Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results

We conducted a seismic refraction experiment across Flemish Cap and into the deep basin east of Newfoundland, Canada, and developed a velocity model for the crust and mantle from forward and inverse modeling of data from 25 ocean bottom seismometers and dense air gun shots. The continental crust at...

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Main Authors: Funck, Thomas, Hopper, John R., Larsen, Hans Christian, Louden, Keith E., Tucholke, Brian E., Holbrook, W. Steven
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/crustal-structure-of-the-oceancontinent-transition-at-flemish-cap(07a7308d-5292-42c7-8acd-2afe81e2e02f).html
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=1142264653&partnerID=8YFLogxK
id ftcopenhagenunip:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/07a7308d-5292-42c7-8acd-2afe81e2e02f
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spelling ftcopenhagenunip:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/07a7308d-5292-42c7-8acd-2afe81e2e02f 2023-07-16T03:59:38+02:00 Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results Funck, Thomas Hopper, John R. Larsen, Hans Christian Louden, Keith E. Tucholke, Brian E. Holbrook, W. Steven 2003-11-10 https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/crustal-structure-of-the-oceancontinent-transition-at-flemish-cap(07a7308d-5292-42c7-8acd-2afe81e2e02f).html http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=1142264653&partnerID=8YFLogxK eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Funck , T , Hopper , J R , Larsen , H C , Louden , K E , Tucholke , B E & Holbrook , W S 2003 , ' Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap : Seismic refraction results ' , Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth , vol. 108 , no. 11 , pp. EPM 10-1 - EPM 10-20 . Ocean-continent transition Refraction seismics Serpentinized mantle article 2003 ftcopenhagenunip 2023-06-28T23:15:43Z We conducted a seismic refraction experiment across Flemish Cap and into the deep basin east of Newfoundland, Canada, and developed a velocity model for the crust and mantle from forward and inverse modeling of data from 25 ocean bottom seismometers and dense air gun shots. The continental crust at Flemish Cap is 30 km thick and is divided into three layers with P wave velocities of 6.0-6.7 km/s. Across the southeast Flemish Cap margin, the continental crust thins ? 90-km-wide zone to only 1.2 km. The ocean-continent boundary is near the base of Flemish Cap and is marked by a fault between thinned continental crust and 3-km-thick crust with velocities of 4.7-7.0 km/s interpreted as crust from magma-starved oceanic accretion. This thin crust continues seaward for 55 km and thins locally to ∼1.5 km. Below a sediment cover (1.9-3.1 km/s), oceanic layer 2 (4.7-4.9 km/s) is ∼1.5 km thick, while layer 3 (6.9 km/s) seems to disappear in the thinnest segment of the oceanic crust. At the seawardmost end of the line the crust thickens to ∼6 km. Mantle with velocities of 7.6-8.0 km/s underlies both the thin continental and thin oceanic crust in an 80-km-wide zone. A gradual downward increase to normal mantle velocities is interpreted to reflect decreasing degree of serpentinization with depth. Normal mantle velocities of 8.0 km/s are observed ∼6 km below basement. There are major differences compared to the conjugate Galicia Bank margin, which has a wide zone of extended continental crust, more faulting, and prominent detachment faults. Crust formed by seafloor spreading appears symmetric, however, with 30-km-wide zones of oceanic crust accreted on both margins beginning about 4.5 m.y. before formation of magnetic anomaly MO (∼118 Ma). Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland University of Copenhagen: Research Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Copenhagen: Research
op_collection_id ftcopenhagenunip
language English
topic Ocean-continent transition
Refraction seismics
Serpentinized mantle
spellingShingle Ocean-continent transition
Refraction seismics
Serpentinized mantle
Funck, Thomas
Hopper, John R.
Larsen, Hans Christian
Louden, Keith E.
Tucholke, Brian E.
Holbrook, W. Steven
Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results
topic_facet Ocean-continent transition
Refraction seismics
Serpentinized mantle
description We conducted a seismic refraction experiment across Flemish Cap and into the deep basin east of Newfoundland, Canada, and developed a velocity model for the crust and mantle from forward and inverse modeling of data from 25 ocean bottom seismometers and dense air gun shots. The continental crust at Flemish Cap is 30 km thick and is divided into three layers with P wave velocities of 6.0-6.7 km/s. Across the southeast Flemish Cap margin, the continental crust thins ? 90-km-wide zone to only 1.2 km. The ocean-continent boundary is near the base of Flemish Cap and is marked by a fault between thinned continental crust and 3-km-thick crust with velocities of 4.7-7.0 km/s interpreted as crust from magma-starved oceanic accretion. This thin crust continues seaward for 55 km and thins locally to ∼1.5 km. Below a sediment cover (1.9-3.1 km/s), oceanic layer 2 (4.7-4.9 km/s) is ∼1.5 km thick, while layer 3 (6.9 km/s) seems to disappear in the thinnest segment of the oceanic crust. At the seawardmost end of the line the crust thickens to ∼6 km. Mantle with velocities of 7.6-8.0 km/s underlies both the thin continental and thin oceanic crust in an 80-km-wide zone. A gradual downward increase to normal mantle velocities is interpreted to reflect decreasing degree of serpentinization with depth. Normal mantle velocities of 8.0 km/s are observed ∼6 km below basement. There are major differences compared to the conjugate Galicia Bank margin, which has a wide zone of extended continental crust, more faulting, and prominent detachment faults. Crust formed by seafloor spreading appears symmetric, however, with 30-km-wide zones of oceanic crust accreted on both margins beginning about 4.5 m.y. before formation of magnetic anomaly MO (∼118 Ma).
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Funck, Thomas
Hopper, John R.
Larsen, Hans Christian
Louden, Keith E.
Tucholke, Brian E.
Holbrook, W. Steven
author_facet Funck, Thomas
Hopper, John R.
Larsen, Hans Christian
Louden, Keith E.
Tucholke, Brian E.
Holbrook, W. Steven
author_sort Funck, Thomas
title Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results
title_short Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results
title_full Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results
title_fullStr Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results
title_full_unstemmed Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap:Seismic refraction results
title_sort crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at flemish cap:seismic refraction results
publishDate 2003
url https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/crustal-structure-of-the-oceancontinent-transition-at-flemish-cap(07a7308d-5292-42c7-8acd-2afe81e2e02f).html
http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=1142264653&partnerID=8YFLogxK
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_source Funck , T , Hopper , J R , Larsen , H C , Louden , K E , Tucholke , B E & Holbrook , W S 2003 , ' Crustal structure of the ocean-continent transition at Flemish Cap : Seismic refraction results ' , Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth , vol. 108 , no. 11 , pp. EPM 10-1 - EPM 10-20 .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
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