John's Work Page
(Sorry about the blinking text.)
This is a quick rundown of what I do at my place of employment.
It is (not surprisingly) primarily focused on the work I've done
for the Web, with a little background material to give it
some rhyme, reason, and perspective.


(John's Current Occupation
...other than creating this site... )

As you might guess (somewhat counter-intuitively, but believe me, it
makes sense) from the poor state of my personal pages, I work
as a "webmaster" or whatever you like to call those folk in charge
of improving and maintaining "official" web sites. Thus, after a long
day of playing with HTML, I'm really not often in the mood to
do it some more in my spare time... hence, the shabby personal pages.
Alas....
Currently, my work consists mainly of creating, expanding and refining
the SCEC Education
Module entitled Investigating Earthquakes Through Regional
Seismicity, which has been the big, behind-the-scenes project that's
occupied my every waking thought for months and months. In addition, I am
responsible for maintaining and adding to the
SCEC Data Center pages,
and I respond to e-mail from Web users of that site.
I am in charge of retrieving images and data from various sources,
including the Amiga kiosk display in the lobby of the South Mudd
building on the campus of the
California Institute of Technology -- a display I helped create
back in the summer of 1994. (You can see the animation of my name I made for
the credits of that display here, as an
MPEG.) Whatever I collect that seems relevant, useful,
or even just nifty gets incorporated (once I've modified it in one of
many ways) by myself or Katrin Hafner, into one of the pages mentioned
above.
My latest publicly visible projects include:
- SCEC Education
Module --
Investigating Earthquakes Through Regional Seismicity
- a monthly
seismicity viewer with data from January 1998 through
July 1999 (also available in a
side-control
version)
- Depth
of Seismicity (1983 through 1997)
- Annual
seismicity plots and four select animations, from 1985 through
1997
- forty-five monthly
animations of all southern California seismicity, January 1996 through
September 1999
- an animation of
southern
California seismicity in April 1991, before the
Landers
and Northridge
earthquakes struck
- the new look for the
Los Angeles Basin
Seismicity page.
- the yet again new and improved
SCSN Digital Broadband
Stations image map
with Los Angeles
area inset map and station files.
- the new Coso
Earthquake Page and Coso
Sequence Animation
- A Day in the
Life of Southern California Seismicity
- two animations of
the earthquakes in southern California of M 4.5 or greater, from
1932 to 1997
- additions (March 18,
1997, Calico earthquake,
1941 Santa Barbara
earthquake,
1941 Torrance-Gardena
earthquakes, 1899
Cajon Pass earthquake, and the
1899 San Jacinto
earthquake) to the
clickable
guide to historic Southern California Earthquakes
- fault block animations for:
normal,
reverse,
right-lateral,
left-lateral,
thrust,
blind thrust,
and numerous other types of fault slip
- the fault block diagrams in
Reviewing the Basics,
part of Putting
Down Roots in Earthquake Country
- the improved menu
of additional topics
- the block diagram in
The Master
Fault, another part of Putting Down Roots in Earthquake Country
- the new
Earthquakes
in Southern California title page
- the new look for the
Putting Down Roots in
Earthquake Country title page
- the clickable
fault maps of Southern California
- clickable
guide to historic Southern California Earthquakes
- the indexes for the two projects listed directly above
- and two Open File Reports about
the LARSE project:
I'd also created a somewhat weak and boring fault
map of southern California... which has finally become
a set of clickable maps
at the Earthquakes
in Southern California site listed above.
Lastly, here's a look at John's typical work day.
Work
your way back to John's Home Page