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ANSS 2007 Meeting Minutes
ANSS Regional Advisory Committee
Meeting: 15 February 2007 (convened at the University of
Washington Seismology Lab)Minutes prepared by Tom Yelin, U.S.
Geological Survey
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Revised 3/5/07
Meeting began at 10:25. The list of attendees is at the end of these minutes. Red text is related to action items,
purple marks committee reminders to the PNSN.
John Vidale, Director of PNSN welcomed the group and provided and introduction. He briefly reviewed the agenda, the
component institutions of the PNSN, the PNSN's sources of funding and in-kind support.
Next, he reviewd the major initiatives on which the PNSN is currently working:
1. High-resolution Shakemaps:
2. Adding building fragility information to HAZUS;
3. Improving speed and accuracy of initial earthquake notification;
4. Working toward real time aftershock probability calculations;
5. Research on earthquake early warning technology;
6. Upgrading of network infrastructure (both in Seattle and out in the field).
Murdock Initiative The Murdock proposal was successful. About 15 temporary Traveling Array (TA)
stations will be converted to permanent network stations, equipped with three-component broadband sensors and
three-component accelerometers. Budget considerations may prevent all 15 from being equipped with accelerometers.
It is possible, although by no means certain, that the state of Oregon and the Pacific Northwest National
Laboratories Seismology Group at Hanford may be able to purchase additional seismic equipment to be installed at other
TA sites. Oregon might fund the purchase of between 2 and 8 stations and Hanford 3 or 4.
John showed a map
of the PNSN broadband instrument network after the TA sites have been converted.
Paul bodin briefly described
the process by which the TA sites were selected. Station selection for conversion to permanence is nearing
completion.
Other instrumentation developments
The UW will soon purchase six
portable broadband sensors and recorders. These may be helpful in a variety of projects, including aftershock
studies, seismicity studies in areas of poor coverage, and possibly building response studies.
Current
state of PNSN
368 stations stream data to Seattle. These include the Earthscope TA stations, which will
be moving out of the region over the next year or so, with the exception of the 15 TA sites that will be converted to
permanent status with the Murdock funds.
240 of these 368 stations are maintained by the PNSN: 95 strong
motion, 23 broadband, and 122 short-period vertical-component weak-motion stations.
Some time was spent
discussing the challenges of accurate location of offshore earthquakes, brought up partly in the context of the M5.3
well offshore Oregon the previous day. Currently, such earthquakes are considered outside of the PNSN's authoritative
region. They are generally located and have magnitudes determined by the USGS's National Earthquake Information
Center (NEIC).
Vidale mentioned the PNSN's intention to change the "Authoritative Region" for the PNSN to the
entire states of Oregon and Washington, to general agreement.
The PNSN is currently inadequate in its routine
magnitude calculation capability above about magnitude 4.5. The AC strongly encouraged efforts to improve
its capability for magnitude estimation and apply it to both onshore and
offshore events. Rapid determination of the
magnitudes of Cascadia subduction events larger than about M8 from near-field data presents considerable technical
challenges.
Strong Motion Issues
Tim Walsh noted that DNR building in Olympia has
accelerographs inside the structure but there is no companion free-field site.
Instruments in WA and OR
currently operated and maintained by the USGS National Strong Ground Motion Program will likely be turned over to the
PNSN over the next few years.
C.B. Crouse asked if there are adequate resources at the PNSN to adequately
maintain all these new sites. Steve Malone replied there probably was
not. C.B. urged that sites that have produced
useful recordings of all the large Puget Sound earthquakes in the past 60 years still have recorders at them be
maintained.
Availability of strong motion data to
engineering community
Considerable time was
spent discussing the long-standing problem of how to provide the engineering community with acceleration time series
data in a timely and convenient fashion.
C.B. noted that most (if not all) modern digital accelerographs have
virtually flat responses in the frequency band of primary engineering interest, so conversion of the seismologist's
times series that are in digital counts to acceleration is simply a matter of multiplying by the correct scale factor.
Malone proposed that some of our engineering colleagues look at what kind of time series data are available
on the web (e.g., Southern California Earthquake Center, California Strong Motion Instrumentation Program, or the
Japanese effort, which was praised by C.B.).
Marc Eberhard, Leon Kempner, C.B., T.J. McDonald, and Ray Cakir
agreed to form an informal committee to define what a strong motion database might look like and to look for existing
web sites that might serve as model for the PNSN, which it could pattern its own effort after. It was also suggested
that John Hooper be invited to participate in this effort.
It was reported that IRIS has agreed to archive
continuous strong motion data from the PNSN, a useful move, although this archive will not provide the necessary easy
access for the engineering community, hence the need to create a special
database.
(Following the meeting, changes in the PNSN and IRIS
software were made such that as of Feb 17, 2007 all real-time strong-motion data from the
PNSN is being continuously archived at the IRIS DMC.)
The efforts of Art Frankel's group in the Seattle and
Portland areas were briefly discussed.
ShakeMap
Malone reported on the history of the effort
to implement ShakeMap in the Pacific Northwest. He talked about the most recent efforts to input
high-spatial-resolution information about surface geology and Vs30 data for the city of Seattle (on a .75 arc-minute
grid, which is about 1400 meter linear spacing) and to make some test runs of ShakeMap with these new data.
Malone briefly summarized the completed effort supported by the WashDOT and instigated by UW CE to use acceleration
values produced by ShakeMap to estimate the probability of DOT bridge
damage following a large earthquake. This
system is currently working but has not been of use because no earthquake has been large enough near bridges in the
past three years. This work will be reported in the paper noted below:
Ranf, R.T., Eberhard, M. and Malone,
S., "Post-Earthquake Prioritization of Bridge Inspections." to appear in
Earthquake Spectra, Earthquake Engineering
Research Institute, April 2007.
The final project report to WashDOT can be retrieved from this link:
http://faculty.washington.edu/eberhard/research/malone_eberhard_WARD_602.1.pdf
A discussion ensued about earthquake loss estimates in general and FEMA's HAZUS loss estimation software in
particular. A lot of accurate information is needed to make good loss estimates: accurate ground motion information,
and as C.B. pointed out comprehensive and correct building inventory information. The PNSN does not have the
resources nor the expertise to address the building inventory issue.
Leon Kempner mentioned that BPA is using HAZUS by inputting all of their
inventory and fragility information for the
whole BPA system.
UW Multi-Geologic Hazards initiative
Robert Winglee, chair of the UW Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences, gave a brief report on the initiative to create a
structure that would bring together University, local, State and Federal resources to address earthquake, volcanic,
flood, landslide and tsunami hazards in Washington State. a white paper has been drafted and a workshop with
potential participants will take place in late April at the UW.
Dealing with all these types of hazards involves four functions: mapping,
monitoring, modeling, and mitigation. The
biggest task of all is finding effective ways to translate the results of such activity into public policy.
Aftershock probabilities
Joan Gomberg spoke about beginning efforts to create a method for estimating aftershock probabilities for significant
PNW earthquakes. Aftershock probabilities are already calculated in California on an experimental basis. The
historical data and higher and more uniform rates of seismicity there make such estimates easier to calculate than is
the case for the PNW.
Coastal Hazards Workshops and Lake Washington tsunamis
Bill Steele reported on two recent workshops to educate coastal communities and Indian tribes to use CISN display to
provide real time earthquake and tsunami warning information to those communities. A $25K grant from the USGS
supported this effort, which also involved the purchase and distribution of the necessary software and computers.
The Washington Department of Natural Resources is having a workshop at the UW on March 9 to discuss the issue of
tsunamis in Lake Washington as the result of a Seattle fault event, and
particularly the risk faced by the 520 bridge.
DNR's tsunami run-up maps can be found at www.dnr.wa.gov/geology
Next Meeting
The UW will be preparing its annual proposal to the USGS for seismic
monitoring in September and October. It was agreed that an advisory
committee meeting sometime early in that process might be helpful, if beforehand a list of specific questions and issues could be prepared for
the advisory committee's consideration.
These issues and questions would be regarding what activities (especially
new activities) might be proposed to the USGS. Bill Steele will keep the
group posted on when such a meeting will be held, preferably with more
lead-time than this meeting.
Action Items & Recommendations
1. The AC encouraged already-planned efforts to improve its capability
for magnitude estimation and apply it to both onshore and offshore events.
We plan to implement moment tensor inversion in the next year or so, as
soon as we plow through the chores queued ahead of it.
2. Formation of the "strong motion database" committee and launching its
work (see details earlier in minutes).
A call to Woody Savage, Director of the NSMP, revealed that NSMP has
created a very good website, and is currently testing it with the CISN,
and planning to make it live April 1st. This leaves us with only the
problem of our sending the NSMP our data in an automated way. Another
phone call to Ralph Archuleta reveals COSMOS may offer a similar delivery
system of strong motion data. So rather than designing our own delivery
system, we need only work out data transmission issues, obviating the
need for committee formation.
3. Recommendation to USGS that Art Frankel be urged to continue his
long-term array studies in the PNW. Also, ask that Art make his data
readily available to the engineering community and help him do it.
Vidale or Bodin will contact Frankel to investigate the logistics and
specified advantages of pursuing this.
4. Next meeting, call out items on which AC is requested to comment, and
notify with more lead time.
A sensible idea.
List of Attendees
CB Crouses (URS, Inc.), Committee Chairman
Advisory Committee Members:
TJ McDonald (City of Seattle)
Craig Weaver (USGS)
Doug Johnson (WA St. Dept. of Ecology / Dam Safety Division)
Tim Walsh (WA Dept. of Natural Resources, Div. of Geology & Earth
Resources)
Ray Cakir (WA Dept. of Natural Resources, Div. of Geology & Earth
Resources)
Leon Kempner (Bonneville Power Administration)
Jared Perez (Bonneville Power Administration)
Marc Eberhard (UW Civil Engineering)
Staff and other participants:
JE Vidale (PNSN/UW)
Paul Bodin, Manager(PNSN/UW)
Steve Malone (PNSN/UW)
Tom Yelin (USGS)
Joan Gomberg (USGS)
Bill Steele, Committee Staff (PNSN/UW)
Ruth Ludwin (PNSN/UW)
For contact information, please see:
http://www.pnsn.org/SEIS/ANSS/advisorycom.html
For minutes and other information about the Pacific Northwest Region of
the Advanced National Seismic System (ANSS) see:
http://www.pnsn.org/SEIS/ANSS/welcome.html
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This is file /SEIS/ANSS/minutes07.html,
last modified 3/5/07. .
For problems with this page contact:
bill@ess.washington.edu.
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