scholarly journals Integrated gradient interpretation techniques for 2D and 3D gravity data interpretation

2006 ◽  
Vol 58 (7) ◽  
pp. 815-821 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hakim Saibi ◽  
Jun Nishijima ◽  
Sachio Ehara ◽  
Essam Aboud
2011 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Boszczuk ◽  
Li Zhen Cheng ◽  
Hanafi Hammouche ◽  
Patrice Roy ◽  
Sylvain Lacroix ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
sara sayyadi ◽  
Magnús T. Gudmundsson ◽  
Thórdís Högnadóttir ◽  
James White ◽  
Joaquín M.C. Belart ◽  
...  

<p>The formation of the oceanic island Surtsey in the shallow ocean off the south coast of Iceland in 1963-1967 remains one of the best-studied examples of basaltic emergent volcanism to date. The island was built by both explosive, phreatomagmatic phases and by effusive activity forming lava shields covering parts of the explosively formed tuff cones.  Constraints on the subsurface structure of Surtsey achieved mainly based on the documented evolution during eruption and from drill cores in 1979 and in the ICDP-supported SUSTAIN drilling expedition in 2017(an inclined hole, directed 35° from the vertical). The 2017 drilling confirmed the existence of a diatreme, cut into the sedimentary pre-eruption seafloor (Jackson et al., 2019). </p><p>We use 3D-gravity modeling, constrained by the stratigraphy from the drillholes to study the structure of the island and the underlying diatreme.  Detailed gravity data were obtained on Surtsey in July 2014 with a gravity station spacing of ~100 m. Density measurements for the seafloor sedimentary and tephra samples of the surface were carried out using the ASTM1 protocol. By comparing the results with specific gravity measurements of cores from drillhole in 2017, a density contrast of about 200 kg m<sup>-3</sup> was found between the lapilli tuffs of the diatreme and the seafloor sediments.  Our approach is to divide the island into four main units of distinct density: (1) tuffs above sea level, (2) tuffs below sea level, (3) lavas above sea level, and (4) a lava delta below sea level, composed of breccias over which the lava advanced during the effusive eruption.  The boundaries between the bodies are defined from the eruption history and mapping done during the eruption, aided by the drill cores. </p><p>A complete Bouguer anomaly map is obtained by calculating a total terrain correction by applying the Nagy formula to dense DEMs (5 m spacing out to 1.2 km from station, 200 m spacing between 1.2 km and 50 km) of both island topography and ocean bathymetry.  Through the application of both forward and inverse modeling, using the GM-SYS 3D software, the results provide a 3-D model of the island itself, as well as constraints on diatreme shape and depth.</p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. SJ65-SJ74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leandro B. Adriano ◽  
Paulo T. L. Menezes ◽  
Alan S. Cunha

The Barra de São João Graben (BSJG), shallow water Campos Basin, is part of the Cenozoic rift system that runs parallel to the Brazilian continental margin. This system was formed in an event that caused the reactivation of the main Precambrian shear zones of southeastern Brazil in the Paleocene. We proposed a new structural framework of BSJG based on gravity data interpretation. Magnetic data, one available 2D seismic line, and a density well-log of a nearby well were used as constraints to our interpretation. To estimate the top of the basement structure, we separated the gravity effects of deep sources from the shallow basement (residual anomaly). Then, we performed a 2D modeling exercise, in which we kept fixed the basement topography and the density of the sediments, to estimate the density of the basement rocks. Next, we inverted the residual anomaly to recover the depth to the top of the basement. This interpretation strategy allowed the identification of a complex structural framework with three main fault systems: a northeast–southwest-trending normal fault system, a northwest–southeast-trending transfer fault system, and an east–west-trending transfer fault system. These trends divided the graben into several internal highs and lows. Our interpretation was corroborated by the magnetic anomalies. The existence of ultradense and strongly magnetized elongated bodies in the basement was interpreted as ophiolite bodies that were probably obducted by the time of the shutdown of the Proterozoic Adamastor Ocean.


2021 ◽  
Vol 54 (2C) ◽  
pp. 13-28
Author(s):  
Kawtar Benyas

The analysis of the magnetic signatures and gravity gradient values of the Rehamna Massif south of the Moroccan Western Meseta by using Geosoft Oasis Montaj 7.0.1 software, allowed us to detect several useful anomalies to be exploited and which are related to magmatic bodies and structural features within the study area. These data were analyzed by applying several techniques, including the horizontal gradient filters combined with the first vertical derivative. Subsurface structures; such as geological boundaries, faults, dykes and folds, were visualized as lineaments on geophysical maps, then results were compared with structural features provided by previous studies in the region. Thus, the Rehamna Massif structural map shows sets of linear features which may represent faults or boundaries of geological structures, which can be either faults or boundaries of geological structures, and they are mostly oriented in the directions: N-S, NNE-SSW, NE-SW, E-W with the predominance of the NNE-SSW to NE-SW directions. In addition, the super position of the minerals bearing beds or formations were distinguished from gravity and magnetic data processing results. Some of the recognized anomalies are related to the existence of precious metals which belong to the granitic bodies within the study area.


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