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  • Articles  (45)
  • Papers in Special Publications / Geological Society London  (45)
  • 2020-2024
  • 2010-2014  (45)
  • 1970-1974
  • 1945-1949
  • 2012  (45)
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  • Articles  (45)
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  • 2020-2024
  • 2010-2014  (45)
  • 1970-1974
  • 1945-1949
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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2012-02-28
    Description: Finding explosive threats in complex environments is a challenge. Benign objects (e.g. rocks, plants and rubbish), ground surface variation, heterogeneous soil properties and even shadows can create anomalies in remotely sensed imagery, often triggering false alarms. The overarching goal is to dissect these complex sensor images to extract clues for reducing false alarms and improve threat detection. Of particular interest is the effect of soil properties, particularly hydrogeological properties, on physical temperatures at the ground surface and the signatures they produce in infrared imagery. Hydrogeological variability must be considered at the scale of the sensor's image pixels, which may be only a few centimetres. To facilitate a deeper understanding of the components of the energy distribution, a computational testbed was developed to produce realistic, process-correct, synthetic imagery from remote sensors operating in the visible and infrared portions of the electromagnetic spectrum. This tool is being used to explore near-surface process interaction at a fine scale to isolate and quantify the phenomena behind the detection physics. The computational tools have confirmed the importance of hydrogeology in the exploitation of sensor imagery for threat detection. However, before this tool's potential becomes a reality, several technical and organizational problems must be overcome.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-01-03
    Description: The SW sector of Mount Natib, a potentially active volcano in the Bataan volcanic arc in western Luzon, is the site of a mothballed nuclear power plant that members of the national legislature have proposed to activate. Detailed geological fieldwork was conducted to assess the capability of the volcano and to identify any volcanic hazards it might pose to the nuclear plant. The nearest eruptive centre is 5.5 km away from the plant. SW Natib Volcano is underlain by lava flows, lahar deposits and at least six pyroclastic density current (PDC) deposits, three directly underlying the nuclear reactor facility. A fault trending N30°E is aligned with the Lubao Fault, a capable fault NE of the volcanic edifice. Radon emissions at the traces of these faults are high and comparable to those at known active faults. An associated thrust fault at the nuclear site cuts through lahars up to the ground surface. The results presented here can be used for general hazard preparedness of local communities, and may assist the government to decide whether or not to recommission the nuclear power plant.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-08-09
    Description: The initial Mw7.1 Darfield earthquake sequence was centred west of Christchurch City in the South Island of New Zealand but aftershocks, including a highly destructive Mw6.3 event, eventually extended eastwards across the city to the coast. The mainshock gave rise to right-lateral strike-slip of up to 5 m along the segmented rupture trace of a subvertical fault trending 085±5° across the Canterbury Plains for c. 30 km, in agreement with teleseismic focal mechanisms. Near-field data however suggest that the mainshock was composite, initiating with reverse-slip north of the surface rupture. Stress determinations for the central South Island show maximum compressive stress σ1 to be horizontal and oriented 115±5°. The principal dextral rupture therefore lies at c. 30° to regional σ1, the classic ‘Andersonian’ orientation for a low-displacement wrench fault. An aftershock lineament trending c. 145° possibly represents a conjugate left-lateral strike-slip structure. This stress field is also consistent with predominantly reverse-slip reactivation of NNE–NE faults along the Southern Alps range front. The main strike-slip fault appears to have a low cumulative displacement and may represent either a fairly newly formed fault in the regional stress field, or an existing subvertical fault that happens to be optimally oriented for frictional reactivation.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2012-08-09
    Description: The Ceduna Sub-basin is located within the Bight Basin on the Australian southern margin. Recent structural analysis using newly acquired two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) seismic data demonstrates two Late Cretaceous delta–deepwater fold–thrust belts (DDWFTBs), which are overlain by Cenozoic sediments. The present-day normal fault stress regime identified in the Bight Basin indicates that the maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) is margin parallel; Andersonain faulting theory therefore suggests the delta-top extensional faults are oriented favourably for reactivation. A breached hydrocarbon trap encountered in the Jerboa-1 well demonstrates this fault reactivation. Faults interpreted from 3D seismic data were modelled using the Poly3D© geomechanical code to determine the risk of reactivation. Results indicate delta-top extensional faults that dip 40–70° are at moderate–high risk of reactivation, while variations in the orientation of the fault planes results in an increased risk of reactivation. Two pulses of inversion are identified in the Ceduna Sub-basin and correlate with the onset of rifting and fault reactivation in the Santonian. We propose a ridge-push mechanism for this stress which selectively reactivates extensional faults on the delta-top, forming inversion anticlines that are prospective for hydrocarbon exploration.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2012-12-03
    Description: The South American record of remagnetizations is linked to specific events of its tectonic history stretching back to Precambrian times. At the Ediacaran–Cambrian time interval (570–500 Ma), the final stages of the western Gondwana assemblage led to remagnetization of Neoproterozoic carbonates within the São Francisco–Congo Craton and at the border of the Amazon Craton, along the Araguaia–Paraguay–Pampean Belt. From the late Permian to early Triassic, the San Rafaelic orogeny and the emplacement of the Choiyoi magmatic province was responsible for widespread remagnetizations in Argentina and Uruguay. Cretaceous remagnetization has also been documented in Brazil and interpreted to result from magmatism and fault reactivations linked to the opening of the South Atlantic Ocean. We present a review of these widespread remagnetization events principally based on palaeomagnetic data and, when available, on rock magnetic and radiogenic isotope age data. This study gives an overview of the geographical distribution of the remagnetization events in South America, and provides important clues to better understand the geodynamic evolution of the South American plate at these times. In addition, magnetic mineralogy data for the different case studies presented here constrain the physical–chemical mechanisms that led to partial or total resetting of magnetic remanences in sedimentary rocks.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2012-04-23
    Description: Six regional recharge and groundwater models have been recently developed of the Chalk and Upper Greensand from Dorset to Kent. Updated Chalk stratigraphy and mapping have improved understanding of geological structure and the development of preferential groundwater flow pathways along hardground horizons. Where shallow dipping folds bring these into the zone of active groundwater flow, extensive ‘underdrainage’ may result in marked differences between surface and groundwater catchments. Hardgrounds and marls are also associated with spring discharges, as are some faults and the clay formations that underlie or confine the aquifer system. Higher specific yield within the Upper Greensand helps support summer baseflow, as do local groundwater discharges from augmentation schemes, watercress and fish farm operations. The aquifer system has been successfully modelled using the ‘variable hydraulic conductivity with depth’ version of MODFLOW. Depths of secondary permeability development have been distributed according to ground and groundwater level data. Interfluve–valley contrasts overlie a base hydraulic conductivity set according to the formation saturated at the water table and enhanced by active hardgrounds. Local parameter overrides may also be needed. The Wessex Basin conceptual and numerical model is described before summarizing similarities and contrasts from the other five regional model areas.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2012-04-23
    Description: Neighbouring groundwater models often have large areas of overlap to avoid boundary issues in hydrogeological assessments and such overlap or artificial boundaries can lead to inconsistent representations of aquifers and processes. This paper presents the aggregation of six adjacent models spanning East Anglia, England, into one model without internal boundaries. This study principally discusses the effect of, and difficulties arising from model edge boundaries. In addition, a review of conceptual and numerical discontinuities at model boundaries is included and a more consistent and robust modelling approach over the whole area is demonstrated. The large, joined model is used to delineate groundwater divides, assess their transient migration, review edge boundary implications for water balances and investigate abstraction impacts without the influence of internal static boundaries. Computer codes developed in conjunction with this study facilitate joining adjacent models and, conversely, splitting of the joined model back into models at the scale of the original component models using simulated groundwater divides, or to smaller submodels incorporating edge boundary conditions calculated from the parent model.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2012-08-09
    Description: Delta–deepwater fold–thrust belts (DDWFTBs) develop over low-angle detachment faults which link extension to downslope contraction. Detachment faults have been examined in previous studies for the Amazon Fan, Niger, Nile, Angola, Baram and Bight Basin DDWFTBs. The driving mechanisms for the movement along the detachment remain uncertain, however. Previous authors have attributed the movement along detachment faults to high pore-fluid pressure, which reduces the effective normal stress acting on a fault surface thereby encouraging sliding along the fault. However, high pore-fluid pressure has not been directly confirmed in many of these faults due to a lack of well data in detachment surfaces. In this study, finite element modelling was used to test the effects of pore-fluid pressure, coefficient of friction, sediment rigidity and sediment wedge angle on sliding along the detachment. The modelling suggests that increased pore-fluid pressures and decreased coefficients of friction increase slip along a detachment. At hydrostatic pore-fluid pressures, sediment rigidity and sediment wedge angle have relatively little effect on the movement of the sediment wedge along the detachment. Modelling of these conditions using ABAQUS™ improves our understanding of the nature and mechanics of DDWFTBs and their underlying detachments.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2012-08-09
    Description: Parts of the Australian continent, including the Otway Basin of the southern Australian margin, exhibit unusually high levels of neotectonic deformation for a so-called stable continental region. The onset of deformation in the Otway Basin is marked by a regional Miocene–Pliocene unconformity and inversion and exhumation of the Cretaceous–Cenozoic basin fill by up to c. 1 km. While it is generally agreed that this deformation is controlled by a mildly compressional intraplate stress field generated by the interaction of distant plate-boundary forces, it is less clear whether the present-day record of deformation manifested by seismicity is representative of the longer-term geological record of deformation. We present estimates of strain rates in the eastern Otway Basin since 10 Ma based on seismic moment release, geological observations, exhumation measurements and structural restorations. Our results demonstrate significant temporal variation in bulk crustal strain rates, from a peak of c. 2×10−16 s−1 in the Miocene–Pliocene to c. 1.09×10−17 s−1 at the present day, and indicate that the observed exhumation can be accounted for solely by crustal shortening. The Miocene–Pliocene peak in tectonic activity, along with the orthogonal alignment of inverted post-Miocene structures to measured and predicted maximum horizontal stress orientations, validates the notion that plate-boundary forces are capable of generating mild but appreciable deformation and uplift within continental interiors.
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  • 10
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    In:  Geological Society Special Publication 371: 1-21.
    Publication Date: 2012-12-03
    Description: Chemical remagnetization is a very common phenomenon in sedimentary rocks and developing a greater understanding of the mechanisms has several benefits. Acquisition of a secondary magnetization is usually tangible evidence of a diagenetic event that can be dated by isolation of the chemical remanent magnetization and comparison of the pole position to the apparent polar wander path. This can be important because diagenetic investigations are frequently limited by the difficulty in constraining the time frames in which most past events have occurred. Remagnetization can commonly obscure a primary magnetization; developing a better understanding of remagnetization could improve our ability to uncover primary magnetizations. Many chemical remagnetization mechanisms have been proposed, including those associated with chemical alteration by a number of different fluids (orogenic, basinal and hydrocarbons), burial diagenetic processes (clay diagenesis and maturation of organic matter) or other processes. This paper summarizes our current knowledge of these chemical remagnetization mechanisms, with a focus on examples where there is a connection with chemical alteration.
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