Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Ruth S. Ludwin"'
Autor:
C. Jonientz-Trisler, D. Buerge, J. Bowechop, K. James, John J. Clague, J. Rasmussen, Gregory Smits, R. Dennis, D. Carver, Robert J. Losey, Ruth S. Ludwin, C. P. Thrush, J. Wray, Alan D. McMillan, A. de los Angeles
Publikováno v:
Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 273:67-94
Autor:
Coll Thrush, Ruth S. Ludwin
Publikováno v:
American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 31:1-24
On Ash Wednesday in the new millennium’s first year, the earth deep beneath Puget Sound slipped. Some thirty miles below Anderson Island, just off the Nisqually River’s delta, a piece of the planet’s crust fractured and slipped a meter or so, a
Autor:
D. Buerge, J. Rasmussen, A. de los Angeles, C. Jonientz-Trisler, K. James, Ruth S. Ludwin, C. P. Thrush, K. Troost
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 76:426-431
The Seattle Fault is a multistranded east-west-striking reverse fault cutting across Puget Sound, through downtown Seattle, and across Lake Washington. Although geophysical evidence has long indicated a substantial offset in basement rocks beneath Pu
Autor:
Deborah Carver, Chris Jonientz-Trisler, Karen James, Alan D. McMillan, Robert Dennis, Jacilee Wray, Janine Bowechop, Robert J. Losey, Ruth S. Ludwin, John Clague
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 76:140-148
Although scientific recognition of the earthquake hazard presented by the Cascadia subduction zone (CSZ) is relatively recent, native peoples have lived on the Cascadia coast for thousands of years, transferring knowledge from generation to generatio
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 92:3239-3258
The largest historical earthquake in eastern Washington occurred on 15 December 1872. We used Modified Mercalli intensity (MMI) assignments for 12 twentieth-century earthquakes to determine attenuation relations for different regions in the Pacific N
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 63:533-539
The Washington Regional Seismograph Network (WRSN) earthquake catalog shows more earthquakes in the day than at night, probably because some local explosions are misidentified as earthquakes. We have implemented a method to help discriminate likely l
Autor:
Ruth S. Ludwin
Publikováno v:
Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union. 71:1143
The 1990 Pacific Northwest regional AGU meeting held September 13–14 at the University of Washington, Seattle, was attended by more than 80 people; 24 papers and 17 posters were presented. About 25 people participated in a field trip to look at deb