Earthquake catalog¶
Pyrocko provides access to some online earthquake catalogs via the
pyrocko.client.catalog
module.
QuakeML import¶
This example shows how to read QuakeML <https://quake.ethz.ch/quakeml/docs/REC?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=QuakeML-BED-20130214b.pdf> event catalogs using load_xml()
.
The function get_pyrocko_events()
is used to obtain events in pyrocko format.
If a moment tensor is provided as [Mrr, Mtt, Mpp, Mrt, Mrp, Mtp
], this is converted to [mnn, mee, mdd, mne, mnd, med
]. The strike, dip and rake values appearing in the pyrocko event are calculated from the moment tensor.
from pyrocko import model
from pyrocko.io import quakeml
from pyrocko.example import get_example_data
# small catalog containing two events (data from ingv):
catalog = get_example_data('example-catalog.xml')
# read quakeml events
qml = quakeml.QuakeML.load_xml(filename=catalog)
# get pyrocko events
events = qml.get_pyrocko_events()
for event in events:
print(event)
# save events as pyrocko catalog:
model.event.dump_events(events, filename='test_pyrocko.pf')
Creating QuakeML from scratch¶
from pyrocko.io import quakeml as q
from pyrocko.util import str_to_time as stt
table = [
# name time lat lon depth mag
('ev0001', stt('2021-09-29 01:02:03'), 55., 120., 11000., 5.5),
('ev0002', stt('2021-09-29 04:05:06'), 57., 122., 9000., 4.0),
('ev0003', stt('2021-09-29 07:08:09'), 56., 121., 1200., 4.1)]
qml = q.QuakeML(
event_parameters=q.EventParameters(
public_id='quakeml:test/eventParameters/test',
event_list=[
q.Event(
preferred_origin_id='quakeml:test/origin/%s' % name,
preferred_magnitude_id='quakeml:test/magnitude/%s' % name,
public_id='quakeml:test/event/%s' % name,
origin_list=[
q.Origin(
public_id='quakeml:test/origin/%s' % name,
time=q.TimeQuantity(value=time),
longitude=q.RealQuantity(value=lon),
latitude=q.RealQuantity(value=lat),
depth=q.RealQuantity(value=depth),
),
],
magnitude_list=[
q.Magnitude(
public_id='quakeml:test/magnitude/%s' % name,
origin_id='quakeml:test/origin/%s' % name,
mag=q.RealQuantity(value=magnitude),
)
],
)
for (name, time, lat, lon, depth, magnitude) in table
]
)
)
print(qml.dump_xml())
Searching the GlobalCMT catalog¶
This example demonstrates how to query the GlobalCMT [1] database for events which occurred in 2011 in northern Chile.
from pyrocko import util, model
from pyrocko.client import catalog
tmin = util.str_to_time('2011-01-01 00:00:00') # beginning time of query
tmax = util.str_to_time('2011-12-31 23:59:59')
# create an instance of the global CMT catalog
global_cmt_catalog = catalog.GlobalCMT()
# query the catalog
events = global_cmt_catalog.get_events(
time_range=(tmin, tmax),
magmin=2.,
latmin=-35.,
latmax=-20.,
lonmin=-76.,
lonmax=-65.)
print('Downloaded %s events' % len(events))
print('The last one is:')
print(events[-1])
# dump events to catalog
model.dump_events(events, 'northern_chile_events.txt')
Download catalog_search_globalcmt.py
We expect to see the following output:
Downloaded 53 events
The last one is
--- !pf.Event
lat: -28.03
lon: -71.55
time: 2011-12-07 22:23:14.250000
name: 201112072223A
depth: 22800.0
magnitude: 6.106838394015895
region: NEAR COAST OF NORTHERN C
catalog: gCMT
moment_tensor: !pf.MomentTensor
mnn: 1.16e+17
mee: -1.24e+18
mdd: 1.1200000000000001e+18
mne: 1.29e+17
mnd: 1.61e+17
med: 1.0900000000000001e+18
strike1: 16.540029329929244
dip1: 24.774772153067424
rake1: 109.14904335232158
strike2: 175.61123518070136
dip2: 66.6800337700307
rake2: 81.39111828783355
moment: 1.622772319211786e+18
magnitude: 6.106838394015895
duration: 5.4
Search for an event in GEOFON catalog¶
Search for an event name only in the GEOFON
catalog [2] using Geofon()
, with a given magnitude
range and timeframe.
from pyrocko import util
from pyrocko.client import catalog
tmin = util.ctimegm('2010-01-12 21:50:00')
tmax = util.ctimegm('2010-01-13 03:17:00') # ending time of query
mag = 6. # minimum magntiude (open end)
# download event information from GEOFON web page
geofon = catalog.Geofon()
event_names = geofon.get_event_names(
time_range=(tmin, tmax),
magmin=mag)
for event_name in event_names:
event = geofon.get_event(event_name)
print(event)
Download catalog_search_geofon.py
We expect to see the following output (in YAML format):
--- !pf.Event
lat: 18.37
lon: -72.55
time: 2010-01-12 21:53:11
name: gfz2010avtm
depth: 17000.0
magnitude: 7.2
region: Haiti Region
catalog: GEOFON
Footnotes