| The annual SCEC Intern Colloquium (pictures) and Field Trip (pictures)
      was held August 3-6. The Colloquium has held on the first day.
      After everyone introduced themselves and Intern Program Coordinator
      Mark Benthien provided an overview of the the next four days,
      USC Professor Thomas Jordan gave a presentation on the history
      and future of SCEC. Outreach Director Jill Andrews then gave
      a presentation about SCEC's Outreach programs. For the remainder
      of the Colloquium each intern shared their project and its status
      mid-way during the summer. Online versions of the Intern presentations
      will be added to the SCEC Website over the month of August. Click
      on the following links to view the second set of presentations
      by three of the ten interns. The first
      set were added to this website last week. Nancy NatekUniv. of New Mexico
 Constraints
      on the SCEC 3D Velocity Model: 2D Gravity Modeling of the Transverse
      Ranges
 Mentor: Mousomi Roy
 
        Gravity can be a useful tool in constraining
        seismic tomography. In this project we develop a 2D gravity model
        based on version 2 of the Southern California Earthquake Center
        (SCEC) 3D velocity model to constrain the tomographic model.
        The 3D seismic velocity model for Southern California in the
        Los Angeles region is a crustal tomographic model of P-wave and
        S-wave velocities reflecting density structures. This study is
        based on previous work by Roy and Clayton for version 1 of the
        SCEC 3D velocity model which showed that the seismic tomography
        was in general consistent with gravity but with some discrepancies
        in the LA Basin and Transverse Ranges. In the preliminary part
        of our study shown in the slides below, we compare four 2D topographic
        profiles across the central and eastern Transverse Ranges to
        Airy Compensation models and observed gravity. In our current
        research we are using scaling relations of Vp and density to
        calculate the crustal density variations from the SCEC 3D velocity
        model and comparing the observed gravity to the predicted gravity.
 Tracy PattelenaPasadena City College/ UC Santa Cruz
 Refinement
      of Near-Surface P and S Velocities in the SCEC 3D Velocity Model
      Using 3D Waveform Modeling
 Mentor: Kim Olsen, UCSB
 
        Active-source industry data were processed
        using the tomographic velocity inversion method of Hole (1992)
        to create three P wave velocity models at 50 m grid spacing for
        the upper 500 m of crust in the Northridge epicentral region
        of Southern California's San Fernando Valley (SFV) (Pattelena
        et al., 1998). These profiles are named SFV-11, SFV-08, and SFV-12
        (Fig. 1). Unusually slow P wave velocities were found along all
        three profiles ranging from 900 to 2600 m/s (Fig's. 2 and 3).
        Additionally, one of the three profiles, SFV-12, had S wave arrivals
        with a resolution sufficient for an S wave velocity model at
        50 m grid spacing for the upper 300 m of crust to be generated.
        Unusually slow S wave velocities were found ranging from 300
        to 900 m/s (Fig. 3). From this profile, we were able to calculate
        Vp/Vs, finding a variable Poisson's ratio of 0.2 near the free
        surface to greater than 0.4 throughout most of the model (Fig.
        3). These high-resolution 2D models could provide a valuable
        constraint on the SCEC 3D Velocity Model in the SFV where control
        on the near-surface S wave velocity, a critical parameter for
        accurate prediction of strong ground motion, is mostly indirect
        and in many areas not well constrained. We define a Southern California Earthquake
        Center (SCEC) summer internship project that will compare the
        near-surface velocities in the tomographic profiles to those
        in the SFV portion of the SCEC 3D Velocity Model, Version 2,
        (SCEC 3D), as well as the ground motion response using the two
        different models. The primary goal of these comparisons is to
        outline any differences, and thereby potentially improve ground
        motion estimates in the SFV. For the method of analysis we use
        both 2D and 3D fourth-order staggered-grid visco-elastic finite-difference
        modeling to generate synthetic wave propagation. We then compare
        the accuracy of the seismic response in terms of amplitude of
        the SCEC 3D and the tomographic models against data for Northridge
        aftershock events. In addition, we constrain the anelastic attenuation
        in the near-surface material by trial and error of different Q values in the 3D model.
 Kathryn van RoosendaalCSU Northridge
 SEISMIC
      SLEUTHS: A Teacher's Package for Grades 7-12
 Mentor: Bob De Groot
 
        Seismic Sleuths was developed by the American
        Geophysical Union (AGU) and the Federal Emergency Management
        Agency (FEMA) in 1995 as an earthquake education curriculum for
        grades 7 through 12. It is unique in that it includes the methods
        of scientific investigation as well as the conclusions. The curriculum
        also includes tools for students to prepare for earthquakes and
        other natural disasters. The major topics included are: earth
        science and paleoseismology, community officials involved with
        disaster support, earthquake waves and the development of modern
        seismology, the response of buildings and other structures to
        earthquakes, and earthquake preparedness and safety. In order to reflect advances made in earth
        science, the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded the revision
        of the Seismic Sleuths curriculum in 1999 under the direction
        of the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC). For Seismic
        Sleuths 2001, each of the major sections will be streamlined
        and reorganized so that each may be used stand-alone if necessary.
        Each laboratory activity will updated and redesigned if necessary.
        Printed and video resources lists for each topic will also be
        updated and expanded to include electronic sources. Finally,
        the curriculum will be reevaluated in terms of the final 1995
        version of the National Science Education Standards.
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