Crustal thickness variations between the Greenland and Ellesmere Island margins determined from seismic refraction

1994 ◽  
Vol 31 (9) ◽  
pp. 1407-1418 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Ruth Jackson ◽  
I. Reid

Two densely sampled marine refraction lines were shot in northern Baffin Bay on the shelves of Devon and Ellesmere islands (North American plate) and Greenland (Greenland plate). A total of 11 ocean-bottom seismometers recorded the airgun signals. The processed data were analyzed by the use of ray tracing and amplitude modelling. Two-dimensional models were derived that reproduce the characteristics of the observed data. A 5 km deep sedimentary basin was identified on the south end of line 3. On both lines the crustal velocity has a range of 5.7–6.6 km/s. Midway along the line on the shelf of Devon and Ellesmere islands, the Moho shallows abruptly northward from 27 to 20 km. The thinned crust is not overlain by a sedimentary basin to compensate for the elevated Moho, suggesting this is not an extensional feature. The thickness of the crust adjacent to northwest Greenland increases from south (22 km) to north (37 km). The thickening occurs in two stages: a sharp increase in the depth to Moho northwest of the sedimentary basin followed by a gradual deepening to the end of the line. The thin crust on the shelf of Ellesmere Island is located adjacent to the thick crust of Greenland. Plate reconstructions based on regional magnetic anomalies and transform faults indicate that Greenland is a separate plate. The crustal structure revealed by seismic refraction and reflection profiles and the variations in the depth to Moho are consistent with the plate boundary occurring between the refraction lines.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Hensen ◽  
Pedro Terrinha ◽  
Joāo Duarte ◽  
Norbert Kaul ◽  
Mark Schmidt ◽  
...  

<p>Vast areas of the deep ocean floor are still insufficiently explored with respect to tectonic processes, exchange processes between the lithosphere and the ocean, and potential deep chemosynthetic energy sources for life. Transform faults and fracture zones, which are dominant seafloor morphological features in the abyssal ocean, deserve specific attention in this regard as they provide potential pathways for fluid recycling. One of them is the Gloria Fault, a unique feature in the Central North Atlantic. It has been the source of large magnitude earthquakes (namely the 1941, M8.4, the second largest instrumental earthquake on a fracture zone) and is a special case of a plate boundary, corresponding to the transform reactivation of an old oceanic fracture zone. Seismic refraction has shown an anomalous layer between normal lower crust and uppermost mantle, possibly a 4 km thick layer of hydrated mantle. We present first results of RV Meteor cruise M162 (March-April 2020) dedicated to the groundtruthing of potential fluid emanation sites.</p>


1978 ◽  
Vol 15 (9) ◽  
pp. 1508-1525 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. D. Hyndman ◽  
G. C. Rogers ◽  
M. N. Bone ◽  
C. R. B. Lister ◽  
U. S. Wade ◽  
...  

The region of the Explorer spreading centre off Vancouver Island, British Columbia, has been studied through a marine geophysical survey. Earthquake epicentres located by three ocean bottom seismometers confirm that the boundary between the Pacific plate and the Explorer plate (the northern extension of the Juan de Fuca plate) at present lies along the Sovanco fracture zone, the Explorer ridge, and the Dellwood Knolls. The epicentres of earthquakes in this area as determined by the onshore seismic network are found to be subject to significant errors. The ocean bottom seismometers also have been used for a detailed seismic refraction line just to the north of the Explorer spreading centre employing explosives and a large airgun as sources. A preliminary analysis of the data indicates a fairly typical crustal structure but a shallow and low velocity mantle near the ridge crest, and illustrates the value of ocean bottom seismometers in oceanic refraction studies. A new geothermal heat flux probe was employed in this study that permitted repeated 'pogostick' penetrations without raising the instrument to the surface. Six profiles with a total of 112 penetrations provided valuable data on the nature of hydrothermal circulation in the oceanic crust. Eleven standard heat probe stations provided some restraints on the poorly known age of the oceanic crust along the margin. Seismic reflection profiles using a 3.5 kHz system, a high resolution pulser profiler, and a large airgun were used as aids in the interpretation of the seismic and heat flow data.


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (11) ◽  
pp. 1857-1870 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonya A. Dehler ◽  
Ron M. Clowes

The active margin between the continental North American plate and oceanic Pacific plate west of the Queen Charlotte Islands was the site of an extensive onshore–offshore seismic refraction project in 1983. An airgun line shot over two ocean-bottom seismographs (OBS's) and a 32-charge explosion line recorded on the two OBS's and eight land-based seismographs (LBS's) deployed across northern Moresby Island were selected to study the structure of the predominantly transform Queen Charlotte Fault Zone and the associated offshore terrace. Two-dimensional ray tracing and synthetic seismogram modelling produced a pronounced laterally varying velocity structural model showing three major crustal components (oceanic, terrace, and continental) separated by an outer, crustally pervasive fault and active Queen Charlotte Fault, respectively. The 3 km thick block-faulted upper terrace unit, overlain by deformed sediments, is indistinguishable from adjacent oceanic sediments and upper crustal basalts located to the west. The upper part of the 10–17 km thick lower terrace unit has anomalously low velocities relative to the adjacent oceanic and continental crustal units. A high gradient increases terrace velocity rapidly with depth until the contrast becomes negligible at approximately 17 km depth. Changes in depth to Moho beneath the terrace suggest an increase in eastward Moho dip from 2–5 °observed west of the terrace to 19 °below it. Tectonic mechanisms proposed to explain the anomalous terrace structure involve sediment accretion during subduction of oceanic lithosphere, alternating or combined with compressive upthrusting of material along near-vertical fault planes during periods of active transform motion.


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (7) ◽  
pp. 1392-1407 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Todd ◽  
I. Reid

A seismic-refraction survey providing deep crustal structural information on the continent–ocean boundary south of Flemish Cap on the east coast of Canada was carried out using large air-gun sources and ocean-bottom seismometers. The seismic-refraction results and gravity modelling suggest that thinned continental crust extends 25 km seaward of the shelf break. The transition from continental to oceanic crust with a main crustal layer p-wave velocity of 7.3 km/s extends seaward over 100 km to the south. One refraction profile with thin (~4 km) oceanic crust was probably shot on, or very near, the trace of a fracture zone. Previous plate reconstructions have suggested that Cretaceous-age sea-floor spreading south of Flemish Cap occurred as a series of short spreading segments offset by transform fauits, or by asymmetric rifting between Iberia and Flemish Cap. This study suggests that an oblique shear margin may have formed south of Flemish Cap. possibly as a result of transcurrent motion between Flemish Cap and Iberia.


1994 ◽  
Vol 119 (3) ◽  
pp. 791-808 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takaya Iwasaki ◽  
Markvard A. Sellevoll ◽  
Toshihiko Kanazawa ◽  
Tor Veggeland ◽  
Hideki Shimamura

2001 ◽  
Vol 106 (B12) ◽  
pp. 30689-30699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kei Katsumata ◽  
Toshinori Sato ◽  
Junzo Kasahara ◽  
Naoshi Hirata ◽  
Ryota Hino ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 75 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon B. Curry ◽  
B. J. Bluck ◽  
C. J. Burton ◽  
J. K. Ingham ◽  
David J. Siveter ◽  
...  

I. ABSTRACT: Research interest in the Highland Border Complex has been pursued sporadically during the past 150 years. The results and conclusions have emphasised the problems of dealing with a lithologically disparate association which crops out in isolated, fault-bounded slivers along the line of the Highland Boundary fault. For much of the present century, the debate has centred on whether the rocks of the complex have affinities with the Dalradian Supergroup to the N, or are a discrete group. Recent fossil discoveries in a wide variety of Highland Border rocks have confirmed that many are of Ordovician age, and hence cannot have been involved in at least the early Grampian deformational events (now accurately dated as pre-Ordovician) which affect the Dalradian Supergroup. Such palaeontological discoveries form the basis for a viable biostratigraphical synthesis. On a regional scale, it is apparent that the geological history of the Highland Border rocks must be viewed in the context of plate boundary tectonism along the entire northwestern margin of Iapetus during Palaeozoic times.II. ABSTRACT: Silicified articulate brachiopods from the Lower Ordovician (Arenig) Dounans Limestone are extremely rare but the stratigraphically diagnostic generaArchaeorthisSchuchert and Cooper, andOrthidiumHall and Clarke, have been identified. In addition, three specimens with characteristic syntrophiid morphology have been recovered. Inarticulate brachiopods are known from Stonehaven and Bofrishlie Burn near Aberfoyle, and have also been previously recorded from Arran.III. ABSTRACT: Micropalaeontological investigation of the Highland Border Complex has produced a range of microfossils including chitinozoans, coleolids, calcispheres and other more enigmatic objects. The stratigraphical ranges of the species lie almost entirely within the Ordovician and reveal a scatter of ages for different lithologies from the Arenig through to the Caradoc or Ashgill, with a pronounced erosional break between the Llandeilo and the Caradoc.IV. ABSTRACT: A Lower Ordovician (Arenig Series) silicified ostracode fauna from the Highland Border Dounans Limestone at Lime Craig Quarry, Aberfoyle, Central Scotland, represents the earliest record of this group of Crustacea from the British part of the early Palaeozoic ‘North American’ plate.V. ABSTRACT: Palaeontological age determinations for a variety of Highland Border rocks are presented. The data are based on the results of recent prospecting which has demonstrated that macro- and microfossils are present in a much greater range of Highland Border lithologies than previously realised. Data from other studies are also incorporated, as are modern taxonomie re-assessments of older palaeontological discoveries, in a comprehensive survey of Highland Border biostratigraphy. These accumulated data demonstrate that all fossiliferous Highland Border rocks so far discovered are of Ordovician age, with the exception of the Lower Cambrian Leny Limestone.VI. ABSTRACT: The Highland Border Complex consists of at least four rock assemblages: a serpentinite and possibly other ophiolitic rocks of Early or pre-Arenig age; a sequence of limestones and conglomerates of Early Arenig age; a succession of dark shales, cherts, quartz wackes, basic lavas and associated volcanogenic sediments of Llanvirn and ? earlier age; and an assemblage of limestones, breccias, conglomerates and arenites with subordinate shales of Caradoc or Ashgill age. At least three assemblages are divided by unconformities and in theirmost general aspect have similarities with coeval rocks in western Ireland.The Highland Border Complex probably formed N of the Midland Valley arc massif in a marginal sea comparable with the Sunda shelf adjacent to Sumatra–Java. Strike-slip and thrust emplacement of the whole Complex in at least four episodes followed the probable generation of all or part of its rocks by pull-apart mechanisms.


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