The findings offer a real-world demonstration of how “dark fiber” can be used to create an ultra-dense seismic array for post-earthquake monitoring in urban areas, reducing the deployment time and ...
Scientists install a GPS station in the Whitmore Mountains during low temperatures and high winds. Photo Credit: Seith White/POLENET Peter Rejcek, Antarctic Sun Editor Talk to just about any scientist ...
New research from The University of Texas at Austin could change the way scientists think about potential damage from earthquakes. The study examined data from one of the densest seismic arrays ever ...
Seismological research is directly related to the incubation, occurrence, and evolution of earthquakes. Scientists seek to reveal potential earthquake precursors by monitoring the stress state of ...
An undersea invention could be critical for early earthquake warnings in California, a study has found. In California, there are miles and miles of underwater fiber optic cables crossing the state, ...
HOUSTON, Nov. 18-- El Paso Corp. let contract to MicroSeismic Inc. for a buried-array seismic monitoring program in its Haynesville shale development program south of Shreveport, La. The buried array, ...
Just days after a 2020 magnitude 5.1 earthquake in Tangshan, China, researchers turned nearly 8 kilometers of unused telecom fiber optic cable into a seismic array that detected dozens of aftershocks ...
According to physics, seismic waves from earthquakes should travel in a four-leaf clover pattern, but in the real world they behave more like ripples in a pond. New research has found the pattern ...
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