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Get Free AccessTime-averaged shear wave velocity over the upper 30 m of the earth’s surface ( V S30 ) is a key parameter for estimating ground motion amplification as both a predictive and a diagnostic tool for earthquake hazards. The first-order approximation of V S30 is commonly obtained through a topographic slope–based or terrain proxy due to the widely available nature of digital elevation models. However, better-constrained V S30 maps have been developed in many regions. Such maps preferentially employ various combinations of V S30 measurements, higher-resolution elevation models, lithologic, geologic, geomorphic, and other proxies and often utilize refined interpolation schemes. We develop a new hybrid global V S30 map database that defaults to the global slope-based V S30 map, but smoothly inserts regional V S30 maps where available. In addition, we present comparisons of the default slope-based proxy maps against the new hybrid version in terms of V S30 and amplification ratio maps, and uncertainties in assigned V S30 values.
David C. Heath, David J. Wald, C. Bruce Worden, Eric M Thompson, Gregory M. Smoczyk (2020). A global hybrid <i>V<sub>S</sub></i><sub>30</sub> map with a topographic slope–based default and regional map insets. Earthquake Spectra, 36(3), pp. 1570-1584, DOI: 10.1177/8755293020911137.
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Type
Article
Year
2020
Authors
5
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Earthquake Spectra
DOI
10.1177/8755293020911137
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