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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 251-300 of 336
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SCEC ID Category Title and Authors SCEC Award
Poster
185
FARM Beyond Backslip: Improvement of Earthquake Simulators from New Hybrid Loading Conditions
Bruce Shaw
A standard approach to loading earthquake simulators involving complex fault system geometries is the backslip method, where fault slip-rates are specified and stressing rates giving the specified slip-rates are calculated and imposed on the system... more
19199
Poster
087
Seismology How to Measure Variations in High-Frequency Radiation for Small to Moderate Earthquakes
Peter Shearer, Rachel Abercrombie, Wei Wang
Many studies have shown that some small earthquakes radiate much more high-frequency energy than others. This variability is a primary contributor to differences in estimated radiated energy, stress drop, and GMPE residuals. Data mining of large... more
18086
Poster 267
Ridgecrest Foreshocks, Aftershocks, and Faulting Complexity: the 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence in High Resolution
David Shelly
The 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake sequence provides a fascinating example of earthquake interaction processes and faulting complexity, captured by modern seismic and geodetic networks. Notable features of the sequence include 1) a rich foreshock... more

Poster
264
Ridgecrest Distinct Dual-mode inter-event slip and cascade triggering during the 2019 Ridgecrest, California foreshock/mainshock earthquake sequence
Zheng-Kang Shen, Han Yue, Jianbao Sun, Min Wang, Lian Xue, Weifan Lu, Yijian Zhou, Chunmei Ren, Mingjia Li
Cascade and slow-slip processes are believed to control interactions between foreshocks, mainshocks, and aftershocks, although their relative contributions are poorly resolved. Discrimination between these processes will shed light on the... more

Poster
190
SDOT Study on the crustal stress field of the Tengchong volcanic area
Shuzhong Sheng, Yongge Wan, Changsheng Jiang, Xiaoshan Wang, Shanshan Liang, Xiaohui Hu
Based on the observation data of the Tengchong volcanic area from January 2011 to April 2019 in the Bulletin of Seismological Observations of Chinese stations, we calculated the crustal stress field in Tengchong volcanic area by using composite... more

Poster
010
GM A Site Response Module Toolbox for the Broadband Platform: Implementation and Verification
Jian Shi, Domniki Asimaki
We present a site module toolbox for the SCEC broadband platform, which synthesizes individual tools and libraries that we developed over the past years, supported in part by SCEC. Our open-source Python library, PySeismoSoil, can be used to compute... more

Poster 246
Ridgecrest Preliminary study on the attenuation characteristics of ground motion recorded during the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquakes
Hongjun Si, Kazuki Koketsu, Hiroe Miyake
Two major earthquakes, the Mw6.5 and the Mw7.0 Ridgecrest earthquakes occurred about 200 km north-northeast of Los Angeles, California, at 10:33:49 on 4 July and 20:19:53 on 5 July 2019 (PDT), respectively. During these earthquakes, a large amount... more

Poster
013
GM The SCEC Broadband Platform: Open-Source Software for Strong Ground Motion Simulation and Validation
Fabio Silva, Philip Maechling, Christine Goulet
The Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) Broadband Platform (BBP) is a collection of contributed open-source scientific software modules that can simulate broadband (0-20+ Hz) ground motions for earthquakes at regional scales. The BBP is a... more
19130, 18146, 17137, 16115, 19097, 17138, 16021, 19079, 17247, 16063, 19150, 19055, 15060, 18092
Poster
114
Geology Recent faulting in south San Diego Bay: A Rose Canyon – San Miguel-Vallecitos fault connection?
Drake Singleton, Jillian Maloney, Daniel Brothers, Neal Driscoll, Jared Kluesner, Ray Sliter
The Rose Canyon Fault (RCF) is the southern segment of the larger Newport-Inglewood-Rose Canyon Fault system, which underlies or is within 10 km of the most populated areas of coastal southern California. While recent work on offshore segments north... more
19107
Poster
201
Geodesy Imaging Slow-slip Events in Costa Rica
Krittanon Sirorattanakul, Adriano Gualandi, Jean-Philippe Avouac
Faults slip varies in duration ranging from a fraction of a second to multiple years. The longer duration end of this spectrum exists the slow-slip events (SSEs). These SSEs do not radiate seismic waves and hence are not destructive, but they... more

Poster 011
GM Shallow and deep nonlinear attenuation of S waves beneath PS10 during the 2002 Denali mainshock
Norman Sleep, Tianze Liu
Nonlinear failure likely attenuated strong S waves beneath Pump Station 10 during the 2002 Denali Earthquake. High dynamic stresses caused failure within gravel that is ~100 m thick at the station. The well-known scaling relationship for vertical S... more
19001
Poster
094
Seismology Developments in EEW testing: Including large magnitude events in the new test suite
Deborah Smith, Jeff McGuire, Andrew Good, Stephen Guiwits, Colin O'Rourke, Angela Chung
Earthquake early warning algorithms must undergo rigorous real-time and offline testing before being accepted into the ShakeAlert production system. The ShakeAlert Testing and Certification platform attempts to simulate how the production system... more

Poster
032
EFP Probabilistic forecasting of induced seismicity in the Groningen gas field
Jonathan Smith, Meyer Hadrien, Jean-Philippe Avouac, Robert White, Stephen Bourne
The Groningen gas field, situated in the north-east of the Netherlands, has been in production since 1963. Prior to gas extraction, the region was considered aseismic with no historical earthquakes recorded. However, since the late 1980s small... more

Poster
237
Ridgecrest Vertical Deformation of the 2019 M6.4 Searles Valley and M7.1 Ridgecrest Earthquakes
Bridget Smith-Konter, Lauren Ward, Xiaohua Xu, David Sandwell
On July 4-5, 2019, the M6.4 and M7.1 Searles Valley and Ridgecrest earthquake sequence ruptured a geometrically complex 50 km long system of faults within the Eastern California Shear Zone (ECSZ). These conjugate events resulted in several meters... more
19161
Poster
314
CXM Imaging the Upper Mantle Seismic Structure Beneath Southern California
A. Christian Stanciu, Eugene Humphreys
Upper mantle seismic imaging using body waves provides high resolution constrain on lateral variation in structure at depths bellow ~55 km. While tomographic imaging methods have been consistently improving over the last few decades, current imaging... more
19231, 18179
Poster
158
FARM Experimental Investigation of the Origins of Brittle Fracture Roughness
Will Steinhardt, Shmuel Rubinstein
As a crack front moves through a material, it leaves in its wake a fracture surface that preserves the time history of the crack front’s motion. For geological materials, this surface is rough, a remnant of the crack’s tortuous path. Rough crack... more

Poster
213
Geodesy Deep Learning-based Damage Mapping with InSAR Coherence Time Series
Oliver Stephenson, Tobias Koehne, Eric Zhan, Brent Cahill, Zachary Ross, Sang-Ho Yun
Fast response in the aftermath of natural disasters is essential to minimize casualties. In order to assist effective use of limited response resources, rapid and accurate mapping of the extent and intensity of disaster-induced damage over tens to... more

Poster 244
Ridgecrest Engineering and Geological Effects of the July 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence
Jonathan Stewart, Scott Brandenberg, Pengfei Wang, Chukwuebuka Nweke, Kenneth Hudson, Silvia Mazzoni, Yousef Bozorgnia, Kenneth Hudnut, Craig Davis, Sean Ahdi, Farzin Zareian, Jawad Fayaz, Rich Koehler, C Chupik, Ian Pierce, A Williams, Sinan Akciz, Martin Hudson, T Kishida, Benjamin Brooks, Ryan Gold, Daniel Ponti, Katherine Scharer, Devin McPhillips, T Ericksen, J Hernandez, Jason Patton, Brian Olson, Timothy Dawson, Jerry Treiman, Christopher DuRoss, Kelly Blake, Jeffrey Bachhuber, Christopher Madugo, J Sun, Andrea Donnellan, Gregory Lyzenga, Erik Conway, Christine Goulet
The Ridgecrest Earthquake sequence included a foreshock event on July 4 2019 (M6.4) and a M7.1 mainshock event on July 5 2019. These events occurred in the Eastern California Shear Zone, near Indian Wells Valley, south of China Lake and west of... more

Poster
322
CXM A Queryable Map-Based Web Interface to the SCEC Community Fault Model
Mei-Hui Su, Philip Maechling, Scott Marshall, Craig Nicholson, Andreas Plesch, John Shaw, Edric Pauk, Tran Huynh, Elizabeth Hearn
The Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) Community Fault Model (CFM) is an object-oriented, three-dimensional (3D) representation of active faults in southern California and adjacent offshore basins that includes 105 complex fault systems... more
19102, 18032
Poster
172
FARM Realistic variability in seismic moment and recurrence time of repeating earthquakes reproduced in models with fractal shapes of fault patches
Kavya Sudhir, Nadia Lapusta
Observations indicate that even repeating earthquake sequences display significant variability in their moment and recurrence time. Similarly, creeping segments may be accumulating their slip unsteadily, as suggested by surface creep meters and... more
19086
Poster
072
Seismology Seismicity in Changning Sichuan, China
Li Sun
A magnitude 6.2 earthquake occurred in Changning Sichuan, China on June 17, 2019. Before this event, there was no earthquake larger than 6.0 occurred Changning and surrounding area. The aftershocks of this event spread nearly 20 km in northwest of... more

Poster
044
Seismology Search for seismic velocity changes associated with CO2 injections at the carbon capture and storage site in Decatur, Illinois
Taka'aki Taira, J. Ole Kaven, Justin Rubinstein, Elizabeth Cochran
We explore the temporal variations in seismic velocity at the Decatur carbon capture and storage (CCS) site by using seismic interferometry with ambient noise. A dense local seismic network has been installed and operated by U.S. Geological Survey... more

Poster
162
FARM Evolution of frictional shear resistance in response to rapid variations of normal stress
Yuval Tal, Vito Rubino, Ares Rosakis, Nadia Lapusta
A proper formulation of the shear-resistance evolution during rupture is essential for many earthquake source problems, including simulations of the ground motion. While the shear resistance is typically assumed to be proportional to normal stress,... more
19093
Poster 247
Ridgecrest Prediction of Ground-Motion Time-Series at an arbitrary location using Gaussian Process Interpolation: Application to the Ridgecrest Earthquake
Aidin Tamhidi, Nicolas Kuehn, Yousef Bozorgnia, Ertugrul Taciroglu, Tadahiro Kishida
Every seismic event is recorded only at a finite number of locations. In many engineering applications a variety of seismic intensity measures (IMs), typically peak ground acceleration or response spectrum, are required as input, that are estimated... more

Poster
303
CEO A conceptual framework of the China Seismic Experimental Site (CSES)
Yi Tang
As a natural laboratory in earthquake science and technology, the China Seismic Experimental Site (CSES), by provide a principal natural laboratory in the Sichuan-Yunnan region, plays important role in investigator-driven and supports core... more

Poster 166
FARM Stress Heterogeneity and Slip Complexity due to Fault Zone Damage in Fully Dynamic Earthquake Cycles
Prithvi Thakur, Yihe Huang
Mechanical modeling of fault-slip over long timescales is of fundamental importance for understanding earthquake physics and assessing seismic hazard. Mature strike-slip faults are usually surrounded by a narrow zone of damaged rocks characterized... more

Poster 317
CXM Preliminary SCEC Community Rheology Model
Wayne Thatcher, Elizabeth Hearn, Michael Oskin, Laurent Montesi, Greg Hirth, Whitney Behr, Andreas Plesch, John Shaw
The SCEC Community Rheology Model (CRM) is a three-dimensional description of the rheology of southern California’s lithosphere, based on an ongoing synthesis of data from a wide range of sources. These sources include but are not limited to seismic... more
19195
Poster
250
Ridgecrest Automated processing of the 2019 Ridgecrest, California, earthquake sequence ground motions
Eric Thompson, Mike Hearne, John Rekoske, Heather Schovanec, Morgan Moschetti, Brad Aagaard, Grace Parker
We describe ongoing efforts at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) to develop automated open-source ground motion processing software. Within the USGS, numerous projects have highlighted the need for standardized and automated ground-motion processing... more

Poster
266
Ridgecrest Anti-similar aftershocks in the Ridgecrest, California earthquake sequence
Daniel Trugman, Zachary Ross, Paul Johnson
Similar earthquakes - pairs of events with highly similar waveforms - rupture overlapping or adjacent fault patches with similar slip mechanisms. Close examination of the characteristics of similar earthquake pairs have been used for a variety of... more

Poster
115
Geology Refining the location of the coastal Newport-Inglewood fault with Structure from Motion photogrammetric models and shallow marine seismic profiling
Amber Tucker, Jayne Bormann, Neal Driscoll
The Newport-Inglewood fault (NIF) is an active fault with a history of damaging earthquakes that cuts coastal communities in Southern California. Onshore, the fault extends from Beverly Hills to Newport Beach, where it continues offshore to connect... more
18192
Poster
062
Seismology Site Response Across the San Gabriel, Chino and San Bernardino Sedimentary Basins from Application of the Spectral Ratio Method to Ambient Noise Recorded by Seismic Node Transects
Anisha Tyagi, Samuel Gurley, Margaret Grenier, Rachel Kreuziger, Jascha Polet
The San Gabriel, Chino and San Bernardino Basins are heavily populated sedimentary basins that are bounded by a series of faults. Sedimentary basins are known to amplify earthquake ground motions; therefore, it is crucially important to understand... more

Poster
320
CXM Complementing CGM with surface deformation measurements from dense catalogs of SAR data
Ekaterina Tymofyeyeva, Yuri Fialko
The SCEC Community Geodetic Model (CGM) aims to describe surface deformation in Southern California at highest possible spatio-temporal resolution and accuracy. This requires an optimal integration of GPS and InSAR (Interferometric Synthetic... more
19234
Poster
150
FARM Surface Displacement and Ground Motion from Dynamic Rupture Models of Thrust Faults with Variable Dip Angles and Burial Depths
Sirena Ulloa, Julian Lozos
Historic earthquakes and empirical studies show that thrust fault ruptures produce stronger ground motion than normal or strike-slip events of the same magnitude. This is due to a combination of hanging wall effects, vertical asymmetry, and higher... more
18218
Poster
299
CS MASTODON: An open source finite element tool to model seismic response of structures
Swetha Veeraraghavan, Chandrakanth Bolisetti, Andrew Slaughter, William Hoffman, Justin Coleman
Multi-hazard Analysis for STOchastic time-DOmaiN phenomena (MASTODON; https://mooseframework.org/mastodon/) - is an open source finite element tool built on top of the Multiphysics Object Oriented Simulation Environment (MOOSE; mooseframework.org)... more

Poster
238
Ridgecrest NOTA Performance During 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence
Christian Walls, Doerte Mann, David Mencin, Kathleen Hodgkinson, Shawn Lawrence, Andre Basset, Ryan Turner, Karl Feaux, Glen Mattioli
The Ridgecrest earthquake sequence occurred within the footprint of the Network of the Americas (NOTA), which federates the former EarthScope Plate Boundary Observatory, TLALOCNet in Mexico, and COCONet in the Caribbean. NOTA is operated by UNAVCO... more

Poster
147
FARM Influence of heterogenous stress on rupture propagation along stepovers of strike-slip faults: Numerical results
Hui Wang, Mian Liu, Benchun Duan, Jianling Cao
Large earthquakes on intracontinental strike-slip faults usually rupture multiple fault segments by jumping over stepovers. Previous field observations and numerical modeling with a homogeneous stress field have suggested that stepovers more than ~... more

Poster
052
Seismology Mapping Near-Surface Rigidity Structure using Co-located Pressure and Seismic Stations from the EarthScope Transportable Array
Jiong Wang, Toshiro Tanimoto
We propose a single-station approach to obtain shallow elastic structure by using co-located pressure and seismic instruments and apply this approach to stations in the EarthScope Transportable Array. This approach retrieves rigidity of the... more

Poster
066
Seismology Earthquake Detection in Develocorder Films: An Image-based Detection Neural Network for Analog Seismograms
Kaiwen Wang, Weiqiang Zhu, William Ellsworth, Gregory Beroza
From the late 19th century into the 1970s, seismograms were almost exclusively recorded in analog form. It was not until the 1980s that digital recording began to replace analog recording. Over 100 years of analog seismograms - about 50 million -... more

Poster
234
Ridgecrest Modeling of co- and early postseismic deformation due to the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake sequence
Kang Wang, Roland Bürgmann
On July 4th, 2019, a Mw 6.4 earthquake struck the Searles Valley near the town of Ridgecrest in southern California. The Mw 6.4 earthquake was followed by a Mw 7.1 event about 30 hours later. Both the Mw 6.4 foreshock and the Mw 7.1 mainshock... more

Poster
014
GM Inclusion of Frequency-Dependent Spatial Correlation into the SDSU Broadband Ground-Motion Generation Method
Nan Wang, Rumi Takedatsu, Kim Olsen, Steven Day
Seismic losses (such as disruption of distributed infrastructure and losses to portfolios of structures) are typically dependent upon the regional distribution of ground-motion intensities, rather than the intensity at only a single site. Ground... more

Poster
080
Seismology Spatial decorrelation of tidal triggering and remote triggering at the Coso geothermal field
Wei Wang, Peter Shearer, Xiaohua Xu
The triggering response of seismic fault systems to short- to mid-term (i.e., seconds to months) stress fluctuations can improve our understanding of earthquake nucleation, rupture failure processes, and local stress states. Geothermal fields are... more

Poster
092
Seismology Bayesian array-based Receiver Function (RF): Towards stable, reliable, and easy-to-interpret RFs
Xin Wang, Zhong Minyan, Zhan Zhongwen
Receiver function (RF) has been an indispensable tool in structural seismology. Though a variety of RF deconvolution techniques have been developed, they are mostly performed at individual station-earthquake pairs, the results of which are adversely... more

Poster
288
GM Effects of off-fault inelasticity on near-fault directivity pulses
Yongfei Wang, Steven Day
Rupture directivity strongly affects spatial variations in ground-motion amplitude and duration around faults and leads to dominant pulse-like fault-normal horizontal ground motions (for prevailing subshear-rupture events) causing a large amount of... more
18204
Poster
198
SDOT Vertical Deformation Dependency on Spatially Variable Elastic Plate Thickness
Lauren Ward, Bridget Smith-Konter, Xiaohua Xu, David Sandwell
Monitoring interseismic crustal deformation of the San Andreas Fault System (SAFS) through geodetic techniques provide key constraints of fault loading over a range of temporal and spatial scales. Historically, these contributions have been limited... more
19161
Poster
008
GM Near-Source Strong Ground Motion Characteristics of the 2018 MW 6.4 Hualien Earthquake in Taiwan
Zengping Wen
The free-field strong ground motions recorded at 30 sites in near fault regions in the 6 February 2018 Mw 6.4 Hualien Earthquake in Taiwan were used to examine the near-source strong ground motion characteristics. The magnitude of vertical and... more

Poster
030
EFP An Update on the Collaboratory for the Study of Earthquake Predictability (CSEP)
Maximilian Werner, William Savran, Philip Maechling, Thomas Jordan, Danijel Schorlemmer, David Rhoades, Warner Marzocchi, John Yu
The Collaboratory for the Study of Earthquake Predictability (CSEP) supports an international effort to conduct and rigorously evaluate earthquake forecasting experiments. CSEP has concluded its first phase of testing (CSEP1) with testing centers... more
19235, 18147
Poster
223
Ridgecrest Detailed fracture map and orthophoto of the southern portion of the M6.4 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake
Alana Williams, Ian Pierce, Rich Koehler, Sinan Akciz, Colin Chupik, Jayne Bormann
An M6.4 foreshock struck on July 3, 2019, near Ridgecrest, California, and ruptured bilaterally. The mainshock, An M7.1 event, followed this earthquake on July 5. Between July 4 and July 9, low altitude aerial photos were acquired along ~12 km of... more

Poster
203
Geodesy Development of a slow slip catalog for the Hikurangi subduction margin, New Zealand
Charles Williams, Laura Wallace, Noel Bartlow, John Haines
Slow slip events (SSEs) occur frequently along the Hikurangi Margin in New Zealand, and understanding these events is critical to our understanding of interseismic coupling, plate motion budgets, and the potential for damaging earthquakes. Along the... more

Poster
240
Ridgecrest Aftershocks of the Ridgecrest earthquake sequence on four dense fiber seismic arrays
Ethan Williams, Zhongwen Zhan, Zefeng Li, Martin Karrenbach, Thomas Coleman, Lisa LaFlame, Steve Cole, Victor Yarsev
Recent advances with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) have demonstrated the ability of pre-existing telecommunications cables to be repurposed as dense arrays of linear strainmeters, effective for scalable seismic monitoring. The extensive fiber... more

Poster
188
FARM Wedge plasticity and coupled simulations of dynamic rupture and tsunami in the Cascadia subduction zone
Andrew Wilson, Shuo Ma
In an elastic dislocation model, whether or not a subduction plate boundary fault breaks the trench has a significant effect on seafloor deformation and resulting tsunami. However, when inelastic deformation of the sedimentary wedge is considered,... more


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