A finite fault striking N24°W and extending to a depth of 10 km is proposed to explain the strong ground motion data for the 6 August 1979 Coyote Lake, California, earthquake (M, = 5.9). Our source model suggests that right-lateral faulting initiated at a depth of 8 km and ruptured toward the south with a velocity of 2.8 km/sec. This unilateral rupture can explain the large displacement recorded south of the epicenter. However, the waveform coherency across an array south and southwest of the epicenter suggests that the rupture length is less than 6 km. The maximum dislocation is about 120 cm in a small area near the hypocenter, and the total moment is estimated to be 3.5 x 1024 dyne-cm. An abrupt stopping phase which corresponds to a dece...
Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar deformat...
To obtain the rupture history of the Parkfield, California, earthquake, we perform 12 kinematic inve...
Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar deformat...
A finite fault striking N24°W and extending to a depth of 10 km is proposed to explain the strong gr...
This thesis presents some deterministic modeling and interpretation of various aspects of observed n...
Our understanding of earthquakes that occurred prior to the establishment of the World-Wide Standard...
Aftershock hypocenters and focal mechanism solutions for the Coyote Lake, California, earthquake rev...
The Coyote Mountain earthquake (M L = 5.8) occurred as an abrupt north-westerly extension of the aft...
On August 1, 1975, a magnitude 5.9 (mb) earthquake occurred approximately 8 km SSE of the town of Or...
On 7 October 1983 a magnitude 5.1 (rob) earthquake occurred in the central Adirondack Mountains, nea...
A least-squares point-by-point inversion of strong ground motion and tele-seismic body waves is used...
Coseismic leveling and triangulation observations are used to determine the faulting geometry and sl...
The source mechanism of earthquakes in the California-Nevada region was studied using surface wave a...
[1] Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar defo...
A detailed seismological interpretation of the strong motion records was attempted for the 1966 Park...
Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar deformat...
To obtain the rupture history of the Parkfield, California, earthquake, we perform 12 kinematic inve...
Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar deformat...
A finite fault striking N24°W and extending to a depth of 10 km is proposed to explain the strong gr...
This thesis presents some deterministic modeling and interpretation of various aspects of observed n...
Our understanding of earthquakes that occurred prior to the establishment of the World-Wide Standard...
Aftershock hypocenters and focal mechanism solutions for the Coyote Lake, California, earthquake rev...
The Coyote Mountain earthquake (M L = 5.8) occurred as an abrupt north-westerly extension of the aft...
On August 1, 1975, a magnitude 5.9 (mb) earthquake occurred approximately 8 km SSE of the town of Or...
On 7 October 1983 a magnitude 5.1 (rob) earthquake occurred in the central Adirondack Mountains, nea...
A least-squares point-by-point inversion of strong ground motion and tele-seismic body waves is used...
Coseismic leveling and triangulation observations are used to determine the faulting geometry and sl...
The source mechanism of earthquakes in the California-Nevada region was studied using surface wave a...
[1] Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar defo...
A detailed seismological interpretation of the strong motion records was attempted for the 1966 Park...
Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar deformat...
To obtain the rupture history of the Parkfield, California, earthquake, we perform 12 kinematic inve...
Structural complexity is common at the terminations of earthquake surface ruptures; similar deformat...