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  • Seismological Society of America (SSA)  (2)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2014-10-04
    Description: We examine the effect of overtone interference on fundamental-mode Love-wave phase measurements made using single-station and array-based techniques at 25–100 s periods. For single-station teleseismic measurements on USArray Transportable Array data, the contamination effects are small, less than 1% of the path-averaged phase velocity, consistent with previous studies. Single-station amplitude measurements provide complementary constraints on the interference pattern. For array-based measurements on the same data set, contamination effects are much larger: up to ~10% of the phase velocity for two-station measurements and up to ~20% for mini-array measurements. The interference pattern for single-station measurements from shallow earthquakes can largely be explained by interactions between only two modes, the fundamental mode and the first higher mode. This interpretation is confirmed using measurements on both mode-summation synthetic waveforms for a 1D Earth model and synthetic waveforms calculated using SPECFEM3D Globe and a 3D Earth model. Array-based phase measurements are calculated from differences of the single-station phase delays, and we demonstrate that the overtone interference pattern for array-based measurements can be approximated using gradients of the single-station interference pattern with distance. This relationship can lead to an overall bias to higher phase velocities when combined with common quality selection and data-reduction procedures for array measurements. Our results indicate that array-based Love-wave phase measurements must be carefully scrutinized for overtone contamination and suggest the possibility of new approaches for measuring overtone phase velocities.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-02-03
    Description: We investigate a large rockfall that occurred along the cliffs of the Hudson River Palisades, United States, on 12 May 2012, using seismic signals recorded at a distance of about 2 km. A rockfall involves a combination of rock detachment, acceleration, impact, and settling motion, each of which involves forces that load and unload the Earth and generate seismic waves. We characterize different phases in the seismograms and associate them with specific stages of the rockfall. Using the analytical solution to Lamb’s problem, we simulate the seismic-wave propagation between the event and seismic station taking into account the elastic properties of the crust in the Palisades region. The dynamics and the source history of the Palisades rockfall are reconstructed by analyzing the characteristics of the seismic signal. From the modeled force history, we infer that the bulk of the mass detached from about 30 m above the highest part of the riverbank and that lower bounds of the mobilized mass and volume are 3.1 x 10 4 metric tons and 1.1 x 10 4 m 3 , respectively.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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