Exciting news! We're transitioning to the Statewide California Earthquake Center. Our new website is under construction, but we'll continue using this website for SCEC business in the meantime. We're also archiving the Southern Center site to preserve its rich history. A new and improved platform is coming soon!
Home  /  SCEC Meetings and Workshops  /  2018 SCEC Annual Meeting  /  Abstracts

SCEC Annual Meeting Banner

PROGRAM TRAVEL REGISTRATION ABSTRACTS PARTICIPANTS

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 51-100 of 323
  • <
  • 2 of 7
  • >
SCEC ID Category Title and Authors SCEC Award
Poster
300
EEII Zoning Verification in Mexico City using strong motions of the M7.1 M7.1 Puebla-Morelos earthquake of September 19, 2017
Mehmet Celebi, Valerie Sahakian, Diego Melgar, Luis Quintanar
Spectral ratios computed from accelerations recorded by strong-motion stations in Mexico City during the mainshock of the September 19, 2017, M7.1 Puebla-Morelos earthquake reveal predominate periods consistent with those mapped in the 2004 Mexican... more

Poster
028
GM Constraining epistemic uncertainties on hazard models in the Marmara region using SHERIFS (Seismic Hazard and Earthquake Rates in Fault Systems)
Thomas Chartier, Oona Scotti, Hélène Lyon-Caen
Modelling the seismic potential of active faults and the associated epistemic uncertainty is a fundamental step of probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA). SHERIFS (Seismic Hazard and Earthquake Rate In Fault Systems) is an open-source code... more

Poster
230
Geology Seismic and aseismic fault slip revealed by luminescence bleaching depth profiles of the bedrock normal fault scarp
Jie Chen, Ming Luo, Jintang Qin, Jinhui Yin, Lewis Owen, Haoran Wang, Huili Yang, Jinfeng Liu, Boxuan Zhang
Understanding the partitioning of seismic and aseismic fault slip is critical to seismotectonics as it ultimately determines the seismic potential of faults. Recent advances in tectonic geodesy and remote sensing make it possible to develop... more

Poster
286
Seismology Magma movement from Nāpau down to Leilani Triggered the 4th May 2018 Mw 7.0 Hawaii earthquake
Kejie Chen, Jonathan D. Smith, Jean-Philippe Avouac, Zhen Liu, Song Y. Tony
On 4th May 2018, a Mw 7.0 earthquake struck the south flank of Kīlauea, Hawaii, where volcanic activities have aggravated since late April. To investigate the possible cause-and-effect relationship between the magma movement and this earthquake, we... more

Poster
081
Seismology Applying improved spectral analysis to an induced earthquake sequence in Oklahoma and implications on earthquake triggering
Xiaowei Chen, Rachel Abercrombie
Earthquake stress drop is an important parameter in ground motion prediction and earthquake source physics. However, it is notoriously known for its uncertainty. We develop an improved spectral analysis based on stacking. This method solves for an... more

Poster
007
EEII Spatial correlations in CyberShake physics-based ground motion simulations
Yilin Chen, Jack Baker
This poster reports the results from quantifying spatial correlations in the intensity of ground shaking using physics-based simulations from the CyberShake platform. Currently, spatial ground motion variations in future earthquakes are predicted... more

Poster
078
Seismology Source parameter variability of intraslab earthquakes as determined from the empirical Green's function method
Shanna Chu, Gregory Beroza, William Ellsworth
The mechanism of intraslab earthquakes are still incompletely understood. In particular, the relative importance of dehydration embrittlement, thermal shear runaway, hybrid dehydration-induced stress transfer, or some combination, and how these... more

Poster
099
Seismology Basin Amplification Seismic INvestigation: tracking the propagation of waves from the San Andreas Fault to Los Angeles
Robert Clayton, Marine Denolle, Kim Olsen, Patricia Persaud, Jascha Polet
Seismic amplification in sedimentary basins naturally arise from the contrast in elastic wave speeds between soft sediments and hard bedrock. Connectivity in sedimentary basins can thus act as seismic waveguides. The Basin Amplification Seismic... more
18029
Poster
270
SAFS In search of earthquakes, a biomarker thermal maturity investigation into the seismic potential of the central San Andreas Fault
Genevieve Coffey
Understanding the seismogenic potential of a fault is important in the assessment of seismic hazard in a region. We know that faults can exhibit a range of seismic behaviors from slow aseismic creep to fast earthquake slip. While earthquakes are not... more

Poster
080
Seismology Revisiting historical earthquakes in our backyard: 1925 Santa Barbara and 1952 Kern County
Scott Condon
We revisit the historic 1925 Santa Barbara and 1952 Kern County earthquakes using available seismic and geodetic data. As these two events occurred before the establishment of the World-Wide Standard Seismographic Network, our knowledge is very... more

Poster
160
SDOT Seafloor scarps, stepover geometry, and kinematics of the Newport-Inglewood fault zone offshore Oceanside, California
James Conrad, Daniel Brothers, Maureen Walton, Ray Sliter, Peter Dartnell
High-resolution Chirp sub-bottom data were collected in 2018 off the southern California coast between San Mateo Point and Carlsbad to image the right-lateral Newport-Inglewood (NI) fault zone and related faults on the outer shelf and upper slope.... more

Poster
313
CEO Predictive Skill: Using the Bayesian Inference to Study RSQSim and UCERF3
Jordan Cortez, Guillermo Beas, Shengyu Wang, Cynthia Tong, Sebastien Rossouw, Katia Ascencio
The undergraduate studies in earthquake information technology (USEIT) probabilistic forecasting team at the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) worked closely with the High Performance Computing (HPC) team to calibrate parameters within... more

Poster
017
GM Kinematic rupture simulations of earthquakes on multi-segment faults
Jorge Crempien, Ralph Archuleta
The presence of bends or multiple faults in the earthquake rupture process significantly affects the spatial seismic-moment distribution per segment and the time evolution of the rupture front. Because of this, it is clear that multi-segment rupture... more
17247
Poster
294
CS Unified and Continuous Software Development for AWP-ODC-OS
Yifeng Cui, Alexander Breuer, Rajdeep Konwar, David Lenz
State-of-the-art software development and engineering techniques are in high demand for increased code quality and usability. Important best practices include sound licensing, unified software development, version control for software and data, as... more
18107
Poster 214
FARM Earthquake sub-event scaling: new perspective for rupture determinism
Philippe Danré, Jiuxun Yin, Bradley Lipovsky, Marine Denolle
Strong ground motions during earthquake come from either a complex source time function or a complex wave propagation. We take advantage of global databases of source time functions (SCARDEC, Vallee et al. 2011, over 2,500 events and USGS, Hayes... more

Poster
046
EFP Why do strike-slip earthquakes produce fewer aftershocks?
Kelian Dascher-Cousineau, Emily Brodsky, Thorne Lay
The number of aftershocks generated by an earthquake is generally related to the size of the mainshock. However, aftershock sequences can have significant excursions from a simple magnitude-dependent productivity law. This variability is... more

Poster
222
Geology Preliminary geologic slip rates along Andes fastest slipping crustal fault, the Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault Zone (LOFZ), Patagonia, Chile
Gregory De Pascale, Melanie Froude, Ivanna Penna, Reginald Hermanns, Daniel Moncada, Sergio Sepulveda, Mario Persico, David Petley, Gabriel Vargas, William Murphy, Sebastian Pairoa
Chile ́s building code is designed for subduction zone events, and not for higher intensity strong-ground motions generated when crustal faults slip. Fault slip rates are therefore important imputs for these models. In Chile, crustal fault... more

Poster 213
FARM Earthquake behaviors in Source Time functions: energetic onset of earthquakes and biases from over-simplifying the source pulse
Marine Denolle, Philippe Danré
Global databases of earthquake source time functions (STFs) provide tremendous opportunities to explore the temporal evolution of the source. We use two such databases (SCARDEC Vallee 2011,2016 and USGS Hayes 2017), to extract information about... more
17100
Talk
Tue 13:30
CS Deep learning for aftershock location patterns and the earthquake cycle
Phoebe DeVries, Thomas Thompson, Martin Wattenberg, Fernanda Viegas, Brendan Meade
Over the past few years, deep learning has led to rapid advances in applied computer science, from machine vision to natural language processing. These methods are now accessible to scientists across all disciplines due to the availability of easy-... more
17090
Talk Sun 18:00
CISM Earthquake and fault system dynamics – Putting the pieces together
James Dieterich
In nature earthquakes do not occur as independent events on faults that are isolated in time and space. Rather they occur as emergent phenomena from the system dynamics of geometrically complex fault networks. Earthquake simulations that integrate... more

Poster
245
Geology Characterizing the 3D geometry of the Ventura-Pitas Point fault system and its implications for earthquake hazards in southern California
Jessica Don, Andreas Plesch, Mattie Newman, John Shaw
The Ventura-Pitas Point fault system, located in the western Transverse Ranges, is one of the largest earthquake sources in southern California with Holocene marine terraces suggesting that deformation occurs in discrete 7-9 meter uplift events (... more
18032
Poster
167
SDOT Deformation in the Yuha Desert from the 2010 M7.2 El Mayor – Cucapah Earthquake
Andrea Donnellan, Jay Parker, Michael Heflin, John Rundle, Lisa Grant Ludwig, Gregory Lyzenga
UAVSAR and GPS measurements were collected north of the US Mexico border spanning the 2010 M7.2 El Mayor – Cucapah earthquake from 6 months before to 7 years following the event. The area includes the Yuha Desert, Ocotillo area, and Salton Trough.... more

Poster
059
Seismology Tracking thousands of microearthquakes for a month in northern Oklahoma: What a large-N array can reveal about induced seismicity
Sara Dougherty, Elizabeth Cochran, Rebecca Harrington, Zachary Ross
The substantial increase in earthquake rate observed in Oklahoma during the last decade has largely been attributed to the disposal of wastewater from energy production activities. While existing sparse regional networks are able to capture the... more

Poster
208
FARM Effects of Fault Geometry and Pre-Stress Loading for Scenarios of Earthquakes on the Eastern San Gorgonio Pass Region in CA using Dynamic Rupture Simulations
Roby Douilly, David Oglesby, Michele Cooke, Jennifer Beyer
Compilations of geologic data have illustrated that the right-lateral Coachella segment of the southern San Andreas Fault is past its average recurrence time period. On its western edge, this fault segment is split into two branches: the Mission... more

Poster
224
Geology Using relative structural complexity of fault segment barriers to model prehistoric earthquake rupture histories
Christopher DuRoss, Ryan Gold, Rich Briggs, Scott Bennett
Geometrically complex structures along faults, such as fault steps and bends, commonly limit the lateral extent of surface-rupturing earthquakes. However, reconstructions of prehistoric fault ruptures often treat these structures as binary limits to... more

Poster
199
FARM Modeling Earthquake Mechanics with High Resolution Fault Zone Physics: New Computational Tools for Addressing The Conundrum of Scales
Ahmed Elbanna, Setare Hajarolasvadi, Xiao Ma, Mohamed Abdelmeguid, David Kammer, Gabriele Albertini, Bob Haber, Amit Madhukar
Modeling earthquake ruptures is a complex challenge due to the wide range of spatio-temporal scales contributing to the dynamic instability, ensuing propagation, and slow inter-seismic deformation. New numerical schemes based on efficient domain... more

Poster
192
FARM The Community Code Verification Exercise for Simulating Sequences of Earthquakes and Aseismic Slip (SEAS): Initial Benchmarks and Future Directions
Brittany Erickson, Junle Jiang, Michael Barall, Nadia Lapusta, Eric Dunham, Ruth Harris, Lauren Abrahams, Kali Allison, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Sylvain Barbot, Camilla Cattania, Ahmed Elbanna, Yuri Fialko, Benjamin Idini Zabala, Jeremy Kozdon, Valere Lambert, Yajing Liu, Yingdi Luo, Xiao Ma, Paul Segall, Pengcheng Shi, Meng Wei
Numerical simulations of Sequences of Earthquakes and Aseismic Slip (SEAS) have made great progress over the past decades to address important questions in earthquake physics and fault mechanics. Significant challenges in SEAS modeling remain in... more
18099, 17151
Poster 020
GM Modeling shallow crustal nonlinearity in physics-based earthquake simulations: Beyond perfect plasticity
Elnaz Esmaeilzadeh Seylabi, Doriam Restrepo, Domniki Asimaki, Ricardo Taborda
We implement and verify a multi-axial constitutive soil model in Hercules, one of SCEC’s three-dimensional wave propagation codes for regional scale earthquake simulations. Our overarching goal is to compute the effects of shallow crust... more
18020
Poster
131
Geodesy Optimal GNSS observations in Southern California
Eileen Evans, Sarah Minson
We evaluate the current Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) observation network in southern California to 1) quantify the relative information provided by expanding the network to include seafloor observations, and 2) to identify optimal... more

Poster
169
FARM The composition and structure of shallow portions of the San Andreas and San Gabriel Faults
James Evans, Rebekah Reimann, Caroline Studnicky, Kelly Bradbury
We investigate the composition and structure of the upper 2 km of strike-slip faults by examining core from two geotechnical investigations in the San Andreas (SAF) and San Gabriel Fault (SGF) zones. Seven steeply north inclined cores from Lake... more
18077
Poster
273
SAFS Characterization of Faulting at the San Andreas Oasis in the Dos Palmas Preserve Using Ground-based Magnetics, VLF and DC Resistivity
Drew Faherty, Stacey Petrashek, Raul Contreras, Nathan Pulver
The San Andreas Oasis is located on the northeast side of the Salton Sea, within the Dos Palmas Preserve at the base of the Orocopia Mountains. This Oasis, among other oases and springs in the Preserve, are associated with the Hidden Springs Fault (... more

Poster
073
Seismology Investigating microearthquake finite source attributes with IRIS Community Wavefield Demonstration Experiment in Oklahoma
Wenyuan Fan, Jeff McGuire
An earthquake rupture process can be kinematically described by rupture velocity, duration and spatial extent. These key kinematic source parameters provide important constraints on earthquake physics and rupture dynamics. In particular, core... more
17177
Poster
319
CEO Lab Talk with Laura: STEM research meets comedy on the radio
Laura Fattaruso
In January 2018 I started producing a weekly STEM-themed radio show, Lab Talk with Laura, on the UMass Amherst radio station WMUA. The show is also distributed as a podcast on iTunes and Soundcloud, and promoted via Facebook and Twitter. I host each... more

Talk Tue 08:30
FARM On the possibility of earthquake rupture through clay-rich faults
Daniel Faulkner, Marieke Rempe, John Bedford, C Sanchez-Roa, C Boulton, S den Hartog
Many mature, large-displacement fault zones exhibit a clay-rich fault core. This low porosity, low permeability material inhibits the migration of fluid and consequently small changes in porosity produce pore pressure transients that take... more

Poster
086
Seismology Combining back-projection and matched filter in detecting offshore seismicity: Application to NE Japan subduction zone
Tian Feng, Lingsen Meng
In this project, we combine the Back Projection (BP) imaging and match-filter detection (MF) techniques to improve the capability of detecting offshore events. The MF method searches for similar patterns by cross-correlating waveforms of known... more

Poster
139
Geodesy Measurements of 3-component, time-dependent deformation using Sentinel-1 SAR interferometry and continuous GPS data
Yuri Fialko, Ekaterina Tymofyeyeva
Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data are increasingly used to image deformation due to active faults. Frequent InSAR acquisitions are expected to provide an improved signal to noise ratio for low-amplitude deformation signals.... more
17046
Poster
261
SAFS Revisiting the Cajon Pass Quaternary Terraces with Geochronology dating­ implications for the long term slip rates of the San Jacinto and San Andreas systems
Paula Figueiredo, Ray Weldon, Lewis Owen
The San Andreas (SA) and the San Jacinto (SJ) Faults are the two major active fault systems in Southern California, accommodating 50-70 % of the 52 mm/yr North America–Pacific plate boundary motion. At the Cajon Pass (CP) area, both fault systems... more

Poster
037
EFP Statistics of seismicity associated with a sequence of explosive eruptions at Kilauea, Hawaii
Rebecca Fildes, Louise Kellogg, Donald Turcotte, John Rundle
Beginning about June 4, 2018, a remarkable quasi-periodic sequence of explosive eruptions began at Kilauea volcano, Hawaii. Explosive summit eruptions began after the M=6.9 earthquake on May 4, 2018 and the decay of its aftershock sequence. These... more

Poster
079
Seismology Effective stress drop and aseismic deformation
Tomas Fischer, Sebastian Hainzl
The concept of effective stress drop of a seismic sequence is based on the cumulative seismic moment and area activated by seismic ruptures. The analysis of end-member cases of clustered seismicity shows that the estimated effective stress drop of a... more

Poster
283
Seismology Preliminary evidence for localized lithospheric deformation in the western Basin and Range and Walker Lane from Ps receiver function analysis
Heather Ford
Cenozoic-aged extension within portions of the Basin and Range has been estimated to be as large as 250 km, however others put estimates lower. A question that remains today is how strain is accommodated within the lithosphere beneath the Basin and... more
17165
Poster
180
FARM Does effective stress have reduced sensitivity to pore pressure at seismogenic depths?
Patrick Fulton, Szu-Ting Kuo, Hiroko Kitajima, Xiaoda Liu
The importance of fluids in fault mechanics is well-recognized. Pore pressure is known to affect elastic deformation and brittle failure through its control on effective stress, where Effective Stress = Stress – alpha * Pore Pressure. However,... more
17245
Poster
292
CS Unraveling earthquake dynamics through large-scale multi-physics simulations
Alice-Agnes Gabriel, Stephanie Wollherr, Thomas Ulrich, Elizabeth Madden, Kenneth Duru, Duo Li
Earthquakes are highly non-linear multiscale problems, encapsulating the geometry and rheology of propagating shear fractures that render the Earth’s crust and emanate destructive seismic waves. Using physics-based earthquake scenarios, modern... more
17075
Poster
048
EFP Aftershock Matters
Nicole Gage, David Wald, Kristin Marano
Aftershocks can be inconsequential, or they can cause more extensive damage and more human casualties than their associated mainshocks. Most studies of aftershocks focus on characterizing statistical properties such as their likelihood, frequency,... more

Poster
031
CISM Probabilities of Earthquakes in the San Andreas Fault System: Estimations from RSQSim Simulations
Jacquelyn Gilchrist, Thomas Jordan, Kevin Milner
The RSQSim model of Dieterich & Richards-Dinger (2010) is now capable of simulating very long (> 10^6 yrs) catalogs of M ≥ 5 earthquakes using the same fault geometry and slip rates as UCERF3 (Field et al., 2014), the latest seismic hazard ... more

Poster
089
Seismology Rapid induced seismicity mitigation and its impact on aftershock productivity in Oklahoma
Thomas Goebel, Zach Rosson, Emily Brodsky, Jake Walter
Induced earthquakes provide a rare opportunity to study the connection between stress perturbations and resulting seismic activity. Fluid-injection can directly trigger seismic events, leading to elevated background rates, but may also result in... more

Poster
278
SAFS Looking Ahead by Looking Down – Potential Applications of Very High Resolution Drone-Based Imagery for Tectonic Geomorphology
Allen Gontz, Chelsea Blanton, Thomas Rockwell, Joshua Kelly
Geomorphic analyses have relied on various methods throughout the recent past. In the 1940’s, aerial imagery changed the way we look at the surface of the Earth. The 1980’s brought Landsat and new capacity to image the surface of the Earth. In the... more
18038
Poster
013
GM Sampling Parametric Rupture Variability using Broadband Ground Motion Simulations
Robert Graves
Observations from past earthquakes show the rupture process can be complex, exhibiting spatial variations in rupture speed, slip and slip rate, as well as geometric roughness of the faulting surface. Incorporating these features within kinematic... more

Poster
115
Geodesy Using a dense GPS array as a strain meter on the Anza section of the San Jacinto fault
Margaret Grenier, Yuri Fialko
The San Jacinto fault is the most actively seismic fault in Southern California and has produced a series of moderately (M>6) sized earthquakes in the last 120 years. Within the main strand of the San Jacinto fault there is a ~20 km long locked... more

Poster
168
SDOT Afterslip and Viscoelastic Processes and Their Relation with Seismic Activity: An Example from the Study of the Mw 7.2 El Mayor-Cucapah Earthquake (Mexico)
Adriano Gualandi, Zhen Liu
Different aseismic deformation processes perturb the stress field in the brittle crust, and consequently influence the seismic activity. Afterslip and viscoelastic relaxation are usually invoked to explain the observed displacements after a major... more

Poster
311
CEO 2018 USEIT: Using Machine Learning to Forecast Earthquakes
Anthony Guerra, Brandon Ho, Varduhi Kababjyan, Ramon Mei, Tomoe Mizutani, Tiffany Streitenberger, Shalani Weerasooriya, Jordan Wolz, Guillermo Beas, Shengyu Wang, Abhijit Kashyap, Jacquelyn Gilchrist
As part of the 2018 Undergraduate Studies in Earthquake Information Technology (UseIT) internship program, the Machine Learning (ML) team was challenged to investigate how ML might be used to derive statistical earthquake forecasts from... 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.