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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Megathrust Splay Fault Geometry In Prince William Sound, Alaska, Shaun Patrick Finn Dec 2012

Megathrust Splay Fault Geometry In Prince William Sound, Alaska, Shaun Patrick Finn

Boise State University Theses and Dissertations

I present marine seismic reflection results from Prince William Sound, Alaska that document the location of active faults related to the subduction zone processes.

Subduction zones along convergent margins experience large earthquakes, magnitude >8, with recurrence intervals on the order of centuries. Smaller magnitude earthquakes with shorter recurrence intervals are probable along the same subduction zone fault zones. Convergent margin earthquakes also are associated with high uplift rates and tsunami generation, yet the location and uplift history of most tsunamigenic faults are unknown. In this thesis, I present the processed results of high resolution marine seismic reflection data of Prince …


Statistical Clustering Of Microseismic Event Spectra To Identify Subsurface Structure, Deborah Kay Fagan Aug 2012

Statistical Clustering Of Microseismic Event Spectra To Identify Subsurface Structure, Deborah Kay Fagan

Boise State University Theses and Dissertations

Understanding subsurface structure by studying microseismicity influences a wide range of activities, including energy extraction, aquifer storage, carbon sequestration, and seismic hazard assessment. Identifying individual fractures in a larger fault system is key to characterizing, understanding, and potentially mitigating risks of natural or induced seismicity.

A year-long study associated with a carbon dioxide (CO2) sequestration project was conducted at the Aneth oil field in southeast Utah to record microseismicity at a single downhole geophone array. A previous analysis located events by first identifying event multiplets consisting of highly correlated time-domain waveforms on receivers shallower than the depth of …


Monitoring Co2 Sequestration In Basalt With Elastic Waves, Larry Thomas Otheim Aug 2012

Monitoring Co2 Sequestration In Basalt With Elastic Waves, Larry Thomas Otheim

Boise State University Theses and Dissertations

The continued burning of fossil fuels as a source of energy is contributing to greater concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere. Increased levels of CO2 in the atmosphere have been linked to an increase of global mean surface temperature. To mitigate the continued release of CO2, projects to capture this gas at large point sources and sequester it in geologic formations are in place. Carbon dioxide sequestration in basalts promises permanent trapping of the fluid as these rocks react with carbonic acid and precipitate carbonate minerals. It is important to monitor the injection …


Subsurface Characterization Using Head-Wave Artifacts In Seismic Interferometry, Thomas Dylan Mikesell May 2012

Subsurface Characterization Using Head-Wave Artifacts In Seismic Interferometry, Thomas Dylan Mikesell

Boise State University Theses and Dissertations

Seismologists continually work to improve images of the Earth's interior. One new approach is seismic interferometry, which involves cross-correlating the seismic wave field recorded at two receivers to generate data as if one of the receivers was a source. Over the past decade, seismic interferometry has become an established technique to estimate the surface-wave part of the impulse response between two receivers; however, practical limitations in the source-energy distribution have made body-wave recovery difficult and causes spurious energy in the estimated impulse response. Rather than suppress such spurious energy, it can be useful to analyze coherent spurious events to help …


Non-Destructively Mapping The In-Situ Hydrologic Properties Of Snow, Firn, And Glacial Ice With Georadar, Joel Matthew Brown May 2012

Non-Destructively Mapping The In-Situ Hydrologic Properties Of Snow, Firn, And Glacial Ice With Georadar, Joel Matthew Brown

Boise State University Theses and Dissertations

Ground penetrating radar (GPR) is a useful tool for studying the in-situ properties of glacial ice, firn, and snowpacks. The main focus of this dissertation is improving and expanding methods employed when collecting, processing, and understanding GPR data collected in the Cryosphere, or the snow and ice covered areas of the earth. The data used herein were collected on the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) and on seasonal snowpacks of Western Montana, USA. This document has three sub-topics.

The first sub-topic is comparing the spatial variability of GPR data to the spatial variability of core data collected in two locations within …