
CRESCENT Topical Workshop
Shallow rupture and tsunamigenesis
May 28-29, 2026, University of Oregon, Eugene
Workshop Goals

Shallow rupture and tsunamigenesis
This interdisciplinary workshop aims to integrate experimental, imaging, and modeling studies on shallow faulting and deformation and tsunamigenesis for the Cascadia Subduction Zone.  We welcome participants interested in frictional fault properties, aseismic slip, fluid pressure, splay faulting, off-fault deformation, acoustic laboratory studies, seafloor geodesy and remote sensing, and offshore DAS. The workshop will generate a community white paper focusing on how to better account for the complexity of shallow deformation to assess tsunami hazard for Cascadia.

Travel & Lodging

May 28-29, 2026
Erb Memorial Union, University of Oregon
Venue
This CRESCENT Topical Workshop will be held in the EMU at the Erb Memorial Union, University of Oregon
Local information
The EMU is located at the heart of the University of Oregon campus, within easy reach of downtown Eugene and surrounding places of interest. Click here for information on where to eat, drink and recreate, or check this map for more ideas.
Flights and ground transportation
Eugene airport (EUG) is a ~20 minute drive from the meeting venue. There is no public transportation from the airport to the university, though several taxi, shuttle and rideshare options are available.
Parking
The University of Oregon has two main parking garages that are an eight-minute walk from the workshop venue: 13th St Garage and Millrace Drive Garage. Daily visitor permits for other campus lots, including ADA parking spaces, are available via the University’s parking portal.
Lodging
The Hayward Inn and Best Western New Oregon are hotel options less than a 10-minute walk from the venue.
Presentation slides and recordings
Application

APPLICATION COMING SOON
There is no registration fee for this CRESCENT Topical Workshop.
Workshop Planning Committee

The Tsunami Topical Workshop conveners have decades of combined tsunami research experience and bring multi-disciplinary, global perspectives to guide the planning process.

Ignacio Sepulveda
San Diego State University isepulveda@sdsu.edu

Alice Gabriel
University of California, San Diego
algabriel@ucsd.edu

Tianhaozhe Sun
Geological Survey of Canada / Natural Resources Canada
thzsun@uvic.ca