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Meeting Abstracts

The SCEC collaboration emphasizes the connections between information gathering by sensor networks, fieldwork, and laboratory experiments; knowledge formulation through physics-based, system-level modeling; improved understanding of seismic hazard; and actions to reduce earthquake risk and promote resilience. Use the form below to search and view all poster and invited talk abstracts submitted to this meeting.


  
  

A SCEC username is required to submit an abstract.

The person submitting the abstract is automatically the First Author, and will receive all communications regarding the abstract.

First Authors can submit a maximum of one poster presentation abstract and one oral presentation abstract (if invited as a plenary speaker).

Abstracts should not exceed 2,500 characters in length.

Every poster will be on display from Sunday evening through Tuesday evening.

Poster dimensions cannot exceed 45 inches high x 45 inches wide.

You may upload a PDF of your poster at any time, even after the submission deadline.

Results 101-150 of 355
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SCEC ID Category Title and Authors SCEC Award
Poster
090
Geology Published Quaternary geochronologic data show the importance of dating geomorphic surfaces with multiple geochronometers
Peter Gold, Whitney Behr
Quaternary fault slip rates rely on geochronologic dating methods for interpreting the ages of displaced geomorphic surfaces such as alluvial fans and fluvial terraces. Most commonly employed among these are cosmogenic exposure dating, uranium-... more

Poster
256
Seismology Seismogeodetic Observations of the June 10, 2016 M5.2 Borrego Springs Earthquake
Dara Goldberg, Jessie Saunders, Jennifer Haase, Yehuda Bock
Seismogeodesy is the optimal combination of high rate GPS observations and strong motion accelerations in a Kalman filter to produce broadband velocity and displacement waveforms, including accurate measure of the static offset. This approach... more

Poster
262
Seismology Seismic Evidence for Splays of the Eureka Peak Fault beneath Yucca Valley, California
Mark Goldman, Rufus Catchings, Joanne Chan, Robert Sickler, Coyn Criley, Dave O'Leary, Alan Christensen
In April 2015, we acquired high-resolution P- and S-wave seismic data along a 3.1-km-long, E-W-trending profile in Yucca Valley, California. Our seismic survey was designed to locate possible sub-parallel faults of the Eureka Peak Fault, which... more

Poster
146
Geodesy Guadalupe Island as a constrain for earthquake hazard at Californias's shoreline
Jose Javier Gonzàlez-Garcìa, Alejandro Gonzalez-Ortega, John Galetzka, Christian Walls, Hebert Martinez-Barcena, Juan Robles
For the purpose of tectonic-earthquake hazard in the Pacific-NorthAmerica western border region, we look for high accuracy of relative plate boundary instead of having global coverage (e.g. GEODVEL, MORVEL56, ITRF2008PPM, GSRM2); by imposing... more

Poster
179
Seismology Investigating tremor sources along the San Andreas Fault using integrated static and dynamic stress models
Hector Gonzalez-Huizar, Sandra Hardy, Bridget Smith-Konter
Ambient and triggered tectonic tremors have been reported near the creeping to locking transition zone along the Parkfield-Cholame section of the San Andreas Fault, as well as in the San Jacinto and Calaveras Faults. Tremors dynamically triggered by... more
14165
Poster
155
Geodesy Geodetic moment accumulation and seismic release in northern Baja California, Mexico
Alejandro Gonzalez-Ortega, Jose Javier Gonzàlez-Garcìa, David Sandwell
We have analyzed all available GPS data from northern Baja California, Mexico, covering the period 1993-2008, in order to estimate the strain rate and seismic moment accumulation rate during the interseismic period prior to the 2010, Mw 7.2 El Major... more

Poster
035
FARM Laboratory Earthquakes Nucleated by Fluid Injection
Marcello Gori, Vito Rubino, Ares Rosakis, Nadia Lapusta
Fluids play an important role in earthquake source processes. Numerous field observations have highlighted the connection between fluids and faulting in triggering events ranging from earthquakes to creeping motion. Our newly developed laboratory... more

Poster 041
FARM How we learned to stop worrying and start loving bulk nonlinearities
Setare Hajarolasvadi, Ahmed Elbanna
The Finite Difference (FD) and Boundary Integral (BI) methods have been extensively used in computational earthquake dynamics. The FD method provides a powerful tool for simulating a variety of rupture scenarios including nonplanar faults and bulk... more

Poster
263
Seismology A derivation of the median ratios between different definitions of horizontal component of ground motions in Central and Eastern United States
Alireza Haji-Soltani, Shahram Pezeshk
A single ground motion intensity measure, typically spectral acceleration (SA), is required as the main input in deriving empirical Ground Motion Prediction Equations (GMPEs). There has been a debate for years on which of the two horizontal ground... more

Talk 9/13 10:30
Geodesy The Ups and Downs of Southern California: Mountain Building, Sea Level Rise, and Earthquake Potential from Geodetic Imaging of Vertical Crustal Motion
William Hammond, Geoffrey Blewitt, Corné Kreemer, Reed Burgette, Kaj Johnson, Charles Meertens, Frances Boler
Contemporary tectonic uplift in California and Nevada is an active part of ongoing plate boundary processes driving earthquakes. However, it has so far been difficult to confidently resolve and interpret uplift patterns. The challenges are twofold... more
14209
Poster
096
Geology Late Quaternary slip rates from offset alluvial fan surfaces along the Central Sierra Madre fault, southern California
Austin Hanson, Reed Burgette, Katherine Scharer, Nikolas Midttun
The Sierra Madre fault (SMF) is an east-west trending reverse fault system along the southern flank of the San Gabriel Mountains near Los Angeles, California. The ~140 km long SMF is separated into four segments; we focus on the multi-stranded, ~85... more
15179
Poster
014
SDOT Can tectonic loading be observed as interseismic stress rotation?
Jeanne Hardebeck
The shear stress on major faults evolves through the seismic cycle, due to tectonic stress loading, coseismic stress release, and earthquake stress transfer. If the seismic cycle stresses are small compared to the background differential stress,... more

Poster
047
FARM Aiming for Validation – The SCEC/USGS Dynamic Earthquake Rupture Code Comparison Exercise
Ruth Harris
The SCEC/USGS Dynamic Earthquake Rupture Code Group is an international collaboration among scientists who use 3D spontaneous rupture computer codes to numerically simulate physics-based earthquake rupture and the resulting ground motions. In the... more
16056
Poster
225
Seismology Characterizing Seismicity with High-Precision Relocations of Recent Earthquake Sequences in Eastern California and Western Nevada
Rachel Hatch, Daniel Trugman, Ken Smith, Peter Shearer, Rachel Abercrombie
Recent earthquake sequences and swarms in eastern California and western Nevada (2010 to present) have caught the attention of the public and emergency responders. Our objective is to characterize this seismicity by computing high-quality event... more

Poster
017
SDOT Progress towards deriving the three-dimensional coseismic deformation field along the White Wolf fault during the Mw ~7.3 1952 Kern County earthquake
Alexandra Hatem, James Dolan, Chris Milliner
We present preliminary results of our efforts to constrain coseismic surface deformation during the Mw~7.3 1952 Kern County earthquake. We are using a modified workflow to difference point clouds derived from legacy air photos taken before and after... more
15200
Poster
261
Seismology Optical Fiber Strainmeters: Developing Higher Dynamic Range and Broader Bandwidth
Billy Hatfield, Mark Zumberge, Frank Wyatt, Duncan Agnew
We have been developing near-surface horizontal strainmeters and vertical borehole strainmeters that use passive optical fibers as their primary sensing element: optical-fiber strainmeters, or OFS. These instruments are useful in two areas. First,... more

Poster
211
Seismology Rapid Rupture Directivity Determination of Moderate Dip-Slip Earthquakes with the Reduced Finite Source Approximation
Xiaohui He, Sidao Ni
Moderate (M5.5-7) dip-slip earthquakes are frequent in both interplate and intraplate regions, and some of them could cause severe damage to buildings and even casualties. For an earthquake with up-dip rupture, the hanging wall region usually... more

Talk 9/12 14:00
SDOT How Sensitive are Inferred Stresses and Stressing Rates to Rheology? Clues from Southern California Deformation Models
Elizabeth Hearn
Variations in fault zone strength and lower lithosphere viscoelastic rheology have been shown to influence deformation patterns in fault systems over a range of time scales (e.g. Bird and Kong, 1994; Fay and Humphreys, 2005). Because of our mandate... more
15199, 16268
Poster
276
GMP NGA 2 GMPE’s Under Predict Long-Period Near-Source Motions from Large Earthquakes
Thomas Heaton, Becky Roh
The recently constructed San Bernardino Law and Justice Center is an 11-story story steel building located 6 km from the San Andreas Fault. In order to mitigate strong shaking expected during the lifetime of this expensive structure ($400M), the... more

Poster
028
FARM Laboratory investigation of friction along rock joints and identification of peaks in shear stiffness prior to the joint’s shear failure
Ahmadreza Hedayat, John Hinton
Laboratory studies of friction along synthetic and natural fault gauge materials have been instrumental in providing a better understanding of the fault deformation mechanisms and when combined with geophysical monitoring techniques, have been very... more

Poster
081
Geology New Investigations on the Hollywood-Raymond Fault Zone, Los Angeles, California
Janis Hernandez, Rufus Catchings, Robert Sickler, Mark Goldman
South of the Transverse Ranges in southern California, the transition zone between the Hollywood and Raymond faults has been mapped as a series of left-stepping, E-NE-trending faults (Weber et al., 1980). Geomorphic expression of faulting in this... more

Poster
069
FARM Coseismic Strengthening of the Shallow Subduction Megathrust Further Enhances Inelastic Wedge Failure and Efficiency of Tsunami Generation
Evan Hirakawa, Shuo Ma
The shallow portion (upper 5 – 10 km) of the subduction megathrust fault, governed by velocity-strengthening friction, has generally been considered to reduce near-trench slip and tsunamigenesis. However, Kozdon and Dunham (2013) showed that large... more

Poster
102
Geology Observations from preliminary 1:24,000 scale bedrock mapping in the western Joshua Tree region: Potential connections between historic seismicity and evolving fault systems
Ann Hislop, Robert Powell, Sean Bemis, David Moecher, Luke Sabala
Bedrock mapping in the epicentral areas of the 1992 Joshua Tree earthquake (Mw 6.1) and Landers aftershocks (Mw 5.7, 5.8) south of Pinto Mountain Fault in southern California has further delineated the geometry, distribution, and relative chronology... more

Poster
195
Seismology Dynamic stress triggering in the 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence
Caroline Holden, Charles Williams, David Rhoades
The Canterbury earthquake sequence started in 2010 with the M7.1 Darfield earthquake. It was followed by over 10,000 aftershocks including the tragic M6.2 February 2011 Christchurch earthquake and the latest M5.7 Valentine earthquake (Kaiser et al... more
16134
Poster
107
Geology Fault Deformation and Segmentation of the Newport-Inglewood Rose Canyon, and San Onofre Trend Fault Systems from New High-Resolution 3D Seismic Imagery
James Holmes, Neal Driscoll, Graham Kent
The Inner California Borderlands (ICB) is situated off the coast of southern California and northern Baja. The structural and geomorphic characteristics of the area record a middle Oligocene transition from subduction to microplate capture along the... more

Poster
165
Geodesy Tracking Seasonal Influences on Stress Changes using Estimates of Anomalous Geodetic Strains
Bill Holt, Meredith Kraner, Adrian Borsa, Alireza Bahadori
Quantifying transient tectonic signals continues to reveal new insights into fault behavior and crust/mantle rheology [Segall and Matthews, 1997; McGuire and Segall, 2003; Freed and Bürgmann, 2004; Ji and Herring, 2012, 2013; Mavrommatis et al, 2014... more
16291
Poster
170
Seismology Shear Wave Velocities in the Central Eastern United States
Mehrdad Hosseini, Paul Somerville, Andreas Skarlatoudis, Jeff Bayless, Hong Kie Thio
USARRAY and ANSS seismic stations provide an invaluable waveform dataset for studying ground motion attenuation in the Central and Eastern United States. However, the dataset is useful only after the site effects at each station are well understood... more

Poster
171
Seismology Were the 1952 Kern County and 1933 Long Beach, California, Earthquakes Induced?
Susan Hough, Victor Tsai, Robert Walker, Morgan Page, Seyed Hosseini
Several recent studies have presented evidence that significant induced earthquakes occurred in a number of regions during the 20th century related to either production or early wastewater injection. We consider whether the Mw6.4 Long Beach and Mw7... more

Poster
259
Seismology Spatial and temporal relationships between tremor and slip in large slow slip earthquakes on the Cascadia subduction zone
Heidi Houston, Kelley Hall, David Schmidt
Slow slip and tremor migrate in tandem along several subduction zones at about 8 km/day in large Episodic Tremor and Slip (ETS) events. These events occur downdip of the locked megathrust, and thus the updip limits of slow slip or tremor provide... more

Poster
160
Geodesy The aseismic slip acceleration before the 2015 Illapel Mw 8.4 event from repeating earthquake observations
Hui Huang, Lingsen Meng
Recent studies provide evidence of accelerating short-term or long-term seismicity possibly accompanied by aseismic slip preceding large interplate earthquakes, such as the 2011 Tohoku-Oki Mw 9.0 earthquake and the 2014 Iquique Mw 8.2 earthquake.... more

Poster
157
Geodesy Coseismic and postseismic deformation from the 2010 Mw 7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah Earthquake in Baja California: Lithospheric structure and deformation in the Salton Trough
Mong-Han Huang, Haylee Dickinson, Andrew Freed, Eric Fielding, Roland Bürgmann, Alejandro Gonzalez-Ortega
Coseismic and postseismic deformation from the 2010 Mw 7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah Earthquake in Baja California: Lithospheric structure and deformation in the Salton Trough The 2010 Mw 7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah (EMC) Earthquake ruptured about 120 km along... more

Poster 270
GMP A Flexible and Memory-Efficient Displacement-Based Approach to Modeling Attenuation in Wave Propagation
Md Monsurul Huda, Ricardo Taborda, Naeem Khoshnevis
Attenuation in the form of energy losses due to internal friction is a major factor in wave propagation and ground motion simulation problems. These effects change the amplitude and dispersion characteristics of seismic waves, especially over large... more

Poster
282
GMSV Site Response During And After Nonlinear Soil Behavior Has Occurred
Kenneth Hudson
Instrumented geotechnical field sites are designed to capture the infrequent but critically important in situ case histories of ground response, deformation, and liquefaction during significant earthquakes that generate high intensity ground shaking... more

Poster
242
Seismology Tectonic tremor in the San Jacinto Fault, near the Anza Gap, detected by multiple mini seismic arrays
Alexandra Hutchison, Abhijit Ghosh
Using several detection and location methods, employing data from both network and mini high density seismic arrays, we detect several instances of non-volcanic tremor that are possibly located on the San Jacinto Fault (SJF) near the Anza Seismic... more
15164
Poster
288
GMSV Validation of 3D velocity models using earthquakes with shallow slip: case study of the Mw6.0 2014 South Napa, California, event
Walter Imperatori, Frantisek Gallovic
Three-dimensional velocity models constitute a key element in strong ground motion modelling, e.g., earthquake hazard assessment. Their validation is typically based on modelling weak earthquakes with foci limited to depths greater than ~5km.... more

Poster 159
Geodesy Toward Rapid, Robust Characterization of Subduction Zone Earthquakes: Application to the 2015 Illapel, Chile Earthquake
Tisha Irwin, Gareth Funning
Accurate and robust knowledge of earthquake source parameters is crucial for hazard assessment and disaster response. The short revisit interval and open and rapid data availability of the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-1 synthetic aperture radar... more

Talk 9/12 11:00
EFP The bridge from earthquake geology to earthquake seismology
David Jackson
Recurrence intervals of large earthquakes exceed the instrumental earthquake record, so we rely on paleo-seismic and surface deformation evidence to infer long-term earthquake rates and recurrence statistics. Paleo-seismic studies generally imply... more
15201
Poster
149
Geodesy New GPS Site Velocities in San Gorgonio Pass, Southern California and Preliminary Elastic Modeling
Naomi Jahan, Matthew Peterson, Sally McGill, Joshua Spinler
Campaign GPS observations have been collected from 23 new sites in San Gorgonio Pass 1-3 times per year since 2013. After 3 years of observations, consistent velocities are now available for these sites and are well constrained enough to support... more
16251
Poster
116
SoSAFE The East Shoreline strand of the San Andreas Fault and its implications for the next Big One in southern California
Susanne Janecke, Daniel Markowski, Roger Bilham, James Evans, Michael Bunds, Jack Wells, Jeremy Andreini, Robert Quinn
The southern San Andreas Fault last ruptured about 1670 AD, and its southern tip could nucleate the next Big One (Shakeout summary). We use new geologic data along a 15-km long swath at the southernmost tip of the San Andreas Fault zone (SAFZ) to... more
12137
Poster
283
GMSV Site amplification effects at Heathcote Valley, New Zealand, during the 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquakes
Seokho Jeong, Brendon Bradley
This poster presents a quantitative case study on the role of near surface site effects on the ground motion intensities at Heathcote Valley school station (HVSC), New Zealand, during the 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence, accounting for the... more

Poster
235
Seismology Slip history of the 2016 Mw 7.0 Kumamoto earthquake: intra-plate rupture in complex tectonic environment
Chen Ji, Jinglai Hao, Zhenxing Yao
We have selected 14 3-component strong motion observations, combining with waveforms of teleseismic broadband body waves and long period surface waves of the 2016 Kumamoto mainshock to constrain its temporal and spatial distribution of slip. Our... more

Poster
066
FARM Reconciling seismicity and geodetic locking depths on the Anza segment of the San Jacinto Fault
Junle Jiang, Yuri Fialko
The depth extent of fault locking can be independently estimated from seismic and geodetic observations. In Southern California, available observations for the San Andreas and San Jacinto Faults suggest a general agreement between the two estimates... more
16121
Poster
012
SDOT Seasonal water storage modulating seismicity on California faults
Christopher Johnson, Yuning Fu, Roland Bürgmann
In California the accumulation of winter snowpack in the Sierra Nevada, surface water in lakes and reservoirs, and groundwater in sedimentary basins follow the annual cycle of wet winters and dry summers. The surface loads resulting from the... more
16006
Poster
301
EFP Earthquake Number Forecasts Testing
Yan Kagan, David Jackson
We study the distributions of earthquake numbers in two global earthquake catalogs: Global Centroid-Moment Tensor (GCMT) and Preliminary Determinations of Epicenters (Monthly Listing) (PDE). The properties of these distributions are especially... more
16089
Poster
287
GMSV Near source ground-motion modelling of the Canterbury aftershocks and implications for engineering metrics
Anna Kaiser, Caroline Holden
The 2010-2011 Canterbury earthquake sequence includes the 22 February 2011 Christchurch aftershock (Mw 6.2), the June 2011 Mw 6.0 aftershock, the December 2011 magnitude (Ml) 5.8 and 6.0 aftershocks and the February 2016 Mw5.7 Valentine’s day... more

Poster 091
Geology Site-specific earthquake hazard characterization for Dhaka City, Bangladesh
Mir Karim, Zillur Rahman, Maksud Kamal, Sumi Siddiqua
Seismic hazard characterization is the foremost module for earthquake risk management in a seismically vulnerable region. The mega city Dhaka in Bangladesh is considered by many researchers as one of the riskiest cities in the world due to many non-... more

Poster
150
Geodesy Vital Signs of the Planet: Southern California Education Contribute to Crustal Deformation Studies Within San Bernardino and Riverside Counties
Dan Keck
In conjunction with California State University, San Bernardino, Inland Empire middle school, high school, and community college teachers have used GPS to monitor movement along the San Andreas and San Jacinto faults within the Inland Empire, San... more
16251
Poster
162
Geodesy Compaction-induced elevated pore pressure and creep pulsing in California faults
Mostafa Khoshmanesh, Manoochehr Shirzaei
The creeping segment of San Andreas Fault (CSAF) is recognized as a weak fault, namely, cannot sustain large earthquake stress drops. Moreover, variable creep rate constrained using kinematic models of geodetic and seismic data implies that the... more

Poster 269
GMP Analysis of Q-factor’s parameters of Los Angeles through Simulation and Artificial Intelligence
Naeem Khoshnevis, Ricardo Taborda
The accurate solution of wave propagation problems requires the appropriate representation of energy losses due to internal friction. These losses are important because their mischaracterization can lead to over- or under-estimation of amplitudes... more
14022
Poster 326
CEO Music of Earthquakes
Debi Kilb, Daniel Trugman
A new middle school class titled 'The Music of Earthquakes' was offered this summer as part of the Sally Ride Science Junior Academy for Girls (https://sallyridescience.com). Exploring the interplay between music and earthquakes, this... more


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