Publications
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Documentation for assessment of modal pushover-based scaling procedure for nonlinear response history analysis of "ordinary standard" bridges Documentation for assessment of modal pushover-based scaling procedure for nonlinear response history analysis of "ordinary standard" bridges
The earthquake engineering profession is increasingly utilizing nonlinear response history analyses (RHA) to evaluate seismic performance of existing structures and proposed designs of new structures. One of the main ingredients of nonlinear RHA is a set of ground-motion records representing the expected hazard environment for the structure. When recorded motions do not exist (as is the...
Authors
Erol Kalkan, Neal Kwong
Global earthquake casualties due to secondary effects: A quantitative analysis for improving PAGER losses Global earthquake casualties due to secondary effects: A quantitative analysis for improving PAGER losses
This study presents a quantitative and geospatial description of global losses due to earthquake-induced secondary effects, including landslide, liquefaction, tsunami, and fire for events during the past 40 years. These processes are of great importance to the US Geological Survey’s (USGS) Prompt Assessment of Global Earthquakes for Response (PAGER) system, which is currently being...
Authors
Kristin Marano, David Wald, Trevor Allen
High tsunami frequency as a result of combined strike-slip faulting and coastal landslides High tsunami frequency as a result of combined strike-slip faulting and coastal landslides
Earthquakes on strike-slip faults can produce devastating natural hazards. However, because they consist predominantly of lateral motion, these faults are rarely associated with significant uplift or tsunami generation. And although submarine slides can generate tsunami, only a few per cent of all tsunami are believed to be triggered in this way. The 12 January Mw 7.0 Haiti earthquake...
Authors
Matthew Hornbach, Nicole Braudy, Richard W. Briggs, Marie-Helene Cormier, Marcy Davis, John Diebold, Nicole Dieudonne, Roby Douilly, Cliff Frohlich, Sean Gulick, Harold Johnson, Paul Mann, Cecilia McHugh, Katherine Ryan-Mishkin, Carol Prentice, Leonardo Seeber, Christopher C. Sorlien, Michael Steckler, Steeve Symithe, Frederick Taylor, John Templeton
Decay of aftershock density with distance does not indicate triggering by dynamic stress Decay of aftershock density with distance does not indicate triggering by dynamic stress
Resolving whether static or dynamic stress triggers most aftershocks and subsequent mainshocks is essential to understand earthquake interaction and to forecast seismic hazard. Felzer and Brodsky examined the distance distribution of earthquakes occurring in the first five minutes after 2 ≤ M
Authors
K. Richards-Dinger, R.S. Stein, S. Toda
Normal-faulting slip maxima and stress-drop variability: A geological perspective Normal-faulting slip maxima and stress-drop variability: A geological perspective
We present an empirical estimate of maximum slip in continental normal-faulting earthquakes and present evidence that stress drop in intraplate extensional environments is dependent on fault maturity. A survey of reported slip in historical earthquakes globally and in latest Quaternary paleoearthquakes in the Western Cordillera of the United States indicates maximum vertical...
Authors
Suzanne Hecker, T. Dawson, David Schwartz
OMG earthquake! can twitter improve earthquake response? OMG earthquake! can twitter improve earthquake response?
[No abstract available]
Authors
P. Earle, M. Guy, R. Buckmaster, C. Ostrum, S. Horvath, A. Vaughan
Methane hydrate synthesis from ice: Influence of pressurization and ethanol on optimizing formation rates and hydrate yield Methane hydrate synthesis from ice: Influence of pressurization and ethanol on optimizing formation rates and hydrate yield
Polycrystalline methane gas hydrate (MGH) was synthesized using an ice-seeding method to investigate the influence of pressurization and ethanol on the hydrate formation rate and gas yield of the resulting samples. When the reactor is pressurized with CH4 gas without external heating, methane hydrate can be formed from ice grains with yields up to 25% under otherwise static conditions...
Authors
Po-Chun. Chen, Wuu-Liang Huang, Laura Stern
Seismic hazard mapping of California considering site effects Seismic hazard mapping of California considering site effects
In this paper, we have combined the U.S. Geological Survey's National Seismic Hazard Maps model with the California geologic map showing 17 generalized geologic units that can be defined by their VS30. We regrouped these units into seven VS30 values and calculated a probabilistic seismic hazard map for the entire state for each VS30 value. By merging seismic hazard maps based on the...
Authors
E. Kalkan, C.J. Wills, D.M. Branum
The effect of error in theoretical Earth tide on calibration of borehole strainmeters The effect of error in theoretical Earth tide on calibration of borehole strainmeters
Since the installation of borehole strainmeters into the ground locally distorts the strain in the rock, these strainmeters require calibration from a known source which typically is the Earth tide. Consequently, the accuracy of the observed strain changes from borehole strainmeters depends upon the calibration derived from modeling the Earth tide. Previous work from the mid-1970s, which...
Authors
John Langbein
Low-altitude aerial color digital photographic survey of the San Andreas Fault Low-altitude aerial color digital photographic survey of the San Andreas Fault
Ever since 1858, when Gaspard-Félix Tournachon (pen name Félix Nadar) took the first aerial photograph (Professional Aerial Photographers Association 2009), the scientific value and popular appeal of such pictures have been widely recognized. Indeed, Nadar patented the idea of using aerial photographs in mapmaking and surveying. Since then, aerial imagery has flourished, eventually...
Authors
David Lynch, Kenneth Hudnut, David Dearborn
Introduction to special section on phenomenology, underlying processes, and hazard implications of aseismic slip and nonvolcanic tremor Introduction to special section on phenomenology, underlying processes, and hazard implications of aseismic slip and nonvolcanic tremor
This paper introduces the special section on the "phenomenology, underlying processes, and hazard implications of aseismic slip and nonvolcanic tremor" by highlighting key results of the studies published in it. Many of the results indicate that seismic and aseismic manifestations of slow slip reflect transient shear displacements on the plate interface, with the outstanding exception of...
Authors
Joan Gomberg
Fault zone structure from topography: signatures of en echelon fault slip at Mustang Ridge on the San Andreas Fault, Monterey County, California Fault zone structure from topography: signatures of en echelon fault slip at Mustang Ridge on the San Andreas Fault, Monterey County, California
We used high-resolution topography to quantify the spatial distribution of scarps, linear valleys, topographic sinks, and oversteepened stream channels formed along an extensional step over on the San Andreas Fault (SAF) at Mustang Ridge, California. This location provides detail of both creeping fault landform development and complex fault zone kinematics. Here, the SAF creeps 10–14 mm...
Authors
Stephen DeLong, George Hilley, Michael Rymer, Carol Prentice