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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical journal international 119 (1994), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: As part of an intensive study of a small area of oceanic lithosphere, the British Institutions Reflection Profiling Syndicate (BIRPS) acquired closely spaced deepseismic-reflection profiles over the Early Cretaceous crust of the Cape Verde abyssal plain off West Africa. The survey consisted of profiles spaced at 4 km arranged into strike lines parallel to the old sea-floor spreading axis (‘isochron’ profiles) and orthogonal dip lines oriented in the original direction of spreading (‘flow’ profiles). A large-capacity, well-tuned airgun source and very quiet shooting conditions ensured a high signal-to-noise ratio for deep reflection. Devising a strategy for mitigating contamination from ‘wrap-around’ multiples arriving from previous shots enabled us to use the minimum possible shot-point interval (50 m) allowed for collecting long (18 s) records. Data processing was oriented towards a medium with low root-mean-square velocity, steeply dipping structure, and pervasive low apparent velocity noise from diffraction at the top of the igneous crust. The contrast between the isochron and flow profiles is striking. Isochron profiles are typically highly reflective throughout the igneous crust, consisting of bright, bidirectionally dipping reflection sets that extend in places from the top of the igneous basement down to the interpreted Moho reflection. These reflections do not offset intracrustal or top-basement structure and thus are not interpreted as faults: an igneous intrusive origin seems more likely. Flow profiles are more sparsely reflective but show individual steeply dipping reflections best developed in the upper igneous crust, continuing down in places to the Moho. Dipping reflections on the flow profiles are interpreted as major normal faults since they are clearly associated with offsets of the top of the basement as well as truncation of horizontal reflections within the igneous crust. The dominant dip of these reflections is to the west towards the spreading ridge axis. Reflections from the vicinity of the Moho, while well developed in some places, are not particularly prominent across the survey area. Moho reflections appear to show a different structural relation to crustal features on the isochron and flow profiles: on isochron profiles, dipping reflections occasionally flatten out into, and may merge with, the Moho reflection; on flow profiles, as dipping crustal reflections approach the Moho reflection, they are usually abruptly cut off by it without extending deeper. This survey shows how oceanic crustal structure can vary rapidly over relatively small areas, provides convincing evidence that a structurally complex fabric dominates oceanic igneous crust, and gives a conclusive observation of faults that penetrate the entire oceanic crust.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2017-08-08
    Description: Landslides associated with flank collapse are volumetrically the most significant sediment transport process around volcanic islands. Around Montserrat, in the Lesser Antilles, individual landslide deposits have volumes (1 to 20 km3) that are up to two orders of magnitude larger than recent volcanic dome collapses (up to 0.2 km3). The largest landslide deposits were emplaced in at least two stages, initiated by the emplacement of volcanic debris avalanches which then triggered larger-scale failure of seafloor sediment, with deformation propagating progressively downslope for up to 30 km on gradients of 〈 1°. An unusually detailed seismic, side-scan sonar and bathymetric dataset shows that the largest landslide off Montserrat (forming Deposit 8) incorporated ~ 70 m of in-situ sediment stratigraphy, and comprises ~ 80% seafloor sediment by volume. Well-preserved internal bedding and a lack of shortening at the frontally-confined toe of the landslide, shows that sediment failure involved only limited downslope transport. We discuss a range of models for progressively-driven failure of in-situ bedded seafloor sediment. For Deposit 8 and for comparable deposits elsewhere in the Lesser Antilles, we suggest that failure was driven by an over-running surface load that generated excess pore pressures in a weak and deforming undrained package of underlying stratigraphy. A propagating basal shear rupture may have also enhanced the downslope extent of sediment failure. Extensive seafloor-sediment failure may commonly follow debris avalanche emplacement around volcanic islands if the avalanche is emplaced onto a fine-grained parallel-bedded substrate. The timing of landslides off Montserrat is clustered, and associated with the deposition of thick submarine pyroclastic fans. These episodes of enhanced marine volcaniclastic input are separated by relatively quiescent periods of several 100 ka, and correspond to periods of volcanic edifice maturity when destructive processes dominate over constructive processes. Highlights: ► Marine volcanic debris avalanche emplacement can lead to much larger sediment failure. ► Failure is progressive, through in situ-strata, and frontally non-emergent. ► Sediment failure propagates on very low gradients, dominating final deposit volume. ► Process involves undrained loading and/or shear rupture, and may be repeated widely. ► Landslide timing reflects timescales of volcanic edifice growth and destruction
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-10-24
    Description: Large-magnitude intraplate earthquakes within the ocean basins are not well understood. The Mw 8.6 and Mw 8.2 strike-slip intraplate earthquakes on 11 April 2012, while clearly occurring in the equatorial Indian Ocean diffuse plate boundary zone, are a case in point, with disagreement on the nature of the focal mechanisms and the faults that ruptured. We use bathymetric and seismic reflection data from the rupture area of the earthquakes in the northern Wharton Basin to demonstrate pervasive brittle deformation between the Ninetyeast Ridge and the Sunda subduction zone. In addition to evidence of recent strike-slip deformation along approximately north-south–trending fossil fracture zones, we identify a new type of deformation structure in the Indian Ocean: conjugate Riedel shears limited to the sediment section and oriented oblique to the north-south fracture zones. The Riedel shears developed in the Miocene, at a similar time to the onset of diffuse deformation in the central Indian Ocean. However, left-lateral strike-slip reactivation of existing fracture zones started earlier, in the Paleocene to early Eocene, and compartmentalizes the Wharton Basin. Modeled rupture during the 11 April 2012 intraplate earthquakes is consistent with the location of two reactivated, closely spaced, approximately north-south–trending fracture zones. However, we find no evidence for WNW-ESE–trending faults in the shallow crust, which is at variance with most of the earthquake fault models.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2014-09-15
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-01-11
    Description: Recent seafloor mapping around volcanic islands shows that submarine landslide deposits are common and widespread. Such landslides may cause devastating tsunamis, but accurate assessment of tsunami hazard relies on understanding failure processes and sources. Here we use high-resolution geophysical data offshore from Montserrat, in the Lesser Antilles, to show that landslides around volcanic islands may involve two fundamentally different sources of sediment (island-flank and larger seafloor-sediment failures), and can occur in multiple stages. A combination of these processes produces elongate deposits, with a blocky centre (associated with island-flank collapse), surrounded by a smoother-surfaced deposit that is dominated by failed seafloor sediment. The failure of seafloor sediment is associated with little marginal accumulation, and involves only limited downslope motion. Submarine landslide deposits with similar blocky and smooth-surfaced associations are observed in several locations worldwide, but the complex emplacement processes implied by this morphological relationship can only be revealed by high-resolution geophysical data. Such complexity shows that the volume of landslide deposits offshore of volcanic islands cannot simply be used in tsunami models to reflect a single-stage collapse of primary volcanic material. By applying predictive equations for tsunami amplitude to investigate general scenarios of volcanic island landslide generation, we show that the tsunami hazard associated with volcanic island collapse remains highly significant. Volcanic flank failures, even if relatively small, may generate large local tsunamis, but associated seafloor sediment failures, even if they have a much greater volume, have a substantially lower potential for tsunami generation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
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    In:  [Poster] In: EGU General Assembly 2014, 27.04.-02.05.2014, Vienna, Austria .
    Publication Date: 2014-09-15
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-01-15
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-11-15
    Type: Conference or Workshop Item , NonPeerReviewed
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2013-06-29
    Description: Turbidite paleoseismology aims to use submarine gravity flow deposits (turbidites) as proxies for large earthquakes, a critical assumption being that large earthquakes generate turbidity currents synchronously over a wide area. We test whether all large earthquakes generate synchronous turbidites, and if not, investigate where large earthquakes fail to do this. The Sumatran margin has a well-characterized earthquake record spanning the past 200 yr, including the large-magnitude earthquakes in 2004 ( M w 9.1) and 2005 ( M w 8.7). Sediment cores collected from the central Sumatran margin in 2009 reveal that surprisingly few turbidites were emplaced in the past 100–150 yr, and those that were deposited are not widespread. Importantly, slope basin deposits preserve no evidence of turbidites that correlate with the earthquakes in 2004 and 2005, although recent flow deposits are seen in the trench. Adjacent slope basins and adjacent pairs of slope basin and trench sites commonly have different sedimentary records, and cannot be correlated. These core sites from the central Sumatran margin do not support the assumption that all large earthquakes generate the widespread synchronous turbidites necessary for reconstructing an accurate paleoearthquake record.
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Evaluation of seismic reflection data has identified the presence of fluid escape structures cross-cutting overburden stratigraphy within sedimentary basins globally. Seismically-imaged chimneys/pipes are considered to be possible pathways for fluid flow, which may hydraulically connect deeper strata to the seabed. These fluid migration pathways through the overburden must be constrained to enable secure, long-term subsurface carbon dioxide (CO2) storage. We have investigated a site of natural active fluid escape in the North Sea, the Scanner Pockmark Complex, to determine the physical characteristics of focused fluid conduits, and how they control fluid flow. Here we show that a multi-scale, multi disciplinary experimental approach is required for complete characterisation of fluid escape structures. Geophysical techniques are necessary to resolve fracture geometry and subsurface structure (e.g., multifrequency seismics) and physical parameters of sediments (e.g., controlled source electromagnetics) across length scales (m to km). At smaller (mm to cm) scales, sediment cores were sampled directly and their physical and chemical properties assessed using laboratory-based methods. Numerical modelling approaches bridge the resolution gap, though their validity is dependent on calibration and constraint from field and laboratory experimental data. Further, time-lapse seismic and acoustic methods capable of resolving temporal changes are key for determining fluid flux. Future optimisation of experiment resource use may be facilitated by the installation of permanent seabed infrastructure, and replacement of manual data processing with automated workflows. This study can be used to inform measurement, monitoring and verification workflows that will assist policymaking, regulation, and best practice for CO2 subsurface storage operations.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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