Publication | Closed Access
Using 1-Hz GPS Data to Measure Deformations Caused by the Denali Fault Earthquake
328
Citations
7
References
2003
Year
EngineeringSeismic WavePermanent Surface DisplacementsEarth ScienceGeophysicsCrustal DeformationDenali Fault EarthquakeMoment Magnitude 7.9Earthquake SourceEarthquake ForecastingGeodesyGround MotionEarthquake Engineering1-Hz Gps DataSeismic CycleGeographySeismic ImagingEarthquake RuptureTectonicsSeismologyGeomechanicsSeismic Hazard
The 3 November 2002 moment magnitude 7.9 Denali fault earthquake generated large, permanent surface displacements in Alaska and large-amplitude surface waves throughout western North America. We find good agreement between strong ground-motion records integrated to displacement and 1-hertz Global Positioning System (GPS) position estimates collected approximately 140 kilometers from the earthquake epicenter. One-hertz GPS receivers also detected seismic surface waves 750 to 3800 kilometers from the epicenter, whereas these waves saturated many of the seismic instruments in the same region. High-frequency GPS increases the dynamic range and frequency bandwidth of ground-motion observations, providing another tool for studying earthquake processes.
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