88 Hours: The U.S. Geological survey national earthquake information center response to the 11 march 2011 Mw 9.0 tohoku earthquake

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Abstract

This article presents a timeline of NEIC response to a major global earthquake for the first time in a formal journal publication. We outline the key observations of the earthquake made by the NEIC and its partner agencies, discuss how these analyses evolved, and outline when and how this information was released to the public and to other internal and external parties. Our goal in the presentation of this material is to provide a detailed explanation of the issues faced in the response to a rare, giant earthquake. We envisage that the timeline format of this presentation can highlight technical and procedural successes and shortcomings, which may in turn help prompt research by our academic partners and further improvements to our future response efforts. We have shown how NEIC response efforts have significantly improved over the past six years since the great 2004 Sumatra-Andaman earthquake. We are optimistic that the research spawned from this disaster, and the unparalleled dense and diverse data sets that have been recorded, can lead to similar-and necessary-improvements in the future.

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Hayes, G. P., Earle, P. S., Benz, H. M., Wald, D. J., & Briggs, R. W. (2011). 88 Hours: The U.S. Geological survey national earthquake information center response to the 11 march 2011 Mw 9.0 tohoku earthquake. Seismological Research Letters, 82(4), 481–493. https://doi.org/10.1785/gssrl.82.4.481

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