1 Ivan Wong Principal Seismologist/Vice President Seismic Hazards Group, URS Corporation Oakland, CA Uncertainties in Characterizing the Cascadia Subduction.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mmax and the Maximum Catalog Magnitude Martin Chapman Department of Geosciences Virginia Tech Blacksburg, VA Mmax Workshop Golden, Colorado.
Advertisements

2013 Northwest Hydro Operators Forum 1 Risk-Informed Decision Making – FERC Perspective David Lord, P.E., D2SI Dam Safety Risk team – Portland, Or Natural.
Earthquake recurrence models Are earthquakes random in space and time? We know where the faults are based on the geology and geomorphology Segmentation.
Regional Case Study III: Seismic Hazards in the Portland Area By Alyssa Pratt, Earth Science Major, Western Oregon University, Monmouth, OR 97361,
TSUNAMI HAZARD BASICS Tsunami Outreach Oregon Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries.
The Local Danger And the Mag ~9.0 event in January 1700.
SPATIAL CORRELATION OF SPECTRAL ACCELERATIONS Paolo Bazzurro, Jaesung Park and Nimal Jayaram 1.
WHAT COULD BE THE NEXT EARTHQUAKE DISASTER FOR JAPAN  A difficult question, but ---  It is the one that was being asked long before the March 11, 2011.
Prague, March 18, 2005Antonio Emolo1 Seismic Hazard Assessment for a Characteristic Earthquake Scenario: Integrating Probabilistic and Deterministic Approaches.
Use of Paleoseismic Data in Seismic Hazard Analysis: Examples from Europe K.Atakan and A.Ojeda Institute of Solid Earth Physics University of Bergen Allégt.41,
American Samoa Seismic Hazard Maps Mark D. Petersen, Stephen C. Harmsen, Kenneth S. Rukstales, Charles S. Mueller, Daniel E. McNamara, Nicolas Luco, and.
Deterministic Seismic Hazard Analysis Earliest approach taken to seismic hazard analysis Originated in nuclear power industry applications Still used for.
Extreme Earthquakes: Thoughts on Statistics and Physics Max Werner 29 April 2008 Extremes Meeting Lausanne.
Ch 3: Characterization of the SFBR Earthquake Sources Working Group on California Earthquake Probabilities, 2002.
A New Approach To Paleoseismic Event Correlation Glenn Biasi and Ray Weldon University of Nevada Reno Acknowledgments: Tom Fumal, Kate Scharer, SCEC and.
Abstract Detection of active faults and seismic hazards in the Seattle area is problematic, owing to thick surficial deposits and abundant vegetative cover.
Rotation and plate locking at the southern Cascadia subduction zone McCaffrey, Long, Goldfinger, Zwick, Nabelek, Johnson, and Smith, Geophysical Research.
Chapter 5: Calculating Earthquake Probabilities for the SFBR Mei Xue EQW March 16.
Analysis of UCS by OpenSees GSR Tae-Hyung Lee PI Khalid M. Mosalam May 23 rd, 2002 Meeting at RFS.
Time-dependent seismic hazard maps for the New Madrid seismic zone and Charleston, South Carolina areas James Hebden Seth Stein Department of Earth and.
Yan Y. Kagan Dept. Earth and Space Sciences, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA , Global.
ABSTRACT Co-seismic landslides are associated with significant infrastructure damage and human casualties in earthquake- prone areas of the world. These.
Historic Seismicity, Neotectonics and Active Faulting in Oregon Ryan Stanley, Earth and Physical Sciences Department, Western Oregon University, Monmouth,
Near-Field Modeling of the 1964 Alaska Tsunami: A Source Function Study Elena Suleimani, Natalia Ruppert, Dmitry Nicolsky, and Roger Hansen Alaska Earthquake.
Turkey Earthquake Risk Model Financing the Risks of Natural Disasters World Bank Washington, DC, June 2-3, 2003 Dennis E. Kuzak Senior Vice President,
Paleoseismic and Geologic Data for Earthquake Simulations Lisa B. Grant and Miryha M. Gould.
WA ST Dept. of Ecology Dam Safety Office Draft Seismic Practice Jerald LaVassar 1, Lead Engineer July
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency US NRC Approach for Seismic Hazard Assessments INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON LESSONS LEARNED FROM STRONG EARTHQUAKES.
Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquakes and Critical Infrastructure Workshop Edward Perez, FERC Background - Part 12D Report. - Every 5 years. - Top-to-bottom.
Seismic Hazard Assessment for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
New earthquake category Nature 447, (3 May 2007) | doi: /nature05780; Received 8 December 2006; Accepted 26 March A scaling law for slow.
Mark Petersen, Arthur Frankel, Steve Harmsen, and Gavin Hayes
Updating Models of Earthquake Recurrence and Rupture Geometry of the Cascadia Subduction Zone for UCERF3 and the National Seismic Hazard Maps Art Frankel.
Earthquake Science (Seismology). Seismometers and seismic networks Seismometers and seismic networks Earthquake aftershocks Earthquake aftershocks Earthquake.
National Seismic Hazard Maps and Uniform California Earthquake Rupture Forecast 1.0 National Seismic Hazard Mapping Project (Golden, CO) California Geological.
Today’s Schedule: HAZARD UPDATE! Review Lecture 3 XXXX Earthquakes (cont.) Stress and Strain (energy transfer) Elastic (bounces back) vs. Plastic (stays.
Management & Development of Complex Projects Course Code MS Project Management Perform Qualitative Risk Analysis Lecture # 25.
FEMA/ EARTH SCIENCE ASPECTS OF HAZUS Ivan Wong Seismic Hazards Group URS Corporation Oakland, CA.
1 Earthquakes, Tsunamis, and the Oregon Coast When will the next Megaquake occur? Why are tsunamis so destructive? How much of the coast is affected? When.
Earthquake hazard isn’t a physical thing we measure. It's something mapmakers define and then use computer programs to predict. To decide how much to believe.
Probabilistic Ground Motions for Scoggins Dam, Oregon Chris Wood Seismotectonics & Geophysics Group Technical Service Center July 2012.
Attempting to Reconcile Holocene And Long-Term Seismicity Rates in the New Madrid Seismic Zone Mark Zoback – Stanford University NASA World Wind looking.
T19 ~10,200 BP Cascadia: The Movie This sequence will start automatically and shows the Cascadia Holocene earthquake sequence, starting 10,000 years ago.
Yan Y. Kagan Dept. Earth and Space Sciences, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA , Evaluation.
E E R I D I S T I N G U I S H E D L E C T U R E S E R I E S State of Practice of Seismic Hazard Analysis: From the Good to the Bad Norm Abrahamson,
9. As hazardous as California? USGS/FEMA: Buildings should be built to same standards How can we evaluate this argument? Frankel et al., 1996.
Recognizing Reflected Tremor Phases: Guidance from Synthetic Seismograms Amanda Klaus ESS 522 – Geophysical Data Analysis Final Project June 10, 2010.
Glenn Spinelli Effects of fluid circulation in ocean crust on subduction zone temperatures and metamorphism.
David Schmidt Ray Weldon Reed Burgette Randy Krogstad Haiying Gao
California Earthquake Rupture Model Satisfying Accepted Scaling Laws (SCEC 2010, 1-129) David Jackson, Yan Kagan and Qi Wang Department of Earth and Space.
Ground-Motion Attenuation Relationships for Cascadia Subduction Zone Megathrust Earthquakes Based on a Stochastic Finite-Fault Model Nick Gregor 1, Walter.
Fault Segmentation: User Perspective Norm Abrahamson PG&E March 16, 2006.
9. As hazardous as California? USGS/FEMA: Buildings should be built to same standards How can we evaluate this argument? Frankel et al., 1996.
May 9, 2016 Learning Target: I will be able to describe the processes that cause earthquakes. Success Criteria: I can explain what will cause “the big.
Metrics, Bayes, and BOGSAT: Recognizing and Assessing Uncertainties in Earthquake Hazard Maps Seth Stein 1, Edward M. Brooks 1, Bruce D. Spencer 2 1 Department.
Seismic Hazard Analysis for Guam & the Northern Mariana Islands Chuck Mueller U.S. Geological Survey Golden, Colorado, USA.
Giant Earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest
Comments on physical simulator models
Yelena Kropivnitskaya, Kristy F. Tiampo,
Shoreline and Hosgri Faults, Central Coast
British Seismology Meeting 5th – 7th April 2017, Reading, UK
Kris Vasudevan and David W. Eaton Department of Geoscience
Coupling at subduction zones Background reading: Pacheco, Sykes, Scholz (1993) Hyndman, Yamano, Oleskevich (1997) Carl Tape November 9, 2007 Thanks.
Southern California Earthquake Center
Tohoku earthquake: A surprise?
Creager, Wech, Vidale, Melbourne
Deterministic Seismic Hazard Analysis
Creager, Wech, Vidale, Melbourne
Creager, Wech, Vidale, Melbourne
Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analysis
Presentation transcript:

1 Ivan Wong Principal Seismologist/Vice President Seismic Hazards Group, URS Corporation Oakland, CA Uncertainties in Characterizing the Cascadia Subduction Zone and Their Seismic Hazard Implications Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquakes and Critical Infrastructure Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 18 July 2012

2  The four most significant seismic source characteristics of the Cascadia subduction zone (CSZ) relevant to hazard in the Pacific Northwest are: 1) segmentation, 2) maximum magnitudes, 3) time-dependent and time-independent recurrence intervals, and 4) the eastern edge of the megathrust rupture zone.  Studies in the past 25 years since the CSZ was recognized as being capable of producing large earthquakes (M ≥ 8) have focused on these issues.  We have evaluated the impacts of these parametric uncertainties on seismic hazard in the Pacific Northwest using a seismic source model developed in a 4-year SSHAC Level 3 PSHA. Introduction

3  Our seismic source model of the CSZ megathrust was developed as part of a regional seismic hazard analysis of 42 dams in British Columbia sponsored by BCHydro.  The CSZ model was developed by a TI team of 8 with input from 12 subject matter experts.  We have investigated the sensitivities to probabilistic hazard at three cities in the Pacific Northwest by calculating the hazard along branches of our logic tree.  The choice of recurrence models (e.g., characteristic, maximum magnitude and truncated exponential) is typically critical to PSHA but we assume that the CSZ can produce the full range of earthquakes and so we model it as such using the paleoseismic/historical seismicity record. Introduction (cont.)

4 BCHydro Redwood (Logic) Tree

5 Cascadia Subduction Zone GSC-McCrory Model

6 Wang et al. (2003) Model of CSZ

7  We have adopted the eastern rupture extent from the model of Wang and Hyndman (2011). We have assumed that M 9 rupture extends down to (1) the base of the coseismic transition zone (CTZ), (2) 30 km downdip, and (3) 10 km updip of the base of the CTZ.  We consider three possible modes of rupture for the megathrust: (1) full rupture events around M 9; (2) intermediate-sized earthquakes of M 8 to 8.8, which rupture one of two possible segments in the southern half of the subduction zone; and (3) smaller earthquakes (M < 8).  Segmentation of the Cascadia subduction zone is based on the model of Goldfinger et al. (2012). Paleoseismic evidence supports full rupture and intermediate magnitude earthquakes. Uncertainties

8 Cascadia Subduction Zone GSC-McCrory Model

9 Space Time Diagram for the Cascadia Margin from Goldfinger et al. (2012) Source: Goldfinger et al. (2012)

10  Time-independent and time-dependent recurrence intervals have been estimated for full rupture events based on the Holocene turbidite history of Goldfinger et al. (2012).  Statistical analysis of the turbidite record indicates that full- rupture events are likely clustered in time. In the Holocene there have been four clusters consisting of 5 earthquakes.  Temporal clustering of the M 9 earthquakes was addressed by including time-dependent intercluster and intracluster recurrence intervals. Uncertainties (cont.)

11 Turbidite Event Chronology for Full Rupture Events from Goldfinger et al. (2012) Source: Goldfinger et al. (2012)

12 BCHydro Logic Tree for Recurrence

13 Seismic Source Contributions to Mean PGA Hazard Eastern Edge SeattlePortlandEureka

14 Seismic Source Contributions to Mean PGA Hazard Time Dependence SeattlePortlandEureka

15 Seismic Source Contributions to Mean PGA Hazard Clustered/Non-Clustered SeattlePortlandEureka

16 Seismic Source Contributions to Mean PGA Hazard Clustered/Gap SeattlePortlandEureka

17 PGA Sensitivities at 2% in 50-Year Exceedance Probabilities UncertaintySeattlePortlandEureka Eastern Edge Shallow Preferred Deep Time Dependence Independent Dependent Clustered/Non-Clustered Independent Clustered Non-clustered Clustered/Gap Independent Dependent – In a gap Dependent – In a cluster Dependent – Non-clustered

18 Time-Dependent 100-Year Probabilities Probability Clustered – in a cluster38% Clustered – in a gap< 1% Not clustered14% Overall (T2 excluded)25% Overall (T2 included)< 5%

19  The probabilistic hazard along the Pacific Coast is most sensitive to the time-dependent aspects of the CSZ recurrence.  Whether the full rupture earthquakes (M 9) are clustered or not has a significant impact on the time-dependent hazard.  Similarly if at present, we are in a gap or within a cluster also has a significant impact on the hazard in the Pacific Northwest.  The hazard is not very sensitive to the location of the eastern edge of the megathrust.  Our modeling of the CSZ recurrence is heavily dependent on the Goldfinger et al. (2012) interpretation of the turbidite record. Continued critical review of that interpretation is needed to improve our ability to estimate the probabilistic hazard from the CSZ. Summary

20  “IT AIN’T WHAT YOU DON’T KNOW THAT GETS YOU INTO TROUBLE ---IT’S WHAT YOU KNOW FOR SURE THAT JUST AIN’T SO”. Final Comment Final Comment