Three‐dimensional gravity inversion in conjunction with a practical graphical users interface to determine the depth of sedimentary basins

1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
William R. Petrick
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 17-29
Author(s):  
Selvi Misnia Irawati ◽  
Alutsyah Luthfian ◽  
Agus Laesanpura

Baturagung Escarpment is an essential tectonic element of Java Island because it represents a transition from the Southern Mountain Block to the Kendeng Basin. This study has succeeded in producing a three-dimensional model of the Baturagung Escarpment subsurface using gravity anomaly data. The data are distributed along a regional scale transect, whose resolving capability has been tested using a checkerboard test. Our proposed geophysical model can fit the observed data very well, with a 0.77% RMS error. This model exhibits a structural depression bounded by high basement blocks below the Baturagung Escarpment, one of the basement block outcrops at Jiwo Hills. The maximum width of the depression is 10 km, with a depth exceeding 3 km in some places. The depression might be formed because of an extensional tectonic regime that prevailed during the Palaeogene, followed by volcanic arc loads' emplacement up to the early Miocene.


Geophysics ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 80 (2) ◽  
pp. G53-G66 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Bijani ◽  
Cosme F. Ponte-Neto ◽  
Dionisio U. Carlos ◽  
Fernando J. S. Silva Dias

We developed a new strategy, based on graph theory concepts, to invert gravity data using an ensemble of simple point masses. Our method consisted of a genetic algorithm with elitism to generate a set of possible solutions. Each estimate was associated to a graph to solve the minimum spanning tree (MST) problem. To produce unique and stable estimates, we restricted the position of the point masses by minimizing the statistical variance of the distances of an MST jointly with the data-misfit function during the iterations of the genetic algorithm. Hence, the 3D spatial distribution of the point masses identified the skeleton of homogeneous gravity sources. In addition, our method also gave an estimation of the anomalous mass of the source. So, together with the anomalous mass, the skeleton could aid other 3D methods with promising geometric a priori parameters. Several tests with different values of regularizing parameter were made to bespeak this new regularizing strategy. The inversion results applied to noise-corrupted synthetic gravity data revealed that, regardless of promising starting models, the estimated distribution of point masses and the anomalous mass offered valuable information about the homogeneous sources in the subsurface. Tests on real data from a portion of Quadrilátero Ferrífero, Minas Gerais state, Brazil, were performed for complementary analysis of the proposed inversion method.


2017 ◽  
Vol 60 (4) ◽  
pp. 368-383
Author(s):  
WU Zhao-Cai ◽  
GAO Jin-Yao ◽  
Ding Wei-Wei ◽  
SHEN Zhong-Yan ◽  
ZHANG Tao ◽  
...  

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