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Using citizen science Raspberry Shake seismometers to enhance earthquake location and characterization: a case study from Wellington, New Zealand

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-25, 13:27 authored by Bethany Hughes, Finnigan Illsley-KempFinnigan Illsley-Kemp, Eleanor MestelEleanor Mestel, John TownendJohn Townend, Chantujan Chandrakumar, Raj Prasanna
The recent development of low-cost citizen seismometers has opened new avenues for earthquake analysis. We explore the integration of Raspberry Shake citizen seismometers with the national GeoNet seismic network to improve the precision of earthquake locations in Wellington, New Zealand. We use a dataset of 19 earthquakes between magnitudes 1.1 and 3.5 and between hypocentral distances of 22 km and 102 km. Our findings demonstrate that using Raspberry Shake seismometers in conjunction with the GeoNet network is effective for both the locating and characterisation of earthquakes. Notably, we find that precise station locations are less critical for precise earthquake location, a significant factor given that the publicly available Raspberry Shake locations are obfuscated to protect user privacy. These results suggest that, dependent on network geometry, citizen seismometer data can be a valuable tool in seismic monitoring and improve earthquake location capability, whilst remaining cost-effective.

Funding

Toka Tū Ake EQC Research Programme in Earthquake Seismology and Tectonic Geodesy | Funder: Earthquake Commission

History

Preferred citation

Hughes, B., Illsley-Kemp, F., Mestel, E., Townend, J., Chandrakumar, C. & Prasanna, R. (n.d.). Using citizen science Raspberry Shake seismometers to enhance earthquake location and characterization: a case study from Wellington, New Zealand. Seismica, 4(1). https://doi.org/10.26443/seismica.v4i1.1430

Journal title

Seismica

Volume

4

Issue

1

Publisher

McGill University Library and Archives

Publication status

Published online

Online publication date

2025-02-05

ISSN

2816-9387

eISSN

2816-9387

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