U.S. Geological
Survey
Open-File Report 01-189
Online version 1.0
Catalog
of Earthquake Hypocenters at Alaskan Volcanoes: January 1,
1994 through December 31, 1999
By
Arthur
D. Jolly, Scott D. Stihler, John A. Power, John C. Lahr, John Paskievitch,
Guy Tytgat, Steve Estes, Andrew B. Lockhart, Seth C. Moran, Stephen R. McNutt,
William R. Hammond
|
INTRODUCTION The Alaska
Volcano Observatory (AVO), a cooperative program of the U.S. Geological
Survey, the Geophysical Institute of the University of Alaska - Fairbanks,
and the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, has maintained
a seismic monitoring program at potentially active volcanoes in Alaska
since 1988 (Power and others, 1993; Jolly and others, 1996). The primary
objectives of this program are the seismic surveillance of active, potentially
hazardous, Alaskan volcanoes and the investigation of seismic processes
associated with active volcanism. Between 1994
and 1999, the AVO seismic monitoring program underwent significant changes
with networks added at new volcanoes during each summer from 1995 through
1999. The existing network at Katmai Valley of Ten Thousand Smokes
(VTTS) was repaired in 1995, and new networks were installed at Makushin
(1996), Akutan (1996), Pavlof (1996), Katmai - south (1996), Aniakchak
(1997), Shishaldin (1997), Katmai - north (1998), Westdahl, (1998), Great
Sitkin (1999) and Kanaga (1999). These networks added to AVO's existing
seismograph networks in the Cook Inlet area and increased the number of
AVO seismograph stations from 46 sites and 57 components in 1994 to 121
sites and 155 components in 1999. The 19951999 seismic network expansion
increased the number of volcanoes monitored in real-time from 4 to 22,
including Mount Spurr, Redoubt Volcano, Iliamna Volcano, Augustine Volcano,
Mount Snowy, Mount Griggs, Mount Katmai, Novarupta, Trident Volcano, Mount
Mageik, Mount Martin, Aniakchak Crater, Pavlof Volcano, Mount Dutton,
Isanotski volcano, Shisaldin Volcano, Fisher Caldera, Westdahl volcano,
Akutan volcano, Makushin Volcano, Great Sitkin volcano, and Kanaga Volcano
(see Figures 1-15). The network expansion also increased the number of
earthquakes located from about 600 per year in1994 and 1995 to about 3000
per year between 1997 and 1999. Highlights of the catalog period include: 1) a large volcanogenic seismic swarm at Akutan volcano in March and April 1996 (Lu and others, 2000); 2) an eruption at Pavlof Volcano in fall 1996 (Garces and others, 2000; McNutt and others, 2000); 3) an earthquake swarm at Iliamna volcano between September and December 1996; 4) an earthquake swarm at Mount Mageik in October 1996 (Jolly and McNutt, 1999); 5) an earthquake swarm located at shallow depth near Strandline Lake; 6) a strong swarm of earthquakes near Becharof Lake; 7) precursory seismicity and an eruption at Shishaldin Volcano in April 1999 that included a 5.2 ML earthquake and aftershock sequence (Moran and others, in press; Thompson and others, in press). The 1996 calendar year is also notable as the seismicity rate was very high, especially in the fall when 3 separate areas (Strandline Lake, Iliamna Volcano, and several of the Katmai volcanoes) experienced high rates of located earthquakes. This catalog covers the period from January 1, 1994, through December 31,1999, and includes: 1) earthquake origin times, hypocenters, and magnitudes with summary statistics describing the earthquake location quality; 2) a description of instruments deployed in the field and their locations and magnifications; 3) a description of earthquake detection, recording, analysis, and data archival; 4) velocity models used for earthquake locations; 5) phase arrival times recorded at individual stations; and 6) a summary of daily station usage from throughout the report period. We have made calculated hypocenters, station locations, system magnifications, velocity models, and phase arrival information available for download via computer network as a compressed Unix tar file. |
Download the entire 22-page report as a PDF document (552 KB)
Download a compressed Unix
tar file that contains phase arrival information
(14.5 MB, compressed; 76 MB uncompressed)
Download appendix B (monthly plots showing station usage per day for each station in each sub-network operated by AVO) as a PDF document (2 MB)
For questions about the content of this report, contact John Power
Download a copy of Acrobat Reader version 5.0 for free
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Created: 6-11-01
Last modified: 7-06-01 (cad)
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