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Featured researches published by Jeffrey W. Given.


Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 1981

Use of long-period surface waves for rapid determination of earthquake-source parameters

Hiroo Kanamori; Jeffrey W. Given

A method for rapid retrieval of earthquake-source parameters from long-period surface waves is developed. With this method, the fault geometry and seismic moment can be determined immediately after the surface wave records have been retrieved. Hence, it may be utilized for warning of tsunamis in real time. The surface wave spectra are inverted to produce either a seismic moment tensor (linear) or a fault model (nonlinear). The method has been tested by using the IDA (International Deployment of Accelerographs) records. With these records the method works well for the events larger than M_s = 6, and is useful for investigating the nature of slow earthquakes. For events deeper than 30 km, all of the five moment tensor elements can be determined. For very shallow events (d ⩽ 30 km) the inversion becomes ill-conditioned and two of the five source moment tensor elements become unresolvable. This difficulty is circumvented by a two-step inversion. In the first step, the unresolvable elements are constrained to be zero to yield a first approximation. In the second step, additional geological and geophysical data are incorporated to improve the first approximation. The effect of the source finiteness is also included.


Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 1982

Use of long-period surface waves for rapid determination of earthquake source parameters 2. Preliminary determination of source mechanisms of large earthquakes (MS ⩾ 6.5) in 1980

Hiroo Kanamori; Jeffrey W. Given

An inversion method for fast retrieval of earthquake source parameters developed earlier has been applied to 28 large (M_S ⩾ 6.5), shallow earthquakes which occurred in 1980. Rayleigh waves recorded by the IDA (International Deployment of Accelerographs) network were used for the analysis. For very shallow events, the inversion is ill-conditioned and two of the moment-tensor elements, M_(zx) and M_(zy), are unresolvable. Of the 28 events, a solution is obtained for 25 with the constraints M_(zx) = M_(zy) = 0. Although these constraints limit the solution to be either vertical strike-slip or 45° dip-slip, the method provides a useful first approximation to the mechanism solution. For deeper events, all of the elements of the moment tensor can be determined. After the seismograms have been retrieved, the solution can be obtained in ∼10 min for most events. The method would be adequate for preliminary cataloging purposes.


Pure and Applied Geophysics | 1989

Large earthquakes in the macquarie ridge complex: Transitional tectonics and subduction initiation

Larry J. Ruff; Jeffrey W. Given; Chris Sanders; Christine M. Sperber

While most aspects of subduction have been extensively studied, the process of subduction initiation lacks an observational foundation. The Macquarie Ridge complex (MRC) forms the Pacific-Australia plate boundary between New Zealand to the north and the Pacific-Australia-Antarctica triple junction to the south. The MRC consists of alternating troughs and rises and is characterized by a transitional tectonic environment in which subduction initiation presently occurs. There is a high seismicity level with 15 large earthquakes (M>7) in this century. Our seismological investigation is centered on the largest event since 1943: the 25 MAY 1981 earthquake. Love, Rayleigh, andP waves are inverted to find: a faulting geometry of right-lateral strike-slip along the local trend of the Macquarie Ridge (N30°E); a seismic moment of 5×1027 dyn cm (Mw=7.7) a double event rupture process with a fault length of less than 100km to the southwest of the epicenter and a fault depth of less than 20km. Three smaller thrust earthquakes occurred previous to the 1981 event along the 1981 rupture zone; their shallow-dipping thrust planes are virtually adjacent to the 1981 vertical fault plane. Oblique convergence in this region is thus accommodated by a dual rupture mode of several small thrust events and a large strike-slip event. Our study of other large MRC earthquakes, plus those of other investigators, produces focal mechanisms for 15 earthquakes distributed along the entire MRC; thrust and right-lateral strike-slip events are scattered throughout the MRC. Thus, all of the MRC is characterized by oblique convergence and the dual rupture mode. The “true” best-fit rotation pole for the Pacific-Australia motion is close to the Minster & Jordan RM2 pole for the Pacific-India motion. Southward migration of the rotation pole has caused the recent transition to oblique convergence in the northern MRC. We propose a subduction initiation process that is akin to crack propagation; the 1981 earthquake rupture area is identified as the “crack-tip” region that separates a disconnected mosaic of small thrust faults to the south from a horizontally continuous thrust interface to the north along the Puysegur trench. A different mechanism of subduction initiation occurs in the southernmost Hjort trench region at the triple junction. newly created oceanic lithosphere has been subducted just to the north of the triple junction. The entire MRC is a “soft” plate boundary that must accommodate the plate motion mismatch between two major spreading centers (Antarctica-Australia and Pacific-Antarctica). The persistence of spreading motion at the two major spreading centers and the consequent evolution of the three-plate system cause the present-day oblique convergence and subduction initiation in the Macquarie Ridge complex.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1982

Absorption band Q model for the Earth

Don L. Anderson; Jeffrey W. Given


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1982

Analysis of long‐period seismic waves excited by the May 18, 1980, eruption of Mount St. Helens—A terrestrial monopole?

Hiroo Kanamori; Jeffrey W. Given


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1984

Analysis of Seismic Body Waves Excited by the Mount St. Helens Eruption of May 18, 1980

Hiroo Kanamori; Jeffrey W. Given; Thorne Lay


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1980

Upper mantle structure of northwestern Eurasia

Jeffrey W. Given; Donald V. Helmberger


Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America | 1982

Teleseismic analysis of the 1980 Mammoth Lakes earthquake sequence

Jeffrey W. Given; Terry C. Wallace; Hiroo Kanamori


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Overview of the 2009 and 2011 Sayarim Infrasound Calibration Experiments

David Fee; Roger Waxler; Jelle Assink; Yefim Gitterman; Jeffrey W. Given; John Coyne; Pierrick Mialle; Milton Garces; Douglas P. Drob; Dan Kleinert; Rami Hofstetter; Patrick Grenard


Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America | 1982

Long-period mechanism of the 8 November 1980 Eureka, California, earthquake

Thorne Lay; Jeffrey W. Given; Hiroo Kanamori

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Hiroo Kanamori

California Institute of Technology

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Pierrick Mialle

Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization

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Ivan Kitov

Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization

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Don L. Anderson

California Institute of Technology

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Thorne Lay

University of California

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Dmitry Bobrov

Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization

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Lassina Zerbo

Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization

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Patrick Grenard

Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization

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