The First Magnetotelluric Image of the Lithospheric-Scale Geological Architecture in Central Svalbard, Arctic Norway
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/8696Dato
2015-12-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Magnetotelluric data, collected from 30 stations on Spitsbergen as part of a
reconnaissance geothermal resource assessment along a profile with 0.53-km
spacing in 0.0031000-s period range, were used to develop a lithospheric-scale
two-dimensional (2D) resistivity model, heretofore unavailable for the region.
Inverting the determinant of the impedance tensor in 2D, we found the
smoothest model fitting the data within a specified tolerance level. We justified
the model by perturbing it, performing sensitivity analysis and re-running the
inversion with a different algorithm and starting models. From our final model,
we constructed a crustal-scale stratigraphic framework, using it to estimate the
depth of major geological features and to locate structural deformations. The
2D resistivity model indicates a shallow low resistive (B100 Vm) Paleozoic
Mesozoic sedimentary sequence, varying laterally in thickness (24 km),
obstructed by a gently dipping PermianCarboniferous succession (1000 Vm)
east of the Billefjorden Fault Zone. Underneath, a (possibly Devonian) basin
is imaged as a thick conductive anomaly stretching 15 km downwards.
Beneath a deformed PaleozoicMesozoic successions, an uplifted pre-Devonian
shallow basement (3000 Vm) is revealed. We estimated a thin lithosphere, in
the range of ca. 55100 km thick, that could explain the area’s elevated surface
heat flow (ca. 6090 mW/m2
), consistent with the calculated depth of thermal
lithosphere heat-base boundaries for a partially melting mantle. The model
indicates a possible replenishment pathway of upward heat transport from the
shallow convective mantle to the composite crustal conductive units. This is
encouraging for low-enthalpy geothermal development.
Human set