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Calibration Coefficients for the U.S. Geological Survey National Crustal Model and Depth to Water Table

Dates

Publication Date
Time Period
2020-01-21

Citation

Boyd, Oliver S., 2020, Calibration coefficients for the U.S. Geological Survey National Crustal Model and depth to water table: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9GO3CP8.

Summary

The U.S. Geological Survey National Crustal Model (NCM) is being developed to include spatially varying estimates of site response in seismic hazard assessments. Primary outputs of the NCM are continuous velocity and density profiles from the Earth’s surface to the mantle transition zone at 410 km depth for each location on a 1-kilometer grid across the conterminous United States. Datasets used to produce the NCM may have a resolution of better than 1 km near the Earth’s surface in some regions, but, with increasing depth, NCM resolution decreases to 10’s to 100’s of km in the mantle. Basic subsurface information is provided by the NCM geologic framework (NCMGF), thermal model, and petrologic and mineral physics database. In this data [...]

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Attached Files

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NETCDF_README.txt 804 Bytes text/plain
NCM_Calibration_VersionHistory.txt 585 Bytes text/plain

Purpose

The purpose of this dataset is to provide the calibration coefficients and depth to water table needed to calculated seismic velocity and density within the U.S. Geological Survey National Crustal Model.

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI https://www.sciencebase.gov/vocab/category/item/identifier doi:10.5066/P9GO3CP8

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