Determining the Architecture of the Terror Rift from Stratal Dips in Reflection Seismology Profiles

The Terror Rift is the youngest part of the West Antarctic rift system in the Antarctic interior. The Terror rift basin lies beneath the western Ross Sea near the Transantarctic Mountains. The rift has undergone multiple episodes of rifting, as evidenced by superimposed tilts of basin strata in faul...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Blocher, Will
Other Authors: Wilson, Terry
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1811/58520
Description
Summary:The Terror Rift is the youngest part of the West Antarctic rift system in the Antarctic interior. The Terror rift basin lies beneath the western Ross Sea near the Transantarctic Mountains. The rift has undergone multiple episodes of rifting, as evidenced by superimposed tilts of basin strata in fault blocks that define the rift. A younger tilt pattern has been superimposed on the rift around Ross Island, where the crust has flexed downward under the weight of young volcanoes. Mapping tilt directions provides a means to reconstruct the orientation of faults that produced tilt, and discriminate fault-induced tilt from younger flexure. This study is using seismic reflection profiles, imaging subsurface structure, to reconstruct tilts. Where two seismic lines cross, the true direction of tilt and the magnitude of tilt can be measured at multiple levels downward through the sequence of strata, such that changes in attitudes of bedding with depth can be determined. Maps of tilt directions from multiple crossing profiles for the time period marked by each seismic reflector will allow us to infer the orientations of these surfaces in 3D space. These orientations inform our knowledge of the dynamics of the episodes of rifting and volcano loading along the Terror Rift. NSF Schlumberger No embargo Academic Major: Earth Sciences