224 resultados para graben
Resumo:
Innerhalb des Untersuchungsgebiets Schleswig-Holstein wurden 39.712 topographische Hohlformen detektiert. Genutzt wurden dazu ESRI ArcMap 9.3 und 10.0. Der Datenaufbereitung folgten weitere Kalkulationen in MATLAB R2010b. Jedes Objekt wurde räumlich mit seinen individuellen Eigenschaften verschnitten. Dazu gehörten Fläche, Umfang, Koordinaten (Zentroide), Tiefe und maximale Tiefe der Hohlform und Formfaktoren wie Rundheit, Konvexität und Elongation. Ziel der vorgestellten Methoden war die Beantwortung von drei Fragestellungen: Sind negative Landformen dazu geeignet Landschaftseinheiten und Eisvorstöße zu unterscheiden und zu bestimmen? Existiert eine Kopplung von Depressionen an der rezenten Topographie zu geologischen Tiefenstrukturen? Können Senken unterschiedlicher Entstehung anhand ihrer Formcharakteristik unterteilt werden? Die vorgenommene Klassifikation der großen Landschaftseinheiten basiert auf der Annahme, dass sowohl Jungmoränengebiete, ihre Vorflächen als auch Altmoränengebiete durch charakteristische, abflusslose Hohlformen, wie Toteislöcher, Seen, etc. abgegrenzt werden können. Normalerweise sind solche Depressionen in der Natur eher selten, werden jedoch für ehemalige Glaziallandschaften als typisch erachtet. Ziel war es, die geologischen Haupteinheiten, Eisvorstöße und Moränengebiete der letzten Vereisungen zu differenzieren. Zur Bearbeitung wurde ein Detektionsnetz verwendet, das auf quadratischen Zellen beruht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass durch die alleinige Nutzung von Depressionen zur Klassifizierung von Landschaftseinheiten Gesamtgenauigkeiten von bis zu 71,4% erreicht werden können. Das bedeutet, dass drei von vier Detektionszellen korrekt zugeordnet werden können. Jungmoränen, Altmoränen, periglazialeVorflächen und holozäne Bereiche können mit Hilfe der Hohlformen mit großer Sicherheit voneinander unterschieden und korrekt zugeordnet werden. Dies zeigt, dass für die jeweiligen Einheiten tatsächlich bestimmte Senkenformen typisch sind. Die im ersten Schritt detektierten Senken wurden räumlich mit weiterreichenden geologischen Informationen verschnitten, um zu untersuchen, inwieweit natürliche Depressionen nur glazial entstanden sind oder ob ihre Ausprägung auch mit tiefengeologischen Strukturen in Zusammenhang steht. 25.349 (63,88%) aller Senken sind kleiner als 10.000 m² und liegen in Jungmoränengebieten und können vermutlich auf glaziale und periglaziale Einflüsse zurückgeführt werden. 2.424 Depressionen liegen innerhalb der Gebiete subglazialer Rinnen. 1.529 detektierte Hohlformen liegen innerhalb von Subsidenzgebieten, von denen 1.033 innerhalb der Marschländer im Westen verortet sind. 919 große Strukturen über 1 km Größe entlang der Nordsee sind unter anderem besonders gut mit Kompaktionsbereichen elsterzeitlicher Rinnen zu homologisieren.344 dieser Hohlformen sind zudem mit Tunneltälern im Untergrund assoziiert. Diese Parallelität von Depressionen und den teils über 100 m tiefen Tunneltälern kann auf Sedimentkompaktion zurückgeführt werden. Ein Zusammenhang mit der Zersetzung postglazialen, organischen Materials ist ebenfalls denkbar. Darüber hinaus wurden in einer Distanz von 10 km um die miozän aktiven Flanken des Glückstadt-Grabens negative Landformen detektiert, die Verbindungen zu oberflächennahen Störungsstrukturen zeigen. Dies ist ein Anzeichen für Grabenaktivität während und gegen Ende der Vereisung und während des Holozäns. Viele dieser störungsbezogenen Senken sind auch mit Tunneltälern assoziiert. Entsprechend werden drei zusammenspielende Prozesse identifiziert, die mit der Entstehung der Hohlformen in Verbindung gebracht werden können. Eine mögliche Interpretation ist, dass die östliche Flanke des Glückstadt-Grabens auf die Auflast des elsterzeitlichen Eisschilds reagierte, während sich subglazial zeitgleich Entwässerungsrinnen entlang der Schwächezonen ausbildeten. Diese wurden in den Warmzeiten größtenteils durch Torf und unverfestigte Sedimente verfüllt. Die Gletschervorstöße der späten Weichselzeit aktivierten erneut die Flanken und zusätzlich wurde das Lockermaterial exariert, wodurch große Seen, wie z. B. der Große Plöner See entstanden sind. Insgesamt konnten 29 große Depressionen größer oder gleich 5 km in Schleswig-Holstein identifiziert werden, die zumindest teilweise mit Beckensubsidenz und Aktivität der Grabenflanken verbunden sind, bzw. sogar auf diese zurückgehen.Die letzte Teilstudie befasste sich mit der Differenzierung von Senken nach deren potentieller Genese sowie der Unterscheidung natürlicher von künstlichen Hohlformen. Dazu wurde ein DEM für einen Bereich im Norden Niedersachsens verwendet, das eine Gesamtgröße von 252 km² abdeckt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass glazial entstandene Depressionen gute Rundheitswerte aufweisen und auch Elongation und Exzentrizität eher kompakte Formen anzeigen. Lineare negative Strukturen sind oft Flüsse oder Altarme. Sie können als holozäne Strukturen identifiziert werden. Im Gegensatz zu den potentiell natürlichen Senkenformen sind künstlich geschaffene Depressionen eher eckig oder ungleichmäßig und tendieren meist nicht zu kompakten Formen. Drei Hauptklassen topographischer Depressionen konnten identifiziert und voneinander abgegrenzt werden: Potentiell glaziale Senken (Toteisformen), Flüsse, Seiten- und Altarme sowie künstliche Senken. Die Methode der Senkenklassifikation nach Formparametern ist ein sinnvolles Instrument, um verschiedene Typen unterscheiden zu können und um bei geologischen Fragestellungen künstliche Senken bereits vor der Verarbeitung auszuschließen. Jedoch zeigte sich, dass die Ergebnisse im Wesentlichen von der Auflösung des entsprechenden Höhenmodells abhängen.
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From historical accounts it is well-known that the coasts of the Gulfs of Lakonia and Argolis (southern and eastern Peloponnese, Greece) have been repeatedly affected by tsunamis during historical times. It is assumed that these palaeotsunamis left sedimentological and geomorphological traces in the geological record which are still detectable these days. As both gulfs are located within one of the seismically most active regions in whole western Eurasia in particular the nearby Hellenic Trench is regarded as the main trigger for tsunami generation. Against this background, selected near-coast sedimentary archives were studied by means of sedimentological, geomorphological, geophysical, geochemical and microfaunal investigations in order to detect signatures of Holocene palaeotsunamigenic activity. The investigations revealed allochthonous sediment layers featuring distinctive sedimentary characteristics of marine high-energy event deposits in most of the investigated study areas. In order to differentiate between the geomorphodynamic driving mechanisms for the deposition of the associated marine high-energy event layers, a multi-method approach was used. The detected high-energy marine deposits are suggested to be of tsunamigenic origin. Radiocarbon dating results allowed establishing local event geo-chronostratigraphies and correlations on a local and regional scale as well as correlations with already described palaeotsunami findings on a supra-regional scale. The geochronological dataset attests repeated tsunamigenic activity at least since the 5th millennium BC up to the 17th century AD. For the studied areas in southeastern Lakonia up to four palaeotsunami event generations were identified, for central Lakonia three and for the investigated areas around the Argolis Gulf also up to four. Comparing the findings with literature data, chronological correlations were found with palaeotsunami deposits detected in near-coast geological archives of Akarnania, of the southwestern, the western and northwestern Peloponnese, with event deposits found on Crete and on the Ionian Islands of Cefalonia and Lefkada as well as with findings from southeastern Sicily (Italy) and Cesarea (Israel). By the identification of multiple palaeotsunami event layers, disturbing autochthonous near-coast sedimentary records of the Gulfs of Lakonia and Argolis during the last seven millennia, a significant tsunami frequency is attested for these regions.
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The Kenya (a.k.a., Gregory) Rift is a geologically active area located within the eastern branch of the larger East African Rift System (EARS). The study area is located in the southern Kenya Rift between 1° South and the Kenya-Tanzania border (covering approximately 1.5 square degrees, semi-centered on Lake Magadi) and is predominantly filled with extrusive igneous rocks (mostly basalts, phonolites and trachytes) of Miocene age or younger. Sediments are thin, less than 1.5Ma, and are confined to small grabens. The EARS can serve both as an analogue for ancient continental rifting and as a modern laboratory to observe the geologic processes responsible for rifting. This study demonstrates that vintage (as in older, quality maps published by the Kenya Geological Survey, that may be outdated based on newer findings) quarter-degree maps can be successfully combined with recently published data, and used to interpret satellite (mainly Landsat 7) images to produce versatile, updated digital maps. The study area has been remapped using this procedure and although it covers a large area, the mapping retains a quadrangle level of detail. Additionally, all geologic mapping elements (formations, faults, etc.) have been correlated across older map boundaries so that geologic units don't end artificially at degree boundaries within the study area. These elements have also been saved as individual digital files to facilitate future analysis. A series of maps showing the evolution of the southern Kenya rift from the Miocene to the present was created by combining the updated geologic map with age dates for geologic formations and fault displacements. Over 200 age dates covering the entire length of the Kenya Rift have been compiled for this study, and 6 paleo-maps were constructed to demonstrate the evolution of the area, starting with the eruption of the Kishalduga and Lisudwa melanephelinites onto the metamorphic basement around 15Ma. These eruptions occurred before the initial rift faulting and were followed by a massive eruption of phonolites between 13-10 Ma that covered most of the Kenya dome. This was followed by a period of relative quiescence, until the initial faulting defined the western boundary of the rift around 7Ma. The resulting graben was asymmetrical until corresponding faults to the east developed around 3Ma. The rift valley was flooded by basalts and trachytes between 3Ma and 700ka, after which the volcanic activity slowed to a near halt. Since 700ka most of the deposition has been comprised of sediments, mainly from lakes occupying the various basins in the area. The main results of this study are, in addition to a detailed interpretation of the rift development, a new geologic map that correlates dozens of formations across old map boundaries and a compilation of over 300 age dates. Specific products include paleomaps, tables of fault timing and displacement, and volume estimates of volcanic formations. The study concludes with a generalization of the present environment at Magadi including discussions of lagoon chemistry, mantle gases in relation to the trona deposit, and biology of the hot springs. Several biologic samples were collected during the 2006 field season in an attempt to characterize the organisms that are commonly seen in the present Lake Magadi environment. Samples were selected to represent the different, distinctive forms that are found in the hotsprings. Each sample had it own distinctive growth habit, and analysis showed that each was formed by a different cyanobacterial. Actual algae was rare in the collected samples, and represented by a few scattered diatoms.
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Maderas volcano is a small, andesitic stratovolcano located on the island of Ometepe, in Lake Nicaragua, Nicaragua with no record of historic activity. Twenty-one samples were collected from lava flows from Maderas in 2010. Selected samples were analyzed for whole-rock geochemical data using ICP-AES and/or were dated using the 40Ar/39Ar method. The results of these analyses were combined with previously collected data from Maderas as well as field observations to determine the eruptive history of the volcano and create a geologic map. The results of the geochemical analyses indicate that Maderas is a typical Central American andesitic volcano similar to other volcanoes in Nicaragua and Costa Rica and to its nearest neighbor, Concepción volcano. It is different from Concepción in one important way – higher incompatible elements. Determined age dates range from 176.8 ± 6.1 ka to 70.5 ± 6.1 ka. Based on these ages and the geomorphology of the volcano which is characterized by a bisecting graben, it is proposed that Maderas experienced two clear generations of development with three separate phases of volcanism: initial build-up of the older cone, pre-graben lava flows, and post-graben lava flows. The ages also indicate that Maderas is markedly older than Concepción which is historically active. Results were also analyzed regarding geologic hazards. The 40Ar/39Ar ages indicate that Maderas has likely been inactive for tens of thousands of years and the risk of future volcanic eruptions is low. However, earthquake, lahar and landslide hazards exist for the communities around the volcano. The steep slopes of the eroded older cone are the most likely source of landslide and lahar hazards.
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Understanding the geometry and kinematics of the major structures of an orogen is important to elucidate its style of deformation, as well as its tectonic evolution. We describe the temporal and spatial changes in the state of stress of the trans-orogen area of the Calama-Olacapato-El Toro (COT) Fault Zone in the Central Andes, at about 24°S within the northern portion of the Puna Plateau between the Argentina-Chile border. The importance of the COT derives principally from the Quaternary-Holocene activity recognized on some segments, which may shed new light on its possible control on Quaternary volcanism and on the seismic hazard evaluation of the area. Field geological surveys along with kinematic analysis and numerical inversion of ∼140 new fault-slip measurements have revealed that this portion of the COT zone, previously considered a continuous, long-lived lineament, in reality has been subjected to three different kinematic regimes: 1) a Miocene transpressional phase with the maximum principal stress (σ1) chiefly trending NNE-SSW; 2) an extensional phase that started by 9 Ma, with a horizontal NW-SE-striking minimum principal stress (σ3) – permutations between σ2 and σ3 axes have been recognized at two sites – and 3) a left-lateral strike-slip phase with a horizontal ∼E-W &sigma1 and ∼N-S σ3 dating to the Late Pliocene-Quaternary. Spatially, in the Quaternary, the left-lateral component decreases toward the westernmost tip of the COT, where it transitions to extension; this produced to a N-S horst and graben structure. Hence, even if transcurrence is still active in the eastern portion of the COT, as focal mechanisms of crustal earthquakes indicate, our study demonstrates that extension is becoming the predominant structural style of deformation, at least in the western region. These major temporal and spatial changes in the tectonic regimes are attributed in part to changes in the magnitude of the boundary forces due to subduction processes. The overall orogen-perpendicular extension might be the result of vertical stress larger than both the horizontal stresses induced by gravitational effect of a thickened crust.
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Abstract. Lake Ohrid shared by the Republics of Albania and Macedonia is formed by a tectonically active graben within the south Balkans and suggested to be the oldest lake in Europe. Several studies have shown that the lake provides a valuable record of climatic and environmental changes and a distal tephrostratigraphic record of volcanic eruptions from Italy. Fault structures identified in seismic data demonstrate that sediments have also the potential to record tectonic activity in the region. Here, we provide an example of linking seismic and sedimentological information with tectonic activity and historical documents. Historical documents indicate that a major earthquake destroyed the city of Lychnidus (today: city of Ohrid) in the early 6th century AD. Multichannel seismic profiles, parametric sediment echosounder profiles, and a 10.08m long sediment record from the western part of the lake indicate a 2m thick mass wasting deposit, which is tentatively correlated with this earthquake. The mass wasting deposit is chronologically well constrained, as it directly overlays the AD472/AD 512 tephra. Moreover, radiocarbon dates and cross correlation with other sediment sequences with similar geochemical characteristics of the Holocene indicate that the mass wasting event took place prior to the onset of the Medieval Warm Period, and is attributed it to one of the known earthquakes in the region in the early 6th century AD.
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The Penninic nappes in the Swiss Alps formed during continental collision between the Adriatic and European plates in Cenozoic times. Although intensely studied, the finite geometry of the basement-bearing Penninic nappes in western Switzerland has remained a matter of debate for decades (e.g., “Siviez-Mischabel dilemma”) and the paleogeographic origin of various nappes has been disputed. Here, we present new structural data for the central part of the Penninic Bernard nappe complex, which contains pre-Permian basement and Permo-Mesozoic metasedimentary units. Our lithological and structural observations indicate that the discrepancy between the different structural models proposed for the Bernard nappe complex can be explained by a lateral discontinuity. In the west, the presence of a Permian graben caused complex isoclinal folding, whereas in the east, the absence of such a graben resulted mainly in imbricate thrusting. The overall geometry of the Bernard nappe complex is the result of three main deformation phases: (1) detachment of Mesozoic cover sediments along Triassic evaporites (Evolène phase) during the early stages of collision, (2) Eocene top-to-the-N(NW) nappe stacking (Anniviers phase), and (3) subsequent backfolding and backshearing (Mischabel phase). The southward localized backshearing is key to understand the structural position and paleogeographic origin of units, such as the Frilihorn and Cimes Blanches “nappes” and the Antrona ophiolites. Based on these observations, we present a new tectonic model for the entire Penninic region of western Switzerland and discuss this model in terms of continental collision zone processes.
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Als Pol-Parteien politisieren SVP und SP radikaler als die grossen Parteien in anderen europäischen Ländern. Zieht sich also ein tiefer Graben durch unsere Gesellschaft – auf der einen Seite die fremdenfeindlichen, auf der anderen die weltoffenen Schweizer? Die Fakten sehen anders aus.
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Für Menschen mit Behinderungen und ihr Umfeld ist es entscheidend zu wissen, welche Parteien sie mit ihrer Arbeit im Parlament unterstützen. In den Fragen rund um Behinderungen zeigt sich unter der Bundeshauskuppel tendenziell ein Rechts-Links-Graben. Die Mitte-Parteien, insbesondere die CVP, scheinen diese Tatsache allerdings in Frage zu stellen.
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Text in d. Platte graviert. - Gestochen nach Hogenberg
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Cenozoic planktonic foraminiferal biostratigraphy at DSDP-IPOD Leg 80 sites documents the existence of regionwide stratigraphic gaps in the Paleocene and middle Miocene. Episodes of carbonate dissolution also occurred during the Paleocene at several sites, particularly at Site 549, where destruction of foraminiferal tests may obscure evidence of an unconformity. The middle Miocene hiatus is apparent at each site where Neogene sediments were continuously cored. Upper Miocene sediments at Site 550 (the only abyssal site) are characterized by moderate to extensive dissolution of planktonic foraminifers, but they contain abundant specimens of Bolboforma that mark this stratigraphic interval (von Daniels and Spiegler, 1974, doi:10.1007/BF02986990; Roegl, 1976, doi:10.2973/dsdp.proc.35.133.1976; Murray, 1979, doi:10.2973/dsdp.proc.48.116.1979; Müller et al., 1985, doi:10.2973/dsdp.proc.80.117.1985). Although foraminiferal evidence is not conclusive, nannofossils indicate a widespread Oligocene unconformity (Müller, 1985). Several oceanographic factors, not just simple sea-level change, probably interacted to produce these regional unconformities. There are also dramatic differences in the Cenozoic sedimentary record among Leg 80 sites, indicating that each has had a distinct geologic history. The thickness of the Cenozoic section varies from 100 m at Site 551 to 471 m at Site 548. The thickness of individual chronostratigraphic units also varies, as do the number and stratigraphic position of unconformities other than those mentioned. Differences in the stratigraphic record from site to site across the continental slope result from (1) location in separate half-graben structures, (2) varying location across the developing margin, and (3) difference in position relative to the seaward edge of the enclosing half-graben. Except for turbidites, deposition at Site 550 (abyssal) was largely independent of developments on the continental slope; but it was affected by oceanographic events widespread in the North Atlantic.