Electronic Supplement to
Ground Motion Modeling of the 1906 San Francisco Earthquake I: Validation Using the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake

by Brad T. Aagaard, Thomas M. Brocher, David Dolenc, Douglas Dreger, Robert W. Graves, Stephen Harmsen, Stephen Hartzell, Shawn Larsen, and Mary Lou Zoback

Color Scheme in the Ground Motion Movie

The movies color the landscape in each frame according to the maximum (peak) intensity of shaking up to that point in time. The color scale is the same as the one used in ShakeMap. In order to show the intensity of the current shaking, the colors darken as the shaking intensifies. At some locations, the most intense shaking lasts for several seconds, so the colors will darken as seismic waves continue to cause strong shaking. Example 1 below shows how the colors change as the shaking at a location progresses from no shaking through weak, moderate, and strong shaking, peaking at a violent shaking level (very dark red), before the shaking dies off (red becomes brighter). Example 2 shows the color progression for a location that peaks at a strong level of shaking.

Shaking color legend