Katrin Hafner
2018-03-06 04:57:57
Dear Member of the Global Seismology community,
The *I**RIS GSN Working Group on Long-Term Seafloor Seismographs*
(WGLTSS https://www.iris.edu/hq/about_iris/governance/wgltss) invites
you to participate in a short survey related to questions in global
seismology and allied disciplines that can be addressed by future
long-running seafloor seismic stations. Last December at AGU, this
working group held a *Special Interest Group meeting*
<cid:part2.34A7FD91.45076A58<at>iris.edu>to discuss the scientific targets
and associated data needs from seafloor seismographs. The goal of the
SIG was to gather community input in order to provide guidance on
designing a pilot experiment to deploy long-term seismographs on the
seafloor.
As a result of discussion at the SIG, we have designed this short survey
in which we ask for your participation. In this survey, you will have an
opportunity to articulate (up to) three unanswered questions where
significant advancement could be made with up to five new, long-term
seafloor seismometers or small-aperture seafloor arrays. Questions can
include unsolved problems in seismic structure, tectonic evolution,
geodynamics, composition, magnetic field, earthquake source processes,
or other relevant disciplines that require seismic data from
long-running seafloor stations as a direct constraint.
Please consider filling out the survey at:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/288KP9P
We anticipate it will take approximately 15 minutes to complete. Your
community input will be directly relevant to a pilot experiment design.
The survey will be available until *March 19th, 2018*.
Kind Regards,
Monica Kohler (Chair of the WGLTSS)
Jeffrey Park (Chair of the GSN Standing Committee)
Katrin Hafner (IRIS GSN Program Manager)
The *I**RIS GSN Working Group on Long-Term Seafloor Seismographs*
(WGLTSS https://www.iris.edu/hq/about_iris/governance/wgltss) invites
you to participate in a short survey related to questions in global
seismology and allied disciplines that can be addressed by future
long-running seafloor seismic stations. Last December at AGU, this
working group held a *Special Interest Group meeting*
<cid:part2.34A7FD91.45076A58<at>iris.edu>to discuss the scientific targets
and associated data needs from seafloor seismographs. The goal of the
SIG was to gather community input in order to provide guidance on
designing a pilot experiment to deploy long-term seismographs on the
seafloor.
As a result of discussion at the SIG, we have designed this short survey
in which we ask for your participation. In this survey, you will have an
opportunity to articulate (up to) three unanswered questions where
significant advancement could be made with up to five new, long-term
seafloor seismometers or small-aperture seafloor arrays. Questions can
include unsolved problems in seismic structure, tectonic evolution,
geodynamics, composition, magnetic field, earthquake source processes,
or other relevant disciplines that require seismic data from
long-running seafloor stations as a direct constraint.
Please consider filling out the survey at:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/288KP9P
We anticipate it will take approximately 15 minutes to complete. Your
community input will be directly relevant to a pilot experiment design.
The survey will be available until *March 19th, 2018*.
Kind Regards,
Monica Kohler (Chair of the WGLTSS)
Jeffrey Park (Chair of the GSN Standing Committee)
Katrin Hafner (IRIS GSN Program Manager)
-
Katrin Hafner2018-03-14 03:00:49Dear Members of the Global Seismology Community,
This is a reminder that we are still soliciting input on this topic.
Please consider filling out the survey
at
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/288KP9P
if you haven't already. Participants so far have taken between 6 to 10
minutes to complete it.
Kind Regards,
Monica Kohler (Chair of the WGLTSS)
Jeffrey Park (Chair of the GSN Standing Committee)
Katrin Hafner (IRIS GSN Program Manager)
===========================================================
Dear Member of the Global Seismology community,
The *I**RIS GSN Working Group on Long-Term Seafloor Seismographs*
(WGLTSS https://www.iris.edu/hq/about_iris/governance/wgltss) invites
you to participate in a short survey related to questions in global
seismology and allied disciplines that can be addressed by future
long-running seafloor seismic stations. Last December at AGU, this
working group held a *Special Interest Group meeting*
http://www.iris.edu/hq/about_iris/governance/wgltss/2017_AGU_SIGto
discuss the scientific targets and associated data needs from seafloor
seismographs. The goal of the SIG was to gather community input in order
to provide guidance on designing a pilot experiment to deploy long-term
seismographs on the seafloor.
As a result of discussion at the SIG, we have designed this short survey
in which we ask for your participation. In this survey, you will have an
opportunity to articulate (up to) three unanswered questions where
significant advancement could be made with up to five new, long-term
seafloor seismometers or small-aperture seafloor arrays. Questions can
include unsolved problems in seismic structure, tectonic evolution,
geodynamics, composition, magnetic field, earthquake source processes,
or other relevant disciplines that require seismic data from
long-running seafloor stations as a direct constraint.
Please consider filling out the survey at:
https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/288KP9P
We anticipate it will take approximately 15 minutes to complete. Your
community input will be directly relevant to a pilot experiment design.
The survey will be available until *March 19th, 2018*.
Kind Regards,
Monica Kohler (Chair of the WGLTSS)
Jeffrey Park (Chair of the GSN Standing Committee)
Katrin Hafner (IRIS GSN Program Manager)