldera and adjacent Sierra Nevada block (SNB). Intracaldera faults include a series of...
Authors
Stephanie G. Prejean, William L. Ellsworth, Mark Zoback, Felix Waldhauser
Geomorphic studies of landslides in the Tully Valley, New York: Implications for public policy and planning Geomorphic studies of landslides in the Tully Valley, New York: Implications for public policy and planning
On April 27, 1993, a large landslide in the Tully Valley, Onondaga County, NY, destroyed three houses and resulted in the evacuation of four others; it also triggered a loss of potable drinking water for about 15 homes north of the slide area and affected a total of 20 ha of land. In the 7 years following this slide, several studies have been conducted by federal and state environmental...
Authors
D. L. Pair, William M. Kappel
Crustal structure of the coastal and marine San Francisco Bay region, California Crustal structure of the coastal and marine San Francisco Bay region, California
As of the time of this writing, the San Francisco Bay region is home to about 6.8 million people, ranking fifth among population centers in the United States. Most of these people live on the coastal lands along San Francisco Bay, the Sacramento River delta, and the Pacific coast. The region straddles the tectonic boundary between the Pacific and North American Plates and is crossed by...
Elevations of water-worn features on Mars: Implications for circulation of groundwater Elevations of water-worn features on Mars: Implications for circulation of groundwater
Central to the model of the evolution of the martian hydrosphere by Clifford and Parker [2001] is a permanent freezing of the planet at the end of the Noachian and recharge of the global groundwater system by basal melting of ice-rich polar deposits. Acquisition of MOLA data by Mars Global Surveyor provides a means of testing the model, since discharge of water onto the surface, after...
Authors
M. H. Carr
Investigating landslides caused by earthquakes - A historical review Investigating landslides caused by earthquakes - A historical review
Post-earthquake field investigations of landslide occurrence have provided a basis for understanding, evaluating, and mapping the hazard and risk associated with earthquake-induced landslides. This paper traces the historical development of knowledge derived from these investigations. Before 1783, historical accounts of the occurrence of landslides in earthquake are typically so...
Authors
D. K. Keefer
The 1999 Izmit, Turkey, earthquake: A 3D dynamic stress transfer model of intraearthquake triggering The 1999 Izmit, Turkey, earthquake: A 3D dynamic stress transfer model of intraearthquake triggering
Before the August 1999 Izmit (Kocaeli), Turkey, earthquake, theoretical studies of earthquake ruptures and geological observations had provided estimates of how far an earthquake might jump to get to a neighboring fault. Both numerical simulations and geological observations suggested that 5 km might be the upper limit if there were no transfer faults. The Izmit earthquake appears to...
Authors
R.A. Harris, J.F. Dolan, R. Hartleb, S.M. Day
Magmatic inflation at a dormant stratovolcano: 1996-1998 activity at Mount Peulik volcano, Alaska, revealed by satellite radar interferometry Magmatic inflation at a dormant stratovolcano: 1996-1998 activity at Mount Peulik volcano, Alaska, revealed by satellite radar interferometry
A series of ERS radar interferograms that collectively span the time interval from July 1992 to August 2000 reveal that a presumed magma body located 6.6 ??? 0.5 km beneath the southwest flank of the Mount Peulik volcano inflated 0.051 ??? 0.005 km3 between October 1996 and September 1998. Peulik has been active only twice during historical time, in 1814 and 1852, and the volcano was...
Authors
Zhong Lu, Charles W. Wicks, Daniel Dzurisin, John A. Power, Seth C. Moran, Wayne R. Thatcher
On the relations between cratonic lithosphere thickness, plate motions, and basal drag On the relations between cratonic lithosphere thickness, plate motions, and basal drag
An overview of seismic, thermal, and petrological evidence on the structure of Precambrian lithosphere suggests that its local maximum thickness is highly variable (140-350 km), with a bimodal distribution for Archean cratons (200-220 km and 300-350 km). We discuss the origin of such large differences in lithospheric thickness, and propose that the lithospheric base can have large depth...
Authors
I.M. Artemieva, Walter D. Mooney
Pockmarks off Big Sur, California Pockmarks off Big Sur, California
A pockmark field was discovered during EM-300 multi-beam bathymetric surveys on the lower continental slope off the Big Sur coast of California. The field contains ??? 1500 pockmarks which are between 130 and 260 m in diameter, and typically are 8-12 m deep located within a 560 km2 area. To investigate the origin of these features, piston cores were collected from both the interior and...
Authors
C. Paull, W. Ussler, N. Maher, H. Gary Greene, G. Rehder, T. Lorenson, H. Lee