1-20 OF 341 RESULTS FOR

Granada Hills

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
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1994
AAPG Bulletin (1994) 78 (7): 1040–1074.
... rocks of the San Gabriel Mountains as well as the southverging Mission HillsGranada Hills and Northridge Hills fault zones. 1 Manuscript received, February 10, 1992; revised manuscript received, March 1, 1994; final acceptance, March 4, 1994. Pre-basinal rocks consist of four roughly...
FIGURES | View All (19)
Image
Water subsystem areas (WSAs) in the LADWP water distribution system. Note: There are 13 WSAs including Foothills (FH), Granada Hills (GH), Sunland/Tujunga (ST), Valley Floor (VF), Encino Hills (EH), Santa Monica Mountains (SM), Hollywood Hills (HH), Highland Park (HP), Mountain Washington (MW), Sata Ynez (SY), Central City (CC), Westside (WS) and Harbor (H).
Published: 01 August 2011
Figure 1. Water subsystem areas (WSAs) in the LADWP water distribution system. Note: There are 13 WSAs including Foothills (FH), Granada Hills (GH), Sunland/Tujunga (ST), Valley Floor (VF), Encino Hills (EH), Santa Monica Mountains (SM), Hollywood Hills (HH), Highland Park (HP), Mountain
Image
—Index map of the east Ventura basin and San Gabriel fault. Base map from Jennings (1975). Basement geology of San Gabriel Mountains from Ehlig (1975). Abbreviations: AM, Alamo Mountain; CF, Canton fault; CR, Caliente Range; F, Fillmore; FM, Frazier Mountain; MC, Modelo Canyon; MF, Morales fault; MG, Mission Hills–Granada Hills fault; N, Newhall; NH, Northridge Hills fault; P, Piru; S, Saugus; SB, Sylmar basin; SGF, San Gabriel fault.
Published: 01 July 1994
, Morales fault; MG, Mission HillsGranada Hills fault; N, Newhall; NH, Northridge Hills fault; P, Piru; S, Saugus; SB, Sylmar basin; SGF, San Gabriel fault.
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 25 January 2024
Geology (2024) 52 (4): 261–265.
FIGURES
Series: Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Published: 09 May 2020
DOI: 10.1144/SP476-2017-46
EISBN: 9781786203892
FIGURES | View All (14)
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1995
Seismological Research Letters (1995) 66 (5): 4.
... © 1995 by the Seismological Society of America 1995 In the paper on the geotechnical aspects of the 1994 Northridge Earthquake in the May/June issue of SRL, depth to ground water of >15 m was reported for a ground failure zone in Granada Hills. This information was obtained from...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1996
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1996) 86 (1B): S300–S318.
.... (1995a) . Ground deformation in Granada Hills and Mission Hills resulting from the January 17, 1994, Northridge, California, earthquake , U.S. Geol. Surv. Open-File Rept. 95-62 . Hecker S. Ponti D. J...
Image
Published: 01 August 2011
al. 1995 ) NR2 Olive View Hospital NR3 Holy Cross Medical Center NR4 Veteran's Administration Hospital (building #3) NR5 LA County Medical Center (mental health building) NR6 St John's Hospital NR7 USC Medical Center (USC hospital building) NR8 Granada Hills
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1971
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1971) 61 (6): 1863–1869.
... km (PAS). " F e l t in San Fernando- Sylmar area. Press reported power and communications equipment failed briefly at the Devon- shire division station in Granada Hills, but no damage was reported" (Nina Scott). Magnitude 4.0 (PAS), 4.7 (NOS). March 31, 1971 14h52m22.5s, 34°15'.0N, 118°31~5W, focal...
Image
On the right, aerial view of the northwestern part of the Granada City and close-up aspect of the River Beiro Channel and landslide. LiDar view of the landslide at the left. Some university buildings are visible on the hill; several urban plots appear at the foot of the landslide in a picture dated 2010. Morphological features and geology of the Beiro landslide are shown below.
Published: 01 August 2012
Figure 17 On the right, aerial view of the northwestern part of the Granada City and close-up aspect of the River Beiro Channel and landslide. LiDar view of the landslide at the left. Some university buildings are visible on the hill; several urban plots appear at the foot of the landslide
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1991
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1991) 81 (6): 2486–2492.
.... (1989) . Coda Q for the state of Washington , Bull. Seism. Soc. Am. 79 , 1024 - 1038 . Hill R. N. Levander A. R. (1984) . Resonances of low-velocity layers with lateral...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 2013
Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (2013) 19 (1): 41–68.
... uplifted the Mission Hills and Granada Hills. Additional geological mapping and neotectonic investigations took place after the 1994 Northridge earthquake. Hitchcock and Wills (2000) produced a Quaternary geologic map of the SFV. Wright (2001) , Yeats (2001) , Carena and Suppe (2002) , Yerkes...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2012
Environmental & Engineering Geoscience (2012) 18 (3): 217–260.
...Figure 17 On the right, aerial view of the northwestern part of the Granada City and close-up aspect of the River Beiro Channel and landslide. LiDar view of the landslide at the left. Some university buildings are visible on the hill; several urban plots appear at the foot of the landslide...
FIGURES | View All (25)
Image
(a) View of the eastern part of the Granada Basin looking north, showing recent dissection of the Dudar Formation by the Rio Genil. The Dudar Formation occupies hills on the north side of the Genil valley. (b) Tortonian calcarenite near Pinos Genil containing small clasts of Alpujárride marble. Coin for scale has 2.3 cm diameter. (c) Dudar Formation conglomerate in road-cut between Pinos Genil and Guejar-Sierra containing large clasts (up to 2 m) of Nevado–Filábride lithologies. Hammer at lower right is 40 cm long.
Published: 01 January 2009
Fig. 2. ( a ) View of the eastern part of the Granada Basin looking north, showing recent dissection of the Dudar Formation by the Rio Genil. The Dudar Formation occupies hills on the north side of the Genil valley. ( b ) Tortonian calcarenite near Pinos Genil containing small clasts
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2003
Seismological Research Letters (2003) 74 (5): 569–573.
... and waves) related to the California Science Content Standards. The various science project workshops are described at the SFVSP Web site ( http://www.csun.edu/science/sli ). Recently, SFVSP has provided the AS-1 and associated computer for two high schools (Reseda and Granada Hills, not part of LAPTAG...
FIGURES | View All (7)
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2002
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2002) 92 (6): 2163–2176.
...S. Alejandro Gil-Zepeda; Francisco Luzón; Jorge Aguirre; José Morales; Francisco J. Sánchez-Sesma; Carlos Ortiz-Alemán Abstract The Granada Basin is located in the southeast of Spain, in the central sector of the Betic Cordilleras, in an area of high seismic hazard in the Iberian Peninsula...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
Published: 28 January 2019
Quarterly Journal of Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology (2019) 52 (2): 208–219.
... of the hills and mountains of Málaga and Granada provinces ( Silvertop 1829 , 1833 ; Cook 1833 ; Ansted 1859 ). Silvertop (1829 , p. 216) described a ‘central (mountain) axis of gneiss and mica schist ( primary rocks ) with successively overlying zones on each flank of transition and secondary rocks, which...
FIGURES | View All (18)
Journal Article
Journal: Elements
Published: 01 February 2025
Elements (2025) 21 (1): 8–9.
... Hill Medal (Australian Academy of Science). Jim De Yoreo is a Battelle Fellow at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) and a member of the Graduate Faculty in Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Washington, USA. He received his PhD in physics from Cornell University (USA...
Image
Sketch map of the Mediterranean region showing key occurrences of Early, Middle and Late Miocene reef and related facies referred to in this study, including NW Cyprus. 1, Terra Member, Cyprus (this study and literature cited in text); 2, Zincir Kaja Platform, Mut Basin, southern Turkey (Bassant et al. 2005; Janson et al. 2010; Pomar et al. 2012); 3, NW Gulf of Suez, Egypt (Schuster 2002a, b); 4, Paros, Greece (Bosellini and Perrin 2008); 5, Sirt Basin, Libya (Hladil et al. 1991); 6, Dolianova, Sardinia, Italy (Cherchi et al. 2000; Galloni et al. 2001); 7, northern Sardinia, Italy (Benisek et al. 2009); 8, Bonifacio Basin, Corsica, France (Galloni et al. 2001; Tomassetti et al. 2013; Brandano et al. 2016); 9, Torino Hills, Piedmont, northern Italy (Chevalier 1962); 10, Aquitaine region, southern France (Chevalier 1962; Cahuzac and Chaix 1996); 11, Dağpazarı Platform, Mut Basin, southern Turkey (Bassant et al. 2005; Janson et al. 2010; Pomar et al. 2012; Vescogni et al. 2014); 12, Ziqlag Formation, Israel (Buchbinder et al. 1993); 13, northern Hungary (Oosterbaan 1990); 14, Vienna Basin, Austria (Riegel and Piller 2000); 15, Torino Hills, Piedmont, northern Italy (Chevalier 1962); 16, Djebel Chott platform, northern Algeria (Belkebir et al. 1994); 17, Aquitaine region, southern France (Chevalier 1962; Cahuzac and Chaix 1996); 18, Valencia Region, eastern Spain (Calvet et al. 1994); 19, Almeria, southern Spain (Mankiewicz 1996); 20, Murchas, Granada Basin, southern Spain (Braga et al. 1996); 21, Koronia Member, Cyprus (this study and literature cited in text); 22, Pattish Formation, Israel (Buchbinder et al. 1993; Buchbinder and Zilberman 1997); 23, Kasaba Formation, SW Turkey (Hayward et al. 1996); 24, Crete, Greece (Brachert et al. 2006); 25, Sirt Basin, Libya (Hladil et al. 1991); 26, Salento Peninsula, Apulia, southern Italy (Bosellini et al. 2001, 2002; Bosellini 2006; Vescogni et al. 2008)); 27, Calabria, southern Italy (Chevalier 1962; Pedley and Grasso 1994); 28, Malta (Pedley 1979); 29, Maiella Mountain, Abruzzo, Italy (Danese 1999); 30, Lampedusa, Pelagian Islands, southern Italy (Grasso and Pedley 1985); 31, Livorno Hills, Tuscany, Italy (Bossio et al. 1996); 32, Llucmajor Platform, Mallorca, Spain (Pomar et al. 1996); 33, San Miguel de Salinas Basin, SE Spain (Reinhold 1995); 34, Almeria, southern Spain (Brachert et al. 1996; Mankiewicz 1996); 35, Melilla, northern Morocco (Rouchy et al. 1986); 36, Granada Basin, southern Spain (Braga and Aguirre 2001). (For a more complete catalogue of Mediterranean reef occurrences see Bosellini and Perrin (2008).)
Published: 15 January 2021
, northern Sardinia, Italy ( Benisek et al. 2009 ); 8, Bonifacio Basin, Corsica, France ( Galloni et al. 2001 ; Tomassetti et al. 2013 ; Brandano et al. 2016 ); 9, Torino Hills, Piedmont, northern Italy ( Chevalier 1962 ); 10, Aquitaine region, southern France ( Chevalier 1962 ; Cahuzac and Chaix
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1933
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1933) 23 (1): 13–22.
..., being dangerously wounded, perished several months after, for want of food and proper care . . . . . It 18 B U L L E T I N OF T H E S E I S M O L O G I C A L S O C I E T Y OF A M E R I C A was felt in the kingdom of New Granada (Colombia) from the branches of the high Sierra de Santa Marta as far...