Todays #SSA2024 poster session includes mine! Representing @AusQuake all the way in Alaska! Find out if local seismic networks are important for lower seismicity hazard environments like Australia
@SeisLOLogist@tamarahking The COMET InSAR data available here as kmz or geotiff. https://t.co/YStmBDCxVR
Would be good to see the aftershocks plotted over the top if someone can plot them together?
Here's the aftershock sequence following the Mw5.9 Woods Point earthquake. First 2 hours has all aftershocks located - remainder only complete for magnitude 1.5+. Graph courtesy @borleis and @SeisLOLogist
Australians had a surprising shock this week when an earthquake struck near Melbourne. Some are wondering why it happened. @DeeNinis, @borleis, and @tamarahking discuss the quake, aftershocks, and a potential culprit in an article for @temblor https://t.co/YvUUxds2pK
Aussie seismologists @DeeNinis and Elodie @borleis have collaborated with @tamarahking on this article that’s just been published on @temblor. Check out the great work of some superstar #womeninSTEM https://t.co/wcFmOcDqCw
@seismo_akash @AusQuake Unfortunately the catalogue used for this plot is not available publicly at this time. However, Geoscience Australia have a publicly available catalogue you can download https://t.co/AVvFsuit1s
@MrsInferno @AusQuake Not at 9:11pm. We have had many aftershocks, the nearest to that time was one at 9:18pm and was a magnitude 1.5, usually too small to feel but not impossible
@structuregeo @AusQuake Not too sure yet. Maybe around 1.3-1.5. A lot of the smaller events are getting lost in the coda of the bigger ones. On average we have about ten stations able to be used for a 1.5 event.
The time is now for an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander voice to be enshrined in Australia’s Constitution. The Uluru Statement from the Heart is 4 years old today. Come on Australians. Support what is right and fair.