1,610 research outputs found
Study geomorphology, past and present, linear trench, tectonics relationship between Pyrenees and Alps
The author has identified the following significant results. ERTS-1 images obviously show up some large linear features trending N 80 E or N 30 E common to both Alps and Pyrenees. One of them, the Ligurian Fault, had been previously forecast by Laubscher in an interpretation of the Alps by the plate tectonic theory, but it extends westward farthest from the Alps, cutting the Pyrenees axis. These lineaments have been interpreted as reflections of deep seated wrench faults in the surficial part of the sedimentary series. A large set of such lineaments is perceptible in western Europe, such as the Guadalquivir Fault in southern Spain, Ligurian Fault, Insubrian Fault, Northern-Jura Fault, Metz Fault. Perhaps these may be interpreted as transform faults of the mid-Atlantic ridge or of a paleo-rift seated in the Rhine-Rhone graben
First ERTS-1 results in southeastern France: Geology, sedimentology, pollution at sea
Results obtained by four ERTS projects in southeastern France are summarized. With regard to geology, ERTS photos of Western Alps are very useful for tectonic interpretation because large features are clearly visible on these photographs even though they are often hidden by small complicated structures if studied on large scale documents. The 18-day repetition coverage was not obtained, and time-varying sedimentological surveys were impossible. Nevertheless, it was possible to delineate the variations of the shorelines in the Rhone Delta for a period covering the least 8,000 years. Some instances of industries discharging pollutant products at sea were detected, as well as very large anomalies of unknown origin. Some examples of coherent optical processing have been made in order to bring out tectonic features in the Alps mountains
Project Pyralp: Tectonics relationships between Pyrenees and Alps (Southern France)
The author has identified the following significant results. In the Eastern Aquitaine Basin in southern France, investigations using SL 3 photographs from an S190A camera reveal a slight line joining a Paleozoic trend of the Montagne Noire massif to a more recent Pyrenean fault zone of Cretaceous to Tertiary age. According to the interpretation of this line as the superficial geomorphological trace of a deep-seated fault zone, Hercynian weakness lines appear to have played a more important part than previously thought in the building of the Pyrenean range. The Lezat line is a trend of small morphological features obvious only in the photographs having the highest resolution
Tectonics relationships between Pyrenees and Alps (southern France)
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
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