Brian Atwater is best known for using coastal geology to help identify and define earthquake and tsunami hazards in the Cascadia region of British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, and California. This work has included comparative studies in Alaska, Chile, and Japan.
His USGS monograph on great earthquakes in Washington State won the Kirk Bryan award of the Geological Society of America. He also produced a widely used public-safety booklet, “Surviving a tsunami—Lessons from Chile, Hawaii, and Japan.” His new book, “The orphan tsunami of 1700—Japanese clues to a parent earthquake in North America,” prepared with coworkers in Japan and the United States, colorfully presents the full story behind his IRIS/SSA lectures.
Atwater’s earlier research dealt with sea levels and glaciation in California and ice-age floods from Montana. He is a fellow of the American Geophysical Union and an affiliate professor at the University of Washington. He currently advises earthquake and tsunami scientists in Indonesia, Thailand, India, and Sri Lanka, under a State Department program to boost tsunami preparedness around the Indian Ocean.
Selected Recent Publications
Atwater, B.F., Musumi-Rokkaku, S., Satake, K., Tsuji, Y., Ueda, K., and Yamaguchi, D.K., 2005, The orphan tsunami of 1700; Japanese clues to a parent earthquake in North America: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1707, published in association with University of Washington Press, Seattle, 133 p., http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/pp1707/
Atwater, B.F., Cisternas V., M., Bourgeois, J., Dudley, W.C., Hendley, J.W., II, and Stauffer, P.H., 2005, Surviving a tsunami—lessons from Chile, Hawaii, and Japan, revised edition: U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1187, 18 p., http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/c1187/ (in English), http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/c1218/ (in Spanish)
Cisternas, M., Atwater, B.F., Torrejón, F., Sawai, Y., Machuca, G., Lagos, M., Eipert, A., Youlton, C., Salgado, I., Kamataki, T., Shishikura, M., Rajendran, C.P., Malik, J.K., Rizal, Y., and Husni, M., 2005, Predecessors to the giant 1960 Chile earthquake: Nature, v. 437, p. 404-407.
Atwater, B.F., Furukawa, R., Hemphill-Haley, E., Ikeda, Y., Kashima, K., Kawase, K., Kelsey, H.M., Moore, A.L., Nanayama, F., Nishimura, Y., Odagiri, S., Ota, Y., Park, S.-C., Satake, K., Sawai, Y., and Shimokawa, K., 2004, Seventeenth-century uplift in eastern Hokkaido, Japan: The Holocene, v. 14, p. 487-501.
Takada, K., and Atwater, B.F., 2004, Evidence for liquefaction identified in peeled slices of Holocene deposits along the lower Columbia River, Washington: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, v. 94, p. 550-575.
Atwater, B.F., Yamaguchi, D.K., Bondevik, S., Barnhardt, W.A., Amidon, L.J., Benson, B.E., Skjerdal, G., Shulene, J.A., and Nanayama, F., 2001, Rapid resetting of an estuarine recorder of the 1964 Alaska earthquake: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 113, p. 1193-1204.
Atwater, B.F., and Hemphill-Haley, E., 1997, Recurrence intervals for great earthquakes of the past 3500 years at northeastern Willapa Bay, Washington: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1576, 108 p.
Atwater, B.F., and Moore, A.L., 1992, A tsunami about 1000 years ago in Puget Sound, Washington: Science, v. 258, p. 1614-1617.
Atwater, B.F., Stuiver, M., and Yamaguchi, D.K., 1991, Radiocarbon test of earthquake magnitude at the Cascadia subduction zone: Nature, v. 353, p. 156-158.
Atwater, B.F., 1987, Evidence for great Holocene earthquakes along the outer coast of Washington State: Science, v. 236, p. 942-944.
Atwater, B.F., 1986, Pleistocene glacial-lake deposits of the Sanpoil River valley, northeastern Washington: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 1661, 39 p.
Atwater, B.F., Adam, D.P., Bradbury, J.P., Forester, R.M., Mark, R.K., Lettis, W.R., Fisher, G.R., Gobalet, K.W., and Robinson, S.W., 1986, A fan dam for Tulare Lake, California, and implications for the Wisconsin-glacial history of the Sierra Nevada: Geological Society of America Bulletin, v. 97, p. 97-109.
Atwater, B.F., Hedel, C.W., and Helley, E.J., 1977, Late Quaternary depositional history, Holocene sea-level changes, and vertical crustal movement, southern San Francisco Bay, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1014, 15 p. |