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Journal of the Australian Society of Exploration Geophysicists
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Initial results from spatially averaged coherency, frequency-wavenumber, and horizontal to vertical spectrum ratio microtremor survey methods for site hazard study at Launceston, Tasmania

Maxime Claprood 1 2 Michael W. Asten 1
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

1 Centre for Environmental and Geotechnical Applications of Surface Waves (CEGAS), School of Geosciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria 3800, Australia.

2 Corresponding author. Email: Max.Claprood@sci.monash.edu.au

Exploration Geophysics 40(1) 132-142 https://doi.org/10.1071/EG08106
Submitted: 29 November 2007  Published: 27 February 2009

Abstract

The Tamar rift valley runs through the City of Launceston, Tasmania. Damage has occurred to city buildings due to earthquake activity in Bass Strait. The presence of the ancient valley, the Tamar valley, in-filled with soft sediments that vary rapidly in thickness from 0 to 250 m over a few hundreds metres, is thought to induce a 2D resonance pattern, amplifying the surface motions over the valley and in Launceston. Spatially averaged coherency (SPAC), frequency-wavenumber (FK) and horizontal to vertical spectrum ratio (HVSR) microtremor survey methods are combined to identify and characterise site effects over the Tamar valley.

Passive seismic array measurements acquired at seven selected sites were analysed with SPAC to estimate shear wave velocity (slowness) depth profiles. SPAC was then combined with HVSR to improve the resolution of these profiles in the sediments to an approximate depth of 125 m. Results show that sediments thicknesses vary significantly throughout Launceston. The top layer is composed of as much as 20 m of very soft Quaternary alluvial sediments with a velocity from 50 m/s to 125 m/s. Shear-wave velocities in the deeper Tertiary sediment fill of the Tamar valley, with thicknesses from 0 to 250 m vary from 400 m/s to 750 m/s.

Results obtained using SPAC are presented at two selected sites (GUN and KPK) that agree well with dispersion curves interpreted with FK analysis. FK interpretation is, however, limited to a narrower range of frequencies than SPAC and seems to overestimate the shear wave velocity at lower frequencies. Observed HVSR are also compared with the results obtained by SPAC, assuming a layered earth model, and provide additional constraints on the shear wave slowness profiles at these sites. The combined SPAC and HVSR analysis confirms the hypothesis of a layered geology at the GUN site and indicates the presence of a 2D resonance pattern across the Tamar valley at the KPK site.

Key words: frequency-wavenumber, high-resolution beamforming, microtremor survey method, passive seismic, resonance pattern, shear wave velocity profile, site effects, spatially averaged coherency.


Acknowledgements

Maxime Claprood is supported by a Monash Graduate Scholarship, an International Postgraduate Research Scholarship, and a Québec’s Funds for Nature and Technology Scholarship. Seismometers used in this project were loaned to Monash University by the Australian National Seismic Imaging Resource (ANSIR).


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