Tectonics, v. 22, n. 4, p. 1034, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2002TC001422
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2003 (v1)Journal articleUploaded on: December 4, 2022
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2003 (v1)Journal article
Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 108, n. B11, p. 2519, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2002JB00208
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
December 16, 2009 (v1)Journal article
During the past few decades, satellite altimetry has brought tremendous new knowledge about the spatial and temporal variations of sea surface heights over the Earth's oceans. However, the precision is limited over short wavelengths and in coastal areas, and other methods such as kinematic GPS may be needed to fill in this information. We...
Uploaded on: December 3, 2022 -
2009 (v1)Journal article
We analyzed interseismic velocity fields along the Vanuatu arc subduction zone from more than 45 GPS station measurements spanning 15 years. Convergence with respect to the Australian plate (AP) is normal to the trench, with amplitudes that vary greatly from a maximum of 170 mm a−1 at Vanikoro to 27 mm a−1 facing the D'Entrecasteaux Ridge...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
2005 (v1)Journal article
International audience
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
February 28, 2011 (v1)Journal article
Since the late 1990s, rising sea levels around the Torres Islands (north Vanuatu, southwest Pacific) have caused strong local and international concern. In 2002-2004, a village was displaced due to increasing sea incursions, and in 2005 a United Nations Environment Programme press release referred to the displaced village as perhaps the world's...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022 -
January 5, 2010 (v1)Journal article
Knowledge of the position and motion of points on the seafloor can be critically important in both fundamental research (for example, global geodesy and plate tectonics) and for more practical applications such as seismic risk evaluation, off-shore construction and pipeline monitoring. In the Vanuatu subduction zone, for example, measuring...
Uploaded on: December 4, 2022