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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical journal international 108 (1992), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-246X
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Two high-amplitude reflections, or ‘bright spots’, occur on COCORP (Consortium for Continental Reflection Profiling) line Georgia 16 at a record time of 5.9 s, corresponding to nearly 16 km depth. They are significant because bright spots often mark great contrasts in subsurface physical properties. The first is the 'Surrency Bright Spot’(SBS), an exceptionally bright antiformal reflection, and the second is the‘Reedy Creek Reflection’(RCR), which lies 5 km to the south and resembles the south half of a diffraction. The RCR is also imaged on a crossline, Georgia 18, as a relatively symmetric antiformal reflection. These reflections coincide with the Brunswick magnetic anomaly, thought to mark the late Palaeozoic Alleghanian suture.The SBS and the RCR are reflections from bodies that lie within the plane of Georgia 16. Migration and 2-D seismic modelling show the aniformal SBS is from a synformal reflector with a buried focus while the RCR is from a relatively small body. The inferred geometry of the SBS reflector, with its flat portion corresponding to the deepest part of the reflector, argues that it does not represent fluids. These results, combined with recent evidence that the SBS is a reflection from a high-velocity thin layer, suggest that the SBS and the RCR might be reflections from ultramafic slices emplaced within the Alleghanian suture zone during collision or from mafic sheets intruded into the suture zone during subsequent rifting. The brightness of the SBS is attributed to a large impedance contrast, constructive interference, good data quality, and a relatively large reflector size with respect to the Fresnel zone and neighbouring reflectors.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    Springer
    In:  International Journal of Earth Sciences, 96 (6). pp. 1033-1046.
    Publication Date: 2017-05-18
    Description: The symmetry or asymmetry of the process of continental breakup has been much debated over the last 20 years, with various authors proposing asymmetric simple shear models, others advocating more symmetric, pure shear models and some combinations of the two. The unroofing of vast expanses of sub-continental mantle at non-volcanic margins has led some authors to argue in favour of simple shear models, but supporting evidence is lacking. Subsidence evidence from conjugate margin pairs is equivocal, and the detailed crustal and lithospheric structure of such pairs not generally well enough known to draw firm conclusions. In the Porcupine Basin, where the final stages of break-up are preserved, the development of structural asymmetry is demonstrable, and apparently related to late stage coupling of the crust to the mantle following the complete embrittlement of the crust. This agrees with theoretical modelling results, which predict that asymmetric models can develop only on a lithospheric scale when the crust and mantle are tightly coupled. However, whether such asymmetry is maintained during continued exhumation of the mantle is unclear.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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