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Published February 1, 2014 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Reproducing the supershear portion of the 2002 Denali earthquake rupture in laboratory

Abstract

A notable feature of the 2002 View the M_w 7.9 Denali, Alaska, earthquake was that a unique set of near-field seismic ground motion records, at Pump Station 10 (PS10), captured the passage of a supershear rupture followed by what was surmised to be a secondary slip pulse, 'Trailing Rayleigh Pulse' (Dunham and Archuleta, 2004 and Mello et al., 2010). Motivated by the unique features contained in these near-field ground motion records, which were obtained only 3 km away from the fault, a series of scaled laboratory earthquake experiments was conducted in an attempt to replicate the dominant features of the PS10 ground motion signatures. Particle velocity records bearing a striking similarity to the Denali ground motion records are presented and discussed. The success of the comparison opens up the possibility of routinely generating near source ground motion records in a scaled and controlled laboratory setting that could be of great societal interest towards assessing seismic hazard from large and potentially devastating earthquakes.

Additional Information

© 2013 Elsevier B. V. Received 7 June 2013; Received in revised form 12 November 2013; Accepted 13 November 2013; Available online 5 December 2013. The authors gratefully acknowledge the National Science Foundation for the research grant (Award No. EAS-0911723) provided under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009 (Public Law 111-5). H.S.B. thanks Amaury Vallage for help provided in preparing Fig. 1. The authors are grateful to Eric Dunham and one anonymous reviewer for their helpful comments.

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