scholarly journals Tectonic structure and volcanic centers at the eastern edge of the aegean volcanic arc around Nisyros island

2001 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 289 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. PAPANIKOLAOU ◽  
P. NOMIKOU

The recent volcanic activity at the eastern edge of the Aegean Volcanic Arc is limited within a neotectonic graben structure which is developed in an E-W general direction between the alpine basement of Kos Island to the north and the alpine basement of Tilos Island to the south. In between the boundary faults of the neotectonic graben there is an extended volcanic area comprising several individual volcanic centers, which penetrate through the thick post-alpine sedimentary deposits of the graben.

2020 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma J. Liu ◽  
Kieran Wood ◽  
Alessandro Aiuppa ◽  
Gaetano Giudice ◽  
Marcello Bitetto ◽  
...  

AbstractThe South Sandwich Volcanic Arc is one of the most remote and enigmatic arcs on Earth. Sporadic observations from rare cloud-free satellite images—and even rarer in situ reports—provide glimpses into a dynamic arc system characterised by persistent gas emissions and frequent eruptive activity. Our understanding of the state of volcanic activity along this arc is incomplete compared to arcs globally. To fill this gap, we present here detailed geological and volcanological observations made during an expedition to the South Sandwich Islands in January 2020. We report the first in situ measurements of gas chemistry, emission rate and carbon isotope composition from along the arc. We show that Mt. Michael on Saunders Island is a persistent source of gas emissions, releasing 145 ± 59 t day−1 SO2 in a plume characterised by a CO2/SO2 molar ratio of 1.8 ± 0.2. Combining this CO2/SO2 ratio with our independent SO2 emission rate measured near simultaneously, we derive a CO2 flux of 179 ± 76 t day−1. Outgassing from low temperature (90–100 °C) fumaroles is pervasive at the active centres of Candlemas and Bellingshausen, with measured gas compositions indicative of interaction between magmatic fluids and hydrothermal systems. Carbon isotope measurements of dilute plume and fumarole gases from along the arc indicate a magmatic δ13C of − 4.5 ± 2.0‰. Interpreted most simply, this result suggests a carbon source dominated by mantle-derived carbon. However, based on a carbon mass balance from sediment core ODP 701, we show that mixing between depleted upper mantle and a subduction component composed of sediment and altered crust is also permissible. We conclude that, although remote, the South Sandwich Volcanic Arc is an ideal tectonic setting in which to explore geochemical processes in a young, developing arc.


2002 ◽  
Vol 4 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 69-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edouard POTY ◽  
Luc HANCE ◽  
Alan LEES ◽  
Michel HENNEBERT

Six paleogeographic sedimentation areas (s. a.) are recognized in the Namur-Dinant Basin: (1) the Hainaut s. a., (2) the Namur s. a., (3) the Condroz s. a., (4) the Dinant s. a., (5) the Visé-Maastricht s. a., and (6) the southern Avesnois s. a. (only in northern France). Together with the sea-level variations (third-order sequences), local controls influenced the nature of the sedimentary deposits, so the lithostratigraphic successions in each sedimentation area are distinctive. The depositional setting was that of a carbonate platform which evolved from a ramp in the early Tournaisian to a rimmed shelf during the early Viséan and then to a regionally extensive shelf during the middle and late Viséan. Before the Livian, open marine fades were developed to the south, but from the Livian onwards open marine facies were restricted to the north while evaporites developed in the south. This inversion of the normal pattern was probably related to an early phase of Variscan shortening. Dinantian biostratigraphy is mainly based upon foraminifera, rugose corals and conodonts. Fifty formations (including members), 3 groups and 2 informal lithostratigraphic units are briefly described.


Author(s):  
A. G. Granovsky ◽  
N. V. Granovskya

The tectonic structure in the junction zone of the East European and Scythian platforms of Rostov region has been considered. Different ages and ranks of Precambrian and Phanerozoic tectonic structures, their correlation within the studied area and tectonic zoning scheme are presented. The structure and composition of rock complexes, formation conditions and their tectonic development stages are characterized. The East European platform within the described territory is represented by two disconnected fragments of the Russian Plate. The northern fragment is the south-eastern part of the Voronezh anteclise, located to the north of the Donetsk-Astrakhan tectonic suture. The southern fragment corresponds to the eastern dipping of the Pre-Paleozoic rocks of the Ukrainian shield, forming the buried Rostov ledge. The Scythian (Epihercynian) platform located to the south of the Donetsk-Astrakhan tectonic suture, is represented by a folded Paleozoic (in some places pre-middle-Jurassic) base and a platform cover of Mesozoic-Cenozoic rocks. The part of the Scythian platform is the exposed Donbass area, where Paleozoic rocks of the base of the platform protrude to the surface and form the Donetsk ledge. The northern part of the Scythian plate, which extends over the buried folds system of Donbass, is allocated from the south by Manych over-fault deflections and called «Karpinsky shaft». The system of the Manych deflections and the territory located to the south compile the Ciscaucasian part of the Scythian plate.


2015 ◽  
Vol 152 (6) ◽  
pp. 1137-1144
Author(s):  
E. BUCHNER ◽  
J. KRÖCHERT ◽  
M. SCHMIEDER

AbstractVarious uplift markers suggest asymmetrical uplift of Tenerife Island, with stable conditions in the north but significant uplift of up to 45 m in the south over the past ~42 ka. Fossil shells in beach deposits uplifted by 7.5–9 m were 14C-dated at a Holocene age of 2460±35 bp (1σ). This confirms earlier results and documents very young, and probably still ongoing, uplift of southern Tenerife potentially caused by ascending magma. This underlines that southern Tenerife is probably undergoing a further cycle of volcanic activity that started ~95 ka ago.


1963 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1415-1433
Author(s):  
Lorenzo Casertano

ABSTRACT An oceanic deep lies off the Chilean coast, bordered on the east by a coastal mountain range, a discontinuous central valley, and the high cordillera of the Andes. The Chilean volcanoes are found on lineaments that in general coincide with, or are sub parallel to, axis of the Andes. In north Chile they lie along en echelon fractures and, in some cases, along transverse fractures. In the south, the alignment of the volcanoes lies west of the axis of the Andes. Where the Central Valley is not well developed, active volcanoes are scarce. Recent lavas range from basalt in the south to rhyolite in the north. Volcanic activity appears to be decreasing. Details are given of individual volcanoes, and a list of active Andean volcanoes south of Volcan Misti is presented with a historical account of their activity.


2012 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Kougioumoutzis ◽  
A. Tiniakou ◽  
T. Georgiadis ◽  
O. Georgiou

The Methana Peninsula (Saronic Gulf, Greece) constitutes the youngest and northwestern part of the South Aegean Volcanic Arc. The flora of the Methana Peninsula consists of 620 taxa, 101 of which are under some protection status, while 35 are Greek endemics and 380 are reported here for the first time. The study area has the highest percentage of endemism in the Saronic Gulf. Additionally, for some endemic taxa, their known distribution is expanded. These include Crocus sieberi subsp. atticus and Ophrys oestrifera subsp. leptomera, reported for the first time for the phytogeographical region of the Peloponnese; Campanula andrewsii subsp. hirsutula and Colchicum psaridis, reported for the first time for the North Peloponnese; and Trigonella rechingeri, reported for the first time from the Greek mainland. The floristic affinities between the study area and the large islands of the Saronic Gulf are examined by the application of Sørensen’s index to investigate the relationships between them.


Polar Record ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (4) ◽  
pp. 358-363
Author(s):  
Krzysztof Migała ◽  
Tymoteusz Sawiński ◽  
Jacek Piasecki

ABSTRACTThis paper describes the first Polish expedition to Greenland in 1937. The fieldwork was carried out in western Greenland at the eastern edge of Arfersiorfik Fjord between Disko Bay in the north and Nordre Strömfjord in the south. The main goal was to undertake a comprehensive study of a fragment of the Greenland ice sheet edge and its foreland focusing on a cartographic survey. The first ever map of this region entitled The Polish expedition to give new names. In the post-war history, expedition members exerted great influence on the development of Polish polar research.


1992 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 85-93
Author(s):  
L.M Larsen ◽  
A.K Pedersen

Lavas from the Rinks Dal, Nordfjord and Niaqussat Members of the Maligat Formation overlying gneisses in eastern Nuussuaq are described together with an overlying young sequence of basalts not known from other areas. The Niaqussat Member lavas are the first recorded from Nuussuaq. On Disko lavas of the Nordfjord and Niaqussat Members have been found on the highest mountain tops bordering the Sermersuaq ice cap, and these two members are now known to have been present over the whole of Disko and eastern Nuussuaq. East of the Disko Gneiss Ridge the base of the Niaqussat Member forms a fairly smooth, gently south-easterly sloping surface that can be extrapolated to Nuussuaq. Eruption sites for the Nordfjord and Niaqussat Members are centred in western Disko, but feeder dykes east of the Disko Gneiss Ridge are indicated, especially for the Niaqussat Member in both Disko and Nuussuaq. There is evidence from several levels within the volcanic pile of relative subsidence in the south-east and uplift in the north-west, and these movements must have taken place in an extended period both during and after the volcanic activity.


1907 ◽  
Vol 4 (11) ◽  
pp. 506-509 ◽  
Author(s):  
George Hickling

While spending a few days recently examining the sections on the North Devon coast, with a view to obtaining a clearer conception of the tectonic structure of that region, I was deeply impressed by the great number of minor overfolds and with the great uncertainty in the relations of the various beds thereby brought about. In many cases where the dip appears to be constantly to the south, through a considerable thickness of strata, closer examination shows repeated isoclinal folds. The western face of Little Hangman Hill at Combe Martin exhibits such a condition very well. Throughout the whole coast which I examined, from Combe Martin to the southernmost part of Bideford Bay, the axes of the minor folds are inclined to the north in this way, so as to frequently produce the appearance of steady southern dip and greatly to increase the apparent thickness of the strata. In speculating as to the possible cause of the constant direction in which the axes of these folds are inclined, an explanation occurred to me which I believe to be the correct one, and which may be applied generally to a large number of cases. As I have been unable to find it in the works I have been able to consult, it may be desirable to publish it, since it may aid considerably the elucidation of the true structure and history of complicated districts.


1869 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 550-553
Author(s):  
David Milne-Home

I. An account was given of the dimensions of the estuary, in respect of length, width, and depth; and also of the general direction of the axis of the estuary.II. It was next shown that the formation of the estuary was probably due to the great geological fractures and dislocations which had taken place in this part of Scotland, inasmuch as the direction of these was parallel, or nearly so, to the axis of the estuary, and as the downcasts in the adjoining counties on the north and the south were all towards the estuary, thus producing a trough or valley, deep enough to be entered and filled by the sea.


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