Publications
Filter Total Items: 7487
Did they feel it? Legacy maroseismic data illuminates an engimatic 20th century earthquake Did they feel it? Legacy maroseismic data illuminates an engimatic 20th century earthquake
The challenges and the importance of preserving legacy instrumental records of earthquakes are now well-recognized (e.g., Richards & Hellweg, 2020, https://doi.org/10.1785/0220200053). Seismologists may not be aware of parallel challenges and opportunities with legacy macroseismic data for earthquakes in the United States. For much of the 20th century, macroseismic data were collected by...
Authors
Susan E. Hough, Lori Dengler, Robert McPherson, Lijam Hagos, Margaret Hellweg
Induced earthquakes are generally not tidally triggered in Oklahoma and Kansas Induced earthquakes are generally not tidally triggered in Oklahoma and Kansas
Human-induced earthquakes occur along critically stressed faults as injected wastewater simultaneously heightens fluid pressure and pushes faults to failure. We investigate the possibility that small stresses imposed by Earth tides could trigger earthquakes in the induced seismicity region of Oklahoma and Kansas from 2011 to 2018. We decluster a catalog consisting of ∼110,000 earthquakes...
Authors
Margaret Elizabeth Glasgow, Justin Rubinstein, Jeanne L. Hardebeck
Python Hyperspectral Analysis Tool (PyHAT) user guide Python Hyperspectral Analysis Tool (PyHAT) user guide
This report is a user guide for the 0.1.2 release of the Python Hyperspectral Analysis Tool (PyHAT) and its graphical user interface (GUI). The GUI is intended to provide an intuitive front end to allow users to apply sophisticated preprocessing and analysis methods to spectroscopic data. Though the PyHAT package has been developed with a particular focus on laser-induced breakdown...
Authors
Ryan B. Anderson, Itiya P. Aneece, Travis S.J. Gabriel
Near-surface material and topography generate anomalous high-frequency ground motion amplification in Chugiak, Alaska Near-surface material and topography generate anomalous high-frequency ground motion amplification in Chugiak, Alaska
An ∼3 km long nodal array oriented approximately east–west was deployed in Chugiak, Alaska, by the U.S. Geological Survey during 2021. The array intersects with the permanent NetQuakes station NP.ARTY, where peak ground acceleration (PGA) value of 1.98g was recorded during the 2018 Mw 7.1 Anchorage, Alaska, earthquake, in sharp contrast to the PGA of ∼0.3g at a site just 4 km to the west...
Authors
Te-Yang Yeh, Kim B. Olsen, Jamison Haase Steidl, Peter J. Haeussler
Revisiting an enigma on California's north coast: The Mw6.5 Fickle Hill earthquake of 21 December 1954 Revisiting an enigma on California's north coast: The Mw6.5 Fickle Hill earthquake of 21 December 1954
Many earthquakes occur along the North Coast of California in the vicinity of the Mendocino Triple Junction (MTJ), where the Pacific, Gorda, and North American (NA) plates meet, and on the adjacent plate boundaries. The MTJ marks the nexus of the Mendocino and San Andreas faults with the Cascadia subduction zone (CSZ). Historically, most large earthquakes around the MTJ have been within...
Authors
Margaret Hellweg, Thomas A. Lee, Douglas S. Dreger, Anthony Lomax, Lijam Hagos, Hamid Haddabi, Robert C. McPherson, Lori Dengler, Susan E. Hough, Jason R. Patton
Magnitude, depth and methodological variations of spectral stress drop within the SCEC/USGS Community Stress Drop Validation Study using the 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence Magnitude, depth and methodological variations of spectral stress drop within the SCEC/USGS Community Stress Drop Validation Study using the 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence
We present the first ensemble analysis of the 56 different sets of results submitted to the ongoing Community Stress Drop Validation Study using the 2019 Ridgecrest, California, earthquake sequence. Different assumptions and methods result in different estimation of the source contribution to recorded seismograms, and hence to the source parameters (principally corner frequency, fc...
Authors
Rachel E. Abercrombie, Annemarie S. Baltay Sundstrom
Astronomical optical interferometry from the lunar surface: High sensitivity at sub-miliarcsecond scales Astronomical optical interferometry from the lunar surface: High sensitivity at sub-miliarcsecond scales
The lunar surface is a compelling opportunity for large, distributed optical facilities, with significant advantages over orbital facilities for high spatial resolution astrophysics. Serious development of mission concepts is timely because of the confluence of multiple compelling factors. First, lunar access technology is maturing rapidly, in the form of both US uncrewed and crewed...
Authors
G. T. van Belle, T. Boyajian, M. Creech-Eakman, J. Elliott, K. Ennico-Smith, D. Hillsberry, K. Hubbard, T. Ito, S. R. Kulkarni, C. Langford, L. Lee, D. Leisawitz, E. Mamajek, May Martin, T. Matsuo, D. Mawet, J. Monnier, J. Morse, D. Mozurkewich, P. Niles, M. Panning, Lori M. Pigue, A. Sanghi, G. Schaefer, J. Scott, S. B. Shaklan, L. Spencer, A. Tohuvavohu, P. Tuthill, K. Valenta, J. Wachs
Reflections on a trio of North American earthquakes in 1925 Reflections on a trio of North American earthquakes in 1925
In 1925, three moderately large damaging earthquakes occurred in North America over four months: the 28 February (local time; LT) M 6.2 Charlevoix, 27 June (LT) M 6.6 Montana, and 29 June M 6.5 Santa Barbara earthquakes. The centennial anniversaries of these events motivated this retrospective consideration focused on the ground motions generated by the three events, including a...
Authors
Susan E. Hough, Maurice Lamontagne, John E. Ebel, L. Baise
The pre-maria geologic history of the Imbrium basin preserved by remnant highlands massifs The pre-maria geologic history of the Imbrium basin preserved by remnant highlands massifs
The Imbrium basin is one of the largest and youngest impact basins on the Moon. It has experienced multiple phases of volcanism that filled the basin with basaltic lavas, obscuring most evidence of geologic activity prior to the emplacement of mare basalts. Elevated basin ring massifs, however, can retain some of that history due to their higher topographic elevation compared to the...
Authors
Ben D. Byron, Catherine M. Elder, Lori M. Pigue, Jean-Pierre Williams
Rupture process of the Mw7.0 December 5, 2024 Offshore Cape Mendocino earthquake Rupture process of the Mw7.0 December 5, 2024 Offshore Cape Mendocino earthquake
The Mw7.0 December 5, 2024 Offshore Cape Mendocino earthquake ruptured a km long portion of the east-west trending Mendocino fault zone (MFZ). In order to clarify the rupture process, we assemble three-component seismograms from regional seismic stations, horizontal coseismic displacement vectors derived from Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) time series, and a Sentinel-1...
Authors
Frederick Pollitz, Katherine Anna Guns, Clara Yoon
Evidence for fluid pressurization of fault zones and persistent sensitivity to injection rate beneath the Raton Basin Evidence for fluid pressurization of fault zones and persistent sensitivity to injection rate beneath the Raton Basin
Subsurface wastewater injection has increased the seismicity rate within the Raton Basin over more than two decades, with the basin-wide injection rate peaked between 2009-2015. To understand the evolution of injection-induced earthquakes, we systematically analyzed 2016-2024 broadband recordings with a machine-learning-based phase picker and constructed a catalog with 95,993 earthquakes...
Authors
Mohammadreza Jamalreyhani, Ruijia Wang, Brandon Schmandt, Andres Felipe Peña Castro, Margaret Elizabeth Glasgow
A newly identified creeping strand of the Concord fault, San Francisco Bay Area A newly identified creeping strand of the Concord fault, San Francisco Bay Area
The Concord fault constitutes a major branch of the Pacific–North America transform plate boundary in Northern California, bridging the strike‐slip Bartlett Springs ‐ Green Valley Fault system to the north with the Greenville and Calaveras Faults to the south. Like many faults in the San Francisco Bay Area its long‐term slip is partially accommodated by aseismic slip (creep). Although...
Authors
Austin John Elliott, Danielle Madugo, Jessica Vermeer