Publications
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Accounting for orphaned aftershocks in the earthquake background rate Accounting for orphaned aftershocks in the earthquake background rate
Aftershocks often occur within cascades of triggered seismicity in which each generation of aftershocks triggers an additional generation, and so on. The rate of earthquakes in any particular generation follows Omori's law, going approximately as 1/t. This function decays rapidly, but is heavy-tailed, and aftershock sequences may persist for long times at a rate that is difficult to...
Authors
Nicholas van der Elst
Physical properties of sidewall cores from Decatur, Illinois Physical properties of sidewall cores from Decatur, Illinois
To better assess the reservoir conditions influencing the induced seismicity hazard near a carbon dioxide sequestration demonstration site in Decatur, Ill., core samples from three deep drill holes were tested to determine a suite of physical properties including bulk density, porosity, permeability, Young’s modulus, Poisson’s ratio, and failure strength. Representative samples of the...
Authors
Carolyn A. Morrow, J. Ole Kaven, Diane E. Moore, David A. Lockner
Proceedings of the 11th United States-Japan natural resources panel for earthquake research, Napa Valley, California, November 16–18, 2016 Proceedings of the 11th United States-Japan natural resources panel for earthquake research, Napa Valley, California, November 16–18, 2016
The UJNR Panel on Earthquake Research promotes advanced research toward a more fundamental understanding of the earthquake process and hazard estimation. The Eleventh Joint meeting was extremely beneficial in furthering cooperation and deepening understanding of problems common to both Japan and the United States. The meeting included productive exchanges of information on approaches to...
U.S. Geological Survey experience with the residual absolutes method U.S. Geological Survey experience with the residual absolutes method
The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Geomagnetism Program has developed and tested the residual method of absolutes, with the assistance of the Danish Technical University's (DTU) Geomagnetism Program. Three years of testing were performed at College Magnetic Observatory (CMO), Fairbanks, Alaska, to compare the residual method with the null method. Results show that the two methods compare...
Authors
E. William Worthington, Jurgen Matzka
Recurrent Holocene movement on the Susitna Glacier Thrust Fault: The structure that initiated the Mw 7.9 Denali Fault earthquake, central Alaska Recurrent Holocene movement on the Susitna Glacier Thrust Fault: The structure that initiated the Mw 7.9 Denali Fault earthquake, central Alaska
We conducted a trench investigation and analyzed pre‐ and postearthquake topography to determine the timing and size of prehistoric surface ruptures on the Susitna Glacier fault (SGF), the thrust fault that initiated the 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake sequence in central Alaska. In two of our three hand‐excavated trenches, we found clear evidence for a single pre‐2002 earthquake...
Authors
Stephen Personius, Anthony J. Crone, Patricia A. Burns, Nadine G. Reitman
Shelf evolution along a transpressive transform margin, Santa Barbara Channel, California Shelf evolution along a transpressive transform margin, Santa Barbara Channel, California
High-resolution bathymetric and seismic reflection data provide new insights for understanding the post–Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ca. 21 ka) evolution of the ∼120-km-long Santa Barbara shelf, located within a transpressive segment of the transform continental margin of western North America. The goal is to determine how rising sea level, sediment supply, and tectonics combine to control...
Authors
Samuel Y. Johnson, Stephen Hartwell, Christopher C. Sorlien, Peter Dartnell, Andrew C. Ritchie
FinDer v.2: Improved real-time ground-motion predictions for M2-M9 with seismic finite-source characterization FinDer v.2: Improved real-time ground-motion predictions for M2-M9 with seismic finite-source characterization
Recent studies suggest that small and large earthquakes nucleate similarly, and that they often have indistinguishable seismic waveform onsets. The characterization of earthquakes in real time, such as for earthquake early warning, therefore requires a flexible modeling approach that allows a small earthquake to become large as fault rupture evolves over time. Here, we present a modeling...
Authors
Maren Boese, Deborah Smith, Claude Felizardo, Men-Andrin Meier, Thomas H. Heaton, J.F. Clinton
Influence of pore pressure change on coseismic volumetric strain Influence of pore pressure change on coseismic volumetric strain
Coseismic strain is fundamentally important for understanding crustal response to changes of stress after earthquakes. The elastic dislocation model has been widely applied to interpreting observed shear deformation caused by earthquakes. The application of the same theory to interpreting volumetric strain, however, has met with difficulty, especially in the far field of earthquakes...
Authors
Chi-Yuen Wang, Andrew J. Barbour
A decade of induced slip on the causative fault of the 2015 Mw 4.0 Venus earthquake, northeast Johnson County, Texas A decade of induced slip on the causative fault of the 2015 Mw 4.0 Venus earthquake, northeast Johnson County, Texas
On 7 May 2015, a Mw 4.0 earthquake occurred near Venus, northeast Johnson County, Texas, in an area of the Bend Arch-Fort Worth Basin that reports long-term, high-volume wastewater disposal and that has hosted felt earthquakes since 2009. In the weeks following the Mw 4.0 earthquake, we deployed a local seismic network and purchased nearby active-source seismic reflection data to capture
Authors
Monique M. Scales, Heather R. DeShon, M. Beatrice Magnani, Jacob I. Walter, Louis Quinones, Thomas L. Pratt, Matthew J. Hornbach
The effects of snow and salt on ice table stability in University Valley, Antarctica The effects of snow and salt on ice table stability in University Valley, Antarctica
The Antarctic Dry Valleys represent a unique environment where it is possible to study dry permafrost overlaying an ice-rich permafrost. In this paper, two opposing mechanisms for ice table stability in University Valley are addressed: i) diffusive recharge via thin seasonal snow deposits and ii) desiccation via salt deposits in the upper soil column. A high-resolution time-marching soil...
Authors
Kaj E. Williams, Jennifer L. Heldmann, Christopher P. McKay, Michael T. Mellon
Source spectral properties of small-to-moderate earthquakes in southern Kansas Source spectral properties of small-to-moderate earthquakes in southern Kansas
The source spectral properties of injection-induced earthquakes give insight into their nucleation, rupture processes, and influence on ground motion. Here we apply a spectral decomposition approach to analyze P-wave spectra and estimate Brune-type stress drop for more than 2000 ML1.5–5.2 earthquakes occurring in southern Kansas from 2014 to 2016. We find that these earthquakes are...
Authors
Daniel T. Trugman, Sara L. Dougherty, Elizabeth S. Cochran, Peter M. Shearer
Seismic response of soft deposits due to landslide: The Mission Peak, California, landslide Seismic response of soft deposits due to landslide: The Mission Peak, California, landslide
The seismic response of active and intermittently active landslides is an important issue to resolve to determine if such landslides present an elevated hazard in future earthquakes. To study the response of landslide deposits, seismographs were placed on the Mission Peak landslide in the eastern San Francisco Bay region for a period of one year. Numerous local and near‐regional...
Authors
Stephen H. Hartzell, Alena L. Leeds, Randall W. Jibson