Publications
Filter Total Items: 2782
Aftershocks of the 2014 South Napa, California, Earthquake: Complex faulting on secondary faults Aftershocks of the 2014 South Napa, California, Earthquake: Complex faulting on secondary faults
We investigate the aftershock sequence of the 2014 MW6.0 South Napa, California, earthquake. Low-magnitude aftershocks missing from the network catalog are detected by applying a matched-filter approach to continuous seismic data, with the catalog earthquakes serving as the waveform templates. We measure precise differential arrival times between events, which we use for double...
Authors
Jeanne Hardebeck, David Shelly
An automatic P‐Phase arrival‐time picker An automatic P‐Phase arrival‐time picker
Presented is a new approach for picking P‐phase arrival time in single‐component acceleration or broadband velocity records without requiring detection interval or threshold settings. The algorithm PPHASEPICKER transforms the signal into a response domain of a single‐degree‐of‐freedom (SDOF) oscillator with viscous damping and then tracks the rate of change of dissipated damping energy...
Authors
Erol Kalkan
Demonstration of the Cascadia G‐FAST geodetic earthquake early warning system for the Nisqually, Washington, earthquake Demonstration of the Cascadia G‐FAST geodetic earthquake early warning system for the Nisqually, Washington, earthquake
A prototype earthquake early warning (EEW) system is currently in development in the Pacific Northwest. We have taken a two‐stage approach to EEW: (1) detection and initial characterization using strong‐motion data with the Earthquake Alarm Systems (ElarmS) seismic early warning package and (2) the triggering of geodetic modeling modules using Global Navigation Satellite Systems data...
Authors
Brendan Crowell, David Schmidt, Paul Bodin, John Vidale, Joan Gomberg, J. Hartog, Victor Kress, Tim Melbourne, Marcelo Santillian, Sarah Minson, Dylan Jamison
Money matters: Rapid post-earthquake financial decision-making Money matters: Rapid post-earthquake financial decision-making
Post-earthquake financial decision-making is a realm beyond that of many people. In the immediate aftermath of a damaging earthquake, billions of dollars of relief, recovery, and insurance funds are in the balance through new financial instruments that allow those with resources to hedge against disasters and those at risk to limit their earthquake losses and receive funds for response...
Authors
David Wald, Guillermo Franco
Earthquake outlook for the San Francisco Bay region 2014–2043 Earthquake outlook for the San Francisco Bay region 2014–2043
Using information from recent earthquakes, improved mapping of active faults, and a new model for estimating earthquake probabilities, the 2014 Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities updated the 30-year earthquake forecast for California. They concluded that there is a 72 percent probability (or likelihood) of at least one earthquake of magnitude 6.7 or greater striking...
Authors
Brad Aagaard, J. Blair, John Boatwright, Susan H. Garcia, Ruth Harris, Andrew Michael, David Schwartz, Jeanne DiLeo
The Elizabeth Lake paleoseismic site: Rupture pattern constraints for the past ~800 years for the Mojave section of the south-central San Andreas Fault The Elizabeth Lake paleoseismic site: Rupture pattern constraints for the past ~800 years for the Mojave section of the south-central San Andreas Fault
The southern San Andreas Fault in California has hosted two historic surface-rupturing earthquakes, the ~M7 1812 Wrightwood earthquake and the ~M7.9 1857 Fort Tejon earthquake (e.g., Sieh, 1978; Jacoby et al., 1988). Numerous paleoseismic studies have established chronologies of historic and prehistoric earthquakes at sites along the full length of the 1857 rupture (e.g., Sieh, 1978...
Authors
Sean Bemis, Katherine Scharer, James Dolan, Ed Rhodes
Field survey of earthquake effects from the magnitude 4.0 southern Maine earthquake of October 16, 2012 Field survey of earthquake effects from the magnitude 4.0 southern Maine earthquake of October 16, 2012
The magnitude 4.0 earthquake that occurred on October 16, 2012, near Hollis Center and Waterboro in southwestern Maine surprised and startled local residents but caused only minor damage. A two-person U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) team was sent to Maine to conduct an intensity survey and document the damage. The only damage we observed was the failure of a chimney and plaster cracks in...
Authors
Amy Radakovich, Alex Fergusen, John Boatwright
A fault-based model for crustal deformation, fault slip-rates and off-fault strain rate in California A fault-based model for crustal deformation, fault slip-rates and off-fault strain rate in California
We invert Global Positioning System (GPS) velocity data to estimate fault slip rates in California using a fault‐based crustal deformation model with geologic constraints. The model assumes buried elastic dislocations across the region using Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast Version 3 (UCERF3) fault geometries. New GPS velocity and geologic slip‐rate data were compiled by...
Authors
Yuehua Zeng, Zheng-Kang Shen
Building a subduction zone observatory Building a subduction zone observatory
Subduction zones contain many of Earth’s most remarkable geologic structures, from the deepest oceanic trenches to glacier-covered mountains and steaming volcanoes. These environments formed through spectacular events: Nature’s largest earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions are born here.
Authors
Joan Gomberg, Paul Bodin, Jody Bourgeois, Susan Cashman, Darrel Cowan, Kenneth Creager, Brendan Crowell, Alison Duvall, Arthur Frankel, Frank Gonzalez, Heidi Houston, Paul Johnson, Harvey Kelsey, Una Miller, Emily C. Roland, David Schmidt, Lydia Staisch, John Vidale, William Wilcock, Erin Wirth
Differences in coastal subsidence in southern Oregon (USA) during at least six prehistoric megathrust earthquakes Differences in coastal subsidence in southern Oregon (USA) during at least six prehistoric megathrust earthquakes
Stratigraphic, sedimentologic (including CT 3D X-ray tomography scans), foraminiferal, and radiocarbon analyses show that at least six of seven abrupt peat-to-mud contacts in cores from a tidal marsh at Talbot Creek (South Slough, Coos Bay), record sudden subsidence (relative sea-level rise) during great megathrust earthquakes at the Cascadia subduction zone. Data for one contact are...
Authors
Yvonne Milker, Alan Nelson, Benjamin Horton, Simon Engelhart, Lee-Ann Bradley, Robert C. Witter
Lithospheric flexure under the Hawaiian volcanic load: Internal stresses and a broken plate revealed by earthquakes Lithospheric flexure under the Hawaiian volcanic load: Internal stresses and a broken plate revealed by earthquakes
Several lines of earthquake evidence indicate that the lithospheric plate is broken under the load of the island of Hawai`i, where the geometry of the lithosphere is circular with a central depression. The plate bends concave downward surrounding a stress-free hole, rather than bending concave upward as with past assumptions. Earthquake focal mechanisms show that the center of load...
Authors
Fred Klein
A study of the 2015 Mw 8.3 Illapel earthquake and tsunami: Numerical and analytical approaches A study of the 2015 Mw 8.3 Illapel earthquake and tsunami: Numerical and analytical approaches
The September 16, 2015 Illapel, Chile earthquake triggered a large tsunami, causing both economic losses and fatalities. To study the coastal effects of this earthquake, and to understand how such hazards might be accurately modeled in the future, different finite fault models of the Illapel rupture are used to define the initial condition for tsunami simulation. The numerical code Non...
Authors
Mauricio Fuentes, Sebastian Riquelme, Gavin Hayes, Miguel Medina, Diego Melgar, Gabriel Vargas, Jose Gonzalez, Angelo Villalobos