Collaborative Research: Assessing the State of Locking on the Frontal Thrust of the Cascadia Subduction Zone with Seafloor Geodesy
合作研究:利用海底大地测量评估卡斯卡迪亚俯冲带锋面逆冲锁定状态
基本信息
- 批准号:1658190
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 5.06万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:Standard Grant
- 财政年份:2017
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2017-09-01 至 2021-08-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
The Cascadia Subduction Zone lies along the coast of Northern California, Oregon and Washington and is a significant geohazard that can generate great earthquakes and tsunamis. The Cascadia subduction zone is formed by the oceanic Juan de Fuca tectonic plate moving downward and beneath the overriding continental North American tectonic plate. The interface surface along which the two plates interact or rub is called the megathrust fault. As the Juan de Fuca plate moves downward, friction on the megathrust bends and contracts the overriding North American plate. The rate of buildup of strain is at the level of a centimeter or so per year, but eventually this stored energy is released causing a large earthquake and tsunami. The last great event occurred in 1700 and was powerful enough that the tsunami waves were recorded in Japan. Since that time the US Coast has become heavily populated posing a large hazard to society. Land-based GPS measurements can measure the slow accumulation of strain buildup, but the coastal sites are too far from the submerged shelf of the North American plate to provide reliable estimates far offshore. It is this offshore region where the tsunami generation may be greatest. This project uses GPS measured at the sea surface on a small robotic platform, combined with acoustic ranging from the platform to sensors on the seafloor. This technique is called GPS-Acoustic and can measure the centimeter-level motion of the seafloor. The project goal is to better document how much the seafloor is displacing and aid assessment of the potential size of the future tsunamis. This project will look for locking along the outer toe of the deformation front on the Cascadia Subduction Zone. Two new seafloor GPS-Acoustic sites at 43.0N and 45.3N will be added to the array of two recently established sites at 44.4N and 46.7N, and will allow for a determination of their motion relative to the North American plate. All of these sites are located several km inboard of the trench, and their motions will constrain the kinematics of the shallowest section of the frontal thrust. The project will use new lower cost methods that include GPS-Acoustic data that are collected from a Wave Glider rather than from an expensive ship. Permanent seafloor benchmarks will also be installed to extend the position time series indefinitely, and utilize commercial transponders that are reusable. Specifically, the re-purposing of seafloor transponders will be demonstrated by recovering and re-deploying an existing set of transponders. At the end of the three-year project, the six transponders at the two new sites will be recovered for reuse in future proposed projects of community interest. The benchmarks at these two new sites remain and can be re-occupied in the future (years to decades) to update the measurement time series. To interpret the motions inferred from the GPS-A observations, these offshore data will be integrated with existing onshore GPS and leveling observations, which will allow for a range of locking models to be explored. The project will also compare the four along-strike observations to each other, and correlate with along-strike variations in geologic and structural patterns.
卡斯卡迪亚俯冲带位于北加州、俄勒冈州和华盛顿州的海岸,是一个可能引发大地震和海啸的重大地质灾害。卡斯卡迪亚俯冲带是由海洋胡安·德·富卡构造板块向下移动并在覆盖的北美大陆构造板块之下形成的。两个板块相互作用或摩擦的界面面称为大逆冲断层。当胡安德富卡板块向下移动时,大逆冲断层上的摩擦使凌驾于其上的北美板块弯曲收缩。张力的积累速度是每年一厘米左右,但最终这些储存的能量被释放出来,导致大地震和海啸。上一次大地震发生在1700年,威力巨大,日本有海啸的记录。从那时起,美国海岸人口密集,对社会构成了巨大的危害。陆基GPS测量可以测量应变积累的缓慢积累,但沿海地点离北美板块的水下大陆架太远,无法提供可靠的离岸估计。在这个近海地区,海啸的产生可能是最大的。该项目使用小型机器人平台在海面上测量的GPS,并结合平台到海底传感器的声学范围。这项技术被称为GPS-Acoustic,可以测量海底厘米级的运动。该项目的目标是更好地记录海底移位的程度,并帮助评估未来海啸的潜在规模。该项目将沿着卡斯卡迪亚俯冲带变形锋的外趾寻找锁定。两个新的位于北纬43.4和北纬45.3的海底gps -声学站点将被添加到最近建立的位于北纬44.4和北纬46.7的站点阵列中,并将允许确定它们相对于北美板块的运动。所有这些地点都位于海沟内侧几公里处,它们的运动将限制锋面推力最浅部分的运动学。该项目将使用成本更低的新方法,包括从波浪滑翔机而不是昂贵的船舶上收集gps -声学数据。还将安装永久性海底基准,以无限期地延长位置时间序列,并使用可重复使用的商用应答器。具体而言,将通过回收和重新部署一套现有的应答器来演示海底应答器的重新用途。在为期三年的计划结束时,两个新地点的六个转发器将被回收,以供日后社区关注的拟议项目使用。这两个新站点的基准仍然存在,并且可以在未来(几年到几十年)重新使用,以更新测量时间序列。为了解释从GPS- a观测推断出的运动,这些海上数据将与现有的陆上GPS和水准观测相结合,这将允许探索一系列锁定模型。该项目还将相互比较四个沿走向观测结果,并与地质和构造模式的沿走向变化相关联。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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David Schmidt其他文献
Playing safe in coordination games: : the roles of risk dominance, payoff dominance, and history of play
在协调博弈中安全行事::风险支配、收益支配和博弈历史的作用
- DOI:
10.1016/s0899-8256(02)00552-3 - 发表时间:
2003 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
David Schmidt;Robert Shupp;James M. Walker;E. Ostrom - 通讯作者:
E. Ostrom
Entrepreneurship and Creative Destruction
创业与创造性破坏
- DOI:
10.21272/bel.4(2).102-108.2020 - 发表时间:
2020 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
Cathleen Johnson;R. Lusch;David Schmidt - 通讯作者:
David Schmidt
Gene ontology analysis of the centrosome proteomes of Drosophila and human
果蝇和人类中心体蛋白质组的基因本体分析
- DOI:
10.4161/cib.4.3.14806 - 发表时间:
2011 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
H. Müller;David Schmidt;Felix Dreher;R. Herwig;A. Ploubidou;B. Lange - 通讯作者:
B. Lange
Economics at the FTC: Fraud, Mergers and Exclusion
- DOI:
10.1007/s11151-015-9488-6 - 发表时间:
2015-10-29 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0.700
- 作者:
David J. Balan;Patrick DeGraba;Francine Lafontaine;Patrick McAlvanah;Devesh Raval;David Schmidt - 通讯作者:
David Schmidt
Adapting Coreference Algorithms to German Fairy Tales
将共指算法应用于德国童话故事
- DOI:
- 发表时间:
2022 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:0
- 作者:
David Schmidt;Markus Krug;F. Puppe - 通讯作者:
F. Puppe
David Schmidt的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('David Schmidt', 18)}}的其他基金
Collaborative Research: Near-Trench Community Geodetic Experiment
合作研究:近海沟群落大地测量实验
- 批准号:
2232640 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
Collaborative Research: Constraints on Interseismic Locking near the Trench on the Oregon Segment of the Cascadia Subduction Zone Using Seafloor Geodesy (GNSS-A)
合作研究:利用海底大地测量 (GNSS-A) 对卡斯卡迪亚俯冲带俄勒冈段海沟附近的震间锁定进行约束
- 批准号:
2127140 - 财政年份:2021
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
GeoPRISMS Synthesis Workshop: The Geological Fingerprints of Slow Earthquakes
GeoPRISMS 综合研讨会:慢地震的地质指纹
- 批准号:
2025105 - 财政年份:2020
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$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
CoPe RCN: Cascadia Coastal Hazards Research Coordination Network
CoPe RCN:卡斯卡迪亚沿海灾害研究协调网络
- 批准号:
1940034 - 财政年份:2020
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
GeoPRISMS Postdoctoral Scholar: Refining GPS-Acoustic Processing to Measure Cascadia Subduction
GeoPRISMS 博士后学者:改进 GPS 声学处理以测量卡斯卡迪亚俯冲带
- 批准号:
1850685 - 财政年份:2019
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$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
NSFGEO-NERC Collaborative Research: Linking geophysics and volcanic gas measurements to contrain the transcrustal magmatic system at the Altiplano-Puna Deformation Anomaly
NSFGEO-NERC 合作研究:将地球物理学和火山气体测量联系起来,以限制高原-普纳变形异常处的穿地壳岩浆系统
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1756525 - 财政年份:2018
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CC*DNI Campus Design: Enhanced Data Delivery at Fort Hays State University
CC*DNI 校园设计:海斯堡州立大学增强数据传输
- 批准号:
1541394 - 财政年份:2016
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Constraints on Slow Slip Behavior in Cascadia Through the Integration of PBO Borehole Strainmeters, GPS Time Series, and Tremor Locations
通过集成 PBO 钻孔应变仪、GPS 时间序列和震颤位置来约束卡斯卡迪亚的慢滑移行为
- 批准号:
1251954 - 财政年份:2013
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Continuing Grant
TWC: Small: Abstract Semantic Processing for Script Security
TWC:小:脚本安全的抽象语义处理
- 批准号:
1219746 - 财政年份:2012
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
Abstract Parsing: Static analysis of dynamically generated string output
摘要解析:动态生成字符串输出的静态分析
- 批准号:
0939431 - 财政年份:2009
- 资助金额:
$ 5.06万 - 项目类别:
Standard Grant
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