Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections

The Pen Branch Fault is a reactivated, high angle, reverse basin border fault that dips to southeast from the basement (Triassic-Paleozoic-Precambrian in age) to near vertical through the Atlantic Coastal Plain sediments (Late Cretaceous to Recent in age) of the Savannah River site in South Carolina...

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Main Author: Moore, Leslie Diane
Other Authors: Geophysics
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44797
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09182008-063212/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-447972021-06-22T05:29:11Z Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections Moore, Leslie Diane Geophysics shallow refraction Savannah River site geophysics LD5655.V855 1997.M667 The Pen Branch Fault is a reactivated, high angle, reverse basin border fault that dips to southeast from the basement (Triassic-Paleozoic-Precambrian in age) to near vertical through the Atlantic Coastal Plain sediments (Late Cretaceous to Recent in age) of the Savannah River site in South Carolina. The fault movement has occurred through Late Cretaceous to Tertiary. Faulting might penetrate as shallow as the Dry Branch and the Tobacco Road Sand Formations (Late Eocene). An investigation with high resolution reflection seismic data is undertaken along the Pen Branch Fault. Five of the seismic lines are reprocessed to help in determining the upward depth of penetration of this fault. This is done by utilizing refracted arrivals from the multifold reflection data. The shallowest refractors (4 - 18 m) imaged have an average velocity of 1700 m/s. All of the lines exhibit events that are not flat lying across the data where the fault is believed to be. The lines possess deformation such as offsets, upwarping and channels. Deformation can be related to the Pen Branch Fault as shallow as 4 m from the surface. Displacements along the lines vary from 1 m up to 5 m. Reverse sense of motion is mainly exhibited along the fault zone that is covered by this study. The events resolved portray the Pen Branch Fault in a fault zone of subparallel faults and splays. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:45:57Z 2014-03-14T21:45:57Z 1997 2008-09-18 2008-09-18 2008-09-18 Thesis Text etd-09182008-063212 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44797 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09182008-063212/ en OCLC# 36828992 LD5655.V855_1997.M667.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ viii, 78 leaves (20 folded) BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic shallow refraction
Savannah River site
geophysics
LD5655.V855 1997.M667
spellingShingle shallow refraction
Savannah River site
geophysics
LD5655.V855 1997.M667
Moore, Leslie Diane
Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
description The Pen Branch Fault is a reactivated, high angle, reverse basin border fault that dips to southeast from the basement (Triassic-Paleozoic-Precambrian in age) to near vertical through the Atlantic Coastal Plain sediments (Late Cretaceous to Recent in age) of the Savannah River site in South Carolina. The fault movement has occurred through Late Cretaceous to Tertiary. Faulting might penetrate as shallow as the Dry Branch and the Tobacco Road Sand Formations (Late Eocene). An investigation with high resolution reflection seismic data is undertaken along the Pen Branch Fault. Five of the seismic lines are reprocessed to help in determining the upward depth of penetration of this fault. This is done by utilizing refracted arrivals from the multifold reflection data. The shallowest refractors (4 - 18 m) imaged have an average velocity of 1700 m/s. All of the lines exhibit events that are not flat lying across the data where the fault is believed to be. The lines possess deformation such as offsets, upwarping and channels. Deformation can be related to the Pen Branch Fault as shallow as 4 m from the surface. Displacements along the lines vary from 1 m up to 5 m. Reverse sense of motion is mainly exhibited along the fault zone that is covered by this study. The events resolved portray the Pen Branch Fault in a fault zone of subparallel faults and splays. === Master of Science
author2 Geophysics
author_facet Geophysics
Moore, Leslie Diane
author Moore, Leslie Diane
author_sort Moore, Leslie Diane
title Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
title_short Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
title_full Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
title_fullStr Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
title_full_unstemmed Shallow subsurface deformation along the Pen Branch Fault in South Carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
title_sort shallow subsurface deformation along the pen branch fault in south carolina: interpretation from seismic refraction stack sections
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44797
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09182008-063212/
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