Room: Ballroom
Date: 4/20/2023
Session Time: 8:00 AM to 5:45 PM (local time)
Coseismic Ground Failure: Advances in Modeling, Impacts and Communication
Landslides and liquefaction triggered by earthquakes are a diverse set of phenomena that can cause significant impacts and losses across wide areas affected by earthquake shaking. Advances in our ability to model the initiation, displacement or runout, and impacts of ground failure of all types are needed to improve our ability to quantify the magnitude and uncertainty of hazard and risk, as well as predict near-real-time losses for emergency response. To be most useful, these hazard and risk models also need to be effectively communicated to a wide range of technical and general audiences across a wide range of contexts. All coseismic ground failure advances depend on a basis of strong high-quality datasets, both in terms of susceptibility and loading factors and detailed documentation of the occurrence of ground failure in past earthquakes.
We welcome all submissions relating to coseismic ground failure, including but not limited to contributions on: regional scale assessment; characterizing uncertainty, or developing ensemble model predictions; studies on the impacts, losses and risk modeling for coseismic ground failure; research or case histories on the best practices and advances in engagement and communication with diverse stakeholder groups; as well as case histories and lessons from recent and historic earthquakes.
Conveners
Alex R. Grant, U.S. Geological Survey (agrant@usgs.gov)
Kate E. Allstadt, U.S. Geological Survey (kallstadt@usgs.gov)
Laurie G. Baise, Tufts University (laurie.baise@tufts.edu)
Eric Thompson, U.S. Geological Survey (emthompson@usgs.gov)
Poster Presentations
Participant Role | Details | Action |
---|---|---|
Submission | A Machine Learning Approach for Landslide Mapping of the 2016 Kumamoto Earthquakes From Geospatial and Image Data | View |
Submission | How to Quantify Uncertainties for Logistic-Regression-Based Geospatial Natural Hazard Models? | View |
Submission | Liquefaction or Liquefiction? Anthropogenic Regulation and the Influence of Evaporite Dissolution on Ground Failure in the 2019 Ridgecrest Earthquake Sequence | View |
Coseismic Ground Failure: Advances in Modeling, Impacts and Communication [Poster]
Description