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The Cascadia Initiative : a sea change In seismological studies of subduction zones
Authors
Richard M. Allen
Andrew H. Barclay
+20 more
Samuel W. Bell
Peter D. Bromirski
Richard L. Carlson
Xiaowei Chen
John A. Collins
Robert P. Dziak
Brent Evers
Donald W. Forsyth
Peter Gerstoft
Emilie E. E. Hooft
Dean Livelybrooks
Jessica A. Lodewyk
Douglas S. Luther
Jeffrey J. McGuire
Susan Y. Schwartz
Maya Tolstoy
Douglas R. Toomey
Anne M. Trehu
Michelle Weirathmueller
William S. D. Wilcock
Publication date
1 June 2014
Publisher
'The Oceanography Society'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Oceanography Society, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of The Oceanography Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Oceanography 27, no. 2 (2014): 138-150, doi:10.5670/oceanog.2014.49.Increasing public awareness that the Cascadia subduction zone in the Pacific Northwest is capable of great earthquakes (magnitude 9 and greater) motivates the Cascadia Initiative, an ambitious onshore/offshore seismic and geodetic experiment that takes advantage of an amphibious array to study questions ranging from megathrust earthquakes, to volcanic arc structure, to the formation, deformation and hydration of the Juan De Fuca and Gorda Plates. Here, we provide an overview of the Cascadia Initiative, including its primary science objectives, its experimental design and implementation, and a preview of how the resulting data are being used by a diverse and growing scientific community. The Cascadia Initiative also exemplifies how new technology and community-based experiments are opening up frontiers for marine science. The new technology—shielded ocean bottom seismometers—is allowing more routine investigation of the source zone of megathrust earthquakes, which almost exclusively lies offshore and in shallow water. The Cascadia Initiative offers opportunities and accompanying challenges to a rapidly expanding community of those who use ocean bottom seismic data.The Cascadia Initiative is supported by the National Science Foundation; the CIET is supported under grants OCE- 1139701, OCE-1238023, OCE‐1342503, OCE-1407821, and OCE-1427663 to the University of Oregon
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