Javascript must be enabled to continue!
AN OVERVIEW OF CLASTIC DIKES: SIGNIFICANCE FOR EARTHQUAKE STUDY
View through CrossRef
Clastic dikes are often the only evidence of past disasters in poorly exposed areas and therefore their findings are extremely important for earthquake study. However, the variety of their origins greatly complicates the use of clastic dikes to assess the seismic hazards within the manifold environments. This paper systematizes main triggers, formation mechanisms and some matching indicative features of tabular and cylindrical bodies with an emphasis on the importance of revealing the injection dikes formed by fluidized injection of clastic material into the host sedimentary layers (from the bottom upwards) and associated with overpressure buildup and hydraulic fracturing. Based on the revision of known seismic liquefaction features and specific descriptions of the injection dikes, this overview defines 12 general and 12 individual geological and structural criteria (for study in sectional view), which make it possible to establish confidently the earthquake origin of the dikes caused by fluidization from seismic liquefaction. In addition, ground penetrating radar data correlating with trenching suggest indicative searching criteria of the injection dikes on radargrams, namely: a pipe‐shaped anomaly or a composite anomaly combining a tubular form in the lower part with an isometric – in the upper [i]; relatively high values of unipolar positive echoes on the trace of GPR signal [ii]; an occurrence of the same anomaly on adjacent parallel profiles located the first tens of meters apart [iii]; and stratigraphic disruptions of the radar events on the background of their continuous horizontal position [iv]. Finally, the paper illustrates that the clastic dikes can be successfully applied to determine the age and the recurrence interval, the epicenter location and a lower‐bound magnitude/intensity of paleoearthquakes, thus providing geological data for seismic hazard assessments in the regions, in which unconsolidated deposits capable to liquefaction are common.
Institute of Earth's Crust, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Title: AN OVERVIEW OF CLASTIC DIKES: SIGNIFICANCE FOR EARTHQUAKE STUDY
Description:
Clastic dikes are often the only evidence of past disasters in poorly exposed areas and therefore their findings are extremely important for earthquake study.
However, the variety of their origins greatly complicates the use of clastic dikes to assess the seismic hazards within the manifold environments.
This paper systematizes main triggers, formation mechanisms and some matching indicative features of tabular and cylindrical bodies with an emphasis on the importance of revealing the injection dikes formed by fluidized injection of clastic material into the host sedimentary layers (from the bottom upwards) and associated with overpressure buildup and hydraulic fracturing.
Based on the revision of known seismic liquefaction features and specific descriptions of the injection dikes, this overview defines 12 general and 12 individual geological and structural criteria (for study in sectional view), which make it possible to establish confidently the earthquake origin of the dikes caused by fluidization from seismic liquefaction.
In addition, ground penetrating radar data correlating with trenching suggest indicative searching criteria of the injection dikes on radargrams, namely: a pipe‐shaped anomaly or a composite anomaly combining a tubular form in the lower part with an isometric – in the upper [i]; relatively high values of unipolar positive echoes on the trace of GPR signal [ii]; an occurrence of the same anomaly on adjacent parallel profiles located the first tens of meters apart [iii]; and stratigraphic disruptions of the radar events on the background of their continuous horizontal position [iv].
Finally, the paper illustrates that the clastic dikes can be successfully applied to determine the age and the recurrence interval, the epicenter location and a lower‐bound magnitude/intensity of paleoearthquakes, thus providing geological data for seismic hazard assessments in the regions, in which unconsolidated deposits capable to liquefaction are common.
Related Results
Timing of Rhyolite Intrusion and Carlin-Type Gold Mineralization at the Cortez Hills Carlin-Type Deposit, Nevada, USA
Timing of Rhyolite Intrusion and Carlin-Type Gold Mineralization at the Cortez Hills Carlin-Type Deposit, Nevada, USA
AbstractCarlin-type gold deposits (CTDs) of Nevada are the largest producers of gold in the United States, a leader in world gold production. Although much has been resolved about ...
Mafic dikes of the Avalon Boston terrane, Massachusetts
Mafic dikes of the Avalon Boston terrane, Massachusetts
Five mafic and four intermediate to felsic swarms have been recognized among the dikes of the Avalon Boston terrane on the basis of their field, petrographic, and petrochemical cha...
Converging Clastic Wedges in the Mississippian of Alabama
Converging Clastic Wedges in the Mississippian of Alabama
A Mississippian carbonate facies in north-central Alabama is bordered on the southwest and on the northeast by separate prograding clastic wedges. The southwestern clastic wedge co...
Analysis of maxillofacial fracture victims in the Wenchuan earthquake and Yushu earthquake
Analysis of maxillofacial fracture victims in the Wenchuan earthquake and Yushu earthquake
Abstract – Objective: To analyze retrospectively 419 patients after the Wenchuan earthquake and 46 after Yushu earthquake with maxillofacial fractures so as to provide reference o...
Geochronology and Geochemistry of Mafic Dikes from Hainan Island and Tectonic Implications
Geochronology and Geochemistry of Mafic Dikes from Hainan Island and Tectonic Implications
Abstract:In the present study, the major and trace element compositions, as well as Sr, Nd isotopic compositions and K‐Ar age data in mafic dikes from Hainan Island, China, have be...
Riverbed Morphologies Induced by Local Scour Processes at Single Spur Dike and Spur Dikes in Cascade
Riverbed Morphologies Induced by Local Scour Processes at Single Spur Dike and Spur Dikes in Cascade
Spur dikes are elongated structures extending from banks into rivers that mitigate erosion by forcing the flow away from the bank. The research on grouped spur dikes is insufficien...
Multiple dikes make eruptions easy
Multiple dikes make eruptions easy
Dikes supply magma to most volcanic eruptions. Understanding how propagating dikes may, or may not, reach the surface is thus one of the fundamental tasks for volcanology. Many, pe...
Study the Geospace impact and the re-occurrence of pre-earthquake signals in the atmosphere: Preliminary analysis for the 2024 M 7.0 Cape Mendocino, CA and 2025 M 7.1 Southern Tibetan Plateau Earthquakes.
Study the Geospace impact and the re-occurrence of pre-earthquake signals in the atmosphere: Preliminary analysis for the 2024 M 7.0 Cape Mendocino, CA and 2025 M 7.1 Southern Tibetan Plateau Earthquakes.
This study explores the processes of generating pre-earthquake abnormalities in the atmosphere/ionosphere associated with significant seismicity. We analyzed two major earthquakes ...

