Satellite gravimetry and lithospheric stress

Author(s):  
Mehdi Eshagh
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 1115
Author(s):  
Aleš Bezděk ◽  
Jakub Kostelecký ◽  
Josef Sebera ◽  
Thomas Hitziger

Over the last two decades, a small group of researchers repeatedly crossed the Greenland interior skiing along a 700-km long route from east to west, acquiring precise GNSS measurements at exactly the same locations. Four such elevation profiles of the ice sheet measured in 2002, 2006, 2010 and 2015 were differenced and used to analyze the surface elevation change. Our goal is to compare such locally measured GNSS data with independent satellite observations. First, we show an agreement in the rate of elevation change between the GNSS data and satellite radar altimetry (ERS, Envisat, CryoSat-2). Both datasets agree well (2002–2015), and both correctly display local features such as an elevation increase in the central part of the ice sheet and a sharp gradual decline in the surface heights above Jakobshavn Glacier. Second, we processed satellite gravimetry data (GRACE) in order for them to be comparable with local GNSS measurements. The agreement is demonstrated by a time series at one of the measurement sites. Finally, we provide our own satellite gravimetry (GRACE, GRACE-FO, Swarm) estimate of the Greenland mass balance: first a mild decrease (2002–2007: −210 ± 29 Gt/yr), then an accelerated mass loss (2007–2012: −335 ± 29 Gt/yr), which was noticeably reduced afterwards (2012–2017: −178 ± 72 Gt/yr), and nowadays it seems to increase again (2018–2019: −278 ± 67 Gt/yr).


2021 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-41
Author(s):  
A.A. Volchek ◽  
◽  
D.O. Petrov ◽  

A review of modern tools of global monitoring of soil moisture by means of remote sensing of the Earth’s surface is presented. The characteristic features of the use of orbital radiometers and radars of C, X and L microwave bands for estimating the volumetric soil moisture at a depth of 5 cm and the root layer of vegetation are considered. A review of the capabilities of satellite gravimetry to assess the land water equivalent thickness is made. A number of sources have been proposed for obtaining estimates of soil water content from satellite based radiometric devices and orbital gravimetric systems. Based on the analysis of scientific research papers, the complexity of monitoring the level of fire danger indices in forests is shown, and the prospects of assessing soil moisture in agricultural regions using microwave orbital instruments are demonstrated, and the adequacy of calculating the moisture content in soil at a depth of up to one meter using satellite gravimetry is described.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
April Allen Langhans ◽  
Robert Moucha ◽  
Michael Keith Paciga

<p>The feedback between climate driven processes; weathering, erosion, sediment transport, and deposition, and extensional tectonics is limited to a few studies (Burov and Cloething, 1997; Burov and Poliakov, 2001; Bialas and Buck, 2009; Theunissen and Huismans, 2019; Andrés-Martínez et al., 2019) despite these processes having been shown to impact the stress state and deformation along active orogens (Koons, 1989; Molnar and England, 1990; Avouac and Burov, 1996; Willett, 1999). Here we utilize a fully coupled landscape evolution and thermomechanical extensional model to investigate the potential impact on faulting and extension due to lake loading changes driven by changes in climate on processional timescales. Fault analyses focusing on heave, throw, and magnitude of dip on faults generated within each model are used to characterize individual faults response to stress changes and rift basin evolution. Preliminary results indicate that fluctuations in lake levels in response to climate change may impact the lithospheric stress state by changing both fault and basin geometries within an extensional basin.</p>


SEG Discovery ◽  
2000 ◽  
pp. 1-20
Author(s):  
JEREMY P. RICHARDS

ABSTRACT Large-scale crustal lineaments are recognized as corridors (up to 30 km wide) of aligned geological, structural, geomorphological, or geophysical features that are distinct from regional geological trends such as outcrop traces. They are commonly difficult to observe on the ground, the scale of the features and their interrelationships being too large to map except at a regional scale. They are therefore most easily identified from satellite imagery and geophysical (gravity, magnetic) maps. Lineaments are believed to be the surface expressions of ancient, deep-crustal or trans-lithospheric structures, which periodically have been reactivated as planes of weakness during subsequent tectonic events. These planes of weakness, and in particular their intersections, may provide high-permeability channels for ascent of deeply derived magmas and fluids. Optimum conditions for magma penetration are provided when these structures are placed under tension or transtension. In regions of subduction-related magmatism, porphyry copper and related deposits may be generated along these lineaments because the structures serve to focus the ascent of relatively evolved magmas and fluid distillates from deep-crustal magma reservoirs. However, lineament intersections can only focus such activity where a magma supply exists, and when lithospheric stress conditions permit. A comprehensive understanding of regional tectono-magmatic history is therefore required to interpret lineament maps in terms of their prospectivity for mineral exploration.


Author(s):  
Reiner Rummel ◽  
Martin Horwath ◽  
Weiyong Yi ◽  
Alberta Albertella ◽  
Wolfgang Bosch ◽  
...  

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