What is SCIGN?

The Southern California Integrated
GPS Network (SCIGN) is a dense array
of GPS receivers in the Los Angeles Basin and surrounding region. The
network continuously records minute movement of the Earth's crust, measuring
millimeter-scale deformation caused by tectonic plate motions.
The idea of a continuously recording
GPS network was conceived following the 1994 Northridge earthquake.
Data collected before the earthquake using campaign-style technique,
in which a site is occupied for a couple of days every few months to
a year, suggested potential hazard on a fault system that included the
Northridge rupture. Although this style of data collection provided
useful information, it did not provide continuous monitoring of crustal
movement, which includes earthquakes.
After the Northridge earthquake, scientists
began to realize the value of using GPS as a tool to monitor the small-scale
movement of the crust, which could yield clues about where and when
future earthquakes may occur. This earthquake was the impetus for proposing
a continuously recording GPS network in the region.
Following the earthquake, 40 permanent
stations were installed throughout the LA Basin and surrounding area
to monitor the crustal movement in the region. JPL
joined its efforts with the Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC),
the US Geological Survey (USGS), and
the Scripps Institution of Oceanography (SIO)
in order to install the array. The 40-station array was a test network,
and the full network proposed for SCIGN would include 250 stations throughout
the Southern California region.
In 1997, the W.
M. Keck Foundation dontated $6 million in order to install the remainder
of the stations in the network. Since then, 23 additional stations have
been installed, many at high schools,colleges, and universities. Over
100 sites have been approved, and are being installed. The complete250-station
SCIGN network should be installed and operational sometime in 1999.
The main objectives of the network
are to monitor crustal motions to estimate earthquake hazard potentional,
to identify active blind thrust faults like the one that caused the
Northridge earthquake, to measure strain in the region in order to understand
the mechanics of faults, and to measure deformation of the crust and
changes in regional strain caused by earthquakes.
What
is SCIGN?
Who
runs it? Who has access?
What happens to SCIGN data?
How
are the SCIGN data used?
More
about SCIGN