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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pure and applied geophysics 142 (1994), S. 687-709 
    ISSN: 1420-9136
    Keywords: Strike-slip faulting ; earthquakes ; subsurface displacement and strain ; coseismic ; postseismic ; elastic dislocation theory
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract A three-layer elastic-gravitational fault displacement model using dislocation theory has been developed and used to examine the effect of layering of earth elastic moduli on surface and subsurface displacement fields for a vertical strike-slip fault. The model has been used to examine the effect of depth variation of elastic properties at coseismic and postseismic time scales. For pure strike-slip motion the effect of gravity on coseismic and postseismic horizontal deformation is negligible. For coseismic deformation the model predicts that (for constant Poisson's ratio) an increase in elastic moduli with depth attenuates the displacements within the upper layers with respect to displacement distribution for a uniform half-space, while an inclusion of a soft layer between the top layer and lower half-space amplifies upper layer displacements. The effect of variation in Poisson's ratio on surface and subsurface displacements has also been examined. The effect of postseismic stress relaxation on surface and subsurface displacements for a three-layer model has been calculated and compared with that of a uniformly relaxed half-space model. Layer 1 is assumed to correspond to the upper crust, layer 2 the lower crust and layer 3 the upper mantle. The effect of postseismic stress relaxation within a uniform half-space and within just the lower crust and upper mantle has been examined. Stress relaxation within the whole half-space decreases the amplitude and shortens the wavelength of displacements, while stress relaxation within the lower two layers increases the amplitude and broadens the wavelength of displacements. The difference between uniform and layered postseismic relaxation is particularly pronounced at the base of the crust. Coseismic and postseismic normal and volumetric strains for a vertical strike-slip fault have also been examined. For a uniformly relaxed half-space model, an increase in normal strains is shown with respect to the coseismic elastic solution, whereas the postseismic volumetric strain is effectively zero. For a three-layer model with stress relaxation in the lower layers only, the normal and volumetric strains within the top elastic layer resemble coseismic strains, while in the lower layers which suffer a rigidity decrease, the postseismic volumetric strain is effectively zero.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical journal international 118 (1994), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Elastic dislocation theory has been modified to determine 3-D subsurface displacements for faults in a three-layer elastic-gravitational medium. A new set of kernel functions for Fourier-Bessel integrals describing subsurface displacements have been derived, using the Thomson-Haskell propagator matrix technique, and has been used to investigate the effect of layering and gravity on subsurface displacement fields. Within our three-layer model, layer 1 may be used to represent the seismogenic upper crust, layer 2 the ductile lower crust and layer 3 the ductile mantle.For a point source within the upper layer, lower layer rigidity moduli control the amplitude and wavelength of displacements within the upper layer and the relative distribution of uplift and subsidence within foot and hanging wall. Displacement variations, due to lower layer rigidity moduli changes, increase with depth and are profound at the base of the upper layer and within the lower layers. High-rigidity-moduli lower layers attenuate the upper layer displacement field, while a decrease gives amplification. The effect of gravity on the subsurface displacement field is more pronounced when the rigidity of the lower layers is small.The elastic-gravitational dislocation model has been used to examine co-seismic and post-seismic components of surface and subsurface displacement during extension of continental lithosphere. The model predicts surface co-seismic footwall uplift and hanging-wall subsidence; the co-seismic subsidence being greater than the uplift. Post-seismic relaxation of stress within the lower crust and mantle by post-seismic ductile deformation, gives an increase in footwall uplift and a decrease in maximum hanging-wall subsidence within the upper layer. A decrease in upper layer rigidity due to post-seismic brittle or plastic deformation within the upper crust leads to a decrease in the wavelength of surface footwall uplift and hanging-wall subsidence. The elastic-gravitational dislocation model has also been used to investigate the development of Moho topography during continental extension. Co-seismically Moho under footwall is predicted to uplift, while that under hanging wall subsides but by a smaller magnitude. During post-seismic relaxation Moho topography is predicted at first to increase in magnitude and then to decay. The existence of preserved Moho topography uplift associated with old continental rifts implies a finite long-term ductile strength within the lower crust and mantle.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical journal international 111 (1992), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: A quantitative model using elastic dislocation theory has been developed to model the near-field subsurface displacement field associated with faults and fault arrays within an elastic layer above an elastic half-space. A fault is modelled as a surface across which there is a discontinuity in prescribed displacements. Fault displacements may be oblique as well as dip-slip. The mathematical expressions for the surface and subsurface displacements are formed using the Thomson-Haskell matrix technique. Faults may intersect the free surface or may be blind. The model has been used to determine the 3-D surface and subsurface displacement fields for a rectangular fault with constant slip and for an elliptical fault on which the slip varies from a point of maximum displacement at the centre to zero displacement at an elliptical tip-line. The 3-D displacement field and associated strain tensor may be determined for individual slip events on a fault or for cumulative fault displacements. Displacement contour maps may be constructed for either originally horizontal, vertical or inclined horizons. The model has also been applied to multiple fault arrays.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 299 (1982), S. 540-542 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] A fundamental property of normal intraplate lithosphere is that it exhibits no significant internal lateral distortion over time periods of the order of tens or hundreds of Myr as testified, for example, by the exactness of fit of the passive continental margins across the Atlantic1. This lack of ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Geotechnical and geological engineering 1 (1983), S. 253-260 
    ISSN: 1573-1529
    Keywords: Coal mining ; geophysics ; borehole log
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Conclusion Geotechnical and lithology data can be reliably derived from borehole geophysical logs. The advantages of deriving geotechnical and lithology data directly from geophysical logs rather than from core examination is that the produced data is continuous, readily interpretable and consistent. In addition the technique is labour saving and cost cutting, especially since data may be extracted from cheaper rock-bitted boreholes.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2007-12-18
    Description: Deformation of continental lithosphere leading to breakup and the initiation of sea-floor spreading can be described in terms of an upwelling divergent flow field within the continental lithosphere and asthenosphere. A new model (SfMargin) of rifted continental margin formation using this upwelling divergent flow field has been developed that successfully predicts lithosphere depth-dependent stretching and mantle exhumation at rifted margins. The kinematics of this flow field has important consequences for the bathymetric (subsidence) and thermal history of continental margin lithosphere. We apply the new model to a profile through the Goban Spur on the eastern Atlantic continental margin. Forward modelling yields parameter values describing the kinematics of the flow field leading to continental breakup and sea-floor spreading initiation that are consistent with the known amagmatic history of this margin. We employ a grid search method to systematically explore model parameter space and provide an assessment of the sensitivity of the model to the kinematic flow field parameter values. The preferred forward model parameters coincide with low values of misfit with respect to observed present-day bathymetry and free air gravity anomalies. Our results reveal the early kinematic history of the Goban Spur margin as characterized by a ratio of upwelling rate to half-spreading rate of unity, consistent with that expected for the initiation of sea-floor spreading at a non-volcanic rifted margin and only a modest amount of prebreakup lithospheric stretching (=1.5). These results conform with recent observations of depth-dependent stretching and serpentinized mantle exhumation at this amagmatic rifted continental margin.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2007-12-18
    Description: Depth-uniform stretching is not the dominant deformation process for thinning continental lithosphere leading to breakup; it cannot explain the observed depth-dependent lithosphere stretching and mantle exhumation at rifted continental margins. Depth-dependent lithosphere thinning, in which stretching of the lower crust and lithosphere mantle greatly exceeds that of the upper crust, has been observed at many non-volcanic and volcanic rifted continental margins including conjugate margin pairs. Passive continental margins show a paucity of brittle deformation in the upper crust during continental lithosphere thinning leading to breakup and sea-floor spreading initiation. A new model of rifted continental margin formation has been developed that assumes that deformation and thinning of continental lithosphere leading to breakup occurs in response to an upwelling divergent flow field within continental lithosphere and asthenosphere, and that this deformation evolves into sea-floor spreading. The new model successfully predicts depth-dependent stretching of continental margin lithosphere for both non-volcanic and volcanic margins and mantle exhumation at non-volcanic margins, both of which are observed, but are not explained, by existing depth-uniform continental lithosphere stretching models. The new model provides a balance of extensional strain, supplies an explanation for the paucity of synrift brittle deformation, and offers a simple transition from prebreakup lithosphere thinning to sea-floor spreading. The observed diversity of rifted continental margin structure and width of the oceancontinent transition can be explained by variability in the form of the upwelling divergent flow field. The new upwelling divergent flow model of continental lithosphere thinning leading to continental breakup successfully predicts the observed bathymetry and margin geometry for the most recent segment of sea-floor spreading initiation in the Woodlark Basin in the western Pacific, and the observed bathymetry and free air gravity anomaly for the Newfoundland and Iberian margins.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2008-10-08
    Description: The mild compressional structures of Cenozoic age on the passive margins bordering Norway, the UK, the Faroes and Ireland have been the subject of much discussion in the literature. Nevertheless, their origin remains enigmatic. Candidate mechanisms must be able to explain the generation of sufficient stress to cause deformation, the episodic nature of the structures and why they developed where they did. We examine these mechanisms and conclude that multiple causes are probable, while favouring body force as potentially the most important agent. The geometry and setting of the structures are incompatible with gravitational sliding and toe-thrusting, probably the commonest compressive' structuring around the Atlantic margins. A passive mode of origin featuring drape or flank sedimentary loading probably emphasized some of the structures, but cannot be invoked as a primary mechanism. Likewise, reactivation of basement structure probably focused deformation but did not initiate it. Far-field orogenic stress from Alpine orogenic phases and from the West Spitsbergen-Eurekan folding and thrusting is also examined. This mechanism is attractive because of its potential to explain episodicity of the compressional structures. However, difficulties exist with stress transmission pathways from these fold belts, and the passive margin structures developed for much of their existence in the absence of any nearby contemporaneous orogeny. Breakup and plate spreading forces such as divergent asthenosheric flow have potential to explain early post-breakup compressional structuring, for example on the UK-Faroes margin, but are unlikely to account for later (Neogene) deformation. Ridge push, generally thought to be the dominant body force acting on passive margins, can in some circumstances generate enough stress to cause mild deformation, but appears to have low potential to explain episodicity. It is proposed here that the primary agent generating the body force was development of the Iceland Insular Margin, the significant bathymetric-topographic high around Iceland. Circumstantially, in Miocene times, this development may also have coincided with the acme of the compressional structures. We show that, dependent on the degree of lithosphere-asthenosphere coupling, the Iceland Plateau may have generated enough horizontal stress to deform adjacent margins, and may explain the arcuate distribution of the compressional structures around Iceland. Assuming transmission of stress through the basement we argue that, through time, the structures will have developed preferentially where the basement is hotter, weaker and therefore more prone to shearing at the relatively low stress levels. This situation is most likely at the stretched and most thermally-blanketed crust under the thickest parts of the young (Cretaceous-Cenozoic) basins. Although several elements of this model remain to be tested, it has the potential to provide a general explanation for passive margin compression at comparatively low stress levels and in the absence of nearby orogeny or gravitational sliding.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: Predicting the effects of small-scale faults and fractures on reservoir behaviour requires a definition of their spatial distribution, orientation and mode. Elastic dislocation (ED) theory can predict the distribution of displacement, strain and stress in the rock volume surrounding major faults, from mapping of fault geometry and slip distribution in 3D seismic-reflection datasets. The intensity of small-scale faulting can be related to the predicted local strain, or the degree to which the shear stresses exceeded the rock failure envelope. We illustrate the methodology with three case studies: (i) a relatively-simple thrust anticline from Venezuela, where hydrocarbons are trapped in Pliocene sandstones within the faulted hanging wall anticline; (ii) the Gull-faks Field and of the North Sea; and (iii) the Miskar Field, offshore Tunisia, where large seismically mapped normal faults are forward-modelled to predict small-scale fault characteristics for comparison with detailed interpretation and seismic attribute analysis. Key requirements for the development of a robust predictive model of the small-scale fault and fracture network are a geometrically consistent framework model, judicious choice of mechanical properties, and a reasonable estimate of regional background strain.
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  • 10
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    The Royal Society
    In:  London, The Royal Society, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 1-40, (ISBN 1-58488-364-2)
    Publication Date: 1991
    Keywords: Textbook of geophysics ; Stress ; Stress measurements ; Borehole geophys. ; Borehole breakouts ; Geol. aspects ; Hydraulic fracturing
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