369 research outputs found

    Eurekan faults on northern Ellesmere Island, Arctic Canada: from Cenozoic strike-slip tectonics to recent seismicity

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    The Eurekan deformation is a partially contractional Cenozoic tectonic event that affected large parts of the Arctic region. In the study area on northern Ellesmere Island, major NE-SW trending strike-slip faults occur, which are related to the Eurekan deformation. The outcrop data show that left-lateral strike-slip kinematics slightly dominate, but also right-lateral kinematics were documented. Cross-cutting relationships of the individual faults give evidence for multiple fault reactivations within major strike-slip zones. The reconstructed paleostress fields show two phases. The first phase started with a N-S compression and shifted over a NNE-SSW compression into a NNW-SSE compression. The second phase was a WNW-ESE compression. The paleostress field evolution reflects the movements of Greenland. During the Eurekan phase 1, Greenland moved northward and during Eurekan phase 2 it moved to the WNW. These motions likely controlled the stress field on northern Ellesmere Island. From the paleostress field analyses and the orientation of the strike-slip faults in the study area, it can be derived that the Eurekan phase 1 deformation is characterized by left-lateral strike-slip faults, whereas most-likely during Eurekan phase 2 the majority of right-lateral strike-slip faults formed. The paleostress field analysis implies that many Eurekan faults are reactivated Ellesmerian faults. Recent seismic events indicate ongoing tectonic activity at some of the major strike-slip faults. This sheds new light on the geodynamics of northern Ellesmere Island, which was mechanically coupled to the Greenland plate, and implies that under the recent stress field, earthquakes at strike-slip faults are still possible and some of these faults were active in at least three phases over the last 350 Myr

    Dynamics of interacting transport qubits

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    We investigate the electronic transport through two parallel double quantum dots coupled both capacitively and via a perpendicularly aligned charge qubit. The presence of the qubit leads to a modification of the coherent tunnel amplitudes of each double quantum dot. We study the influence of the qubit on the electronic steady state currents through the system, the entanglement between the transport double quantum dots, and the back action on the charge qubit. We use a Born-Markov-Secular quantum master equation for the system. The obtained currents show signatures of the qubit. The stationary qubit state may be tuned and even rendered pure by applying suitable voltages. In the Coulomb diamonds it is also possible to stabilize pure entangled states of the transport double quantum dots

    Dating the youngest deformation in the Alps with ESR thermochronometry

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    Low-temperature thermochronology is a useful tool to reconstruct tectonic deformation and landscape evolution within the first 2 km of the crust. It is a suitable tool to investigate deformation associated with cooling and exhumation of the lower crust in orogenic settings. Low temperature thermochronology is applied here to understand the Neogenic post-collisional extensional event that occurred in the Alps, because a gap in previous age dating exists between a thousand and a million years. Quartz is the most common mineral in the crust; occurring in magmatic as well as sedimentary and metamorphic rocks. The potential of quartz electron-spin resonance (ESR) as a radiation dosimeter has been well documented, and many studies applied the method to date sediments and heated rocks (e.g. tephra). In this study, we apply quartz ESR dating as an ultralow-temperature thermochronometer, characterized by a closure temperature of 30°-90°, and dating range of 103-107 years. We show the results of ESR thermochronometry on quartz applied to rocks from crustal-scale faults in the Central (Simplon Fault) and Eastern Alps (Brenner and Salzachtal Faults). Here, the lower crust has been tectonically exhumed, associated with exhumation of the Lepontine Dome and Tauern Window, respectively. Thermochronological data are available from this area, such as fission tracks or U-Th/He data on zircon and apatite. Results of the ESR measurements of 15 samples crossing the Brenner and Salzachtal faults (northern and western border of the Tauern Window) show that the ESR ages of quartz get younger (<1Ma) inside the western part of the Tauern Window, in accordance with fission track and (U-Th)/He ages. In general, younger ages (between 200 and 500 ka) are also obtain closer to the fault zone, localized near (e.g. Simplon Fault) or at the bottom of the valley (e.g. Brenner Fault), compared with the protolithic rocks (600-900 ka). We interpret the trend of the ESR ages as an exhumation of the isotherms due to both recent uplift of the footwall of the fault and for erosion of the valley, where the later overprints the former. These results promise to establish ESR as an ultra-low thermochronometer using quartz for the Quaternary landscape reconstruction of the Alpine chain

    Grain-size distribution dataset of supercritical flow sediments from a Gilbert-type delta that are associated with disaggregation bands

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    This is a dataset of grain-size distribution in sub- and supercritical flow sediments of a Gilbert-type delta from an outcrop in North Germany. Thirteen samples of ca 2.5 kg were dried (at 105°C), and homogenised twice with a sample divider. A representative sample of 1-2 g was then analysed using laser diffraction. The grain-size distribution of the sand has a maximum between fine to medium sand, with a long fine fraction tail down to 0.06 µm and occasional coarse fractions (up to 1.5 mm) in some samples. Specific grain-size distributions correlate with the different sedimentary bedforms from which the samples were taken. This data is important for two reasons: Firstly, sedimentary structures formed by Froude supercritical flows are controlled by grain-size. However, few studies have provided grain-size datasets from the natural record, which often have a much wider grain-size distribution than experimentally-produced supercritical flow deposits. Secondly, the sands were deformed subsequently by disaggregation bands, a type of geological fault that only develops in porous granular materials, i.e. well-sorted, medium sand. The disaggregation bands are indicative of seismic or even aseismic, creeping movement of basement faults

    The Mesozoic-Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the New Siberian Islands, NE Russia

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    On the New Siberian Islands the rocks of the east Russian Arctic shelf are exposed and allow an assessment of the structural evolution of the region. Tectonic fabrics provide evidence of three palaeo-shortening directions (NE–SW, WNW–ESE and NNW–SSE to NNE–SSW) and one set of palaeo-extension directions revealed a NE–SW to NNE–SSW direction. The contractional deformation is most likely the expression of the Cretaceous formation of the South Anyui fold–thrust belt. The NE–SW shortening is the most prominent tectonic phase in the study area. The WNW–ESE and NNW–SSE to NNE–SSW-oriented palaeo-shortening directions are also most likely related to fold belt formation; the latter might also have resulted from a bend in the suture zone. The younger Cenozoic NE–SW to NNE–SSW extensional direction is interpreted as a consequence of rifting in the Laptev Sea

    Using an OPEN UMS format for document flow formalization in medicine

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    The question about construction of medical documents by means of AURRORA MIS with the use of the Open UMS format is considered in the work. The approach suggested allows data storage in the electronic form suitable for generation of required statistical reports and different researches and preserves a possibility of correct data interpretation

    Ramsey numbers for sets of small graphs

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    AbstractThe Ramsey number r=r(G1-G2-⋯-Gm,H1-H2-⋯-Hn) denotes the smallest r such that every 2-coloring of the edges of the complete graph Kr contains a subgraph Gi with all edges of one color, of a subgraph Hi with all edges of a second color. These Ramsey numbers are determined for all sets of graphs with at most four vertices, and in the diagonal case (m=n,Gi=Hi) for all pairs of graphs, one with at most four and the other with five vertices, so as for all sets of graphs with five vertices

    Disaggregation bands as an indicator for slow creep activity on blind faults

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    Hidden, blind faults have a strong seismic hazard potential. Consequently, there is a great demand for a robust geological indicator of neotectonic activity on such faults. Here, we conduct field measurements of disaggregation bands above known underlying blind faults at several locations in Central Europe. We observe that the disaggregation bands have the same orientation as that of the faults, indicating their close connection. Disaggregation bands develop in unconsolidated, near-surface, sandy sediments. They form by shear-related reorganization of the sediment fabric, as a consequence of grain rolling and sliding processes, which can reduce the porosity. Using an analogue shearing experiment, we show that disaggregation bands can form at a velocity of 2 cm h−1, which is several orders of magnitude slower than seismogenic fault-slip velocities. Based on the field data and the experiments, we infer that disaggregation bands can form in the process zone of active blind faults and serve as an indicator of neotectonic activity, even if the fault creeps at very low slip velocity. Disaggregation bands could open a new path to detect hidden active faults undergoing aseismic movements.publishedVersio
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