Abstract
Over the past third of a century the Incorporated Research Institutions
for Seismology (IRIS) has facilitated observational seismology in many
ways. At the beginning of IRIS in 1984, and with the support of the
National Science Foundation and in partnership with the US Geological
Survey, IRIS embarked on deploying the Global Seismographic Network
(GSN). Key characteristics of the GSN are its use of high-performance
digitizers, very broad band seismometers, strong motion accelerometers,
and high frequency sensors to provide multi-decadal observations across
a wide frequency band and dynamic range. The IRIS Portable Array Seismic
Studies of the Continental Lithosphere (PASSCAL) program has also
operated since 1984. PASSCAL’s extensive inventory of seismic equipment
has been used by scientists to make observations on every part of the
globe. The number and breadth of observations made with this equipment
has fueled thousands of research papers and contributed to the education
of hundreds, if not thousands, of students. More recently, the
IRIS-operated EarthScope Transportable Array (TA) provided a
breakthrough in the systematic collection of data using an array of
unprecedented size. The success of the TA has ushered in a new era of
“Large N” seismology, focused on dense spatial coverage of sensors to
reduce aliasing and provide more complete recording of the full
wavefield. The TA highlighted the power of survey mode data collection,
where systematic, spatially-dense, and high-quality data fuel
data-driven discovery, as opposed to deployments made to test a specific
hypothesis. Key future directions in observational seismology include an
increasing emphasis on wavefield measurements. Deploying instruments in
large numbers requires reductions in the size, weight, and power of
units, as well as a focus on dirt-to-desktop data management strategies
that merge data and metadata while minimizing human intervention with
the data flow from the sensor in the dirt to the scientist’s desktop.
Other critical frontiers include pervasive seafloor observations to
enable studies of key structures like subduction zones, more accessible
satellite telemetry to enable ubiquitous sensing of the environment, and
new sensing technologies such as MEMS and Distributed Acoustic Sensing.