On the Use of Data Noise as a Site‐Specific Weight Parameter in a Hierarchical Bayesian Moment Tensor Inversion: The Case Study of The Geysers and Long Valley Caldera Earthquakes

Author(s):  
Marija Mustać ◽  
Hrvoje Tkalčić
1991 ◽  
Vol 81 (6) ◽  
pp. 2194-2213
Author(s):  
Kevin Mayeda ◽  
Stuart Koyanagi ◽  
Keiiti Aki

Abstract Following the work of Phillips (1985), we have computed site amplification factors for coda waves at many sites in the Long Valley region in the eastern Sierra Nevada. We computed ratios of coda amplitudes measured at 15 stations in and around Long Valley caldera relative to a granitic site, MMPM, for six frequency bands centered at 1.5, 3.0, 6.0, 9.0, 12.0, and 15.0 Hz. All station sites located within the caldera experienced large ground motion amplification at 1.5 and 3.0 Hz, ranging between five and 17 times that of the reference site. However, at higher frequencies, these same sites exhibited significantly less amplification than the reference granite site. This is attributed to the competing effects of an impedance contrast between the basement rock and caldera fill and very high absorption in the caldera fill at high frequencies. Station MMLM, located on top of a volcanic plug, displayed the largest amplitudes of all the sites studied for frequencies between 9.0 and 15.0 Hz. A dike structure attached to the plug couples the basement rock to the surface. At high frequencies, the resulting large amplitudes at MMLM are not due to amplification resulting from a strong impedance contrast; rather, the absorption under this site is very low, perhaps lower than at the reference site, MMPM. Outside the caldera, another hard-rock site located at Devil's Postpile, MDPM, generally behaved like the reference site for all frequencies. The lowest amplifications observed came from a site outside the caldera, MDCM, located on thin pyroclastic ash deposits overlying granitic basement. This can be attributed to a dominance of absorption over the amplification caused by lower impedance of this layer. Variations among sites on similar surface geology may be due to small local variations in impedance and absorption under and adjacent to the site. The range in the spectral decay parameter, κ, between caldera and rock sites are comparable to results of Anderson and Hough (1984) for sites on alluvium and rock in the San Fernando region. These surprisingly different amplifications support the need for additional site-specific studies. Amplifications determined in this study for the frequency range 1.5 and 3.0 Hz correlate remarkably well with Eaton's (1990) residuals for duration magnitude, FMAG, and amplitude magnitude, XMAG, for the USGS northern California seismic array, further supporting the use of coda waves in determining site-specific amplification.


Radiocarbon ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (2) ◽  
pp. 871-876 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seren Griffiths

Bayesian analysis is now routinely applied for the construction of site-specific stratigraphic chronological models. Other approaches have analyzed the chronology of phases of archaeological activity across regions. The available radiocarbon results—the nature of the samples and their associations—provide the basis for what chronological questions it is possible to address for any site or region. In dealing with regional analyses, due consideration must be made of data selection. While data selection might be a relatively self-evident consideration in the analysis of a site chronology, working with data from a larger region poses a number of specific data selection issues. Robust association between dated samples and a particular type of diagnostic material culture or site may provide one means of producing regional chronologies. However, if the activity under investigation includes a number of different cultural traits, which are related but with each having a slightly different chronological currency, defining the temporal end of data selection becomes more problematic. This article presents one approach, using a case study from the British Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, with 880 simulation OxCal models used to investigate the effect of variously defining the end of a regional archaeological phase. The results emphasize that for a regional case study, sensitivity analysis may provide a useful tool to ensure representative models; the study also highlights the importance of comparing multiple model posteriors.


Radiocarbon ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (02) ◽  
pp. 871-876
Author(s):  
Seren Griffiths

Bayesian analysis is now routinely applied for the construction of site-specific stratigraphic chronological models. Other approaches have analyzed the chronology of phases of archaeological activity across regions. The available radiocarbon results—the nature of the samples and their associations—provide the basis for what chronological questions it is possible to address for any site or region. In dealing with regional analyses, due consideration must be made of data selection. While data selection might be a relatively self-evident consideration in the analysis of a site chronology, working with data from a larger region poses a number of specific data selection issues. Robust association between dated samples and a particular type of diagnostic material culture or site may provide one means of producing regional chronologies. However, if the activity under investigation includes a number of different cultural traits, which are related but with each having a slightly different chronological currency, defining the temporal end of data selection becomes more problematic. This article presents one approach, using a case study from the British Mesolithic-Neolithic transition, with 880 simulation OxCal models used to investigate the effect of variously defining the end of a regional archaeological phase. The results emphasize that for a regional case study, sensitivity analysis may provide a useful tool to ensure representative models; the study also highlights the importance of comparing multiple model posteriors.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (11) ◽  
pp. 2419-2429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oscar Hernandez-Alba ◽  
Stéphane Houel ◽  
Steve Hessmann ◽  
Stéphane Erb ◽  
David Rabuka ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 336-350 ◽  
Author(s):  
Larissa Hjorth

This article explores the unofficial role of camera phone practices in visualizing everyday forms of play as part of emergent urban cartographies. I argue that camera phone practices—especially in an age of timestamping—are creating their own cartographies of place that overlay the visual with the ambient, social with the geographic, emotional with the electronic, in new ways. By focusing upon the playful qualities of camera phone practices, we can begin to understand places as sites for ambient meandering and co-presence. Having outlined the notion of performative cartography as part of what has been defined as “critical cartography,” I consider how camera phone practices can be understood through ambient, co-present play. I turn to a site-specific mobile game, keitai mizu (mobile water), made for a post-Tokyo tsunami and Fukushima disaster context (known as 3/11), to explore the ways in which cartography can be performed.


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