Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics

The Transantarctic Mountains (TAM) form the high western rift flank of the West Antarctic Rift System (WARS), a region of extended crust that separates East and West Antarctica. Little is known about the structural geology in the southern TAM due to limited accessibility and more ice cover than in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Davis, Marcy B.
Other Authors: Blankenship, Donald D., Dalziel, Ian W. D., 1937-
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2152/75682
https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786
id ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/75682
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivtexas
language English
topic Geomorphology--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Geology
Structural--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Geophysical surveys--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
spellingShingle Geomorphology--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Geology
Structural--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Geophysical surveys--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Davis, Marcy B.
Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics
topic_facet Geomorphology--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Geology
Structural--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
Geophysical surveys--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains
description The Transantarctic Mountains (TAM) form the high western rift flank of the West Antarctic Rift System (WARS), a region of extended crust that separates East and West Antarctica. Little is known about the structural geology in the southern TAM due to limited accessibility and more ice cover than in the central and northern TAM. The objectives of this study are to characterize the subglacial bedrock morphology interior of the southern TAM and to define the structural geology along the southern TAM Front through analysis of airborne ice-penetrating radar data. The airborne survey extended from the Ross Ice Shelf, southward over the TAM along the 150°W meridian and between the Scott and Reedy Glaciers then over the high plateau and through the South Pole. Approximately 15,000 line km were flown and processed using finite difference migration techniques in a seismic processing software package. Subsequently, the ice and bed surfaces were picked along each line and known geology was interpreted on the radar records where it exists. Ice-penetrating radar sounding coupled with a compilation of field geologic studies has proven to be a powerful technique for examining the architecture and structural geological relationships of the southern TAM. Four distinct morphological provinces are identified along the length of the survey, these include: 1) the South Pole Basin and Plateau Province, with low relief features and up to 4 km of ice; 2) the Alpine Glaciated Province, with well-preserved U-shaped valleys that show a glaciation network that flowed opposite of contemporary glaciers; 3) the TAM Massif, which includes three subglacial blocks and the outcropping portion of the TAM; and 4) the TAM Front, a normal fault zone north of the TAM to Ice Stream A. The southern TAM have a southward tilted block structure with the area of maximum uplift in a region 30-50 km wide from the Watson Escarpment, the highest part of the TAM in this area, southward and is bounded by NW-SE-trending normal faults on both the north and south sides. Down-to-the-north normal faults north of the Watson Escarpment topographically downdrop the TAM from >3000 m to sea level over ~50 km and facilitate the development of the Leverett Glacier and Ice Stream A. The primary structural trend between the Scott and Reedy Glaciers is NW-SE, parallel to the TAM. Faults oriented obliquely to the TAM break the area of maximum uplift into three NNW-SSE trending blocks that appear offset ~10 km in a left-lateral sense relative to each other with range-parallel horst and graben features superimposed. One of these faults may control the eastern side of Scott Glacier. Structural relationships across the Watson Escarpment suggest that the southern TAM are a result of upward block faulting along the TAM Front rather than a result of regional upwarping. Geological Sciences
author2 Blankenship, Donald D.
Dalziel, Ian W. D., 1937-
format Thesis
author Davis, Marcy B.
author_facet Davis, Marcy B.
author_sort Davis, Marcy B.
title Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics
title_short Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics
title_full Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics
title_fullStr Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics
title_full_unstemmed Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics
title_sort subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern transantarctic mountains from airborne geophysics
publishDate 2001
url https://hdl.handle.net/2152/75682
https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786
long_lat ENVELOPE(-147.583,-147.583,-85.633,-85.633)
ENVELOPE(-145.000,-145.000,-86.000,-86.000)
geographic Antarctic
West Antarctica
Ross Ice Shelf
Transantarctic Mountains
South Pole
Leverett Glacier
Watson Escarpment
geographic_facet Antarctic
West Antarctica
Ross Ice Shelf
Transantarctic Mountains
South Pole
Leverett Glacier
Watson Escarpment
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Shelf
Ice Stream A
Leverett Glacier
Ross Ice Shelf
Scott Glacier
South pole
South pole
West Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Shelf
Ice Stream A
Leverett Glacier
Ross Ice Shelf
Scott Glacier
South pole
South pole
West Antarctica
op_relation UT Electronic Theses and Dissertations
https://hdl.handle.net/2152/75682
http://dx.doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786
op_rights Copyright © is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
Open
op_doi https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786
_version_ 1766273619472678912
spelling ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/75682 2023-05-15T14:03:05+02:00 Subglacial morphology and structural geology in the southern Transantarctic Mountains from airborne geophysics Davis, Marcy B. Blankenship, Donald D. Dalziel, Ian W. D., 1937- 2001 electronic application/pdf text/xml https://hdl.handle.net/2152/75682 https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786 eng eng UT Electronic Theses and Dissertations https://hdl.handle.net/2152/75682 http://dx.doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786 Copyright © is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works. Open Geomorphology--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains Geology Structural--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains Geophysical surveys--Antarctica--Transantarctic Mountains Thesis 2001 ftunivtexas https://doi.org/10.26153/tsw/2786 2020-12-23T22:22:24Z The Transantarctic Mountains (TAM) form the high western rift flank of the West Antarctic Rift System (WARS), a region of extended crust that separates East and West Antarctica. Little is known about the structural geology in the southern TAM due to limited accessibility and more ice cover than in the central and northern TAM. The objectives of this study are to characterize the subglacial bedrock morphology interior of the southern TAM and to define the structural geology along the southern TAM Front through analysis of airborne ice-penetrating radar data. The airborne survey extended from the Ross Ice Shelf, southward over the TAM along the 150°W meridian and between the Scott and Reedy Glaciers then over the high plateau and through the South Pole. Approximately 15,000 line km were flown and processed using finite difference migration techniques in a seismic processing software package. Subsequently, the ice and bed surfaces were picked along each line and known geology was interpreted on the radar records where it exists. Ice-penetrating radar sounding coupled with a compilation of field geologic studies has proven to be a powerful technique for examining the architecture and structural geological relationships of the southern TAM. Four distinct morphological provinces are identified along the length of the survey, these include: 1) the South Pole Basin and Plateau Province, with low relief features and up to 4 km of ice; 2) the Alpine Glaciated Province, with well-preserved U-shaped valleys that show a glaciation network that flowed opposite of contemporary glaciers; 3) the TAM Massif, which includes three subglacial blocks and the outcropping portion of the TAM; and 4) the TAM Front, a normal fault zone north of the TAM to Ice Stream A. The southern TAM have a southward tilted block structure with the area of maximum uplift in a region 30-50 km wide from the Watson Escarpment, the highest part of the TAM in this area, southward and is bounded by NW-SE-trending normal faults on both the north and south sides. Down-to-the-north normal faults north of the Watson Escarpment topographically downdrop the TAM from >3000 m to sea level over ~50 km and facilitate the development of the Leverett Glacier and Ice Stream A. The primary structural trend between the Scott and Reedy Glaciers is NW-SE, parallel to the TAM. Faults oriented obliquely to the TAM break the area of maximum uplift into three NNW-SSE trending blocks that appear offset ~10 km in a left-lateral sense relative to each other with range-parallel horst and graben features superimposed. One of these faults may control the eastern side of Scott Glacier. Structural relationships across the Watson Escarpment suggest that the southern TAM are a result of upward block faulting along the TAM Front rather than a result of regional upwarping. Geological Sciences Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ice Shelf Ice Stream A Leverett Glacier Ross Ice Shelf Scott Glacier South pole South pole West Antarctica The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks Antarctic West Antarctica Ross Ice Shelf Transantarctic Mountains South Pole Leverett Glacier ENVELOPE(-147.583,-147.583,-85.633,-85.633) Watson Escarpment ENVELOPE(-145.000,-145.000,-86.000,-86.000)