Electrical resistivity structure of the Flathead Basin in southeastern British Columbia, Canada

1990 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 1061-1073 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jagdish C. Gupta ◽  
Alan G. Jones

In June 1985, wide-band magnetotelluric data were acquired at 12 equally spaced sites along a 30 km profile crossing the Flathead (Kishenehn) Basin in southeastern British Columbia, Canada. These data have been modelled by both one-dimensional inverse techniques and two-dimensional forward trial-and-error fitting. The results indicate the presence in the area of the following three major zones of low electrical resistivity (10–500 Ω∙m):1. Sediments of the 10 km wide Flathead sedimentary basin, extending to a depth of about 2 km, dominate the responses in the middle of the profile.2. In the eastern part of the profile, in the area of the Lewis Range, a thin [Formula: see text] zone of low resistivity (35 Ω∙m) is imaged at a depth of some 3 km extending eastward from the edge of the basin. We associate this zone with the less dense thrusted Mesozoic clastic rocks lying directly below the Proterozoic rocks of the Lewis thrust sheet.3. Beneath the Flathead Basin is a third zone, of higher resistivity (500 Ω∙m), which extends to deep within the crust. This zone may originate from mantle upflow, as recently proposed to explain the existence of Cordilleran conductors in other localities. Additionally, to model the long-period geomagnetic transfer function responses, we are required to postulate the existence of a zone of low resistivity in the middle to lower crust, 50 km west of the survey line, corresponding to the location of the Rocky Mountain Trench.


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew J. Comeau ◽  
Michael Becken ◽  
Alexey V. Kuvshinov ◽  
Sodnomsambuu Demberel

AbstractCrustal architecture strongly influences the development and emplacement of mineral zones. In this study, we image the crustal structure beneath a metallogenic belt and its surroundings in the Bayankhongor area of central Mongolia. In this region, an ophiolite belt marks the location of an ancient suture zone, which is presently associated with a reactivated fault system. Nearby, metamorphic and volcanic belts host important mineralization zones and constitute a significant metallogenic belt that includes sources of copper and gold. However, the crustal structure of these features, and their relationships, are poorly studied. We analyze magnetotelluric data acquired across this region and generate three-dimensional electrical resistivity models of the crustal structure, which is found to be locally highly heterogeneous. Because the upper crust (< 25 km) is found to be generally highly resistive (> 1000 Ωm), low-resistivity (< 50 Ωm) features are conspicuous. Anomalous low-resistivity zones are congruent with the suture zone, and ophiolite belt, which is revealed to be a major crustal-scale feature. Furthermore, broadening low-resistivity zones located down-dip from the suture zone suggest that the narrow deformation zone observed at the surface transforms to a wide area in the deeper crust. Other low-resistivity anomalies are spatially associated with the surface expressions of known mineralization zones; thus, their links to deeper crustal structures are imaged. Considering the available evidence, we determine that, in both cases, the low resistivity can be explained by hydrothermal alteration along fossil fluid pathways. This illustrates the pivotal role that crustal fluids play in diverse geological processes, and highlights their inherent link in a unified system, which has implications for models of mineral genesis and emplacement. The results demonstrate that the crustal architecture—including the major crustal boundary—acts as a first‐order control on the location of the metallogenic belt.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Joseph Comeau ◽  
Michael Becken ◽  
James A. D. Connolly ◽  
Alexander Grayver ◽  
Alexey V. Kuvshinov ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;We investigate how a conceptual hydrodynamic model consisting of fluid localization and stagnation by thermally activated compaction can explain low-resistivity anomalies observed in the lower crust (&gt;20 km depth). Electrical resistivity models, derived from magnetotelluric data collected across the intracontinental Bulnay region, a subset of a larger regional array across central Mongolia, are generated. They reveal low-resistivity (3 - 30 &amp;#937;m) domains with a width of ~25 km and a vertical extent of &lt;10 km in the lower crust, with their tops ~5 km below the brittle-ductile transition zone. In 3-D these features appear as laterally extended (tube-like) structures, 300 km long, rather than disconnected ellipsoids. The features are oriented parallel to the adjacent Bulnay fault zone segments and perpendicular to the far-field compressive tectonic stress (i.e., northward motion from China and Tibet). These low-resistivity domains are consistent with the presence of saline metamorphic fluids. Deeper features imaged with the data include a large upper mantle conductor that we attribute to an asthenospheric upwelling, and thin lithosphere, related to intraplate surface uplift and volcanism, in agreement with recent geodynamic modelling of lithospheric removal in this region.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Based on the observed thermal structure of the crust, and assuming the mean stress at the brittle-ductile transition is twice the vertical load, the hydrodynamic model predicts that fluids would collect in zones &lt;9 km below the brittle-ductile transition zone, and the zones would have a vertical extent of ~9 km, both in agreement with the resistivity models across the Bulnay region. The hydrodynamic model also gives plausible values for the activation energy for viscous creep (270 - 360 kJ/mol), suggesting that the mechanism is dislocation creep.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;From the electrical resistivity models, the lower crustal viscous compaction-length is constrained to be ~25 km - in this region. Within the conceptual model, this length-scale is entirely consistent with independent estimates for the specific hydraulic and rheological properties of this region. In fact, this can be used to independently constrain acceptable ranges for the lower crustal effective viscosity, which is found to be low (on the order of 10^18 Pas). Accordingly, the results indicate that low-salinity fluids (likely 1 - 0.01 wt% NaCl), and correspondingly low porosities (likely 5 - 0.1 vol%), are the most plausible. These key findings suggest partial melts are not favoured to explain the anomalies. Overall, the results of this contribution imply that it is tectonic and compaction processes that control lower crustal fluid flow, rather than lithological or structural heterogeneity.&lt;/p&gt;



2019 ◽  
Vol 220 (1) ◽  
pp. 541-567 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Lee ◽  
Martyn Unsworth ◽  
Knútur Árnason ◽  
Darcy Cordell

SUMMARY Krafla is an active volcanic field and a high-temperature geothermal system in northeast Iceland. As part of a program to produce more energy from higher temperature wells, the IDDP-1 well was drilled in 2009 to reach supercritical fluid conditions below the Krafla geothermal field. However, drilling ended prematurely when the well unexpectedly encountered rhyolite magma at a depth of 2.1 km. In this paper we re-examine the magnetotelluric (MT) data that were used to model the electrical resistivity structure at Krafla. We present a new 3-D resistivity model that differs from previous inversions due to (1) using the full impedance tensor data and (2) a finely discretized mesh with horizontal cell dimensions of 100 m by 100 m. We obtained similar resistivity models from using two different prior models: a uniform half-space, and a previously published 1-D resistivity model. Our model contains a near-surface resistive layer of unaltered basalt and a low resistivity layer of hydrothermal alteration (C1). A resistive region (R1) at 1 to 2 km depth corresponds to chlorite-epidote alteration minerals that are stable at temperatures of about 220 to 500 °C. A low resistivity feature (C2) coincides with the Hveragil fault system, a zone of increased permeability allowing interaction of aquifer fluids with magmatic fluids and gases. Our model contains a large, low resistivity zone (C3) below the northern half of the Krafla volcanic field that domes upward to a depth of about 1.6 km b.s.l. C3 is partially coincident with reported low S-wave velocity zones which could be due to partial melt or aqueous fluids. The low resistivity could also be attributed to dehydration and decomposition of chlorite and epidote that occurs above 500 °C. As opposed to previously published resistivity models, our resistivity model shows that IDDP-1 encountered rhyolite magma near the upper edge of C3, where it intersects C2. In order to assess the sensitivity of the MT data to melt at the bottom of IDDP-1, we added hypothetical magma bodies with resistivities of 0.1 to 30 Ωm to our resistivity model and compared the synthetic MT data to the original inversion response. We used two methods to compare the MT data fit: (1) the change in r.m.s. misfit and (2) an asymptotic p-value obtained from the Kolmogorov–Smirnov (K–S) statistical test on the two sets of data residuals. We determined that the MT data can only detect sills that are unrealistically large (2.25 km3) with very low resistivities (0.1 or 0.3 Ωm). Smaller magma bodies (0.125 and 1 km3) were not detected; thus the MT data are not sensitive to small rhyolite magma bodies near the bottom of IDDP-1. Our tests gave similar results when evaluating the changes in r.m.s. misfit and the K–S test p-values, but the K–S test is a more objective method than appraising a relative change in r.m.s. misfit. Our resistivity model and resolution tests are consistent with the idea of rhyolite melt forming by re-melting of hydrothermally altered basalt on the edges of a deeper magma body.



2021 ◽  
Vol 929 (1) ◽  
pp. 012026
Author(s):  
E V Pospeeva ◽  
V V Potapov

Abstract The results of magnetotelluric studies (MTS) conducted in the western part of the Mountainous Altai region on the profile of the Kurai depression – lake Teletskoye are presented. The profile intersects two large tectonic units – the Mountainous Altai and Teletskaya, bounded by regional tectonic suturs of the Teletsko-Bashkausskiy, Northern Sayans, Shapshalskiy and other faults. The obtained data indicate a fairly fractional recent block divisibility of the Earth’s crust of the Mountainous Altai territory. It is shown that according to the characteristics of the electrical resistivity distribution within the studied profile, large blocks are distinguished that differ sharply in the features of the composition and structure of the Earth’s crust, as well as the manifestation intensity of deep processes. The sections constructed from magnetotelluric data allow us to trace the behavior of the main neotectonic disturbances, which are marked by subvertical zones with abnormally low resistivity values (1-5 Ohm·m).



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustafa Karaş ◽  
Serkan Üner ◽  
Sabri Bülent Tank

&lt;p&gt;Fluid contribution in a tectonic process is a crucial parameter for characterization of its products. In the geophysical point of view, illustrating the electrical resistivity structure of any tectonic system can be used to determine effects of fluid contribution. Magnetotellurics is globally used to decipher characteristics of fault zones, volcanoes and hydrothermal systems which are related to driving tectonic regime in collision and transition zones. Mt. Erciyes, which is the largest composite volcano of the Central Anatolian Volcanic Province in Turkey, developed in two particular stages during the Quaternary. Igneous activities in Ko&amp;#231;da&amp;#287; and New Erciyes stages created a plausible environment to observe dominant calc-alkaline products while alkaline and tholeiitic components are also present in the region. Geochemical evidences offer that fractional crystallization combined with low degree crustal assimilation were experienced during the formation of the volcano in addition to potential magma mixing processes occurred in the magma chambers. As part of NSF-funded Continental Dynamics/Central Anatolian Tectonics Project (CD/CAT), this study aims to investigate electrical resistivity structure beneath Mt. Erciyes by means of three-dimensional modeling of the wide-band magnetotelluric data collected at 48 sounding locations. Current model depicts a high conductivity anomaly beneath Mt. Erciyes, which corresponds to its hydrothermal system and related clay cap. Within Erciyes pull-apart basin, local branches of Ecemi&amp;#351; Fault Zone that possibly reinforced the convenient setting for the upwelling of volcanic materials, bound the interconnected highly conductive zones in shallow depths. Under these circumstances, a complex resistivity distribution arises as a consequence of various electrical transfer mechanisms contemplated for the study region.&lt;/p&gt;





1957 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Gregson

Tick paralysis continues to be one of the most baffling and fascinating tickborne diseases in Canada. It was first reported in this country by Todd in 1912. Since then about 250 human cases, including 28 deaths, have been recorded from British Columbia. Outbreaks in cattle have affected up to 400 animals at a time, with losses in a herd as high as 65 head. Although the disease is most common in the Pacific northwest, where it is caused by the Rocky Mountain wood tick, Dermacentor andersoni Stiles, it has lately been reported as far south as Florida and has been produced by Dermacentor variabilis Say, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, and A. americanum (L.) (Gregson, 1953). The symptoms include a gradual ascending symmetrical flaccid paralysis. Apparently only man, sheep, cattle, dogs, and buffalo (one known instance) are susceptible, but even these may not necessarily be paralysed.



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