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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Rosenquist photographs
Structural architecture of the 1980 Mount St. Helens collapse: An analysis of the Rosenquist photo sequence using digital image correlation Available to Purchase
A: Shaded relief map of Mount St. Helens as it appeared after 18 May 1980 e... Available to Purchase
The Siren Call of Cascadia Free
The expansive effects of concentrated pyritic zones within the Devonian Marcellus Shale Formation of North America Available to Purchase
A sagging-spreading continuum of large volcano structure Available to Purchase
Response characteristics and detectability of pegmatitic rare-metal deposits using different grounded-wire configurations Available to Purchase
Is short-offset frequency-domain controlled-source electromagnetic survey using an equatorial configuration a good choice on land? Available to Purchase
Clay Mobility in Landslides, Ventura, California Available to Purchase
Rapid block glides: slide-surface fragmentation in New Zealand's Waikaremoana landslide Available to Purchase
Controlled-source electromagnetic noise attenuation via a deep convolutional neural network and high-quality sounding curve screening mechanism Available to Purchase
Reexamination of controlled-source electromagnetic inversion at the Lona prospect, Orphan Basin, Canada Available to Purchase
Marine controlled-source electromagnetic methods in the hydrocarbon industry: A tutorial on method and practice Available to Purchase
Subaerial volcaniclastic deposits – influences of initiation mechanisms and transport behaviour on characteristics and distributions Open Access
Abstract Subaerial volcaniclastic deposits are produced principally by volcanic debris avalanches, pyroclastic density currents, lahars, and tephra falls. Those deposits have widely ranging geomorphic and sedimentologic characteristics; they can mantle, modify, or create new topography, and their emplacement and subsequent reworking can have an outsized impact on the geomorphic and sedimentologic responses of watersheds surrounding, and channels draining, volcanoes. Volcaniclastic deposits provide a wealth of information about eruptive histories, volcanic processes, and landscape responses to eruptions. The volcanic processes that produce these deposits, and consequently the character and sedimentary structures of the deposits themselves, are influenced by initiation mechanism. Deposit preservation is affected by deposit magnitude, texture, and composition, depositional environment, and climate regime. Innovative analyses of deposits from several modern eruptions and advancements in physical and numerical modelling have vastly improved our understanding of volcanic processes, interpretations of eruptive histories, and recognition of the hazards posed by volcanic eruptions. This contribution highlights and summarizes major advances that have occurred in the past few decades in understanding of volcaniclastic deposits and linkages with volcanic processes.
Clay mineral transformations and weakening mechanisms along the Alpine Fault, New Zealand Available to Purchase
Abstract The formation of clay minerals within active fault zones, which results from the infiltration of aqueous fluids, often leads to important changes in mechanical behaviour. These hydrous phyllosilicates can (1) enhance anisotropy and reduce shear strength, (2) modify porosity and permeability, (3) store or release significant volumes of water, and (4) increase fluid pressures during shearing. The varying interplay between faulting, fluid migration, and hydrous clay mineral transformations along the central Alpine Fault of New Zealand is suggested to constitute an important weakening mechanism within the upper section of this crustal discontinuity. Well-developed zones of cataclasite and compacted clay gouge show successive stages of hydrothermal alteration, driven by the cyclic, coseismic influx of meteoric fluids into exhumed amphibolite-facies rocks that are relatively Mg rich. Three modes of deformation and alteration are recog-nized within the mylonite-derived clay gouge, which occurred during various stages of the fault’s exhumation history. Following initial strain-hardening and frictional melting during anhydrous cataclastic breakdown of the mylonite fabric, reaction weakening began with formation of Mg-chlorite at sub-greenschist conditions (<320 0 C) and continued at lo wer temperatures (<120°C) by growth of swelling clays in the matrix. The low permeability and low strength of clay-rich shears are suitable for generating high pore-fluid pressures during faulting. Despite the apparent weakening of the c . 6 km upper segment of the Alpine Fault, the upper crust beneath the Southern Alps is known to be actively releasing elastic strain, with small (<M 5) earthquakes occurring to 12 km depth. We predict that larger events will nucleate at c . 6–12 km along an anhydrous, strain-hardened portion of the fault.