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Earthquake hazard in the heart of the homeland

Evidence that earthquakes threaten the Mississippi, Ohio, and Wabash River valleys of the Central United States abounds. In fact, several of the largest historical earthquakes to strike the continental United States occurred in the winter of 1811-1812 along the New Madrid seismic zone, which stretches from just west of Memphis, Tenn., into southern Illinois. Several times in the past century, mode
Authors
Joan Gomberg, Eugene Schweig

Writing on the walls: Geological context and early American spiritual beliefs

Native American culture in many parts of California is preserved in fragmentary oral and conventional written histories, but also in sometimes dramatic petroglyphs and pictographs throughout the state. The symbolism of these images has been interpreted to reflect the natural environment, in particular issues related to rain. Although there is little doubt that rain was of paramount concern to nati
Authors
S. E. Hough

Behavior of tunnel form buildings under quasi-static cyclic lateral loading

In this paper, experimental investigations on the inelastic seismic behavior of tunnel form buildings (i.e., box-type or panel systems) are presented. Two four-story scaled building specimens were tested under quasi-static cyclic lateral loading in longitudinal and transverse directions. The experimental results and supplemental finite element simulations collectively indicate that lightly reinfor
Authors
S.B. Yuksel, E. Kalkan

Remotely triggered earthquakes following moderate main shocks

Since 1992, remotely triggered earthquakes have been identified following large (M > 7) earthquakes in California as well as in other regions. These events, which occur at much greater distances than classic aftershocks, occur predominantly in active geothermal or volcanic regions, leading to theories that the earthquakes are triggered when passing seismic waves cause disruptions in magmatic or ot
Authors
Susan E. Hough

A three-dimensional geophysical model of the crust in the Barents Sea region: Model construction and basement characterization

BARENTS50, a new 3-D geophysical model of the crust in the Barents Sea Region has been developed by the University of Oslo, NORSAR and the U.S. Geological Survey. The target region comprises northern Norway and Finland, parts of the Kola Peninsula and the East European lowlands. Novaya Zemlya, the Kara Sea and Franz-Josef Land terminate the region to the east, while the Norwegian-Greenland Sea mar
Authors
O. Ritzmann, N. Maercklin, Faleide J. Inge, H. Bungum, Walter D. Mooney, Shane T. Detweiler

Seismic-reflection images of the crust beneath the 2001 M = 7.7 Kutch (Bhuj) epicentral region, western India

Three short (∼35 km) seismic-reflection profiles are presented from the region of the 2001 Mw = 7.7 Bhuj (western India) earthquake. These profiles image a 35–45-km-thick crust with strong, near-horizontal reflections at all depths. The thickness of the crust increases by 10 km over a distance of ∼50 km from the northern margin of the Gulf of Kutch to the earthquake epicenter. Aftershocks of the B
Authors
Dipankar Sarkar, K. Sain, P.R. Reddy, Rufus D. Catchings, Walter D. Mooney

Two lithospheric profiles across southern California derived from gravity and seismic data

We present two detailed 2-D density transects for the crust and uppermost mantle across southern California using a linear gravity inversion technique. This technique parameterizes the crust and upper mantle as a set of blocks that are based on published geologic and seismic models. Each block can have a range of densities that are constrained where possible by borehole measurements, seismic veloc
Authors
T. Romanyuk, Walter D. Mooney, Shane T. Detweiler

The 17 July 2006 Tsunami earthquake in West Java, Indonesia

A tsunami earthquake (Mw = 7.7) occurred south of Java on 17 July 2006. The event produced relatively low levels of high-frequency radiation, and local felt reports indicated only weak shaking in Java. There was no ground motion damage from the earthquake, but there was extensive damage and loss of life from the tsunami along 250 km of the southern coasts of West Java and Central Java. An inspecti
Authors
J. Mori, Walter D. Mooney, Afnimar, S. Kurniawan, A.I. Anaya, S. Widiyantoro

Integrated geologic and geophysical studies of North American continental intraplate seismicity

The origin of earthquakes within stable continental regions has been the subject of debate over the past thirty years. Here, we examine the correlation of North American stable continental region earthquakes using five geologic and geophysical data sets: (1) a newly compiled age-province map; (2) Bouguer gravity data; (3) aeromagnetic anomalies; (4) the tectonic stress field; and (5) crustal struc
Authors
X. Van Lanen, Walter D. Mooney

Liquemap: A real-time post-earthquake map of liquefaction probability

No abstract available.
Authors
Michael J. Bennett, Luke Blair, Thomas L. Holzer, Thomas E. Noce