Title: Oceanic Crust and Rocks Appendices
1Oceanic Crust and Rocks(Appendices)
- JFM505E Physics and Structure of the Earths
Crust
2 Comparision of Characteristics of Typical
Refraction and Reflection Techniques
Comparision of Characteristics of Typical
Refraction and Reflection Techniques for Deep
Crustal Structure Studies (Braile and Chiang,
1986)
3Summary of Advantages and Limitations of
Refraction and Reflection Techniques for Deep
Crustal Structure Studies (Braile and Chiang,
1986)
4SEISMIC RESOLUTION
- Vertical Resolution
- Horizontal Resolution
- Vertical Resolution
- For 2 reflections (one from the top and one from
the bottom of a thin layer), - there is a limit on how close they can be, yet
still be separable (Yilmaz, - 1989).
- The dominant wavelength of seismic waves is given
by - ?v / f,
- where v is velocity and f is the dominant
frequency. - The acceptable threshold for vertical resolution
generally is a quarter of - the dominant wavelength.
5 6(Yilmaz, 1989)
7Lateral Resolution
- Lateral resolution refers to how close two
reflecting points can be - situated horizontally, yet be recognized as two
separate points rather - than one (Yilmaz, 1989).
8- The total energy arriving within the time
interval (t1-t0), which equals half the dominant
period (T/2), interferes constructively. - AA is called a half-wavelength Fresnel zone
(Hilterman, 1982) or the first Fresnel zone
(Sheriff, 1984). Two reflecting points that fall
within this zone generally are considered
indistinguishable as observed from the Earths
surface. - The Fresnel zone width is a measure of lateral
resolution. - The Fresnel zone radius (rOA)
- r?(z? / 2)1/2(v / 2) (t / f)1/2
- t(2z / v)
9(Yilmaz, 1989)
10Layers of Oceanic Crust
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11- Layer 1 Vp 1.6-2.5 km/s, Thickness 0.4 km,
Rocks Sediment - Layer 2 Vp 3.4-6.2 km/s, Thickness 1.4 km
- Layer 2A Vp 3.5 km/s, Rocks Fractured
Basalt - Layer 2B Vp 5.2 km/s, Rocks Massive Basalt
with Dykes - Layer 2C Vp 6.1 km/s, Rocks Dykes with
Massive Basalt - Layer 3 Vp 6.4-7.0 km/s, Thickness 5 km
- Layer 3A Vp 6.8 km/s, Rocks Metagabbros and
gabbros with pockets of plagiogranite and
protrusions of serpentine - Layer 3B Vp 7.3 km/s, Rocks Gabbros and
metagabbros with serpentinite protrusions and
pockets of cumulate ultramafic - Moho
- Upper Mantle Vp 7.4-8.6 km/s
- Rocks Serpentinized ultramafics lt 6.9 km/s
- Anomalous mantle (close to ridge axis) 7.8
km/s - Harzburgite and lherzolite 8.1 km/s
- (Kearey and Vine, 1992, p20)
12(Ehlers and Blatt, 1982)
13(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
14(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
15Ophiolites
- Description
- The term ophiolite refers to a distinctive rock
assemblage containing ultramafic, gabbroic and
basaltic rocks, often capped by layers of deep
sea sediments. - Locations
- Well described ophiolite suites are located Bay
of Islands in Newfound land, Troodos in Cyprus,
Semail in Oman and eastern Papua in New Guinea. - Process (Obduction)
- Initial stage of collision, the oceanic plate is
thrust over the continental plate.
16Possible mechanisms for obduction of ophiolite
sheets onto continental margin (Ehlers and Blatt,
1982)
17Ophiolitic rocks in Turkey (Piril, 2003)
- Within the Tethyan belt, Turkey is well known for
extensive areas of - ophiolitic rocks in the mountains of the Alpine
chain. - In NW Turkey, a complete ophiolite sequence has
not been found. - Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone (ophiolitic
zone ) formed during Early - Tertiary continental collision following
northward subduction of Tethyan - oceanic lithosphere
- The Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone separates
the Pontides from the - Anatolides-Taurides.
- It is the boundary between Gondwana and Laurasia,
and two separate - Oceanic lithospheres, Palaeo-Tethys and
Neo-Tethys, have been - consumed along the suture
- In contrast, the Tauride ophiolites in the south
are larger and more - complete, of mid- to late Cretaceous age.
18Tectonic map of the Eastern Mediterranean
(Robertson, 2000)
19Plate tectonic sketches showing the simlified
evolution of southern Turkey a) Late Triassic, b)
Late Cretaceous, c) Late Eocene (Robertson, 2002)
20Ophiolitic rocks in the Island of Cyprus
- The Troodos ophiloite in the Island of Cyprus
formed at a spreading center - above a subduction zone.
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21Map of the Troodos Ophiolite (Staudigel et al.,
1999)
22- The Troodos ophiolite belongs to the
mid-Cretaceous, - and formed 91 my ago.
- A belt of ophiolites of this age stretches far to
the east, - ending with the well known Samail ophiolite in
Oman. - Uplift of Troodos to its present position took
place - episodically, but was initiated 20 My ago.
23Ophiolites in the Island of Cyprus. The vertical
slabs of rock are dikes intruding into lavas that
erupted on the seafloor. The transition from
lavas to sheeted dikes (Layer 2B)
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24Ophiolitic Rocks in Oman
- http//www.angelfire.com/ms/snasir/page14.html
25- Ophiolites are very common in the Middle East.
They occur in elongate belts that make up an
integral part of the Alpine mountain chains. - These ophiolites extend eastward and southward
from Cyprus into Syira, the Turkey-Iran boerder
fold belt, through Neyriz in Iran , then across
the Arabian Gulf into Oman. The Semail ophiolite
, Sultanate of Oman, is part of these ophiolits. - It provides the best exposure in the world to
study oceanic lithosphere. - The Semail ophiolite crops out in a belt 600 km
long and 150 km wide and between 5 and 10 km
thick. - The Sultanate of Oman forms the southeastern
corner of the Arabian Plate (http//www.angelfire.
com/ms/snasir/page14.html ).
26(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
27(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
28(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
29(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
30(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
31(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)
32(Hamblin and Christiansen, 1998)