Publikationsdatum:
2017-04-04
Beschreibung:
A Global Positioning System (GPS) network of 30 semi-permanent vertices known as the Victoria Land Network
for Deformation Control (VLNDEF) was set up in the Austral summer of 1998 in Northern Victoria Land (NVL),
including the permanent GPS station of Terra Nova Bay (TNB1), Antarctica.
The locations were selected according to the known Cenozoic fault framework, which is characterized by a system
of NW[U+2010]SE regional faults with right[U+2010]lateral, strike[U+2010]slip kinematics.
The TNB1 permanent GPS station is included within the VLNDEF, and was installed on a bedrock monument in
October 1998, it has been recording almost continuously up to the present. The GPS network has been surveyed
routinely every two summers, using high[U+2010]quality, dual[U+2010]frequency GPS receivers like Trimble
5700, TopCon GB100, and Ashtech Z-XII. In this study we present the results of a distributed session approach
based on Gamit/Globk 10.4 software package applied to the processing of the GPS data of the VLNDEF aimed to
obtain the preliminary framework of the active tectonics of this region of Antarctica.
An improved reference frame definition was implemented, including a new Euler rotation pole, to compute the
Antarctic intra-plate residual velocities.
The projection of the residual velocities on the main faults in NVL show present[U+2010]day activities for
some faults, including the Tucker, Leap Year, Lanterman, Aviator, and David faults, with right[U+2010]lateral
strike[U+2010]slip kinematics and local extensional and compressional components. This active fault pattern
divides NVL into eight rigid blocks, each characterized by its relative movements and rigid rotations. These show
velocities of up to several millimeters per year, which are comparable to those predicted by plate tectonic theory at
active plate margins.
During the austral summer 2010, in the framework of the Italian Antarctic campaign, field investigations at 25
geodetic stations were performed both for survey of the instruments and measurements as well as for the geological
study necessary to evaluate the geological stability of the sites. Preliminary analysis of the collected structural data
showed the stability of most of the investigated stations, thus confirming the proposed active tectonic framework
of the NVL at the regional scale.
Beschreibung:
Published
Beschreibung:
Vienna, Austria 3–8 April 2011
Beschreibung:
3.2. Tettonica attiva
Beschreibung:
reserved
Schlagwort(e):
Antarctica
;
Northern Victoria Land
;
Active Tectonics
;
GPS data
;
Geologic Setting
;
04. Solid Earth::04.07. Tectonophysics::04.07.04. Plate boundaries, motion, and tectonics
Repository-Name:
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
Materialart:
Abstract
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