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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 201-250 of 305
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SCEC ID Category Title and Authors SCEC Award
Poster
144
Geology Using lidar to elucidate the slip behavior of the southern Alpine Fault, New Zealand
Jozi Pearson, Nicolas Barth
We use a newly acquired airborne lidar swath to interpret geomorphic features associated with the southernmost 25 km of the onshore Alpine Fault (AF) in New Zealand. In this heavily vegetated environment a ground return point cloud density up to 4... more

Poster 011
CISM Performance enhancements and visualization for RSQSim earthquake simulator
Dmitry Pekurovsky, Amit Chourasia, Keith Richards-Dinger, Bruce Shaw, James Dieterich, Yifeng Cui
We report on progress of performance tuning and visualization for earthquake simulator code RSQSim. We have studied performance of the code in detail on supercomputers such as Blue Waters (NCSA/UIUC), Stampede (TACC) and Mira (Argonne). We have... more

Poster
023
SP Detecting Micro-seismicity and Long-duration Tremor-like Events from the Oklahoma Wavefield Experiment
Zhigang Peng, Chenyu Li, Zefeng Li, Chengyuan Zhang, Nori Nakata
Oklahoma has experienced abrupt increase of induced seismicity in the last decade. An important way to fully understand seismic activities in Oklahoma is to obtain more complete earthquake catalogs and detect different types of seismic events. The... more

Poster
125
Geology New high-resolution seismic data reveals the Holocene active structures and deformation events in offshore Ventura basin, CA
Hector Perea, Gülsen Ucarkus, Neal Driscoll, Graham Kent, Yuval Levy, Thomas Rockwell
During the last 2-5 Ma, the Transverse Ranges (Southern California) have been subject to a N-S compression related to the formation of a regional restraining bend in the San Andreas Fault and resulting in the development of an E-W trending thrust-... more
12026
Poster
178
FARM Dynamic rupture modeling of thrust faults with parallel surface traces.
Paul Peshette, Julian Lozos, Doug Yule
Fold and thrust belts (such as those found in the Himalaya or California Transverse Ranges) consist of many neighboring thrust faults in a variety of geometries. Active thrusts within these belts individually contribute to regional seismic hazard,... more

Poster
140
Geology Terrestrial cosmogenic surface exposure dating of moraines at Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada, California, and slip rate estimate for the West Tahoe fault.
Ian Pierce, Steven Wesnousky, Lewis Owen
Two sets of Pleistocene moraines (Tioga and Tahoe) are preserved at Cascade Lake along the west side of Lake Tahoe. 10Be terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide surface exposure ages for two younger Tioga moraines yield an average age of 22.3 ± 1.2 ka,... more

Poster
209
SDOT Using Borehole Breakouts in Deviated Offshore Wells to Constrain Stress Regimes Beneath The Santa Barbara Channel, Offshore Southern California
Edward Pritchard, Patricia Persaud, Joann Stock
The Santa Barbara Channel is an E-W trending marine basin that represents the western continuation of the onshore Ventura basin. Beneath this channel lie several active, E-W trending en echelon fault systems, with both N and S dips, that control a... more
16062, 15012, 14118
Poster
137
Geology Effects of Improved Production Rates and Statistical Treatment of Cosmogenic Dates on California fault slip rates
Veronica Prush, Michael Oskin
Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides (TCNs), such as Beryllium-10, are commonly used in fault slip-rate studies to determine the ages of offset surfaces. Two recent advances in the treatment of TCN ages necessitate reinterpretation of previously... more
15209
Poster
032
Seismology Ground motion coherence study in multiple distance ranges and frequency bands
Lei Qin, Yehuda Ben-Zion, Frank Vernon
We analyze one year of continuous waveform data from the Pinon Flats Observatory Array (PY) and Dry Wash linear array (DW) across the San Jacinto fault. PY consists of 13 broadband sensors arranged on three circles with station separated by about... more

Poster
037
Seismology Eikonal Tomography of the Southern California Plate Boundary Region
Hongrui Qiu, Yehuda Ben-Zion, Fan-Chi Lin
We use eikonal tomography to derive directionally-dependent phase and group velocities of surface waves sensitive to the approximate depth range 1-20 km for the plate boundary region in southern CA. Seismic noise data recorded by 346 stations in the... more

Poster
133
Geology Tectonic control on landsliding in the nepal himalaya revealed by the 2015 gorkha earthquake
Paul Quackenbush, Josh West, Marin Clark, Dimitrios Zekkos, Chamlagain Deepak
The Mw 7.8 Gorkha earthquake in 2015 triggered more than 25,000 landslides, providing a rare opportunity to gain new general understanding of the links between faulting, tectonics, and landsliding. While landslides from many other seismic events are... more

Poster
248
GM Sensitivity and Comparison of Two Broad-band Synthetic Generation Methods
Leonardo Ramirez-Guzman, Miguel Jaimes, Carlos Mendoza
The use of synthetic seismograms with engineering applications in mind is starting to gain acceptance worldwide, and validation efforts are a current topic of several research groups. Here we analyze the performance and sensitivity of two... more

Poster
141
Geology Toward characterizing extension and Quaternary faulting on the Pleasant Valley fault, Central Nevada
Tabor Reedy, Steven Wesnousky
The Pleasant Valley fault is a 59 km long fault located approximately 30 km south of Winnemucca, Nevada. The fault system is the northernmost of a set of historical surface rupturing earthquakes that define the Central Nevada Seismic Belt (CNSB).... more

Poster
028
Seismology Towards Structural Imaging Using Scattering Artifacts Detected in Ambient Field Correlations
Lise Retailleau, Gregory Beroza
Correlations of the ambient seismic field have been used successfully for tomographic imaging of the Earth on a wide range of scales. This is based on the theoretical and experimental observations that correlation functions computed between the... more

Poster
126
Geology Evidence for Holocene coseismic subsidence during a non- plate boundary earthquake
Laura Reynolds, Alexander Simms, Thomas Rockwell, Yusuke Yokoyama, Yosuke Miyairi, Alexandra Hangsterfer
Coseismic subsidence is a coastal hazard commonly associated with subduction zones. Although discrete coseismic events have also been proposed for tectonic basins and synclines along non-plate boundary active margins, confidently differentiating the... more
14008, 15156, 16132
Poster
258
GM Estimation of Ground Motion Variability in the CEUS
Sanaz Rezaeian, Xiaodan Sun, Brandon Clayton, Stephen Hartzell
The Next Generation Attenuation for Eastern U.S. (NGA-East) project (Goulet et al., 2017) has adopted the Sammon’s mapping approach for estimating ground motion uncertainties in the Central and Eastern United States (CEUS). Although this approach... more

Poster 010
EFP Earthquake forecasts and their applications following the M7.8 2016 Kaikoura earthquake
David Rhoades, Matthew Gerstenberger, Annemarie Christophersen, David Harte
Following the M7.8 Kaikoura earthquake of 14 November 2016, GNS Science, through the GeoNet website, provided public forecasts of future earthquake occurrence, similar to the practice that has evolved during major earthquake sequences in New Zealand... more

Poster
309
CEO 2017 USEIT: SCEC-VDO Enhancement and Release
Sebastian Rinkema, Alyssa Oda, Alejandro Narvaez-Colon, Kevin Rolón-Domena, Prad Tantiwuttipong, Esther Kala, John Yu, Kevin Milner, Gabriela Noriega, Jozi Pearson, Thomas Jordan
SCEC-VDO (Southern California Earthquake Center Visual Display of Objects) is a visualization software that enables interactive, 4D display of diverse geo-referenced datasets for analysis, presentation, and publication. SCEC-VDO is developed by... more

Poster
255
GM NGA high-pass filters remove important real signals; simple tilt correction is preferable when predicting collapse.
Becky Roh, Kenny Buyco, Thomas Heaton
Horizontal accelerometers record a combination of horizontal ground acceleration and gravitational changes from ground tilt. Traditionally, the tilt effect is removed in data processing to attempt to find the actual ground motion. NGA uses zero-... more

Poster
051
Seismology Anomalously large complete stress drop during the 2016 Mw 5.2 Borrego Springs earthquake inferred by waveform modeling and near-source aftershock deficit
Zachary Ross, Hiroo Kanamori, Egill Hauksson
The 2016 Mw 5.2 Borrego Springs earthquake occurred in the trifurcation area of the San Jacinto fault zone and generated more than 23,000 aftershocks. We analyze source properties of this earthquake along with 12,487 precisely located aftershock... more

Poster
086
Geodesy Off-fault deformations and shallow slip deficit from dynamic rupture simulations with fault zone plasticity
Daniel Roten, Kim Olsen, Steven Day
Fault slip distributions obtained from source inversions of major (M > 7) strike-slip earthquakes (e.g., M 7.3 Landers, M 7.1 Hector Mine, M 7.6 Izmit, M 6.5 Bam, M 7.2 Baja California) indicate that coseismic slip near the surface is... more
16238
Poster
001
EFP Repeating Earthquakes Trigger Themselves in Parkfield
Justin Rubinstein, William Ellsworth
Previous studies of repeating earthquake sequences in Parkfield, Taiwan and Japan yield that repeating earthquakes behavior is better predicted by a characteristic earthquake model with fixed inter-event time or fixed slip than it is by the time-... more

Poster
084
Seismology Path and site effects in GMPEs: Incorporating crustal physical properties for region-specific ground motion estimation using small magnitude data from Southern California
Valerie Sahakian, Annemarie Baltay, Tom Hanks, Janine Buehler, Frank Vernon
The purpose of this work is to reduce aleatory uncertainty in ground motion prediction equations (GMPEs) by including knowable, physical processes or properties of path effects; in effect, reclassifying this uncertainty as epistemic, and improving... more

Poster
252
GM Synthetic ground motions of the 8 October 2005 Kashmir earthquake (Mw 7.6): a stochastic finite fault element approach
Hamid Sana
Synthetic ground motions of the 8 October 2005 Kashmir earthquake (Mw 7.6) were generated in the Kashmir basin, NW Himalaya. This earthquake caused paramount amount of damage to life and property. It resulted in death of 86,000 people and... more

Poster
089
Geodesy A 4-D Earthquake Cycle Model with Lateral Variations in Shear Modulus
David Sandwell, Bridget Smith-Konter
We have developed a semi-analytic approach (and computational code) for rapidly calculating 3D time-dependent deformation and stress caused by screw dislocations imbedded within an elastic layer overlying a Maxwell viscoelastic half space. The... more
17042, 17169
Poster
261
GM Improving static slip characterization of near-shore earthquakes with amphibious datasets: A Cascadia example
Jessie Saunders, Jennifer Haase
The rupture location of a Mw~8 megathrust earthquake can dramatically change the near-source tsunami impact, where a shallow earthquake can produce a disproportionally large tsunami for its magnitude. Because the locking pattern of the shallow... more

Poster
250
GM Generating 10 Hz deterministic broadband ground motions using kinematic source descriptions
William Savran, Kim Olsen, Steven Day
Small buildings, such as single and multi-family residences, are most susceptible to seismic waves between 5 and 10 Hz. Therefore, it is crucial we understand the behavior of these high-frequency waves to provide informed seismic hazard assessments... more

Poster
182
FARM Exploring seismological properties of asperity-type events in a rate-and-state fault model
Natalie Schaal, Nadia Lapusta, Yen-Yu Lin
Observations of foreshocks on both natural and laboratory faults suggest that the source of the foreshocks may be fault heterogeneities, such as bumps, that are driven to fail by aseismic processes of the mainshocks nucleation process [e.g., Dodge... more
17154
Poster
121
Geology Slip rate variation of the Central Sierra Madre fault, southern California over the past 200 ka
Katherine Scharer, Reed Burgette, Austin Hanson, Nathaniel Lifton, Tammy Rittenour, Devin McPhillips
The Central Sierra Madre fault (CSMF) system uplifts the San Gabriel Mountains along the northern Los Angeles metropolitan area. A suite of late Quaternary alluvial fan surfaces are preserved near Arroyo Seco and offset across strands of the CSMF.... more
15179, 16066
Poster
044
Seismology A systematic assessment of the spatio-temporal evolution of fault activation through induced seismicity in Oklahoma and southern Kansas
Martin Schoenball, William Ellsworth
Much of Oklahoma and Southern Kansas has seen widespread seismic activity in the last decade that is attributed to large-scale wastewater disposal into the Arbuckle group. Using a waveform-relocated earthquake catalog, we perform a systematic study... more

Poster 008
EFP Nonparametric Hawkes models with strike angle covariates.
Frederic Schoenberg, James Molyneux
Earthquake focal mechanism estimates have been posited to have predictive value for forecasting future seismicity. In particular, for strike-slip earthquakes, aftershocks should occur roughly along the estimated mainshock strike. However, the errors... more

Poster
225
SDOT Constraints on seismic anisotropy in ductile rock fabric and application to imaging fault roots in southern California
Vera Schulte-Pelkum, Karl Mueller, Sarah Brownlee, Thorsten Becker, Kevin Mahan
Understanding the roots of faults in the deep, ductile crust constrains and validates rheological models of deep shear and informs fault modeling of strain transfer across the base of the seismogenic crust. We show passive imaging results for deep... more
17098, 17097
Poster
099
Geodesy The M7 2016 Kumamoto, Japan, Earthquake: 3D coseismic deformation from differential topography
Chelsea Scott, Ramon Arrowsmith, Lia Lajoie, Ed Nissen, Tadashi Maruyama, Chiba Tatsuro
The April 2016 Kumamoto earthquake sequence ruptured the Hinagu and Futagawa faults on the Kyushu Island of SW Japan. Our work concentrates on the M7 mainshock, which ruptured 30 km of fault length with an oblique strike-slip mechanism. We present... more

Poster
110
Geology Timing of Earthquakes during the past 800 years along the Peninsula Section of the San Andreas Fault Suggests Persistent 1906-like Behavior
Gordon Seitz, Maxime Mareschal, Nathan Barrett, David Olsen
Evidence to support the existence of a peninsula San Andreas fault (SAF) segment, with an individual earthquake (EQ) history, has been a speculative hypothesis. The only historical EQ rupture that can be confidently located, is the M7.9 1906 San... more

Poster
069
Seismology Repeating earthquakes detected by a new fast method reveal complex creep behavior in the northern San Francisco Bay Area
Nader Shakibay Senobari, Gareth Funning
Repeating earthquakes (REs) are families of seismic events generated by repeated loading and failure of a single fault asperity. They produce similar waveforms at common seismic stations, that can be identified by similarity search. Sequences of REs... more

Poster
157
SAFS Seismic imaging of the southern California plate-boundary around the South-Central Transverse Ranges using double-difference tomography
Pieter-Ewald Share, Yehuda Ben-Zion, Clifford Thurber, Haijiang Zhang, Hao Guo
We derive P and S seismic velocities within and around the South-Central Transverse Ranges section of the San Andreas Fault (SAF), using a new double-difference tomography algorithm incorporating both event-pair and station-pair differential times.... more

Poster
014
WGCEP Striking agreement of physics-based earthquake simulator and UCERF3 California seismic hazard model
Bruce Shaw, Kevin Milner, Edward Field, Keith Richards-Dinger, Jacquelyn Gilchrist, James Dieterich, Thomas Jordan
Probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) provides important information to society, informing building codes and hazard mitigation efforts. The PSHA models currently applied in California combine fault-based earthquake rupture forecasts (ERFs)... more
17218
Poster
145
Geology Garlock Fault: Re-assessing past stream offsets at Oak Creek Canyon and predicting future fault displacements
Kelley Shaw, Graham Kent
Numerous paleoseismic investigations have been undertaken along the western and central traces of the Garlock fault. Some of the older investigations relied on rough topographic data for cross fault reconstructions to estimate slip rates. Re-... more

Poster
054
Seismology Testing and Reconciling Stress Drop and Attenuation Models for Southern California
Peter Shearer, Rachel Abercrombie, Daniel Trugman
Earthquake stress drop is a fundamental source parameter, implicit in many SCEC science goals. It is relatively easy to estimate from seismic data, but hard to measure reliably. The large uncertainties and scatter in results affect strong ground... more
16020
Poster
078
Seismology A 15-year catalog of more than 1 million low-frequency earthquakes: tracking tremor and slip along the deep San Andreas Fault
David Shelly
Low-frequency earthquakes (LFEs) are small, rapidly recurring slip events that occur on the deep extensions of some major faults. Their collective activation is often observed as a semi-continuous signal known as tectonic (or non-volcanic) tremor... more

Poster 031
Seismology On the Properties of Higher-Order Ambient Field Correlation
Yixiao Sheng, Nori Nakata, Gregory Beroza
Higher order cross-correlations, like C3 (correlation of the coda of correlation), of the ambient seismic field, is observed to yield more symmetric, and thus more accurate Green’s functions (GFs) than direct, first order correlation (C1). This is... more

Poster 230
CXM Inferring Crustal Viscosity from Seismic Wavespeeds: Applications to the Rheologic Structure of Southern California
William Shinevar, Mark Behn, Greg Hirth, Oliver Jagoutz
We constrain the viscosity of the lower crust through a joint inversion of seismic P-wave (Vp) and S-wave (Vs) velocities. Previous research has demonstrated robust relationships between seismic velocity and crustal composition, as well as between... more
16106, 17202
Poster
301
CME The SCEC Broadband Platform: Open-Source Software for Strong Ground Motion Simulation and Validation
Fabio Silva, Philip Maechling, Christine Goulet, Thomas Jordan
The Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) Broadband Platform (BBP) is a carefully integrated collection of open-source scientific software programs that can simulate broadband (0-100 Hz) ground motions for earthquakes at regional scales. The... more
16021, 16063, 16110, 16115, 16162
Poster
151
Geology Late-Holocene Earthquakes on the Rose Canyon Fault at Old Town, San Diego CA
Drake Singleton, Thomas Rockwell, Monte Murbach, Diane Murbach, Jillian Maloney, Yuval Levy, Eui-Jo Marquez, Luke Weidman
We present the results of new paleoseismic trenches excavated across the main trace of the Rose Canyon fault (RCF) in Old Town, San Diego, to determine the timing of late Holocene earthquakes. The stratigraphy at the site consists of historical... more

Poster
042
Seismology Microseismic events associated with the Oroville Dam spillway
Rob Skoumal, Ezer Patlan, Phillip Dawson, J. Ole Kaven, Stephen Hickman
On 14 February 2017, two small (equivalent Md 0.8 and 1.0) seismic events occurred in proximity to the Oroville Dam in the Sierra Nevada foothills, CA. To examine possible causal relationships between these events and reservoir operations, including... more

Poster
186
FARM Earthquake cycles with dynamic weakening from flash melting with heterogeneous stress and near-fault anelastic strain
Norman Sleep
Major earthquakes may nucleate at high-shear-traction patches of strike-slip faults left over from heterogeneous slip in past events. Once an earthquake is underway, the slip-weakening distance can be less than 1 mm for rate and state friction and... more
17001
Poster
223
SDOT Deformation of the southern San Andreas Fault System induced by lateral variations in crustal rigidity
Bridget Smith-Konter, David Sandwell, Xiaopeng Tong, Xiaohua Xu, Lauren Ward, Justin Higa
To improve our understanding of crustal rheology influences on fault loading processes, we have developed a 4-D earthquake cycle model of the San Andreas Fault System (SAFS) that incorporates spatial variations in lithosphere rheology. We have added... more
17169, 16177
Poster
039
Seismology Stochastic Representations of Seismic Anisotropy: Verification of Effective Media Models for Locally Isotropic 3D Heterogeneity
Xin Song, Thomas Jordan, David Okaya
A self-consistent theory for the effective elastic parameters of stochastic media with small-scale 3D heterogeneities has been developed using a 2nd-order Born approximation to the scattered wavefield [Jordan,2015]. The theory has been applied to... more

Poster
026
Seismology Geometry of the Los Angeles Basin Using Full H/V Spectral Ratio Inversion
Zack Spica, Mathieu Perton, Robert Clayton, Gregory Beroza
The H/V spectral ratio (HVSR) of the auto-correlated signal at a seismic station is proportional to the ratio of the imaginary parts of the Green's functions. Following this approach, observations of H/V can be compared to their theoretical... more
17031
Poster
306
CEO Temblor, an app to transform seismic science into personal risk reduction
Ross Stein, Volkan Sevilgen, David Jacobson, Alexandra Kim, Gabriel Lotto
Government agencies and academic researchers and provide a rich stream of seismic and engineering data. In addition to rapid earthquake notifications and damage assessments, these form the basis of probabilistic seismic hazard assessments and loss... more


The Southern California Earthquake Center is committed to providing a safe, productive, and welcoming environment for all participants. We take pride in fostering a diverse and inclusive SCEC community, and therefore expect all participants to abide by the SCEC Activities Code of Conduct.