Publications
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Inferring earthquake source properties from laboratory observations and the scope of lab contributions to source physics
No abstract available.
Authors
Nicholas M. Beeler
The San Andreas fault in Sonoma and Mendocino counties
This two-day trip explores the northern San Andreas fault in the Gualala area between Fort Ross and Point Arena (Fig. 1). The first stop overlooks the Golden Gate Bridge and includes a discussion of its in-progress seismic retrofit. Several subsequent stops are at paleoseismic sites on the San Andreas fault. The stop at Annapolis Road includes a short hike along the fault through the redwood fores
Authors
Carol S. Prentice, Keith I. Kelson
Source scaling telationships of microearthquakes at Parkfield, CA, determined using the SAFOD pilot hole seismic array
Weestimate thesourceparametersof34microearthquakes at Parkfield,CA,ranginginsizefromM-0.2 toM2.1, byanalyzingseismogramsrecorded bythe32-level, 3-componentseismic arrayinstalled in theSAFODPilotHole. Wesucceeded in obtainingstablespectral ratios by stacking theratioscalculatedfromthemovingwindowstakenalongtherecordfollowingthedirectwaves.Thesespectral ratios were modeledtodetermine seismicmoments
Authors
Kazutoshi Imanishi, William L. Ellsworth
Earthquake Trail, Sanborn County Park: A geology hike along the San Andreas fault
On the southern part of the San Francisco Peninsula, the San Andreas fault traverses the actively uplifting Santa Cruz Mountains. The field guide is comprised of a hiking tour along the fault in Sanborn County fault, a visit to a winery and vineyards traversed by the fault, and visits to two wineries that provide vistas of the San Andreas Rift Valley and surroundings.
Authors
Philip W. Stoffer
Continuous borehole strain and pore pressure in the near field of the 28 September 2004 M 6.0 Parkfield, California, earthquake: Implications for nucleation, fault response, earthquake prediction and tremor
Near-field observations of high-precision borehole strain and pore pressure, show no indication of coherent accelerating strain or pore pressure during the weeks to seconds before the 28 September 2004 M 6.0 Parkfield earthquake. Minor changes in strain rate did occur at a few sites during the last 24 hr before the earthquake but these changes are neither significant nor have the form expected for
Authors
M.J.S. Johnston, R. D. Borcherdt, A. T. Linde, M. T. Gladwin
Recordings of the 2004 Parkfield earthquake on the General Earthquake Observation System array: Implications for earthquake precursors, fault rupture, and coseismic strain changes
The 2004 Parkfield earthquake generated a unique set of near-field, high-resolution colocated measurements of acceleration, volumetric strain, and velocity at 11 stations in the General Earthquake Observation System (geos) array. The recordings indicate no precursory strain or displacement was discernable at sensitivities of 10−11 strain and 5 × 10−8 m 25 sec prior to the earthquake at distances o
Authors
R. D. Borcherdt, M.J.S. Johnston, G. Glassmoyer, C. Dietel
Explosion source strong ground motions in the Mississippi embayment
Two strong-motion arrays were deployed for the October 2002 Embayment Seismic Excitation Experiment to study the spatial variation of strong ground motions in the deep, unconsolidated sediments of the Mississippi embayment because there are no comparable strong-motion data from natural earthquakes in the area. Each linear array consisted of eight three-component K2 accelerographs spaced 15 m apart
Authors
C.A. Langston, P. Bodin, C. Powell, M. Withers, S. Horton, Walter D. Mooney
Seismic characteristics of central Brazil crust and upper mantle: A deep seismic refraction study
[1] A two‐dimensional model of the Brazilian central crust and upper mantle was obtained from the traveltime interpretation of deep seismic refraction data from the Porangatu and Cavalcante lines, each approximately 300 km long. When the lines were deployed, they overlapped by 50 km, forming an E‐W transect approximately 530 km long across the Tocantins Province and western São Francisco Craton. T
Authors
J.E. Soares, J. Berrocal, R.A. Fuck, Thomas Mooney, D.B.R. Ventura
Crustal structure across the Altyn Tagh Range at the northern margin of the Tibetan Plateau and tectonic implications
We present new seismic refraction/wide-angle-reflection data across the Altyn Tagh Range and its adjacent basins. We find that the crustal velocity structure, and by inference, the composition of the crust changes abruptly beneath the Cherchen fault, i.e., ∼100 km north of the northern margin of the Tibetan plateau. North of the Cherchen fault, beneath the Tarim basin, a platform-type crust is evi
Authors
J. Zhao, Walter D. Mooney, X. Zhang, Z. Li, Z. Jin, N. Okaya
Crustal structure of the northeastern margin of the Tibetan plateau from the Songpan-Ganzi terrane to the Ordos basin
The 1000-km-long Darlag–Lanzhou–Jingbian seismic refraction profile is located in the NE margin of the Tibetan plateau. This profile crosses the northern Songpan-Ganzi terrane, the Qinling-Qilian fold system, the Haiyuan arcuate tectonic region, and the stable Ordos basin. The P-wave and S-wave velocity structure and Poisson's ratios reveal many significant characteristics in the profile. The crus
Authors
M. Liu, Walter D. Mooney, S. Li, N. Okaya, Shane T. Detweiler
Simulation of active tectonic processes for a convecting mantle with moving continents
Numerical models are presented that simulate several active tectonic processes. These models include a continent that is thermally and mechanically coupled with viscous mantle flow. The assumption of rigid continents allows use of solid body equations to describe the continents' motion and to calculate their velocities. The starting point is a quasi-steady state model of mantle convection with tem
Authors
V. Trubitsyn, M. Kaban, Walter D. Mooney, C. Reigber, P. Schwintzer
Crustal structure and tectonics of the northern part of the Southern Granulite Terrane, India
Deep seismic reflection studies investigating the exposed Archean lower continental crust of the Southern Granulite Terrane, India, yield important constraints on the nature and evolution of the deep crust, including the formation and exhumation of granulites. Seismic reflection images along the Kuppam–Bhavani profile reveal a band of reflections that dip southward from 10.5 to 15.0 s two-way-time
Authors
V.V. Rao, K. Sain, P.R. Reddy, Walter D. Mooney