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Published 2011 | Published
Book Section - Chapter Open

Seismic Calibration Shots Conducted in 2009 in the Imperial Valley, Southern California, for the Salton Seismic Imaging Project (SSIP)

Abstract

The Salton Seismic Imaging Project (SSIP) is a large-scale collaborative project with the goal of developing a detailed 3-D structural image of the Salton Trough (including both the Coachella and Imperial Valleys). The image will be used for earthquake hazard analysis, geothermal studies, and studies of plate-boundary transition from an ocean-ocean to a continent-continent plate-boundary. As part of SSIP, a series of calibration shots were detonated in June 2009 in the southern Imperial Valley for four specific reasons: (1) to measure peak particle velocity and acceleration at various distances from the shots, (2) to calibrate the propagation of energy through sediments of the Imperial Valley, (3) to test the effects of seismic energy on buried clay drainage pipes, which are abundant throughout the irrigated parts of the Salton Trough, and (4) to test the ODEX drilling technique, which uses a downhole casing hammer for a tight casing fit. Currently, we are using information obtained from the calibration shots to plan the data collection phase of the SSIP project. We have validated the use of ground-motion tables developed with Los Angeles Region Seismic Experiment (LARSE) data for use in the Imperial Valley and we have demonstrated that seismic energy from shots will not damage the drainage pipes used throughout the Salton Trough for irrigation.

Additional Information

We thank Caltrans (State of California) for allowing us to operate on their land and put seismic recorders in their road right-of-way. We are grateful to the staff at the IRIS-PASSCAL Instrument Center for their help with the instrumentation and software. We especially thank Caltech students Steven Skinner, Yunung Nina Lin, and Wang Yu for their help in the field. They worked tirelessly in temperatures well over 100 degrees and late into the night to the early hours of the morning.

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Created:
August 19, 2023
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January 13, 2024