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Real-time

Seismogram Displays

Latest Quake Info

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Real-time Seismogram Displays

Northern California Seismic Network

Berkeley

Seismographic Network

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Welcome to the NCSN* Drum Recorder

Displays

Real-time Views of Selected Seismograms

(The seismograms are updated every 5

minutes.)

View Station Map

Northern

California Seismograms

Long

Valley Seismograms

What's a Drum Recorder?

Drum recorders, like the

ones pictured here, draw a seismogram on a piece of paper wrapped around

a slowly revolving drum. As the drum revolves, the pen shifts across it,

making a big spiral or helical record that eventually fills the entire

page. When the paper is removed and laid flat, the record appears to be

many horizontal lines, like lines in a book. These mechanical recorders,

popular 30 years ago, have largely been replaced by computers, which

digitize the data (typically at 100 samples per second) and store it in

digital form. The digital data can then be displayed in a variety of ways

by the computer. Here, we've displayed the data to look like the

old-fashioned paper records that drum recorders produced. Pictured here

are Helicorders®, a common type of drum recorder, manufactured by

Geotech Instruments, LLC.

How to read the display

The seismograms displayed are from a few of

the seismograph stations routinely recorded by the Northern California

Seismograph Network. Each is a record of how the ground moved at a

particular seismograph station in Northern California during a 24-hour

period. The plots are " magnified " according to the level of

background or ambient seismic noise, which is generated by wind, cultural

disturbances and oceanic microseisms. Thus, some sites appear noisier than

others. The seismogram is " read " like a book, from left to right

and top to bottom (this is the direction that time increases). As with a book,

the right end of any horizontal line " connects " with the left end

of the line below it. Each line represents 15 minutes of data; four lines

per hour. The colors of the horizontal lines have no particular

significance; they are used to make it easier to distinguish lines from one

another and to make it easier to recognize at which quarter-hour of data we

are looking. The vertical lines are not part of the seismogram. They were

added to indicate equal intervals of time. Time is indicated on the left in

local Pacific time, and on the right end in Universal (or Greenwich) time.

Interpretation

When an earthquake occurs the seismogram will

show ground motions that typically last from several tens of seconds to

many minutes, depending on the size of the earthquake and the sensitivity

of the seismograph. The height of the recorded waves on the seismogram

(wave amplitude) is a greatly magnified representation of the actual ground

motion. A recording of an earthquake has recognizable characteristics.

Typically, one can recognize the arrival of different wave types: P (the

fastest traveling waves), S (shear waves), and surface waves. On these

seismograms you may see local earthquakes in Northern California and

earthquakes elsewhere in the world.

Not all the wiggles seen on the seismograms

are due to earthquakes. Anything that produces ground vibrations could be

recorded, for example a car that passes by the seismometer (this is why we

try to locate most of our seismometers well away from roads). Since the

electrical signals from the seismometers are typically transmitted to the

USGS by microwave or over telephone wires, electrical and radio noise on

the transmission path may also show up on the seismogram. Such interference

is usually easy to distinguish from earthquake-generated signals because it

is often erratic or " spikey " in appearance.

Some Illustrative

Examples

Magnitude 1.9

Earthquake

Teleseisms

(distant earthquakes)

Calibration Pulse

Magnitude 3.1

Earthquake

Foreshock-Main

shock-Aftershock

High Winds

at Geyser Peak

Magnitude 4.0

Earthquake

Clipped Records

Quarry Blast

Magnitude 5.6

Earthquake

How the data channels are named

Each

data channel has a three part name such as MSL VHZ NC. Read more about what these codes mean.

Northern

California Seismograms

Long

Valley Seismograms

Top of this page

Credits

* NCSN stands for Northern California

Seismic Network

Please direct comments or questions about the

Drum Recorder pages to Jim Luetgert,

USGS.

Homepage

| Site Index | Contact Us | About Us

| USGS Earthquake News Releases

U.S. Geological

Survey, Earthquake Hazards Program

URL http://quake.wr.usgs.gov/recent/helicorders/index.html

Contact:webmaster@...

Last modification: December 21, 2000

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