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Journal Article
Published: 13 March 2024
Seismological Research Letters (2024) 95 (4): 2179–2194.
...Gabrielle Tepp; Igor Stubailo; Monica Kohler; Richard Guy; Yousef Bozorgnia Abstract Large music festivals and stadium concerts are known to produce unique vibration signals that resemble harmonic tremor, particularly at frequencies around 1–10 Hz. This study investigates the seismic signals...
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First thumbnail for: Shake to the Beat: Exploring the Seismic Signals a...
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(a) Map showing the concert venue and nearby seismic stations (circles) that recorded signals from the Swift concerts (blue). The orange circle indicates a station that only had data for the Metallica and Beyonce concerts. The zoomed inset shows the location of proximal stations relative to SoFi Stadium. (b) Locations of triaxial sensors temporarily deployed inside the SoFi Stadium bowl (red triangles). The purple polygon depicts the concert stage shape and location. Stadium layout diagrams adapted from the SoFi stadium website (see Data and Resources). The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 13 March 2024
Figure 1. (a) Map showing the concert venue and nearby seismic stations (circles) that recorded signals from the Swift concerts (blue). The orange circle indicates a station that only had data for the Metallica and Beyonce concerts. The zoomed inset shows the location of proximal stations
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A picture following a splendid music concert in the duomo during the IMA meeting in Pisa, Italy (1994). From right to left: Subrata Ghose (1932-2015), Giulio Ottonello, (wide-eyed) Giulio Jr. and Bernardo Cesare talking to Richard Spiess.
Published: 01 April 2021
Figure 2.2. A picture following a splendid music concert in the duomo during the IMA meeting in Pisa, Italy (1994). From right to left: Subrata Ghose (1932-2015), Giulio Ottonello, (wide-eyed) Giulio Jr. and Bernardo Cesare talking to Richard Spiess.
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(a) Spectrograms from the analyzed Morgan Wallen, Metallica, and Beyonce concerts. Metallica had a different setlist each night and is shown twice. Signals from opening acts are visible during the first hour of the CE.14683 recordings. (b) Comparison of signal frequency and song beat rate for all concerts shown in panel (a), not including opening acts. The identification frequency was used for the Metallica concerts instead of the peak frequency due to the effects of the broader‐band signals on the peak detection. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 13 March 2024
Figure 10. (a) Spectrograms from the analyzed Morgan Wallen, Metallica, and Beyonce concerts. Metallica had a different setlist each night and is shown twice. Signals from opening acts are visible during the first hour of the CE.14683 recordings. (b) Comparison of signal frequency and song beat
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(a) Vertical‐component spectrograms from five stations at varying distances for four hours around the 5 August 2023 Swift concert (starting at 03:00 UTC, or 8 p.m. on 4 August, local time). (b) Example concert tremor waveform for song 9 (“Love Story”), bandpass filtered from 1 to 6 Hz. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 13 March 2024
Figure 2. (a) Vertical‐component spectrograms from five stations at varying distances for four hours around the 5 August 2023 Swift concert (starting at 03:00 UTC, or 8 p.m. on 4 August, local time). (b) Example concert tremor waveform for song 9 (“Love Story”), bandpass filtered from 1 to 6 Hz
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A present-day photograph of the first-floor room at 20 Bedford Street which was the site of the 1824 meeting. Photograph courtesy of The Concert Artistes’ Association.
Published: 01 April 2025
Figure 5. A present-day photograph of the first-floor room at 20 Bedford Street which was the site of the 1824 meeting. Photograph courtesy of The Concert Artistes’ Association.
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Fig. 5.
Published: 01 January 2024
Fig. 5. Thematic maps showing anthropogenic pressure on groundwater resource: (a) spatially high concertation of Boro rice cultivation area at central parts of the basin; (b) annually higher production of Boro rice at the eastern part
Journal Article
Published: 01 July 2025
American Mineralogist (2025) 110 (7): 996–1011.
...Hengxu Li; Zhaochong Zhang; Ruixuan Zhang; Marc K. Reichow; Zhiguo Cheng; Zhenjie Zhang; M. Santosh Abstract Basalts are ubiquitous mafic rocks found within diverse tectonic settings on Earth. Despite concerted efforts to distinguish tectonic settings through the chemical compositions of basalt...
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First thumbnail for: A machine-learning-based approach using clinopyrox...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2025
American Mineralogist (2025) 110 (5): 820–825.
... be employed to manage fluid flow and reduce the pressure exerted by geothermal fluids in the Solfatara-Pisciarelli area with the aim of minimizing the risk of phreatic eruptions and, concomitantly, reducing uplift and seismicity. This approach requires concerted and cooperative efforts between geoscientists...
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First thumbnail for: The “breathing” Earth at Solfatara-Pisciarelli, Ca...
Second thumbnail for: The “breathing” Earth at Solfatara-Pisciarelli, Ca...
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Summary of the different parts of planetary systems which can be transported to the Roche sphere of a white dwarf, eventually polluting it. The numbers in the first column refer to the typical radii of the corresponding objects. Listed in the second column are the different mechanisms or objects which drive this transport, sometimes in concert with one another.
Published: 01 July 2024
or objects which drive this transport, sometimes in concert with one another.
Journal Article
Published: 26 February 2025
American Mineralogist (2025)
... results, in concert with earlier studies, highlight the formation process of natrojarosite and provide insights into detailed mineralogy at the Kutch region and the magnitude of the redox state. The natrojarosite and the associated minerals (including anhydrite and other sulfates) argue for acidic...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 09 January 2025
Geology (2025) 53 (4): 301–305.
... results suggest a feedback between deformation and coupling that may be active or latent in other more complex subduction zones but in concert with or masked by other factors. * [email protected] 30 9 2024 6 12 2024 19 12 2024 © 2025 The Authors 2025 Gold Open Access...
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First thumbnail for: Interactions between megathrust behavior and forea...
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Spectrograms from 4 hr of data recorded by level 8SW CSN sensor for the concert starting at 03:00 on 5 August 2023 (8 p.m. on 4 August, local time) produced using 4096 samples per window with 90% overlap. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Published: 13 March 2024
Figure 8. Spectrograms from 4 hr of data recorded by level 8SW CSN sensor for the concert starting at 03:00 on 5 August 2023 (8 p.m. on 4 August, local time) produced using 4096 samples per window with 90% overlap. The color version of this figure is available only in the electronic edition.
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1990
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1990) 38 (2): 246–258.
... sedimentation rates are calculated from biostratigraphic data. Relatively rapid sedimentation rates prior to Turonian time (before 91 Ma) lead to the generation of overpressures. These are predicted to have declined, in concert with the sedimentation rate, throughout the Late Cretaceous and Tertiary until...
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1988
Seismological Research Letters (1988) 59 (4): 289–297.
... magnetic anomaly maps which focus on upper crustal features. In concert, these data have provided the insight to interpret the host structures that together with related seismic and geoscience data, suggest causative mechanisms of the New Madrid seismic zone and other seismogenic regions of the eastern...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1972
AAPG Bulletin (1972) 56 (12): 2451–2455.
...Andrew J. Mantura ABSTRACT Within the scheme of the new global tectonics, each part of the globe is like a ballet dancer, and as in a ballet, each motion must be done in perfect concert. Thus, as one part of the globe is shifted, other parts must shift concurrently to keep the globe in balance...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1971
GSA Bulletin (1971) 82 (12): 3263–3298.
... interval, the cratonic interior of North America underwent four major onlap-offlap cycles of sedimentation called sequences. Evidently orogeny, epeirogeny, and eustasy act in concert in response to the same driving mechanism, because the timing of orogeny in the geosynclines and of the spread of marine...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1948
American Mineralogist (1948) 33 (3-4): 178–184.
...Carleton A. Chapman Abstract Terence Thomas Quirke was born July 23, 1886, in Brighton, Sussex, England. His father, a concert violinist of distinction and a violin teacher, had come to England from Ireland in the early 1860’s. His mother was an accomplished pianist who, with her husband, gave over...
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An example of sonobuoy refraction analysis. (a) Sonobuoy data with reflections and refractions labeled. (b) Reflection profile concerted to time domain with the refraction ray-trace model overlain.
Published: 01 May 2013
Figure 13. An example of sonobuoy refraction analysis. (a) Sonobuoy data with reflections and refractions labeled. (b) Reflection profile concerted to time domain with the refraction ray-trace model overlain.
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 12 July 2024
GSA Bulletin (2025) 137 (1-2): 297–314.
... to apply these techniques in concert and across multiple mineralogical phases within samples, our results provide important constraints on paleoenvironmental conditions in an enigmatic ocean system and will improve interpretations of the overall health of ecosystems leading into the end-Cretaceous mass...
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First thumbnail for: Reconstructing paleoenvironments of the Late Creta...
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