U N I T R E S O U R C E S
3
To obtain U.S. Department of the Interior/U.S.
Geological Survey Preliminary Determinations of
Epicenters, write to the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC
20402. Annual subscription, $21.
BOOK S AND R E POR T S
Bolt, Bruce A. (1993).
Earthquakes.
New York: W.H.
Freeman & Co. Probably the single most useful basic
text on earthquakes.
Christman, Robert A. (1980). “Epicenters of the 1964
Alaskan Earthquake” and “Time Travel: Earthquake
Waves and Horses.” In
Activities for Earth Science,
edited by V. Mayor. Columbus, OH: ERIC
Clearinghouse (1929 Kenny Road, Columbus, OH
43210-1079; 614-292-7784).
Davison, Charles. (1978).
The Founders of
Seismology.
New York: Arno Press.
Herbert-Gustar, A.L., and Mott, P.A. (1980).
John
Milne: Father of Modern Seismology.
Tenterden,
England: Paul Norburg Publishers Ltd.
Penick, J. (1981).
The New Madrid Earthquake of
1811-1812
, revised edition. Columbia, MO:
University of Missouri Press.
Ross, Katherine E., editor.
Making Earthquake
Education Come Alive—The Development and Use of
Low Cost Models in the Classroom.
Buffalo, NY:
NCEER, State University of New York; 716-636-
3391. In press.
Simon, Ruth B. (1981).
Earthquake Interpretation: A
Manual for Reading Seismograms.
Los Altos, CA:
Steinbrugge, K.V. (1982).
Earthquakes, Volcanoes,
and Tsunamis.
New York: Scandia America Group.
Stewart, David, and Knox, Ray. (1993).
The
Earthquake That Never Went Away. The Shaking
Stopped in 1812, but the Impact Goes On.
Marble Hill,
MO: Gutenberg-Richter Publications.
Utah Geological Survey. (October 1992, Revised).
Places with Hazards.
Salt Lake City, UT: Utah
Department of Natural Resources; 801/467-7970. A
teacher’s handbook on natural hazards in Utah for
secondary earth science classes. Includes a geologic
hazard slide set. Identifies and defines nine types of
soil and rock conditions that pose geologic hazards in
Utah and their locations.
AR T I C L E S AND P A P E R S
Barker, Gary Keith. (1987). “Interfacing the Lehmann
Seismograph with an Apple Computer.”
Journal of
Geological Education
4, 35: 126-128. Provides plans
for interfacing the Lehmann seismograph with an
Apple computer and printer through an analog/digital
converter.
Barker, Gary. (September 1983). “A Working
Seismograph for the Classroom.”
Michigan Earth
Scientist. Journal of the Michigan Earth Science
Teachers Association.
“The Bigger One.” (Nov. 29, 1987).
Los Angeles
Times Magazine.
A fictional account of a magnitude
7.5 earthquake, worst-case scenario, on the Newport-
Inglewood Fault.
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