3 research outputs found

    New Insights on Peniche Basin (West Iberian Margin) Crustal Structure Based on Gravity Data Interpretation

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    A gravimetric study has been carried out over a sector of the West Iberian Margin (WIM), constrained by well and seismic data. The analytic development was made through three main stages: the processing of different gravity datasets, the production of gravity anomaly maps and 2,5D models using the processed data, and the geophysical interpretation of maps and models. The final results of the interpretation achieved, allowed the determination of crustal structure and its variation/complexity along the WIM. The main obtained results concern the pre-saline infilling and the deep structure of the margin, which vary related to the location of first-order oblique fractures

    Análisis de la sensibilidad de las estimaciones de la profundidad del basamento en la cuenca de Madrid (España Central)

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    The Madrid basin, over 20.000 km2 , located in Central Spain. Its evolution is conditioned by basement uplifts (Central System and Toledo Mountains) during the Alpine orogeny. The Madrid basin is connected with the Loranca basin at its NE corner and with La Mancha basin to the south. Sediment thickness accumulated from Late Cretaceous to the Late Miocene, is about 3.000 m at Pradillo well, but from seismic interpretation, a depocenter associated to Central System South Thrust is inferred. For this study four different methodologies were used(“Euler Deconvolution”, “Source Parameter Imaging”, “Analytic Signal” and “Tilt Depth”), in order to obtain depth to basement estimations from aermagnetic data. These methods work for simplified source geometries, estimating depths as a good starting point for a structural interpretation. In Madrid Basin, this knowledge is important due to the geothermal and hydrological potential of the basin, as well as for CO2 storage. [RESUMEN]La cuenca de Madrid, con un área aproximada de 20.000 km2, se extiende en la zona central de la Península Ibérica. Su evolución está condicionada por el levantamiento del Sistema Central y de los Montes de Toledo durante la orogenia Alpina. La cuenca de Madrid está conectada con las cuencas de Loranca, en su límite NE, y de La Mancha por el sur. El espesor de sedimentos, con registro continuo desde el Cretácico Superior hasta el Mioceno Superior, alcanza los 3000 m en el pozo Pradillo, aunque de la interpretación sísmica se obtiene un depocentro, de mayor profundidad, adosado al cabalgamiento del Borde Sur del Sistema Central . En este trabajo se han seguido distintas metodologías para estimar la profundidad del basamento, a partir de datos aeromagnéticos. Los distintos métodos (“Deconvolucion de Euler”, “Source Parameter Imaging”, “Analytic Signal” y “Tilt Depth”) tienen en común que asumen geometrías sencillas, pero los resultados obtenidos resultan de gran interés para la interpretación estructural del basamento. En el caso de la cuenca de Madrid, este conocimiento es muy importante dado su potencial geotérmico e hidrogeológico, así como un posible uso como almacenamiento geológico
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