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earthquakes

Posted inAGU News

McLaskey Receives 2014 Keiiti Aki Young Scientist Award

by AGU 13 April 20157 July 2025

Gregory C. McLaskey received the 2014 Keiiti Aki Young Scientist Award at the 2014 American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, held 15–19 December in San Francisco, Calif. The award recognizes the scientific accomplishments of a young scientist who makes outstanding contributions to the advancement of seismology.

Posted inScience Updates

Exploring Earthquakes, Slow Slip, and Triggering

by D. Marsan, Joan Gomberg and M. Bouchon 20 March 20152 December 2022

Earthquakes: Nucleation, Triggering, and Relationships With Aseismic Processes; Cargèse, Corsica, France, 3–10 November 2014

Posted inNews

Internet Users Act as Earthquake Trackers

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 2 March 201530 August 2022

Armed with Internet connections, smartphones, and Twitter handles, citizens around the world are helping seismologists track earthquakes.

Posted inFeatures

Los Angeles Gets Serious About Preparing for the “Big One”

by J. Rosen 24 February 201514 March 2025

A large earthquake in southern California could devastate Los Angeles. To help reduce the city’s risks, one scientist spent last year working in the LA mayor’s office.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Tracking Down a Subduction Zone Earthquake

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 13 February 201524 August 2023

Researchers use computer simulations to find the date and earthquake source of an ancient tsunami that deposited sediment in a Hawaii sinkhole.

Posted inScience Updates

Earthquake Monitoring Gets Boost from New Satellite

by J. R. Elliott, A. J. Elliott, A. Hooper, Y. Larsen, P. Marinkovic and T. J. Wright 12 February 20151 November 2021

Europe's Sentinel-1A spacecraft and its extraordinary images of slip from the South Napa earthquake herald a new era of space-based surveillance of faults.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Mapping Seismic Activity in the Pamir Mountains

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 10 February 20157 October 2021

Researchers plot deformation from 6000 seismic events across the central Asian mountain range to better understand its tectonic history.

Posted inNews

Ohio Earthquake Directly Tied to Fracking

JoAnna Wendel, freelance science writer and illustrator by JoAnna Wendel 8 January 20158 December 2022

A small earthquake that occurred in Ohio in 2014 is among the largest earthquakes thought to be induced directly by hydraulic fracturing.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Ancient Earthquakes Made an Island Rise and Fall

by C. Schultz 31 December 201424 January 2023

Observations track elevation changes of an island in the Kodiak Archipelago to past ruptures of the Alaska-Aleutian megathrust fault.

Posted inResearch Spotlights

Seafloor Changes Above the Tohoku-Oki Earthquake Rupture Zone

by J. Orwig 19 December 20148 December 2022

Three years after the devastating earthquake, transponders record afterslip deformation on the seabed above the Tohoku-Oki rupture zone.

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