Peter J Haeussler, Ph.D. (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Pace and process of active folding and fluvial incision across the Kantishna Hills anticline, central Alaska
New approach to assessing age uncertainties – The 2300-year varve chronology from Eklutna Lake, Alaska (USA)
Submarine deposition of a subaerial landslide in Taan Fiord, Alaska
The 2015 landslide and tsunami in Taan Fiord, Alaska
Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault, southeastern Alaska
The Queen Charlotte Fault defines the Pacific–North America transform plate boundary in western Canada and southeastern Alaska for c. 900 km. The entire length of the fault is submerged along a continental margin dominated by Quaternary glacial processes, yet the geomorphology along the margin has never been systematically examined due to the absence of high-resolution seafloor mapping data. Hence
Assessment of undiscovered oil and gas resources of the Susitna Basin, southern Alaska, 2017
Deformation of the Pacific/North America plate boundary at Queen Charlotte Fault: The possible role of rheology
Strain partitioning in southeastern Alaska: Is the Chatham Strait Fault active?
Varve formation during the past three centuries in three large proglacial lakes in south-central Alaska
Neotectonics of interior Alaska and the late Quaternary slip rate along the Denali fault system
Eastern Denali Fault surface trace map, eastern Alaska and Yukon, Canada
Paleoseismic potential of sublacustrine landslide records in a high-seismicity setting (south-central Alaska)
Science and Products
Pace and process of active folding and fluvial incision across the Kantishna Hills anticline, central Alaska
New approach to assessing age uncertainties – The 2300-year varve chronology from Eklutna Lake, Alaska (USA)
Submarine deposition of a subaerial landslide in Taan Fiord, Alaska
The 2015 landslide and tsunami in Taan Fiord, Alaska
Slope failure and mass transport processes along the Queen Charlotte Fault, southeastern Alaska
The Queen Charlotte Fault defines the Pacific–North America transform plate boundary in western Canada and southeastern Alaska for c. 900 km. The entire length of the fault is submerged along a continental margin dominated by Quaternary glacial processes, yet the geomorphology along the margin has never been systematically examined due to the absence of high-resolution seafloor mapping data. Hence
Assessment of undiscovered oil and gas resources of the Susitna Basin, southern Alaska, 2017
Deformation of the Pacific/North America plate boundary at Queen Charlotte Fault: The possible role of rheology
Strain partitioning in southeastern Alaska: Is the Chatham Strait Fault active?
Varve formation during the past three centuries in three large proglacial lakes in south-central Alaska
Neotectonics of interior Alaska and the late Quaternary slip rate along the Denali fault system
Eastern Denali Fault surface trace map, eastern Alaska and Yukon, Canada
Paleoseismic potential of sublacustrine landslide records in a high-seismicity setting (south-central Alaska)
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