Technological and infrastructure collaborative seismic research in Western Mexico
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Rafael Bartolomé de la Peña
Juan José Dañobeitia
Alejandra L. Cameselle
Diego Cordoba
Francisco Núñez Cornú
Colin Day
William L. Bandy
Manel Prada
Héctor Perea
Carlos A. Mortera Gutiérrez
Diana Nuñez
Arturo Castellón
José Luis Alonso
In February and March 2014, Spanish, Mexican and British scientists
and technicians explored the western margin of Mexico, a region with a high occurrence
of large earthquakes (> Mw = 7.5) and tsunami generation, on board the
British Royal Research Ship James Cook. This successful joint cruise, named TSUJAL,
was made possible thanks to a cooperative agreement between NERC and CSIC as
part of the Ocean Facilities Exchange Group (OFEG), a major forum of European
oceanographic institutions for the exchange of ship time, equipment and personnel.
A dense geophysical data set was acquired using for the first time 6 km length
seismic streamer facilities from Spain’s Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas
(CSIC), usually operating in the Spanish RV Sarmiento de Gamboa, onboard
the British RRS James Cook by solving all mechanical, electrical and electronic
problems. The RRS James Cook in turn provides the seismic source and the acoustic,
hullmounted echosounder operated by the British Natural Environment Research
Council (NERC). Multiscale seismic and echosounder images unravel the subduction
geometry, nature of the crust, and evidence faults and mass wasting processes. The
data are crucial to estimating fault seismic parameters, and these parameters are
critical to carrying out seismic hazard in Mexico, especially when considering largemagnitude
earthquakes (Mw 8.0), and to constrain tsunami models.
and technicians explored the western margin of Mexico, a region with a high occurrence
of large earthquakes (> Mw = 7.5) and tsunami generation, on board the
British Royal Research Ship James Cook. This successful joint cruise, named TSUJAL,
was made possible thanks to a cooperative agreement between NERC and CSIC as
part of the Ocean Facilities Exchange Group (OFEG), a major forum of European
oceanographic institutions for the exchange of ship time, equipment and personnel.
A dense geophysical data set was acquired using for the first time 6 km length
seismic streamer facilities from Spain’s Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas
(CSIC), usually operating in the Spanish RV Sarmiento de Gamboa, onboard
the British RRS James Cook by solving all mechanical, electrical and electronic
problems. The RRS James Cook in turn provides the seismic source and the acoustic,
hullmounted echosounder operated by the British Natural Environment Research
Council (NERC). Multiscale seismic and echosounder images unravel the subduction
geometry, nature of the crust, and evidence faults and mass wasting processes. The
data are crucial to estimating fault seismic parameters, and these parameters are
critical to carrying out seismic hazard in Mexico, especially when considering largemagnitude
earthquakes (Mw 8.0), and to constrain tsunami models.
Article Details
Com citar
Bartolomé de la Peña, Rafael et al. “Technological and infrastructure collaborative seismic research in Western Mexico”. Instrumentation viewpoint, no. 19, https://raco.cat/index.php/Instrumentation/article/view/317856.
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