Space geodetic data improve seismic hazard assessment in California: Workshop on incorporating geodetic surface deformation data into UCERF3; Pomona, California, 1-2 April 2010
Elizabeth H. Hearn, Kaj M. Johnson, & Wayne R. ThatcherPublished September 21, 2010, SCEC Contribution #1878
A workshop was held to begin scientific consideration of how to incorporate space geodetic constraints on strain rates and fault slip rates into the next generation Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast, version 3 (UCERF3), due to be completed in mid-2012. Principal outcomes of the meeting were (1) an assessment of secure science ready for UCERF3 applications within the next year, and (2) an agenda of new research objectives for the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC), the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), and others in support of UCERF3 and related probabilistic seismic hazard assessments (PSHA).
A number of goals potentially achievable within a year were identified, including (1) slip rate and fault locking depth estimates, with uncertainties or ranges, for all major and some minor faults of the extended San Andreas system; (2) strain rate estimates or bounds on rates for selected regions lying off the major faults of the San Andreas system; and (3) corrections or bounds on perturbing effects of postseismic deformation and elastic modulus heterogeneities on the observed Global Positioning System (GPS) velocity field (needed as input to models for estimating fault slip and strain rates in goals 1 and 2 above).
Citation
Hearn, E. H., Johnson, K. M., & Thatcher, W. R. (2010). Space geodetic data improve seismic hazard assessment in California: Workshop on incorporating geodetic surface deformation data into UCERF3; Pomona, California, 1-2 April 2010. Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, 91(38), 336. doi: 10.1029/2010EO380007.