Publications
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Taking the Earth's pulse
During the past 35 years, scientists have developed a vast network of seismometers that record earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, and nuclear explosions throughout the world. Seismographic data support disaster response, scientific research, and global security. With this network, the United States maintains world leadership in monitoring the greatest natural and technological events that threaten o
Authors
Robert L. Woodward, Harly M. Benz, William M. Brown
Executive summary of vision and options for the future of the US National Strong-Motion Program
These reports are presented in response to a charge of the Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (EHRP) Program Council of the U.S. Geological Survey to 'define the future of the USGS National Strong-Motion Program (NSMP)' (Appendix A). The council requested that a 'Vision Paper' and an 'Options Document' be prepared. Each of these reports is a separate document. The 'Executive Summary' of both rep
Authors
Options for the Future of the US National Strong-Motion Program
This report constitutes the requested 'Options Document'. This report considers three options. Option I assumes a constant level of financial support for Operating Expenses (OE) with not additional personnel support. Option II assumes a slight increase in OE support of $150K for FY 99 and beyond. Option III considers the role that a NSMP must play if the nation's urgent need to record the main ear
Authors
Vision for the future of the US National Strong-Motion Program
This document provides the requested vision for the future of the National Strong-Motion Program operated by the US Geological Survey. Options for operation of the program are presented in a companion document.
Each of the three major charges of the EHRP, program council pertaining to the vision document is addressed here. The 'Vision Summary' through a series of answers to specific questions
Authors
Crustal structure along the west flank of the Cascades, western Washington
Knowledge of the crustal structure of the Washington Cascades and adjacent Puget Lowland is important to both earthquake hazards studies and geologic studies of the evolution of this tectonically active region. We present a model for crustal velocity structure derived from analysis of seismic refraction/wide-angle reflection data collected in 1991 in western Washington. The 280-km-long north-south
Authors
K.C. Miller, Gordon R. Keller, J.M. Gridley, James H. Luetgert, Walter D. Mooney, H. Thybo
Introduction to special section: The Trans-Alaska Crustal Transect (TACT) across Arctic Alaska
This special section of the Journal of Geophysical Research addresses the composition and structural evolution of the lithosphere in northern Alaska. Investigations reported in this section were mainly undertaken as part of the Trans‐Alaska Crustal Transect (TACT), an integrated geological and geophysical transect of the entire Alaskan lithosphere along a north‐south corridor undertaken from 1984
Authors
G. Plafker, Walter D. Mooney
Continents as lithological icebergs: The importance of buoyant lithospheric roots
An understanding of the formation of new continental crust provides an important guide to locating the oldest terrestrial rocks and minerals. We evaluated the crustal thicknesses of the thinnest stable continental crust and of an unsubductable oceanic plateau and used the resulting data to estimate the amount of mantle melting which produces permanent continental crust. The lithospheric mantle is
Authors
D.H. Abbott, R. Drury, Walter D. Mooney
Ophiolitic basement to the Great Valley forearc basin, California, from seismic and gravity data: Implications for crustal growth at the North American continental margin
The nature of the Great Valley basement, whether oceanic or continental, has long been a source of controversy. A velocity model (derived from a 200-km-long east-west reflection-refraction profile collected south of the Mendocino triple junction, northern California, in 1993), further constrained by density and magnetic models, reveals an ophiolite underlying the Great Valley (Great Valley ophioli
Authors
N. J. Godfrey, B. C. Beaudoin, S.L. Klemperer, A. Levander, J. Luetgert, A. Meltzer, Walter D. Mooney, A. Tréhu
Comment on “The stress state implied by dislocation models of subduction deformation” by J. J. Douglass and B. A. Buffett
No abstract available.
Authors
James C. Savage
No: The L.A. array is not ready for prime time
Although much interest will focus upon the temporal behavior of observed deformation, the principal justification for the SCIGN array is that within a 5‐year interval it will provide an accurate and detailed determination of the velocity field in the Los Angeles basin that can be used to identify the active faults and estimate their secular slip rates. Obviously, the accuracy of the measurements w
Authors
James C. Savage
Earthquakes, minerals, and me with the USGS, 1942-1995
No abstract available.
Authors
Robert E. Wallace, Stanley Scott
Reflected seismic waves and their effect on strong shaking during the 1989 Loma Prieta, California, earthquake
Our data indicate that critical and postcritical reflections from crustal layers and the Moho produced increased shaking at discrete distances along the San Francisco Peninsula during the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. These reflections may have produced an increase in amplitude that is as much as 10 times greater than that of the direct arrival. Peak amplitude-distance patterns measured from explos
Authors
Rufus D. Catchings, W. M. Kohler