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Now showing 1 - 10 of 15
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    Weibull-distributed dyke thickness reflects probabilistic character of host-rock strength
    ([London] : Nature Publishing Group UK, 2014) Krumbholz, Michael; Hieronymus, Christoph F.; Burchardt, Steffi; Troll, Valentin R.; Tanner, David C.; Friese, Nadine
    Magmatic sheet intrusions (dykes) constitute the main form of magma transport in the Earth’s crust. The size distribution of dykes is a crucial parameter that controls volcanic surface deformation and eruption rates and is required to realistically model volcano deformation for eruption forecasting. Here we present statistical analyses of 3,676 dyke thickness measurements from different tectonic settings and show that dyke thickness consistently follows the Weibull distribution. Known from materials science, power law-distributed flaws in brittle materials lead to Weibull-distributed failure stress. We therefore propose a dynamic model in which dyke thickness is determined by variable magma pressure that exploits differently sized host-rock weaknesses. The observed dyke thickness distributions are thus site-specific because rock strength, rather than magma viscosity and composition, exerts the dominant control on dyke emplacement. Fundamentally, the strength of geomaterials is scale-dependent and should be approximated by a probability distribution.
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    Visualisation and analysis of shear-deformation bands in unconsolidated Pleistocene sand using ground-penetrating radar: Implications for paleoseismological studies
    (Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2018) Brandes, Christian; Igel, Jan; Loewer, Markus; Tanner, David C.; Lang, Jörg; Müller, Katharina; Winsemann, Jutta
    Deformation bands in unconsolidated sediments are of great value for paleoseismological studies in sedimentary archives. Using ground-penetrating radar (GPR), we investigated an array of shear-deformation bands that developed in unconsolidated Pleistocene glacifluvial Gilbert-type delta sediments. A dense grid (spacing 0.6 m) of GPR profiles was measured on top of a 20 m-long outcrop that exposes shear-deformation bands. Features in the radargrams could be directly tied to the exposure. The shear-deformation bands are partly represented by inclined reflectors and partly by the offset of reflections at delta clinoforms. 3-D interpretation of the 2-D radar sections shows that the bands have near-planar geometries that can be traced throughout the entire sediment volume. Thin sections of sediment samples show that the analysed shear-deformation bands have a denser grain packing than the host sediment. Thus they have a lower porosity and smaller pore sizes and therefore, in the vadose zone, the deformation bands have a higher water content due to enhanced capillary forces. This, together with the partially-developed weak calcite cementation and the distinct offset along the bands, are likely the main reasons for the clear and unambiguous expression of the shear-deformation bands in the radar survey. The study shows that deformation-band arrays can clearly be detected using GPR and quickly mapped over larger sediment volumes. With the 3-D analysis, it is further possible to derive the orientation and geometry of the bands. This allows correlation of the bands with the regional fault trend. Studying deformation bands in unconsolidated sediments with GPR is therefore a powerful approach in paleoseismological studies. Based on our data, we postulate that the outcrop is part of a dextral strike-slip zone that was reactivated by glacial isostatic adjustment.
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    Structural analysis of S-wave seismics around an urban sinkhole: evidence of enhanced dissolution in a strike-slip fault zone
    (Katlenburg-Lindau : European Geophysical Society, 2017-12-19) Wadas, Sonja H.; Tanner, David C.; Polom, Ulrich; Krawczyk, Charlotte M.
    In November 2010, a large sinkhole opened up in the urban area of Schmalkalden, Germany. To determine the key factors which benefited the development of this collapse structure and therefore the dissolution, we carried out several shear-wave reflection-seismic profiles around the sinkhole. In the seismic sections we see evidence of the Mesozoic tectonic movement in the form of a NW–SE striking, dextral strike-slip fault, known as the Heßleser Fault, which faulted and fractured the subsurface below the town. The strike-slip faulting created a zone of small blocks ( < 100 m in size), around which steep-dipping normal faults, reverse faults and a dense fracture network serve as fluid pathways for the artesian-confined groundwater. The faults also acted as barriers for horizontal groundwater flow perpendicular to the fault planes. Instead groundwater flows along the faults which serve as conduits and forms cavities in the Permian deposits below ca. 60 m depth. Mass movements and the resulting cavities lead to the formation of sinkholes and dissolution-induced depressions. Since the processes are still ongoing, the occurrence of a new sinkhole cannot be ruled out. This case study demonstrates how S-wave seismics can characterize a sinkhole and, together with geological information, can be used to study the processes that result in sinkhole formation, such as a near-surface fault zone located in soluble rocks. The more complex the fault geometry and interaction between faults, the more prone an area is to sinkhole occurrence.
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    Seismic interpretation and structural restoration of the Heligoland glaciotectonic thrust-fault complex: Implications for multiple deformation during (pre-)Elsterian to Warthian ice advances into the southern North Sea Basin
    (Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 2020) Winsemann, Jutta; Koopmann, Hannes; Tanner, David C.; Lutz, Rüdiger; Lang, Jörg; Brandes, Christian; Gaedicke, Christoph
    Despite a long history of research, the locations of former ice-margins in the North Sea Basin are still uncertain. In this study, we present new palaeogeographic reconstructions of (pre-) Elsterian and Warthian ice-margins in the southeastern North Sea Basin, which were previously unknown. The reconstructions are based on the integration of palaeo-ice flow data derived from glaciotectonic thrusts, tunnel valleys and mega-scale glacial lineations. We focus on a huge glaciotectonic thrust complex located about 10 km north of Heligoland and 50 km west of the North Frisian coast of Schleswig-Holstein (Northern Germany). Multi-channel high-resolution 2D seismic reflection data show a thrust-fault complex in the upper 300 ms TWT (ca. 240 m) of seismic data. This thrust-fault complex consists of mainly Neogene delta sediments, covers an area of 350 km2, and forms part of a large belt of glaciotectonic complexes that stretches from offshore Denmark via northern Germany to Poland. The deformation front of the Heligoland glaciotectonic complex trends approximately NNE-SSW. The total length of the glaciotectonic thrust complex is approximately 15 km. The thrust faults share a common detachment surface, located at a depth of 250–300 ms (TWT) (200–240 m) below sea level. The detachment surface most probably formed at a pronounced rheological boundary between Upper Miocene fine-grained pro-delta deposits and coarser-grained delta-front deposits, although we cannot rule out that deep permafrost in the glacier foreland played a role for the location of this detachment surface. Restored cross-sections reveal the shortening of the complex along the detachment to have been on average 23% (ranging from ca. 16%–50%). The determined ice movement direction from east-southeast to southeast suggests deformation by an ice advance from the Baltic region. The chronospatial relationship of the thrust-fault complex and adjacent northwest-southeast to northeast-southwest trending Elsterian tunnel valleys implies a pre-Elsterian (MIS 16?) age of the glaciotectonic complex. However, the age of these Elsterian tunnel valleys is poorly constrained and the glaciotectonic complex of Heligoland may also have been formed during an early Elsterian ice advance into the southeastern North Sea Basin. The glaciotectonic complex underwent further shortening and the Elsterian tunnel-valley fills that were incised into the glaciotectonic complex were partly deformed during the Saalian Drenthe and Warthe (1) ice advances.
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    Near-surface fault detection using high-resolution shear wave reflection seismics at the CO2CRC Otway Project site, Australia
    (Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 2016) Beilecke, Thies; Krawczyk, Charlotte M.; Ziesch, Jennifer; Tanner, David C.
    High-resolution, near-surface, shear wave reflection seismic measurements were carried out in November 2013 at the CO2CRC Otway Project site, Victoria, Australia, with the aim to determine whether and, if so, where deeper faults reach the near subsurface. From a previous P wave 3-D reflection seismic data set that was concentrated on a reservoir at 2 km depth, we can only interpret faults up to 400 m below sea level. For the future monitoring in the overburden of the CO2 reservoir it is important to know whether and how the faults continue in the subsurface. We prove that two regional fault zones do in fact reach the surface instead of dying out at depth. Individual first-break signatures in the shot gathers along the profiles support this interpretation. However, this finding does not imply perforce communication between the reservoir and the surface in the framework of CO2 injection. The shear wave seismic sections are complementary to existing P wave volumes. They image with high resolution (better than 3 m vertically) different tectonic structures. Similar structures also outcrop on the southern coast of the Otway Basin. Both the seismic and the outcrops evidence the complex youngest structural history of the area.
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    S-wave experiments for the exploration of a deep geothermal carbonate reservoir in the German Molasse Basin
    (Berlin ; Heidelberg [u.a.] : SpringerOpen, 2021) Wawerzinek, Britta; Buness, Hermann; von Hartmann, Hartwig; Tanner, David C.
    There are many successful geothermal projects that exploit the Upper Jurassic aquifer at 2–3 km depth in the German Molasse Basin. However, up to now, only P-wave seismic exploration has been carried out. In an experiment in the Greater Munich area, we recorded S-waves that were generated by the conventional P-wave seismic survey, using 3C receivers. From this, we built a 3D volume of P- to S-converted (PS) waves using the asymptotic conversion point approach. By combining the P-volume and the resulting PS-seismic volume, we were able to derive the spatial distribution of the vp/vs ratio of both the Molasse overburden and the Upper Jurassic reservoir. We found that the vp/vs ratios for the Molasse units range from 2.0 to 2.3 with a median of 2.15, which is much higher than previously assumed. This raises the depth of hypocenters of induced earthquakes in surrounding geothermal wells. The vp/vs ratios found in the Upper Jurassic vary laterally between 1.5 and 2.2. Since no boreholes are available for verification, we test our results against an independently derived facies classification of the conventional 3D seismic volume and found it correlates well. Furthermore, we see that low vp/vs ratios correlate with high vp and vs velocities. We interpret the latter as dolomitized rocks, which are connected with enhanced permeability in the reservoir. We conclude that 3C registration of conventional P-wave surveys is worthwhile.
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    Multiphase, decoupled faulting in the southern German Molasse Basin – evidence from 3-D seismic data
    (Göttingen : Copernicus Publ., 2020) Shipilin, Vladimir; Tanner, David C.; von Hartmann, Hartwig; Moeck, Inga
    We use three-dimensional seismic reflection data from the southern German Molasse Basin to investigate the structural style and evolution of a geometrically decoupled fault network in close proximity to the Alpine deformation front. We recognise two fault arrays that are vertically separated by a clay-rich layer – lower normal faults and upper normal and reverse faults. A frontal thrust fault partially overprints the upper fault array. Analysis of seismic stratigraphy, syn-kinematic strata, throw distribution, and spatial relationships between faults suggest a multiphase fault evolution: (1) initiation of the lower normal faults in the Upper Jurassic carbonate platform during the early Oligocene, (2) development of the upper normal faults in the Cenozoic sediments during the late Oligocene, and (3) reverse reactivation of the upper normal faults and thrusting during the mid-Miocene. These distinct phases document the evolution of the stress field as the Alpine orogen propagated across the foreland. We postulate that interplay between the horizontal compression and vertical stresses due to the syn-sedimentary loading resulted in the intermittent normal faulting. The vertical stress gradients within the flexed foredeep defined the independent development of the upper faults above the lower faults, whereas mechanical behaviour of the clay-rich layer precluded the subsequent linkage of the fault arrays. The thrust fault must have been facilitated by the reverse reactivation of the upper normal faults, as its maximum displacement and extent correlate with the occurrence of these faults. We conclude that the evolving tectonic stresses were the primary mechanism of fault activation, whereas the mechanical stratigraphy and pre-existing structures locally governed the structural style.
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    Unravelling the shape and stratigraphy of a glacially-overdeepened valley with reflection seismic: the Lienz Basin (Austria)
    (Basel : Birkhäuser, 2019) Burschil, Thomas; Tanner, David C.; Reitner, Jürgen M.; Buness, Hermann; Gabriel, Gerald
    We reveal the subsurface bedrock topography and sedimentary succession of one of the deepest glacially-formed basins in the Eastern Alps: the Lienz Basin in the Upper Drau Valley (Tyrol), by means of seismic reflection. A dense source-receiver spacing, supplied by autonomous receivers, and a prestack depth-migration processing scheme were essential to distinguish the various deposits in fine detail, such as slumping, fan delta deposits, and a modified monocline on the basin flank. These details support our interpretation of the seismic stratigraphy that consists of, e.g., subglacial till of last glacial maximum (LGM) age and possibly older, laminated basin fines, and gravel/coarse sand. The maximum depth of the basin is 622 m, at the junction of two major basement faults that are not clearly visible in the seismic reflections. We regard the overdeepening in this longitudinal valley as the result of glacier confluence during the LGM. Subglacial meltwaters utilized the higher erodibility of faulted rocks, as indicated by channel structures. The adverse slope (2.6%) along the valley axis exceeds the gradient ice-surface slope (0.4–0.5%) during the LGM by more than fivefold. We thus suggest this feature is a product of a pre-LGM phase, since adverse slopes greater than ~ 1.2 times the ice surface slope promote the freezing of water in subglacial channels and prevent efficient water flushing of sediments. Integrating other studies allows us to estimate the local overdeepening of the Lienz Basin and that of the whole Upper Drau Valley to be 146 m and 530 m, respectively. At the beginning of lacustrine sedimentation, we estimate the paleo-water depth to be at least 216 m.
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    High‐resolution reflection seismics reveal the structure and the evolution of the Quaternary glacial Tannwald Basin
    (Oxford : Wiley, 2018) Burschil, Thomas; Buness, Hermann; Tanner, David C.; Wielandt‐Schuster, Ulrike; Ellwanger, Dietrich; Gabriel, Gerald
    Over-deepened basins exist throughout the Alpine realm. Improving our knowledge on these basins is of high social relevance, since these areas are often well-populated and they possess, for instance, unusual hydrological settings. Nonetheless, geophysical and sedimentological investigations of over-deepened basins are rare. We analyse the sedimentary succession of such a basin, the Tannwald Basin, through geological interpretation of seismic reflection profiles. The basin is located approximately 60 km north of the European Alps. It was incised into Tertiary molasse sediments by the Rhine Glacier and later filled by glacial, fluvial, and lacustrine deposits of 250 m thickness. The Leibniz Institute for Applied Geophysics acquired a grid of five high-resolution seismic reflection lines that imaged till the deepest parts of the Tannwald Basin. The seismic profiles, processed to a pre-stack depth migration level, allow a detailed geological interpretation that is calibrated with the help of a nearby borehole. We determine the structure and the seismic facies of the sediment succession in the basin and presume the following hypothesis of the evolution of the basin: sub-glacial erosion comprises the excavation of the over-deepened basin as well as detachment of large fragments of molasse material. These molasse slabs were deposited within the basin in a layer of basal till that graded upwards in water-lain till and fine-grained deposits. During the last two glaciations, the basinal structure became buried by till sequences and glacio-fluvial sediments.
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    Multi-stage emplacement of the Götemar Pluton, SE Sweden: new evidence inferred from field observations and microfabric analysis, including cathodoluminescence microscopy
    (Berlin ; Heidelberg : Springer, 2012) Friese, Nadine; Vollbrecht, Axel; Tanner, David C.; Fahlbusch, Wiebke; Weidemann, Miriam
    The emplacement of the Mesoproterozoic Götemar Pluton into Paleoproterozoic granitoid host rocks of the Transscandinavian Igneous Belt is re-examined by microfabric analysis, including cathodoluminescence microscopy. Field data on the pluton-host rock system are used to strengthen the model. The Götemar Pluton, situated on the Baltic Shield of SE Sweden, is a horizontally zoned tabular structure that was constructed by the intrusion of successive pulses of magma with different crystal/melt ratios, at an estimated crustal depth of 4–8 km. Initial pluton formation involved magma ascent along a vertical dike, which was arrested at a mechanical discontinuity within the granitoid host rocks; this led to the formation of an initial sill. Subsequent sill stacking and their constant inflation resulted in deformation and reheating of existing magma bodies, which also raised the pluton roof. This multi-stage emplacement scenario is indicated by complex dike relationships and the occurrence of several generations of quartz (Si-metasomatism). The sills were charged by different domains of a heterogeneous magma chamber with varying crystal/melt ratios. Ascent or emplacement of magma with a high crystal/melt ratio is indicated by syn-magmatic deformation of phenocrysts. Complex crystallization fabrics (e.g. oscillatory growth zoning caused by high crystal defect density, overgrowth and replacement features, resorbed and corroded crystal cores, rapakivi structure) are mostly related to processes within the main chamber, that is repeated magma mixing or water influx.