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Argo Fault

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Image
—Crustal cross section AB through the Scotian Shelf. Note the bowl-like crustal syncline that underlies the Mesozoic and Tertiary fill, the rift faulting, and the extent of the Jurassic Argo salt.
Published: 11 December 1994
Figure 2 —Crustal cross section AB through the Scotian Shelf. Note the bowl-like crustal syncline that underlies the Mesozoic and Tertiary fill, the rift faulting, and the extent of the Jurassic Argo salt.
Series: SEPM Gulf Coast Section Publications
Published: 01 December 2005
DOI: 10.5724/gcs.05.25.0910
EISBN: 978-0-9836096-5-0
... was associated with the formation of the Argo Abyssal Plain and produced further movement on the faults bounding the sub-basins. Restricted, deep-marine environments were established in the subsiding troughs, and the primary oil source rock facies of the Dingo Claystone was deposited during the Late Jurassic...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 11 December 1994
AAPG Bulletin (1994) 78 (12): 1863–1880.
...Figure 2 —Crustal cross section AB through the Scotian Shelf. Note the bowl-like crustal syncline that underlies the Mesozoic and Tertiary fill, the rift faulting, and the extent of the Jurassic Argo salt. ...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Relationships Between Pore Pressure, Stresses, and...
Second thumbnail for: Relationships Between Pore Pressure, Stresses, and...
Third thumbnail for: Relationships Between Pore Pressure, Stresses, and...
Image
Southern Jeanne d'Arc Basin, Grand Banks, offshore Newfoundland. (a) Line drawing of time-migrated seismic section 85-4A. (b) Restoration for the Middle Jurassic during deposition of the Whale member. See Appendix for restoration approach. Cormorant fold developed above subsalt normal faults, antithetic to Murre boundary fault. Some detached, suprasalt normal faults formed far from the subsalt normal faults. (c) Restoration for the Early Jurassic during deposition of upper evaporitic package (i.e., Argo Formation).
Published: 01 May 2000
faults, antithetic to Murre boundary fault. Some detached, suprasalt normal faults formed far from the subsalt normal faults. (c) Restoration for the Early Jurassic during deposition of upper evaporitic package (i.e., Argo Formation).
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 November 1975
GSA Bulletin (1975) 86 (11): 1553–1578.
..., magnetic, and seismic-reflection profiling. In some 2,800,000 sq km of this region, igneous rocks of the crust, lower crust, and possible upper mantle are exposed by faulting or volcanism. Fifty-six dredge hauls of these igneous rocks were obtained, largely from the major cross-fractures (transform faults...
Image
Triangulation displacement vectors with respect to Attica from Le Pichon et al. (1995, their figs. 4 and 6). Note how western Peloponnesus moves westward with respect to Attica due to a distributed north/south extensional system. Argos (Ar), Lakonia (Lak), and Messinia (Me) are identified within this system. Co, Gulf of Corinth; Pat, Gulf of Patras; Tri, Lake of Trikhonis; Am, Gulf of Amvrakia; KF, Kefalonia dextral fault. [Colour online.]
Published: 26 March 2019
Fig. 9. Triangulation displacement vectors with respect to Attica from Le Pichon et al. (1995 , their figs. 4 and 6). Note how western Peloponnesus moves westward with respect to Attica due to a distributed north/south extensional system. Argos (Ar), Lakonia (Lak), and Messinia (Me
Image
Examples of the internal structure in high fluid-flux, vein-rich fault zones. (a). Quartz-rich fault-fill veins and spatially associated extension veins in two adjacent reverse fault zones (Defiance lode, St. Ives goldfield, Western Australia). (b). Fault-fill vein in reverse fault with arrays of related extension veins (B01 lode, Argo gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (c). Laminated fault-fill vein (Gympie gold mine, southeast Queensland). (d). Extension vein arrays developed adjacent to reverse fault zone (Conqueror lodes, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (e). Dilatant jog in a reverse fault (Revenge gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (f). Wing crack veins propagating from the upper termination of a reverse fault zone (Centenary lode, Darlot gold mine, WA). After Kenworthy and Hagemann (2007), with permission of Elsevier.
Published: 01 May 2016
with arrays of related extension veins (B01 lode, Argo gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (c). Laminated fault-fill vein (Gympie gold mine, southeast Queensland). (d). Extension vein arrays developed adjacent to reverse fault zone (Conqueror lodes, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (e). Dilatant jog in a reverse
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 2015
AAPG Bulletin (2015) 99 (7): 1281–1313.
... a very late diagenetic mineral. This implies that the source of Ba is because of the late diagenetic breakdown of K-feldspars at 2–3 km (1–2 mi) depth, which is confirmed by covariation of Ba and Rb in sandstones. Sulfur isotope data suggest that the SO 4 2 + was derived from Argo Formation evaporites...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Diagenetic barite and sphalerite in middle Mesozoi...
Second thumbnail for: Diagenetic barite and sphalerite in middle Mesozoi...
Third thumbnail for: Diagenetic barite and sphalerite in middle Mesozoi...
Image
(a). Dilational breccia (Argo gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (b). Hydrothermal alteration around fault-related extension veins, W66 lode, Revenge gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA. (c). Detail of internal structure of laminated fault-fill vein in thrust fault (W66 lode, Revenge gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (d). Crack-seal inclusion bands in quartz from a quartz-tourmaline extension vein, Sigma mine, Val d’Or, Quebec. (e). Crack-seal inclusion bands in laminated, fault-fill calcite vein, Taemas, N.S.W. Spacing of crack-seal inclusion bands indicates slip increments were each up to 200 μm, and that sealing of dilatant sites occurred between slip events.
Published: 01 May 2016
Fig. 2 (a). Dilational breccia (Argo gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA). (b). Hydrothermal alteration around fault-related extension veins, W66 lode, Revenge gold mine, St. Ives goldfield, WA. (c). Detail of internal structure of laminated fault-fill vein in thrust fault (W66 lode, Revenge gold
Journal Article
Published: 12 October 2010
Geological Magazine (2011) 148 (3): 404–422.
... with the evolved oxide gabbro. These gabbro samples are geochemically distinct from the CIR gabbro occurring along the Vema, Argo and Marie Celeste transform faults and can further be discriminated from the associated NCIR basalts by their clinopyroxene (augite in gabbro, and diopsidic in basalts) and olivine...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 February 1985
AAPG Bulletin (1985) 69 (2): 265–266.
... is that of an Atlantic-type plate margin. Two major unconformities divide the section into prerift, synrift, and postrift sequences. The prerift sequence consists of Paleozoic metasediments in basement fault blocks. Synrift sediments consist of Newark Group equivalents: the Argo Salt and the Iroquois Formation...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1982
AAPG Bulletin (1982) 66 (7): 965.
... 16,000 ft (5,000 m) thick and can be divided into five depositional sequences. The subduction of continental crust from the Aru shelf/Arafura Sea, beneath the Aru Trough, is associated with intensive normal faulting of Pliocene to recent age. In the Argo Abyssal Plain of northwestern Australia, a complex...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 December 1940
AAPG Bulletin (1940) 24 (12): 2126–2142.
.... Cox and Hamon-Gorman-Yoakam’s Cuellar No. 1, in the center of Survey No. 117 (west), provided a half-mile south extension to the field in the Government Wells sand in October, 1937. Their Cuellar No. 3 discovered the Argo sand production through perforations from 2,550 to 2,570 feet. The well...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Hoffman Field, Duval County, Texas
Second thumbnail for: Hoffman Field, Duval County, Texas
Third thumbnail for: Hoffman Field, Duval County, Texas
Image
A northwest–southeast cross-section through the Jeanne d’Arc Basin showing four segments: (1) stable shelf (Bonavista Platform), (2) hinge zone, (3) main Jeanne d’Arc Basin, and (4) Central Ridge (from Tankard and Welsink 1987). TR, Triassic red beds; cross-hatched pattern, Argo Formation evaporites. Wavy stratigraphic boundries indicate (erosional) unconformities. Relative strike-slip movement along two transfer faults: A, away from; T, towards viewer. For location of section, see line A–A′ on Fig. 2. L., Lower; M., Middle; U., Upper; Unc., Uncomformity.
Published: 21 April 2004
Fig. 3. A northwest–southeast cross-section through the Jeanne d’Arc Basin showing four segments: (1) stable shelf (Bonavista Platform), (2) hinge zone, (3) main Jeanne d’Arc Basin, and (4) Central Ridge (from Tankard and Welsink 1987 ). TR, Triassic red beds; cross-hatched pattern, Argo
Journal Article
Published: 21 February 2013
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2013) 50 (6): 607–635.
...-shaped (autochthonous) as indicated from a seismic profile given by Kidston et al (2005) ; significant faulting has taken place on the margin, with platform soling on the Argo Formation ( Fig. 3 ). Glooscap-C63 well is located on the Nova Scotia Shelf ∼180 km south-southeast of Halifax and 200 km...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Hydrocarbon fluid inclusions in the <span class="s...
Second thumbnail for: Hydrocarbon fluid inclusions in the <span class="s...
Third thumbnail for: Hydrocarbon fluid inclusions in the <span class="s...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2002
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2002) 92 (4): 1621–1632.
... several state highways in the area, including Interstate 40 about 10 km north of the fault rupture. Moreover, California's experience has been that enhancements to ground motion have resulted in major damage and collapse of bridges up to 100 km from the epicenter of large earthquakes. It would be of great...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Highway Performance during the 16 October 1999 Hec...
Second thumbnail for: Highway Performance during the 16 October 1999 Hec...
Third thumbnail for: Highway Performance during the 16 October 1999 Hec...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1991
AAPG Bulletin (1991) 75 (8): 1353–1373.
..., the geologic history, and the location of earthquake foci then offer constraints on the deep structure of this complex area. The Upper Ojai Valley is a tectonic depression between opposing reverse faults. Its northern border is formed by the active, north-dipping San Cayetano fault, which has 6.0 km...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Thin-Skinned Tectonics of the Upper Ojai Valley an...
Second thumbnail for: Thin-Skinned Tectonics of the Upper Ojai Valley an...
Third thumbnail for: Thin-Skinned Tectonics of the Upper Ojai Valley an...
Image
(A) Location of the study area, with schematic map of active faults in the Argos basin (this study; Papanastassiou et al., 1993; Piccardi, 2005a; Hinzen et al., 2018; Mechernich et al., 2018; Karakonstantis et al., 2019; Kassaras et al., 2020). Gray lines show the main trade roads in the Bronze Age. The paleocoastline between Lerna and Tyrins (2500 B.C.) is from Zangger (1991). Names are for places relevant to Mycenaean history (see Piccardi et al., 2017). (B) Active faults in the area of Mycenae. Digital elevation model is from U.S. Geological Survey (2020). Peak elevations are in m. (C) Geological map of the area of Mycenae (modified from Papanastassiou et al., 1993). The Havos stream continued its course toward the northwest, into the Kokoretsa stream, before being captured and diverted south by regressive headward erosion stimulated by the tectonic uplift of the footwall of the Mycenae fault. Contours are in m. 1—location of stream capture and fault barrage described in the text. (D) Bird’s-eye view of ancient Mycenae’s hilltop citadel (photo from https://www.thearchaeologist.org/blog/3d-video-of-the-acropolis-of-mycenae-in-prehistoric-greece, accessed July 2022). Mycenae was positioned close to main communication routes of the area on a naturally defensible hill (278 m above sea level) with a nearby perennial water source.
Published: 25 July 2023
Figure 1. (A) Location of the study area, with schematic map of active faults in the Argos basin (this study; Papanastassiou et al., 1993 ; Piccardi, 2005a ; Hinzen et al., 2018 ; Mechernich et al., 2018 ; Karakonstantis et al., 2019 ; Kassaras et al., 2020 ). Gray lines show the main trade
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1974
AAPG Bulletin (1974) 58 (9): 1731–1750.
... sec. (d) Layer R 4 -R 3 is weakly stratified. (e) Reflector R 4 is distinguished by its characteristically rough surface on the northwestern half of the plateaus. There, R 4 is the shallowest surface that appears to be offset by normal faults and is an obvious unconformity...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Seismic Reflection Measurements of Northwest Austr...
Second thumbnail for: Seismic Reflection Measurements of Northwest Austr...
Third thumbnail for: Seismic Reflection Measurements of Northwest Austr...
Journal Article
Published: 20 November 2012
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2012) 49 (12): 1523–1539.
... of pathways along major fault zones. The geochemistry of the volcanic rocks ( Pe-Piper and Jansa 1987 ; Pe-Piper et al. 1994 ) showed the presence of basalt, trachyte, and alkaline rhyolite and microgranite. Chemical composition and radiogenic isotopes show that basalts range from mildly alkalic to mildly...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Early Cretaceous volcanism in the Scotian Basin 1 ...