Uri S. ten Brink
Stanford University
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Featured researches published by Uri S. ten Brink.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 1996
W. Steven Holbrook; Thomas M. Brocher; Uri S. ten Brink; John A. Hole
Wide-angle seismic data collected during the Bay Area Seismic Imaging Experiment provide new glimpses of the deep structure of the San Francisco Bay Area Block and across the offshore continental margin. San Francisco Bay is underlain by a veneer (<300 m) of sediments, beneath which P wave velocities increase rapidly from 5.2 km/s to 6.0 km/s at 7 km depth, consistent with rocks of the Franciscan subduction assemblage. The base of the Franciscan at 15–18 km depth is marked by a strong wide-angle reflector, beneath which lies an 8- to 10-km-thick lower crust with an average velocity of 6.75 ± 0.15 km/s. The lower crust of the Bay Area Block may be oceanic in origin, but its structure and reflectivity indicate that it has been modified by shearing and/or magmatic intrusion. Wide-angle reflections define two layers within the lower crust, with velocities of 6.4–6.6 km/s and 6.9–7.3 km/s. Prominent subhorizontal reflectivity observed at near-vertical incidence resides principally in the lowermost layer, the top of which corresponds to the “6-s reflector” of Brocher et al. [1994]. Rheological modeling suggests that the lower crust beneath the 6-s reflector is the weakest part of the lithosphere; the horizontal shear zone suggested by Furlong et al. [1989] to link the San Andreas and Hayward/Calaveras fault systems may actually be a broad zone of shear deformation occupying the lowermost crust. A transect across the continental margin from the paleotrench to the Hayward fault shows a deep crustal structure that is more complex than previously realized. Strong lateral variability in seismic velocity and wide-angle reflectivity suggests that crustal composition changes across major transcurrent fault systems. Pacific oceanic crust extends 40–50 km landward of the paleotrench but, contrary to prior models, probably does not continue beneath the Salinian Block, a Cretaceous arc complex that lies west of the San Andreas fault in the Bay Area. The thickness (10 km) and high lower-crustal velocity of Pacific oceanic crust suggest that it was underplated by magmatism associated with the nearby Pioneer seamount. The Salinian Block consists of a 15-km-thick layer of velocity 6.0–6.2 km/s overlying a 5-km-thick, high-velocity (7.0 km/s) lower crust that may be oceanic crust, Cretaceous arc-derived lower crust, or a magmatically underplated layer. The strong structural variability across the margin attests to the activity of strike-slip faulting prior to and during development of the transcurrent Pacific/North American plate boundary around 29 Ma.
Geology | 1991
Uri S. ten Brink
In-plane stresses, which accompany the flexural deformation of the lithosphere under the load adjacent volcanoes, may govern the spacing of volcanoes in hotspot provinces. Specifically, compressive stresses in the vicinity of a volcano prevent new upwelling in this area, forcing a new volcano to develop at a minimum distance that is equal to the distance in which the radial stresses change from compressional to tensile (the inflection point). If a volcano is modeled as a point load on a thin elastic plate, then the distance to the inflection point is proportional to the thickness of the plate to the power of 3/4. Compilation of volcano spacing in seven volcanic groups in East Africa and seven volcanic groups of oceanic hotspots shows significant correlation with the elastic thickness of the plate and matches the calculated distance to the inflection point. In contrast, volcano spacing in island arcs and over subduction zones is fairly uniform and is much larger than predicted by the distance to the inflection point, reflecting differences in the geometry of the source and the upwelling areas.
Journal of African Earth Sciences | 1989
Zvi Ben-Avraham; Uri S. ten Brink
Abstract The Dead Sea rift is a large transcurrent fault system extending from the Red Sea to Turkey. Several morphotectonic depressions of various sizes exist along its length. Most of them are divided into several sedimentary basins which are in turn divided into smaller units by transverse faults. Several transerve faults extend beyond the boundaries of the basins into areas which are otherwise unaffected by the rifting activity. In some cases the transverse faults are active at present as strike slip faults. In the Dead Sea area where multichannel seismic profiles are available across several transverse faults, there are indications that some of these faults have changed their mode of activity from normal to strike-slip faults during the evolution of the basins. The apparent uniform spacing between transverse faults (20–30 km) indicates that their location was, probably, not dictated by the location of oversteps in the en-echelon system of longitudinal faults. Rather, they may have formed to accommodate the internal deformation of the rapidly subsiding basins.
Geophysics | 1992
Bruce C. Beaudoin; Uri S. ten Brink; Tim A. Stern
Coincident reflection and refraction data, collected in the austral summer of 1988/89 by Stanford University and the Geophysical Division of the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Zealand, imaged the crust beneath the Ross Ice Shelf, Antarctica. The Ross Ice Shelf is a unique acquisition environment for seismic reflection profiling because of its thick, floating ice cover. The ice shelf velocity structure is multilayered with a high velocity‐gradient firn layer constituting the upper 50 to 100 m. This near surface firn layer influences the data character by amplifying and frequency modulating the incoming wavefield. In addition, the ice‐water column introduces pervasive, high energy seafloor, intra‐ice, and intra‐water multiples that have moveout velocities similar to the expected subseafloor primary velocities. Successful removal of these high energy multiples relies on predictive deconvolution, inverse velocity stack filtering, and frequency filtering. Removal of the multiples reveals...
Open-File Report | 2000
Thomas M. Brocher; Thomas L. Pratt; Kate Miller; Anne M. Trehu; Catherine M. Snelson; Craig S. Weaver; Kenneth C. Creager; Robert S. Crosson; Uri S. ten Brink; Marcos G. Alvarez; Steven H. Harder; Isa Asudeh
Open-File Report | 2014
Brian D. Andrews; Uri S. ten Brink; William W. Danforth; Jason D. Chaytor; José Luis Granja Bruña; Pilar Llanes Estrada; Andrés Carbó Gorosabel
Open-File Report | 1995
Uri S. ten Brink; Stephen Bannister
Open-File Report | 2014
Shannon K. Hoy; Jason D. Chaytor; Uri S. ten Brink
Open-File Report | 2014
Jeffrey Obelcz; Uri S. ten Brink; Jason D. Chaytor; Charles R. Worley; Eric M. Moore
Archive | 2010
Jason D. Chaytor; Uri S. ten Brink