Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialConference paper

RADIOGENIC ISOTOPE ANALYSES REFINE CONSTRAINTS ON THE SEISMIC CYCLE OF AN INTRAPLATE NORMAL FAULT

Randolph T. Williams, Laurel B. Goodwin, Warren D. Sharp, Peter S. Mozley, Brian L. Beard, Clark M. Johnson

Abstracts with programs - Geological Society of America · 2017

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Summary

This appears to be a geoscience study using radiogenic isotope techniques to refine understanding of the seismic cycle on an intraplate normal fault. The research likely contributes to earthquake hazard assessment by improving constraints on fault rupture timing and recurrence intervals through isotopic dating methods. The work is not relevant to farming systems, soil health, nutrient density, or human nutrition.

UK applicability

This geoscience study has no direct applicability to UK farming, soil health, or food systems research.

Key measures

Radiogenic isotope ratios (likely strontium, lead, or other isotopic systems) used to date fault movement and seismic events

Outcomes reported

The study does not report on agricultural, nutritional or food systems outcomes. It appears to present radiogenic isotope analyses used to constrain the timing and recurrence patterns of seismic activity on an intraplate normal fault.

Theme
General food systems / other
Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Study type
Research
Study design
Field study / Laboratory analysis
Source type
Conference paper
Status
Published
Geography
United States
System type
Other
DOI
10.1130/abs/2017am-308057
Catalogue ID
BFmokjoedi-syu6yg

Topic tags

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