Study on System of Faults in the Gulf of Mexico and Adjacent Region based on Gravity Data

2021 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 305-318
Author(s):  
Jie MA ◽  
Wanyin WANG ◽  
Xiangdong DU ◽  
Xingang LUO ◽  
Wenjie CAI ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. SS31-SS45
Author(s):  
Daniel Minguez ◽  
E. Gerald Hensel ◽  
Elizabeth A. E. Johnson

Interpretation of recent, high-quality seismic data in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) has led to competing hypotheses regarding the basin’s rift to drift transition. Some studies suggest a fault-controlled mechanism that ultimately results in mantle exhumation prior to seafloor spreading. Others suggest voluminous magmatic intrusion accommodates the terminal extension phase and results in the extrusion of volcanic seaward dipping reflectors (SDRs). Whereas it has been generally accepted that the plate motions between the rift and drift phases of the GOM are nearly perpendicular to each other, it has not been greatly discussed if the breakup mechanism plays a role in accommodating the transition in plate motion. We have developed a plate kinematic and crustal architecture hypothesis to address the transition from rift to drift in the GOM. We support the proposition of a fault-controlled breakup mechanism, in which slip on a detachment between the crust and mantle may have exhumed the mantle. However, we stress that this mechanism is not exclusive of synrift magmatism, though it does imply that SDRs observed in the GOM are not in this case indicative of a volcanic massif separating attenuated continental and normal oceanic crust. We support our hypothesis through a geometrically realistic 2D potential field model, which includes a magnetic seafloor spreading model constrained by recent published seismic data and analog rock properties. The 2D model suggests that magnetic anomalies near the continent-ocean transition may be related to removal of the lower continental crust during a phase of hyperextension prior to breakup, ending in mantle exhumation. The kinematics of breakup, derived from recent satellite gravity data and constrained by our spreading model and the global plate circuit, suggests that this phase of hyperextension accommodated the change in plate motion direction and a diachronous breakup across the GOM.


Geophysics ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 907-907
Author(s):  
Lewis R. Tucker

In the interest of brevity, I will summarize the points I raised and the conclusions I drew in my somewhat extended correspondence with LaFehr and Herring concerning my objections to their paper. 1) Any geologic interpretation of gravity data includes a number of assumptions. 2) Of all these assumptions, the most tenuous one is that concerning a “regional.” 3) Once assumptions have been made, the answer is only the end result of an arithmetical exercise; the conclusion has been established already. 4) In the specific case of the calculated quantity of salt in the study area in the Gulf of Mexico, many of the “facts” that had to be included in the reduction of the data are actually assumptions that, through constant repetition, are now thought of as actual knowledge. 5) The conclusion in their paper as to the quantity of salt is only one of a large family of results, though it may be in the correct magnitude.


Geophysics ◽  
2001 ◽  
Vol 66 (5) ◽  
pp. 1438-1449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiichi Nagihara ◽  
Stuart A. Hall

In the northern continental slope of the Gulf of Mexico, large oil and gas reservoirs are often found beneath sheetlike, allochthonous salt structures that are laterally extensive. Some of these salt structures retain their diapiric feeders or roots beneath them. These hidden roots are difficult to image seismically. In this study, we develop a method to locate and constrain the geometry of such roots through 3‐D inverse modeling of the gravity anomalies observed over the salt structures. This inversion method utilizes a priori information such as the upper surface topography of the salt, which can be delineated by a limited coverage of 2‐D seismic data; the sediment compaction curve in the region; and the continuity of the salt body. The inversion computation is based on the simulated annealing (SA) global optimization algorithm. The SA‐based gravity inversion has some advantages over the approach based on damped least‐squares inversion. It is computationally efficient, can solve underdetermined inverse problems, can more easily implement complex a priori information, and does not introduce smoothing effects in the final density structure model. We test this inversion method using synthetic gravity data for a type of salt geometry that is common among the allochthonous salt structures in the Gulf of Mexico and show that it is highly effective in constraining the diapiric root. We also show that carrying out multiple inversion runs helps reduce the uncertainty in the final density model.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. SAC99-SAC106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Filina ◽  
Nicholas Delebo ◽  
Gopal Mohapatra ◽  
Clayton Coble ◽  
Gary Harris ◽  
...  

A 3D gravity model was developed in the western Gulf of Mexico in the East Breaks and Alaminos Canyon protraction areas. This model integrated 3D seismic, gravity, and well data; it was constructed in support of a proprietary seismic reprocessing project and was updated iteratively with seismic. The gravity model was built from seismic horizons of the bathymetry, salt layers, and the acoustic basement; however, the latter was only possible to map in seismic data during the latest iterations. In addition, a deep layer representing the Moho boundary was derived from gravity and constrained by public-domain refraction data. A 3D density distribution was derived from the seismic velocity volume using a modified Gardner equation. The modification comprised imposing a depth dependency on the Gardner coefficient, which is constant in the classic Gardner equation. The modified coefficient was derived from well data in the study area and public-domain velocity-density data sets. The forward-calculated gravity response of the composed density model was then compared with the observed gravity field, and the mismatch was analyzed jointly by a seismic interpreter and a gravity modeler. Adjustments were then made to the gravity model to ensure that the resultant salt model was geologically reasonable and supported by gravity, seismic, and well data sets. The output of the gravity modeling was subsequently applied to the next phase of seismic processing. Overall, this integration resulted in a more robust salt model, which has led to significant improvements in subsalt seismic imaging. The analysis of the regional trend in the observed gravity field suggested that a stretched continental crust underlay our seismic reprocessing area, with an oceanic-continental transition zone located to the southeast of our reprocessing region.


2008 ◽  
Vol 179 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Rangin ◽  
Xavier Le Pichon ◽  
Nicolas Flotté ◽  
Laurent Husson

Abstract The Gulf of Mexico margin in Texas is one of the most impressive examples of starved passive margin gravity collapse systems. Growth faults developed upslope and are compensated down slope by toe folding and thrusting. On the basis of new multi-channel seismic data with high penetration (down to 11 s-twtt) we present evidences for deep crustal extension and rifting that have enhanced superficial sliding. This hypothesis is supported by a significant heat flow anomaly and crustal thinning independently deduced from gravity data. This Cenozoic rifting episode is tectonically linked to left lateral motion along the Rio Bravo fault, a reactivated branch of the Texas lineament.


2013 ◽  
Vol 01 (04) ◽  
pp. 63-67
Author(s):  
Hongzhi Song ◽  
Alexey L. Sadovski ◽  
Gary Jeffress

Author(s):  
D. J. Hall ◽  
T. D. Cavanaugh ◽  
J. S. Watkins ◽  
K. J. McMillen

Geophysics ◽  
1963 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 736-744 ◽  
Author(s):  
Garry C. Henderson

A possible structure of the earth’s crust across Campeche Escarpment, Gulf of Mexico, was resolved by utilizing the gravity measurements made on the A&M College of Texas Research Vessel HIDALGO and by combining these data with published seismic information. The La Coste‐Romberg surface‐ship gravity meter S‐9 of A&M College, owned by the Office of Naval Research, was the gravity instrument used. The method used herein effectively reduces an infinite number of possible structures to a few possible structures. A total of 915 km of continuous gravity profile was traversed from June 29 to July 1, 1961. Accuracy of the gravity profiles appears to be satisfactory for this kind of crustal investigation. This report is intended as a basis for further studies; no attempts were made to ascertain the geologic events in detail. From this investigation it appears that the escarpment is nontectonic in origin, although the possibility of a crustal fault below the escarpment cannot be ignored.


Author(s):  
Diane M. Vanderwalker

There is a widespread interest in understanding the properties of Al-base alloys so that progress can be made toward extending their present applications in the aircraft industry. Al-Zn-Mg is precipitation hardened to gain its high strength; however, during aging the formation of heterogeneous precipitates on the grain boundaries creates a precipitate-free zone in the adjacent region. Since high angle grain boundaries are not easily characterized, it is difficult to establish a relationship between the precipitate and the boundary structure. Therefore, this study involves precipitation on low angle grain boundaries where the boundary and the precipitate can be fully analyzed.


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