Cordilleran Section - 103rd Annual Meeting (4–6 May 2007)

Paper No. 5
Presentation Time: 11:20 AM

HIGH-RESOLUTION GRAVITY STUDY REVEALS THE STRUCTURAL STYLE AND FORWARD LIMIT OF A TECTONIC WEDGE, CENTRAL BROOKS RANGE FOOTHILLS, ALASKA


BROWN II, Philip J. and SALTUS, Richard W., Crustal Imaging and Characterization Team, U. S. Geological Survey, DFC, PO Box 25046, MS 964, Denver, CO 80225-0046, pbrown@usgs.gov

A GPS-located gravity transect with 50 m station spacing through a complex region of the Brooks Range foothills, northern Alaska, provides a test for multiple geologic structural hypotheses. A two-dimensional forward gravity model, constrained by available geologic, petrophysical, and geophysical information, supports a structural cross section that includes a northward-extending subsurface wedge of higher-density rocks than those exposed at the surface. Between two previously published, end-member structural theories, our results support multistory duplexes as opposed to large-offset overthrust faulting. Closely spaced precision gravity measurements, when adequately constrained by additional data, provide important complementary information to seismic investigations in this difficult-to-image structural setting.