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Ground motion in Anchorage, Alaska, from the 2002 Denali fault earthquake: Site response and displacement pulses

Data from the 2002 Denali fault earthquake recorded at 26 sites in and near Anchorage, Alaska, show a number of systematic features important in studies of site response and in constructing long-period spectra for use in earthquake engineering. The data demonstrate that National Earthquake Hazards Reduction Program (NEHRP) site classes are a useful way of grouping stations according to site amplif
Authors
D. M. Boore

Triggered deformation and seismic activity under Mammoth Mountain in Long Valley caldera by the 3 November 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake

The 3 November 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali fault earthquake triggered deformational offsets and microseismicity under Mammoth Mountain (MM) on the rim of Long Valley caldera, California, some 3460 km from the earthquake. Such strain offsets and microseismicity were not recorded at other borehole strain sites along the San Andreas fault system in California. The Long Valley offsets were recorded on borehole
Authors
M.J.S. Johnston, S. G. Prejean, D. P. Hill

Shear- and compressional- wave velocity measurements from two 150-m-deep boreholes in Seattle, Washington, USA

No abstract available.
Authors
Jack K. Odum, William J. Stephenson, Kathy Goetz-Troost, David M. Worley, Arthur D. Frankel, Robert A. Williams, Jake Fryer

Kinematic and dynamic rupture models of the November 3, 2002 Mw7.9 Denali, Alaska, earthquake

Regional seismic waveforms, continuous and campaign-mode GPS data, and surface slip measurements were used to obtain a kinematic model of the rupture process of the November 3, 2002 Mw 7.9 Denali, Alaska, earthquake. The event initiated as a Mw 7.0 reverse slip event on the north-dipping Susitna Glacier fault with subsequent right-lateral slip distributed over approximately 300 km of the Denali fa
Authors
Douglas S. Dreger, D. D. Oglesby, R. Harris, N. Ratchkovski, R. Hansen

Crystallographic controls on the frictional behavior of dry and water-saturated sheet structure minerals

We compare the frictional strengths of 17 sheet structure mineral powders, measured under dry and water-saturated conditions, to identify the factors that cause many of them to be relatively weak. The dry coefficient of friction μ ranges upward from 0.2 for graphite, leveling off at 0.8 for margarite, clintonite, gibbsite, kaolinite, and lizardite. The values of μ (dry) correlate directly with cal
Authors
Diane E. Moore, D. A. Lockner

Strain accumulation across the Coast Ranges at the latitude of San Francisco, 1994-2000

A 66-monument geodetic array spanning the Coast Ranges near San Francisco has been surveyed more than eight times by GIPS between late 1993 and early 2001. The measured horizontal velocities of the monuments are well represented by uniform, right-lateral, simple shear parallel to N29°W. (The local strike of the San Andreas Fault is ∼N34°W.) The observed areal dilatation rate of 6.9 ± 10.0 nstrain
Authors
J. C. Savage, Weijun Gan, W. H. Prescott, J. L. Svarc

Interseismic strain and rotation rates in the northeast Mojave domain, eastern California

The northeast Mojave domain, a type locality for bookshelf faulting, is a region of east striking, left-lateral faults in the northeast corner of the Mojave block, a block otherwise dominated by ∼N40°W striking, right-lateral faults. Paleomagnetic evidence suggests that blocks within the domain have rotated clockwise about a vertical axis as much as 60° since 12.8 Ma [Schermer et al., 1996]. In 19
Authors
J. C. Savage, J. L. Svarc, II W. Prescott

Stress-induced, time-dependent fracture closure at hydrothermal conditions

Time-dependent closure of fractures in quartz was measured in situ at 22–530°C temperature and 0.1-150 MPa water pressure. Unlike previous crack healing and rock permeability studies, in this study, fracture aperture is monitored directly and continuously using a windowed pressure vessel, a long-working-distance microscope, and reflected-light interferometry. Thus the fracture volume and geometry
Authors
N.M. Beeler, S.H. Hickman

Stress triggering in thrust and subduction earthquakes and stress interaction between the southern San Andreas and nearby thrust and strike-slip faults

We argue that key features of thrust earthquake triggering, inhibition, and clustering can be explained by Coulomb stress changes, which we illustrate by a suite of representative models and by detailed examples. Whereas slip on surface-cutting thrust faults drops the stress in most of the adjacent crust, slip on blind thrust faults increases the stress on some nearby zones, particularly above the
Authors
J. Lin, R. S. Stein

The coefficient of friction of chrysotile gouge at seismogenic depths

We report new strength data for the serpentine mineral chrysotile at effective normal stresses, σn between 40 and 200 MPa in the temperature range 25°-280°C. Overall, the coefficient of friction, μ (= shear stress/effective normal stress) of water-saturated chrysotile gouge increases both with increasing temperature and σn, but the rates vary and the temperature-related increases begin at ~100°C.
Authors
Diane E. Moore, D. A. Lockner, H. Tanaka, K. Iwata

The role of water in gas hydrate dissociation

When raised to temperatures above the ice melting point, gas hydrates release their gas in well-defined, reproducible events that occur within self-maintained temperature ranges slightly below the ice point. This behavior is observed for structure I (carbon dioxide, methane) and structure II gas hydrates (methane-ethane, and propane), including those formed with either H2O- or D2O-host frameworks,
Authors
S. Circone, L.A. Stern, S. H. Kirby

Crustal structure along the geosciences transect from Altay to Altun Tagh

No abstract available.
Authors
Y.-X. Wang, G.-H. Han, M. Jiang, X.-C. Yuan, Walter D. Mooney, R. G. Coleman