[ca.earthquakes] SCV Geoscience and Remote Sensing Meeting for April

paluzzi@pioneer.arc.nasa.gov (Peter Paluzzi- ZeroOne) (04/11/90)

          April Meeting and Technical Presentation

                    Santa Clara Valley
           Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society

              Analyzing Earthquake Aftershocks

                     Dr. Susan Schwartz
                  University of Santa Cruz

                  Thursday April 26, 1990

Dinner -       5:45 pm at Sundance Mining Company,
               1921 El Camino, Palo Alto

Presentation - 7:30 pm at 450 Durand Building,
               Stanford University

Within a matter of a few hours following the  magnitude  7.1
Loma  Prieta  earthquake, 21 instruments belonging to Incor-
porated Research Institutions  for  Seismology  (IRIS)  were
deployed  in  the  epicentral  region to record the abundant
aftershock activity.  These instruments, along with the hun-
dreds  of  permanent  stations  comprising the Calnet array,
make the aftershock sequence of this earthquake one  of  the
best instrumented in the history of seismic observations.

Dr. Susan Schwartz, a University of  California  President's
Fellow  at  UC  Santa Cruz and a seismic researcher, led the
deployment of the IRIS instruments, and is  currently  using
the  data  collected  in  an  effort  to understand the sub-
surface geometry of the  many  active  faults  in  the  Loma
Prieta  aftershockzone.   Dr.  Schwartz will be the featured
speaker at the April 26 meeting of the  Santa  Clara  Valley
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Society.

The IRIS instruments consisted of 16-bit  data  loggers  and
sensors  that  recorded three-component ground motion in the
frequency range between 1-40  hz.   These  instruments  were
previously used in experiments designed to image crustal and
upper mantle velocity structure.  The Loma Prieta aftershock
deployment  was  the first opportunity for this equipment to
be used in aftershock study.

The  data  collected  during  the  aftershock  sequence  are
presently  being  analyzed by many universities and research
institutions.   Some  of  the  important   questions   being
addressed  are:  was this earthquake characteristic for this

region of the San Andreas Fault,  and  does  its  occurrence
help  us  with  future  predictions; what is the sub-surface
velocity structure in an active fault zone; and what did the
magnitude  of  ground-shaking caused by this earthquake vary
so greatly and what factors affect this magnitude?  Progress
made  on  these  and  other important questions will be dis-
cussed in the presentation.

Reservations for dinner can be  made  by  calling  the  IEEE
Council Office at (415) 327-6622.

Peter Paluzzi, Sr. Graphics Analyst, Sterling Software, ZeroOne Group
Advanced Computing Facility, NASA/Ames Research Center, Mail Stop 233-3
Moffett Field, CA  94035
paluzzi@ames.arc.nasa.gov                            (415) 604-4589