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LYNM-PE1 Seismic Parameters from Borehole Log, Laboratory, and Tabletop Measurements

Wilson, Jennifer E.; Bodmer, Miles A.; Townsend, Margaret J.; Choens, Robert C.; Bartlett, Tara; Dietel, Matthew; Downs, Nicholas M.; Laros, James H.; Smith, Devon; Larotonda, Jennifer M.; Jaramillo, Johnny L.; Barrow, Perry C.; Kibikas, William M.; Sam, Robert C.W.P.; Broome, Scott T.; Davenport, Kathy D.

The goal of this work is to provide a database of quality-checked seismic parameters which can be integrated with the Geologic Framework Model (GFM) for the LYNM-PE1 (Low Yield Nuclear Monitoring – Physical Experiment 1) testbed. We integrated data from geophysical borehole logs, tabletop measurements on collected core, and laboratory measurements.

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PE1 Site Characterization: Data Documentation on Geologic and Hydrologic Lab Testing

Wilson, Jennifer E.; Heath, Jason; Kuhlman, Kristopher L.; Xu, Guangping X.; Bodmer, Miles A.; Broome, Scott T.; Jaramillo, Johnny L.; Barrow, Perry C.; Rodriguez, Mark A.; Griego, James J.M.; Valdez, Nichole R.

This data documentation report describes geologic and hydrologic laboratory analysis and data collected in support of site characterization of the Physical Experiment 1 (PE1) testbed, Aqueduct Mesa, Nevada. The documentation includes a summary of laboratory tests performed, discussion of sample selection for assessing heterogeneity of various testbed properties, methods, and results per data type.

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Hydrologic Impacts of a Strike-Slip Fault Zone: Insights from Joint 3D Body-Wave Tomography of Rock Valley

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

Harding, Jennifer L.; Preston, Leiph A.; Bodmer, Miles A.

The Rock Valley fault zone (RVFZ), an intraplate strike-slip fault zone in the southern Nevada National Security Site (NNSS), hosted a series of very shallow (<3 km) earthquakes in 1993. The RVFZ may also have hydrological significance within the NNSS, potentially playing a role in regional groundwater flow, but there is a lack of local hydrological data. In the Spring of 2021, we collected active-source accelerated weight drop seismic data over part of the RVFZ to better characterize the shallow subsurface. We manually picked ∼17,000 P-wave travel times and over 14,000 S-wave travel times, which were inverted for P-wave velocity (VP), S-wave velocity (VS), and VP = VS ratio in a 3D joint tomographic inversion scheme. Seismic velocities are imaged as deep as ∼700 m in areas and generally align with geologic and structural expectations. VP and VS are relatively reduced near mapped and inferred faults, with the most prominent lower VP and VS zone around the densest collection of faults. We image VP = VS ratios ranging from ∼1.5 to ∼2.4, the extremes of which occur at a depth of ∼100 m and are juxtaposed across a fault. One possible interpretation of the imaged seismic velocities is enhanced fault damage near the densest collection of faults with relatively higher porosity and/or crack density at ∼100 m depth, with patches of semiperched groundwater present in the sedimentary rock in higher VP = VS areas and drier rock in lower VP = VS areas. A relatively higher VP = VS area beneath the densest faults persists at depth, which suggests percolation of groundwater via the fault damage zone to the regionally connected lower carbonate aquifer. Potentially, the presence and movement of groundwater may have played a role in the 1993 earthquake aftershocks.

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Rock Valley Dense Gravity Acquisition

Bodmer, Miles A.; Phillips, Joseph; Pine, Jesse; Turley, Reagan; Stanciu, Adrian

Characterizing the shallow structure of the Rock Valley region of the Nevada National Security Site is a critical component of the Rock Valley Direct Comparison project. Geophysical data of the region is needed for operational decisions, to constrain geologic models used for simulation, and to facilitate the analysis of future explosive source data. Local measurements of gravity are a key piece of geophysical information that helps to resolve the underlying geologic composition, fault structure, and density characteristics, yet, in the Rock Valley region these measurements are sparse on the scale of the testbed. In this report, we present the details of a recent gravity data acquisition survey designed to collect a dense dataset in the region of interest that complements the existing gravity work but greatly enhances our resolution. This dataset will be integrated with a complementary Los Alamos National Laboratory gravity collection and combined with the existing seismic data in a joint inversion. These measurements were conducted over two weeks with a portable gravimeter and high-resolution GPS and include repeat measurements at a USGS base station as well as reoccupation of gravity sites in the regional dataset. This collection of over 100 new dense gravity measurements will facilitate refinement of the existing Geologic Framework Model and directly complement newly acquired dense seismic data, ultimately improving the project’s ability to investigate the direct comparison of shallow earthquake and explosive sources.

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Rock Valley Accelerated Weight Drop Seismic Data Processing and Picking of P-wave and S-wave Arrival Times

Harding, Jennifer L.; Bodmer, Miles A.; Preston, Leiph A.

Rock Valley, in the southern end of the Nevada National Security Site, hosts a fault system that was responsible for a shallow (< 3 km below surface ) magnitude 3.7 earthquake in May 1993. In order to better understand this system, seismic properties of the shallow subsurface need to be better constrained. In April and May of 2021, accelerated weight drop (AWD) active-source seismic data were recorded in order to measure P- and S-wave travel-times for the area. This report describes the processing and phase picking of the recorded seismic waveforms. In total, we picked 7,982 P-wave arrivals at offsets up to ~2500 m, and 4,369 S-wave arrivals at offsets up to ~2200 m. These travel-time picks can be inverted for shallow P-wave and S-wave velocity structure in future studies.

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9 Results
9 Results