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Dive into the research topics where Laura C. Gregory is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura C. Gregory.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Orogen-scale uplift in the central Italian Apennines drives episodic behaviour of earthquake faults

Patience A. Cowie; Richard J. Phillips; Gerald P. Roberts; Ken McCaffrey; Leo Zijerveld; Laura C. Gregory; J.P. Faure Walker; Luke Wedmore; Tibor J. Dunai; Steven A. Binnie; Stewart P.H.T. Freeman; Klaus M. Wilcken; Richard P. Shanks; Ritske S. Huismans; Ioannis Papanikolaou; Alessandro Maria Michetti; M. Wilkinson

Many areas of the Earth’s crust deform by distributed extensional faulting and complex fault interactions are often observed. Geodetic data generally indicate a simpler picture of continuum deformation over decades but relating this behaviour to earthquake occurrence over centuries, given numerous potentially active faults, remains a global problem in hazard assessment. We address this challenge for an array of seismogenic faults in the central Italian Apennines, where crustal extension and devastating earthquakes occur in response to regional surface uplift. We constrain fault slip-rates since ~18 ka using variations in cosmogenic 36Cl measured on bedrock scarps, mapped using LiDAR and ground penetrating radar, and compare these rates to those inferred from geodesy. The 36Cl data reveal that individual faults typically accumulate meters of displacement relatively rapidly over several thousand years, separated by similar length time intervals when slip-rates are much lower, and activity shifts between faults across strike. Our rates agree with continuum deformation rates when averaged over long spatial or temporal scales (104 yr; 102 km) but over shorter timescales most of the deformation may be accommodated by <30% of the across-strike fault array. We attribute the shifts in activity to temporal variations in the mechanical work of faulting.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Near-field fault slip of the 2016 Vettore Mw 6.6 earthquake (Central Italy) measured using low-cost GNSS.

M. Wilkinson; Ken McCaffrey; Richard R. Jones; Gerald P. Roberts; R. E. Holdsworth; Laura C. Gregory; R. J. Walters; Luke Wedmore; Huw Goodall; F. Iezzi

The temporal evolution of slip on surface ruptures during an earthquake is important for assessing fault displacement, defining seismic hazard and for predicting ground motion. However, measurements of near-field surface displacement at high temporal resolution are elusive. We present a novel record of near-field co-seismic displacement, measured with 1-second temporal resolution during the 30th October 2016 Mw 6.6 Vettore earthquake (Central Italy), using low-cost Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) receivers located in the footwall and hangingwall of the Mt. Vettore - Mt. Bove fault system, close to new surface ruptures. We observe a clear temporal and spatial link between our near-field record and InSAR, far-field GPS data, regional measurements from the Italian Strong Motion and National Seismic networks, and field measurements of surface ruptures. Comparison of these datasets illustrates that the observed surface ruptures are the propagation of slip from depth on a surface rupturing (i.e. capable) fault array, as a direct and immediate response to the 30th October earthquake. Large near-field displacement ceased within 6–8 seconds of the origin time, implying that shaking induced gravitational processes were not the primary driving mechanism. We demonstrate that low-cost GNSS is an accurate monitoring tool when installed as custom-made, short-baseline networks.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2012

The structure of the Sumatran Fault revealed by local seismicity

Owen Weller; Dietrich Lange; Frederik Tilmann; Danny Hilman Natawidjaja; Andreas Rietbrock; Rachel Collings; Laura C. Gregory

The combination of the Sunda megathrust and the (strike-slip) Sumatran Fault (SF) represents a type example of slip-partitioning. However, superimposed on the SF are geometrical irregularities that disrupt the local strain field. The largest such feature is in central Sumatra where the SF splits into two fault strands up to 35 km apart. A dense local network was installed along a 350 km section around this bifurcation, registering 1016 crustal events between April 2008 and February 2009. 528 of these events, with magnitudes between 1.1 and 6.0, were located using the double-difference relative location method. These relative hypocentre locations reveal several new features about the crustal structure of the SF. Northwest and southeast of the bifurcation, where the SF has only one fault strand, seismicity is strongly focused below the surface trace, indicating a vertical fault that is seismogenic to ∼15 km depth. By contrast intense seismicity is observed within the bifurcation, displaying streaks in plan and cross-section that indicate a complex system of faults bisecting the bifurcation. In combination with analysis of topography and focal mechanisms, we propose that the bifurcation is a strike-slip duplex system with complex faulting between the two main fault branches.


Precambrian Research | 2009

Paleomagnetism and geochronology of the Malani Igneous Suite, Northwest India: Implications for the configuration of Rodinia and the assembly of Gondwana

Laura C. Gregory; Joseph G. Meert; Bernard Bingen; Manoj K. Pandit; Trond H. Torsvik


Precambrian Research | 2006

A paleomagnetic and geochronologic study of the Majhgawan kimberlite, India: Implications for the age of the Upper Vindhyan Supergroup

Laura C. Gregory; Joseph G. Meert; Vimal R. Pradhan; Manoj K. Pandit; Endale Tamrat; Shawn J. Malone


Journal of Geodynamics | 2010

India's changing place in global Proterozoic reconstructions: A review of geochronologic constraints and paleomagnetic poles from the Dharwar, Bundelkhand and Marwar cratons

Vimal R. Pradhan; Joseph G. Meert; Manoj K. Pandit; George D. Kamenov; Laura C. Gregory; Shawn J. Malone


Gondwana Research | 2015

U-Pb age and Lu-Hf isotopic data of detrital zircons from the Neoproterozoic Damara Sequence: Implications for Congo and Kalahari before Gondwana

David A. Foster; Ben Goscombe; Brittany Newstead; Ben Mapani; Paul A. Mueller; Laura C. Gregory; Ewereth Muvangua


Geomorphology | 2015

Slip distributions on active normal faults measured from LiDAR and field mapping of geomorphic offsets : an example from L’Aquila, Italy, and implications for modelling seismic moment release.

M. Wilkinson; Gerald P. Roberts; Ken McCaffrey; Patience A. Cowie; Joanna Faure Walker; Ioannis Papanikolaou; Richard J. Phillips; Alessandro Maria Michetti; Eutizio Vittori; Laura C. Gregory; Luke Wedmore; Zoë K. Watson


Geophysical Journal International | 2010

Late Pleistocene slip rate of the Höh Serh–Tsagaan Salaa fault system, Mongolian Altai and intracontinental deformation in central Asia

Kurt L. Frankel; Karl W. Wegmann; A. Bayasgalan; Robert J. Carson; Nicholas E. Bader; Tsolmon Adiya; Erdenebat Bolor; Chelsea C. Durfey; Jargal Otgonkhuu; Jodi Sprajcar; Kristin E. Sweeney; Richard T. Walker; Tina L. Marstellar; Laura C. Gregory


Annals of Geophysics | 2016

Surface faulting during the August 24, 2016, central Italy earthquake (Mw 6.0) : preliminary results.

Franz Livio; Alessandro Maria Michetti; Eutizio Vittori; Laura C. Gregory; Luke Wedmore; L. Piccardi; Emanuele Tondi; Gerald P. Roberts; Anna Maria Blumetti; L. Bonadeo; F. Brunamonte; V. Comerci; P. Di Manna; Maria Francesca Ferrario; J.P. Faure Walker; Chiara Frigerio; F. Fumanti; Luca Guerrieri; F. Iezzi; G. Leoni; Ken McCaffrey; Z.K. Mildon; Rebecca L. Phillips; Edward J. Rhodes; R. J. Walters; M. Wilkinson

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Eutizio Vittori

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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