A team of 25 researchers from the United States, Japan, and Italy joined the staff of the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) from January 8 through February 9, 1996, to make the most detailed seismic recordings on Kilauea Volcano ever. One-hundred-sixteen portable seismographs were installed in and near Kilauea Crater in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park as a joint Japanese-U.S. research project to record volcanic earthquakes and tremor. The importance of these events has long been recognized, but their origin remains poorly understood due to inadequate network coverage and limitations of the analog instrumentation used in the past. On February 1, a swarm of over 500 earthquakes was recorded by the dense network, providing the best recording o...
This volume contains reports on seismological studies done in conjunction with other geophysical and...
Around Mt. Iwate, volcanic earthquakes have frequently occurred since 1998. Many instruments have be...
Scientists recently drilled through a Hawaiian volcano to a depth of 3,098 meters below sea level
A team of 25 researchers from the United States, Japan, and Italy joined the staff of the Hawaiian V...
The largest swarm of earthquakes ever observed at a Hawaiian volcano occurred at Loihi Seamount duri...
Near‐field recordings of large earthquakes and volcano‐induced events using traditional seismologica...
The Island of Hawai'i was formed by repeated eruptions of basalts at an oceanic hotspot. Kilauea, th...
Recordings of the seismic power (rate of radiation of seismic energy) and seismic power spectral den...
Seismology is an important and effective tool for monitoring volcanoes and forecasting eruptions. In...
Source properties of earthquakes in Hawaii and seismological aspects of explosive volcanic eruptions...
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by...
"Prepared by Sandia Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185 and Livermore, California 94550 for ...
[1] High precision relocation of earthquakes recorded by the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) seis...
A linear, travel time tomography study of the most active shield volcano of the world, Kilauea Volca...
AbstractEruptive activity returned to the summit region of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i with the formati...
This volume contains reports on seismological studies done in conjunction with other geophysical and...
Around Mt. Iwate, volcanic earthquakes have frequently occurred since 1998. Many instruments have be...
Scientists recently drilled through a Hawaiian volcano to a depth of 3,098 meters below sea level
A team of 25 researchers from the United States, Japan, and Italy joined the staff of the Hawaiian V...
The largest swarm of earthquakes ever observed at a Hawaiian volcano occurred at Loihi Seamount duri...
Near‐field recordings of large earthquakes and volcano‐induced events using traditional seismologica...
The Island of Hawai'i was formed by repeated eruptions of basalts at an oceanic hotspot. Kilauea, th...
Recordings of the seismic power (rate of radiation of seismic energy) and seismic power spectral den...
Seismology is an important and effective tool for monitoring volcanoes and forecasting eruptions. In...
Source properties of earthquakes in Hawaii and seismological aspects of explosive volcanic eruptions...
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2005. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by...
"Prepared by Sandia Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87185 and Livermore, California 94550 for ...
[1] High precision relocation of earthquakes recorded by the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO) seis...
A linear, travel time tomography study of the most active shield volcano of the world, Kilauea Volca...
AbstractEruptive activity returned to the summit region of Kīlauea Volcano, Hawai'i with the formati...
This volume contains reports on seismological studies done in conjunction with other geophysical and...
Around Mt. Iwate, volcanic earthquakes have frequently occurred since 1998. Many instruments have be...
Scientists recently drilled through a Hawaiian volcano to a depth of 3,098 meters below sea level