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  • 2020-2024  (78)
  • 2020-2023  (4)
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2023-09-13
    Description: At the Blanco transform fault system (BTFS) off Oregon, 138 local earthquakes and 84 double‐couple focal mechanisms from ocean‐bottom‐seismometer recordings jointly discussed with bathymetric features reveal a highly segmented transform system without any prominent fracture zone traces longer than 100 km. In the west, seismicity is focused at deep troughs (i.e., the West and East Blanco, and Surveyor Depressions). In the east, the BTFS lacks a characteristic transform valley and instead developed the Blanco Ridge, which is the most seismically active feature, showing strike‐slip and dip‐slip faulting. Sandwiched between the two main segments of the BTFS is the Cascadia Depression, representing a short intra‐transform spreading segment. Seismic slip vectors reveal that stresses at the eastern BTFS are roughly in line with plate motion. In contrast, stresses to the west are clockwise skewed, indicating ongoing reorganization of the OTF system. As we observed no prominent fracture zones at the BTFS, plate tectonic reconstructions suggest that the BTFS developed from non‐transform offsets rather than pre‐existing transform faults during a series of ridge propagation events. Our observations suggest that the BTFS can be divided into two oceanic transform systems. The eastern BTFS is suggested to be a mature transform plate boundary since ∼0.6 Ma. In contrast, the western BTFS is an immature transform system, which is still evolving to accommodate far‐field stress change. The BTFS acts as a natural laboratory to yield processes governing the development of oceanic transform faults.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The Blanco transform fault system (BTFS) northwest off the coast of Oregon is seismically very active. We used 1 year of ocean bottom seismometer data collected between September 2012 and October 2013 to locate 138 local earthquakes. The events align perfectly with the morphologic features of the BTFS, dividing the BTFS into five transform segments and two short intra‐transform spreading centers. Furthermore, we observe different seismotectonic behaviors of the western and eastern BTFS based on the along‐strike variation in morphology, magnetization, focal depth distribution, and strain partitioning. Although many segmented oceanic transform systems were formed from a single transform fault in response to rotations in plate motion, the BTFS turns out to be originated from non‐transform offsets between ridge segments, as we observed no prominent fracture zone traces neither in morphology nor gravity field data. A clockwise shift in the Juan de Fuca/Pacific pole of rotation at ∼5 Ma followed by a series of ridge propagation events initiated the formation of the BTFS, integrated each segment of the BTFS by shortening the ridge segments in between. Our observations suggest that the Blanco Ridge and the Gorda transform segment in the eastern BTFS were formed at ∼1.6 and 0.6 Ma, respectively, and ever since, the eastern BTFS became a mature transform boundary. In contrast, seismic slip vectors comparing to plate motion directions reveal that stresses in the western BTFS are systematically skewed, suggesting the immature transform plate boundary is still adjusting to the new stress regime.
    Description: Key Points: Local seismicity of the Blanco transform fault system (BTFS) reveals along‐strike variations dominated by strike‐slip and oblique dip‐slip. The BTFS developed from non‐transform offsets rather than discrete transform faults in response to plate rotation and ridge propagation. The BTFS consists of a mature plate boundary in the east and an immature system in the west, separated by a central spreading center.
    Description: China Scholarship Council http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100004543
    Description: https://doi.org/10.7914/SN/X9_2012
    Description: https://www.gmrt.org/GMRTMapTool/
    Description: https://mrdata.usgs.gov/magnetic/
    Keywords: ddc:551.22 ; Blanco transform fault system ; local seismicity ; tectonic evolution ; transform plate boundary
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-11-16
    Description: The formation of Cenozoic mountain belts in the Mediterranean realm was preceded by tens of millions of years of subduction, forming volcanic arcs, and frontal contractional systems. In addition, subduction usually involves slab rollback and formation of oceanic backarcs. Although such structure must have influenced the orogeny of Mediterranean mountain belts, no active analog has been mapped with modern crustal-scale seismic methods. Here, we study the entire Calabrian subduction system to map the structure resulting from Tethys lithosphere subduction and slab rollback, in a process that must be akin to that operating during a phase of the formation of the Mediterranean orogenic belts. We present a crustal-scale cross section of the entire Calabrian subduction system obtained from on- and off-shore wide-angle seismic data. The 2D P-wave velocity section shows spatially abrupt (〈5 km of profile distance) structural and petrological transitions from the Ionian sedimentary wedge and Calabrian arc, to the rifted NW Calabrian margin, where the Quaternary Aeolian arc is emplaced. The margin, then, transitions northwards into the Marsili backarc region, where exhumed mantle and localized volcanism occurred during its formation. This complex structure implies rapid temporal and spatial changes between magmatic and amagmatic processes, and between compressional and extensional regimes during the evolution of this subduction system. We find that some terranes involved in the Alpine orogeny share petrological and tectonic similarities with some domains of the Calabrian subduction system. Based on the results of this study we propose the Calabrian Arc system as an analog for the subduction structuration that preceded the formation of Alpine orogenic systems.
    Description: Published
    Description: 116480
    Description: 1T. Struttura della Terra
    Description: JCR Journal
    Repository Name: Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
    Type: article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2022-06-22
    Description: Oceanic transform faults (OTFs) are an inherent part of seafloor spreading and plate tectonics, whereas the process controlling their morphology remains enigmatic. Here, we systematically quantify variations in transform morphology and their dependence on spreading rate and age‐offset, based on a compilation of shipborne bathymetric data from 94 OTFs at ultraslow‐ to intermediate‐spreading ridges. In general, the length, width and depth of OTFs scale systematically better with age‐offset rather than spreading rate. This observation supports recent geodynamic models proposing that cross‐transform extension scaling with age‐offset, is a key process of transform dynamics. On the global scale, OTFs with larger age‐offsets tend to have longer, wider, and deeper valleys. However, at small age‐offsets (〈5 Myr), scatters in the depth and width of OTFs increase, indicating that small age‐offset OTFs with weak lithospheric strength are easily affected by secondary tectonic processes.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: In the past 5 decades, studies on oceanic transform faults (OTFs) have revealed significant complexity in their morphology, which calls for detailed quantitative analysis to study the processes controlling the morphology of OTFs. Using the most complete and advanced compilation of bathymetric data from ultraslow‐ to intermediate‐spreading ridges, we parameterized the morphological characteristics of OTFs and extracted length, width and depth for each transform fault from the compiled bathymetric data. Moreover, correlations between these morphological parameters and related tectonic factors (e.g., spreading rate, age‐offset) were investigated in this study. We find that correlations between morphological features and spreading rate are rather weak. Comparison of correlations suggests that age‐offset scales better with the morphological parameters, along with scatters mostly at small age‐offsets, indicating small‐age‐offset OTFs are unstable due to their weak lithospheric strength. Our observation evidences extensional tectonics at OTFs.
    Description: Key Points: We compiled multibeam bathymetric data of 94 oceanic transform faults (OTFs) to quantify their morphological characteristics. Morphology of OTFs is dominated by age‐offset rather than spreading rate. Transform valleys get systematically deeper and wider with increasing age‐offset, implying extensional tectonics at OTFs.
    Description: China Scholarship Council
    Description: http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4774185
    Keywords: ddc:551
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2022-12-01
    Description: About 25% of the Earth’s mid-ocean ridges spread at ultraslow rates of less than 20 mm/yr. However, most of these ultraslow spreading ridges are located in geographically remote areas, which hamper investigation. Consequently, how the crust forms and ages at such spreading centres, which traditional models predict to be magma-starved and cold, remains poorly understood. One of the most accessible ultra-slow spreading centres is the Mid Cayman Spreading Centre (MCSC), in the Caribbean Sea, with spreading rates of ~15-17 mm/yr. CAYSEIS project was proposed to survey the Cayman Trough area in order to obtain new data that constraints the nature of the crust, tectonic structures, lithologies outcropping and hydrothermal processes taking place in this area. Understanding the sub-seabed geophysical structure of the MCSC is key to understanding not only the lithologies and structures exposed at the seabed, but more fundamentally, how they are related at depth and what role hydrothermal fluid flow plays in the geodynamics of ultraslow spreading. CAYSEIS was a joint and multidisciplinary programme of German, British and US American top tier scientists designed for the obtaining of a new high-quality dataset, including 3D Wide-Angle Seismic (WAS), magnetic, gravimetric and seismological data. During the CAYMAN project, we took leverage of the CAYSEIS dataset to invert a 3D tomographic model of the Cayman Trough lithosphere using the Tomo3D code (Meléndez et al., 2015; 2019). This is one of the first times that the Tomo3D code is used for 3D inversion of real datasets. Thus, we are checking our results comparing them with tomographic inversions of 2D lines and testing the different parameters to obtain the more accurate and higher resolution model as possible. The results of this experiment will show not only the lithospheric structure along and across the MSCS, including the exhumed Ocean Core Complexes in the surrounding areas, but the 3D lithospheric configuration of the region which is important to understand the crustal formation processes and the evolution of ultra-slow spreading settings.
    Description: Poster
    Description: poster
    Keywords: ddc:550 ; 3D tomography ; crustal characterization ; ultra-slow spreading ; Cayman Trough
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:conferenceObject
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-01-13
    Description: During RV SONNE cruise SO111, five 50 to 60 km long seismic refraction and wide-angle profiles were shot on the eastern flank of the Juan de Fuca Ridge near 48°N, southwest of Vancouver Island, Northeastern Pacific. All profiles were shot in 1996 and run parallel to the strike of the spreading centre and sampled crust created 0.5 Myr to 2.6 Myr ago. In total, 24 ocean-bottom-hydrophones (OBH) were deployed to record shots fired using a single low-frequency airgun source (main source frequency of 4-12 Hz). 23 OBH provided data useful for geophysical data analyses.
    Keywords: Event label; File content; File format; File name; File size; HYDROCELL; North Pacific Ocean; OBH; Ocean bottom hydrophone; ocean-bottom-hydrophones; oceanic crust; RFR01/02; RFR03/04; RFR05/06; RFR07/08; seismic refraction and wide-angle data; Seismic refraction profile; SEISREFR; SO111; SO111_OBH501; SO111_OBH502; SO111_OBH503; SO111_OBH504; SO111_OBH505; SO111_OBH506; SO111_OBH511; SO111_OBH512; SO111_OBH513; SO111_OBH514; SO111_OBH515; SO111_OBH516; SO111_OBH521; SO111_OBH522; SO111_OBH523; SO111_OBH524; SO111_OBH526; SO111_OBH531; SO111_OBH532; SO111_OBH533; SO111_OBH534; SO111_OBH535; SO111_OBH536; SO111_RFR96-01; SO111_RFR96-03; SO111_RFR96-05; SO111_RFR96-08; Sonne; spreading centre; Uniform resource locator/link to metadata file; Uniform resource locator/link to sgy data file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 112 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-08-24
    Description: We provide a processed gravity (Free-air anomaly) dataset collected in the equatorial Atlantic during ILAB-SPARC experiment conducted aboard N/O Pourquoi Pas? in Fall 2018.
    Keywords: Equatorial Atlantic; Free-air gravity anomaly; GRAV; Gravimeter (Bondenseewerk KSS31); Gravimetry; gravity; ILAB-SPARC; ILAB-SPARC_Profile1A; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; Pourquoi Pas ? (2005)
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 74992 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-01-26
    Description: Underway temperature and salinity data was collected along the cruise track with two autonomous thermosalinograph (TSG) systems, each consisting of a SBE21 TSG together with a SBE38 Thermometer. Both systems worked independent from each other throughout the cruise. While temperature is taken at the water inlet in about 2.5 m depth, salinity is estimated within the interior TSG from conductivity and interior temperature. No correction against independent data was performed, neither for temperature nor for salinity. Finally, TSG1 was chosen for publication. For details to all processing steps see Data Processing Report.
    Keywords: Calculated from internal temperature and conductivity; Conductivity; DAM_Underway; DAM Underway Research Data; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Digital oceanographic thermometer, Sea-Bird, SBE 38; GPF 20‐3_090, TRANSFORMERS; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; M170; M170_0_Underway-3; Measurement container; Meteor (1986); Quality flag, salinity; Quality flag, water temperature; Salinity; Seadatanet flag: Data quality control procedures according to SeaDataNet (2010); Temperature, water; Temperature, water, internal; Thermosalinograph; Thermosalinograph (TSG), Sea-Bird, SBE 21 SEACAT; TSG
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 185983 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-01-26
    Description: Upper-ocean velocities along the cruise track of Meteor cruise M170 were continuously collected by a vessel-mounted Teledyne RD Instruments 75 kHz Ocean Surveyor ADCP. The transducer was located at 5.0 m below the water line. The instrument was operated in narrowband mode with 8 m bins and a blanking distance of 4.0 m, while 100 bins were recorded using a pulse of 1.43 s. The ship's velocity was calculated from position fixes obtained by the Global Positioning System (GPS). Heading, pitch and roll data from the ship's gyro platforms and the navigation data were used by the data acquisition software VmDas internally to convert ADCP velocities into earth coordinates. Accuracy of the ADCP velocities mainly depends on the quality of the position fixes and the ship's heading data. Further errors stem from a misalignment of the transducer with the ship's centerline. Data post-processing included water track calibration of the misalignment angle ( -0.18° +/- 0.5601°) and scale factor (0.9992 +/- 0.0098) of the Ocean Surveyor signal. The average interval was set to 60 s.
    Keywords: Acoustic Doppler Current Profiling (ADCP); Calculated; Current velocity, east-west; Current velocity, north-south; DAM_Underway; DAM Underway Research Data; DATE/TIME; DEPTH, water; Echo intensity, relative; GPF 20‐3_090, TRANSFORMERS; LATITUDE; LONGITUDE; M170; M170_0_Underway-1; Meteor (1986); Pings, averaged to a double ensemble value; Quality flag, current velocity; Vessel mounted Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler [75 kHz]; VMADCP-75
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 9276100 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-02-02
    Description: During MSM69, in November and December of 2017, an 1100-km-long transect in the equatorial Atlantic Ocean aboard the German research vessel MARIA S. MERIAN. The profiles runs from 12.8°W/2.8°S,for 75 km on the South American plate, crosses the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and terminates at 3.2°W/0.7°S, roughly covering zero-age to approximately 50 Myr old lithosphere of the African plate. The seismic refraction and wide-angle transect was covered with 71 Ocean-Bottom-Seismometers and hydrophones spaced at 10 to 20 km intervals. The profile was shot at an increased interval of 210 s to decrease the shot-induced-level, improving signal-noise-ratio and providing an average shot spacing of 410 m. Seismic data in SEGY format are reduced with 8 km/s and the origin of the time series is at -1 sec.
    Keywords: crustal structure; Event label; File content; File format; File name; File size; Maria S. Merian; Mid-Atlantic Ridge; MSM69; MSM69_10-1; MSM69_11-1; MSM69_12-1; MSM69_13-1; MSM69_14-1; MSM69_15-1; MSM69_16-1; MSM69_17-1; MSM69_18-1; MSM69_20-1; MSM69_21-1; MSM69_22-1; MSM69_23-1; MSM69_24-1; MSM69_25-1; MSM69_26-1; MSM69_27-1; MSM69_28-1; MSM69_29-1; MSM69_30-1; MSM69_3-1; MSM69_31-1; MSM69_32-1; MSM69_33-1; MSM69_34-1; MSM69_35-1; MSM69_36-1; MSM69_37-1; MSM69_38-1; MSM69_39-1; MSM69_4-1; MSM69_41-1; MSM69_43-1; MSM69_44-1; MSM69_45-1; MSM69_46-1; MSM69_47-1; MSM69_48-1; MSM69_49-1; MSM69_50-1; MSM69_5-1; MSM69_51-1; MSM69_52-1; MSM69_53-1; MSM69_54-1; MSM69_55-1; MSM69_56-1; MSM69_57-1; MSM69_58-1; MSM69_59-1; MSM69_60-1; MSM69_61-1; MSM69_62-1; MSM69_63-1; MSM69_64-1; MSM69_65-1; MSM69_67-1; MSM69_68-1; MSM69_69-1; MSM69_70-1; MSM69_7-1; MSM69_71-1; MSM69_72-1; MSM69_73-1; MSM69_74-1; MSM69_75-1; MSM69_76-1; MSM69_77-1; MSM69_8-1; MSM69_9-1; OBH; OBH01; OBH05; OBH16; OBH20; OBH31; OBH35; OBH46; OBH48; OBH51; OBH62; OBH63; OBH64; OBH65; OBH66; OBH67; OBH68; OBH69; OBS; OBS02; OBS03; OBS04; OBS06; OBS07; OBS08; OBS09; OBS10; OBS11; OBS12; OBS13; OBS14; OBS15; OBS17; OBS18; OBS19; OBS21; OBS22; OBS23; OBS24; OBS25; OBS26; OBS27; OBS28; OBS29; OBS30; OBS32; OBS33; OBS34; OBS37; OBS38; OBS39; OBS40; OBS41; OBS42; OBS43; OBS44; OBS45; OBS47; OBS49; OBS50; OBS52; OBS53; OBS54; OBS55; OBS56; OBS57; OBS58; OBS59; OBS60; OBS70; OBS71; Ocean bottom hydrophone; Ocean bottom seismometer; Optional event label; P01; SEIS; Seismic; seismic data; Uniform resource locator/link to metadata file; Uniform resource locator/link to sgy data file
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 905 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: We provide processed bathymetry and gravity (Free-air anomaly) datasets collected in the equatorial Atlantic during ILAB-SPARC experiment conducted aboard N/O Pourquoi Pas? in Fall 2018. The seismic data sample the oceanic lithosphere extending between the Romanche Transform Fault to the Charcot Fracture Zone. Refraction data were collected during the ILAB-SPARC experiment. The provided refraction data were recorded on 25 Ocean Bottom Seismometer (OBS data) instruments (from 25 to 50) and span source-receiver offsets from ~-100 km to 100 km. Reflection (multichannel seismic - MCS data), we provide are sorted as CMP gathers that were used to produce seismic sections for imaging layer 2A. The data were collected during two experiments, using different survey geometries: 1) ILAB_SPARC_CMP.segy (in 5 parts): collected during ILAB_SPARC experiment in 2018, sample the region south of the Chain Fracture Zone. The maximum source-receiver offset is ~6 km. Note that the provided data were interpolated only in the shot domain (data fold 40). 2) TransAtlantic_CMP.segy (provided in two parts): collected during iLAB TransAtlantic survey aboard M/V Western Trident in Spring 2015. The data sample the region between the Chain Fracture ZOne and Romanche Transform Fault. The maximum source-receiver offset provided is ~ 6 km. Finally, we provide our final velocity model obtained by analyzing the OBS data (the data are provided in ascii format (horizontal and vertical grid sizes are 200 m and 50 m, respectively).
    Keywords: Bathymetry; Equatorial Atlantic; gravity; MCS seismic; OBS
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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