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DOBRE-2 WARR profile: the Earth's upper crust across Crimea between the Azov Massif and the northeastern Black Sea.
Starostenko, V., Janik, T., Stephenson, R., Gryn, D., Rusakov, O., Czuba, W., Sroda, P., Grad, M., Guterch, A., Flueh, Ernst R., Thybo, H., Artemieva, I., Tolkunov, A., Sydorenko, G., Lysynchuk, D., Omelchenko, V., Kolomiyets, K., Legostaeva, O., Dannowski, Anke and Shulgin, Alexey
(2016)
DOBRE-2 WARR profile: the Earth's upper crust across Crimea between the Azov Massif and the northeastern Black Sea.
In: Tectonic Evolution of the Eastern Black Sea and Caucasus.
, ed. by
Sosson, M., Stephenson, R. A. and Adamia, S. A..
Special Publications Geological Society London, 428
.
GSL (Geological Society London), London, pp. 199-220.
DOI 10.1144/SP428.11.
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Abstract
The DOBRE-2 wide-angle reflection and refraction profile was acquired in June 2007 as a direct, southwestwards prolongation of the 1999 DOBREfraction’99 that crossed the Donbas Foldbelt in eastern Ukraine. It crosses the Azov Massif of the East European Craton, the Azov Sea, the Kerch Peninsula (the easternmost part of Crimea) and the northern East Black Sea Basin, thus traversing the entire Crimea–Caucasus compressional zone centred on the Kerch Peninsula. The DOBRE-2 profile recorded a mix of onshore explosive sources as well as airguns at sea. A variety of single-component recorders were used on land and ocean bottom instruments were deployed offshore and recovered by ship. The DOBRE-2 datasets were degraded by a lack of shot-point reversal at the southwestern terminus and by some poor signal registration elsewhere, in particular in the Black Sea. Nevertheless, they allowed a robust velocity model of the upper crust to be constructed along the entire profile as well as through the entire crust beneath the Azov Massif. A less well constrained model was constructed for much of the crust beneath the Azov Sea and the Kerch Peninsula. The results showed that there is a significant change in the upper crustal lithology in the northern Azov Sea, expressed in the near surface as the Main Azov Fault; this boundary can be taken as the boundary between the East European Craton and the Scythian Platform. The upper crustal rocks of the Scythian Platform in this area probably consist of metasedimentary rocks. A narrow unit as shallow as about 5 km and characterized by velocities typical of the crystalline basement bounds the metasedimentary succession on its southern margin and also marks the northern margin of the northern foredeep and the underlying successions of the Crimea–Caucasus compressional zone in the southern part of the Azov Sea. A broader and somewhat deeper basement unit (about 11 km) with an antiformal shape lies beneath the northern East Black Sea Basin and forms the southern margin of the Crimea–Caucasus compressional zone. The depth of the underlying Moho discontinuity increases from 40 km beneath the Azov Massif to 47 km beneath the Crimea–Caucasus compressional zone.
Document Type: | Book chapter |
---|---|
Research affiliation: | OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB4 Dynamics of the Ocean Floor > FB4-GDY Marine Geodynamics Kiel University |
Open Access Journal?: | No |
Publisher: | GSL (Geological Society London) |
Date Deposited: | 08 Feb 2016 09:43 |
Last Modified: | 10 May 2021 12:45 |
URI: | https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/31288 |
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