Publications
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Geodetic determination of strain at the Nevada Test Site following the Handley event
Repeated surveys of a trilateration network (aperture greater than 20 km) centered on ground zero for the HANDLEY event, a nuclear explosion at the Nevada Test Site with yield in excess of 1 megaton, suggest that the explosion induced an east-west extension of the network by more than 50 mm. In the year following the detonation, this deformation reversed such that the final configuration represent
Authors
James C. Savage, W. T. Kinoshita, W. H. Prescott
Effects of the Bear Valley and San Juan Bautista earthquakes of 1972 on Geodimeter line lengths
Measurements of lines of the California Geodimeter network in the vicinity of the epicenters of four 1972 earthquakes (magnitudes 4.7, 4.7, 4.8, and 5.1) along the San Andreas fault system indicate that no significant anomalous changes in line length preceded or accompanied those earthquakes. Within the precision of measurement, the data are consistent with a linear change in line length with time
Authors
W. H. Prescott, James C. Savage
Tectonic significance of the Kodiak-Bowie seamount chain, northeastern Pacific
The hypothesis of a fixed melting spot reference frame (M) for relative plate motion is tested in the northeastern Pacific Ocean, where the Kodiak-Bowie seamount chain intersects the northern triple junction between the Pacific, American, and Juan de Fuca plates. Available age determinations on Kodiak and Giacomini Seamounts provide an estimated average rate of volcanic propagation along the chain
Authors
Eli A. Silver, Roland E. von Huene, James K. Crouch
Effects of local geology on ground motion in the San Francisco Bay region, California: A continued study
Measurements of ground motion generated by nuclear explosions in Nevada have been completed for 99 locations in the San Francisco Bay region, California. The seismograms, Fourier amplitude spectra, spectral amplification curves for the signal, and the Fourier amplitude spectra of the seismic noise are presented for 60 locations. Analog amplifications, based on the maximum signal amplitude, are com
Authors
James F. Gibbs, Roger D. Borcherdt
Prediction of maximum earthquake intensities for the San Francisco Bay region
No abstract available.
Authors
Roger D. Borcherdt, James F. Gibbs
Geology and mineral deposits of Churchill County, Nevada
Churchill County, in west-central Nevada, is an area of varied topography and geology that has had a rather small total mineral production. The western part of the county is dominated by the broad low valley of the Carson Sink, which is underlain by deposits of Lake Lahontan. The bordering mountain ranges to the west and south are of low relief and underlain largely by Tertiary volcanic and sedime
Authors
Ronald Willden, Robert C. Speed
Energy and plane waves in linear viscoelastic media
The mathematical framework for describing plane waves in elastic and linear anelastic media is presented. Theoretical results suggest that the nature of plane waves in anelastic materials is distinctly different from the nature of plane waves in elastic materials. In elastic media the only type of inhomogeneous plane wave (P or S) that can propagate is one for which planes of constant phase are pe
Authors
Roger D. Borcherdt
Structure of the crust in the conterminous United States
On the basis of the newest interpretations of all sufficiently long seismic profiles, a contour map of the Mohorovičić discontinuity for the conterminous United States is compiled. Differences from earlier interpretations are discussed.
Authors
David H. Warren, J. H. Healy
Earthquakes in the oil field at Rangely, Colorado
Seven years of seismic data recorded at the Uinta Basin Observatory were searched for earthquakes originating near an oil field at Rangely, Colorado, located 65 km ESE of the observatory. Changes in the number of earthquakes recorded per year appear to correlate with changes in the quantity of fluid injected per year. Between November 1962 and January 1970, 976 earthquakes were detected near the o
Authors
James F. Gibbs, John H. Healy, C. Barry Raleigh, John M. Coakley
Man-made earthquakes and earthquake prediction
Convincing evidence that man can trigger earthquakes has been developed since the 1963–1967 report. The fact that man can start earthquakes has increased our understanding of earthquake mechanisms and reinforced our judgment that we are approaching the possibility of earthquake prediction.Traditionally, seismologists have avoided the subject of earthquake prediction because of its distasteful asso
Authors
J. H. Healy, L. C. Pakiser
Satellite relay telemetry of seismic data in earthquake prediction and control
The Satellite Telemetry Earthquake Monitoring Program was started in FY 1968 to evaluate the applicability of satellite relay telemetry in the collection of seismic data from a large number of dense seismograph clusters laid out along the major fault systems of western North America. Prototype clusters utilizing phone-line telemetry were then being installed by the National Center for Earthquake R
Authors
Wayne H. Jackson, Jerry P. Eaton
Mechanism of the Chilean Earthquakes of May 21 and 22, 1960
The Chilean earthquake sequence of May 21–22, 1960, was accompanied by linear zones of tectonic warping, including both uplift and subsidence relative to sea level. The region involved is more than 200 km wide and about 1000 km long, and lies along the continental margin between latitude 37° and 48° S. Significant horizontal strains accompanied the vertical movements in parts of the subsided zone
Authors
George Plafker, James C. Savage