Research programs in the SES continue to make groundbreaking discoveries about the planet, its environment, and human interactions. As a result, there are a number of industry funded-research groups (e.g.,
Stanford Exploration Project, Stanford Wave Physics Laboratory, Stanford Rock Physics and Borehole Geophysics Project) that implement student-led research for industry implementation.
Industrial Affiliate Programs The Doerr School includes 14 industry-funded affiliate programs, including the Stanford Exploration Project, the Stanford Natural Gas Initiative, and the Stanford Center for Carbon Storage. The affiliate programs cover many areas of research, including oil and gas exploration, oil field monitoring and development, hydraulic fracturing, natural gas extraction, methane leak detection, carbon capture and sequestration, and enhanced oil recovery.
San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD) The
San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD) is one of three components of the Earthscope Project, funded by the
National Science Foundation in conjunction with the USGS and NASA. The
SAFOD site is located just north of the town of
Parkfield, California. The SAFOD main hole was drilled to a depth of ~3.4 km in 2004 and 2005, crossing the San Andreas near a region of the fault where repeating Magnitude 2 earthquakes are generated. A goal of this project is to install instruments to record data near the source of these earthquakes. In addition to the installation of these instruments, rock and fluid samples were continuously collected during the drilling process, and will also be used to analyze changes in geochemistry and mechanical properties around the
fault zone. The project will lead to a better understanding of the processes that control the behavior of the
San Andreas fault, and it is hoped that the development of instrumentation and analytic methods will help evaluate the possibility of
earthquake prediction which is of primary importance for
earthquake engineering. The project is co-PIed by Bill Ellsworth and Steve Hickman of the USGS, and Stanford geophysics faculty member and alum Mark Zoback. Zoback's research in the SES focuses on stress and crustal mechanics. His students are heavily engaged in on-going research in the
Global Climate and Energy Project. ==Funding==