Search Data.gov
Found 11 dataset(s) matching "fault creep".
-
Widespread surface creep is observed across a number of active faults included in the US National Seismic Hazard Model. In northern California, creep occurs on the central section of the San...
-
The data comprise an archive of repeated surveyed measurements to monitor surface fault creep (a form of gradual tectonic movement) occurring along active faults in the San Francisco Bay region...
-
An exposure of a creeping segment of the Bartlett Springs Fault (BSF), part of the San Andreas system in northern California, is a ~1.5 m-wide zone of serpentinite-bearing fault gouge cutting...
-
We present whole-rock geochemical analyses of 27 Phase 3 core samples obtained from Hole G of the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth, which crosses the creeping section of the San Andreas...
-
The occurrence and impact of the February 2023 earthquake doublet in Türkiye, where an Mw 7.8 event was followed roughly 9 hours later by an Mw 7.5 event on an adjacent fault, begs the question:...
-
<div style='text-align:justify;'>"This digital database contains the faults shown on the Fault Activity Map of California by Charles W. Jennings and William A. Bryant published in 2010. The...
-
This data release contains principal facts of gravity measurements collected by the U.S. Geological Survey in 2020-2022, a compilation of existing and new density and magnetic susceptibility data,...
-
Measurements of changes in the distance (or length) between monuments are provided. These measurements were made using a two-color Electronic Distance Meter (EDM) that can measure distances...
-
The gCent Catalog is a repository of earthquake centroids and finite fault source information derived from geodetic observations (Shea & Barnhart, 2022). This database additionally includes...
-
The Concord fault is an active strike-slip fault of the Pacific-North America plate boundary that runs through suburban eastern San Francisco Bay Area, Contra Costa County, CA, in the cities of...
-
New Zealand’s Alpine Fault (AF) ruptures quasi-periodically in large-magnitude earthquakes. Paleoseismological evidence suggests that about half of all recognized AF earthquakes terminated at the...