Structure and Tectonics of the Continental Crust: Evidence from Deep Seismic Reflection Profiling by Cocorp
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 4
 - File Size:
 - 137 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
The past decade has seen a great  increase in activity in deep seismic  reflection profiling of the continental  crust. Some 20 countries have conducted  field experiments and the total length of  deep seismic profiles surveyed to date is  approximately 25,000 km. This total is  very large compared to the quantity of such  data that existed previously, but very  small compared to the total length of seis- mic profiles of the shallow crust carried  out for petroleum exploration, which some- times has exceeded 600,000 km on land in  one year alone and 1,600,000 km/yr on land  and sea. Furthermore, 25,000 km of seismic pro- filing corresponds to exploration of only a  tiny fraction of the total volume of the  entire continental crust. Thus at this  stage of development of the subject, one  must be wary of generalizations that are  based on these limited data and then ex- tended in scope to include the crust  everywhere. The state of the subject is  such that virtually every new seismic line  reveals totally unexpected seismic fea- tures, a sign that the subject is in its  major discovery phase and a warning to the  generalizers. Nevertheless, in addition to much new  information on deep crustal structure in  specific locations, some broad consequences  of application of this powerful geophysical  technique to a region of the earth not pre- viously explored in this manner are be- coming clear. One is that, as seismic data  on the deep continental crust become more  abundant and more revealing of complexi- ties, the deep crust can be far better re- lated to rocks at the surface. Conse- quently, the geological style of reason- ing is now being extended from its normal  domain of the near-surface to include the  deepest crust in a comprehensive story of  the evolution of the continents. This  change is a subtle but important one and is  evident, for example, in some cross sec- tions of the North American Transect Pro- gram, which show surface geology extended  in a consistent, though speculative, manner  to the top of the mantle. In other words,
Citation
APA: (1987) Structure and Tectonics of the Continental Crust: Evidence from Deep Seismic Reflection Profiling by Cocorp
MLA: Structure and Tectonics of the Continental Crust: Evidence from Deep Seismic Reflection Profiling by Cocorp. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.