Tags: GPS

All Categories (1-7 of 7)

  1. gpstools

    Linking to GitHub repo: datatools https://github.com/jzmejia/datatools.git includes: gpstools.py – Import GAMIT/GLOBK post-process GNSS station positions to python. Specifically for...

    https://theghub.org/projects/icevelocity/notes/gpstools

  2. Luis A. Romero

    https://theghub.org/members/5736

  3. Timothy Masterlark

    Fluid-solid coupling drives the dynamic systems of volcanoes, earthquakes, and tsunamis. Magma-filled dikes propagate within active volcanoes. Megathrust earthquakes shift the seafloor and excite...

    https://theghub.org/members/5700

  4. New Methods and Computer Codes for Volcanic Modelling

    18 Jul 2013 | Contributor(s):: Martha Kane Savage, Yosuke Aoki, Thomas Lecocq, Jess Johnson, Florent Brenguier, Benoit Taisne, Charles Williams, Nico Fournier

    This workshop was undertaken before the IAVCEI conference in July 2013, complementing the session on "Stress, strain and mass changes at active volcanoes. It brings together seismic and geodetic methods and computational approaches for modelling volcanic processes.Material presented includes:1....

  5. GPS and Volcano Monitoring

    11 Aug 2011 | Contributor(s):: Jose Luis Palma

    This presentation is part of the workshop "Volcanic Hazards and Remote Sensing in Pacific Latin America" held in Costa Rica in January 2011.Speaker: Chuck DeMets, University of Wisconsin-MadisonGPS and Volcano Monitoring .mp4Differential GPS as a Monitoring Tool on Volcano Santa Ana (Illamatepec)...

  6. Feb 02 2011

    COCONet Workshop: Community Science, Station Siting, and Capacity Building

    from UNAVCO website:With NSF funding for a Continuously Operating Caribbean GPS Observational Network, the international geoscience community is planning for Caribbean-wide GPS observations to...

    https://theghub.org/events/details/11

  7. PASI: Volcanic Hazards and Remote Sensing in Pacific Latin America

    11 Jan 2011 | Contributor(s):: William I Rose, Jose Luis Palma

    http://www.geo.mtu.edu/~raman/PASI2011The Open Vent Volcanoes PASI in Costa Rica gathered 60 scientists from 13 countries to build scientific networking in the transdisciplinary field of volcanology in January 2011. The accelerating application of field measurements and remote sensing to...