Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data

Sills emplaced at shallow-levels are commonly accommodated by overburden uplift, producing forced folds. We examine ancient forced folds developed above saucer-shaped sills using 3D seismic reflection data from the Canterbury Basin, offshore SE New Zealand. Seismic-stratigraphic relationships indica...

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Main Authors: Jennifer Reeves, Craig Magee, Christopher Aiden-Lee Jackson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Volcanica 2018-03-01
Series:Volcanica
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jvolcanica.org/ojs/index.php/volcanica/article/view/2
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spelling doaj-1559759cd2524bfdb71d5a6364dc4b562021-05-02T19:54:26ZengVolcanicaVolcanica2610-35402018-03-011111710.30909/vol.01.01.01172Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection dataJennifer Reeves0Craig Magee1Christopher Aiden-Lee Jackson2Imperial College LondonImperial College LondonImperial College LondonSills emplaced at shallow-levels are commonly accommodated by overburden uplift, producing forced folds. We examine ancient forced folds developed above saucer-shaped sills using 3D seismic reflection data from the Canterbury Basin, offshore SE New Zealand. Seismic-stratigraphic relationships indicate sill emplacement occurred incrementally over ~31 Myr between the Oligocene (~35–32 Ma) and Early Pliocene (~5–4 Ma). Two folds display flat-topped geometries and amplitudes that decrease upwards, conforming to expected models of forced fold growth. Conversely, two folds display amplitudes that locally increase upwards, coincident with a transition from flat-topped to dome-shaped morphologies and an across-fold thickening of strata. We suggest these discrepancies between observed and expected forced fold geometry reflect uplift and subsidence cycles driven by sill inflation and deflation. Unravelling these forced fold kinematic histories shows complex intrusion geometries can produce relatively simple ground deformation patterns, with magma transgression corresponds to localisation of uplift.https://www.jvolcanica.org/ojs/index.php/volcanica/article/view/2SillForced foldEmplacementGround deformationIncremental
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jennifer Reeves
Craig Magee
Christopher Aiden-Lee Jackson
spellingShingle Jennifer Reeves
Craig Magee
Christopher Aiden-Lee Jackson
Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data
Volcanica
Sill
Forced fold
Emplacement
Ground deformation
Incremental
author_facet Jennifer Reeves
Craig Magee
Christopher Aiden-Lee Jackson
author_sort Jennifer Reeves
title Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data
title_short Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data
title_full Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data
title_fullStr Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data
title_full_unstemmed Unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3D seismic reflection data
title_sort unravelling intrusion-induced forced fold kinematics and ground deformation using 3d seismic reflection data
publisher Volcanica
series Volcanica
issn 2610-3540
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Sills emplaced at shallow-levels are commonly accommodated by overburden uplift, producing forced folds. We examine ancient forced folds developed above saucer-shaped sills using 3D seismic reflection data from the Canterbury Basin, offshore SE New Zealand. Seismic-stratigraphic relationships indicate sill emplacement occurred incrementally over ~31 Myr between the Oligocene (~35–32 Ma) and Early Pliocene (~5–4 Ma). Two folds display flat-topped geometries and amplitudes that decrease upwards, conforming to expected models of forced fold growth. Conversely, two folds display amplitudes that locally increase upwards, coincident with a transition from flat-topped to dome-shaped morphologies and an across-fold thickening of strata. We suggest these discrepancies between observed and expected forced fold geometry reflect uplift and subsidence cycles driven by sill inflation and deflation. Unravelling these forced fold kinematic histories shows complex intrusion geometries can produce relatively simple ground deformation patterns, with magma transgression corresponds to localisation of uplift.
topic Sill
Forced fold
Emplacement
Ground deformation
Incremental
url https://www.jvolcanica.org/ojs/index.php/volcanica/article/view/2
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AT craigmagee unravellingintrusioninducedforcedfoldkinematicsandgrounddeformationusing3dseismicreflectiondata
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