Published August 1, 1995 | Version public
Journal Article Open

Earthquake Hazard Assessment: Has Our Approach Been Modified in the Light of Recent Earthquakes?

Abstract

This may be an historic event for many of you. It will be the first time that you have ever heard a geologist give a talk related to earthquakes that was not replete with Kodachrome slides of cracks in the ground and maps of active faults, or at least of "allegedly" active faults, or "potentially" active faults or even "possibly" active faults! But I would like to go beyond the detailed discussion of individual earthquakes this afternoon, and instead discuss the broader problem of whether our studies of numerous recent earthquakes -- here and abroad -- are leading to modifications in our hazard assessment techniques, speaking from the point of view of a geologist or seismologist. I emphasize that I make no pretext of speaking for either the geotechnical or structural engineers. You already know, of course, the answer posed by the title. It's both "yes" and "no". And I would like to focus on the question of: In what scientific areas, in particular, are our approaches changing, and in what areas do the traditional methods remain credible?

Additional Information

© 1995 Copyright Earthquake Engineering Research Institute. Address of Clarence R. Allen as EERI's Distinguished Lectureer for 1995.

Files

ALLes95.pdf

Files (678.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:218d1a55665021e2a1f4823446b59a94
678.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
6607
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:ALLes95

Related works

Dates

Created
2006-12-14
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2019-10-02
Created from EPrint's last_modified field