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Dive into the research topics where Goran Boren is active.

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Featured researches published by Goran Boren.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2010

Upper mantle electrical resistivity structure beneath the central Mariana subduction system

Tetsuo Matsuno; Nobukazu Seama; Rob L. Evans; Alan D. Chave; Kiyoshi Baba; Antony White; Graham Heinson; Goran Boren; Asami Yoneda; Hisashi Utada

This paper reports on a magnetotelluric (MT) survey across the central Mariana subduction system, providing a comprehensive electrical resistivity image of the upper mantle to address issues of mantle dynamics in the mantle wedge and beneath the slow back-arc spreading ridge. After calculation of MT response functions and their correction for topographic distortion, two-dimensional electrical resistivity structures were generated using an inversion algorithm with a smoothness constraint and with additional restrictions imposed by the subducting slab. The resultant isotropic electrical resistivity structure contains several key features. There is an uppermost resistive layer with a thickness of up to 150 km beneath the Pacific Ocean Basin, 80–100 km beneath the Mariana Trough, and 60 km beneath the Parece Vela Basin along with a conductive mantle beneath the resistive layer. A resistive region down to 60 km depth and a conductive region at greater depth are inferred beneath the volcanic arc in the mantle wedge. There is no evidence for a conductive feature beneath the back-arc spreading center. Sensitivity tests were applied to these features through inversion of synthetic data. The uppermost resistive layer is the cool, dry residual from the plate accretion process. Its thickness beneath the Pacific Ocean Basin is controlled mainly by temperature, whereas the roughly constant thickness beneath the Mariana Trough and beneath the Parece Vela Basin regardless of seafloor age is controlled by composition. The conductive mantle beneath the uppermost resistive layer requires hydration of olivine and/or melting of the mantle. The resistive region beneath the volcanic arc down to 60 km suggests that fluids such as melt or free water are not well connected or are highly three-dimensional and of limited size. In contrast, the conductive region beneath the volcanic arc below 60 km depth reflects melting and hydration driven by water release from the subducting slab. The resistive region beneath the back-arc spreading center can be explained by dry mantle with typical temperatures, suggesting that any melt present is either poorly connected or distributed discontinuously along the strike of the ridge. Evidence for electrical anisotropy in the central Mariana upper mantle is weak.


Australian Journal of Earth Sciences | 2013

Crustal architecture of the Capricorn Orogen, Western Australia and associated metallogeny

Simon P. Johnson; A. M. Thorne; I.M. Tyler; R.J. Korsch; B. L. N. Kennett; H.N.C. Cutten; J. Goodwin; O. Blay; Richard S. Blewett; Aurore Joly; Mike Dentith; Alan Aitken; J. Holzschuh; Michelle Salmon; Anya M. Reading; Graham Heinson; Goran Boren; J. Ross; R.D. Costelloe; Tanya Fomin

A 581 km vibroseis-source, deep seismic reflection survey was acquired through the Capricorn Orogen of Western Australia and, for the first time, provides an unprecedented view of the deep crustal architecture of the West Australian Craton. The survey has imaged three principal suture zones, as well as several other lithospheric-scale faults. The suture zones separate four seismically distinct tectonic blocks, which include the Pilbara Craton, the Bandee Seismic Province (a previously unrecognised tectonic block), the Glenburgh Terrane of the Gascoyne Province and the Narryer Terrane of the Yilgarn Craton. In the upper crust, the survey imaged numerous Proterozoic granite batholiths as well as the architecture of the Mesoproterozoic Edmund and Collier basins. These features were formed during the punctuated reworking of the craton by the reactivation of the major crustal structures. The location and setting of gold, base metal and rare earth element deposits across the orogen are closely linked to the major lithospheric-scale structures, highlighting their importance to fluid flow within mineral systems by the transport of fluid and energy direct from the mantle into the upper crust.


Nature Communications | 2018

Author Correction: Uplift of the central transantarctic mountains

Phil Wannamaker; Graham J. Hill; John A. Stodt; Virginie Maris; Yasuo Ogawa; Kate Selway; Goran Boren; Edward Bertrand; Daniel Uhlmann; Bridget Ayling; A. Marie Green; Daniel Feucht

The original version of this Article incorrectly referenced the Figures in the Supplementary Information. References in the main Article to Supplementary Figure 7 through to Supplementary Figure 20 were previously incorrectly cited as Supplementary Figure 5 through to Supplementary Figure 18, respectively. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Geophysics | 2016

Magnetotelluric monitoring of coal-seam gas and shale-gas resource development in Australia

Nigel Rees; Simon Carter; Graham Heinson; Lars Krieger; Dennis Conway; Goran Boren; Christopher Matthews


Nature Communications | 2017

Uplift of the central transantarctic mountains

Phil Wannamaker; Graham Hill; John A. Stodt; Virginie Maris; Yasuo Ogawa; Kate Selway; Goran Boren; Edward Bertrand; Daniel Uhlmann; Bridget Ayling; A. Marie Green; Daniel Feucht


The APPEA Journal | 2015

Magnetotelluric monitoring of coal seam gas depressurisation

Nigel Rees; Graham Heinson; Lars Krieger; Goran Boren; Dennis Conway; Simon Carter; Joseph Rugari; Oliver Putland; Sebastian Schnaidt


The APPEA Journal | 2015

Monitoring of hydraulic fracturing in Moomba, South Australia, using magnetotellurics

Simon Carter; Graham Heinson; Lars Krieger; Nigel Rees; Dennis Conway; Oliver Putland; Joseph Rugari; Goran Boren; Christopher Matthews


International Conference and Exhibition, Melbourne, Australia 13-16 September 2015 | 2015

Magnetotelluric Monitoring of a Hydraulic Fracturing in Moomba, South Australia

Graham Heinson; Simon Carter; Lars Krieger; Goran Boren; Christopher Matthews


Exploration Geophysics | 2015

Magnetotelluric imaging of a Palaeozoic Andean margin subduction zone in western Victoria

Michael Stepan; Graham Heinson; David Taylor; Kate Robertson; Phillip Skladzien; Goran Boren


Exploration Geophysics | 2012

From Surface to Mantle; An Overview of Downloadable MT Data from South Australia

Tania Dhu; Graham Heinson; Peter Milligan; Stephan Thiel; Kate Selway; Goran Boren; Jingming Duan; Tanya Fomin; Jenny Maher

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Kate Selway

University of Adelaide

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Nigel Rees

University of Adelaide

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