Seminars typically take place virtually at 10:30 AM (Pacific) on Wednesdays on Microsoft Teams.
We record most seminars. You can watch live or check the archives to view a past seminar.
January 2024
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Extremely Efficient Bayesian Inversions (or how to fit a model to data without the model or the data)
Sarah Minson, U.S. Geological Survey
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The 17 January 1994 Northridge Earthquake: That was Then, This is Now
(1) Susan Hough, (2) Kate Hutton, (1) U.S. Geological Survey, (2) Caltech (retired)
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Probabilistic regional liquefaction hazard and risk analysis: A case study of residential buildings in Alameda, CA (In-person presentation)
Emily Mongold, Stanford University
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Northern California Earthquake Hazards Workshop - Day 1
Multiple speakers
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Northern California Earthquake Hazards Workshop - Day 2
Multiple speakers
February 2024
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Northern California Earthquake Hazards Workshop - Day 3
Multiple speakers
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Spatial correlation in ground motion intensities: Measurement, prediction, and seismic risk implications
Jack W. Baker, Stanford University
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A decade of prospective evaluations of earthquake forecasting models in California: What have we learned and what can we do with it?
Toño Bayona, University of Bristol
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Adventures in Measuring Variations in High-Frequency Radiation for Small to Moderate Earthquakes
Peter Shearer, University of California, San Diego
March 2024
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Tidally modulated icequake periodicity and its implication for rift zone dynamics
Mong-Han Huang, University of Maryland
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What does the 2024 M 7.5 Noto Hanto, Japan, quake tell us about short-term forecasting and long-term hazard?
Shinji Toda, Tohoku University
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Mechanics of caldera collapse earthquakes and their seismic representations
Taiyi Wang, Stanford University
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Variable short-term slip rate on the Imperial fault modulated by filling of the Salton Trough by Lake Cahuilla
Thomas Rockwell, San Diego State University
April 2024
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Offshore Fault Damage and Slip Behavior: Insights from Microseismicity and Seismic Imaging
Travis Alongi, U.S. Geological Survey
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Unraveling Multi-Scale Fault Zone Behaviors with Small Earthquake Focal Mechanisms
Yifang Cheng, Tongji University, Shanghai
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[***NOTE: Video is not available at this time.***] Fracture mechanics insights into fault coupling and earthquake nucleation
Camilla Cattania, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
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Fault damage zone evolution across distributed fault systems: Insights from Ridgecrest, California
Zachary Smith, University of California Berkley
May 2024
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(Re)Discovering the seismicity of Antarctica: A new seismic catalog for the southernmost continent
Andres Pena Castro, University of New Mexico
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Detecting Repeating Earthquakes on the San Andreas Fault with Unsupervised Machine-Learning of Spectrograms
Theresa Sawi, U.S. Geological Survey
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Stress Shadows: Insights into the Physics of Aftershock Triggering
Jeanne Hardebeck, U.S. Geological Survey
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Cascadia’s frontal thrust fault system revealed in unprecedented detail
Janet Watt, U.S. Geological Survey
June 2024
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An upper-crust lid over the Long Valley magma chamber revealed by fiber tomography
Ettore Biondi, California Institute of Technology
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Physical process of earthquake nucleation from extremely shallow seismic events in Southeastern U.S.
Zhigang Peng, Georgia Institute of Technology
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MyShake: Crowdsourced Data for Ground Motion Modeling and Earthquake Early Warning Performance Assessment
Savvas Marcou, University of California Berkeley
July 2024
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Decadal Creep-rate Changes Along the Hayward Fault
Roland Burgmann, University of California Berkeley
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Marsquake Focal Mechanisms from InSight Data: Understanding the Seismotectonics of Mars
Ross Maguire, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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Historical Seismic Data for the Future: Preservation, Digitization, and Utility
Thomas Lee, Harvard University
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How Fault Network Geometry Affects Earthquakes
Jaeseok Lee, Brown University
August 2024
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Splay fault dynamics at subduction and rift margins: insight from 3D dynamic rupture modeling of the Cascadia megathrust and the Mai’iu low-angle normal fault
James Biemiller, USGS
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Combining earthquake and tsunami early warnings along the west coast of the United States
Amy Williamson, University of California Berkeley
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Geometric Parametrization of Sedimentary Basins in Southern California for Site Response Analysis and Modelling
Rashid Shams, University of Southern California
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Solving the ground-motion puzzle one piece at a time
Tara Nye, USGS
September 2024
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Source, path, and site effects and their role on earthquake ground motions
Haiyang Kehoe, USGS
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Rapid, physics-informed seismic wavefield predictions using high-performance computing and reduced-order modeling techniques
John Rekoske, University of California San Diego
October 2024
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The mechanics of (laboratory) earthquakes and aseismic slip due to fluid injection
Sara Beth Cebry, U.S.G.S.
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DAS for EEW: what about the dynamic range?
Martijn van den Ende, Université Côte d'Azur
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Tracing the 1959 M7.3 Hebgen Lake earthquake sediment record in four nearby lakes, West Yellowstone region, USA
Sylvia Nicovich, USGS
November 2024
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Rupture along Branch Faults: Implications for Earthquakes and Tsunami-genesis in the Eastern Sea of Marmara
Evan Marschall, University of California Riverside
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Engineering modeling for assessing and optimizing seismic resilience
Omar Issa, ResiQuant (Co-Founder)/Stanford University
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The Positive Feedback Loop of 3D Earth Structure and Earthquake Source Parameters
Claire Doody, Lawrence Livermore National Lab