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From surface fault traces to a fault growth model: The Vogar Fissure Swarm of the Reykjanes Peninsula,Southwest Iceland
Affiliation:1. Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire des Sciences et Sciences Appliquées du Sahel (LISSAS), Département de Physique, Faculté des Sciences, Université de Maroua, BP 814, Maroua, Cameroon;2. Laboratoire LE2I UMR 6306, CNRS, Arts et Métiers, Université de Bourgogne Franche-Comté, Dijon, France;3. Department of Physics, Faculty of Science, University of Yaoundé I, P. O. Box 812, Yaoundé, Cameroon;4. State Research Center OPTIMAS, and Fachbereich Physik, Technische Universität Kaiserslautern, D-67663 Kaiserslautern, Germany;5. The Abdus Salam International Center for Theoretical Physics, 34151 Trieste, Italy
Abstract:The Vogar Fissure Swarm is one of four en-echelon fracture swarms that connect the Reykjanes Ridge to the South Iceland Seismic Zone and the Western Volcanic Zone. Occurring in an area of flat topography, this fissure swarm is clearly visible at the surface, where it can be seen to affect recent postglacial lavas. Using remote sensing methods to identify and measure all the faults and fractures in the swarm, combined with additional field observations and measurements, we measured 478 individual fractures, 33% of them being faults and 67% being fissures. The fracture lengths show roughly log-normal distributions. Most of the individual fractures belong to 68 main composite fractures, seven of which are longer than 2500 m and correspond to the main fault scarps of the fissure swarm. We showed that these main faults are distributed along five, equally spaced zones, ∼500 m apart and a few kilometers long. We drawn 71 across-strike profiles to characterize the shape of the fault scarps, and 5 along-strike profiles to characterize the evolution of vertical throw along the main faults. Each fault consists of a coalescence of individual segments of approximately equal length. Fault throws are never larger than 10 m and are smallest at the junctions between individual segments. Analyses of along-strike throw profiles allowed us to determine the early stages of growth after coalescence. The earliest stage is characterized by an increase in the throw of the central parts of segments. This is followed by a second stage during which the throw increases at the junctions between segments, progressively erasing these small-throw zones.
Keywords:Icelandic rift  Fissure swarm  Normal fault growth  Remote sensing  Photogrammetric techniques  Divergent plate boundary
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