Zobrazeno 1 - 5
of 5
pro vyhledávání: '"Albert M. Rogers"'
Autor:
Dennis W. O'Leary, Robert B. Smith, John W. Whitney, Laurence W. Anderson, Robert R. Youngs, Susan S. Olig, Frank H. Swan, Christopher J. Fridrich, Silvio K. Pezzopane, R. Ernest Anderson, Ronald L. Bruhn, Albert M. Rogers, Kenneth D. Smith, David B. Slemmons, James C. Yount, Jon P. Ake, Gabriel R. Toro, Walter J. Arabasz, Kevin J. Coppersmith, James P. McCalpin, Peter L.K. Knuepfer, Craig M. dePolo, David P. Schwartz, Diane I. Doser, Alan R. Ramelli
Publikováno v:
Earthquake Spectra. 19:191-219
We present a methodology for conducting a site-specific probabilistic analysis of fault displacement hazard. Two approaches are outlined. The first relates the occurrence of fault displacement at or near the ground surface to the occurrence of earthq
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 60:953-971
The November 9, 1968 earthquake in south-central Illinois occurred in the New Madrid zone, a seismic zone associated with northeast-trending geological structure. Landforms in the epicentral area consist of nearly flat, glacial lake plains surroundin
Autor:
Albert M. Rogers, Carl Kisslinger
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 62:301-324
A ray-theory development of the effect of dip on P-wave transmission through a single layer over a half-space permits an assessment of errors due to dip in estimates of crustal thickness from observed P-wave spectral properties using transmission coe
Autor:
Mark E. Meremonte, Albert M. Rogers
Publikováno v:
Open-File Report.
This catalog is a collation of earthquake hypocenters, intensities, and magnitudes for the southern Great Basin (SGB) for the period 1868-1978 prior to the operation of the SGB network. The data are drawn from many sources such as earlier non-instrum
Autor:
Jerry Thompson
A thrillingly rendered and level-headed look at the Cascadia Subduction Zone—the cause of over 30 monster earthquakes—and the devastating natural disasters it promises.There is a crack in the earth's crust that runs roughly 31 miles offshore, app