Mapping crustal thickness using marine gravity data: Methods and uncertainties

Author:

Bai Yongliang1,Williams Simon E.2,Müller R. Dietmar2,Liu Zhan3,Hosseinpour Maral2

Affiliation:

1. China University of Petroleum (East China), School of Geosciences, Qingdao, China and University of Sydney, School of Geosciences, EarthByte Group, New South Wales, Australia..

2. University of Sydney, School of Geosciences, EarthByte Group, New South Wales, Australia..

3. China University of Petroleum (East China), School of Geosciences, Qingdao, China..

Abstract

Crustal thickness is a critical parameter for understanding the processes of continental rifting and breakup and the evolution of petroleum systems within passive margins. However, direct measurements of crustal thickness are sparse and expensive, highlighting the need for methodologies using gravity anomaly data, jointly with other geophysical data, to estimate crustal thickness. We evaluated alternative gravity inversion methodologies to map crustal thickness variations at rifted continental margins and adjacent oceanic basins, and we tested our methodology in the South China Sea (SCS). Different strategies were investigated to estimate and remove the gravity effect of density variations of sediments and the temperature and pressure variations of the lithospheric mantle from the observed free air gravity anomaly data. Sediment density was calculated using a relationship between sediment thickness, porosity, and density. We found that this method is essential for crustal thickness inversion in the presence of a thick sedimentary cover by comparing the Moho depths obtained from gravity inversion and seismic interpretation in the Yinggehai Basin where sediments are up to 13 km thick; the inversion accuracy depended on the parameters of the exponential equation between porosity and the buried depth. We modeled the lithospheric mantle temperature field based on oceanic crustal age, continental crustal stretching factors, and other boundary conditions. We tested three different methods to calculate the thermal expansion coefficient, which is either held constant or is a linear/polynomial function of temperature, for applying a thermal correction and found that the inversion results were relatively insensitive to alternative methods. We compared inversion results with two recent deep seismic profiles that image the rifted continental edge at the northern margin of the SCS and the continental Liyue Bank (Reed Bank) at the southern margin, and we found that the inversion accuracy was improved considerably by removing sediment, thermal, and pressure gravity effects.

Publisher

Society of Exploration Geophysicists

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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