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A Teleseismic Study of the 2002 Denali Fault, Alaska, Earthquake and Implications for Rapid Strong-Motion Estimation

Authors :
Donald V. Helmberger
David J. Wald
Chen Ji
Source :
Earthquake Spectra. 20:617-637
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2004.

Abstract

Slip histories for the 2002 M7.9 Denali fault, Alaska, earthquake are derived rapidly from global teleseismic waveform data. In phases, three models improve matching waveform data and recovery of rupture details. In the first model (Phase I), analogous to an automated solution, a simple fault plane is fixed based on the preliminary Harvard Centroid Moment Tensor mechanism and the epicenter provided by the Preliminary Determination of Epicenters. This model is then updated (Phase II) by implementing a more realistic fault geometry inferred from Digital Elevation Model topography and further (Phase III) by using the calibrated P-wave and SH-wave arrival times derived from modeling of the nearby 2002 M6.7 Nenana Mountain earthquake. These models are used to predict the peak ground velocity and the shaking intensity field in the fault vicinity. The procedure to estimate local strong motion could be automated and used for global real-time earthquake shaking and damage assessment. [DOI: 10.1193/1.1778388]

Details

ISSN :
19448201 and 87552930
Volume :
20
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Earthquake Spectra
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f51f0ad34c91b7114609ab53350deac8