58 research outputs found

    Preliminary Results of a Seismic Refraction Study in the Meriadzek-Trevelyan Area, Bay of Biscay

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    Seismic refraction studies over the Meriadzek-Trevelyan area in the north of the Bay of Biscay have established four main geological sequences : Cenozoic (1.9 to 2.8 km/s) ; Cretaceous (3.2 to 4.0 km/s); lower to middle Mesozoic (4.5 to 5.0 km/s) ; pre-Mesozoic (5.4 to 6.3 km/s). These agree broadly with the adjoining Western Approaches and English Channel areas to the northeast. The sub-sedimentary structure between the Meriadzek Terrace and the Trevelyan escarpment is of continental origin having a block-faulted pattern and is interpreted as a southwestward prolongation of the continental structure. The blockfaulted form is considered to have originated during the rifting of the Armorican Continental margin and may have been influenced by a tectonic pattern caused by the earlier activity of the South Armorican shear zone. [NOT CONTROLLED OCR

    Deep structure of the Armorican Basin (Bay of Biscay): a review of Norgasis seismic reflection and refraction data

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    International audienceThe Bay of Biscay is bounded to the North by the North Biscay margin, which comprises the Western Approaches and Armorican segments. In the 1970s and 1980s, most researchers considered this margin typical of a non-volcanic passive margin: It is characterized by a striking succession of tilted blocks beneath which occurs the S reflector and the continent/ocean boundary is abrupt. This paper examines the Armorican segment and is based on a study of all early seismic profiles together with new multichannel reflection and refraction seismic data (NORGASIS cruise). An important result is the discovery of a 80-km wide Ocean-Continent Transition zone that coincides with the Armorican Basin (a deep sedimentary basin). It is characterized by a High-Velocity Layer-Crust (7.4-7.5 km/s) overlain by sediments. The other results are: i) the main crustal thinning occurs exclusively under the narrow continental slope. ii) The tilted blocks and the S-reflector are observed only at the base of the continental slope in the narrow domain called "neck area". iii) the North Biscay Ridge is a large oceanic plateau present only off the NW Armorican margin rather than a long ridge elongated off the whole North Biscay Margin

    A Miocene tectonic inversion in the Ionian Sea (Central Mediterranean): evidence from multi-channel seismic data

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    It is widely accepted that the Central and Eastern Mediterranean are remnants of the Neo-Tethys. However, the orientation and timing of spreading of this domain remain controversial. Here, we present time migrated and pre-stack depth migrated NW-SE oriented Archimede (1997) lines together with the PrisMed01 (1993) profile to constrain the evolution of the Ionian basin. Our interpretation allows us to identify a large-scale set of SW-NE striking reverse faults beneath the Ionian Abyssal Plain. These primarily NW vergent faults are characterized by a spacing comprised between 10 to 20 km and a dip ranging from 60 to 65{degree sign}. Following very recent paleogeographic reconstructions, we propose that the set of N{degree sign}55 features initially formed as normal faults during the NW-SE trending seafloor spreading of the Ionian basin after its late Triassic-early Jurassic rifting. Based on geometric comparisons with the intraplate deformation observed beneath the Central Indian Ocean, we show that the inherited oceanic normal faults were reactivated under compression as reverse faults. Well-developed Tortonian syntectonic basins developed NW of the major faults and the base of the Messinian evaporites (Mobile Unit) is slightly folded by the activity of the faults. We show that 3-4 km of total shortening occurs over a 80 km wide area beneath the Ionian Abyssal Plain, resulting in a bulk shortening of 3.5-5 %. We propose a link between the Tortonian-early Messinian inversion of the fault pattern and a plate tectonic reorganization prior to the main phase of back-arc opening of the Tyrrhenian domain

    Tectonic history of northern New Caledonia Basin from deep offshore seismic reflection: Relation to late Eocene obduction in New Caledonia, southwest Pacific

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    International audienceNew, high-quality multichannel seismic reflection data from the western New Caledonia offshore domain allow for the first time the direct, continuous connection of seismic reflectors between the Deep Sea Drilling Project 208 drill hole on the Lord Howe Rise and the New Caledonia Basin. A novel seismic interpretation is hence proposed for the northern New Caledonia Basin stratigraphy, which places the Eocene/Oligocene unconformity deeper than previously thought and revisits the actual thickness of the pre-Oligocene sequences. A causal link is proposed between the obduction of the South Loyalty Basin over New Caledonia (NC) and the tectonic history of the northern New Caledonia Basin. Here it is suggested that as the South Loyalty Basin was being obducted during early Oligocene times, the NC Basin subsided under the effect of the overloading and underthrusted to accommodate the compressional deformation, which resulted in (1) the uplift of the northern Fairway Ridge and (2) the sinking of the western flank of New Caledonia. This event also had repercussions farther west with the incipient subsidence of the Lord Howe Rise

    Limits of the seismogenic zone in the epicentral region of the 26 December 2004 great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake: Results from seismic refraction and wide-angle reflection surveys and thermal modeling

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    The 26 December 2004 Sumatra earthquake (Mw = 9.1) initiated around 30 km depth and ruptured 1300 km of the Indo-Australian Sunda plate boundary. During the Sumatra OBS (ocean bottom seismometer) survey, a wide angle seismic profile was acquired across the epicentral region. A seismic velocity model was obtained from combined travel time tomography and forward modeling. Together with reflection seismic data from the SeaCause II cruise, the deep structure of the source region of the great earthquake is revealed. Four to five kilometers of sediments overlie the oceanic crust at the trench, and the subducting slab can be imaged down to a depth of 35 km. We find a crystalline backstop 120 km from the trench axis, below the fore arc basin. A high velocity zone at the lower landward limit of the raycovered domain, at 22 km depth, marks a shallow continental Moho, 170 km from the trench. The deep structure obtained from the seismic data was used to construct a thermal model of the fore arc in order to predict the limits of the seismogenic zone along the plate boundary fault. Assuming 100C-150C as its updip limit, the seismogenic zone is predicted to begin 530 km from the trench. The downdip limit of the 2004 rupture as inferred from aftershocks is within the 350C 450C temperature range, but this limit is 210-250 km from the trench axis and is much deeper than the fore arc Moho. The deeper part of the rupture occurred along the contact between the mantle wedge and the downgoing plate

    Formation and deformation of hyperextended rift systems: Insights from rift domain mapping in the Bay of Biscay-Pyrenees

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    International audienceThe Bay of Biscay and the Pyrenees correspond to a Lower Cretaceous rift system including both oceanic and hyperextended rift domains. The transition from preserved oceanic and rift domains in the West to their complete inversion in the East enables us to study the progressive reactivation of a hyperextended rift system. We use seismic interpretation, gravity inversion, and field mapping to identify and map former rift domains and their subsequent reactivation. We propose a new map and sections across the system illustrating the progressive integration of the rift domains into the orogen. This study aims to provide insights on the formation of hyperextended rift systems and discuss their role during reactivation. Two spatially and temporally distinct rift systems can be distinguished: the Bay of Biscay-Parentis and the Pyrenean-Basque-Cantabrian rifts. While the offshore Bay of Biscay represent a former mature oceanic domain, the fossil remnants of hyperextended domains preserved onshore in the Pyrenean-Cantabrian orogen record distributed extensional deformation partitioned between strongly segmented rift basins. Reactivation initiated in the exhumed mantle domain before it affected the hyperthinned domain. Both domains accommodated most of the shortening. The final architecture of the orogen is acquired once the conjugate necking domains became involved in collisional processes. The complex 3-D architecture of the initial rift system may partly explain the heterogeneous reactivation of the overall system. These results have important implications for the formation and reactivation of hyperextended rift systems and for the restoration of the Bay of Biscay and Pyrenean domain

    The Mediterranean Ridge: A mass balance across the fastest growing complex on Earth

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    Depth migration of seismic reflection profiles across the Mediterranean Ridge accretionary complex between the African and Eurasian blocks illustrates profound variations in the geometry and internal structure along strike. Structural interpretations of four cross sections, together with bathymetric and acoustic surface information and drilling data, are used to volumetrically balance the amount of subduction versus accretion with time. Results suggest the existence of three distinct scenarios, with a jump in décollement in the west, intense backthrusting in the central part between Libya and Crete, and transcurrent tectonism in the east. The onset of accretion coincides with exhumation of thrust sheets (∼19 Ma), followed by rapid sediment accretion with thick, evaporite-bearing incoming successions facilitating outward growth of the wedge. The minimum rate of accretion (20–25% of the total sediment supply) is observed in the central portion where the ridge suffers maximum deformation. Here the indenting leading edge of the African Plate apparently forces the sediment into subduction, or local underplating. In contrast, an estimated 40–60% of the available sedimentary input was accreted in the western domain where collision is less accentuated. The results support the hypothesis that highly destructive forearc collisional events, like slab break off and exhumation of thrust sheets, can be followed by periods of accretion and continuous growth of accretionary wedges

    Reflection seismic profiles from the Central Ionian Sea (Mediterranean) and their geodynamic interpretation

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    Five reflection seismic profiles from the borderland between Messina Abyssal Plain and Malta Ridge (= Medina Rise), recorded during "Meteor" cruise no. 50 in 1978, are described. The subbottom/bottom structures are interpreted as a pattern of broad grabens and intercalated SW-NE striking narrow horsts. Within the grabens great thicknesses of Messinian evaporites as well as of Quaternary turbiditic sediments, depending on the respective differential sinking, were accumulated. Some of the horsts rise above the surrounding seafloor. Ontop of the horsts, being mainly composed of pre-Messinian series, only little or no evaporites at all were deposited. The cover of Quaternary sediments depends on the position of the horst with respect to the seafloor. The thickness of Pliocene sediments is constant within the whole studied area. The authors conclude from the observations that the pattern of horsts and grabens acted already during Messinian time producing the variable thickness of the evaporite layer. The relative movements between grabens and horsts as well as a general sinking of the whole area must have acted also in Pliocene and Quaternary time
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