On the nature of the crust in the vicinity of the southeast Newfoundland Ridge

1978 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 1462-1471 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. D. Sullivan ◽  
C. E. Keen

This paper presents new seismic reflection, refraction, gravity, and magnetic data bearing on the nature of the crust in the vicinity of the Newfoundland Ridge and the J-anomaly Ridge, immediately south of the Grand Banks. This area experienced a complicated plate tectonic history being the focal point for interactions of the North American, African, and Iberian plates. New data have recently been published for this region and conflicting interpretations have been offered in relation to the oceanic or continental origin of the crust there. The data presented here show that the seismic structure and the most reasonable models for the magnetic anomalies are more consistent with an oceanic origin. The trends and offsets in the magnetic lineations and possible differences in subsidence, north and south of the Newfoundland Ridge, are discussed in relation to possible modes of formation of this feature. It is proposed that similar subsidence histories since mid-Cretaceous time on the Grand Banks and J-anomaly Ridge are related to a similarity in the thermal history of the lithosphere beneath these areas, as the ridge crest migrated eastwards, and do not require the same type of crust to underlie both areas.

1997 ◽  
Vol 102 (B5) ◽  
pp. 10055-10082 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark B. Gordon ◽  
Paul Mann ◽  
Dámaso Cáceres ◽  
Raúl Flores

Geophysics ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 47 (12) ◽  
pp. 1693-1705
Author(s):  
Alan O. Ramo ◽  
James W. Bradley

Spatially discontinuous high‐amplitude seismic reflections were encountered in seismic data acquired in the early 1970s in northeast Louisiana and southwest Arkansas. Large acoustic impedance contrasts are known to result from gaseous hydrocarbon accumulations. However, amplitude anomalies may also result from large density and velocity contrasts which are geologically unrelated to hydrocarbon entrapment. A well drilled on the northeast Louisiana amplitude anomaly encountered 300 ft of rhyolite at a depth of 6170 ft. Subsequent gravity and total field magnetic profiles across the feature revealed the presence of 0.2 mgal and 17 gamma anomalies, respectively. The measured magnetic susceptibility of the rhyolite was 0.0035 emu and the measured density contrast was [Formula: see text]. Model studies based on the seismically determined areal extent of the anomaly and the measured thickness of rhyolite accounted for the observed gravity and magnetic anomalies. The southwest Arkansas amplitude anomaly was a sheet‐like reflection which terminated to the north and west within the survey area. Two north‐south gravity profiles exhibited a negative character over the sheet‐like reflector but did not exhibit a clear spatial correlation with the north limit of the seismic anomaly. Two north‐south magnetic profiles exhibited tenuous 4 gamma anomalies which appeared to be spatially correlated with the interpreted north edge of the seismic anomaly. A subsequent wildcat well encountered no igneous material but did penetrate 200 ft of salt at about 7500 ft. Reassessment of the gravity and magnetic data indicated that this seismic amplitude anomaly is not attributable to an intrasedimentary igneous source; it suggested a salt‐related 0.2 to 0.3 mgal minimum coextensive with the observed seismic amplitude anomaly. Present amplitude analysis technology would treat these seismic data with suspicion. However, gravity and magnetic data acquisition can provide a relatively inexpensive means for evaluation and verification of amplitude anomalies and thus should be an adjunct for land seismic exploration utilizing amplitude analysis.


2021 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 25-47
Author(s):  
Erlangga Septama ◽  
C. Prasetyadi ◽  
A Abdurrokhim ◽  
T. Setiawan ◽  
P.D. Wardaya ◽  
...  

The Java Island is an active volcanic arc that experiences several volcanism episodes, which gradually changes from South to North from the Late Oligocene to Pleistocene, following the subduction of the Australian plates underneath the Eurasian plates. During the Eocene, the southern and northern part of Java was connected as one passive margin system with the sediment supply mainly comes from Sundaland in the north.  The compressional tectonics creates a flexural margin and a deep depression in the central axis of Java Island and acts as an ultimate deep-sea depocenter in the Neogene period. In contrast to the neighboring Northwest and Northeast Java Basins in the Northern edges of Java Island, the basin configuration in the East-West trending depression in median ranges of Java (from Bogor to Kendeng Troughs) are visually undetected by seismic due to the immense Quaternary volcanic eruption covers.Five focused window areas are selected for this study. A total of 1,893 Km sections, 584 rock samples, 1569 gravity and magnetic data, and 29 geochemical samples (rocks, oil, and gas samples) were acquired during the study. Geological fieldwork was focused on the stratigraphic unit composition and the observable features of deformation products from the outcrops. Due to the Paleogene deposit exposure scarcity in the Central-East Java area, the rock samples were also collected from the mud volcano ejected materials in the Sangiran Dome.The distinct subsurface configuration differences between Bogor and Kendeng Troughs are mainly in the tectonic basement involvement and the effect of the shortening on the formerly rift basin. Both Bogor and Kendeng Troughs are active petroleum systems that generate type II /III Kerogen typical of reduction zone organic material derived from transition to the shallow marine environment. The result suggests that these basins are secular from the neighboring basins with a native petroleum system specific to the palaeogeographical condition during the Paleogene to Neogene periods where the North Java systems (e.g., Northwest and Northeast Java Basin) was characterized by oxidized terrigenous type III Kerogen.


Author(s):  
B. Grasemann ◽  
D.A. Schneider ◽  
K. Soukis ◽  
V. Roche ◽  
B. Hubmann

The paleogeographic position of the central Dodecanese Islands at the transition between the Aegean and Anatolian plates plays a considerable role in understanding the link between both geologically unique domains. In this study, we investigate the tectonic history of the central Dodecanese Islands and the general correlation with the Aegean and western Anatolian and focus on the poorly studied islands of Kalymnos and Telendos. Three different major tectonic units were mapped on both islands from bottom to top: (1) The Kefala Unit consists of late Paleozoic, fossil-rich limestones, which have been deformed into a SE-vergent fold-and-thrust belt sealed by an up to 200-m-thick wildflysch-type olistostrome with marble and ultramafic blocks on a scale of tens of meters. (2) The Marina Basement Unit consists of a Variscan amphibolite facies basement with garnet mica schists, quartzites, and amphibolites. (3) Verrucano-type formation violet shales and Mesozoic unmetamorphosed limestones form the Marina Cover Unit. Correlation of these units with other units in the Aegean suggests that Kalymnos is paleogeographically located at the southern margin of the Pelagonian domain, and therefore it was in a structurally upper tectonic position during the Paleogene Alpine orogeny. New white mica 40Ar/39Ar ages confirm the Carboniferous deformation of the Marina Basement Unit followed by a weak Triassic thermal event. Single-grain white mica 40Ar/39Ar ages from pressure solution cleavage of the newly defined Telendos Thrust suggest that the Marina Basement Unit was thrusted toward the north on top of the Kefala Unit in the Paleocene. Located at a tectonically upper position, the units exposed in the central Dodecanese escaped subduction and the syn-orogenic, high-pressure metamorphism. However, these units were affected by post-orogenic extension, and the contact between the Marina Basement Unit and the non-metamorphic Marina Cover Unit has been reactivated by the cataclastic top-to-SSW, low-angle Kalymnos Detachment. Zircon (U-Th)/He ages from the Kefala and Marina Basement Units are ca. 30 Ma, which indicates that exhumation and cooling below the Kalymnos Detachment started in the Oligocene. Conjugate brittle high-angle normal fault systems, which resulted in the formation of four major WNW-ESE−trending graben systems on Kalymnos, localized mainly in the Marina Cover Unit and probably rooted in the mechanically linked Kalymnos Detachment. Since Oligo-Miocene deformation in the northern Dodecanese records top-to-NNE extension and the Kalymnos Detachment accommodated top-to-SSW extension, we suggest that back-arc extension in the whole Aegean realm and transition to the Anatolian plate is bivergent.


2014 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 297-311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy M. Kusky ◽  
Xiaoyong Li ◽  
Zhensheng Wang ◽  
Jianmin Fu ◽  
Luo Ze ◽  
...  

A review and comparison of the tectonic history of the North China and Slave cratons reveal that the two cratons have many similarities and some significant differences. The similarities rest in the conclusion that both cratons have a history of a Wilson Cycle, having experienced rifting of an old continent in the late Archean, development of a rift to passive margin sequence, collision of this passive margin with arcs within 100–200 Ma of the formation of the passive margin, reversal of subduction polarity, then eventual climactic collision with another arc terrane, microcontinental fragment, or continent. This cycle demonstrates the operation of Paleozoic-style plate tectonics in the late Archean. The main differences lie in the later tectonic evolution. The Slave’s post-cratonization history is dominated by subduction dipping away from the interior of the craton, and later incorporation into the interior of a larger continent, whereas the North China Craton has had a long history of subduction beneath the craton, including presently being located above the flat-lying Pacific slab resting in the mantle transition zone, placing it in a broad back-arc setting, with multiple mantle hydration events and collisions along its borders. The hydration enhances melting in the overlying mantle, and leads to melts migrating upwards to thermochemically erode the lithospheric root. This major difference may explain why the relatively small Slave craton preserves its thick Archean lithospheric root, whereas the eastern North China Craton has lost it.


1933 ◽  
Vol 70 (6) ◽  
pp. 241-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. C. Dunham

The Northumbrian Fault-block, forming the central part of the Pennine Chain, is a region of gently tilted Carboniferous sediments, bounded on the north, west, and south by major faultlines. It is divided naturally into two structurally complementary areas, symmetrically disposed to the north and south of the syncline of Stainmore. The present paper is concerned exclusively with the northern area, named by F. M. Trotter and S. E. Hollingworth the “Alston Block” (1928) and by H. G. A. Hickling the “Cross Fell Block” (1930). The first-named authors, who have recently completed a revision of the Geological Survey sheet covering the north-west corner of the block, have discussed in detail the structure of that district and have described the broad outlines of the tectonic history of the block (1928, 1932).


1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (8) ◽  
pp. 1140-1147 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Thériault ◽  
G. M. Ross

Sm–Nd isotopic data are presented for 23 drill-core samples from five aeromagnetically and geochronologically (U–Pb zircon) distinct domains of the Precambrian basement of northern Alberta. The domains in question are the Taltson (1.96–1.94 Ga), Buffalo Head (2.32–1.99 Ga), Chinchaga (2.19–2.09 Ga), Ksituan (1.99–1.90 Ga), and Nova (2.81 Ga). These domains are truncated to the north and south by the Great Slave Lake shear zone and the Snowbird tectonic zone, respectively.Initial εNd values are −5.0 to −9.7 for the Taltson, +0.2 to −6.3 for the Buffalo Head, +0.6 to −1.8 for the Chinchaga, −1.8 to −2.1 for the Ksituan and +5.6 for the Nova. Crustal residence model ages fall in the 2.5–2.8 Ga range. The Nd isotopic signatures may be viewed in terms of mixing a minimum of 10% Archean continental crust with a depleted-mantle component. Speculations on the tectonic history of the basement domains in question involve the assembly of Archean crustal nuclei to form the Buffalo Head – Chinchaga composite domain. Arc magmatism resulting from plate subduction to the east and west of the Buffalo Head – Chinchaga composite domain would have generated the Taltson and Ksituan domains. The Nd isotopic data suggest that the basement of northern Alberta consists of crust of late Archean crustal residence age which has been extensively remobilized in the Early Proterozoic.


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