Earthquake damage: significant cracking and displacement in adobe wall of garage Geology, Hazards August 16, 2022 The Great ShakeOut The origins of The Great ShakeOut project lie, unsurprisingly, in Southern California, one of the more seismically active regions of the country. In 2008 a group of experts collaboratively modeled what might happen when a major earthquake hits the Southern California region. The detailed report, titled…
Helicorder trace from Trinidad seismometer station Geology, Hazards March 25, 2022 CGS Seismic Stations Early History The Colorado School of Mines first acquired and installed a single three-component seismograph in the Cecil H. Green Observatory at Bergen Park, about 9 mi (14 km) southwest of Golden. That system was in continuous high-gain operation into the 1980s and was, during that…
Detail from one of over 600 Denver Basin geophysical and lithological logs included in the ON-OF-78-08M digitization project. Photo credit: Colorado Geological Survey. Geology, Minerals, Publications June 3, 2021 New GIS data and maps For those of you who are subscribers to the CGS announcement list, we want to direct your attention to a handful of new maps and recently digitized analog data sets that we haven’t otherwise publicized. These include several important online GIS maps and downloadable data packages:…
While Glendon Rewerts begins the excavation that will host the site Hazards October 14, 2020 Seismometer installed on campus Mines students partner with the CGS to install seismometer on campus Colorado School of Mines geophysics students enrolled in Assistant Professor Ebru Bozdag’s Earthquake Seismology class have a literal ear to the ground for the next few weeks. With help from two CGS employees, Kyren…
Retaining wall settlement at the center of the image with the sorority houses in the background and the IM field in the foreground. Photo credit: T. C. Wait for the CGS.|The Rockwell clay mine area immediately south of the CSM campus along US 6 in 1977 before more recent reclamation as a golf course. The green area to the top left is part of the IM field where the subsidence occurred. Photo credit: Colorado Geological Survey.|DC resistivity survey crew from the engineering firm Zapata/Blackhawk laying out the multicore switch cables across the IM field area in 2008. Photo credit: T. C. Wait for the CGS.|Subsidence road damage near one of the sorority houses at CSM in August 2005. Photo credit: T. C. Wait for the CGS.|A drill-rig preparing boreholes for subsurface grouting under the IM field in August 2005. Photo credit: T. C. Wait for the CGS.|One of the several subsidence features in the IM field at the Colorado School of Mines in 2005. Photo credit: T. C. Wait for the CGS.|Figure from DC resistivity report from 2009 detailing some of the infrastructure Geology, Hazards April 26, 2005 Case Study: mine subsidence, CSM For decades, the west side of the Colorado School of Mines (CSM) main campus had subsidence issues related to historical mining activities. At one point, in the 1990s, one of the married student housing units in that area was so badly damaged that it was condemned. In the early…