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Dive into the research topics where U. Weckmann is active.

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Featured researches published by U. Weckmann.


Nature | 2011

Correlation between deep fluids, tremor and creep along the central San Andreas fault

Michael Becken; Oliver Ritter; Paul A. Bedrosian; U. Weckmann

The seismicity pattern along the San Andreas fault near Parkfield and Cholame, California, varies distinctly over a length of only fifty kilometres. Within the brittle crust, the presence of frictionally weak minerals, fault-weakening high fluid pressures and chemical weakening are considered possible causes of an anomalously weak fault northwest of Parkfield. Non-volcanic tremor from lower-crustal and upper-mantle depths is most pronounced about thirty kilometres southeast of Parkfield and is thought to be associated with high pore-fluid pressures at depth. Here we present geophysical evidence of fluids migrating into the creeping section of the San Andreas fault that seem to originate in the region of the uppermost mantle that also stimulates tremor, and evidence that along-strike variations in tremor activity and amplitude are related to strength variations in the lower crust and upper mantle. Interconnected fluids can explain a deep zone of anomalously low electrical resistivity that has been imaged by magnetotelluric data southwest of the Parkfield–Cholame segment. Near Cholame, where fluids seem to be trapped below a high-resistivity cap, tremor concentrates adjacent to the inferred fluids within a mechanically strong zone of high resistivity. By contrast, subvertical zones of low resistivity breach the entire crust near the drill hole of the San Andreas Fault Observatory at Depth, northwest of Parkfield, and imply pathways for deep fluids into the eastern fault block, coincident with a mechanically weak crust and the lower tremor amplitudes in the lower crust. Fluid influx to the fault system is consistent with hypotheses of fault-weakening high fluid pressures in the brittle crust.


Reviews of Geophysics | 2009

Anatomy of the Dead Sea Transform from lithospheric to microscopic scale

Michael Weber; K. Abu-Ayyash; A. Abueladas; Amotz Agnon; Z. Alasonati‐Tašárová; H. Al‐Zubi; A. Babeyko; Yuval Bartov; K. Bauer; Michael Becken; Paul A. Bedrosian; Zvi Ben-Avraham; Günter Bock; M. Bohnhoff; J. Bribach; P. Dulski; Jörg Ebbing; Radwan J. El-Kelani; A. Förster; H.-J. Förster; U. Frieslander; Zvi Garfunkel; H. J. Goetze; V. Haak; Christian Haberland; M. Hassouneh; Stefan L. Helwig; A. Hofstetter; A. Hoffmann‐Rothe; K.-H. Jäckel

Fault zones are the locations where motion of tectonic plates, often associated with earthquakes, is accommodated. Despite a rapid increase in the understanding of faults in the last decades, our knowledge of their geometry, petrophysical properties, and controlling processes remains incomplete. The central questions addressed here in our study of the Dead Sea Transform (DST) in the Middle East are as follows: (1) What are the structure and kinematics of a large fault zone? (2) What controls its structure and kinematics? (3) How does the DST compare to other plate boundary fault zones? The DST has accommodated a total of 105 km of left-lateral transform motion between the African and Arabian plates since early Miocene (similar to 20 Ma). The DST segment between the Dead Sea and the Red Sea, called the Arava/Araba Fault (AF), is studied here using a multidisciplinary and multiscale approach from the mu m to the plate tectonic scale. We observe that under the DST a narrow, subvertical zone cuts through crust and lithosphere. First, from west to east the crustal thickness increases smoothly from 26 to 39 km, and a subhorizontal lower crustal reflector is detected east of the AF. Second, several faults exist in the upper crust in a 40 km wide zone centered on the AF, but none have kilometer-size zones of decreased seismic velocities or zones of high electrical conductivities in the upper crust expected for large damage zones. Third, the AF is the main branch of the DST system, even though it has accommodated only a part (up to 60 km) of the overall 105 km of sinistral plate motion. Fourth, the AF acts as a barrier to fluids to a depth of 4 km, and the lithology changes abruptly across it. Fifth, in the top few hundred meters of the AF a locally transpressional regime is observed in a 100-300 m wide zone of deformed and displaced material, bordered by subparallel faults forming a positive flower structure. Other segments of the AF have a transtensional character with small pull-aparts along them. The damage zones of the individual faults are only 5-20 m wide at this depth range. Sixth, two areas on the AF show mesoscale to microscale faulting and veining in limestone sequences with faulting depths between 2 and 5 km. Seventh, fluids in the AF are carried downward into the fault zone. Only a minor fraction of fluids is derived from ascending hydrothermal fluids. However, we found that on the kilometer scale the AF does not act as an important fluid conduit. Most of these findings are corroborated using thermomechanical modeling where shear deformation in the upper crust is localized in one or two major faults; at larger depth, shear deformation occurs in a 20-40 km wide zone with a mechanically weak decoupling zone extending subvertically through the entire lithosphere.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2005

Electrical conductivity images of active and fossil fault zones

Oliver Ritter; Arne Hoffmann-Rothe; Paul A. Bedrosian; U. Weckmann; V. Haak

Abstract We compare recent magnetotelluric investigations of four large fault systems: (i) the actively deforming, ocean-continent interplate San Andreas Fault (SAF); (ii) the actively deforming, continent-continent interplate Dead Sea Transform (DST); (iii) the currently inactive, trench-linked intraplate West Fault (WF) in northern Chile; and (iv) the Waterberg Fault/Omaruru Lineament (WF/OL) in Namibia, a fossilized intraplate shear zone formed during early Proterozoic continental collision. These fault zones show both similarities and marked differences in their electrical subsurface structure. The central segment of the SAF is characterized by a zone of high conductivity extending to a depth of several kilometres and attributed to fluids within a highly fractured damage zone. The WF exhibits a less pronounced but similar fault-zone conductor (FZC) that can be explained by meteoric waters entering the fault zone. The DST appears different as it shows a distinct lack of a FZC and seems to act primarily as an impermeable barrier to cross-fault fluid transport. Differences in the electrical structure of these faults within the upper crust may be linked to the degree of deformation localization within the fault zone. At the DST, with no observable fault-zone conductor, strain may have been localized for a considerable time span along a narrow, metre-scale damage zone with a sustained strength difference between the shear plane and the surrounding host rock. In the case of the SAF, a positive correlation of conductance and fault activity is observed, with more active fault segments associated with wider, deeper and more conductive fault-zone anomalies. Fault-zone conductors, however, do not uniquely identify specific architectural or hydrological units of a fault. A more comprehensive whole-fault picture for the brittle crust can be developed in combination with seismicity and structural information. Giving a window into lower-crustal shear zones, the fossil WF/OL in Namibia is imaged as a subvertical, 14 km-deep, 10 km-wide zone of high and anisotropic conductivity. The present level of exhumation suggests that the WF/OL penetrated the entire crust as a relatively narrow shear zone. Contrary to the fluid-driven conductivity anomalies of active faults, the anomaly here is attributed to graphitic enrichment along former shear planes. Once created, graphite is stable over very long time spans and thus fault/shear zones may remain conductive long after activity ceases.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2011

Shallow lithological structure across the Dead Sea Transform derived from geophysical experiments

Jacek Stankiewicz; G. Muñoz; Oliver Ritter; Paul A. Bedrosian; Trond Ryberg; U. Weckmann; Michael Weber

[1]xa0In the framework of the DEad SEa Rift Transect (DESERT) project a 150 km magnetotelluric profile consisting of 154 sites was carried out across the Dead Sea Transform. The resistivity model presented shows conductive structures in the western section of the study area terminating abruptly at the Arava Fault. For a more detailed analysis we performed a joint interpretation of the resistivity model with a P wave velocity model from a partially coincident seismic experiment. The technique used is a statistical correlation of resistivity and velocity values in parameter space. Regions of high probability of a coexisting pair of values for the two parameters are mapped back into the spatial domain, illustrating the geographical location of lithological classes. In this study, four regions of enhanced probability have been identified, and are remapped as four lithological classes. This technique confirms the Arava Fault marks the boundary of a highly conductive lithological class down to a depth of ∼3 km. That the fault acts as an impermeable barrier to fluid flow is unusual for large fault zone, which often exhibit a fault zone characterized by high conductivity and low seismic velocity. At greater depths it is possible to resolve the Precambrian basement into two classes characterized by vastly different resistivity values but similar seismic velocities. The boundary between these classes is approximately coincident with the Al Quweira Fault, with higher resistivities observed east of the fault. This is interpreted as evidence for the original deformation along the DST originally taking place at the Al Quweira Fault, before being shifted to the Arava Fault.


Reviews of Geophysics | 2010

Correction to “Anatomy of the Dead Sea Transform from lithospheric to microscopic scale”

Michael Weber; K. Abu-Ayyash; A. Abueladas; Amotz Agnon; Z. Alasonati‐Tašárová; H. Al‐Zubi; A. Babeyko; Yuval Bartov; K. Bauer; Michael Becken; Paul A. Bedrosian; Zvi Ben-Avraham; Günter Bock; M. Bohnhoff; J. Bribach; P. Dulski; Jörg Ebbing; Radwan J. El-Kelani; A. Förster; H.-J. Förster; U. Frieslander; Zvi Garfunkel; H. J. Goetze; V. Haak; Christian Haberland; M. Hassouneh; Stefan L. Helwig; A. Hofstetter; A. Hoffmann‐Rothe; K.-H. Jäckel

Weber, M., Abu‐Ayyash, K., Abueladas, A., Agnon, A., Alasonati‐Tašárová, Z., Al‐Zubi, H., Babeyko, A., Bartov, Y., Bauer, K., Becken, M., Bedrosian, P. A., Ben‐Avraham, Z., Bock, G., Bohnhoff, M., Bribach, J., Dulski, P., Ebbing, J., El‐Kelani, R., Förster, A., Förster, H.‐J., Frieslander, U., Garfunkel, Z., Goetze, H. J., Haak, V., Haberland, C., Hassouneh, M., Helwig, S., Hofstetter, A., Hoffmann‐Rothe, A., Jäckel, K. H., Janssen, C., Jaser, D., Kesten, D., Khatib, M., Kind, R., Koch, O., Koulakov, I., Laske, G., Maercklin, N., Masarweh, R., Masri, A., Matar, A., Mechie, J., Meqbel, N., Plessen, B., Möller, P., Mohsen, A., Oberhänsli, R., Oreshin, S., Petrunin, A., Qabbani, I., Rabba, I., Ritter, O., Romer, R. L., Rümpker, G., Rybakov, M., Ryberg, T., Saul, J., Scherbaum, F., Schmidt, S., Schulze, A., Sobolev, S. V., Stiller, M., Stromeyer, D., Tarawneh, K., Trela, C., Weckmann, U., Wetzel, U., Wylegalla, K. (2010): Correction to Anatomy of the Dead Sea Transform from lithospheric to microscopic scale. ‐ Reviews of Geophysics, 48, RG1003


Geophysical Journal International | 2008

A deep crustal fluid channel into the San Andreas Fault system near Parkfield, California

Michael Becken; Oliver Ritter; S. K. Park; Paul A. Bedrosian; U. Weckmann; Michael Weber


Geophysical Journal International | 2007

Lithology-derived structure classification from the joint interpretation of magnetotelluric and seismic models

Paul A. Bedrosian; N. Maercklin; U. Weckmann; Yuval Bartov; Trond Ryberg; Oliver Ritter


South African Journal of Geology | 2007

Comparison of electrical conductivity structures and 2D magnetic modelling along two profiles crossing the Beattie Magnetic Anomaly, South Africa

U. Weckmann; Andre Jung; Thomas Branch; Oliver Ritter


South African Journal of Geology | 2007

The Whitehill Formation – a high conductivity marker horizon in the Karoo Basin

Thomas Branch; Oliver Ritter; U. Weckmann; Reinhard F. Sachsenhofer; Frank Schilling


Tectonophysics | 2009

Simple models for the Beattie Magnetic Anomaly in South Africa

Yoann Quesnel; U. Weckmann; Oliver Ritter; Jacek Stankiewicz; Vincent Lesur; Mioara Mandea; B. Langlais; Christophe Sotin; Armand Galdeano

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Oliver Ritter

Free University of Berlin

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Paul A. Bedrosian

United States Geological Survey

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Yuval Bartov

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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