Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 28
pro vyhledávání: '"Walter J. Arabasz"'
Autor:
John R. Filson, Walter J. Arabasz
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 88:131-143
This historical review traces the origins of the current national seismic system in the United States, a cooperative effort that unifies national, regional, and local‐scale seismic monitoring within the structure of the Advanced National Seismic Sy
Autor:
Ivan G. Wong, William R. Lund, Christopher B. DuRoss, Barry Welliver, James C. Pechmann, Walter J. Arabasz, Bob Carey
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 84:165-169
We welcome you to the 2013 Annual Meeting of the Seismological Society of America in Salt Lake City. On 24 July 1847, when Mormon pioneers first viewed the Salt Lake Valley, Brigham Young famously pronounced, "This is the right place" - the place of
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 79:620-636
At 2:48 a.m. local time (MDT; 08:48 UTC) on 6 August 2007, a major collapse occurred in the Crandall Canyon coal mine in east-central Utah. This collapse resulted in the deaths of six miners who were working underground in the area of the collapse. T
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 78:369-374
Advances in seismometry and recording systems have greatly increased the range of signals that can be recorded by strong-motion instruments. This increased range has practical implications for observational weak-motion seismology, as we demonstrate i
Autor:
Walter J. Arabasz, John Ake, James C. Pechmann, Kristine L. Pankow, S. J. Nava, Arthur F. McGarr, Michael K. McCarter
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 95:18-30
We describe a multipart study to quantify the potential ground-shaking hazard to Joes Valley Dam, a 58-m-high earthfill dam, posed by mining-induced seismicity (mis) from future underground coal mining, which could approach as close as ∼1 km to the
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 94:S332-S347
Immediately after the arrival of the surface waves from the M w 7.9 Denali fault earthquake on 3 November 2002, the University of Utah regional seismic network recorded an abrupt increase in local microseismicity throughout most of Utah’s main seis
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
Autor:
Walter J. Arabasz, Robert B. Smith
Publikováno v:
Earthquake Prediction
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::d4862b4e64552d8d96f9a2ecea34e6da
https://doi.org/10.1029/me004p0248
https://doi.org/10.1029/me004p0248
Publikováno v:
Seismological Research Letters. 66:25-34
INTRODUCTION A seismic event of ML (local magnitude) 5.1 occurred at 8:26 a.m. MST (15:26 UTC) on Feb. 3, 1995, in southwestern Wyoming. The epicenter of the shock (Figures 1 and 2) was 29 km west of the town of Green River in a region where five act