Agricultural ground penetrating radar response to deep cultivation across a fault scarp after the 4 September 2010 Darfield earthquake, Canterbury, New Zealand

Author(s):  
D. C. Nobes ◽  
Thomas M. Wilson ◽  
Matt Cockcroft ◽  
P. Almond ◽  
Z. Whitman
2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 423-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert W. Jacob ◽  
Jeffrey M. Trop ◽  
R. Craig Kochel

Icy debris fans have recently been described as fan shaped depositional landforms associated with (or formed during) deglaciation, however, the subsurface characteristics remain essentially undocumented. We used ground penetrating radar (GPR) to non-invasively investigate the subsurface characteristics of icy debris fans (IDFs) at McCarthy Glacier, Alaska, USA and at La Perouse Glacier, South Island of New Zealand. IDFs are largely unexplored paraglacial landforms in deglaciating alpine regions at the mouths of bedrock catchments between valley glaciers and icecaps. IDFs receive deposits of mainly ice and minor lithic material through different mass-flow processes, chiefly ice avalanche and to a lesser extent debris flow, slushflow, and rockfall. We report here on the GPR signal velocity observed from 15 different wide-angle reflection/refraction (WARR) soundings on the IDFs and on the McCarthy Glacier; the effect of GPR antenna orientation relative to subsurface reflections; the effect of spreading direction of the WARR soundings relative to topographic contour; observed differences between transverse electric (TE) and transverse magnetic (TM) antenna polarization; and a GPR profile extending from the McCarthy Glacier onto an IDF. Evaluation of the WARR soundings indicates that the IDF deposits have a GPR signal velocity that is similar to the underlying glacier, and that the antenna polarization and orientation did not prevent identification of GPR reflections. The GPR profile on the McCarthy Glacier indicates that the shallowest material is layered, decreases in thickness down fan, and has evidence of brittle failure planes (crevasses). The GPR profile and WARR soundings collected in 2013 indicate that the thickness of the McCarthy Glacier is 82 m in the approximate middle of the cirque and that the IDF deposits transition with depth into flowing glacial ice.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oksana Lunina ◽  
Ivan Denisenko

<div> <p>Tectonic displacement is one of the important parameters in determining the seismic potential of an active fault. Its distribution along the fault strike is highly variable; therefore, when assessing seismic hazard, both the quality and the number of measurements of single-event throws are essential. We reconstructed and studied peculiarities of distribution of vertical displacements, which occurred on the land-based part of the Delta fault during the devasting M~7.5 Thagan earthquake of 12 January 1862. Morphologically, the seismogenic structure is expressed by the fault scarp in unconslolidated Holocene sediments, which underwent significant liquefaction and fluidization during the seismic event. In space, the fault scarp coincides with the lacustrine-deltoid and alluvial-deltoid terraces of Lake Baikal and the Selenga river and complicated by eolian deposits.</p> <p>As a basic method, we used ground-penetrating radar (GPR) in combination with data from shallow drilling, trenching and analysis of seven topographic profiles. By measuring near-field displacements at the fault planes (brittle component) and far-field displacement at a distance from the fault plane (sum of brittle and ductile components according to Homberg et al. (2017)) on GPR sections, we subtracted folding component of the total throw. Besides, we considered a number of other parameters in relation with the value of the last single-event offset in the upper sedimentary layer at a depth of the first meters. As a result, it was found that the displacement during the Tsagan earthquake occurred under NW-SE extension as motion on a stepped system of normal faults with a dip of the major plane to the NW at angles 56–77°. The total throws from GPR data on each of seven profiles were 3.83 m, 9.59 m, 2.4 m, 4.27 m, 9.28 m, 5.23 m, and 1.81 m, which are aligned with vertical fault displacements H1 with an error from 0.03 to 0.47 m. H1 was defined as a vertical distance between the intersections of the fault plane, and planes formed by the displaced original geomorphic surfaces (McCalpin, 2009). The brittle components were 2.32 m, 5.54 m, 1.93 m, 3.0 m, 6.07 m, 3.2 m, and 1.58 m, respectively. The contribution of the ductile component to the total displacement varies from 13% to 42%, the visible fault damage zone widths are from 2.55 m to 20 m. The maximal contributions of the ductile component correspond to minimal fault dips of the major fault plane and, as a whole, to the largest fault damage zone widths, which also correlate well with the offset values.</p> <p>The structural features of the rupture zones and peculiarities of throw distribution in unconsolidated sediments should be taken into account in order to avoid underestimating the magnitudes of the normal fault earthquakes and their seismic effect. In the case of soft sediments of mixed rheology (competent and incompetent), obviously, one should expect large values of total displacements and wider zones of deformations, in comparison with homogeneous sections. Acknowledgments: The reported study was partly funded by RFBR, project number 19-35-90003.</p> </div>


2013 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 26-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colette C.A. Starheim ◽  
Christopher Gomez ◽  
Justin Harrison ◽  
Claire Kain ◽  
Nicholas J. Brewer ◽  
...  

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