Daniel Ragona
University of California, San Diego
10 Papers
59 Citations
Daniel Ragona is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fault (geology) & Thrust fault. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Daniel Ragona include San Diego State University.
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Papers
Palaeoseismology of the North Anatolian Fault near the Marmara Sea: implications for fault segmentation and seismic hazard
Thomas K. Rockwell,Daniel Ragona,Gordon G. Seitz,Robert Langridge,M. Ersen Aksoy,Gülsen Uçarkuş,Matthieu Ferry,Aron J. Meltzner,Yann Klinger,Mustapha Meghraoui,Dilek Satir,Aykut Barka,Burcak Akbalik +12 more
TL;DR: This paper conducted palaeoseismic studies along the North Anatolian fault both east and west of the Marmara Sea to evaluate its recent surface rupture history in relation to the well-documented historical record of earthquakes in the region, and to assess the hazard of this major fault to the city of Istanbul, one of the largest cities in the Middle East.
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Paleoseismology of the North Anatolian fault near the Marmara Sea: implications for fault segmentation and seismic hazard
Thomas K. Rockwell,Daniel Ragona,Gordon G. Seitz,Robert Langridge,Murat Ersen Aksoy,Gülsen Uçarkuş,Matthieu Ferry,Aron J. Meltzner,Yann Klinger,Mustapha Meghraoui,Dilek Satir,Aykut Barka,Burcak Akbalik +12 more
- 01 Jan 2009
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Eight Days in Bhuj: Field Report Bearing on Surface Rupture and Genesis of the 26 January 2001 Earthquake in India
Steven G. Wesnousky,Leonardo Seeber,Thomas K. Rockwell,V. C. Thakur,Richard W. Briggs,Senthil Kumar,Daniel Ragona +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors visited the epicentral area of the Bhuj earthquake for eight days between 11 and 18 February 2001 and reported observations and impressions arising from their brief visit, with the aim of documenting their efforts to record surface rupture as well as providing a starting point for field investigations by others.
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Prehistoric earthquakes on the Caribbean–South American plate boundary, Central Range fault, Trinidad
TL;DR: The Central Range fault is the principal plate-boundary structure accommodating strike-slip motion between the Caribbean and South American plates as discussed by the authors, and the study shows that the fault forms a topographically prominent lineament in central Trinidad.
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Field imaging spectroscopy: A new methodology to assist the description, interpretation, and archiving of paleoseismological information from faulted exposures
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a new methodology to acquire, interpret, and store stratigraphic and structural information from paleoseismic exposures using portable hyperspectral cameras to acquire field-based visible near-infrared (VNIR) and short-wave infrared (SWIR) high spatial/spectral resolution images.
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