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Regional Review Regional Review Intermountain West Intermountain West (IMW) Region Walter Arabasz Regional Coordinator Nov. 21, 2005
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ANSS Intermountain West Region Population* AZ5.7 million CO4.6 million UT2.4 million NV2.3 million NM1.9 million ID1.4 million MT0.9 million WY0.5 million 19.7 *July2004
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IMW Region... Large (~3 times larger than CA+WA+OR) Large (~3 times larger than CA+WA+OR) Fastest growing region in the Nation Fastest growing region in the Nation Has concentrated EQ risk in scattered metropolitan areas, in part due to large federal landholdings (83% NV, 65% UT, 62% ID, 50% WY, 45% AZ, 36% CO, 34% NM, 28% MT) Has concentrated EQ risk in scattered metropolitan areas, in part due to large federal landholdings (83% NV, 65% UT, 62% ID, 50% WY, 45% AZ, 36% CO, 34% NM, 28% MT) Has compelling needs for improved seismic monitoring associated with (a) dramatic population growth in metropolitan areas at moderate to high seismic risk and (b) large gaps in regional coverage of seismically active areas Has compelling needs for improved seismic monitoring associated with (a) dramatic population growth in metropolitan areas at moderate to high seismic risk and (b) large gaps in regional coverage of seismically active areas
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IMW Organizational Structure Regional Advisory Committee (18 members—2 from each state, except 1 from AZ, and 3 “at large”) Regional Working Group (16 members, incl. rep’s from all major networks and every state) UT 12 members, incl. 10 engrs state level advisory committees NV ~17 members CO ~20 members Regional Coordinator: Walter Arabasz Invited participant in NIC to represent NV: John Anderson (alternate, Glenn Biasi) IMW Web site: www.seis.utah.edu/anss
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Status of ANSS Implementation NationalBackbone
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Strong-Motion Stations Pink = PGA 16%g, 2% in 50 years 2% in 50 years Purple = 50-km radius
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545 stations (283 SM, 59 BB) 167 UU 130 UNR 104 NSMP MT WY CO NM AZ NV ID UT Black = “Have Not” states
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UUSS Regional/Urban Seismic Network Regional short-period/broadband net Urban strong-motion network > 216 stations ~ 517 channels
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ShakeMap in Utah Region ShakeMaps in Wasatch Front Area ShakeMaps in Wasatch Front Area ShakeCast Expanding ShakeMap capability to entire Utah region
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USGSGlobalShakeMap Uncalibrated Scenario ShakeMap for M7.2 EQ on Teton fault
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Regional Advisory Committee: 1. Most important IMW need for regional seismic monitoring is a strategic regionwide plan for dealing with EQ geography, uniform recording, and response Patchquilt of seismic networks—both stably funded and unstably-funded
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Regional Advisory Committee: 2. Need to help “have not” networks in IMW HOW? Convene long-overdue mtg between ANSS mgrs, IMW network operators, and IMW RAC “Mutual-aid agreements among nets & NEIC, especially where network staffing is very small Provide improved software for efficient earthquake analysis Assist with critically-needed technical support (more)
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Regional Advisory Committee: HOW? (cont’d) Address ways to provide critical info—both via Web and via personal contacts—to information outlets and/or to key persons in “have not” states to ensure that they can reliably inform governors, high-level decision-makers, and local media during earthquake situations
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Regional Advisory Committee: HOW? (cont’d) Explore avenues for funding—including ways that unified political activism among IMW states can gain support for improved network monitoring in seismically active states that are disadvantaged under ANSS
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Regional Advisory Committee: 3. Need for availability of portable instruments to augment inadequate network coverage (with sensible “business rules” to govern when instruments will be deployed and what logistic and financial support may be available)
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Regional Advisory Committee: 4. Need to capture strong-motion data for large normal-faulting Eqs, even if it means instrumenting areas with low population density
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Regional Advisory Committee: 5. States without their own seismic nets need clearer understanding from ANSS how, and to what level, seismic monitoring is carried out within their state using national backbone stations (e.g., Is small-magnitude EQ activity in Colorado being routinely located?)
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