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JPG
Slide 30, Diagram of the Turnagain Heights Ground Failure
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 28, Dust from Rockfalls Triggered by the San Rafael Swell (Emery County) 1988 Earthquake (Magnitude 5.3).
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 27, Sand Boil That Was Active for 72 Hours After the 1989 Loma Prieta, California Earthquake, Magnitude 7.1
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 26, Sand Boil Diagram
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 25, Lateral Spreading, San Fernando Valley, California, Magnitude 6.4
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 24, Septic Tank Buoyed Up by Liquefaction During the Nigata, Japan Earthquake, Magnitude 7.5
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 23, These Four Story Apartment Buildings Settled and Tilted When the Subsurface Material Liquefied During the 1964 Nigata, Japan Earthquake, Magnitude 7.5
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 22, Liquefaction Diagram
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 21, Tectonic Subsidence, Hebgen Lake, Montana, Magnitude 7.5
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 20, Tectonic Subsidence, Hebgen Lake, Montana Earthquake, 1959 Magnitude 7.5
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 19, Close Up View of Bell Canyon Fault Scarps, Utah
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 18, Aerial Photo of the Wasatch Fault at the Mouth of Little Cottonwood Canyon, South of Salt Lake City
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 17, The Warm Springs Branch of the Wasatch Fault Located on the East Side of Beck Street in North Salt Lake
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 16, The Wasatch Fault is Evident From the Air
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 15, Hurricane Fault in Utah
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 11, Building Facings May Fail, Hence Sidewalks are Not Good Places to be During an Earthquake, Borah Peak, Idaho
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 10, Inside, Loose Objects Fall and Book Stacks can Tip Over, Failure of Library Book Stacks, Whittier Narrows, 1987, Magnitude 5.9
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 9, Highway Overpasses and Bridges May Suffer Serious Damage, Such As This One in California, San Fernando Valley, Magnitude 6.4
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 8, Buildings May Partially Collapse, or Totally Collapse
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 7, Homes That Are Not Well Anchored to Their Foundations May Incur Severe Structural Damage
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 6, Ground Shaking can Cause Chimneys to Detach From a House, 1971 San Fernando Valley, California, Magnitude 6.4
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 5, The Side to Side Movement of Ground Shaking in an Earthquake is the Most Damaging to Buildings
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 4, Seismicity in the Intermountain Seismic Belt (ISB) from 1850 to 1974
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 3, Seismicity Map of the World
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 2, Comparison of the Earthquake Ground Shaking Hazard on Bedrock in the Contiguous United States
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 1, Turnagain Heights, Alaska (Earthquake Damage)
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 29, Springdale Landslide, Generated by the Magnitude 5.9 St. George Earthquake on 2 September 1992, Utah
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 14, Road That Has Been Deformed by Faulting From the Borah Peak Earthquake, Magnitude 7.3, Illustrating Multiple Faults in the Zone of Deformation
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 13, Fault Scarp Caused by the 1983 Borah Peak, Idaho Earthquake, Magnitude 7.3
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 29-1, Turnagain Heights, Alaska
Lund, Bill
JPG
Slide 12, Surface Rupture Caused by the 1934 Hansel Valley, Utah, Magnitude 6.6 Earthquake
Lund, Bill