AN OCEAN BOTTOM SEISMOGRAPHIC REFRACTION EXPERIMENT IN BRANSFIELD STRAIT, WEST ANTARCTICA, 1990/1991

A detailed refraction seismological experiment to study the crust and upper mantle structure in Bransfield Strait, by the use of 10 sensitive Japanese OBSs (Ocean Bottom Seismographs) and 5 Polish land seismographs, was carried out in 1990-91. Bransfield Strait, between the South Shetland Islands an...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hideki SHIMAMURA, Hajime SHIOBARA, Aleksander GUTERCH, Tomasz JANIK, Janusz NIEWIADOMSKI, Marek GRAD, Alvaro PERETTI
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: ABSTRACT 1993
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Online Access:https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_uri&item_id=2728
http://id.nii.ac.jp/1291/00002728/
https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_action_common_download&item_id=2728&item_no=1&attribute_id=18&file_no=1
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Summary:A detailed refraction seismological experiment to study the crust and upper mantle structure in Bransfield Strait, by the use of 10 sensitive Japanese OBSs (Ocean Bottom Seismographs) and 5 Polish land seismographs, was carried out in 1990-91. Bransfield Strait, between the South Shetland Islands and the Antarctic Peninsula, is suspected to be a young rift system or the back-arc basin in the first stage; knowledge about the Moho discontinuity beneath the strait is poor. Three refraction profiles, 180-250km in lengths, were taken. The main profile, profile 20,was directly in the Bransfield Strait. The spacing between the OBSs, 40-50km, and those of shots fired in the sea, 5km on average, were dense enough to obtain a detailed structure. The records obtained by the OBS were very clear up to the distance of 250km, sometimes up to 350km. We have obtained the detailed structure of the Bransfield Trough, i.e. the central trough of Bransfield Strait, down to 30km for the first time. The depth to the Moho discontinuity becomes shallower toward the center of the Trough, from 30 to 10km, and is shallowest at the central subbasin where the sea bottom is nearly deepest. The shallowest value, 10km, coincided with a result which was obtained by a crossing profile in a preceding experiment made by GUTERCH et al. in 1984-1985. The upper mantle velocity beneath the whole of the Bransfield Strait is slow, about 7.7km/s, which suggests existence of high temperature mantle beneath the Strait. We found an abnormally low velocity layer, 5.5km/s, in the middle of the crust where the Moho is shallowest. We have also found that the thinning of the crust toward the central part of the Trough solely consist of thinning of the upper crust, the 6.5km/s layer. Such thinning of the upper crust, is very similar to what happened in the Okinawa Trough, an active back-arc basin in southwest Japan, which we obtained also by dense OBS refraction study. This suggests that the process beneath Bransfield Straight is similar to the Okinawa Trough back ...