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Abstract Plate boundaries in the oceans are often poorly monitored. Though typically less remote than the deep sea, shallow marine environments with seafloor depths <0.5 km can be especially challenging for seismic experiments due to natural and anthropogenic hazards and noise sources that can affect instrument survival and data quality. The Queen Charlotte fault (QCF) is part of a transform plate boundary that follows the continental shelf of the Alaska Panhandle and central British Columbia. This fault system accommodates dextral slip between the Pacific and North American plates and has hosted several historic Mw > 7 earthquakes. In August 2021, we deployed 28 broadband ocean-bottom seismometers (OBSs) along the central QCF for the “Transform Obliquity along the Queen Charlotte Fault and Earthquake Study” (TOQUES) to investigate fault architecture and local seismicity. Deployment depths varied between 0.2 and 2.5 km below sea level, with half of the instruments deployed in shallow water (<0.5 km depth). We describe the scientific motivations for the TOQUES broadband OBS array, present data metrics, and discuss factors that influence data quality and instrument survival. We show that many opportunities exist for scientific study of shallow marine environments and the solid earth. Despite concerns that shallow water was responsible for the risk of data or instrument loss, direct relationships between instrument success and water depth are inconclusive. Rather, instrument success may be more related to the ability of different instrument designs to withstand shallow-water conditions.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 5, 2026
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Blackman, Donna K; Talavera-Soza, Sujania; Hung, Ruei-Jiun; Collins, John A; Laske, Gabi (, Marine Geology)
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Wolfson-Schwehr, Monica; Boettcher, Margaret S.; McGuire, Jeffrey J.; Collins, John A. (, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems)
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McGuire, Jeffrey J.; Collins, John A.; Davis, Earl; Becker, Keir; Heesemann, Martin (, Geophysical Research Letters)
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