1-20 OF 341 RESULTS FOR

Delaney Park

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2022
Earthquake Spectra (2022) 38 (4): 2398–2421.
... and Delaney Park downhole arrays. The adopted method is based on the joint inversion of earthquake acceleration time series and experimental surface wave dispersion data and includes physical constraints to improve the inverse problem’s well-posedness. We first use synthetic data at these two sites to refine...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Published: 02 September 2020
Seismological Research Letters (2020) 91 (6): 3381–3390.
...Hai‐Yun Wang; Wei‐Ping Jiang Abstract The shear‐wave velocity ( V S ) in soil is an important parameter to characterize dynamic soil properties. The Delaney Park downhole array was deployed in 2003 without measuring the shear‐ and compression‐wave velocity ( V S and V P ) profiles. Thornley et al...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Published: 28 November 2018
Seismological Research Letters (2019) 90 (1): 395–400.
...‐component accelerometers placed at seven depths from the surface to 61 m below ground (Fig.  1 ) is located in Delaney Park, part of downtown Anchorage, Alaska, and has been recording strong ground motions since 2004 (Fig.  2 , upper left inset). The site is located on level ground approximately 800 m south...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Image
Delaney Park borehole array sensor layout and generalized geology with the previously assumed shear‐wave velocity profile. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 28 November 2018
Figure 1. Delaney Park borehole array sensor layout and generalized geology with the previously assumed shear‐wave velocity profile. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Image
Location of the Delaney Park downhole array. (Upper left inset) The location of the array site adjacent to Delaney Park in downtown Anchorage; (lower right inset) the relative locations of the two earthquake events used in this study. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 28 November 2018
Figure 2. Location of the Delaney Park downhole array. (Upper left inset) The location of the array site adjacent to Delaney Park in downtown Anchorage; (lower right inset) the relative locations of the two earthquake events used in this study. The color version of this figure is available only
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2022
Earthquake Spectra (2022) 38 (2): 1103–1123.
... using ground motions recorded during the M W 7.1 2018 Anchorage Earthquake, and close matches between measured and predicted response spectra are found. The method is then compared with site response analyses using a calibrated 1D equivalent linear (EQL) model of the Delaney Park Downhole Array site...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2021
Earthquake Spectra (2021) 37 (3): 1931–1954.
... variability. This 1D application is demonstrated at the Treasure Island and Delaney Park Downhole Array sites, where it is shown to produce superior fits to the small-strain recorded site response relative to existing approaches used to account for spatial variability in 1D GRAs. Using the proposed approach...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2021
Earthquake Spectra (2021) 37 (3): 2013–2040.
... at the Treasure Island and Delaney Park Downhole Array sites (TIDA and DPDA, respectively). While the pseudo-3D Vs models can be used to incorporate spatial variability into 1D, two-dimensional (2D), or 3D GRAs, their implementation in 1D GRAs at TIDA and DPDA is discussed in a companion paper. Recognizing...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Image
Photo showing north façade of the 20‐story‐high Atwood Building next to the Delaney Park borehole array (fenced area) in downtown Anchorage, Alaska. Google map shows the location of Delaney Park (photograph by E. Kalkan).The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 14 February 2017
Figure 1. Photo showing north façade of the 20‐story‐high Atwood Building next to the Delaney Park borehole array (fenced area) in downtown Anchorage, Alaska. Google map shows the location of Delaney Park (photograph by E. Kalkan).The color version of this figure is available only
Image
Borehole array site locations differentiating types as 1D- or 3D-like: (a) sites in Japan, (b) sites in California with an insert closeup view of the Delaney Park site in Alaska. 3D-like KiK-net sites used as examples throughout this paper are labeled for reference.
Published: 01 August 2023
Figure 1. Borehole array site locations differentiating types as 1D- or 3D-like: (a) sites in Japan, (b) sites in California with an insert closeup view of the Delaney Park site in Alaska. 3D-like KiK-net sites used as examples throughout this paper are labeled for reference .
Image
Measured Vs profiles, triaxial accelerometer sensor depths (black triangle symbols), and simplified stratigraphy at (a) the Treasure Island Downhole Array (TIDA) and (b) Delaney Park Downhole Array (DPDA) sites. The measured Vs profile at TIDA is from deep PS suspension logging (Graizer and Shakal, 2004) and the stratigraphy is based on the seismic downhole borehole presented in Gibbs et al. (1992). The measured Vs profile at DPDA is from seismic downhole (DH) (Thornley et al., 2019) and the stratigraphy is based on geologic data from Combellick (1999).
Published: 01 August 2021
Figure 1. Measured Vs profiles, triaxial accelerometer sensor depths (black triangle symbols), and simplified stratigraphy at (a) the Treasure Island Downhole Array (TIDA) and (b) Delaney Park Downhole Array (DPDA) sites. The measured Vs profile at TIDA is from deep PS suspension logging
Image
Published: 01 November 2022
TIDA: Treasure Island downhole array; DPDA: Delaney Park downhole array.
Image
The VS and VP profiles measured by Thornley et al. (2019) at Delaney Park downhole array (DPDA) and the average VS and VP profiles computed by the measured VS and VP data between two successive sensors for comparison with the VS and VP profiles computed by this study. (a) The VS profile and (b) the VP profile. The black lines denote the measured VS and VP profiles, and the red lines denote the measured average VS and VP profiles, respectively. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 02 September 2020
Figure 1. The V S and V P profiles measured by Thornley et al. (2019) at Delaney Park downhole array (DPDA) and the average V S and V P profiles computed by the measured V S and V P data between two successive sensors for comparison
Image
Published: 01 August 2022
Table 2. Key features of the downhole sites selected for the evaluation of empirical consistency Downhole site Depth (m) V S 30 (m/s) Site type No. of events a Database TR20 b Tea12 c Delaney Park 61 270 A LG 15 NEES Garner Valley 150 285
Image
Measured Vs profiles, triaxial accelerometer sensor depths (black triangle symbols), and simplified stratigraphy at: (a) the Treasure Island Downhole Array (TIDA) and (b) Delaney Park Downhole Array (DPDA) sites. The measured Vs profiles at TIDA are from seismic downhole (DH) (Gibbs et al., 1992), shallow crosshole (CH) (De Alba et al., 1994), and deep PS suspension logging (Graizer and Shakal, 2004), and the stratigraphy is based on Gibbs et al. (1992). The measured Vs profiles at DPDA are from inversion of surface wave data (SW) (Nath et al., 1997) and seismic downhole (DH) (Thornley et al., 2019), and the stratigraphy is based on geologic cross-sections from Combellick (1999).
Published: 01 August 2021
Figure 3. Measured V s profiles, triaxial accelerometer sensor depths (black triangle symbols), and simplified stratigraphy at: (a) the Treasure Island Downhole Array (TIDA) and (b) Delaney Park Downhole Array (DPDA) sites. The measured V s profiles at TIDA are from seismic downhole (DH
Series: GSA Field Guide
Published: 01 January 2013
DOI: 10.1130/2013.0033(04)
EISBN: 9780813756332
... 60.5 Ma, when coarse, chaotic, debris-flow deposits of the Paleocene Windy Gap Volcanic Member of the Middle Park Formation began to accumulate along the southern basin margin. These volcaniclastic conglomerate deposits were derived from local, mafic-alkalic volcanic sources (and transitory deposits...
FIGURES | View All (14)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 May 1974
AAPG Bulletin (1974) 58 (5): 906.
...Guy Burton; Robert Wellborn Abstract Lone Pine field, in the northwest part of North Park basin, Colorado, lies between the Park Range on the west and the Sheep Mountain-Delaney Butte thrust on the east. The oil field underlies a surface anticline mapped by Hale in 1965. Seismic work by a major oil...
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2022
Earthquake Spectra (2022) 38 (3): 2235–2259.
...Table 2. Key features of the downhole sites selected for the evaluation of empirical consistency Downhole site Depth (m) V S 30 (m/s) Site type No. of events a Database TR20 b Tea12 c Delaney Park 61 270 A LG 15 NEES Garner Valley 150 285...
FIGURES | View All (17)
Image
Published: 01 August 2023
Table 2. 1D-like borehole array sites and main characteristics No. Site a Number of events b Depth c (m) GWT d (m) V S 30 e (m/s) V S , average e (m/s) 1 Corona I-15 Highway 91 4 42 25 334 440 2 Delaney Park 7 61 21 266 320 3
Journal Article
Published: 20 April 2021
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2021) 111 (4): 2112–2120.
... data for station 8040, the Delaney Park Downhole Array, are available from the University of California, Santa Barbara (see Data and Resources ). Strong‐motion records at several stations were downloaded from Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (see Data and Resources ) for the M w...
FIGURES | View All (6)