MP
Member Since 1986
Marino Protti
Researcher, Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica
Professional Experience
Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica
Researcher
1984 - Present
Education
University of California Santa Cruz
Doctorate
1994
Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica
Doctorate
1994
Honors & Awards
Union Fellow
Received December 2022
Ambassador Award
Received December 2022
Citation
Marino Protti is a respected seismologist with a long list of well-cited
journal articles on his CV. What makes Marino uniquely qualified for
the Ambassador Award is his ability to spawn collaborations that advance
earthquake forecasting and hazard mitigation.
Over his career Marino initiated numerous international research
projects. He had three goals: first, do good science; second, exploit
the geography and geology of Costa Rica to study the subduction seismic
cycle; and third, raise public awareness in Costa Rica and the world
about seismic hazard. His view was that all three goals would be best
advanced by collaborations involving seismologists, geodesists,
geologists and other scientists from around the world, each bringing
their expertise (and instruments and funding) to the table.
When Marino started his career in the 1980s, there was little
appreciation of seismic hazard. Marino worked tirelessly to get the
message out that earthquake and volcano hazard could be forecast, and
preparations could be made. For seismic hazard, that meant strengthening
building codes. Decades later, his efforts paid off when an M 7.6
earthquake struck the northwest coast of Costa Rica. While damages were
extensive, casualties were limited.
Early in his career, Marino worked with Costa Rican colleagues to
establish Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica
(OVSICORI). This is a remarkable organization, charged with earthquake
and volcano monitoring and hazard mitigation, affiliated with the
Universidad Nacional (UNA). OVSICORI-UNA maintains a sophisticated
network of real-time and near-real-time geophysical monitoring equipment
throughout the country. They are a model for other Central American
nations facing similar hazards with limited resources.
Marino worked with American scientists involved with the National
Science Foundation’s MARGINS program, which ran from 2001 to 2010, to
get the northwest coast of Costa Rica declared a special focus site for
the study of subduction zone earthquakes (a similar program continued
the following decade under GeoPrisms). Seismic and geodetic networks
were established to augment OVSICORI’s monitoring efforts, beginning in
2001 and continuing today. When the 2012 earthquake struck, more than a
decade of spatially and temporally dense seismic and geodetic data had
been collected, capturing the late stage of a seismic cycle and making
the earthquake an exceptionally well monitored event.
Marino is currently working with other Central and South American
countries on issues related to marine conservation and Law of the Sea.
He is promoting the idea of Costa Rica as a signatory to the Antarctic
Treaty. The hope is that this country, one of the few in the world
without a standing army, can be a voice for conservation, research and
continuation of that continent’s nonmilitary status. In these troubling
times, we need more such efforts.
— Timothy Dixon
University of South Florida
Tampa, Florida
Response
It is
with great humility that I receive this award while thanking both the
colleagues who nominated me as well as the judges who chose me.
More
than as an individual merit, I want to acknowledge that what I have done
in almost four decades is thanks to a chain of institutions and people.
The Costa Rica Volcanological and Seismological Observatory (OVSICORI)
is a great institution that has given me all the conditions to
grow scientifically without bounds. OVSICORI can do that because behind
it is the National University of Costa Rica with a strong commitment for
public service. My colleagues from the United States, Japan and Europe
have provided me with instrumentation and opportunities to contribute to
the understanding of subduction process in Costa Rica, share it with
the world, and trickle it down to the population of Costa Rica. As a
result, I believe that Costa Rica is the country with the highest
tectonically educated people in the world. As an example, thanks to the
dissemination of the knowledge we are producing, most Costa Ricans can
explain in simple words what subduction is.
By
abolishing the army and therefore not wasting money on defense, Costa
Rica has been able to invest large amounts of resources in education and
health care for all its citizens. I have been a direct beneficiary of
these circumstances, and having come from a low-income family with half a
dozen siblings (all of them with higher education degrees in science
and engineering), my only merit has been to work hard to pay back my
country for the investment it put into me.
The only
thing I claim is the ability to take advantage of every opportunity my
colleagues and life put in front of me. Some have taken me down to 4,000
m below the sea surface, and others down to Antarctica on two
occasions. I tell students to also take every opportunity because each
one will open more doors to grow in science and life. Going to
Antarctica exposed me to the Antarctic Treaty, and since I saw its
beauty, I pushed Costa Rica into becoming the 55th party of such a novel
international treaty for peace, science and conservation, features for
which Costa Rica is also known around the world.
I only hope that this award will
help me continue promoting Costa Rica as an excellent field laboratory
to study subduction processes.
— Marino Protti
Observatorio Vulcanológico y Sismológico de Costa Rica, Universidad Nacional
Heredia. Costa Rica
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Publications
Shallow Slow Slip Events Identified Offshore the Osa Peninsula in Southern Costa Rica From GNSS Time...
Using new continuous geodetic time series, we identify five shallow slow slip events (SSEs) offshore and beneath the Osa peninsula in southern Cost...
October 13, 2023
Slow Slip and Inter‐transient Locking on the Nicoya Megathru...
November 11, 2020
A New Sulfur and Carbon Degassing Inventory for the Southern...
December 12, 2017
AGU Abstracts
Optimization of heterogeneous seafloor geodetic networks for detection of long-term and transient strain
RECENT APPLICATIONS AND DEVELOPMENTS IN SEAFLOOR GEODESY I ORAL
geodesy | 14 december 2023
Eric O. Lindsey, Sarah Rysanek, Mitchell S. Hastin...
Seafloor geodesy is a rapidly expanding field, yet most offshore megathrust environments remain poorly instrumented due to the high cost of observatio...
View Abstract
Megathrust coupling in southern Costa Rica and the influence of Slow Slip Events
SLOW-TO-FAST EARTHQUAKES FROM SHALLOW TO DEEP: OBSERVATIONS, EXPERIMENTS, AND NUMERICAL MODELING IV POSTER
tectonophysics | 13 december 2023
Mason Perry, Cyril Muller, Marino Protti, Lujia Fe...
At the Osa peninsula in Southern Costa Rica, at least three large (magnitude > 7) earthquakes have occurred in 1904, 1941, and most recently in 198...
View Abstract
Preliminary Magnetotelluric Results of Lithosphere Imaging of Guanacaste Electrical Resistivity Array: perica-LIGERA
FRONTIERS IN ELECTROMAGNETIC (EM) GEOPHYSICS I ORAL
geomagnetism, paleomagnetism and electromagnetism | 11 december 2023
Oliver Azevedo, Darcy R. Cordell, Samer Naif, Mari...
An ultrawide-band magnetotelluric survey was carried out on a ~10 km-spaced grid over the surface of the Nicoya Peninsula of Costa Rica, collecting a ...
View Abstract
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