Presentation type:
TS – Tectonics & Structural Geology

EGU26-7238 | Orals | MAL26-TS | Highlight | Marie Tharp Medal Lecture

At the Core of Orogens 

Christian Teyssier

Nowhere is the continental crust evolving more rapidly than in the core of orogenic belts where the thickened crust typically undergoes partial melting and orogenic collapse, leading ultimately to crustal stabilization. While the processes of accretion and collision may take 10-100 Myr, the collapse instability, involving flow of deep crust and formation and emplacement of metamorphic core complexes and migmatite domes, is short lived (1-10 Myr). Material transfer during orogenic collapse is achieved by (1) lateral flow near the base of the evolving continental crust, where highly sheared partially molten rocks remain buried, and (2) upward flow within metamorphic core complexes (MCCs) below bounding extensional fault systems. These MCCs are commonly cored by migmatite domes that provide exceptional windows into the dynamics of the deep orogenic crust. Therefore, extensional detachment systems and migmatite domes are prime recorders of how the mechanical and thermal instability introduced by crustal thickening and melting, transitions to a gravitationally equilibrated crust. Some notable research results from these systems include the record of fluid-rock interaction across detachments and the provenance of partially molten crust as observed in migmatite domes.

MCCs are bounded by detachment shear zones that record large strain and metamorphic gradients as well as effective fluid-rock interaction enhanced by intense deformation and recrystallization processes at the grain scale. Stable isotope analyses across detachment systems have delineated the limit between a zone dominated by surface-derived (meteoric) fluids above and a zone of prevailing metamorphic fluids below. In some cases, the meteoric fluid is consistent with a surface fluid that precipitated at high elevation and was involved in convective flow from the surface down to the detachment shear zone, likely during the initial stages of orogenic collapse. The rocks within migmatite domes are varied and include refractory lithologies, typically mafic enclaves or pods, that inform the provenance of partially molten crust. In some domes, mafic pods are made of eclogite, and the age of eclogite metamorphism (pressures of 1.5-2.0 GPa) is close to the age of migmatite crystallization. In other cases, eclogite that was formed in subduction zones was incorporated as blocks or pods and transported laterally within the partially molten crust over long distances across the orogen before being exhumed in domes. The presence of eclogite within migmatite suggests that the partially molten crust is sourced at near-Moho depths and is extremely mobile, with the ability to travel laterally (order of >100 km) as well as vertically. Phanerozoic orogenic cores provide a template for understanding the extent of reworking of continental material and the flow of this material during the stabilization of continental crust over geologic time.

How to cite: Teyssier, C.: At the Core of Orogens, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7238, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7238, 2026.

In the Chundi–Malakonda–Ayyavaripalle region of the Nellore Schist Belt, part of the Dharwar Craton, six north-south (N–S) trending, elongated Banded Magnetite Quartzite (BMQ) bands have been identified. These bands are exposed within meta-rhyolite and quartzite formations and are associated with biotite–muscovite schist. The BMQs vary in width from 20 to 40 meters and extend in length from 1.5 to 4.5 kilometres. ​ High-resolution aeromagnetic surveys with a terrain clearance of 80 meters have revealed significant magnetic anomalies over the study area (source: https://geodataindia.gov.in). These anomalies range from –3,900 to +5,000 nanoteslas (nT), indicating a high concentration of magnetic minerals within the exposed BMQs, designated as Bands 1 to 6. In addition to these exposed bands, a concealed, parallel, N–S trending BMQ band has been identified through detailed analysis of aeromagnetic data. 2D and 3D Interpretation of the magnetic anomalies suggests that meta-rhyolites exist up to an average depth of 250 m from the surface and might be associated with BIF bands at depth. This depth extent highlights the substantial vertical continuity of the magnetite-rich formations in the region. The integration of geological mapping and aeromagnetic data provides a comprehensive understanding of subsurface geology, highlighting the potential for significant mineralization within the Nellore Schist Belt.

How to cite: Dharavathu, S., Kosuri, S. K., Vappangi, P. K., and Kumar, P.: Unveiling concealed Banded Magnetite Quartzites (BMQs) through high-resolution aeromagnetic surveys: New insights from the Nellore Schist belt of Eastern Dharwar Craton, India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2063, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2063, 2026.

Within the comprehensive framework of the Sun–Earth system, plasma environments exhibit an exceptionally wide range of physical conditions. These encompass the ultra-high-temperature, high-pressure, and high-density liquid metallic outer core of Earth, which generates the geomagnetic field through the geodynamo process; the tenuous, partially ionized ionosphere; and the magnetosphere, which provides essential shielding against energetic cosmic and solar radiation while exerting substantial influence on human technological systems, most notably microwave communication infrastructure. In addition, transient ultra-high-temperature plasmas generated by solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) represent the primary drivers of disturbed space electromagnetic environments, as they propagate through interplanetary space and subsequently interact with Earth's magnetosphere.Although prior research has extensively employed the first-principles quantum Monte Carlo method coupled with the lattice Boltzmann approach (FPQM-LBM) to address various theoretical and computational aspects of plasma behavior in this context, no existing modeling framework has successfully integrated — within a single consistent methodology — the extreme conditions of the Earth's outer core plasma, the low-density ionospheric plasma, the magnetospheric plasma, and the highly energetic, transient flare/CME plasmas. As a result, a unified and comprehensive understanding of particle transport mechanisms and internal structural properties across the full spectrum of plasma regimes in the Sun–Earth system remains elusive.The present study aims to address this critical gap by developing novel theoretical frameworks and advanced computational methodologies for elucidating the particle migration mechanisms and structural characteristics of space electromagnetic plasmas throughout the panoramic Sun–Earth system. To this end, we will enhance the first-principles quantum Monte Carlo–lattice Boltzmann method (FPQM-LBM) to establish robust techniques capable of modeling particle transport under the complex electromagnetic conditions prevailing in space environments. The improved FPQM-LBM framework will be systematically applied to simulate particle dynamics across the aforementioned plasma regimes — namely, the ultra-high-temperature/pressure/density outer core plasma, the low-density ionosphere, the magnetosphere, and transient flare/CME plasmas — with particular emphasis on ionic characteristics, microstructural evolution, fine-scale particle transport processes, internal structural transformations, and the response of plasma properties to external electromagnetic perturbations. The anticipated results are expected to furnish a solid theoretical foundation and valuable predictive capabilities for advancing solar–terrestrial space physics and enhancing electromagnetic monitoring and forecasting in space weather research.

How to cite: Zhu, B.: Theoretical Foundations and Methodological Developments in the Study of Particle Transport Mechanisms and Microstructural Evolution Employing the Hybrid Quantum Monte Carlo–Boltzmann Transport Model, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3254, 2026.

EGU26-5611 | Posters virtual | VPS29

Improving GIC modelling and validation with high-quality information on power network parameters 

Ciaran Beggan, Gemma Richardson, and Ewelina Lawrence

Space weather can affect the operation of high voltage AC transformers in power grids by applying an offset DC current during periods of heightened geomagnetic activity. Modelling GIC requires knowledge of magnetic field variation, the response of the local subsurface geoelectric field (related to conductivity) and a representation of the connections between transformers and various resistance parameters of the power network. Presently, in Britain, the largest uncertainty in this chain applies to the resistance parameters of the network, as these values come from open-source data which are known to have many approximations.

Recent work with a transmission network operator in the UK has provided us with an improved dataset of resistance parameters of transformers, power lines and substation grounding. The grounding resistance at electrical substations has not been known before and so historically was set at 0.5 Ω in our models. The new dataset of 110 sites around central Scotland reveals substation grounding resistance varies from 0.04 Ω to 11.7 Ω with a mean of 0.54 Ω but a median of 0.2 Ω. Combined with line and transformer resistance information, we have created an improved representation of the power grid in Scotland.

Using GIC measurements from three sites (Torness, Strathaven and Neilston) for the largest geomagnetic storms in the past 25 years (October 2003, September 2017 and May 2024), we are able to validate the new model, demonstrating its improved accuracy.

The new model demonstrates that our previous assumptions of grounding resistance were too high but our estimate of line resistance was too low, thus balancing out the overall GIC magnitude on average. However, in detail, some locations show large differences in GIC compared to the original model. This highlights the importance of using accurate resistance information to correctly capture GIC.

How to cite: Beggan, C., Richardson, G., and Lawrence, E.: Improving GIC modelling and validation with high-quality information on power network parameters, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5611, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5611, 2026.

During intense solar atmospheric activity—such as major solar flares and geomagnetic storms—magnetic energy is converted into plasma kinetic and thermal energy through three-dimensional turbulent magnetic reconnection within large-scale, extended current sheets. This process releases enormous amounts of stored energy, often accompanied by the rapid ejection of high-energy particles into interplanetary space. These high-energy particles include electrons, protons, helium nuclei, and heavier ions, forming a complex multi-component, multi-abundance, and multi-isotopic population. Their energies span from ~100 keV to ~100 MeV and even into the GeV range, making them a primary driver of space weather hazards. Understanding the sources and acceleration mechanisms of these particles remains one of the most critical challenges in space weather research. Previous studies have shown that high-energy particle acceleration is highly complex, involving multiple species, a variety of mechanisms, and interactions across scales. It remains an open and challenging problem in solar and plasma physics. This paper provides a systematic review and forward-looking perspective on recent advances in high-energy particle acceleration during the fine-scale evolution of large-scale current sheets. The discussion is organized around three key pillars: theory, observations, and numerical simulations. First, we summarize the turbulence-fractal model as it applies to typical solar atmospheric events. We focus on acceleration mechanisms in turbulent magnetic reconnection within large spatiotemporal current sheets, with particular emphasis on: Turbulent (second-order) Fermi acceleration, Turbulent shock acceleration, and Turbulent wave-particle resonant acceleration. These mechanisms operate synergistically in the turbulent environment generated by reconnection, enabling efficient energy transfer to particles. Second, we review recent progress in coupling macroscopic (hydrodynamic and magnetohydrodynamic) dynamics to microscopic kinetic processes in high-energy particle acceleration. This includes multi-scale modeling of turbulence, reconnection, and particle transport. Finally, we outline promising future research directions, including improved multi-spacecraft observations, higher-resolution simulations that incorporate kinetic effects, and integrated models that bridge MHD turbulence and particle-in-cell approaches. We also highlight several urgent unresolved issues, such as the relative contributions of different mechanisms across energy regimes, the role of fractal structures in particle trapping and escape, and the origin of observed abundance enhancements in heavy ions. This review synthesizes recent theoretical, observational, and computational developments to provide a comprehensive framework for understanding high-energy particle acceleration in large-scale turbulent current sheets, with implications for solar flares, space weather forecasting, and broader astrophysical plasma processes.

How to cite: Zhu, B.: Research Progress on SEPs on the Fine Structures of the Large Temporal-spatial Current Sheets in Solar Flares/CMEs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6969, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6969, 2026.

EGU26-8141 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS29

A Late Holocene Paleomagnetic Record from Lago del Desierto, Southern Patagonia (Argentina) 

Romina Valeria Achaga, Claudia Susana Gabriela Gogorza, Maria Alicia Irurzun, Christian Ohlendorf, Torsten Haberzettl, and Bernd Zolitschka

Lago del Desierto (49°02′S, 72°51′W) is located in a climatically sensitive sector near the Southern Patagonian Ice Field (Argentina). Three sediment cores collected from two sites in the lake were analyzed using a multi-proxy approach to reconstruct past environmental variability (Kastner et al., 2010). Numerous turbidites were identified in the sedimentological record. After excluding these event layers, a new age–depth model was developed for the first 3 sections of the core DES05-3 (289 cm), and paleosecular variations (PSV) were reconstructed for the interval between ~1000 and 3500 cal. BP.

Standard paleomagnetic measurements (alternating-field demagnetization) were performed on 125 samples from the same core. In addition, rock-magnetic measurements, including Anhysteretic Remanent Magnetization (ARM, 100 mT peak AF, 0.05 mT DC field), Isothermal Remanent Magnetization (IRM, acquisition up to 1.5 T and backfield curves), hysteresis loops and thermomagnetic analyses, were applied to extract complementary paleoenvironmental information from the sediment cores.

Rock-magnetic measurements indicate that the magnetic mineralogy is dominated by a low-coercivity component (magnetite-type), accompanied by a secondary high-coercivity fraction (hematite/goethite-type). This downcore distribution mirrors the paleoenvironmental shift described by Kastner et al. (2010): the lower part of the sequence shows an enhanced contribution of high-coercivity Fe oxides, consistent with more stable and chemically weathered catchment conditions. In contrast, the upper part shows an increasing dominance of detrital magnetite, indicating strengthened minerogenic supply and enhanced erosion, matching the onset of warmer conditions and glacier retreat during the Medieval Climate Anomaly as inferred from geochemical and lithological proxies. This agreement between magnetic and non-magnetic sediment parameters suggests coherent changes in the provenience of the sediment and in catchment dynamics over the last millennia. As expected from the catchment instability and the numerous turbidites in the upper part of the sequence, this interval could not be used for PSV reconstruction due to its discontinuous directional record. In contrast, samples from the lower part (~1000–3500 cal. BP) provided a continuous sequence suitable for paleosecular variation analysis. Although samples from this unit were not completely demagnetized at 100 mT, due to the presence of a high-coercivity component, magnetization directions consistently decayed toward the origin with high precision. Characteristic remanent magnetization (ChRM) directions were determined using principal component analysis, with maximum angular deviation (MAD) values below 2.5° for all non-turbidite samples. The resulting PSV record compares well with geomagnetic field models and other Patagonian paleomagnetic reconstructions. Inclination values range from −40° to −70°, displaying coherent directional variability over the last ~3500 years.

References:
Kastner, S., Enters, D., Ohlendorf, C., Haberzettl, T., Kuhn, G., Lücke, A., Mayr, C., Reyss, J.-L., Wastegård, S., & Zolitschka, B. (2010). Reconstructing 2000   years of hydrological variation derived from laminated proglacial sediments of Lago del Desierto at the eastern margin of the South Patagonian Ice Field, Argentina. Global and Planetary Change, 72(3), 201-214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2010.04.007

How to cite: Achaga, R. V., Gogorza, C. S. G., Irurzun, M. A., Ohlendorf, C., Haberzettl, T., and Zolitschka, B.: A Late Holocene Paleomagnetic Record from Lago del Desierto, Southern Patagonia (Argentina), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8141, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8141, 2026.

EGU26-8566 | Posters virtual | VPS29

Pc3 geomagnetic pulsations excited by earthquakes and their commonality with solar wind-originated Pc3 

Toshihiko Iyemori, Tadashi Aoyama, and Yoshihiro Yokoyama

The source of compressional Pc3 magnetic pulsations has been considered to be the plasma process in the solar wind or in the magnetosphere. However, we found some strong inland earthquakes that occur on the dayside also excite Pc3s. The Lamb waves generated by the January 2022 Tongan undersea volcanic eruption are also believed to have excited large amplitude and short period compressional Pc3 geomagnetic pulsations in the dayside plasmasphere (Iyemori et al., 2025). Increases in power spectral density (PSD) in the Pc3 frequency band were observed 10-30 minutes after the origin time of large inland earthquakes (M>6.5) during the daytime (10-14 LT). During these large earthquakes, seismic waves with period of 10-30 seconds propagate far away (even more than several thousand km), causing slight fluctuations in the orientation of magnetometer sensors, resulting in apparent Pc3-like fluctuations. To avoid such sensor tremor effect, we analyzed the total force of magnetic field, or analyzed comparing with seismometer data. We also used the Swarm satellite observation. The PSD of Pc3s caused by earthquakes or by Lamb wave show many spectral peaks having interval of 3-5 mHz, and this is similar with the characteristic reported by, for example, Samson et al. (1995) for normal, i.e., solar wind origin Pc3s. In this paper, we will also show the commonality between the Pc3s caused by earthquakes or Lamb waves and those originated from the solar wind and discuss what the commonality means.

How to cite: Iyemori, T., Aoyama, T., and Yokoyama, Y.: Pc3 geomagnetic pulsations excited by earthquakes and their commonality with solar wind-originated Pc3, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8566, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8566, 2026.

EGU26-8852 | Posters virtual | VPS29

High-resolution magnetic record of environmental changes during Middle – Late Pleistocene from a loess-palaeosol sequence in NE Bulgaria – pilot data from the LOEs-CLIMBE project 

Diana Jordanova, Bozhurka Georgieva – Ishlyamska, Daniel Veres, Yunus Baykal, Marius Robu, Neli Jordanova, Ulrich Hambach, Daniel Ishlyamski, Dimo Dimov, Andrew Trott, and Guido Wiesenberg

Continental sedimentary sequences of alternating loess and palaeosol horizons preserve detailed records of past global climate changes during the Pleistocene. Obtaining deeper and genuine knowledge on the history of past climates using proxy data depends on interdisciplinary approaches, novel techniques and thinking “out-of-the-box”. The LOEs-CLIMBE team members gather around this concept and present here the first pilot magnetic data from the Kolobar loess-palaeosol section in NE Bulgaria. The 25 m thick section is exposed in an active quarry and was sampled at 2-cm-resolution, covering the Holocene soil, seven palaeosol units and loess horizons L1 to L7 of varying thicknesses. New high resolution magnetic susceptibility data, delineates palaeosol horizons with high values of mass specific magnetic susceptibility except the special case of fourth palaeosol S4, showing no magnetic enhancement as compared to the underlying thin loess. Such depletion of pedogenic magnetic enhancement in paleosol units from the Lower Danube area is rarely reported. This phenomenon will be further examined by detailed magnetic and colorimetric methods. The strongest pedogenic magnetic signal is observed in the three youngest palaeosol units S1, S2 and S3, tentatively related to the interglacial stages MIS 5, MIS 7 and MIS 9. The weakest magnetic susceptibility is typical for the younger part of the loess unit L2, punctuated by the signal of a tephra layer, which is a widespread chronostratigraphic marker in the region.  This research is carried out and financed within the framework of the second Swiss Contribution MAPS, LOEs-CLIMBE project № IZ11Z0_230102.

How to cite: Jordanova, D., Georgieva – Ishlyamska, B., Veres, D., Baykal, Y., Robu, M., Jordanova, N., Hambach, U., Ishlyamski, D., Dimov, D., Trott, A., and Wiesenberg, G.: High-resolution magnetic record of environmental changes during Middle – Late Pleistocene from a loess-palaeosol sequence in NE Bulgaria – pilot data from the LOEs-CLIMBE project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8852, 2026.

EGU26-9301 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS29

The influence of the heterogeneity (stratification) of the outer core fluid on the variation of the geomagnetic field 

Shichao Wang, Yongbing Li, Bojing Zhu, Yang Zhao, Qian Wang, and Hanfen Liu

The Earth's magnetic field is divided into internal and external sources, with the internal field including the main magnetic field, the crustal magnetic field, and the induced magnetic field. Among these, the main magnetic field accounts for approximately 95% of the Earth's total magnetic field. Data from paleomagnetic records in rocks, various geomagnetic observatories, and satellites indicate that the main magnetic field exhibits westward drift, polarity reversals, intensity decay, and brief geomagnetic excursions at the core-mantle boundary. To explain these phenomena, several models have been proposed in previous studies. The prevailing view is that the outer core is composed of liquid metal, and the Earth's main magnetic field is generated by the turbulent fluid motion of this liquid metal, influenced primarily by factors such as its composition and properties, thermal convection, Lorentz force, and Coriolis force. Considering the strong Coulomb forces between electrons and ions, previous research has usually treated the electrons and ions in the outer core's metallic fluid as a unified component, greatly simplifying the study and achieving satisfactory results. However, existing studies have not taken into account the differences in motion between ions and electrons under the dynamics of the outer core, the resulting spatial distribution differences of electrons and ions in the outer core, or the impact of these differential distributions on the Earth's main magnetic field. In view of this, This paper studies the effect of the factors generating outer core dynamics on the distribution of electrons and ions in the outer core. It examines the distribution of electrons and ions in the outer core space under equilibrium conditions and estimates their contribution to Earth's main magnetic field. Then, by changing parameter conditions (such as temperature gradients) and adding convective terms (non-equilibrium state), the calculations are redone. These results are used to explain changes in Earth's magnetic field.

How to cite: Wang, S., Li, Y., Zhu, B., Zhao, Y., Wang, Q., and Liu, H.: The influence of the heterogeneity (stratification) of the outer core fluid on the variation of the geomagnetic field, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9301, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9301, 2026.

EGU26-10911 | Posters virtual | VPS29

Mineralogical Drivers of Ground Failure in Neogene Sediments: a Case Study from Northwest Bulgaria 

Zornitsa Dotseva, Dian Vangelov, and Tsveta Stanimirova

The stability of critical infrastructure in Northwest Bulgaria (Western Moesian Platform) could be compromised by ground instability within Neogene sediments that cover the region. This is evidenced by the collapse of the I-1 national road near Dimovo town in 2006, which involved vertical displacements of 3–4 meters. The purpose of this study is to identify the underlying geological drivers of this failure and to evaluate the specific hazard in the area resulting from the interaction between the sediments and the local environmental conditions. We hypothesize that the instability is not merely a result of conventional failure mechanisms but is governed by an anomalous mineralogical composition, specifically by the presence of aragonite and gypsum layers, which could create a dual hazard.

To elucidate geological drivers, we employed a methodology that integrates field mapping and sampling with laboratory analyses. Samples from the Neogene sediments in the area of 2006 damage underwent mineralogical analyses using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) to determine phase composition and morphology. These analyses were coupled with X-ray fluorescence (XRF) for chemical profiling and standard geotechnical testing to determine grain size distribution, Atterberg limits, and Activity index according to Skempton’s classification.

The analysis reveals a heterogeneous sediment succession with the presence of inorganic clays with high plasticity. The XRD and SEM results identified a mineralogical anomaly where the high concentrations of metastable, acicular aragonite coexist with active swelling phyllosilicates (smectite/illite). Furthermore, various amounts of gypsum were detected in some of the samples, indicating an evaporitic paleoenvironment. Geotechnically, these materials exhibit extreme reactivity. Liquid limits range from 34.85% to 67.88%, and plasticity indices reach up to 47.39%. The Activity index peaks at 2.00, categorizing the sediments as "highly active" and prone to volume change driven by moisture variations.

The study concludes that ground failure is a direct consequence of a synergistic hydro-chemo-mechanical mechanism driven by the sediments' mineralogy. The specific aragonite fabric allows rapid water infiltration, triggering the hydration of smectites that could lead to loss of shear strength. Simultaneously, gypsum dissolution could create secondary porosity, reduce effective stress, and release sulfate ions, which could pose a potential chemical hazard to concrete foundations through sulfate attack. Furthermore, the high silt content facilitates internal erosion and possible piping through fracture networks, which could explain the sudden loss of support and large vertical displacements observed in the 2006 case. These findings imply that standard geotechnical data alone are insufficient for risk assessment in this region. Effective mitigation strategies must integrate mineralogical analysis to address both the physical swelling and the chemical durability risks.

Acknowledgements: This research was funded by the European Union-NextGenerationEU, through the National Recovery and Resilience Plan of the Republic of Bulgaria, Project No BG-RRP-2.004-0008-C01.

How to cite: Dotseva, Z., Vangelov, D., and Stanimirova, T.: Mineralogical Drivers of Ground Failure in Neogene Sediments: a Case Study from Northwest Bulgaria, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10911, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10911, 2026.

EGU26-14934 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS29

Effects of the Historical Geomagnetic Field on Earth's Energetic Particle Environment: Magnetic Anomalies and Auroral Regions  

Kirolosse Girgis, Maximilian Arthus Schanner, Sanja Panovska, and Akimasa Yoshikawa

Three centuries ago, auroral emissions could be observed over the Korean sector, where the West Pacific Anomaly (WPA) coexisted with the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA). To investigate this phenomenon, the present study builds upon our recent numerical simulations of the inner proton radiation belt [Girgis et al., JSWSC (2021), Girgis et al., SW (2023,2024)], in which we examined the effects of space weather on the near-Earth particle environment. Here, we extend our modeling framework to explore the historical distribution and state of the radiation environment. A key aspect of this research is the incorporation of a geomagnetic field configuration representative of the year 1650, and the comparison of the resulting particle environment with that derived from contemporary magnetic field models.  The primary objective is to model the near-Earth particle environment in a manner that enables future coupling with atmospheric models, while also accounting for the influence of external space weather conditions. A comprehensive understanding of both the present-day and historical particle dynamics in the near-Earth environment is essential for predicting radiation conditions relevant to low Earth orbit (LEO) missions and for assessing the potential impact on Earth’s atmosphere. 

How to cite: Girgis, K., Arthus Schanner, M., Panovska, S., and Yoshikawa, A.: Effects of the Historical Geomagnetic Field on Earth's Energetic Particle Environment: Magnetic Anomalies and Auroral Regions , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14934, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14934, 2026.

EGU26-18706 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS29

SwarmDF: A toolbox for analysing high-latitude ionospheric electrodynamics 

Margot Decotte, Karl M. Laundal, and Fasil T. Kebede

The Swarm Data Fusion (SwarmDF) toolbox is designed as an easy-to-use Python module for analysing the local electrodynamics of the high-latitude ionosphere by combining measurements from ESA’s Swarm satellites with additional ionospheric and thermospheric datasets. Given a Swarm satellite ID, a regional grid, and a time interval, the toolbox automatically retrieves and combines available observations from SuperDARN, SuperMAG, Iridium/AMPERE, and Swarm electromagnetic field measurements. SwarmDF uses the local mapping of polar ionospheric electrodynamics (Lompe) technique to reconstruct two-dimensional maps of key electrodynamic parameters in the vicinity of the Swarm satellite tracks. To assess and quantify reconstruction performance, SwarmDF integrates the LompeOSSE Python module, which generates controlled synthetic electrodynamics datasets based on Gamera simulations and enables systematic comparisons with the toolbox outputs under different data availability and configuration scenarios. Featuring a user-friendly graphical interface, SwarmDF simplifies data handling and model setup for high-latitude ionospheric electrodynamic studies using Swarm observations.

How to cite: Decotte, M., Laundal, K. M., and Kebede, F. T.: SwarmDF: A toolbox for analysing high-latitude ionospheric electrodynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18706, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18706, 2026.

EGU26-21147 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS29

Dimensionality Analysis of the Iberian Pyrite Belt Lithosphere derived from the Magnetotelluric Impedance Tensor. 

Pedro Baltazar-Soares, Francisco José Martinéz-Moreno, Lourdes Gonzaléz-Castillo, Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar, Fernando Monteiro Santos, Antonio Mateus, and Luis Matias

The Iberian Pyrite Belt (IPB) hosts one of the largest concentrations of massive sulfide deposits in Europe, yet its lithosphere architecture remains incompletely understood. In this study, we employ magnetotelluric (MT) impedance tensor data to investigate the dimensionality and structural characteristics of the IPB crust. The analysis combines two complementary approaches: WAL invariants, computed from the MT impedance tensor using the Waldim code (Martí et al., 2013), which are scalar, rotation invariant quantities providing a robust, frequency dependent measure of three-dimensionality and highlighting anisotropic features in the conductivity distribution; and the Phase Tensor, following the methodology of Caldwell et al. (2004), which offers distortion free insights into the orientation and geometry of regional conductive structures. Integrating these methods enables a systematic dimensional analysis of the impedance tensor, revealing lateral heterogeneities, preferred orientations of conductive features, and depth dependent variations in lithospheric responses.

The results demonstrate that WAL invariants and Phase Tensor analysis together allow the separation of near surface distortions from deeper geoelectric structures, providing a robust framework for characterizing the lithospheric architecture of the IPB. This study highlights the enhanced resolution and robustness achieved by complementing the tensor based analysis of MT data with invariant derived quantities that provide rotationally independent measures of three-dimensionality and anisotropy.

Consequently, this dimensional and structural assessment constitutes a critical prerequisite for subsequent MT data inversion, as it provides essential constraints on model dimensionality, structural orientation, and the treatment of near surface distortion. By supporting the choice between 2D and 3D inversion strategies, the proposed framework enhances the stability of the inversion process, increases the reliability of the conductivity distributions, and ensures greater geological consistency of the resulting models.

Acknowledgment

This work is supported by FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020, https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020,UID/50019/2025,  https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025, UID/PRR2/50019/2025

References

Caldwell, T.G., Bibby, H.M. and Brown, C. (2004). The magnetotelluric phase tensor. Geophysical Journal International, 158: 457-469. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2004.02281.x

Castro, C., Hering, P., Junge, A. (2020). FFMT: a MATLAB-based toolbox for Magnetotellurics (MT). 10.13140/RG.2.2.12465.92007.

F. E. M. Lilley. (1998). Magnetotelluric tensor decomposition; Part, Theory for a basic procedure. Geophysics; 63 (6): 1885–1897. doi: https://doi.org/10.1190/1.1444481.

Martí, A., Queralt, P., Ledo, J., Farquharson, C. (2010). Dimensionality imprint of electrical anisotropy in magnetotelluric responses, Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, Volume 182, Issues 3–4, 2010, Pages 139-151, ISSN 0031-9201. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2010.07.007.

Martí, A., Queralt, P., Ledo, J. (2013). WALDIM: A code for the dimensionality analysis of magnetotelluric data using the rotational invariants of the magnetotelluric tensor. Computers & Geosciences. 2295-2303. 10.1016/j.cageo.2009.03.004

Miensopust, M. P. (2017). Application of 3-D electromagnetic inversion in practice: Challenges, pitfalls and solution approaches. Surveys in Geophysics, 38(5), 869–933. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10712-017-9435-1.

Vozoff, K. (1991). The magnetotelluric method: Electromagnetic methods. In M. N. Nabighian (Ed.), Applied Geophysics (pp. 641–712).

Kelbert, A., Meqbel, N., Egbert, G. D., & Tandon, K. (2014). ModEM: A modular system for inversion of electromagnetic geophysical data. Computers & Geosciences, 66, 40–53. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cageo.2014.01.010.

How to cite: Baltazar-Soares, P., Martinéz-Moreno, F. J., Gonzaléz-Castillo, L., Galindo-Zaldívar, J., Monteiro Santos, F., Mateus, A., and Matias, L.: Dimensionality Analysis of the Iberian Pyrite Belt Lithosphere derived from the Magnetotelluric Impedance Tensor., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21147, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21147, 2026.

EGU26-3508 | Posters virtual | VPS30

Subsurface structural mapping using high-resolution gravity data and advanced processing techniques in the Ouarzazate Basin, Southern Morocco. 

Brahim Bouali, Fatima-Zahra Tabayaoui, Hassan Sahbi, Ahmed Manar, Abderrahime Nouayti, Mustapha Boujamaoui, and Nour eddine Berkat

This study investigates the deep structure of the Ouarzazate Basin, located between the Central High Atlas and the Anti-Atlas, using gravity data analysis. Gravimetric methods were applied to map subsurface structural lineaments beneath the sedimentary cover. The resulting structural map reveals that the basin is mainly controlled by ENE-WSW oriented faults, with subordinate E-W and NE-SW trends related to Variscan deformation, Triassic-Jurassic rifting, and Atlas tectonic inversion. Positive gravity anomalies show preferential NE-SW and E-W orientations and are linked to the structural configuration of the Central High Atlas, which acted as a major source area for the basin. The identified fault systems and compressional structures in the Central High Atlas and Anti-Atlas are consistent with the regional geodynamic evolution. These results highlight the strong tectonic connection between the Ouarzazate Basin and adjacent Atlas basins, particularly the Central High Atlas, and provide new insights into the basin’s geodynamic development.

How to cite: Bouali, B., Tabayaoui, F.-Z., Sahbi, H., Manar, A., Nouayti, A., Boujamaoui, M., and Berkat, N. E.: Subsurface structural mapping using high-resolution gravity data and advanced processing techniques in the Ouarzazate Basin, Southern Morocco., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3508, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3508, 2026.

EGU26-5809 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS30

Rotation of tectonic blocks controlled by strike-slip component along the Zahedan fault, Iran 

Zahra Paktarmani, Andrzej Konon, and Mateusz Mikołajczak

The Zahedan fault zone in Iran constitutes an active tectonic zone characterised by a complex network of strike-slip faults that dominate the local deformation pattern. This area is located within a large-scale transpressional shear zone accommodating relative motion between the Central East Iranian block and the Afghan Helmand block. The region provides a natural laboratory for investigating the relationship between strike-slip faulting and tectonic blocks rotated around vertical axes.

We present herein, based on high-resolution 2025 Airbus satellite imagery and cartographic and geophysical data, a new strike-slip fault pattern that facilitated the development of the rotated tectonic blocks.

Our observations show that the major strike-slip fault zones are accompanied by dense networks of second-order faults, including single sets of antithetic and synthetic strike-slip faults, conjugate strike-slip fault sets, restraining and releasing stepovers, and thrust faults. In several sectors along the major faults occur the zones of deformation consisting of the rotated tectonic blocks. The scale, orientation, and spatial organisation of the mapped structures indicate that block rotation is controlled by the interaction between major strike-slip faults and subsidiary fault networks.

The individual second-order antithetic faults display that these faults commonly accommodate small displacements, but the faults play a critical role in allowing internal deformation within blocks and facilitate the progressive block rotation. The sense of movements along the major fault and the antithetic strike-slip faults bounding the tectonic blocks allows us to consider the structures as the blocks rotated around vertical axes in a domino-like orientation. Recognised examples of structures show that some rotating blocks are rigid, with no evidence of significant internal deformation, while other rotating blocks exhibit strong internal deformation.

Understanding these spectra of behaviours and the determination of the relationships between them will improve our knowledge of fault interaction processes in eastern Iran and related patterns of seismicity, and it also has implications for seismic hazard assessment in active transpressional settings.

How to cite: Paktarmani, Z., Konon, A., and Mikołajczak, M.: Rotation of tectonic blocks controlled by strike-slip component along the Zahedan fault, Iran, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5809, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5809, 2026.

Charnockite is generally regarded as a product of high-temperature melting; however, its specific origin, generation, and preservation mechanisms, as well as its relationship to high-grade metamorphism or deep crustal reworking, remain poorly constrained. During the early Paleozoic, the South China Block underwent intense orogeny that resulted in significant crustal shortening and thickening, subsequently inducing widespread anatexis and extensive S-type granites. This study identifies ~431 Ma charnockites containing granulitic enclaves that were exposed in the Yunkai massif, providing key insights into the early Paleozoic crustal reworking and deep crustal melting behaviors in South China. The body displays A-type characteristics with crustal reworking zircon isotopic features (δ18O = 8.0–9.8 ‰; εHf(t) = - 11.5 to - 3.4). The charnockite and its enclaves show identical mineral assemblages and comparable orthopyroxene chemical compositions. The two anhydrous minerals of orthopyroxene and garnet are identified as of peritectic and magmatic origins given their textural features and geochemical compositions. Moreover, petrographic observations and bulk geochemical data argue that the peritectic minerals were derived from the entrainment of their granulitic sources. Crystallization phase modeling indicates orthopyroxene would have been completely hydrated and formed biotite when water contents exceed ∼0.3 wt.% near the solidus. Water-in-zircon analysis and thermodynamic modeling indicate low magma water contents (∼0.15 wt.%; 135 ppm, zircon water medians) for the Gaozhou charnockite from early crystallization to final solidification. CO2‐rich fluids flushed the charnockite reservoir further contributing to the stabilization of the orthopyroxene. Accordingly, the Yunkai charnockite reveals deep crustal melting processes involving anhydrous minerals entrained in a low-water environment. This low-water environment correlates with high-temperature melting of granulite-facies rocks in the lower crust and the presence of CO₂-rich fluids within the system. Regional magmatic-metamorphic-tectonic data indicate that the formation of the Yunkai A-type charnockite occurred within a post-orogenic extension regime, representing the peak of intracrustal reworking in South China.

How to cite: yang, H. and Yao, J.: Formation of A-type charnockite and constraints on deep crustal anatexis in early Paleozoic orogen, South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8520, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8520, 2026.

EGU26-12696 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS30

Constraining Early Miocene Reactivation of the Main Mantle Thrust (Swat Valley, Pakistan) through Integrated Structural and Thermochronologic Analysis 

Daniel Ricardo Hernández Chaparro, Claudio Faccena, Valerio Olivetti, Giuditta Fellin, and Humaad Ghani

Unravelling the tectonic evolution of collisional orogens and the forces driving the exhumation of high-grade metamorphic rocks requires constraining the kinematics and timing of major fault systems. The Main Mantle Thrust (MMT) in the Swat Valley (northern Pakistan) marks the Eocene suture between the Indian Plate and the Kohistan–Ladakh Island Arc. Its later reactivation is critical yet debated, with models ranging from dominantly dextral strike-slip faulting with minor normal offset (typically less than a few meters) to significant normal faulting facilitating regional exhumation of high-grade metamorphic rocks. This research integrates structural geology with a new, multi-method low-temperature thermochronology dataset—including zircon and apatite (U–Th)/He and apatite fission-track ages—to contribute to this debate. Structural analysis of over 150 kinematic indicators collected along the MMT and its footwall shows that the MMT experienced semi-ductile to brittle reactivation dominated by top-to-the-north normal faulting. Structures formed under greenschist- to sub-greenschist facies conditions (e.g., C′ shear bands) in the footwall record progressive exhumation, with purely brittle cataclastic deformation marking the final stages. Our new thermochronometer dateset includes zircon (U–Th)/He (ZHe) single-grain ages (14.9 ± 1.2 to 24.4 ± 2.0 Ma), apatite (U–Th)/He (AHe) single-grain ages (7.6 ± 0.4 to 15.9 ± 1.0 Ma), and apatite fission-track (AFT) central ages (15.3 ± 2.4 to 16.4 ± 3.2 Ma). This dataset, alongside its thermal history modelling, reveals a consistent cooling signal across the Swat Valley. Following the Eocene collision and peak metamorphism, a major tectonic shift occurred in the Early Miocene. Our data indicate the onset of rapid cooling at ~20 Ma, with a slightly later initiation at ~18 Ma in the eastern Loe Sar Dome. This distinct phase of rapid cooling records the top-to-the-north normal reactivation of the MMT, which lasted until ~15–14 Ma. Collectively, our results provide structural and timing constraints supporting a model of protracted, normal-sense reactivation of the MMT between ~20 and 15 Ma. This event facilitated the final unroofing of high-grade metamorphic rocks in the Swat Valley. 

How to cite: Hernández Chaparro, D. R., Faccena, C., Olivetti, V., Fellin, G., and Ghani, H.: Constraining Early Miocene Reactivation of the Main Mantle Thrust (Swat Valley, Pakistan) through Integrated Structural and Thermochronologic Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12696, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12696, 2026.

EGU26-16222 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS30

Quantitative lineament network analysis of a folded crystalline terrain using FracPaQ: The Kadavur Anorthosite Complex, Southern Granulite Terrane 

Aravind Prathapachandran, Arunima Manilal Girija, and R Senthil Kumar

The Kadavur Anorthosite Complex represents a distinctive structural domain within a folded high-grade crystalline terrain, where a massif-type anorthosite body occupies the core of a regional-scale fold and is surrounded by folded quartzite ridges. This study examines the relationship between lineament development and the pre-existing ductile fold architecture through integrated DEM–SRTM data analysis and quantitative lineament network characterisation using FracPaQ. The objective is to assess how fold geometry and lithological contrasts influence the spatial distribution and mechanical behaviour of brittle structures. DEM analysis reveals a coherent folded morpho-structural architecture characterised by a well-defined core, axial-plane domains, and limbs expressed as quartzite ridges. FracPaQ-derived results show that lineaments are non-randomly distributed and define multiple dominant orientation sets, reflecting systematic structural control rather than random patterns. Spatial variations in lineament density and lineament intensity show pronounced localisation within and adjacent to the fold core, whereas lineament attributes vary systematically between the anorthosite-dominated core and the surrounding folded quartzite limbs.

Slip tendency analysis indicates that brittle deformation is predominantly shear-controlled across the study area, while dilation tendency values are generally low to moderate, suggesting a subordinate role for opening-mode fracturing. Lineaments within the anorthosite core are comparatively longer, less densely spaced, and display lower orientation dispersion, reflecting brittle stress accommodation within a mechanically competent lithology. In contrast, lineaments developed in the folded quartzite ridges are shorter, more closely spaced, and strongly influenced by lithological layering and fold-related bending stresses.

Although comparable lineament orientation patterns occur across the fold core, axial planes, and limbs, their geometric characteristics, spatial distribution, and inferred mechanical roles differ significantly, indicating that brittle deformation was modulated by local fold geometry and lithological contrasts. The results indicate a structural association between ductile folding and later brittle deformation; however, the tectonic conditions responsible for anorthosite exhumation cannot be uniquely constrained from the present dataset. This study highlights the importance of domain-specific lineament analysis in folded crystalline terrains and emphasizes the role of inherited ductile architecture in controlling later brittle deformation.

How to cite: Prathapachandran, A., Manilal Girija, A., and Kumar, R. S.: Quantitative lineament network analysis of a folded crystalline terrain using FracPaQ: The Kadavur Anorthosite Complex, Southern Granulite Terrane, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16222, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16222, 2026.

EGU26-18367 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS30

Quantitative Characterization of Fracture Networks Based on Geometric-Topological Integration and Its Application in Hydrocarbon Migration Prediction in the Western Junggar Basin 

Ye Tao, Lijie Cui, Yuxi Niu, Yawen Huang, Song Bai, Guoan Zhao, Paerhati Piluolan, and ying liu

With the continuous advancement of geological research, quantitative analysis of fracture networks has become a crucial research direction in geological exploration and resource development. To overcome the limitations of traditional methods in quantitatively analyzing fault data under complex geological conditions, we adopt a quantitative fracture characterization method based on geometric and topological theories. This study focuses on the overlay analysis of multi-period and multi-layer faults in a typical area of the western Junggar Basin, aiming to reveal their significant role in hydrocarbon exploration. By means of this method, we achieve multi-dimensional automatic quantification of geometric features (including fracture network length, orientation, and Pxy system), as well as node/branch types and topological parameters. Through the construction of a fracture topological network, we can quantitatively analyze the connectivity characteristics of each period and the vertically favorable conduction zones across multiple periods, thereby providing valuable guidance for hydrocarbon migration path prediction.

How to cite: Tao, Y., Cui, L., Niu, Y., Huang, Y., Bai, S., Zhao, G., Piluolan, P., and liu, Y.: Quantitative Characterization of Fracture Networks Based on Geometric-Topological Integration and Its Application in Hydrocarbon Migration Prediction in the Western Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18367, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18367, 2026.

The Achankovil Shear zone (AKSZ), juxtaposing the Trivandrum Granulite Block (TB) and the Madurai Granulite Block (MB) of the Southern Granulite Terrane (SGT), represents a paleo-suture zone related to the late Neoproterozoic to early Cambrian Gondwana assembly (Rajesh et al., 1998; Praharaj et al., 2021). The polyphase deformational history of the Achankovil Shear Zone (AKSZ) reveals progressive transition from a ductile to brittle deformation regime concomitant with high-grade granulite facies metamorphism and subsequent cooling–exhumation of the granulites. Progressive evolution of the state of stress and the variation of crustal dynamics during the ductile to brittle deformation regime transition, and the genetic link between these two contrasting episodes, if any, have been evaluated from statistical analysis of solid-state fabric and kinematic analysis of brittle fractures.

Three ductile deformation phases, D1, D2, and D3, and associated solid-state fabrics, i.e., S1, S2, and S3, are discernible at the mesoscopic scale. S1 fabric is gneissic in character and is only preserved in strain shadow regions. Elsewhere, S1 is transposed along the later S2 fabric, which is axial planar to fold on S1. Prevalence of high-temperature deformation conditions during D2 and D3 deformation stages is manifested by the presence of S2-parallel stromatic leucosomes and diatexite leucosome along dilatant S3 fabric, developed parallel to the axial planes of fold on S2. Significant simple shear component during D3 deformation is evidenced from the asymmetric nature of S2 folds, asymmetric porphyroclast tail and other shear sense markers. Eigen vector analysis reveals a change of maximum eigen vector, i.e., pole to the mean foliation, from NW-SE (D1: 311⁰/62⁰ NE) to N-S (D3: 187⁰/80⁰ W). The maximum eigen vector of D2 (125⁰/53⁰ SW), though similar in trend with D1, shows a reversal of dip direction. Fabric shape analysis reveals a progressive change from girdle to a strong clustered distribution of solid-state fabric from D1 to D3 deformation regime, suitably accounting for intense ductile shearing and transposition of earlier fabric during the D3 deformation stage.

Minor conjugate faults are ubiquitous at different locations along the AKSZ. Dihedral angle of ~60 or less for these faults suggests a shear or hybrid fracture origin, diagnostic of a compressive stress regime. Also, the observed slip of striations on slickensides suggests a consistent oblique reverse kinematics. Fault kinematic and paleo-stress analysis further reveals two distinct stress regimes with NW-SE and NE-SW directed maximum compressive stress (s1). Stress ratios for these faults imply a compressional to transpressional tectonic regime. Superposition of the slip tendency of NW–SE directed stress tensor over NE–SW directed stress tensor and vice-versa suggests that the NW-SE stress tensor precedes the NE-SW stress tensor during a progressive brittle deformation regime. Summarily, the cooling and exhumation and the switch over from ductile to brittle deformation regimes of the granulites took place under a compressive stress field developed during terrane accretion along the AKSZ. The brittle faults seemingly result from the relaxation of the orogenic far-field stress.

How to cite: Manilal Girija, A. and Bhadra, S.: Ductile to brittle tectonic evolution of the Achankovil Shear Zone, Southern Granulite Terrane – Constraints from statistical analysis of fabric and paleostress inversion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20066, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20066, 2026.

EGU26-21372 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS30

Dynamic Triggering and Effects of Crust Heterogeneities on Propagating Waves due to the 2025 Mw 7.7 Myanmar Earthquake 

Sneha Gupta, Vipul Silwal, and Sanjay Singh Bora

We investigate the heterogeneity of the Indian subcontinent using seismic recordings from the Mw 7.7 Myanmar earthquake that occurred on 28 March 2025. This event was recorded by broadband stations across India. These variations in waveforms at different stations highlight the influence of radiation pattern, crustal structure, wave-propagation paths, and local site conditions. Sedimentary basins, characterized by relatively soft sediments, are known to amplify seismic energy and modify ground motion characteristics, often resulting in enhanced shaking. Understanding these effects is essential for assessing seismic hazard.

We use time-series data from approximately 88 seismic broadband stations provided by the National Centre for Seismology (NCS), India. We apply frequency spectrum analysis, horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR) analysis, and surface wave dispersion analysis. The frequency spectrum helps identify frequency bands where seismic energy is amplified while HVSR analysis is used to estimate the site’s fundamental resonance frequency and the corresponding amplification factor. Surface wave dispersion analysis provides shear-wave velocity information, which is crucial for characterizing near-surface geological conditions.

Together, these analyses help us to understand the influence of local geological conditions at the receiver sites and contributes to a better analysis of regional seismic wave propagation and site-specific ground motion characteristics across the Indian subcontinent.

How to cite: Gupta, S., Silwal, V., and Bora, S. S.: Dynamic Triggering and Effects of Crust Heterogeneities on Propagating Waves due to the 2025 Mw 7.7 Myanmar Earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21372, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21372, 2026.

EGU26-21385 | ECS | Posters virtual | VPS30

Constraining Late Pleistocene to Holocene seismic fault activity in NE Iberia: The value of integrating complementary techniques in a low-strain region 

Marc Ollé-López, Julián García-Mayordomo, John Gallego-Montoya, Júlia Molins-Vigatà, Fabian Bellmunt, Anna Gabàs, Juvenal Andrés, Albert Macau, Altug Hasözbek, Anna Martí, Paula Figueiredo, Ángel Rodés, David García, María Ortuño, and Eulàlia Masana

The northeastern margin of the Iberian Peninsula, extending from the Vallès-Penedès Graben to the Valencia Depression, constitutes a passive margin related to the opening of the Valencia Trough during the Neogene. It comprises a series of extensive basins bounded by several mountain ranges, where numerous NNE–SSW-oriented normal faults are present, commonly associated with mountain fronts. Previous studies show that some of these faults, such as the El Camp fault, remain active, although at very low slip rates, as low as 0.02 m/kyr for Late Pleistocene.
Recent analyses of high-resolution Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) have revealed several additional morphological escarpments crosscutting different Quaternary alluvial fan systems across the region. These scarps, found from the Sant Jordi Plain to the La Salzadella Basin, share the same orientation as the Neogene faults, suggesting a common tectonic origin. They are discontinuous, arranged in a right-stepped pattern, and locally display vertical offsets of up to 8 m. Furthermore, several geomorphic features indicate recent tectonic activity, including aligned fissures within the fans and entrenched channels developed on the upthrown block that fade out after crossing the escarpments. Each family of escarpments exceeds 10 km in length, with important implications for the seismic hazard of the region.
Geophysical surveys (ERT, GPR, SRT, HVSR, and MT), validated with borehole data, confirm the presence of faults beneath each analysed escarpment system. At the Vinaixarop escarpment, for instance, ERT profiles revealed a steeply dipping discontinuity plane with a vertical offset of approximately 40 m affecting upper Pliocene sediments.
The faulted alluvial fans are interpreted as Lower to Middle Pleistocene in age and are mainly composed of carbonate gravels. Paleoseismological trenches excavated at four sites (L’Ampolla, Vinaixarop, and two at Sant Rafael del Riu) on different scarps revealed consistent evidence of late Quaternary faulting, such as ruptured strata. Additionally, ground-based hyperspectral cameras (400–1700 nm) were deployed on trench walls as an ancillary tool to map faulted
stratigraphic layers and to detect subtle coseismic deformation. As sedimentation on the fans ceased by the Middle Pleistocene, subsequent activity has been primarily recorded through the deformation of pedogenic features (calcretes), commonly found in the study area. To constrain the timing of this activity, U–Th dating was performed on fault-related carbonates and deformed calcretes. Preliminary results indicate that tectonic activity along these faults persisted at least until the Late Pleistocene. However, a deformed colluvial wedge and the presence of open fissures observed on trench walls suggest Holocene activity.
Additionally, three cosmonuclide depth-profiles were sampled to date displaced geomorphic surfaces, and hence estimating the long-term slip rates of the faults. Ongoing analyses aim to demonstrate Holocene seismic activity and to further characterize paleoearthquakes and their seismic parameters.
In summary, studies of active tectonics in regions of very low strain are inherently challenging, especially when recent sedimentation is scarce and pedogenic processes are intense. Nevertheless, this work highlights that integrating multiple complementary techniques is the most effective approach to address such settings.

How to cite: Ollé-López, M., García-Mayordomo, J., Gallego-Montoya, J., Molins-Vigatà, J., Bellmunt, F., Gabàs, A., Andrés, J., Macau, A., Hasözbek, A., Martí, A., Figueiredo, P., Rodés, Á., García, D., Ortuño, M., and Masana, E.: Constraining Late Pleistocene to Holocene seismic fault activity in NE Iberia: The value of integrating complementary techniques in a low-strain region, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21385, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21385, 2026.

TS1 – Deformation Mechanisms, Rheology, and Rock-Fluid Interactions

The evolution of rift-related fault systems is strongly influenced by pre-existing structural weaknesses, yet the role of their spatial arrangement in shaping fault patterns during multiphase non-coaxial extension remains unclear. To address this, we conducted a series of brittle–viscous analogue experiments to examine how left-stepping and right-stepping configurations of parallel weaknesses affect fault propagation, linkage, and orientation under two successive phases of orthogonal and oblique extension. We find that (1) fault orientation is jointly controlled by extension direction, weakness orientation, and the relative positioning of pre-existing weaknesses; (2) left-stepping and right-stepping systems, though geometrically identical, evolve differently under the same boundary conditions—left-stepping configurations develop greater fault linkage, strike diversity, and overall structural complexity; and (3) inherited weaknesses reduce the direct control of extension direction on fault strikes, implying that present-day fault patterns may not simply reflect paleostress orientations. Furthermore, our results suggest that apparent strike variability in multiphase rift systems can arise without local stress rotation, emerging instead from the interaction between regional stress and the spatial arrangement of inherited structures. Mechanistically, left-stepping configurations behave analogously to releasing steps in strike-slip systems, promoting more distributed deformation and strike-slip components, whereas right-stepping systems resemble restraining steps, producing simpler and more localized fault networks. Our findings provide new insights into how pre-existing structural configurations modulate rift fault evolution, highlighting the need to consider structural inheritance when reconstructing tectonic histories of multiphase extensional basins.

How to cite: Zhang, Y. and Huang, L.:  Fault System Evolution Controlled by Weakness Arrangement under Multiphase Non-Coaxial Extension:Analogue Modeling Insights, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-106, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-106, 2026.

EGU26-999 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Geometry of conjugate shears with conflicting shear-sense indicators in the western Palghat–Cauvery Shear Zone, Southern India 

Nanditha Nandan Thayyilunnithiri and Sreejith Chettootty

Shear zones are the areas of localised deformation that contain differential movement within the lithosphere. As such it plays a vital role in the tectonic evolution of continental margins and orogenic belts. The formation, geometry and kinematics of these zones are important for reconstructing the tectonic history. The Indian subcontinent exposes several crustal-scale shear zones, which are major zones of deformation that accommodate the movement of tectonic plates. Among these, the ~30 km wide east-west trending Palghat-Cauvery Shear Zone (PCSZ) forms one of the major transpressive dextral systems in the Southern Indian Granulite Terrain (SGT).

The PCSZ records D1–S1 fabrics that were overprinted by widespread dextral D2 mylonitisation (S2). This structural configuration is altered by brittle to brittle–ductile D3 structures, indicating significant structural heterogeneity in the area. On close examinations, the region is found to preserve evidence of conflicting nature of shears with brittle, brittle-ductile and ductile signatures. The structural complexity of the PCSZ is envisaged as a product of multiple deformation events, tectonic reworking and the overprinting of successive fabrics. The dextral and sinistral senses of shears include σ- and δ-type porphyroclasts, folds, minor faults, and fractures. The ductile dextral shears are characterised by well-developed S-C fabrics, σ- and δ-type porphyroclasts, and mica fish and folds that have oriented nearly in the E-W direction, while both the ductile and brittle sinistral shears are oriented mainly in the NNE to NNW direction. The younger brittle shears such as minor faults and fractures overlap the earlier ductile, which is oriented in the NW-SE direction. The structural analysis of the western PCSZ reveals that two principal stress regimes were in operation in this region. The early N-S compressive stress is associated with the collision of the Madurai and Madras blocks, producing E-W trending foliations, folds and σ- and δ-type porphyroclasts. The later E-W-oriented stress developed due to the transpressional movements leads to the development of conjugate brittle and brittle-ductile shear sets. Thus, the PCSZ form an ideal section to understand how alternating stress orientations and multiple deformations can form conjugate conflicting shear systems, exhibiting the interplay of ductile flow, strain partitioning, and brittle fracture in the deep crustal response to orogenic processes.

 

How to cite: Nandan Thayyilunnithiri, N. and Chettootty, S.: Geometry of conjugate shears with conflicting shear-sense indicators in the western Palghat–Cauvery Shear Zone, Southern India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-999, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-999, 2026.

The Central Indian Tectonic Zone (CITZ) records the Proterozoic collision between the Bundelkhand and Bastar cratons, with the adjacent Vindhyan Basin preserving evidence of deformation during the N-S convergence across CITZ. Previous interpretations associated the structural features in the Lower Vindhyan Group (LVG) to synsedimentary or seismic processes. To investigate the structural evolution of LVG and its relationship with CITZ, we conducted detailed litho-structural analysis of both the LVG and the Mahakoshal Supracrustal Belt (MSB) within the CITZ, specifically focusing on their mechanical coupling during Mesoproterozoic collisional deformation.

Our field investigations revealed polyphase deformation within the MSB, characterized by three distinct phases: (D1) E-W trending regional foliation (S1) and diversely oriented folds, (D2) E-W oriented steep folds associated with a crustal-scale shear zone along the Son-Narmada South Fault, and (D3) local cross-folds. In the LVG, we report, for the first time, characteristic fold-and-thrust belt features including buckle folds, kink bands, reverse faults, fault-related folds, and notably, 5-20 meters long outcrops of pop-up structures. The deformation style in the LVG was dominantly controlled by a mechanically weak detachment layer comprising the Kajrahat Limestone and Arangi Shale units, which enabled thin-skinned deformation within the overlying competent units of Porcellanite, Kheinjua Shale, and Chorhat Sandstone.

Based on geometric and kinematic analysis, we demonstrate that deformation in the LVG occurred between the D3 event in the MSB and the deposition of the Upper Vindhyan Group (1.5–1.2 Ga). Cross-sectional analysis reveals that the LVG deformation patterns closely mimic sandbox experiments of fold-and-thrust belt evolution, particularly in the sequential development of pop-up structures above a weak detachment horizon. We propose a tectonic model wherein the Vindhyan Basin initially developed as a peripheral foreland basin, followed by northward propagation of deformation through detachment folding mechanisms. The model involves initial northward subduction followed by polarity reversal to southward subduction, explaining both the basin formation and subsequent deformation patterns. Our findings also highlight the significance of thin-skinned tectonics in shaping structural architecture of Central India during the Mesoproterozoic period and reveal the far-field effects of cratonic collisions on basin evolution.

How to cite: Todkar, T., Saha, P., Dutta, D., and Misra, S.: Development of Mesoproterozoic Fold-and-Thrust Belt Structures in Central India: New Evidence from Detachment-Controlled Deformation in the Lower Vindhyan Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1062, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1062, 2026.

Lamprophyre dykes are enigmatic volatile-rich, mantle-derived igneous melts that are often contemporary with lithospheric extension. Despite a rich literature on the petrology and geodynamic implications of lamprophyre intrusions into the continental crust, the emplacement mechanisms of these dykes (i.e. structural relationship with the host rock and structures, mode of intrusion, speed of magma ascent, etc) into the dry mid–lower crust is poorly constrained.

In the Jotun Nappe of south-central Norway, Proterozoic gabbro gneisses are overprinted locally by mutually crosscutting lamprophyre dykes, pseudotachylytes (coseismic-derived quenched frictional melts), and mylonitized pseudotachylytes. Mylonitized pseudotachylytes form networks of small-scale (cm- to dm-scale) ductile shear zones, orientated in roughly three sets of orientations, that separate relatively undeformed gabbro gneiss blocks, while pristine pseudotachylytes dissect these blocks and are bounded by the ductile shear zones – akin to observations from Lofoten, Norway (e.g. Jostling Block; Campbell et al., 2020). Pseudotachylytes and mylonitized pseudotachylytes have similar mineral assemblages containing plagioclase, K-feldspar, clinopyroxene, amphibole, Fe-Ti-oxides, with the mylonitized versions also containing garnet porphyroblasts and biotite in addition. Lamprophyre dykes (<1.5m wide), strike dominantly NW-SE, are either undeformed or are incorporated into viscous shear zones that are comprised primarily of mylonitized pseudotachylytes. Many of the undeformed lamprophyres show some amount of viscous shearing localized to <5 cm at the contact with the host rock, otherwise pristine undeformed dykes display primary igneous fabrics and textures. Injection veins of the dyke into the host rock are common, while dyke tips form sharp <45° indentations into the gabbro gneiss. The host rock around jogs is bleached and exhibits numerous small shear fractures filled with dyke material that can easily be misidentified for pseudotachylytes. Lamprophyres have a matrix composed of biotite, plagioclase, dolomite, orthopyroxene, amphibole, Fe-Ti-oxides, and apatite with xenocrysts of orthopyroxene surrounded by a corona of clinopyroxene, amphibole, biotite. Pristine pseudotachylytes crosscut the dykes, offsetting them by up to an apparent ~50 cm and dragging dyke material along the length of the pseudotachylyte surface.

Structural relationships between mylonitized pseudotachylytes and pseudotachylytes suggest that viscous creep along the shear zone network concentrated stresses towards the interior of the gabbro gneiss blocks, which resulted in failure of the blocks and the formation of pristine pseudotachylytes (Zertani et al., 2025). Because the dominant orientation of the lamprophyre dykes is orthogonal to the most dominant orientation of the ductile shear zones, we suggest the lamprophyres exploited transient crustal weaknesses caused by the stress drops during rupturing of the blocks, which created permeably fracture networks for the dykes to ascend through the gneiss. This study demonstrates through field and microstructural observations that lamprophyre intrusions are fundamentally linked to seismicity in the dry mid–lower crust.

Campbell et al., (2020). Nature Communications,  https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15150-x

Zertani et al., (2025). Geophysical Research Letters,  https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL114350

How to cite: Michalchuk, S. P. and Augland, L. E.: Field and microstructural evidence demonstrating the interplay between seismicity and the emplacement of lamprophyres in the dry mid to lower crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1099, 2026.

Microstructural observations such as grain and subgrain sizes, pole figures (CPO), grain boundary irregularities, and thermometry (opening angles, Ti-in-Quartz) from the mineral quartz have become one of the most reliable proxies for deciphering the mechanical properties, including stress, strain rate, and deformation conditions (temperature) of the continental crust. These relationships were constrained from experimental studies on monomineralic quartz aggregates. Consequently, many field-based studies from continental shear zones focus on analyzing sporadically occurring quartzites and quartz veins. However, crustal rocks are predominantly polymineralic, yet, for simplification, most rheological models rely on homogeneous single-phase approximations. Interactions among multiple mineral phases can disrupt steady-state grain sizes, leading to violations of the piezometric relationships commonly applied to quartz mylonites. Experimental studies further show that polymineralic aggregates deform at significantly lower stresses than their monomineralic counterparts, implying that previous studies have likely overestimated the strength of the crust. In addition, experiments demonstrate that the presence of a secondary phase results in markedly different quartz CPO from that expected in single-phase quartzite. These observations raise an important question: to what extent can quantitative microstructural data from polymineralic rocks be used to infer realistic mechanical properties of the continental crust? Addressing this gap is crucial for developing rheological models that accurately reflect the deformation processes occurring in nature.

In this study, we focus on performing high-resolution EBSD analysis of quartz-bearing mylonites formed from metapelites and granites during thrust-sense shearing along the Main Central Thrust (MCT) shear zone (Western Himalaya, India), which runs along the entire Himalayan Mountain belt. From south to north, these samples record an increasing peak-metamorphic temperature and pressure condition; from 535 °C and 5.8 kbar to 683 °C and 11 kbar. Although strain is inhomogeneously distributed within the ~4 km thick shear zone, an overall increase in deformation intensity is recorded towards the north. The Crystallographic Vorticity Axis (CVA) analysis of quartz reveals monoclinic simple-shear flow kinematics consistent with earlier studies; however, the secondary phases (plagioclase) exhibit pure shear-dominated deformation. Depending on the proportion of the secondary phase (30 to 70%), quartz grains form either continuous layers (monophase domain) or isolated quartz aggregates (polyphase domain). Overall, the CPO pattern in the monophase domain exhibits a transition from a type-II crossed-girdle to an asymmetric type-I pattern, towards the north. The mixed polyphase domain exhibits a random CPO. Within the monophase domains, the fabric strength (M-index, B-index) is higher for the thicker domains (> 163μm). Thereafter, we segregate our analysis into two types of quartz grains: (i) quartz surrounded by quartz grains (Q-Q), and (ii) quartz surrounded by other phases (Q-S). Within a thin section, the Q-Q grains exhibit higher fabric strength, larger recrystallized grain sizes, but lower aspect ratios compared to the Q-S grains. The low-angle boundary density increases towards the north (0.0042 to 0.0095µm-1), but the density is always higher for Q-Q grains than Q-S grains. Our study suggests Q-Q grains can be used for piezometry. We will discuss these results in terms of deformation mechanisms and strain partitioning between mono and polyphase domains.

How to cite: Ghosh, S. and Saha, S.: Quantifying the Rheology of Quartz-bearing Polyphase aggregates deformed under mid-crustal conditions: An EBSD-based Application, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1321, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1321, 2026.

Temperature-dependent rheological changes control the long-term brittle-ductile transition, but several other factors may control the transient and localized switching between brittle and ductile rheology in the continental crust during orogen build-up. Rheological transients are inferred from, for example, mutual overprinting relationship between localized ductile and brittle deformation features (faults, veins, foliations, and shear zones) in the field. These occurrences are commonly used as a starting point for developing models of the mechanisms controlling seismicity outside the upper-crustal schizosphere, including lower-crustal earthquakes, intermediate-depth seismicity, and slow seismic phenomena such as tremor and slow slip. Current geophysical/seismological investigations show indeed the occurrence of different types of seismicity potentially related to continental subduction; however, most recorded seismicity appears to be linked to collision and exhumation processes. Based on field observations from subducted and exhumed Alpine continental units (Corsica and the Central Alps), this contribution addresses key challenges in interpreting brittle–ductile transient rheology from the geological record, discussing how structural inheritance, metamorphic overprinting, and fluid composition complicate interpretations of seismic versus aseismic deformation.

During prograde subduction, increasing temperature and pressure should promote a progressive transition from brittle to ductile rheology. The blueschist-ecogitic facies continental units of Alpine Corsica, prime example of continental subduction, show indeed a general brittle-to-ductile (and potentially seismic-to-aseismic) evolution, with distinct deformation features developed across increasing metamorphic grades. However, the post-kinematic increment in metamorphic conditions may overprint brittle structures with higher-grade assemblages, precluding us to understand if these field occurrences are really representative of (seismic) rheological transients during deep subduction, or if they simply result from structural inheritance from the pre-orogenic stages. New field observations from the Crystalline Massifs of the Central Alps (Aar massif, Gotthard nappe) further demonstrate the role of inherited structures in steering the retrograde rheological evolution of the continental crust during Alpine collision and exhumation, challenging models for mid-crustal seismicity and strain localization. Rheological transients are commonly associated with fluid flow and fluid pressure fluctuations, manifested in the field as mineralised veins precipitating from metamorphic fluids. Yet, the polyphase nature of metamorphic fluids (e.g., CO2-, CH4-bearing fluids), and the resulting variability in chemo-physical properties are rarely considered in rheological models. CO2-rich fluids and the resulting carbonate-bearing mineral veins might lead to transient rheological switches in both the brittle and ductile fields, as documented by sheared carbonate-bearing breccias in several Alpine crystalline units and plutons.

Together, these observations highlight that brittle–ductile transients inferred from the geological record require careful evaluation of inheritance, metamorphic overprinting, and fluid composition before being extrapolated to crustal rheology and seismicity models.

How to cite: Ceccato, A.: Brittle–ductile transients during continental subduction and exhumation: inheritance, fluids, and implications for seismicity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4445, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4445, 2026.

Continental subduction is a fundamental stage in the tectonic evolution of convergent plate margins, accommodating the transition from oceanic subduction to continental collision and orogenic build up. Despite the elevated seismic hazard currently posed by destructive earthquakes in continental subduction settings (e.g., Taiwan 1999 Chi Chi MW = 7.6, 2024 Hualien MW = 7.4; Nepal 2015 Gorkha MW = 7.8; Albania 2019 Durres MW = 6.4), our understanding of the processes steering the seismogenic behaviour during prograde subduction of the buoyant, dry, quartzo-feldspathic continental lithosphere remains limited. With the Maria Skłodowska Curie Action SEISMI-COS, we aim at providing quantitative estimates of the stress state, rheology and petrophysical properties of natural deformation zones developed during progressive subduction of continental lithosphere. We will focus on fossil deformation zones exposed in the metamorphic units of Northern Corsica, where the former crystalline basement of the European continental margin has been coherently subducted to and exhumed from different depths during Eocene Alpine orogenesis. Different metamorphic units preserve pristine deformation structures developed at increasing subduction depth, making Northern Corsica the perfect natural laboratory to track the prograde rheological evolution and seismogenic behaviour of the subducted continental lithosphere from shallow seismogenic depths all the way down to conditions at intermediate-depth earthquakes are expected. Preliminary results show that units subducted at progressive depths show different structural features, from pseudotachylyte-bearing fault zones and brittle-ductile shear bands and veins in the outermost continental slices (Corte blueschist units), to high-pressure ductile shear zones (Tenda blueschist phyllonites) involving cycles of fluid pressure variation and veining (Centuri shear zones). This plethora of mesostructures represent the variable seismogenic behaviour during subduction of crystalline continental units subducted at different depths. Field, microstructural, and laboratory analyses will provide us with fundamental insights on how rheology and petrophysics control seismogenic deformation.

How to cite: Ceccato, A., Vannucchi, P., and Molli, G.: SEISMogenic behavIour of COntinental Subduction (SEISMI-COS): insights from rheology and petrophysics of Corsica blueschist and eclogite-facies continental units, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4448, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4448, 2026.

EGU26-5415 | ECS | Orals | TS1.1

Giant pseudotachylyte breccias of Valsesia (Ivrea Zone, Western Italian Alps) 

Silvia Aldrighetti, Gianluca D'Ippolito, Giorgio Pennacchioni, Rodrigo Gomila, Paola Baccheschi, and Giulio Di Toro

Pseudotachylytes are solidified frictional melts produced in silicatic rocks during an earthquake (Sibson, 1975). They usually form fault and injection veins with thicknesses ranging from few millimeters to several centimeters. Still, exposures of meter-thick pseudotachylyte breccias with evidence of a single melt pulse and associated with seismic faulting have been documented (i.e., Musgrave Ranges, Australia; Lofoten Islands, Norway; Outer Hebrides, Scotland; Greenland; Ivrea-Verbano Zone, Italy).

In the present study, we perform field, microstructural and mineralogical investigations of both “normal” (i.e., mm- to cm-scale) pseudotachylytes and “giant” pseudotachylyte breccias outcropping in the Ivrea-Verbano Zone moving away from the Canavese Line, a segment of the Insubric Line, the main tectonic lineament of the Alps. The giant pseudotachylyte breccias reach up to ~2 m in thickness, and up to 8 m in length, limited by the outcrop extension, and possibly fill pull-aparts. Despite pseudotachylytes in this area have already been studied in detail, giant pseudotachylyte breccias were somehow overlooked (Techmer et al., 1992; Ueda et al., 2008; Souquière and Fabbri, 2010; Ferrand et al., 2018). We aim to determine (i) the ambient P-T conditions of formation (discussed here), (ii) their geodynamic and seismogenic environment, and (iii) their formation mechanism.

We selected four main outcrops along the Sesia River for detailed field mapping and sampling, moving eastward from the Canavese Line for ~9 km. In fact, no giant pseudotachylyte breccias have been found to the west of the lineament. In detail:

Outcrop I, <500 m from the Canavese Line (altered greenschist facies gabbros) shows:

  • multiple generations of pseudotachylyte-bearing faults, including giant pseudotachylyte breccias subparallel to the NNE-SSW striking Canavese Line, containing clasts of the altered host rock;
  • matrix of the pseudotachylytes overprinted by greenschist facies minerals (epidote, chlorite, albite);
  • late quartz-epidote- and chlorite-bearing faults cutting the pseudotachylyte-bearing faults and breccias.

Outcrop II, ~1 km from the Canavese Line (unaltered gabbros) shows:

  • multiple generations of pseudotachylyte veins and giant breccias, the latter subparallel to the Canavese Line;
  • cataclasite- and graphite-bearing faults cut by giant pseudotachylyte breccia;
  • late quartz-epidote- and chlorite-bearing faults cutting the pseudotachylytes.

Outcrop III, ~2 km from the Canavese Line (Balmuccia peridotite) shows:

  • multiple giant pseudotachylyte breccias cutting cataclasite-bearing faults;
  • serpentine-bearing veins and pseudotachylytes mutually cross-cutting each other;
  • giant pseudotachylyte breccias subparallel to the Canavese line; their matrix includes microlites of olivine, enstatite, and vesicles.

Outcrop IV, ~9 km from the Canavese Line (unaltered tonalite) shows:

  • only thin pseudotachylytes overprinting foliated cataclasite-bearing faults;
  • well-preserved matrix of the pseudotachylytes (microlites, chilled margins, flow structures).

In conclusion, giant pseudotachylyte breccias are (i) mostly subparallel and only outcropping close to the Canavese Line (<2 km), (ii) made of a relatively homogenous matrix, resulting from the solidification of a continuous melt layer, (iii) not reactivated by ductile deformation, (iv) cut and are cut by brittle faults and, (v) cut by quartz-epidote, chlorite-, serpentine- bearing faults and veins. Thus, they were possibly generated in a shallow (~15 km depth) and cold (<350°C) environment by individual earthquakes of large magnitude, associated with the activity of the Canavese Line.

How to cite: Aldrighetti, S., D'Ippolito, G., Pennacchioni, G., Gomila, R., Baccheschi, P., and Di Toro, G.: Giant pseudotachylyte breccias of Valsesia (Ivrea Zone, Western Italian Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5415, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5415, 2026.

EGU26-5725 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Brittle-ductile deformation of granulitic clinopyroxene during incipient eclogitisation 

Larissa Lenz, Sascha Zertani, Bernhard Grasemann, Roland Stalder, Luca Menegon, and Anna Rogowitz

In the mafic lower crust, clinopyroxene is among the main rock-forming minerals. Based on experimental investigations, clinopyroxene is considered to be strong and to deform in a brittle manner at dry lower crustal conditions. However, field observations on Holsnøy, Norway, indicate ductile deformation of coarse-grained clinopyroxene in the mafic lower crust, reflected by bending of the granulitic foliation adjacent to eclogitic shear zones.

This study focusses on the strain accommodating processes of the granulitic clinopyroxene during incipient eclogitisation. Representative samples of deformed weakly eclogitised granulite were analysed via scanning electron microscopy, electron back-scattered diffraction mapping, electron probe micro analysis and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy.

Microstructural analysis reveals the formation of garnet lamellae along the {010} planes of the diopsidic clinopyroxene. Initial bending of this anisotropic clinopyroxene is accommodated by the development of en échelon microcracks at a high angle to the {010} planes. The micro-cracks are traced by garnet with similar composition as the lamellae, suggesting that both formed at similar pressure-temperature conditions. With ongoing strain, the cracks start to link and evolve into micro-shear zones, which systematically widen with strain and eventually connect forming networks. This widening is accompanied by the nucleation of amphibole and a second clinopyroxene with higher magnesium and lower aluminium concentration when compared to the host clinopyroxene, facilitating further macroscopic bending of the granulitic foliation. Increased intracrystalline misorientation and formation of subgrains adjacent to the micro-shear zone indicate that the diopsidic clinopyroxene host grain deforms by crystal plastic processes. In contrast, shape-preferred orientation and minor chemical zoning of the newly crystallised grains related to the micro-shear zone suggest that diffusion-related processes predominately accommodated the strain in the micro-shear zones.

In recent literature, low-permeable granulite has been described as dry. The observed deformation style as well as the formation of amphibole in the micro-shear zones indicate the presence of water, either in form of external fluids, infiltrating through en échelon microcracks, or as minor amounts of OH-groups occurring in the nominally anhydrous clinopyroxene. First Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy results suggest that the nucleation of amphibole might be facilitated by the incorporated OH in the diopsidic clinopyroxene.

The observed microstructures and mineral compositions suggest that the micro-shear zones form at an early deformation stage throughout the eclogitisation process on Holsnøy. Our investigations show the complex interplay of brittle and ductile processes on a microscopic scale during macroscopically ductile flow.

How to cite: Lenz, L., Zertani, S., Grasemann, B., Stalder, R., Menegon, L., and Rogowitz, A.: Brittle-ductile deformation of granulitic clinopyroxene during incipient eclogitisation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5725, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5725, 2026.

A monocline fold forming in a sedimentary cover above a fault in a rigid basement is an example of fault-related folding and is often associated with fault propagation. We developed a custom implementation of finite element method model of folding in a viscous medium above a fault with an arbitrary dip (θ) and sense of slip. We explored three rheological scenarios: (1) a homogeneous isotropic cover, (2) a heterogeneous cover consisting of initially flat, alternating low- and high-viscosity (denoted by µ1 and µ2 respectively) isotropic layers, (3) an initially homogeneous anisotropic cover. Anisotropic fluids are characterised by shear and normal viscosity, i.e., viscosity under layer-parallel shearing and layer parallel shortening or extension, respectively. The model of an anisotropic fluid approximates the behaviour of a layered media in the limit of fine layering.

We performed systematic numerical experiments for fault dip angles ranging from θ=10° to θ=90°, number of layers n=8, 16, 32, 64, 128, viscosity ratios µ2/ µ1=10, 25, 50, 100 and shortening or extensional regime. Results demonstrated that an anisotropic viscous medium effectively approximates a finely layered sedimentary cover at both the onset of deformation and under large finite strain. However, the observations regarding the trends of structure evolution (e.g., fold amplitude growth rate) made at the onset or after a few initial time steps of deformation cannot be extrapolated for further stages of deformation. For sufficiently fine layering (e.g., n=64, 128), the simulated folds tend to be chevron-like. Two major geometrical types of folds can be described in the reverse fault case, i.e. in the shortening regime. A forelimb monocline alone forms above a basement fault with dip angles larger than θ=30-40°, but an additional pop-up anticline emerges in the case of a gentler dipping fault. In general, greater viscosity contrasts favour the amplification of the pop-up anticline. The anticline grows in time for most of studied cases, but its evolution is more complex for folds formed above a fault dipping close to the threshold value between two geometrical types. In these cases, the amplitude of the pop-up anticline decreases with progressive shortening at late stages of deformation. In the normal fault case (extensional regime), the covering layers tend to deform more or less parallel to the top basement boundary and fold geometries are rather similar regardless of the fault dip angle.

The work was supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, under research project “Numerical and field studies of anisotropic rocks under large strain: applying micro-POLAR mechanIcS in structural geology (POLARIS)”, no UMO-2020/39/I/ST10/00818.

How to cite: Mol, S. and Dabrowski, M.: Numerical modelling of viscous folding in a layered sedimentary cover above a basement fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6922, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6922, 2026.

EGU26-8935 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Controls on Deformation Style in a Neoarchean Crustal-Scale Shear Zone: Evidence from the Dharwar Craton 

Lakshmanan Sreehari, Manato Urakawa, Yoshihiro Nakamura, Madhusoodhan Satish-Kumar, and Krishnan Sajeev

Variations in rock deformation style across crustal levels are a fundamental topic in structural geology, yet the factors controlling strain localization in long-lived shear zones remain debated. Here we present a detailed field-scale and microstructural study of the >200 km-long Neoarchean Gadag–Mandya shear zone in the Dharwar Craton, southern India, based on a continuous along-transect observations.

The significance of this shear zone lies in its pronounced metamorphic gradient, from dominantly greenschist-facies assemblages in the northern Western Dharwar Craton to amphibolite- and granulite-facies assemblages in the south. This framework allows us to investigate variations in deformation mechanisms and the factors governing deformation style at different crustal levels, dominantly within granitic basement rocks. The shear zone has also been interpreted as a major tectonic boundary related to Neoarchean subduction, making its internal architecture critical for understanding the tectonic evolution of the Dharwar Craton.

Our results show that shear-zone width varies markedly along the transect, from centimetre- to metre-scale zones in the greenschist-facies domain to kilometre-scale zones near the amphibolite–granulite transition. The wider domains are characterized by (i) strong strain localization within granitic intrusions, (ii) the presence of pseudotachylytes, ultramylonites, and hydrous mineral assemblages, and (iii) pervasive overprinting relationships. EBSD data and quartz microstructural analyses indicate overprinting of earlier high-temperature deformation by lower-temperature deformation, particularly in the southern sector, where amphibolite-facies assemblages are locally retrogressed to chlorite–muscovite-bearing fabrics.

Beyond the amphibolite–granulite transition, marked by the appearance of clinopyroxene within the foliation, the main shear zone becomes difficult to trace as a single continuous structure. Instead, multiple metre-scale shear zones with variable orientations are observed, commonly spatially associated with melt-rich domains. These observations highlight the critical role of rheological heterogeneity, melt and fluid infiltration, and inherited thermal structure in controlling shear-zone width, strain localization, and deformation style in Neoarchean crustal-scale shear zones. Rather than recording a simple depth-controlled transition, the Gadag–Mandya shear zone preserves a composite record of spatially and temporally variable deformation processes, in which localized seismic slip, viscous flow, and melt-assisted deformation coexist and overprint each other. This integrated field–microstructural dataset provides new constraints on the mechanical behavior of long-lived lithospheric shear zones in Archean continental crust.

How to cite: Sreehari, L., Urakawa, M., Nakamura, Y., Satish-Kumar, M., and Sajeev, K.: Controls on Deformation Style in a Neoarchean Crustal-Scale Shear Zone: Evidence from the Dharwar Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8935, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8935, 2026.

EGU26-9776 | ECS | Orals | TS1.1

The memory of crystals: microstructures in UHP garnets from Dora Maira 

Alessia Tagliaferri, Lucie Tajčmanová, and Thibault Duretz

Microstructures within rocks and crystals describe their past deformation conditions, which may vary in time and space even within a single rock sample. This variation depends on pressure, temperature and strain rate, and determines whether minerals deform in a brittle or ductile manner. Investigating deformation mechanisms under extreme conditions, such as ultra-high-pressure (UHP), is particularly useful. Indeed, the analysis of well-preserved UHP rocks provides insights into crystal’s behavior over a wider range of pressures. For these reasons, we studied Dora Maira whiteschists, and specifically the pyrope crystals forming these rocks.

Dora Maira is one of the internal crystalline massifs of the European Western Alps, formed by HP and UHP units. The latter is famous for the presence of coesite-bearing whiteschists. These rocks are foliated, with a spatially variable foliation defined by the shape preferred orientation of phengite and garnet crystals. Garnet grains can be either rounded or elongated and show different sets of fractures. Moreover, garnet crystals are locally recrystallized.

The first set of garnet fractures is represented by parallel fractures oriented at high angle with respect to the main rock schistosity and affecting garnet crystals in the entire outcrop. These fractures are locally associated with another set developed at ca. 45°, formed together with small (µm-scale) rotating volumes of garnet. The parallel fractures are dislocated by the local recrystallization of some garnet grains and by radial fractures developed around coesite/palisade quartz inclusions. These radial fractures formed due to the large volumetric change happening at the coesite-quartz transition.

We analyzed the described microstructures using optical microscope and SEM in (HR)-EBSD mode. Additionally, we investigated garnet crystals’ composition with SEM-EDS and microprobe. In this contribution, we show the results of this combined analysis.

Our results provide new microstructural evidence that garnet can record alternating brittle and ductile deformation under UHP conditions. Besides, we document a correlation between deformation-related microstructures and major-element redistribution within garnet, highlighting the deep connection between these two aspects which was previously underestimated.

How to cite: Tagliaferri, A., Tajčmanová, L., and Duretz, T.: The memory of crystals: microstructures in UHP garnets from Dora Maira, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9776, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9776, 2026.

EGU26-9812 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Coupled interaction between fluid and deformation mechanisms in quartz 

Shuting Wang, Shuyun Cao, Christoph von Hagke, and Lefan Zhan

Fluids are widely recognized to weaken quartz and to be redistributed during deformation. However, integrated constraints that link water partitioning in natural quartz (fluid inclusions, grain boundaries, and crystal defects) to the evolution of dynamic recrystallization mechanisms (from SGR-dominated recrystallization, through increasing grain-boundary involvement, to GBM-dominated recrystallization) are still limited. Three types of quartz veins that are (sub-)parallel to foliation in the Xuelongshan metamorphic complex record a progressive shift in recrystallization style, providing an ideal natural laboratory to compare deformation mechanisms and fluid reservoirs.

We integrate field observations, microstructure, electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), fluid inclusion (FI), laser Raman microspectroscopy (LRM), and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) to constrain coupled deformation-fluid evolution. All three quartz veins display widespread grain-size reduction and strong crystallographic fabrics. EBSD indicates dominant dislocation creep, with dynamic recrystallization evolving from subgrain rotation (SGR; Type I) through a transitional regime with enhanced grain boundary processes (Type II) toward grain boundary migration (GBM; Type III).

Fluid inclusions are mainly small, irregular, and are preferentially aligned along grain boundaries. Raman spectra from Types I and II quartz reveal a multicomponent fluid system including CO₂, SO₂, CH₄, and CO₃²⁻. FTIR spectra and spatial maps of bulk H₂O and Al-related OH demonstrate a systematic, mechanism-dependent redistribution of water among microstructural reservoirs. In SGR dominant quartz, water exist mainly as inclusion H₂O concentrated along (sub)grain boundaries, and inclusion deformation and rupture promote leakage so that recrystallized grains contain more bulk H₂O than porphyroclasts. Toward GBM, crystal defect OH increases significantly and the relative contribution of inclusion water decreases. In GBM dominant quartz, however, the proportion of defect water declines again as migrating boundaries efficiently sweep out dislocations and reduce the capacity for crystal defect H, despite continued high bulk H₂O.

Overall, our results suggest quartz deformed mechanism transitions are linked not only to the bulk water budget, but more critically to the redistribution of water among microstructural reservoirs (inclusions, grain boundaries, and defects), and to the evolving capacity of the microstructure to store mechanically effective water.

How to cite: Wang, S., Cao, S., von Hagke, C., and Zhan, L.: Coupled interaction between fluid and deformation mechanisms in quartz, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9812, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9812, 2026.

EGU26-9871 | ECS | Orals | TS1.1

Multiphase deformation and stress field evolution of the Yuanmou metamorphic complex, SW China 

Xuemei Cheng, Shuyun Cao, Shaoyong Jiang, and Christoph von Hagke

Metamorphic complexes preserve well-recorded evidence of multistage deformation, metamorphism, magmatism, and fluid-rock interactions. However, the structural relationships between microstructurally constrained ductile deformation and later brittle fault kinematics and stress fields remain insufficiently constrained. The Yuanmou Complex, located in the central–southern Kangdian region along the southwestern margin of the Yangtze Block, China, provides an ideal site to address these issues.  In this study, we combine field investigations with optical microscopy–cathodoluminescence (OM–CL), electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and paleostress inversion of fault-slip data to investigate the deformation process and stress fields of later brittle faulting in the Yuanmou Complex.

Microstructures and EBSD fabric results indicate that the Yuanmou Complex experienced multistage deformation, evolving from early high-temperature ductile deformation to low-temperature ductile deformation, followed by brittle deformation during exhumation to shallow crustal levels. EBSD fabric analyses of deformed quartz reveal a systematic transition in dominant slip systems, from high-temperature prism slip (>650 °C), through intermediate–high temperature prism

Paleostress inversion reveals the coexistence of compressional, extensional and strike-slip stress regimes. An early stress regime dominated by NNE–SSW-oriented compression is identified, whereas a later stage is characterized by a NW–NWW-oriented principal stress field, under which fault kinematics gradually evolved from thrusting to strike-slip–dominated deformation, accompanied by local extensional activity. Linking ductile deformation processes with subsequent brittle fault kinematics and stress fields, our results reveal their structural connection and reflect regional Cenozoic responses to eastward extrusion of the Tibetan Plateau and southeastward escape of the Sichuan-Yunnan rhombic block.

How to cite: Cheng, X., Cao, S., Jiang, S., and von Hagke, C.: Multiphase deformation and stress field evolution of the Yuanmou metamorphic complex, SW China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9871, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9871, 2026.

EGU26-10275 | Orals | TS1.1

Deformation, fluid circulation, and strain localization during mantle exhumation in the Tyrrhenian back-arc basin 

Paola Vannucchi, Manon Bickert, Eirini M. Poulaki, Chiara Montemagni, Edoardo Baroncini, Roberto E. Rizzo, and Alessio Sanfilippo

The exhumation of lithospheric mantle at magma-poor rifted margins requires efficient strain localization and sustained weakening of ultramafic rocks. In the Tyrrhenian back-arc basin, recent IODP drilling by Expedition 402 has provided unprecedented access to mantle exhumed ≤4 Ma, revealing a complex interplay between deformation, magmatic intrusions, and hydrothermal fluid circulation.

We assess how hydrothermal fluids and syn-rift intrusions influence the mechanical evolution of the exhumed mantle in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Structural and microstructural observations from drilled mantle sections document a transition from high-temperature ductile deformation (mylonitization) to brittle faulting (e.g., brecciation). This evolution is accompanied by serpentinization and localized carbonation veins. These veins follow pre-existing lithological contacts such as felsic and mafic intrusions, which probably act as rheological barriers and as preferential pathways for fluid flow.

We integrate structural analysis, microstructural characterization and mineralogical constraints, and 3D tomography (synchrotron µCT) to evaluate how porosity distribution, connectivity of veins, reaction front, linked to fluid infiltration and fluid-driven mineral transformations, modify mantle rheology. Fluid-assisted weakening and reaction-induced volume changes may promote the development of localized shear zones and, ultimately, detachment faults. Preliminary observations indicate that magmatic intrusions (felsic and mafic) localize strain; subsequent serpentinization further reduces rock strength and facilitates the late stages of exhumation.

Our results suggest that mantle exhumation in the Tyrrhenian basin reflects complex coupled deformation-magmatism- fluid processes rather than  tectonic extension alone. This provides new constraints on strain localization mechanisms at magma-poor rifted margins and on the mechanical evolution of continent–ocean transitions.

How to cite: Vannucchi, P., Bickert, M., Poulaki, E. M., Montemagni, C., Baroncini, E., Rizzo, R. E., and Sanfilippo, A.: Deformation, fluid circulation, and strain localization during mantle exhumation in the Tyrrhenian back-arc basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10275, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10275, 2026.

EGU26-10360 | Posters on site | TS1.1

Microlites of natural and experimental peraluminous pseudotachylytes: a comparison 

Giorgio Pennacchioni, Giovanni Toffol, Pawel Slupski, Lea Pennacchioni, Richard Wirth, Anja Schreiber, and Georg Cerwenka

Pseudotachylyte is a quenched coseismic frictional melt. As such, pseudotachylyte may provide invaluable information on the processes occurring on fault at hypocentre depths. Of particular interest are pseudotachylytes hosted in high-grade rocks, as they may record seismic ruptures propagated in the middle and lower crust. However, pseudotachylyte in high-grade rocks may also result from shallow deformation after uplift, thus constraining ambient conditions of faulting is crucial although not trivial.

The mineralogy of pseudotachylyte includes microlites crystallized during melt quenching, glass recrystallization products and, for deep-seated pseudotachylytes, minerals reflecting re-equilibration to the ambient metamorphic conditions. In absence of ductile deformation of pseudotachylyte promoting re-equilibration, the estimate of P–T conditions is typically based on the microlites. For example, the presence of microlitic ‘cauliflower’ garnet has been interpreted to reflect high-grade ambient conditions of faulting. However, Papa et al. (2023), described cauliflower-garnet-bearing pseudotachylytes hosted in granulite facies garnet-sillimanite-rich gneiss from Calabria and proposed shallow faulting conditions based on radiometric dating, suggesting that garnet can be transiently stable during quenching at shallow conditions.

Here we quenched at room conditions superheated (>2100 °C) melts produced by instantaneous laser-heating of the same peraluminous gneisses hosting the natural pseudotachylyte and compare the microlite population of the experimental glass with the microlites of the natural pseudotachylyte. Both the natural pseudotachylyte and the experimental glass contain: (i) acicular-shaped corundum microlites; (ii) sillimanite/mullite microlites overgrowing sillimanite clasts; (iii) skeletal-, dendritic-shaped spinel microlites, spatially associated with garnet, epitaxially nucleating on sillimanite/mullite and dispersed in the glass; (iv) microlitic cordierite, present in the natural pseudotachylyte as spherulitic aggregates and in the experimental glass as plumose microlites in melt-filled fractures of the wall-rock garnet; (v) newly formed euhedral rims of garnet epitaxial on garnet clasts and wall-rock garnet. The observed microlites crystallized during melt quenching following the same sequence, with slight differences due to the faster cooling rate of the experiments.

By comparing natural pseudotachylytes and experimentally produced analogues, we show that the mineralogy of natural microlites is essentially constituted by high-melting point phases and it is controlled by the local availability of chemical constituents and nucleation seeds (i.e. host-rock clasts). The experiments also prove that garnet can crystallize during quenching even at room conditions if seeds are available and the melt has the right composition. This observation calls for caution when using the mineralogy of pseudotachylytes, and in particular the presence of cauliflower garnet, to infer the depth of faulting. Finally, the melting experiments under static conditions highlight the relevance of thermal fracturing as deformation process aiding pseudotachylyte formation.

Papa et al. (2023), Lithos 460, 107375

How to cite: Pennacchioni, G., Toffol, G., Slupski, P., Pennacchioni, L., Wirth, R., Schreiber, A., and Cerwenka, G.: Microlites of natural and experimental peraluminous pseudotachylytes: a comparison, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10360, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10360, 2026.

EGU26-11126 | Orals | TS1.1

Duration, thermal regime and argon behavior in continental shear zones: a synthesis from the Aegean domain, Menderes Massif and Alpine Corsica 

Valentin Laurent, Vincent Roche, Laurent Jolivet, Romain Augier, Hugues Raimbourg, Armel Menant, Laurent Arbaret, and Loïc Labrousse

Large continental shear zones play a fundamental role in crustal deformation, exhumation and lithosphere-scale tectonics, yet their duration of activity and the controls exerted by thermal regime on their geochronological record remain debated. Over the past decade, studies conducted in the Aegean domain, Menderes Massif and Alpine Corsica have generated a large and internally consistent set of geochronological data acquired across several major shear-zone systems. These datasets are dominated by 40Ar/39Ar ages complemented by U–Pb, Rb–Sr and low-temperature thermochronology.

Here we propose a synthesis of these datasets, integrating published results from different types of shear zones developed under contrasting P–T conditions, ranging from cold HP–LT subduction zone to Barrovian metamorphism in collisional environment and hot metamorphic core complex settings. We aim to compare age–distance relationships across shear zones, assess the temporal distribution and duration of deformation events recorded by argon systems, and place these observations in a broader tectono-thermal framework. Preliminary observations suggest systematic differences between cold and hot shear zones: cold systems tend to preserve a broad spectrum of argon ages spanning most of the deformation history, whereas hot shear zones commonly record shorter durations and younger ages biased toward the final stages of activity. These patterns appear to be robust across different tectonic settings and may reflect fundamental differences in deformation mechanisms, fluid circulation and argon mobility.

By combining shear-zone geochronology with independent constraints from magmatic intrusions, partial melting and tectono-metamorphic evolution, this synthesis identifies common timescales for shear-zone activity and clarifies how thermal regime controls both deformation processes and the geochronological record. Beyond regional implications for the dynamics of the Aegean and surrounding domains, this study provides first-order constraints on the mechanisms and longevity of continental shear zones and on the interpretation of geochronological datasets acquired in deformed rocks.

How to cite: Laurent, V., Roche, V., Jolivet, L., Augier, R., Raimbourg, H., Menant, A., Arbaret, L., and Labrousse, L.: Duration, thermal regime and argon behavior in continental shear zones: a synthesis from the Aegean domain, Menderes Massif and Alpine Corsica, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11126, 2026.

EGU26-11270 | Posters on site | TS1.1

The Other Ductile – Brittle Transition Zone: Syn-Deformational Lithification Within the Shallow Subduction Shear Zone and its Implications for Earthquake Nucleation 

Alex P. Clarke, Selina Di Vincenzo, Mara Weiler, Friedrich Hawemann, Thomas M. Mitchell, and Virginia G. Toy

Subduction zones are uniquely direct pathways in which originally unconsolidated sediment is conveyed to great depths, all while experiencing continuous shear as it lithifies and metamorphoses. The largest earthquakes on our planet occur within these zones, along with other seismic and aseismic phenomena. The products of these processes are accreted mélanges which provide ‘windows’ into the otherwise inaccessible plate boundary interface at depth. The bulk physical behaviour of these subduction shear zones is controlled by the geometries of the blocks, the proportions of blocks to matrix, and the relative mechanical properties of blocks and matrix. Here we provide a structural and mechanical characterisation of the Chrystalls Beach Mélange, New Zealand, and trace its rheological evolution from the surface to the shallow seismogenic zone. We conducted a detailed 3D macro- and micro-structural investigation coupled with in-situ and laboratory-based rock mechanics to measure sub-block-scale heterogeneities and explain their origins.

The Chrystalls Beach Mélange formed within a Mesozoic Gondwanan–Pacific subduction zone, achieving maximum metamorphic conditions of <600 MPa/<300°C, within the shallow seismogenic zone and below the conditions required for quartz crystal-plasticity. This mélange is composed of subducted seafloor sediments that form decametre- to millimetre-sized blocks of sandstone and chert within a pelitic matrix, mixed with minor exotic blocks of altered basalt. These blocks display overprinting relationships showing a progression from ductile to brittle deformation as they transition from soft sediment to low-grade metamorphosed rock coincident with burial and pervasive shearing.

Four distinct rheological and tectonic regimes were responsible for the structural features we documented:

1) Layer-parallel shortening and fluidisation in the frontal toe of the subduction zone. Unconsolidated interbedded sand, mud, and siliceous ooze experienced ductile deformation producing isoclinal folds and injectites.

2) Layer-parallel extension of poorly consolidated ductile sediments resulted in boudinage and dismemberment in the shallowest subduction channel. This produced blocks with moderate – high aspect ratios, sharp tips, and asymmetric profiles.

3) Continued layer-parallel extension as the blocks lithified and embrittled. Internal stresses transferred from the matrix exceeded the yield stresses of the still-weak blocks, resulting in pervasive brecciation, followed by fragmentation as fluidised matrix injected into these fractures. This produced sub-rounded – sub-angular blocks with low – moderate aspect ratios, blunt tips, and irregular profiles. As blocks continued to indurate to the point that they could no longer be broken by stresses imparted by the matrix, they may still have been broken as they jostled and temporarily jammed the shear zone. At the same time, exotic blocks of basalt entered the mélange as rigid inclusions but underwent progressive weakening during subduction as they experienced brecciation and altered to clay minerals.

4) Localisation of strain previously distributed in the matrix towards more localised shear zones and veins in anastomosing networks.

In-situ Schmidt hammer strength tests show that block margins are systematically weaker than block cores across all lithologies. This is consistent with the increased fracture density towards block margins.  As such, mélange blocks within the shallow seismogenic zone display significant internal heterogeneity and should not be considered as two-phase mixtures.

How to cite: Clarke, A. P., Di Vincenzo, S., Weiler, M., Hawemann, F., Mitchell, T. M., and Toy, V. G.: The Other Ductile – Brittle Transition Zone: Syn-Deformational Lithification Within the Shallow Subduction Shear Zone and its Implications for Earthquake Nucleation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11270, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11270, 2026.

EGU26-12335 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Semi-brittle deformation of Solnhofen limestone: Initial porosity effects on strength 

Wei Feng and Nicolas Brantut

Semi-brittle deformation, characterized by the concurrent operation of cataclasis and crystal plasticity, plays a key role in constraining the strength of the middle crust. While the effects of temperature, pressure, fluid-abundance/pressure, and material properties (e.g., grain size) have been relatively well studied, the role of initial porosity in semi-brittle deformation remains poorly understood. Here, we performed a series of triaxial compression experiments on dry samples of Solnhofen limestone, which has an initial porosity of ~5.6% and an isotropic texture. Experiments were conducted at a range of confining pressures (Pc=30-300 MPa), temperatures (T=25 to 600 °C) and a constant strain rate of 1×10-5 s-1. Under these conditions, Solnhofen limestone mainly deforms in the semi-brittle regime associated with strain hardening, and brittle fracturing only occurs at low pressures (Pc≤50 MPa) and T <200 °C.

The strength, expressed as differential stress at a given strain, of Solnhofen limestone varies with imposed conditions. At 5% strain, the strength decreases with increasing temperature at all investigated pressures. In contrast, the pressure dependence of strength is temperature sensitive. At T =400 °C, the strength decreases significantly with increasing pressure from 30 to 300 MPa, in contrast to the positive pressure dependence observed for low porosity (~0.5%) Carrara Marble in the similar semi-brittle regime. This pressure sensitivity becomes less pronounced at 600 °C. Changes in porosity, determined from the pre- and post- deformation measurements, show that dilation and compaction are closely related to deformation mode. The extent in sample compaction correlates with the deformation ductility and becomes more marked with increasing temperature and pressure.

We speculate that the observed negative pressure dependence of strength during semi-brittle deformation arises from the presence of initial porosity and can be explained by the increasingly dominant role of plastic pore collapse. This hypothesis is supported by an additional experiment conducted at 400 °C, in which samples pre-compacted at 300 MPa for 3 h and subsequently deformed at 30 MPa exhibited higher strength than samples deformed directly at 30 MPa without a pre-compaction stage. Ongoing microstructural investigations will provide a basis for developing a microphysical model to better interpret deformation processes in rocks with intermediate porosity in the semi-brittle deformation regime.

How to cite: Feng, W. and Brantut, N.: Semi-brittle deformation of Solnhofen limestone: Initial porosity effects on strength, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12335, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12335, 2026.

EGU26-12353 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Deformation in great detail: A nanoindentation workflow for investigating low-temperature plasticity in silicate minerals 

Hugo van Schrojenstein Lantman and Alissa Kotowski

Nanoindentation is a mechanical testing technique used to quantify material properties (e.g., hardness) and deformation behaviour (e.g., plasticity). By controlling the indenter tip with great precision in all dimensions, the range of available methods can be expanded to include rapid property mapping, constant-stiffness stress-strain curves, topography mapping, and scratch and frictional testing. We have set up a complete, affordable, and fast workflow centred around nanoindentation with a Bruker Hysitron TriboIndenter 990 and complemented by electron microscopy to tackle a variety of research questions concerning the behaviour of earth materials.

This contribution showcases this workflow as applied to several common rock-forming high-pressure metamorphic minerals. We begin with first-order sample characterisation of thin sections using optical microscopy and electron backscatter diffraction to quantify crystal orientations to determine which crystal axes are being indented. Transitioning to the mechanical testing phase, we use spherical tips to obtain stress-strain curves to analyse the transition from elastic deformation to low-temperature plasticity, and to quantify the yield hardness. Stress-strain curves can be calculated from regular constant loading rate indentation experiments, only valid within the elastic domain, or with constant stiffness measurements using tip oscillations to provide a full stress-strain curve including plastic behaviour. We image the residual indent sites with surface probe mapping, which measures surface topography with a vertical resolution down to 0.1 nm and thus produces 3D maps with which we can quantify the dimensions and geometries of indent pits.

The results of our case studies on glaucophane, omphacite, and garnet show that plastic yielding is controlled by the availability of nucleation points for dislocations, provided by pre-existing defects. The degree of this effect varies per mineral, and further depends on crystal orientation. Overall, we demonstrate an efficient workflow for mechanical and microstructural characterization of low-temperature plasticity with nanoindentation applicable to most silicates and other minerals. This workflow can also be adjusted to analyse and quantify many other aspects of the properties and behaviour of earth materials.

How to cite: van Schrojenstein Lantman, H. and Kotowski, A.: Deformation in great detail: A nanoindentation workflow for investigating low-temperature plasticity in silicate minerals, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12353, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12353, 2026.

EGU26-15192 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Viscous folding of multilayer rocks under layer-parallel shortening: discrete layering vs. anisotropic models 

Jerzy Gamdzyk and Marcin Dąbrowski

Layer-parallel shortening of multilayer rocks results in the formation of folds. Using linear stability analysis, we obtain a growth rate curve. It allows us to determine the dominant wavelength during the initial stage of viscous folding. We derive an analytical expression for the growth rate curve of a single layer embedded in an anisotropic host, including confinement effects. The analytical results obtained for an anisotropic medium are compared to the growth rates obtained numerically for the corresponding cases of a finely laminated host. These cases split into two groups depending on whether a low- or high-viscosity layer borders perturbed interfaces of the central layer. However, in the limit of fine layering, their arithmetic mean tends to the results obtained for the anisotropic host. In search of an explanation, we calculate growth rates of the laminated host case analytically and show where the anisotropic approximation breaks down.

Next, we investigate an anisotropic rock medium under shortening along the anisotropy direction, with a locally perturbed axis of anisotropy orientation. It is a mean-field upscaled approximation to a multilayer system, which can tackle arbitrarily perturbed layer interfaces. In addition to the analytical approach, we use numerical simulations to study folding instability in such multilayer systems based on the direct (discretely layered medium) and upscaled (anisotropic medium) approaches. As a limiting case, we find the evolution of chevron fold amplitudes and study the convergence of the bilaminate dominant eigenmode to that obtained for the anisotropic medium.

Those results shed light on the limitations of the effective anisotropic models of layered rock systems, and provide a framework for more accurate mean-field approximations.

 

The work was supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, under research project “Numerical and field studies of anisotropic rocks under large strain: applying micro-POLAR mechanIcS in structural geology (POLARIS)”, no UMO-2020/39/I/ST10/00818.

How to cite: Gamdzyk, J. and Dąbrowski, M.: Viscous folding of multilayer rocks under layer-parallel shortening: discrete layering vs. anisotropic models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15192, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15192, 2026.

EGU26-15465 | Orals | TS1.1

The microstructural legacy of mantle deformation during orogenic reactivation  

Julie Newman, Basil Tikoff, and Vasileios Chatzaras

Studies of multiple mantle exposures indicate that a fundamental shift occurs in polymineralic peridotites at ~850° C.  At these temperatures, there is a shift from dislocation creep (plus or minus dislocation accommodated grain boundary sliding) to reaction-facilitated grain-size sensitive creep.  This reaction results in a fine-grained matrix produced by neocrystallization.  The fine-grained shear zones that formed by dislocation creep dynamic recrystallization create increased grain-boundary surface area that localize the reaction-enhanced deformation.  Because the grains are formed by reaction, grain boundary pinning of the different mineral phases occurs.  Moreover, these fine-grain sizes are preserved during exhumation, because of the grain boundary pinning.  Thus, the fine-grain size – once it has been formed by reaction-facilitated deformation – continues to exist even if there is a change in temperature.  

This rheological behavior is not typically shown in deformation strength profiles, because monophase olivine does not show these effects.  Yet, the lithospheric mantle is polyphase, and we have observed evidence for reaction-facilitated deformation that occurred below ~850° C.  Once grain size reduction has occurred in a polyphase material, it is not expected to grow large grain sizes again, due to the role of grain boundary pinning.  Thus, once formed, a reaction-facilitated shear zone with smaller grain size relative to the surrounding mantle rocks would remain a lithospheric “scar”.  The fine-grain shear zones would preferentially reactivate because the zone can deform by grain-size sensitive creep at lower stress conditions that the surrounding mantle material can deform by dislocation creep.  This interpretation could explain the common reactivation of transform faults, and perhaps even extensional faults, in orogenic belts.  Reactivation of transform faults in the mantle may explain:  1) the Neoproterozoic transform faults of the eastern and western United States, which are reactivated by Pennsylvanian and Cretaceous deformation, respectively; and 2) the modern San Andreas System reactivating a Cretaceous – Paleogene proto San Andreas Fault. 

How to cite: Newman, J., Tikoff, B., and Chatzaras, V.: The microstructural legacy of mantle deformation during orogenic reactivation , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15465, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15465, 2026.

EGU26-17196 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Progressive evolution of paleostress in the Hutti-Maski Greenstone belt, Eastern Dharwar Craton, southern India 

Shalini Goswami and Manish A. Mamtani

This study presents a paleostress reconstruction of the metavolcanic and granitoid rocks of the Hutti-Maski greentone belt, Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC), southern India, aimed at evaluating progressive changes in the regional stress field at ca. 2.5 Ga. Paleostress was constrained using quartz vein orientations, Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS) fabrics, and fault–slip data from metavolcanic and granitoid rocks.

Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS) data from granitoids reveal a dominant NNW–SSE–striking magnetic fabric developed during earlier D1/D2 deformation. Paleostress analysis using vein orientations of dilational quartz veins in the granitoids yields an apparent NE–SW compressional stress field. However, kinematic analysis demonstrates that these veins in the granitoids were formed by dextral simple shear along the pre-existing NNW–SSE–oriented fabric under a regional N–S–directed D3 compression. From previous studies it is already well established that this regional N–S–directed D3 compression was responsible for D3 folds with E–W–striking axial planes found in different parts of EDC. N-S-oriented dilational quartz veins in the metavolcanic rocks of this greenstone belt were also formed due to this N-S oriented D3 compression. This interpretation is further supported by comparable stress ratio values obtained from three-dimensional Mohr circle analyses of vein populations in both lithologies.

Fault–slip analysis of displaced veins in granitoids reveals a late-stage NNE–SSW compressional stress field, indicating localised brittle deformation during the final stages of D3. This late brittle overprint is interpreted as resulting from late-D3 brittle deformation during the cratonization of the Dharwar Craton at approximately 2.5 Ga.

Therefore, this study demonstrates that there are pitfalls in the direct evaluation of paleostress using only vein orientations and that it is crucial to integrate kinematic constraints with vein orientation data during paleostress analysis of dilational veins.

How to cite: Goswami, S. and Mamtani, M. A.: Progressive evolution of paleostress in the Hutti-Maski Greenstone belt, Eastern Dharwar Craton, southern India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17196, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17196, 2026.

EGU26-17384 | Posters on site | TS1.1

Linking metamorphic transformations and the brittle–ductile transition: Insights from numerical modeling of the granulite-to-eclogite transformation 

Philippe Yamato, Marie Baïsset, Anaïs Cochet, Thibault Duretz, Stefan Schmalholz, Yury Podladchikov, and Loïc Labrousse

Geophysical observations combined with detailed petro-structural analyses conducted in the field and in the laboratory indicate that « brittle » deformation occurs within subduction zones in rocks that are otherwise expected to deform in a « ductile » manner under the associated pressure–temperature conditions. These brittle events are most commonly localized in regions where metamorphic transformations are predicted to occur. Because such reactions may induce substantial changes in density and strength, they are frequently invoked as a primary mechanism driving the ductile-to-brittle switch in subducting rocks. However, the physical processes that link metamorphic transformations to changes in deformation style remain incompletely understood.

This contribution addresses this issue through the emblematic example of the granulite-to-eclogite transformation exposed at Holsnøy (Bergen Arcs, Norway). We combine field-based structural and petrological observations with numerical modeling developed over the past several years to investigate the mechanical and rheological consequences of this transformation.

We specifically examine whether eclogitization necessarily initiates along pre-existing brittle precursors or whether the reaction itself can trigger faulting, how the transformation propagates through the rock, and the extent to which the inherited granulitic foliation influences reaction localization. We further discuss the mechanisms leading to the formation of eclogitic shear zones as opposed to static eclogites (commonly referred to as eclogite fingers). Finally, we assess the relative roles of fluid availability and far field stress in controlling the spatial distribution and mechanical impact of the reaction.

By confronting field observations with numerical modeling, this presentation aims to show that the answers to these questions may not be unique, and that much remains to be done to fully understand the impact of metamorphic reactions on the rheological behavior of rocks.

How to cite: Yamato, P., Baïsset, M., Cochet, A., Duretz, T., Schmalholz, S., Podladchikov, Y., and Labrousse, L.: Linking metamorphic transformations and the brittle–ductile transition: Insights from numerical modeling of the granulite-to-eclogite transformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17384, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17384, 2026.

EGU26-17819 | Posters on site | TS1.1

Insights into deformation mechanisms of exhuming brittle-ductile shear zones (Oman Mountains) 

Francesco Giuntoli, Alessandro Petroccia, Laura Airaghi, Jacques Précigout, Hugues Raimbourg, and Jan Kulhánek

Exhuming shear zones are key structures in the dynamic evolution of orogens. Such shear zones accommodate most of the shear-related exhumation within relatively small rock volumes. This is possible due to major strain partitioning occurring along weak rocks, frequently represented by phyllosilicate-rich rocks. Thus, the study of phyllosilicate-rich mylonites can provide fundamental insights into exhumation mechanisms responsible for the architecture of orogens.

The Hulw Shear Zone in the Saih Hatat Window of Oman (Agard et al., 2010) is one of these exhuming shear zones juxtaposing two subducted continental tectonic units. This tectonic contact experienced sustained shearing, accommodating a delta pressure of circa 0.8 GPa between 1.2 and 0.4 GPa at a relatively constant temperature of circa 400 °C (Petroccia et al., 2025) between 77 and 74 Ma (Ring et al., 2024).

In the field, micaschist belonging to the footwall displays a strain gradient moving toward the contact with the hanging wall, corresponding to a development of a S-C-C’ fabric and a modal enrichment in K-rich white mica and pyrophyllite matched by a progressive increase in the physical interconnectivity of these phyllosilicates. Microstructural analysis suggests that interconnected C planes were formed due to an interplay of fracturing allowing fluid to preferentially flow along the newly formed fractures and precipitating phyllosilicates, and preferential grain boundary sliding and glide of the quartz-phyllosilicate grain boundaries, with additional precipitation of new phyllosilicates in dilatant sites.

Hyperspectral cathodoluminescence highlights different luminescence for the larger (several hundreds of µm) detrital quartz grains, producing a bright signal and containing yielded cracks, and smaller equant quartz grains (less than 70 µm), darker in cathodoluminescence and devoid of cracks. Electron backscatter diffraction analyses suggest that large quartz grains experienced grain size reduction by subgrain rotation recrystallization to form smaller equant grains. Interconnected chains of small quartz grains are located in contact with the phyllosilicates, suggesting preferential recrystallization along these planes.

Transmission Electron Microscope analyses highlight pyrophyllite-muscovite intergrowths at the submicron scale as small as 300-500 nm, with truncated boundaries likely reflecting dissolution and precipitation mechanisms. Muscovite and pyrophyllite appear to deform differently, suggesting that strain partitioning occurred down to the submicron scale.

Summarising, these results suggest that strain localization and weakening of this rock volume was achieved by an interplay of the following mechanisms: I) diffuse microcracking and subgrain rotation recrystallization leading to a finer grain size of quartz, II) synkinematic nucleation of retrograde mineral phases along discrete C and C’ planes, III) preferential recrystallization along the shear planes and IV) dissolution and precipitation processes of phyllosilicates. Concluding, this intimate and polyphase interplay between deformation and metamorphism is responsible for the formation and evolution of exhuming shear zones and the related structure of orogens.

 

Giuntoli acknowledges financial support of grant N° MUR 2022X88W2Y _002.

 

References

Agard, et al., (2010). Tectonics, 29(5). https://doi.org/10.1029/2010TC002669

Petroccia, et al., (2025). Journal of Structural Geology, 191. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2024.105328

Ring, et al., (2024). Earth-Science Reviews, 250, 104711. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2024.104711 

How to cite: Giuntoli, F., Petroccia, A., Airaghi, L., Précigout, J., Raimbourg, H., and Kulhánek, J.: Insights into deformation mechanisms of exhuming brittle-ductile shear zones (Oman Mountains), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17819, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17819, 2026.

EGU26-18356 | Posters on site | TS1.1

 Connectivity and fabric evolution with strain in eclogites : in-situ X-ray tomography under UHP conditions 

Nadège Hilairet, Chloé Molines, Tommaso Mandolini, Julien Chantel, Ahmed Addad, Alexandre Fadel, David Troadec, Yann Le Godec, Zoé Turpin, and Nicolas Guignot

Eclogites are a major lithology of the subducting oceanic crust, and the strength contrasts between and with lithologies such as blueschists, serpentinites and peridotites, at depths, is likely what commands the timing and style of HP rocks exhumation, within subduction zones (Agard et al., 2016). These contrasts also influence the roughness and stress at the interface between the subducting slab and the overlying mantle wedge (Agard et al., 2018), and therefore may play a role in the stress relaxation and intermediate depths earthquakes sequences. Deformation mechanisms of the main minerals of eclogite, pyroxene and garnet, have been studied individually under high pressure and temperature. The rheology of eclogites themselves has received some attention using high pressure experiments (e.g. Zhang and Green, 2007, Farla et al., 2017, Rogowitz et al, 2023, Molines et al., EGU25-5696). These works and numerical models (e.g. Yamato et al, 2019, Angiboust et al, 2024) underline the importance of the interplay between brittle vs. ductile mechanisms in eclogites rheology at experimental strain rates. The garnet vs. pyroxene volume fractions are expected to have a major effect on brittleness and strength, since the spatial contiguity of the strongest component, or connectivity of the weakest component, may lead to transitions in the control of the deformation.

Until now the effect of shear strain on phases connectivities under GPa pressures has not been quantified, while it is one path to achieve connections between strong or weak domains. Here, we will present results from torsion experiments on two-phase aggregates of garnet and pyroxene as a proxy for eclogites, with garnet fractions from 15% vol. to 85% vol. We use in-situ absorption contrast tomography at the PSICHE beamline (synchrotron SOLEIL), under pressures of 2 to 5 GPa and temperatures of 850°C, to characterize quantitatively the fabric/microstructure of the aggregates under increasing shear strain (up to ca. 5).

We will discuss these microstructural quantifications with respect to 1) recent in-situ mechanical measurements in the same aggregates compositions, by Molines et al. (EGU25-5696), and 2) similar in situ characterizations during torsion experiments of serpentine+olivine aggregates – hence a different strength contrast between phases – by Mandolini et al. (e.g. EGU25-13729).

How to cite: Hilairet, N., Molines, C., Mandolini, T., Chantel, J., Addad, A., Fadel, A., Troadec, D., Le Godec, Y., Turpin, Z., and Guignot, N.:  Connectivity and fabric evolution with strain in eclogites : in-situ X-ray tomography under UHP conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18356, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18356, 2026.

EGU26-18458 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Recrystallization and intracrystalline crystal-plastic deformation of naturally deformed hornblende 

Bhupesh Meher, Sarah Incel, Jörg Renner, Anna Rogowitz, and Yuval Boneh

Despite hornblende’s widespread occurrence in deformed rocks from exhumed crustal shear zones and metamorphic soles, its dominant deformation mechanism(s) and the respective microstructural fingerprints remain poorly constrained. Several deformation mechanisms have been documented in hornblende, including cataclastic flow, twinning, dissolution–precipitation, and dislocation-mediated deformation. Hornblende’s easy slip system, (100)[001], can be inferred from observations of intragrain misorientation axes (MOA) or crystallographic rotation about the [010] axis (Meher et al., 2026). Notably, even where some contribution from dislocation-mediated deformation is observed, hornblende is rarely deformed solely by dislocation creep. While crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) and recrystallization suggest dislocation creep for most minerals (e.g., calcite, quartz, and olivine), in hornblende, these features seldom arise from alternative mechanisms.

We used electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to analyze microstructures in four natural hornblende-rich samples spanning a range of P-T conditions: (1) Mamonia complex, Cyprus (0.5 GPa, ~ 600 °C), comprising mm-scale conjugated kink bands. (2) Koralpe, Austrian Alps (~2.1 GPa, 750 °C), dominated by sigmoidal hornblende porphyroclasts surrounded by smaller, tabular grains. (3) Mayodiya, India (0.78–0.82 GPa, 770–820 °C), containing large grains with high intragrain misorientations and some twinning, and smaller needle-shaped grains with serrated boundaries between large grains. And (4) Koraput, India (0.76–0.84 GPa, 860–883 °C), which exhibits recrystallization of a centimeter-scale porphyroclast with smaller grains with lobate boundaries forming a core–mantle microstructure. By examining both CPO and MOA using detailed EBSD analysis, our goal is to (i) constrain the underlying deformation mechanism in these samples, and (ii) identify temperature-dependent transitions under natural conditions.

The Mamonia sample that experienced the lowest deformation temperatures exhibits deformation through fractures and kink bands, with no evidence of recrystallization. However, the MOA cluster is oriented toward [010], consistent with dislocation glide, suggesting semi-brittle deformation (e.g., Meher et al., 2026). The Koralpe sample exhibits a characteristic recrystallization microstructure, strain-free grains around large and highly strained porphyroclasts, and an MOA clustering around [101], which fits the orientation of (-101) twin planes and suggests twinning-driven recrystallization. The Mayodiya sample exhibits elongated recrystallized grains with MOA clustering around [001], while the porphyroclast exhibits MOA toward [010], again indicating twinning-driven recrystallization. The Koraput sample displays recrystallized grains that are slightly rotated compared to the parent porpyroclast with rotation around [010], consistent with hornblende’s easy slip system, (100)[001].

We infer that at low P-T conditions, hornblende deforms through semi-brittle deformation. At intermediate temperatures (Koralpe and Mayodiya), twinning-driven recrystallization dominates, activated via the (-101)[101] and (100)[001] twinning systems, respectively. At the highest temperatures (Koraput), hornblende undergoes grain-size reduction via dislocation-driven recrystallization. Together, those samples suggest a temperature-controlled transition from semi-brittle to dislocation creep mediated deformation between < 600 to > 850 °C.  

 

Meher, B., Incel, S., Renner, J. and Boneh, Y., 2026. Experimental deformation of textured amphibolites in the semi‐brittle regime: Microstructural signatures of dislocation‐mediated deformation. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth131(1), p.e2025JB031852.

How to cite: Meher, B., Incel, S., Renner, J., Rogowitz, A., and Boneh, Y.: Recrystallization and intracrystalline crystal-plastic deformation of naturally deformed hornblende, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18458, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18458, 2026.

EGU26-20441 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Mechanical-anisotropy controlled strain-localisation in garnet-mica domains of the Plattengneis Shear Zone (Koralpe, Eastern Alps) 

Luke Hill, Michel Bestmann, Bernhard Grasemann, Florian Fusseis, and Marcin Dąbrowksi

Deformation microstructures in mylonites from the Plattengneis Shear Zone (PGSZ), Eastern Alps, provide new constraints on how mechanically anisotropic mid‑crustal rocks accommodate ductile strain. Although the PGSZ exhibits a strong Eo-Alpine N–S stretching fabric, it lacks many macroscopic structures typically associated with amphibolite facies deformation in anisotropic rocks. To determine where and how the high finite strains were localised, we investigate the microstructures of PGSZ mylonites with a focus on the polyphase ‘garnet–mica’ domains. Within these microstructural sites, locally elevated mechanical anisotropies form ideal conditions for nucleating and concentrating deformation structures. Importantly, this contrasts the relatively weaker mechanical strength contrasts observed in PGSZ quartz-feldspar domains, where localised deformation microstructures are scarce. Optical microscopy, back-scattered electron microscopy (SEM-BSE), and synchrotron microtomography (S‑µCT) were used to characterise both 2D microfabrics and the 3D architectures of garnet clusters. With this data, we present newly-described deformation microstructures in the PGSZ, discuss the importance of their spatial distributions, and consider the possible deformation processes involved.

SEM-BSE imaging uncovered a range of micro-scale shear bands, boudinage, and pinch‑and‑swell structures occurring exclusively within garnet–mica layers. Their restriction to these domains reflects the locally elevated mechanical strength contrast between competent garnet grains and weaker white-mica and biotite. Deformation is channelled into mica-rich areas, nucleating localised shear structures and rarely propagating further into quartz–feldspar domains. Garnet undergoes microcrack–induced fragmentation during producing synkinematic redistribution of garnet grains and fragments within the mica-rich matrix regions. This redistribution generates a range of (dis)aggregate cluster morphologies and biotite-infilled boudinage structures that align with the kinematic flow geometries predicted for the established D1 + D2 polyphase deformation history (Hill et al., in review). S‑µCT imaging resolved the 3D geometry of garnet clusters and revealed how fragmentation and redistribution record the cumulative kinematic evolution of the PGSZ. In more detail, the 3D data shows garnet forming complex clusters of both interconnected and disconnected grains elongated in the N-S direction, which are subsequently transposed in the E-W plane, in concordance with the D1 and D2 kinematic flow trajectories.

These results demonstrate that deformation in the PGSZ is highly localised within rheologically complex garnet–mica domains, where the elevated mechanical strength contrasts play a central role in the development of micro‑scale shear structures. Restricted development of shear bands exclusively within garnet-mica microstructural sites contributes to the apparent absence of larger-scale macrostructure development in the PGSZ, demonstrating the importance of a multi-scale approach to structural and kinematic analyses of ductile shear zones. Lastly, the (re)distribution of garnet in the PGSZ is proposed to be controlled by synkinematic growth and disaggregation during polyphase deformation, with the redistribution geometries potentially providing as a means of tracing strain histories in mechanically heterogeneous shear zones.

How to cite: Hill, L., Bestmann, M., Grasemann, B., Fusseis, F., and Dąbrowksi, M.: Mechanical-anisotropy controlled strain-localisation in garnet-mica domains of the Plattengneis Shear Zone (Koralpe, Eastern Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20441, 2026.

The South-Central Zone of the Damara Belt records a history of intense, complex deformation resulting from the collision between the Congo and Kalahari cratons during the Pan-African Orogeny. Structural models have typically focused on multiphase deformation with inherent changes in the stress field and, to a lesser degree, on progressive deformation driven by a stress field with less variation. One example of the latter is a model that separates the crust in the South-Central Zone into two structural domains, a higher crustal level and a deeper crustal level. This allows the existence of orthogonal fabric domains resulting from different strain fields within the same orogenic zone, without the need for major changes in the regional tectonic stress orientation.

To date, geological maps and cross-sections have been used widely to graphically present the geological geometries of large areas in the Central Damara Belt. However, unlike 2D geological maps and sections, 3D models are more representative, providing additional insight to complex geometries and structural relationships. These complement and test traditional interpretations that often fail to account for the complexity and uncertainty of geological geometries.

This study provides the first large-scale 3D lithostructural modelling of the deeper structural levels of the South-Central Zone of the Damara Belt, south and east of the Rossing Dome. The different rock units in this area display kinematic and geometric features that support large scale constrictional-type strain characteristics and top-to-the-southwest displacement. In addition to field mapping data, digital elevation models, satellite imagery and published geological maps were used to delineate the regional geometry of folded lithological units. The resulting 3D model contributes to a better understanding of the deformation of the deeper crust during the collision of continental fragments and the development of large-scale fold geometries.

How to cite: Tuitz, C. and Uken, R.: Regional-scale 3D modelling of deep-crustal constrictional strain geometries within the Central Damara Belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21778, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21778, 2026.

Recrystallization of plagioclase is induced by deformation and/or chemical disequilibrium. It can be accomplished by several deformation mechanisms or their combination and it is typically accompanied by a change in plagioclase composition. The known agents facilitating the recrystallization are dislocations, mechanical twinning and cracking. In this contribution, we present incipient stages of dynamic recrystallization imposed on the magmatic plagioclase crystals in metagabbro from the Teplá-Barrandian Unit in the Bohemian Massif. The plagioclase crystals show chemically and mechanically heterogeneous internal structure related to its metamorphic-deformation transformation.

The chemical heterogeneity is manifested by decomposition of magmatic porphyroblasts of labradorite composition to the mixture of randomly oriented laths of bytownite and surrounding andesine. Crystallographically the laths are perfectly coherent with the rest of the crystal. The mechanical heterogenity is due to subsequent deformation that led to mechanical twinning followed by recrystallization. The initial low angle boundaries of the newly developing grains follow the network of bytownite laths while the later high angle boundaries are based on the original laths together with segmented twin boundaries. The resulting recrystallized microstructure shows small individual grains with andesine cores and bytownite rims. The misorientation analysis of the low angle boundaries indicate the geometry of till and twist boundaries resulting from dislocation glide and operation of (010)[001] slip system. Once the high angle boundaries are established they start to migrate and equillibrate, driven by chemical disequilibrium at the bytownite-andesine interfaces. The resulting fine-grained plagioclase shows evidence for grain size sensitive creep during subsequent deformation. Our findings indicate that crystal heterogeneity in feldspars may be an important parameter in the grain refinement process thus influencing the switch from dislocation creep to viscous flow.

How to cite: Jeřábek, P. and Racek, M.: Crystal heterogeneity controlling the grain size of dynamically recrystallized plagioclase, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21988, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21988, 2026.

EGU26-23091 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.1

Contrasting frictional Stability of Olivine and Quartz: Rotary ShearExperiments under Hydrothermal Conditions 

Hossein Shahabi, Hadrien Rattez, Telemaco Tesei, Rodrigo Gomila, and Giulio Di Toro

In this study, we conducted rotary shear experiments to examine the frictional stability of Olivine and Quartz gouges over a range of temperatures (25–350 °C), slip velocities (100 μm s−1 to 1 mm s−1), and under a constant normal stress of 50 MPa. The two minerals exhibit contrasting stability behaviors: Olivine remains frictionally stable at room temperature but develops pronounced stick–slip instabilities at 350 °C. This unstable behavior persists at the velocity of 1 mm s−1, although peak friction decreases slightly, indicating minor weakening. Quartz, by contrast, displays repeated stick–slip events at 25 °C, with stress drops that grow progressively larger with slip and are accompanied by continuous compaction, consistent with ongoing grain crushing. At 350 °C, Quartz behavior evolves from strong stick–slip at low velocities to stable sliding at higher velocities. These observations suggest that frictional stability is likely governed by a competition between the rate of tectonic loading, the specific healing kinetics, and the localization state of each mineral.

How to cite: Shahabi, H., Rattez, H., Tesei, T., Gomila, R., and Di Toro, G.: Contrasting frictional Stability of Olivine and Quartz: Rotary ShearExperiments under Hydrothermal Conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23091, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23091, 2026.

EGU26-1143 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Strength Reversal in Recrystallisation: an EBSD-based Study in a Naturally Deformed Granitic Vein 

Anamitra Sikdar, David Wallis, and Santanu Misra

Strain partitioning in quartzo-feldspathic rock is closely related to the degree of phase mixing. Both quartz and feldspar tend to form the load-bearing framework (LBF) in naturally deformed rocks, provided there are softer phases such as mica, which behaves as the interconnected weak layer (IWL). In cases where mica is absent, the scenario becomes complicated. Quartz in augen gneisses often behaves as the IWL and feldspar takes the role of the LBF. However, the relative degree of weakening in deformed quartz and feldspar depends on their respective deformation mechanisms. As the mechanisms are different, there is a possibility of dissimilar weaking, followed by a strength reversal.

We have studied a deformed quartzo-feldspathic vein from the Bundelkhand Craton in central India. Despite being Archean, this craton experienced long hiatuses between deformation events, which makes the delineation between different events simpler. The sample we collected from this craton is the result of the latest stage of deformation. A high-temperature fluid entered through fractures and softened the granitic country rock. The fluid, being syn-tectonic, allowed the granitic vein to facilitate different deformation mechanisms in quartz and feldspars.

We investigated the crystal-plastic behaviour of quartz and two feldspars in the deformed vein via electron backscatter diffraction. The quartz crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) and misorientation index (M) is strongest when quartz grains are adjacent to each other. There is no significant difference in CPO strength in feldspars when the proportion of similar neighbouring phases changes. Additionally, a monomineralic quartz layer exhibits a class 3 buckling fold, implying a higher competency than the adjacent matrix, which contains recrystallised feldspar grains. However, the microstructural evidence suggests that the parent feldspar porphyroclasts are stronger than the recrystallised monomineralic quartz bands. From the inverse pole figure of low-angle (2–10°) misorientation axes in quartz, prism <a> activity is observed which is dominant in the temperature range of 500–650°C. Hence, we infer a deformation temperature of at most 650°C, although it can be lower depending upon the water weakening as such weakening activates prism <a> at lower temperatures. Randomised CPO in feldspar suggests strain accommodation via diffusion creep, followed by grain boundary sliding mechanism might have operated in feldspars. These processes could result in greater softening than that in quartz, which deformed by dislocation creep. Isolated quartz grains existing in the triple junctions of feldspars are not part of such pure dislocation creep; rather, it is more likely that they are byproducts of albitic transformation reactions. Hence, higher strength in quartz is limited to the monomineralic bands, which are purely affected by dislocation creep in the deformed quartzo-feldspathic vein of the Bundelkhand Craton.

How to cite: Sikdar, A., Wallis, D., and Misra, S.: Strength Reversal in Recrystallisation: an EBSD-based Study in a Naturally Deformed Granitic Vein, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1143, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1143, 2026.

EGU26-4322 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Seismic twinning in monazite: Microstructural records of deep crustal earthquakes 

Renelle Dubosq, Alfredo Camacho, and Ben Britton

Earthquake records preserved in rocks provide key insights into the processes that govern crustal deformation and seismic energy dissipation. This manuscript presents new approaches for identifying mineralogical signatures of paleoearthquakes using advanced microstructural analyses, including electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and electron channeling contrast imaging (ECCI). These techniques enable observations from the millimetre to nanometre scale of features associated with plastic deformation, including crystal reorientation and deformation twinning. Here, we investigate deformation microstructures in monazite, a key geochronometer, with the aim of assessing the impact of deformation on geochronological interpretations, as deformation-induced crystallographic defects can act as high-diffusivity pathways leading to Pb loss. Understanding the deformational behaviour of monazite is therefore critical for interpreting geochronological data. We examine monazite from an eclogite facies mylonite in the Musgrave Province (central Australia) to elucidate mechanisms of seismic deformation under dry (<0.002 wt% H₂O), lower-crustal conditions. The studied monazite grain is directly cross-cut by a pseudotachylite vein, indicating that the observed microstructures formed during the associated seismic event. EBSD and ECCI analyses reveal crystal-plastic deformation in the form of twinning with three distinct orientations: 180° <100>, 180° <001>, and 95° <201>. The latter is associated with dynamic recrystallization via subgrain boundary rotation. ECCI further reveals nanometre-scale (<15 nm) porosity within both parent grains and twins. These microstructures are consistent with those reported in monazite deformed during impact events. Recent studies of shocked monazite have shown that deformation by twinning can liberate Pb during rupture of rare-earth-element–oxygen (REE–O) bonds, enabling rapid diffusion along crystallographic defects and complete expulsion from the crystal, effectively resetting the geochronometer. The new insight provided by these microstructural focussed observations likely accounts for the disparity of electron probe microanalysis (EPMA)-based geochronology on the same monazite grain, which yielded ages of 1309 to 691 Ma. Seismicity in the Musgrave Province is primarily associated with the Petermann Orogeny (~550 Ma), suggesting that the younger EPMA ages were partially reset as a result of the twinning. Our results demonstrate the potential for monazite to record and date seismicity, opening new avenues for reconstructing paleoearthquake histories from deep crustal rocks.

How to cite: Dubosq, R., Camacho, A., and Britton, B.: Seismic twinning in monazite: Microstructural records of deep crustal earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4322, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4322, 2026.

EGU26-4517 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

The complex evolution of elasticity during metamorphic transformation 

Damien Freitas, James Gilgannon, Danielle Duggins, Ian Butler, Roberto Rizzo, Leonard Turpin, Bengang Chen, Christina Reinhard, and Neil Bourne

Prograde metamorphic reactions that reduce solid volume are common in subduction zones and orogenic settings [1]. These reductions are often linked to irreversible deformation such as viscous compaction and deep mantle earthquakes [2]. Viscous compaction involves permanent closure of reaction-generated porosity and fluid release, making porosity transient property of metamorphic reactions [3]. The pore closure observation is often linked to the intuitive loss of the elastic strength of the rock leading to permanent strains [4, 5], but these assumptions are very rarely demonstrated experimentally. In most cases, the nature of field relationships and the design of experiments do not allow for such an assessment to be made. Time-resolved in situ experiments enable the observation of a sample volume undergoing metamorphic transformation to check such assumptions at every stage of the reaction (loading, heating, cooling and unloading).

In this contribution, we provide preliminary visual and quantitative strain mapping during the metamorphic reaction cycle of a rock sample at various stress states and reaction extent.

Using Mjolnir, an X-ray transparent miniature triaxial deformation rig, we performed a series of gypsum (Ca2SO4·2H2O) dehydration experiments into bassanite (Ca2SO4·1/2H2O) at constant confining pressure of 20 MPa, pore fluid pressure (5 MPa) and subjected to similar temperature paths (up to 125ºC).  We used a series of differential stresses (radial, hydrostatic and axial principal stresses) to explore how the rock volume responds mechanically while also displaying different reaction fabrics (see [6]). This dehydration reaction produces a solid volume reduction of ~30% [4] enabling the investigation of the evolution of elasticity by unloading fully and partially transformed samples.

Using synchrotron microtomography at the I13-2 beamline of the Diamond Light Source (MG34156), we performed high resolution imaging (1.625 microns/ voxel edge) during gradual unloading to observe and quantify the elastic behaviour both using the mechanical data from the Mjolnir rig [7], sample dimensions (using stitched images; [8]) and digital volume correlation (DVC) techniques (Avizo). 

Our results show the complexity of strain distribution and partial preservation in metamorphic rocks with:

  • Significant elastic strain preservation during metamorphic reactions and its apparent minimisation during the ultimate stages of the reaction (textural “maturation” via pressure/solution).
  • Complex strain distribution influenced by bassanite anisotropy, sample fabric, geometry, and stress state.

These experiments enable to visualise in 4D the grain-scale development of a complex porous network during the reaction. It opens pathways to document the emergence of poro-elasticity (initial solid has very low porosity) and then the release of the elastic strains. This dataset further demonstrates the importance and the complexity of elasticity in metamorphic systems, with complex displacement vector fields under relatively simple boundary conditions.

References:

[1] Brown & Johnson (2019). https://doi.org/ https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2019-6956

[2] van Keken & Wilson (2023). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40645-023-00573-z

[3] Putnis (2015). https://doi.org/10.2138/rmg.2015.80.01

[4] Leclère et al. (2018). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2018.05.005

[5] Llana-Fúnez et al. (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00410-012-0726-8

[6] Gilgannon et al. (2024). https://doi.org/10.1130/G51612.1

[7] Butler et al. (2020). https://doi.org/ 10.1107/S160057752001173X

[8] Turpin et al. in prep

How to cite: Freitas, D., Gilgannon, J., Duggins, D., Butler, I., Rizzo, R., Turpin, L., Chen, B., Reinhard, C., and Bourne, N.: The complex evolution of elasticity during metamorphic transformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4517, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4517, 2026.

EGU26-6735 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

The material-independent effect of a differential stress on metamorphic kinetics 

James Gilgannon, Eilidh Vass Payne, Ian Butler, Damien Freitas, and Florian Fusseis

Deformation and metamorphism are fundamental processes that act synchronously throughout the Earth; however, their interaction remains unclear. Theoretical models predict that an applied tectonic stress has both a dramatic effect or no effect at all. While the small set of deformation experiments that document the interaction between reaction and deformation are either hard to compare or cannot provide the necessary time resolution to test the various theories. These disagreements of predictions and the gap in data invites new time-resolved experiments to be run that can probe details of model predictions and connect existing datasets from different materials deforming at a range of metamorphic conditions. To this end, we use state-of-the-art time-resolved synchrotron-based x-ray microtomography (4DSµCT) deformation experiments to map out the effect of a differential stress on the kinetics of the dehydration of polycrystalline gypsum samples. Our experiments are highly resolved in space (µm) and time (s), which allows us to track and contrast the emergence of the first small crystals (~100 µm3) and their growth through time in hydrostatic and differentially stressed conditions. We find that the kinetics of a metamorphic reaction are profoundly affected by the addition of deformational energy. Differentially stressed samples transform up to ~90% sooner than in the hydrostatic case, and reaction rates increase by a factor of ~5 with increasing differential stress. Importantly, our findings can be expanded to other published data for reactions occurring in the lower crust and the mantle to show that it is changes in the elastic strain energy that drive accelerated metamorphic kinetics. We find that, when we compare kinetic data from these different reactions and normalise the differential stress to each material’s yield strength, a trend emerges that shows stresses larger than the yield do not contribute to accelerating a reaction. Our results showcase the material-independent effect of a differential stress on metamorphic reactions and support theoretical models which place emphasis on the role of changes in stored energy. Current geodynamic models largely ignore the role of stored energy because it is assumed that it is not relevant at long time scales, our results show that its effect is important and should be accounted for when coupling deformation and metamorphism.

How to cite: Gilgannon, J., Vass Payne, E., Butler, I., Freitas, D., and Fusseis, F.: The material-independent effect of a differential stress on metamorphic kinetics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6735, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6735, 2026.

EGU26-7324 | PICO | TS1.2

Neutron and X-ray µ-tomography-based 3D imaging of alteration phases in faulted granodiorite at Nojima (Japan) 

Maxime Jamet, Fabien Baron, Daniel Beaufort, Baptiste Dazas, Patricia Patrier, Alessandro Tengattini, Romain Iaquinta, Mai-Linh Doan, Philippe Pezard, Benoît Gibert, and Linda Luquot

The study of the evolution of petrophysical properties and alteration of host rock in an active fault system is essential for understanding the mechanisms of deformation localization. The distribution of alterations is closely linked to fluid flow paths, while the formation of new deformation structures depends on the mechanical contrasts induced by these alterations. Our study focuses on granodiorite samples from a borehole drilled in 1996 at Hirabayashi by the Geological Survey of Japan, one year after the Nanbu-Kobe earthquake. Crossing the active Nojima fault, this borehole intersects the fault core at 625 m. The analyses include imaging of samples using neutron and X-ray microtomography (ILL – NeXT) and thin sections, as well as mineralogical quantification by X-ray diffraction (XRD). X-ray diffractograms on oriented slides and Rietveld analyses of XRD data acquired on disoriented powders reveal the presence of secondary mineral phases (e.g., montmorillonite, kaolinite, laumontite, siderite, ankerite), representative of different fluid-rock interaction conditions during the exhumation of the massif. Their proportions, which increase as they approach the fault, reach more than 30% of the volume of a sample at 625 m. Whereas X-ray µ-tomography imaging allows us to observe density contrasts within the samples (e.g., mineral phases and fracture network). On the other hand, neutron imaging allows us to observe the distribution of hydrated mineral phases due to the high neutron absorption coefficient of hydrogen (e.g. for 25 meV neutrons, hydrogen attenuation is 3.44 vs 0.17 and 0.11 for oxygen and silicon, respectively). Neutron and X-ray image registration in the same reference frame allows us to perform joint image segmentation, using gaussian-mixture-model to quantify uncertainties, based on the neutron and X-ray coefficients of absorption of the pre-identified mineral phases. The volumes segmented in this way enable us to (i) quantify in a non-destructive way the volume of secondary mineral phases present in the samples along the fault damage profile and (ii) obtain their spatial distribution and assess the anisotropies of distribution in relation to the deformation structures. This work will subsequently enable us to understand the impact of both the distribution of secondary mineral phases and the network of microfractures on the evolution of the petrophysical and mechanical properties of a seismogenic fault.

How to cite: Jamet, M., Baron, F., Beaufort, D., Dazas, B., Patrier, P., Tengattini, A., Iaquinta, R., Doan, M.-L., Pezard, P., Gibert, B., and Luquot, L.: Neutron and X-ray µ-tomography-based 3D imaging of alteration phases in faulted granodiorite at Nojima (Japan), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7324, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7324, 2026.

EGU26-7733 | PICO | TS1.2

A new concept of Messinian Salinity Crisis based on physical properties from the IODP Exp.402 in the Tyrrhenian Sea 

Maria Filomena Loreto, Marco Ligi, Irina Y. Filina, Noriaki Abe, Brandon D. Shuck, Philippe A. Pezard, Emily R. Estes, Alberto Malinverno, Cesar R. Ranero, Lining Yang, and Nevio Zitellini

During the International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 402 in the Tyrrhenian Sea, two of the six drilled sites, the U1613 and U1617, were located on the thinned continental crust of the Cornaglia and Campania terraces, where the deposition of evaporites during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC) had been imaged with seismic data. Expedition 402 recovered Messinian evaporites beneath a relatively thin sedimentary cover at both drill sites. At Site U1613, the Messinian section is extremely thin (a few meters only). In contrast, at Site U1617, a complete 102 m-thick evaporitic sequence ranging from gypsum-enriched terrigenous sediments through anhydrite to halite layers was sampled. This scientific drilling site is the only one in the Mediterranean that penetrated the complete Messinian evaporitic sequence, providing a unique opportunity to study the properties of the so-called Upper, Mobile and Lower units. A series of physical property measurements was performed on these cores on board of the JOIDES Resolution drillship, including P-wave velocity, density, magnetic susceptibility, natural gamma ray and thermal conductivity. In addition, we collected representative discrete samples to measure P-wave velocity (Vp), bulk density, grain density and porosity. These data allowed us to analyze the sealing properties of the halite unit and its interaction with salt-induced tectonics. Furthermore, from Vp and density used as input to calculate reflection coefficients, we generated a 1D synthetic seismogram at Site U1617. We compared this synthetic seismogram with the multi-channel seismic data acquired across the drill site, namely the Medoc 6 line. These new data allowed us to compare the Messinian units recovered in situ with multichannel seismic data and thereby revise seismic interpretation of these units. Thanks to the unique opportunity offered by the IODP Expedition 402, we now have reliable data on the physical properties of Messinian evaporites and we are able to provide new constraints on the interpretation of Messinian facies.

How to cite: Loreto, M. F., Ligi, M., Filina, I. Y., Abe, N., Shuck, B. D., Pezard, P. A., Estes, E. R., Malinverno, A., Ranero, C. R., Yang, L., and Zitellini, N.: A new concept of Messinian Salinity Crisis based on physical properties from the IODP Exp.402 in the Tyrrhenian Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7733, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7733, 2026.

EGU26-7751 | PICO | TS1.2

In situ observation of faulting in olivine at high pressures and high temperatures using high-flux synchrotron X-rays 

Tomohiro Ohuchi, Yuji Higo, Noriyoshi Tsujino, Sho Kakizawa, Hiroyuki Ohsumi, and Makina Yabashi

The mechanisms of intraslab earthquakes at depths of > 40 km are fundamentally different from those of shallow earthquakes because the frictional strength of silicate rocks is proportional to the confining pressure. To understand the process triggering intraslab earthquakes, many experimental studies on faulting of slab-forming rocks have been conducted at upper mantle pressures. Previous studies have revealed that shear localization induced by dehydration of hydrous minerals (e.g., Okazaki & Hirth, 2016) or adiabatic shear heating (e.g., Kelemen & Hirth, 2007) is essential for the occurrence of faulting at high pressures. Although acoustic emission (AE) monitoring technique for D-DIA apparatuses enabled us to discuss the process of microcracking at high pressures, mechanical behavior at the onset of faulting is still unclear due to low time-resolution stress/strain measurements using synchrotron X-rays. The cause of bottleneck in stress/strain measurements is a long exposure time required for the acquisition of a two-dimensional X-ray diffraction pattern of minerals. Considering that the timescale of stress drop associating faulting is on the order of 0.01 sec (e.g., Okazaki & Katayama, 2015), a significant improvement for time resolution of stress/strain measurements is required. To improve the time resolution of stress/strain measurements, we installed a series of new devices at BL15XU, SPring-8.

We conducted in situ triaxial deformation experiments on olivine aggregates at pressures of 1-3 GPa and temperatures of 700-1250 K under nominally dry conditions using a D-DIA apparatus, installed at BL15XU, SPring-8. Two-dimensional radial X-ray diffraction patterns and radiographic images were alternately acquired by adjusting sizes of the incident slit and operating a flatpanel detector and a CCD camera using a high-flux pink beam (energy 100 keV) from an undulator source (0.2 s of exposure time for both ones). Pressure and differential stress were determined from the d-spacing of olivine. Strains of deforming samples were evaluated from the distance between platinum strain markers. AEs were recorded continuously on six sensors glued on the rear side of the 2nd-stage anvils, and three-dimensional AE source location were determined.

Stress increased with strain at the beginning of sample deformation, and it reached the yielding point at strains of ~0.1 or less. AEs from the deforming sample were detected when stress exceeded ~1 GPa and the amplitude of AE is positively correlated with the magnitude of stress. At strains higher than 0.1 (i.e., beyond the yielding point), both softening (i.e., decrease in stress and/or increase in strain rate) and a decrease in AE rate were observed prior to the occurrence of faulting. Faulting was observed at 880-1150 K. Most of unstable slips proceeded within 1 s and associated a sudden stress drop (~0.5 GPa) and temporal radiation of large AEs. In contrast, neither stress drops nor AEs were associated with a few “aseismic” unstable slips. Differential stress continuously increased when stable slip proceeded and the stable slip was terminated by the occurrence of another unstable slip. Our observations suggest that unstable slips can be divided into two types (i.e., seismic and aseismic ones) under the P-T conditions of shallow subducting slabs.

How to cite: Ohuchi, T., Higo, Y., Tsujino, N., Kakizawa, S., Ohsumi, H., and Yabashi, M.: In situ observation of faulting in olivine at high pressures and high temperatures using high-flux synchrotron X-rays, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7751, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7751, 2026.

EGU26-7796 | PICO | TS1.2

Abnormal grain growth in carbonate samples from the North Anatolian Fault: Microstructural evidence of the seismic cycle 

Yuval Boneh, Tsafrir Levi, Perah Nuriel, and Ram weinberger

Evidence for the nature of fault slip across the seismic cycle is hard to decipher. Fault-related deformation near the fault surface develops over the seismic cycle, characterized by rapid coseismic slip and intense deformation, followed by slower interseismic slip and stress accumulation. While considerable focus has been placed on characterizing deformation through fracturing and mesoscale structures, the analysis of grain-scale plastic processes has been largely neglected. However, transient temperature increases due to frictional heating, combined with the ability of calcite-bearing rocks to deform plastically at relatively low temperatures, suggest that microstructural damage and subsequent recovery processes could leave diagnostic evidence in carbonate fault rocks. Indeed, Pozzi et al. (2019) demonstrated that shearing gouge at seismic rates (~1 m/s) develops a crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO), accompanied by grain growth and sintering. These observations, however, were confined to nanometer-scale grains, localized at the fault surface.

Here, we present a detailed microstructural analysis of carbonate samples from the North Anatolian Fault Zone. We used Electron Backscatter Diffraction to map the calcite grains' orientations and characterize intragrain deformation and grain-boundary morphologies. We identify three distinct layers extending from the fault surface to a distance of ~4 mm. Layer I, with a thickness of tens of µm to 0.5 mm, exhibits predominantly angular grains with grain sizes ranging from unresolved (<1 µm) to tens of µm. Layer II, with a thickness of 0-200 µm, is comprised of small equant grains (1-5 µm) and some larger grains (10-30 µm), characterized by wavy grain boundaries, suggesting active grain boundary migration. No CPO was observed in layers I and II. Layer III, with a thickness of ~2-3 mm, contains large grains (hundreds of µm) that can be divided into two populations of grains. Rounded grains with wavy grain boundaries indicate the progressive consumption of smaller grains. At the core of the layer, grains contain faceted boundaries and are elongated parallel to the fault surface. This layer is the only one to exhibit a distinct CPO with the c-axis oriented normal to oblique to the slip surface. Importantly, the large grains in layer III also comprise small, isolated ‘islands’ of finer grains.

We infer that deformation mechanisms vary systematically with distance from the fault surface. Layer I records cataclastic flow at the fault surface, whereas layer II, characterized by very small grain sizes, exhibits shearing by grain boundary sliding that resulted in grains with low intragrain misorientation and the absence of CPO. The most striking microstructural record is preserved in layer III, which initially shows strong evidence for recovery processes by abnormal grain growth. We propose that this latter process occurred during or immediately after coseismic frictional heating, resulting in the consumption of previously deformed grains, which maintains the CPO record of deformation and provides a microstructural record of the seismic cycle at millimeter-scale distances from the fault surface.

Pozzi, et al., 2019. Coseismic ultramylonites: An investigation of nanoscale viscous flow and fault weakening during seismic slip. Earth and Planetary Science Letters.

How to cite: Boneh, Y., Levi, T., Nuriel, P., and weinberger, R.: Abnormal grain growth in carbonate samples from the North Anatolian Fault: Microstructural evidence of the seismic cycle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7796, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7796, 2026.

EGU26-8362 | PICO | TS1.2

Nano- and micro-scale imaging of rocks with X-ray ptychography 

Christoph E. Schrank, Michael W. M. Jones, Cameron M. Kewish, Grant A. van Riessen, Gerard Hinsley, Alfons Berger, Marco Herwegh, Berit Schwichtenberg, Nicole D. Bishop, Daryl Howard, Andrew D. Langendam, and David J. Paterson

X-ray ptychography is a lensless, coherent-diffraction imaging technique developed over the last 20 years that affords 10-nm resolution for optically thick specimens1. It reconstructs the optical transmission function (OTF) of a sample from raster-scanned overlapping 2D transmission diffraction patterns through iterative phase retrieval algorithms1,2. The OTF projects the refractive index of the sample along the incident beam and thus quantifies the phase shift and amplitude attenuation of the transmitted beam2, which in turn relate to the projected electron density of the specimen. X-ray ptychography is therefore an ultramicroscopy technique that is very well suited to mapping nano- and micron-sized objects with significant density differences relative to the bulk such as pores and dense accessory minerals.   

In this contribution, we present a primer for the application of X-ray ptychography to nano- and micro-scale studies of rocks. First, we illustrate the underlying physical principles that guide the data processing and interpretation of ptychographs. Then, we show exemplary applications to a wide range of rock samples (e.g., seismogenic brittle fault rocks, mylonites, veins, shale, and micrite) imaged at the XFM beamline of the Australian Synchrotron3 over the last 5 years4,5. Application examples include the measurement of sample surface roughness, imaging of cracks and pores, 3D porosity measurements, and the detection of buried accessory phases.

References

1          Pfeiffer, F. X-ray ptychography. Nature Photonics 12, 9-17, doi:10.1038/s41566-017-0072-5 (2018).

2          Wittwer, F., Hagemann, J., Brückner, D., Flenner, S. & Schroer, C. G. Phase retrieval framework for direct reconstruction of the projected refractive index applied to ptychography and holography. Optica 9, 295-302, doi:10.1364/OPTICA.447021 (2022).

3          Howard, D. L. et al. The XFM beamline at the Australian Synchrotron. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation 27, 1447-1458, doi:doi:10.1107/S1600577520010152 (2020).

4          Jones, M. W. M. et al. High-speed free-run ptychography at the Australian Synchrotron. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation 29, 480-487, doi:https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600577521012856 (2022).

5          Schrank, C. E. et al. Micro-scale dissolution seams mobilise carbon in deep-sea limestones. Communications Earth & Environment 2, 174, doi:10.1038/s43247-021-00257-w (2021).

How to cite: Schrank, C. E., Jones, M. W. M., Kewish, C. M., van Riessen, G. A., Hinsley, G., Berger, A., Herwegh, M., Schwichtenberg, B., Bishop, N. D., Howard, D., Langendam, A. D., and Paterson, D. J.: Nano- and micro-scale imaging of rocks with X-ray ptychography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8362, 2026.

EGU26-9434 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Localized dehydration of antigorite during experimental deformation at subduction zone conditions 

Danielle Silva Souza, Marcel Thielmann, Florian Heidelbach, and Daniel Frost

Dehydration embrittlement is the dominant mechanism proposed to explain deep-focus earthquakes between 100–350 km in depth. Antigorite dehydration was extensively investigated in previous experimental studies, which demonstrated contrasting results regarding the seismic potential of antigorite dehydration. Additionally, microstructural aspects of antigorite dehydration and their implications for deep seismicity are scarce. Localized dehydration, on the other hand, might generate strain weakening, potentially leading to failure at depths relevant to deep earthquakes. Localized antigorite dehydration is demonstrated to occur in nature and the laboratory; however, it is not clear if this is a passive or dynamic process.

To better understand the micro-mechanisms of localized antigorite dehydration, we conducted high-pressure, high-temperature experiments under isostatic and non-isostatic conditions. Experiments were run at 3 GPa and temperatures within and above the antigorite stability field (530 °C–800 °C). Antigorite cores with 2 mm diameter were mounted in cubic assemblies and deformed in a 6-ram multi-anvil press at the Bayerisches Geoinstitute. Pure shear deformation was applied by inserting one pair of anvils while simultaneously removing the remaining two pairs orthogonal to it.

Results show that isostatic dehydration of antigorite at 3 GPa starts at ~530 °C and completes at ~800 °C. Localized dehydration occurs in isostatic and non-isostatic conditions within the antigorite stability field. It is enhanced during deformation experiments, resulting in the formation of nanocrystalline veins and networks containing olivine and pyroxene. These results demonstrate that localized dehydration might occur through passive and dynamic processes with the development of different microstructures.

How to cite: Silva Souza, D., Thielmann, M., Heidelbach, F., and Frost, D.: Localized dehydration of antigorite during experimental deformation at subduction zone conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9434, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9434, 2026.

EGU26-9614 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Trace element mapping in vein calcite with synchrotron XFM: implications for U-Pb geochronology 

Ismay Vénice Akker, Christoph E. Schrank, Michael W. M. Jones, Daryl Howard, Lorenzo Tavazzani, and Luiz Morales

U-Pb geochronology via Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) is a fast and reliable method for in-situ dating of calcite that is used across disciplines in earth science. However, the heterogeneous distribution of U (and Pb) in individual calcite crystals represents a yet unmitigated challenge and identifying zones of sufficiently high U concentrations that can provide precise constraints on timing of calcite precipitation is an inefficient “hit or miss” process. Moreover, it is challenging to confirm that targeted domains of a calcite crystal retain their pristine geochemical signature, given the range of post-crystallization dissolution-reprecipitation and solid diffusion processes that can affect this mineral. There is thus an urgent need to understand the spatial and temporal mechanisms of U incorporation and mobilization in calcite to ultimately improve this key geochronological tool. To determine where specific trace elements are located within calcite crystals, investigate how they are incorporated during crystal growth and how they are affected by post-crystallization fluid-assisted deformation processes, we applied Synchrotron X-Ray Fluorescence Microscopy (XFM) with emphasis on U mapping, Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD), and LA-ICP-MS to a set of calcite veins. Samples were collected from drillcores through the Middle and Upper Jurassic carbonates and marls (max. 85°C) in the Neogene Molasse Basin in central northern Switzerland. By combining high-resolution trace element maps with information on the crystal lattice structure of calcite we show two main textural types of trace element distributions within syntaxial calcite veins: 1) oscillatory crystal growth zonations that reflect preferential incorporation of trace elements into structurally different growth steps and faces of growing calcite crystals during growth and, 2) complete overprint of the initial growth zonation upon potential secondary fluid infiltration and trace element replacement. The anti-correlation between Fe, Mn and Sr, U demonstrates the role of kinetic factors during trace element partitioning between fluid and calcite, pointing to the inhibition of Fe incorporation at higher growth rates. Where the Sr uptake during calcite growth is generally enhanced with growth rate. The results of this project give valuable insights in the complexity of fluid overprint during multi-staged deformation cycles in the modification of trace elements in calcite, with clear implications for the applicability and reliability of U-Pb geochronometer in calcite.

How to cite: Akker, I. V., Schrank, C. E., Jones, M. W. M., Howard, D., Tavazzani, L., and Morales, L.: Trace element mapping in vein calcite with synchrotron XFM: implications for U-Pb geochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9614, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9614, 2026.

EGU26-9678 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

An experimental investigation of dynamic recrystallisation processes and their influence on the mechanical properties of natural rock salt samples 

Evangelos Dialeismas, Hans de Bresser, Suzanne Hangx, and Jan ter Heege

Salt caverns are formed in the subsurface during solution mining of salt. After the end of salt production, caverns need to be safely abandoned or may be repurposed for storage of energy carriers such as hydrogen. Salt caverns locally disturb subsurface stresses, leading to creep of the surrounding rock salt. Creep can cause cavern convergence at depth and may result in surface subsidence, with consequences for infrastructure and public safety. Accurate forecasting of cavern stability during abandonment or assessment of suitability for storage requires a deep understanding of the grain scale deformation mechanisms and processes controlling rock salt strength and creep rate. For rock salt, important deformation mechanisms are dislocation creep and pressure solution creep. Laboratory experiments have shown that dynamic recrystallization (DRX) associated with dislocation creep can be activated and contribute to mechanical weakening. However, the weakening effect of DRX is not included in engineering constitutive laws used in salt cavern numerical models. These laws are commonly based on low-strain laboratory experiments, where the influence of DRX is limited, and microstructural data are relatively rarely reported. The aim of this study is to experimentally investigate the dominant DRX process in deforming natural rock salt and its effect on the mechanical behaviour.

Lab experiments have been carried out on natural wet salt samples from the Zechstein formation. We conducted constant strain rate experiments using a triaxial compression apparatus. Experiments were performed at a confining pressure of 20 MPa and a temperature of 125 °C, using constant displacement rates corresponding to strain rates of approximately 5 × 10⁻⁵ s⁻¹ and 5 × 10⁻⁷ s⁻¹, up to 30–40% axial strain. After the experiment, all samples were studied using optical microscopy. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis was performed on the starting material and on two deformed samples, one from each strain-rate condition.

For all samples, we observed an initial transient creep stage followed by a quasi-steady state stage. The transition to quasi-steady occurred at a strain of about 10% for samples deformed at a strain rate of ~5 × 10-7 s-1. For samples deformed at the faster strain rate of ~5 × 10-5 s-1, continuous hardening occurred up to axial strains of 30%, with a gradually decreasing hardening rate approaching steady state. Light optical and EBSD microstructural analysis revealed grains with a dense substructure including subgrain walls, euhedral shape grains with low to no substructure, and grains with irregular shaped grain boundaries including bulges. We infer that the dominant deformation mechanism in the tested natural samples was dislocation creep, providing sufficient local differences in dislocation density to activate DRX dominated by grain boundary migration processes. DRX led to rheological weakening and quasi-steady deformation. We are working on robust understanding of the parameters controlling DRX as this is essential to evaluate the zones prone to weakening by DRX around salt caverns.

How to cite: Dialeismas, E., de Bresser, H., Hangx, S., and ter Heege, J.: An experimental investigation of dynamic recrystallisation processes and their influence on the mechanical properties of natural rock salt samples, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9678, 2026.

EGU26-11242 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

High-resolution microstructural study of calcite crystals precipitated through bio-cementation under different conditions 

Marilyn Sarkis, Carsten Detlefs, Michela La Bella, Antoine Naillon, Christian Geindreau, Fabrice Emeriault, Yves Watier, James A. D. Ball, and Can Yildirim

Bio-cementation is a new, environmentally-friendly soil-reinforcement process. It is used for civil engineering purposes, such as the fabrication of construction materials, as well as the preservation of monuments. This process uses bacterial activity, mainly that of Sporosarcina Pasteurii, that is capable of  hydrolysing the urea present in the medium, leading to the precipitation of CaCO3 (calcite) crystals between sand grains, therefore binding them together, and reinforcing the soil. The macro and micro (contact scale) mechanical properties of bio-cememted sand have been extensively studied. However, the microstructure of the precipitated calcite crystals remains undiscovered, which induces mechanical differences under different conditions of cementation. The goal of this study is to investigate the microstructure of biogenic calcite, issued from bio-cementation of sand, and how it varies under different cementation conditions. For this, high resolution synchrotron diffraction imaging at the ESRF was performed, utilizing scanning 3DXRD (s-3DXRD) on ID11 and Dark-Field X-ray Microscopy (DFXM) on ID03. For this, the main experiment was performed on three samples that consist of 3D printed resin cells in which cementation was performed under different conditions, by varying the substrate on which the calcite was grown (between sand grains and glass beads), as well as varying the salinity of the medium. After each cementation cycle, and for each sample, layer measurements were acquired using s-3DXRD. A significant difference was observed between the sand and glass bead cases: the precipitated crystals on the glass beads were much smaller than those precipitated on the sand grains. DFXM measurements showed defects that are only present in the case of high concentration of NaCl in the medium, which could potentially alter the mechanical properties of the material. These two complementary techniques allowed for an in-depth study of the microstructure of the precipitated calcite crystals.

How to cite: Sarkis, M., Detlefs, C., La Bella, M., Naillon, A., Geindreau, C., Emeriault, F., Watier, Y., Ball, J. A. D., and Yildirim, C.: High-resolution microstructural study of calcite crystals precipitated through bio-cementation under different conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11242, 2026.

EGU26-11671 | PICO | TS1.2

Olivine Deformation: to B Slip or not to B Slip, that is the Question 

John Wheeler, Simon Hunt, Alexander Eggeman, Jack Donoghue, Ali Gholinia, Yizhe Li, Evan Tillotson, and Sarah Haigh

When deformed by dislocation creep the dominant slip (Burgers) vectors of olivine dislocations are parallel to [100] or [001]. Dislocations with an [010] Burgers vector component (b dislocations) have been recorded rarely. Here we show an experimentally deformed olivine sample has a substantial population (17%) of b dislocations. Electron Backscatter Diffraction maps of crystal orientations provided information on dislocations from the orientation gradients. Maps show the b dislocations form subgrain walls like those formed by other dislocation types and are interpreted to form similarly by glide and climb, so b dislocations are mobile. To confirm our approach, we used EBSD maps to select an area for Transmission Electron Microscopy imaging, down to an atomic scale image of a b dislocation. Our sample was deformed within range of subduction zone conditions; our approach can be used to investigate the scale and conditions of b slip in the mantle more widely.

How to cite: Wheeler, J., Hunt, S., Eggeman, A., Donoghue, J., Gholinia, A., Li, Y., Tillotson, E., and Haigh, S.: Olivine Deformation: to B Slip or not to B Slip, that is the Question, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11671, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11671, 2026.

EGU26-11961 | PICO | TS1.2

Combining X-ray absorption and Induced Polarization Spectroscopies for in situ monitoring of Cation Exchange in clay materials 

Alexandra Courtin, Damien Jougnot, Erwan Paineau, Damien Roy, Delphine Vantelon, Augustin Dallaporta, and Emmanuel Léger

The Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC) of clay minerals has been extensively studied in wide applications / purposes, using various imaging techniques to highlight changes of the clay sheet chargeability. Among the clay minerals, swelling clays such as smectite or vermiculite are particularly interesting regarding their adsorption-desorption properties strongly related to their high CEC (80-150 to 100-150 meq/100g respectively). To better monitor and predict cation exchange processes, the CEC has been investigated by different methodological approaches, including X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) and geoelectrical methods. The Spectral Induced Polarization (SIP) is particularly well designed to quantify CEC because its complex conductivity measurements (in phase and quadrature) characterizes the electrical conduction of charge carriers (liquid) and the polarization phenomenon resulting from the local accumulation of electrical charge carriers in the porous medium (mineral interface).

The aim of this work is to investigate in situ how K cations are incorporated within the interlayer of a Ca-montmorillonite by coupling XAS and SIP experimental methods. This novel approach brings multi-scale information at the atomic and clay-sheet levels, providing new insights on enhancing the understanding of CEC mechanisms in terms of time and space and our ability to monitor it with SIP. The experiment was carried out on LUCIA (Soleil synchrotron), at the low energy of potassium K-edge with a microbeam size (2.5 x 2.5 µm²).

We used a 1.7 mm3 cell filled with 0.1 g of Ca-Montmorillonite isolated in a 0.8 µm sieve to avoid flushing of the clay sample during the experiment. The cell was subjected to a solution flux of a few cc per minute with 4 different KCl salinities (0.01, 0.05, 0.1, 1 M of KCl).  In situ SIP spectra are compared with XAS to conjointly monitor the CEC exchange at different scales. Preliminary results are shown to test-proof the methods as a new in situ / in operando cross-scale methods for CEC spatio-temporal characterization. Overall,this work is the first step of a technological development project, merging the approaches of geophysicists, mineralogists and physicists to monitor in real time the cation exchange processes of a Ca-montmorillonite by K in swelling clay minerals. 

How to cite: Courtin, A., Jougnot, D., Paineau, E., Roy, D., Vantelon, D., Dallaporta, A., and Léger, E.: Combining X-ray absorption and Induced Polarization Spectroscopies for in situ monitoring of Cation Exchange in clay materials, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11961, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11961, 2026.

The evolution of orogens is steered by complex deformation processes that act at several crustal levels, evolving over time from syn- to post-orogenic. Investigating how strain and deformation localize in the ductile domains of the deep crust and brittle domains of the shallow crust can improve our understanding of the processes ultimately controlling the exhumation of deeply seated rocks. Within this framework, the Sestri-Voltaggio Zone (SVZ) of the Italian Ligurian Alps provides a record of rocks and structures attesting to the complete subduction-exhumation cycle during the Europe-Adria convergence. The SVZ is a mature fault zone characterized by a polyphase tectonic evolution and a high lithological variability, which tectonically juxtaposes high-pressure (HP) metamorphic units to non-metamorphic rocks. It also represents an abrupt structural-metamorphic boundary between the Voltri Massif (an eclogitic domain defining a southern culmination of the Western Alps) to west, and the Northern Apennines units (anchi-metamorphic or non-metamorphic) to east. The exhumation processes that led to the current outcropping units of the SVZ occurred following a multi-stage progression from early ductile to later brittle conditions. However, open questions remain reflecting the generalized lack of systematic descriptions of structural fabrics formed during the exhumation-related events of the SVZ units. In this recently launched study we further explore the exhumation mechanisms of the SVZ by investigating how the pre-existing metamorphic fabrics helped localize the brittle deformation that occurred at later stages at shallow crustal levels. Preliminary field observations and structural analyses document N-S to NNE-SSW-striking brittle faults separating lenses of HP-mafic (metagabbros and metabasalts) and carbonate lithotypes from the enveloping phylladic schists and serpentinites. The enclosed lenses exhibit a pervasive internal schistosity that strikes either parallel or at high angle to the orientation of the main SVZ boundaries. By mapping the orientation of the rock fabric as a function of distance, perpendicular to the main tectonic boundaries, it is possible to identify systematic geometric trends between the metamorphic foliations and the bounding brittle faults. Within the matrix, the metamorphic schistosity wraps around the lenses, varying both in strike and dip. Brittle faults, with dominant oblique kinematics, are characterized by a double behavior: they truncate the metamorphic schistosity when approaching massive lenses; but they tend to rework the schistosity within the phylladic matrix. The overall structural record of the investigated units highlights the distribution of strain localization within the deeply exhumed units, suggesting a distinction between episodic vs. progressive transition from ductile to brittle during exhumation. In this sense, the SVG can be considered a useful example of the deformation history of the Western Alps-Northern Apennines tectonic junction, with noteworthy implications on the first-order mechanisms leading to the exhumation of deeply seated rocks.

How to cite: Generi, A., Viola, G., and Vignaroli, G.: Characterizing ductile-to-brittle exhumation of polymetamorphic units along the Sestri-Voltaggio Zone (Ligurian Alps, Italy)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13049, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13049, 2026.

Microstructural investigations of halite are essential for understanding deformation mechanisms relevant to salt tectonics and underground storage applications, including radioactive waste disposal and salt caverns. However, the identification of subgrain boundaries, dislocation structures, acting creep mechanisms and fluid-related features remains challenging due to the optical transparency and inherently low defect contrast of halite. Gamma decoration provides a powerful solution by inducing radiation-related colour centers that selectively highlight lattice defects and deformation structures.

At the Forschungs-Neutronenquelle Heinz Maier-Leibnitz (FRM II, TUM), gamma decoration has been implemented since over a decade, recently we re-established and systematically optimized it using older spent fuel elements characterized by comparatively low dose rates. This contribution focuses on methodological developments and parametric studies that enable reliable gamma decoration under these conditions, extending the applicability of the technique beyond high-dose irradiation facilities.

We present results from controlled irradiation experiments on halite thin sections covering a wide range of total doses, irradiation times, and temperatures, combined with post-irradiation optical microscopy, spectroscopy, and digital colorimetry to quantify and optimize suitable optical contrast. Our experimental results from long-term irradiations are compared with theoretical models describing dose-rate-dependent radiation effects on defect formation in natural rock salt. This parametric approach allows identification of threshold conditions required for effective defect visualization, as well as optimization strategies to compensate for reduced dose rates, including extended irradiation times and temperature control.

These results establish gamma decoration at FRM II as a robust and versatile experimental method for salt-rock research, providing a valuable link between laboratory testing, microstructural analysis, and mechanical modelling, and ensuring continued applicability of this technique with ageing irradiation infrastructure.

How to cite: Hutanu, V., Li, X., and Schmatz, J.: Gamma decoration at FRM II: recent optimisations and parametric studies for microstructural investigations of halite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13462, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13462, 2026.

EGU26-13669 | PICO | TS1.2

Spatial phase distribution and deformation processes 

Rüdiger Kilian

Spatial phase distributions can be grouped into random, clustered or anticorrelated/distributed based on the probability to encounter a given nearest neighbour. This property can also be probed with respect to intervals of directions, frequently revealing an anisotropy in the spatial phase distribution. In this study, several high temperature ultramylonites with variable composition from felsic to ultramafic as well as coarse grained deformed rocks (e.g. eclogite from Münchberg, Germany) were investigated. Measurements of phase distribution anisotropy frequently manifest in a pronounced direction of phase clustering and one direction of anticorrelation. Especially in the investigated ultramylonites but also in deformed eclogites and amphibolites, those two directions are found not to be orthogonal and not to coincide with finite strain axes (as far as manifested by foliation and stretching lineation). Clustering phases (e.g. qtz, plg or grt, depending on the rock type) form stacks antithetically tilted against the sense of shear. These stacks are separated by phases such as kfs, bt or cpx. Below a certain volume threshold of the stack-forming phase, stacking is not observed.

In addition to the phase distribution, truncated chemical zonations and/or indications of directed growth are frequently observed. On the other hand, there is a lack of microstructures which can reasonabley be associated with steady state dislocation creep.

It is suggested that the observed microstructures in combination indicate deformation by a mechanism best described by dissolution-precipitation accommodated granular flow (or "diffusion creep" in the broadest sense). Stack-forming phases undergo mostly rigid-body rotation and translation temporarily forming transient force chains before being disintegrated again. Since these stacks can be observed in the rock record, the residence time in the force chain position must be greater than in a randomly distributed position, compatible with jamming of particles during granular flow.

The presence of this particular type of anisotropic spatial phase distribution may not only serve as a shear sense indicator but could in general be useful for the identification of deformation mechanisms.

How to cite: Kilian, R.: Spatial phase distribution and deformation processes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13669, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13669, 2026.

EGU26-14234 | PICO | TS1.2

Dissolution-Precipitation dominated deformation in (ultra)high-pressure serpentinites from the Zermatt-Saas Meta-Ophiolite 

Luiz F. G. Morales, Jesus Muñoz-Montecinos, Alberto Ceccato, Rüdiger Kilian, and Silvia Volante

Serpentinites are key components in subduction zones, acting as primary carriers of water into the deep Earth and critically influencing seismic behavior. Several studies suggest that fluid-saturated deformation in serpentinized subduction channels may control a variety of processes associated with Intermediate-depth seismicity (~50 to 300 km depth) . A key problem in their rheology is the discrepancy between experimentally deformed serpentinites, which exhibit predominantly brittle behavior, and their naturally deformed counterparts, which show ductile fabrics. While the dominant deformation mechanism in subduction settings—whether crystal plasticity, dissolution-precipitation, or a combination— also remains poorly documented. Moreover, there is a lack of constraints on how serpentinites deform during and after partial dehydration at (ultra)high-pressure conditions and transformation to olivine and pyroxene-dominated assemblages. To address these issues, we present an integrated microstructural and geochemical study of serpentinites across a hectometer-scale strain gradient within the Zermatt-Saas meta-ophiolite, documenting the evolution of deformation and major element mobility during subduction and exhumation. In low-strain samples, dehydration forms coarse-grained olivine-diopside-clinohumite-magnetite veins. Host antigorite shows weak crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs) and twinning. With increasing strain, deformation localizes around these veins, where olivine develops a weak B-type CPO, but with grains showing no evidence of intracrystalline deformation. Progressively, antigorite develops a strong, penetrative foliation with a (001) maximum normal to foliation and grain size reduction, while olivine veins are folded and boudinaged. Low angle grain boundaries are related to fracturing of olivine. In high-strain serpentinite mylonites, transposed olivine veins form isoclinal folds, and S-C' fabrics develop. Antigorite CPO strength increases considerably, something that is not observed for olivine. Whole thin section XRF mapping reveals an increase of Ni and S in the more deformed serpentinites, where pentlandite defines the C' fabric and wraps around olivine porphyroclasts. Antigorite mm thick bands show Cr depletion accompanied by grain size reduction, while Fe-Mn occur normally associated with each other. In the transposed olivine veins there is an increase of Fe content in comparison to the original olivine vein composition.  When present, Al-rich phases such as chlorite are mostly undeformed but can breakdown locally and transform into tremolite + magnetite in late shear bands. Our data document a fluid-assisted progression from localized brittle-ductile to distributed ductile deformation. Microstructural and chemical evidence indicate that deformation was primarily controlled by dissolution-precipitation processes, with limited crystal plasticity in antigorite and predominantly brittle olivine deformation. This study provides a rare dataset on metamorphic olivine deformation in subduction zones and highlights the fundamental coupling between element mobility, metamorphic reactions, and strain localization in the subduction interface and mantle wedge.

How to cite: Morales, L. F. G., Muñoz-Montecinos, J., Ceccato, A., Kilian, R., and Volante, S.: Dissolution-Precipitation dominated deformation in (ultra)high-pressure serpentinites from the Zermatt-Saas Meta-Ophiolite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14234, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14234, 2026.

EGU26-15191 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

 Microstructure Across Deformation Regimes: 3D Imaging of Olivine by Dark-Field X-ray Microscopy 

Yaozhu Li, Phil McCaulsand, Roberta Flemming, Can Yildirim, and Carsten Detlefts

Olivine is a fundamental rock-forming mineral for which microstructures are closely tied to deformation conditions. However, visualization of olivine deformation has traditionally been limited to two-dimensional observations, ranging from petrographic microscopy at the millimetre– to micrometre scale to electron-based techniques probing crystallographic distortion and ordering at the micro- to nanometre scale (e.g., EBSD and TEM). Here, we introduce dark-field X-ray microscopy (DFXM) and present its first application to geological materials, conducted at beamline ID03 of the ESRF.

Using a focused line beam produced by compound refractive lenses, DFXM enables non- destructive, in-situ imaging with spatial resolution down to ~35 nm. By selectively illuminating a ~500 nm thick volume with the line beam, DFXM allows “slicing” through depth of the crystal volume. By translating the sample through the X-ray beam, the layers can be stacked and reconstructed into full 3D datasets.

In this work, we reconstruct the 3D microstructures of the mineral olivine across a range of deformation settings, spanning from hydrothermal single crystal olivine, to olivine in Åheim orogenic peridotite which experienced long-term dislocation creep, to olivine in heavily shock-metamorphosed martian basalt with relict crustal strain. We observe individual static dislocations and associated lattice strain field in the hydrothermal olivine single crystal, to arranged low-angle boundaries (LABs) formed by geometrically necessary dislocations (GNDs) in the Åheim peridotite, to chaotic dislocation networks connected by dense, short, and randomized LABs in shocked martian basalts.

By bridging conventional 2D crystallographic observations with volumetric 3D microstructural reconstructions, our work enables robust observations of microstructures developed in distinctive deformation conditions, providing a powerful and advanced 3D imaging technique for geological materials. Our study expands the application of DFXM to Earth and planetary materials and demonstrates the power of multi-scale, three-dimensional imaging for resolving complex deformation histories in geological systems.

How to cite: Li, Y., McCaulsand, P., Flemming, R., Yildirim, C., and Detlefts, C.:  Microstructure Across Deformation Regimes: 3D Imaging of Olivine by Dark-Field X-ray Microscopy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15191, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15191, 2026.

EGU26-15835 | PICO | TS1.2

Microanalytic characteristics of extremely fractured quartz in fault damage zone and implications 

Wen-Jie Wu, Po-ying Lien, Teng-Huei Huang, Wyan Chiu, Ching-Yu Chiang, and Li-Wei Kuo

The fault damage zone of the active Milun Fault in eastern Taiwan exhibits fractured and altered fault-rock textures, including spotted schist, serpentinite, and associated gouge. In the vicinity of the upper boundary of the damage zone, the recovered drill core hosts a non-cohesive, pulverized quartz body (~20-30 cm in length) within the fault rocks. The pulverized quartz is sandwiched between fractured schist and millimetre-scale laminae subparallel to the zone boundary. Microanalytical observations show that the quartz is shattered into a fine powder without an evident shear sense or preferred fracture orientation. No shear-induced amorphous phase is detected, whereas Laue diffraction indicates pronounced lattice distortion and elevated residual stress. The pulverized quartz displays a dense tensile fracture network, a feature commonly reported for seismically pulverized rocks along seismogenic faults, suggesting a dilatational, tensile-dominated fragmentation mechanism rather than progressive shear comminution. We propose that the quartz pulverization resulted from high strain rates associated with transient tensile stresses during coseismic rupture, potentially favoured by specific lithologic conditions.

How to cite: Wu, W.-J., Lien, P., Huang, T.-H., Chiu, W., Chiang, C.-Y., and Kuo, L.-W.: Microanalytic characteristics of extremely fractured quartz in fault damage zone and implications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15835, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15835, 2026.

EGU26-16278 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Memory of brittle-ductile yielding within near surface fault zone sediments 

Jhardel Dasent, Ming Chang, Kenneth Su, Vashan Wright, and Michael Manga

The interactions between fluid and solids in fault zones are governed by slip, slip rate, and constituent properties. These interactions are recorded by particle shape and size distributions, fracture patterns, and the geochemical composition of material within the deformation zone. The evolution of near-surface sediment microstructures and yielding behaviors under tectonic loading and at variable fluid saturation remains an open question. We collect undisturbed 10 x 40 mm cores from unconsolidated silt-sized sediments (fines) surrounding, and along, a fault strand that slipped while saturated, and likely experienced aseismic slip under variable saturation over the past 300 years. We use X-ray microtomography to analyze voids within the fines and found that they are ellipsoidal, have volume distributions that are best fit by a truncated power-law, orient sub-parallel to the fault strike, and sometimes merge into tabular or irregularly shaped fractures. The volume range for power-law scaling in the distributions separates a smaller population of voids with markedly different distributions in sphericity, tortuosity, aspect ratio, and minor/major axis lengths from a larger population of voids. The power-law truncation is likely due to the finite core size. We interpret the voids as initially small gas bubbles that nucleated where cavities existed within the fines and then grew via diffusion of immiscible gases when saturated, or via brittle/ductile yielding of the fines under variable saturation. Several fractures cross-cut or branch off some voids, indicating multiple deformation events and suggesting that the void boundaries are weak spots within the fines that accommodate tectonic strain. Similar growth mechanisms have been observed in magmatic systems, where ductile yielding of the melt occurs from the merging of bubbles that primarily orient at acute angles from the maximum extension direction. These findings suggest that, in addition to sands, pore structures in finer-grained sediments preserve a record of near-surface aseismic slip and may provide a relative estimate of near-surface strain. The findings further imply that a process akin to ductile yielding deformed the fines and, in turn, the pore voids. 

How to cite: Dasent, J., Chang, M., Su, K., Wright, V., and Manga, M.: Memory of brittle-ductile yielding within near surface fault zone sediments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16278, 2026.

EGU26-17303 | PICO | TS1.2

Combined geochemical and textural analyses of halite: First results of non-destructive µXRF measurements 

Wilhelm Nikonow, Michael Mertineit, and Michael Schramm

The mineralogical-geochemical composition and texture of salt rocks plays an important role for the site selection and construction of a repository for heat-generating, highly active radioactive waste. As the bromide content in halite depends on the degree of evaporation and subsequent processes, Br is frequently analyzed to estimate the genetic history of the rocks (Braitsch 1971). Typically, geochemical analytical methods are applied on powder samples (e.g. ICP-OES, XRF), and textural analyses (e.g. using EBSD) require extensive sample preparation. In this study, first results of diapiric Upper Permian rock salt samples are presented using non-destructive µXRF on polished rock samples.

The µXRF Bruker M4 Tornado Plus (Nikonow & Rammlmair 2016) was used to map and quantify element distributions in rock salt. For calibration, in a first step, a certified reference material (CGL), consisting of mostly halite (NaCl) with minor content of anhydrite (CaSO4), and sylvite (KCl), was pressed into pellets of 2 g and 1 cm diameter. For representativity, three spot measurements and a mapping of the center (1 cm²) were chemically quantified. The µXRF measurements correlate with the certified values yielding an R² of 0.995. In a second step, pressed pellets with a range of defined concentrations of Br in halite and Rb in sylvite were prepared to estimate the concentration ranges measurable by µXRF. For Br, the concentrations range from 1 to 0.005 wt.% Br in halite, and for Rb the concentrations range from 0.4 to 0.005 wt.% Rb in sylvite. Both data sets show a good correlation with R² of 0.99 (n=21 for Br and n=17 for Rb). Therefore, µXRF seems suitable for quantification of Rb and Br in salt rocks.

Furthermore, naturally deformed halite samples were analyzed simultaneously for their geochemically and textural properties, which were previously analyzed using “conventional” methods (ICP-OES and EBSD, respectively; Mertineit et al. 2023). The bromide content in halite is ca. 200 µg/g and thus comparable to the known values. The textural results show misorientations of few degrees within single halite grains and pronounced misorientations at halite grain boundaries, indicating bending of the crystals, but no pronounced texture of the bulk rock.

Although the results are in good agreement with published data, further test should follow, especially on the textural analyses including the misorientation angle resolution and the indexing of the halite crystal axis. However, the application of µXRF on salt rocks offers a fast, non-destructive method providing reliable combined geochemical and textural information.

References

Braitsch 1971. Springer-Verlag, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-65083-3

Mertineit et al. 2023. Tectonophysics 847, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2023.229703

Nikonow & Rammlmair. 2016. Spectrochim Acta B 125, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sab.2016.09.018

How to cite: Nikonow, W., Mertineit, M., and Schramm, M.: Combined geochemical and textural analyses of halite: First results of non-destructive µXRF measurements, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17303, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17303, 2026.

EGU26-17416 | PICO | TS1.2

Advanced Microscopy and Machine Learning for Multiscale Analysis of Porosity and Mineralogy 

Joyce Schmatz, Mingze Jiang, and Julia Schmitz

Recent advances in microanalytical imaging and machine learning enable quantitative, multiscale characterization of geological materials with direct relevance for subsurface energy storage. This study presents an integrated workflow combining Broad Ion Beam (BIB) sample preparation, Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM), Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDX), and advanced machine learning to quantify pore structures, mineralogy, and their spatial relationships from the micrometre to nanometre scale (Klaver et al. 2021).

High-resolution secondary electron (SE2) and backscattered electron (BSE) imaging, complemented by low-resolution EDX data, provides multimodal datasets for automated analysis. Pore networks are segmented using a pre-trained U-Net deep learning model, enabling efficient and accurate porosity quantification. Mineralogical phases are identified and quantified through a semi-automatic, decision-tree–based segmentation approach. The alignment of SE2 and BSE datasets allows porosity to be directly correlated with specific mineral phases, establishing a robust link between microstructure, mineral composition, and petrophysical properties (Jiang et al, 2021).

The applicability of this technology-driven approach is demonstrated through two case studies. Case study 1 investigates geological hydrogen storage in underground salt caverns, focusing on the impact of biotic and abiotic reactions on anhydrite. Flow-cell experiments combined with cryogenic BIB-SEM analyses enable early detection of microstructural, mineralogical, and pore-space changes induced by hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide, and microbial sulfate reduction. Despite slow reaction kinetics, microstructural observations reveal the substantial onset of chemical alteration, biofilm formation, and evolving pore connectivity at the submicron scale, providing essential constraints for geochemical and hydraulic models (Berest et al., 2024).

Case study 2 examines fault sealing in mechanically layered limestone–marl successions. Oriented transfer samples from normal fault systems were analysed using multiscale microanalytical workflows to capture marl smearing, mechanical mixing, fracturing, and cementation processes. High-quality microstructural datasets serve as ground truth for training machine learning algorithms for efficient interpretation of 2D image data. The results show that fault cores are composed of recurrent structural building blocks whose distribution and sealing capacity are strongly controlled by the presence and properties of marly interbeds (Schmatz et al., 2022).

Overall, the integrated microscopy–machine learning framework provides a transferable, data-driven approach for quantifying coupled structural, hydraulic, and geochemical processes in complex geological systems.

References

Berest et al.,2024. Risk assessment of hydrogen storage in a conglomerate of salt caverns in the Netherlands. KEM-28 report. https://www.kemprogramma.nl/documenten/2024/04/03/kem-28-project-rapportfinal-report-kem-28-h2c3-240403_v2

Jiang et al., 2021.Workflow for high-resolution phase segmentation of cement clinker from combined BSE image and EDX spectral data. Journal of Microscopy, 1-7.

Klaver et al., 2021. Automated carbonate reservoir pore and fracture classification by multiscale imaging and deep learning. 82nd EAGE Annual Conference & Exhibition, Oct 2021, Volume 2021, p.1 – 5.

Schmatz et al., 2022. Prediction of Fault Rock Permeability With Deep Learning: Training Data from Transfer Samples of Fault Cores. 83rd EAGE Annual Conference & Exhibition, Jun 2022, Volume 2022, p.1 – 5.

 

How to cite: Schmatz, J., Jiang, M., and Schmitz, J.: Advanced Microscopy and Machine Learning for Multiscale Analysis of Porosity and Mineralogy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17416, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17416, 2026.

The investigation of microstructural characteristics in concrete constitutes a fundamental basis for advancing its performance in civil engineering construction. Existing expertise in digital rock physics (DRP), developed for natural rock materials, is transferred and adapted for concrete. DRP utilizes non-destructive X-ray computed tomography (XRCT) to examine the internal microstructure of concrete, allowing for the visualization of features such as phase distributions, pore space, and microcracks. In this study, high-resolution digital concrete twins are created to capture and quantify internal microstructural changes induced by external mechanical loading. To overcome limitations in phase and microstructure identification caused by the restricted resolution of XRCT, these digital investigations are complemented by detailed microstructural analyses using standard polarization microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The results show that externally applied stresses significantly influence the microstructural response of concrete and thus affect the accuracy of physical measurements conducted under high-pressure conditions.

XRCT datasets with varying spatial resolutions were acquired under in-situ confining pressures ranging from 0.1 MPa to 46 MPa. CT images of concrete in unloaded and mechanically loaded states were subsequently analyzed and compared to identify stress-induced microstructural changes, with particular emphasis on the segmentation workflow. Here, particular focus is on large and small concrete aggregates, grain/phase boundaries within the aggregates, (micro-)porosity, and especially the interfacial transition zone (ITZ), which represents a major source of uncertainty in phase assignment during segmentation.

Image quality was first assessed by identifying artifacts and evaluating grayscale histograms. Subsequently, global thresholding was applied for phase assignment and initial segmentation, which was iteratively refined using complementary microscopic analyses of thin sections, including SEM, as reference data. The resulting segmentation of the concrete subvolume (600x600x769) distinguishes large and small aggregates (<80 % quartz, ca. 20 % phyllosilicates), pore space, phyllosilicate-composed matrix, silica-composed matrix, and inclusions (mainly rutile, zircon, apatite, iron oxides). Small changes can be seen in the distribution of the individual phases at the different pressures. With increasing pressure, the porosity decreases, and partially areas with characteristic phase arrangements arise along the large aggregates, potentially indicating the influence of the ITZ.

However, the quantitative determination of the interfacial transition zone remains challenging using XRCT data, and microcracks are likewise difficult to reliably resolve and segment. Therefore, the high-resolution microstructural investigations are also required to adequately capture these features. Overall, the study highlights the necessity of detailed microstructural characterization for the reliable interpretation of XRCT data and the assessment of stress-induced changes in concrete.

How to cite: Beiers, L. M., Balcewicz, M., Lebedev, M., and Saenger, E. H.: Digital Concrete Physics – Microstructural Characterization of Concrete under Confining Pressure: Insights from X-ray Computed Tomography and Microscopy , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17609, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17609, 2026.

EGU26-18276 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Deformation and reaction in the microstructural record of oceanic serpentinites 

Rebecca Kühn, Luisa Schlickum, Rüdiger Kilian, Luiz Morales, Andy Parsons, Barbara John, and Jeremy Deans

Ultramafic rocks exposed adjacent to mid-ocean ridges in the footwall to large slip oceanic detachment faults provide unique insight into deformation and reaction when transforming from peridotite to serpentinite. In contrast to orogenic serpentinites, oceanic serpentinites have not subjected to superposed metamorphic and/or tectonic overprinting. A suite of samples from mostly fresh peridotites (~20% alteration), with preserved olivine and pyroxene, to completely serpentinized rocks (100% alteration), dominated by serpentine (lizardite) and magnetite, were collected from a ~1.2 km long drill core from IODP Expedition 399 at the Atlantis Massif oceanic core complex.

A combined approach of synchrotron diffraction and electron backscatter diffraction in order to analyze the crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO), and micro X-ray fluorescence mapping and optical microscopy in order to image and analyze the microstructure, is used to explore the variable microstructures.

Magnetite forms polycrystalline aggregates defining a foliation, which ranges from anastomosing to highly parallel. In partially serpentinized, mylonitic peridotites showing olivine grain size reduction and CPO development; magnetite aggregates trace the preexisting mylonitic fabric. Lizardite and magnetite both have a variable CPO strength and different CPO types, suggesting that different processes and parameters influence the formation of these microstructures. Further, late stage deformation, is evident from microfaulting, sheared serpentine veins and dissolution features. The individual contributions of deformation and serpentinization reaction to the final microstructure will be evaluated and discussed.

How to cite: Kühn, R., Schlickum, L., Kilian, R., Morales, L., Parsons, A., John, B., and Deans, J.: Deformation and reaction in the microstructural record of oceanic serpentinites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18276, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18276, 2026.

EGU26-18322 | PICO | TS1.2

Lithium content and mineralogical composition of fractured salt clay (Upper Permian) 

Michael Mertineit, Michael Schramm, Wilhelm Nikonow, and Jeannet Meima

Lithium is a trace component, which is frequently observed in salt deposits and salt solutions collected in salt mines, respectively (Mertineit & Schramm 2019). So far, no naturally formed Li-bearing salt mineral is known, thus, the origin of Li in salt deposits must be related to other sources, e.g. to detrital phyllosilicates (Braitsch 1971). Detailed investigations on the Li content, the occurrence within a mine and the mineralogical composition of specific stratigraphic layers enable the reconstruction of rock-fluid interaction and fluid migration pathways. This is important for the construction, design and dimensions for a repository for radioactive waste in rock salt.

To verify which minerals are Li-hosts, diapiric Upper Permian (Zechstein) samples from the uppermost Staßfurt-Formation and the lower Leine-Formation were investigated for their mineralogical-geochemical composition. The succession contains salt clays, anhydrite and carbonate rocks as these rocks reveal the highest Li content (up to 159 µg/g bulk rock). The samples were previously investigated using ICP-OES, ICP-MS, XRD, SEM and thin section microscopy. Beside typical salt minerals in varying amounts (halite, anhydrite, magnesite, sylvite, carnallite), most samples consist of quartz, illite-muscovite, chlorite (clinochlore) and biotite, all of them with a grain size of ≤100 µm, often <20 µm. Only few samples contain traces of kaolinite, koenenite, hydrotalcite, anatase and tourmaline.

Additionally, µXRF and imaging LIBS (Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy) analyses were performed at the same specimen to obtain detailed information of the element distribution including Li on thick section scale (Nikonow et al. 2019).

The clay containing rocks are intensively deformed by boudinage and subsequent brittle fracturing. The fractures are oriented in different directions and are filled with halite and/or carnallite and single grains of anhydrite and magnesite. Relics of bedding are present, but the phyllosilicates do not show a pronounced shape-preferred orientation. Shear strain is indicated by a slight rotation of single rock fragments. The spatial distribution of Li shows that Li is enriched in certain areas. Li accumulations are observed in single silicate grains, which are unequally distributed in a very fine-grained clay matrix. Furthermore, Li is enriched at the fracture rims, often associated with seams of Fe-bearing phases and probably organic matter.

Depending on the mineralogical composition of the investigated rocks, the Li content varies significantly. Li probably originates from illite-muscovite and a Li-bearing variety of a tourmaline (elbaite). Li was mobilized during brine-host rock interaction and precipitated in fracture infill, probably at reducing geochemical conditions. However, due to the limited spatial resolution of most used methods compared to the very small grain size of the rocks, a distinct relation of Li content to a specific mineral phase requires further analysis.

 

Braitsch 1971. Springer-Verlag, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-65083-3

Mertineit & Schramm 2019. Minerals 9, 766; doi:10.3390/min9120766.

Nikonow et al. 2019. Mineralogy & Petrology 113, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00710-019-00657-z

How to cite: Mertineit, M., Schramm, M., Nikonow, W., and Meima, J.: Lithium content and mineralogical composition of fractured salt clay (Upper Permian), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18322, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18322, 2026.

EGU26-18619 | PICO | TS1.2

Recent Developments in 4D X-ray Tomography for Real-Time Observation of Fault Slip and Gouge Evolution 

Eranga Jayawickrama, Nick Harpers, Berit Schwichtenberg, Andrew Bell, Arthur Ng, Roberto Rizzi, Benoit Cordonnier, Marco Herwegh, and Florian Fusseis

The properties of fault slip surfaces, gouge characteristics, and fluid-rock reactions are tightly coupled and control earthquake mechanics. To visualise and quantify the role of this coupling, we have developed a new operando imaging approach that allows the documentation of fast direct-shear deformation experiments in time-resolved 2- and 3-dimensional image data at low single-digit micrometer resolution. A direct-shear inset developed for the X-ray transparent Heitt Mjölnir triaxial deformation apparatus enables experiments at 20 MPa normal stress under fluid-pressurised conditions and allows real-time permeability measurements.

We apply this platform to three fault systems: 1) Slip surfaces in basaltic rocks, imaged while sliding at 1 mm.s-1, reveal how asperities, phenocrysts, and surface roughness control stick-slip behavior and damage localization during fast slip. 2) Reactive quartz-gypsum gouges imaged during velocity stepping and healing experiments, enable the direct linking of evolving frictional properties to microphysical developments. 3) A shearing, dehydrating gypsum gouge provides insights into transient rheologies and the resulting strain distributions.

These datasets demonstrate that 4D imaging resolves coupled mechanical, chemical, and hydraulic fault evolution in real time. Our approach allows documenting microphysical processes underlying the frictional properties of faults and thereby constitutes a potent tool for studying faults in a variety of tectonic settings.

How to cite: Jayawickrama, E., Harpers, N., Schwichtenberg, B., Bell, A., Ng, A., Rizzi, R., Cordonnier, B., Herwegh, M., and Fusseis, F.: Recent Developments in 4D X-ray Tomography for Real-Time Observation of Fault Slip and Gouge Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18619, 2026.

The deformation and interaction of amphibole grains are crucial for comprehending the rheological behavior and physical properties of middle to lower crust. However, the mechanisms of strain accommodation and grain boundary processes in amphibolites are poorly studied. In this study, we analyzed a naturally deformed amphibolite from an exhumed continental strike-slip shear zone. The amphibole grains can be categorized into two distinct types: type I and type II, with the type II being embedded within type I. Type I amphibole grains exhibit typical plastic deformation behavior, distinguished by the presence of discernible dislocation arrays and formation of subgrains. In contrast, type II amphibole grains predominantly display microfractures in the middle of grains and voids occur in their elongated tails. Meanwhile, we identified three types of low-angle boundaries in amphibole grains with varying microstructural and nanoscale characteristics. Our findings indicate that low-angle boundaries in minerals are not exclusively associated with crystal-plastic deformation. Furthermore, the deformation characteristics in type II amphibole grains are related to grain boundary sliding (GBS) process. To relieve stress concentration during grain boundary sliding in type II amphibole grains, two accommodation mechanisms are proposed: (i) Grain boundary diffusion with elimination of grain boundary irregularities. (ii) Intragranular deformation of adjacent grains through either a brittle or a ductile process. Our findings hold significant implications for understanding the stress concentration and accommodation during deformation process in amphibolite

How to cite: Liu, J., Cao, S., and Cheng, X.: Development of low-angle boundaries in amphibole and their implications for accommodating grain boundary sliding in naturally deformed amphibolite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20317, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20317, 2026.

EGU26-21052 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

3D Fractal Analysis of Co-seismic Damage in the Nojima Fault Using X-Ray Tomography and SHPB Experiments 

Romain Iaquinta, Mai-Linh Doan, and Frederic Victor Donze

The origin of the intense damage found in active fault cores is still a matter of debate. We investigated the potential co-seismic contribution to this damage by studying the Nojima fault, which ruptured during the 1995 Kobe earthquake (Mw 6.9). Drilled just a year after the event, the Hirabayashi borehole offers a snapshot of the fault zone’s state shortly after a major rupture.

Working within the French ANR AlterAction, we analyzed drill core samples using X-ray computed tomography (CT) at a resolution of ~50 μm. Instead of relying on complex segmentation of fracture geometries, we applied a 3D fractal analysis to the spatial distribution of voids (empty space) versus the rock matrix. This method allowed us to quantify damage intensity and organization using the fractal dimension D. This metric, ranging from 2 (highly clustered voids) to 3 (homogeneous distribution), tracks the transition from localized fracture networks to diffuse pulverization and correlates well with fracture porosity.

We observed a damage zone extending roughly 70 m on either side of the fault core. While open fracture density generally spikes toward the core, it drops sharply in the immediate vicinity, likely due to rapid post-seismic healing. Our analysis shows D values near 2 in clustered zones, rising toward 3 where damage becomes volumetric. Interestingly, some samples display intense micro-fracturing but lack significant macroscopic deformation, resembling the "pulverized rock" seen at other active faults. This texture suggests high strain-rate loading occurred during the earthquake.

To test the dynamic origin of this damage, we ran Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar (SHPB) experiments on intact borehole samples to reproduce pulverization in the lab. We found a linear link between strain rate and absorbed energy. When combined with the CT data, this relationship helps distinguish two modes of propagation: diffuse pulverization (matching near-fault observations) and sparse, poorly connected networks. Crucially, the fractal dimensions of the experimental samples confirm these contrasting morphologies.

These results suggest that the intense damage in the Nojima fault core likely stems from co-seismic processes, marked by specific fractal patterns associated with high strain rates. We conclude that 3D fractal analysis of void space offers a robust tool, independent of geometry, for identifying the dynamic origins of fault zone damage.

How to cite: Iaquinta, R., Doan, M.-L., and Donze, F. V.: 3D Fractal Analysis of Co-seismic Damage in the Nojima Fault Using X-Ray Tomography and SHPB Experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21052, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21052, 2026.

EGU26-21418 | ECS | PICO | TS1.2

Probing active deformation - Fault healing through the lens of 4D operando imaging 

Berit Schwichtenberg, Florian Fusseis, Eranga Jayawickrama, Benoit Cordonnier, Nick Harpers, and Marco Herwegh

Direct observations of geological processes are often limited by available observation time, the spatial resolution of imaging techniques or the accessibility of active sites. These limitations also apply to fault healing, whereby faults progressively regain strength throughout the interseismic phase of the earthquake cycle. Here, conventional approaches either capture a static snapshot of the final microstructure in exhumed natural fault rocks or focus on the bulk mechanical behaviour through slide–hold–slide or direct shear experiments. However, these approaches generally fail to resolve the dynamic evolution of the microstructural record, and the associated chemo-mechanical feedback that controls a rock’s hydraulic properties. To overcome these limitations and constrain the spatiotemporal coupling between mechanical, chemical, and hydraulic processes in healing fault gouges, we conducted a series of direct shear experiments on analogue fault gouges composed of a quartz–hemihydrate mixture. We then monitored their microstructural evolution using operando 4D synchrotron-based X-ray CT imaging.

Our experiments, performed at constant shear rates of 0.3–1 µm/s, were designed to mimic gouge-rich faults in the uppermost continental crust during the interseismic phase. In the presence of a reactive pore fluid, we simulated chemical fault healing through dissolution-reprecipitation and cementation, which are associated with the hydration reaction of CaSO₄ hemihydrate to gypsum. In our deforming samples, these time-dependent healing processes compete with mechanical weakening processes, such as frictional granular flow.

Our novel approach combines an innovative experimental setup [1, 2] with high-resolution 4D imaging and advanced image analysis techniques, including digital volume correlation (DVC). In this contribution we discuss the benefits of integrating micromechanical data with high-resolution 4D imaging by linking active deformation mechanisms to the evolving mechanical and hydraulic response of the simulated fault gouge. Further, we demonstrate a shear-rate-dependent competition between time-dependent healing processes and mechanical weakening.   

 

[1] Freitas, D. et al. (2024): Heitt Mjölnir: a heated miniature triaxial apparatus for 4D synchrotron microtomography. Journal of Synchrotron Radiation 31, 150-161. doi.org/10.1107/S1600577523009876 

[2] Jayawickrama, E. et al. (2026): Recent Developments in 4D X-ray Tomography for Real-Time Observation of Fault Slip and Gouge Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18619.

How to cite: Schwichtenberg, B., Fusseis, F., Jayawickrama, E., Cordonnier, B., Harpers, N., and Herwegh, M.: Probing active deformation - Fault healing through the lens of 4D operando imaging, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21418, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21418, 2026.

EGU26-2868 | Orals | TS1.5

Changes in fluid migration in ductile shear zones during tectonic switching may explain the formation of hydrothermal ore deposits 

Melanie Finch, Ben Knight, Andy Tomkins, Enrique Gomez-Rivas, Paul Bons, Bruno Ribeiro, and Alanis Olesch-Byrne

A common feature of many hydrothermal ore deposits is that they formed during tectonic switches between extension and shortening on plate boundaries. Several theories to explain this relationship have been proposed but evidence for a mechanism remains elusive. Many of these ore deposits occur within or adjacent to ductile shear zones that changed movement direction during the tectonic switch. Prior to tectonic switches, shear zone structures evolve to orientations optimised to accommodate deformation, which maximises strain rate and creates permeable pathways for fluid migration. But when a tectonic switch occurs the structures are misoriented and must reconfigure to accommodate the new shearing direction. Using numerical models of shear zone evolution, we determined that during tectonic switches the microstructural reconfiguration reduces the strain rate and mean stress, causing fluid influx into the shear zone. To further explore the effect of this microstructural reconfiguration on fluid migration we examined rocks of the Bergen Arc shear zone in Norway in a transition zone where sinistral shearing is progressively overprinted by dextral shearing. We find that during the tectonic switch, accretionary veins of quartz, ankerite and calcite formed in dilatational spaces that opened as the sinistral structures were reconfigured to accommodate dextral shearing. With increasing strain, fluid migration into the shear zone became more pervasive, evidenced by larger vein networks and hydrothermal breccias. Coincident with vein formation there is a statistically significant increase in the water content in quartz as determined by synchrotron FTIR. These data indicate that the microstructural reconfiguration in shear zones during tectonic switching causes fluid influx into shear zones. This process may be responsible for the introduction of ore fluids into the shear zone and the formation of hydrothermal ore deposits during tectonic switching.

How to cite: Finch, M., Knight, B., Tomkins, A., Gomez-Rivas, E., Bons, P., Ribeiro, B., and Olesch-Byrne, A.: Changes in fluid migration in ductile shear zones during tectonic switching may explain the formation of hydrothermal ore deposits, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2868, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2868, 2026.

EGU26-5095 | Posters on site | TS1.5

Alteration pathways in Cenozoic volcanic suites of the Styrian Basin: an integrated petrographic–geochemical approach  

Veronika Tenczer, Christoph von Hagke, Mathias Hopfinger, Anja, C. Hörger, Ena Topalović, and Inga Strähler

We present a study that investigates the post-eruptive geochemical evolution of six sites from Miocene and Pliocene volcanic suites from Styria (SE Austria). The sites are Weitendorf, Gleichenberg, Klöch, Hochstraden, Steinberg and Fürstenfeld. We focus on a stratigraphic sequence that transitions from lavas to porous, laminated ash tuffs and pyroclastic rocks. An integrated approach was performed combining petrography, whole rock geochemistry, and isocon–τ relative mass balance modeling to decipher fluid–rock interaction and element mobility. 

Detailed petrography (based on microscopy work with thin sections) show that the six sites exhibit different alteration stages ranging from weak alteration over mafic phenocryst alteration (reducing versus oxidizing) to palagonite and zeolite formation. Mass balance modeling allows us to establish alteration pathways where Miocene units follow a path of pronounced alkali leaching and Mn depletion, whereas Pliocene high‑alkaline units display more variable pathways. 

The site‑specific fingerprints delineate contrasting nutrient and redox landscapes that provide a geochemical baseline for further studies on soil development and vegetation. 

How to cite: Tenczer, V., von Hagke, C., Hopfinger, M., Hörger, A. C., Topalović, E., and Strähler, I.: Alteration pathways in Cenozoic volcanic suites of the Styrian Basin: an integrated petrographic–geochemical approach , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5095, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5095, 2026.

Significant breakthroughs have been made recently in petroleum exploration within ultra-deep (burial depth > 6,000 m) carbonates in the Tarim Basin, northwestern China. The discovery of several large-scale oil and gas accumulation (e.g., Shunbei and Fuman) in these deeply buried, highly fractured and vuggy carbonates highlights the crucial role of strike-slip faults in reservoir development. However, the formation mechanisms of these ultra-deep, fault-controlled carbonate reservoirs remain poorly understood. It is therefore essential to conduct experimental simulations investigating the controlling factors and evolutionary trends governing the impact of deep CO₂-rich fluids on carbonate rocks.

For this reason, experiments were performed by using an ultra-deep, multi-tectonic-stage, high-temperature and high-pressure reservoir simulation system. This study focused on two key aspects, the dissolution mechanisms of dolomite in CO₂-saturated solutions, and the evolutionary trends of pore structure in carbonate rocks with different initial pore types during dissolution. Overall, two major findings were obtained. First, within temperature of 40–220 °C and pressure of 10–132 MPa, the saturated dissolution capacity of dolomite in CO₂-rich fluids exhibited an initial increase that was followed by a decrease, with the maximum dissolution occurred approximately at 60–110°C. This provides the theoretical basis for predicting favorable depth intervals where large-scale secondary pores may be formed in dolomite by deep CO₂-rich fluids. Second, influenced by the deep CO2-rich fluid dissolution, both pore-dominated and fracture-dominated limestones tend to transform into fracture-vug reservoirs. Dissolution preferentially occurred along major fractures, gradually enhancing reservoir space and percolation capacity, ultimately becoming concentrated within these main fracture systems.

These results led to the construction of a genetic model for the development of fault-controlled, fracture-vug carbonate reservoirs. When deep CO2-rich fluid activity coincides with fault development periods, fluids preferentially migrate into main faults, leading to dissolution-enlarged porosity along fault planes. When fluids migrate to fault intersections, they stagnate and induce dissolution and connectivity to form vugs. The fluids continue to expand along multiple sets of pre-existing faults, stagnating at new fault intersections to create more vugs. Such dissolution cycles are controlled by the episodic regional tectono-fluid activity. Ultimately, early-formed fracture-vug systems may become merged to formwell-connected fracture-vug reservoirs with superior reservoir performance. This model effectively explains the differences in dissolution and modification effects observed in different segments of strike-slip faults and clarifies the underlying mechanisms.

How to cite: She, M., Qiao, Z., and Liu, Y.: Influence of Deep CO₂-Charged Fluids on the Development of Carbonate Reservoirs in Fault-Controlled, Ultra-Deep burial setting: Insights from Water-Rock Interaction Experiment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6340, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6340, 2026.

Deep fluid activities driven by strike-slip fault movement play important roles in the modification of carbonate and hydrocarbon accumulation. The complexities of deep fluid sources and temperature-pressure variations during strike-slip fault movement complicate fluid-rock reactions, diagenetic modification processes and the formation and evolution of reservoirs in deep to ultradeep carbonate strata. To understand the temporal-spatial coupling between strike-slip movement and deep fluid migration, we investigate the migration periods and sources of deep fluids along strike-slip fault belts in the Fuman Area of the Tarim Basin, considering the geometry of the strike-slip faults and analysing laser ablation U-Pb dating, clumped isotopes, REE, and fluid inclusions in diagenetic products such as calcite, chert, and quartz.

U-Pb age results indicate that vug-filling calcites were emplaced between 460.8 ± 3.4 and 448.6 ± 5.3 Ma, and at 335 ± 19 Ma during the early Hercynian orogeny, while the fracture-filling and megacrystalline calcites formed between 364 ± 53 and 282.9 ± 5.4 Ma, and during periods from 324 ± 23 to 300.9 ± 4.8 Ma and from 244.13 ± 13 to 240.5 ± 4.1 Ma, respectively. The latest fracture-filling calcites show a slightly younger U-Pb age of ca. 158 ± 17 Ma. In addition, the U-Pb ages for the chert and quartz in fractures (459 ± 57 Ma, 252 ± 56 Ma, and 174 ± 35 Ma) fall within the middle Caledonian, late Hercynian, and Yanshanian periods.

The combination of geochemical analyses on calcites, including clumped isotopes, d13C, d18O, and 87Sr/86Sr isotopes, REE, and fluid d18O calculation, suggests that these calcites were precipitated from formation fluids mostly of meteoric water origin with some input from hydrothermal fluids. Hydrothermal fluid flow resulted from strike-slip fault activity and volcanism, whereas meteoric water intruded from uplifted areas along the faults during tectonic quiescence. This study shows that the formation of fracture-related cavern reservoirs in the Fuman oil field is related to the early Hercynian, late Hercynian, and Yanshanian tectonic events and their associated fluid activity. The methodologies and outcomes of the present study may guide future hydrocarbon exploration in the Tarim Basin and be applied to other oil fields with similar tectonic backgrounds.

How to cite: Qiao, Z.: Fluid activities Controlled by Intra-craton Strike-slip Faults: A Case Study of Ordovician in Fuman Area in Tarim Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6851, 2026.

Abstract

The volcanic rocks of the Mesoproterozoic Xiong’er Group (Changcheng System) in the Ordos Basin are pervasively albitized, a phenomenon mainly attributed to lava-seawater interaction. Understanding the mineralogical and textural imprints of this alteration is therefore essential.

This study focuses on deep core samples of the Xiong’er Group from the southwestern Ordos Basin. An integrated methodology was applied, combining petrographic observation with geochemical analyses (major and trace elements, TIMA automated mineralogy, C-O isotopes, and zircon U-Pb dating). Our results confirm intense lava-seawater alteration in the Xiong’er Group magmas and define the diagnostic mineral assemblages and textures produced by this process. Additionally, a comparative analysis with coeval volcanic rocks from the eastern Ordos Basin was conducted to reconstruct the tectonic environment during magma genesis.

Key findings are summarized as follows:

(1) Core and thin-section observations reveal volcanic rocks with vesicular-amygdaloidal textures, plagioclase-phyric porphyritic structures, and interbedded sedimentary layers. Distinct dark-reddish alteration zones occur along lithological contacts. Microscopically, the rocks show porphyritic texture with feldspar phenocrysts in a cryptocrystalline groundmass. Vesicles are commonly filled with calcite, quartz and chlorite.

(2) Geochemical data indicate that the Xiong’er Group volcanic rocks in the southwest basin are predominantly basaltic. They exhibit high alkalinity (σ = 4.6~10.6) alongside anomalous silica contents, classifying them as basic to intermediate igneous rocks. Rare earth element patterns are consistent with an intracontinental rift setting linked to mantle plume activity, with evidence of crustal contamination.

(3) TIMA automated mineralogical mapping shows that feldspar phenocrysts in the basalts are exclusively albite. The groundmass is pervasively altered by chloritization and argillization. Slilceous sediments occur widely, filling vesicles in basalts and appearing within sedimentary rocks at basaltic contacts.

(4) Marked petrological and geochemical differences exist between the Xiong’er Group volcanic rocks in the southwest and eastern Ordos Basin, reflecting contrasting tectono-magmatic environments-intracontinental rift versus continental arc settings.

The results advance the understanding of mineral alteration and element exchange during such interactions at the micro-scale and provide key mineralogical constraints on lava-seawater alteration processes.

Keywords

Xiong’er Group, Volcanic Rocks, Lava-Seawater Interaction, Alteration Mineralogy, Geochemistry, Ordos Basin

How to cite: Ren, Y. and Chen, Z.: Lava-Seawater Interaction of the Mesoproterozoic Xiong’er Group Volcanic Rocks in the Southwestern Ordos Basin: Insights from Alteration Mineralogy and Geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7121, 2026.

Geological fluids play crucial roles in the stabilisation of minerals and in the mobilization and redistribution of elements during mid- to lower-crustal metamorphism, thereby influencing the chemical evolution of continental crust. The current study demonstrates extensive fluid-induced alterations and formation of a highly peraluminous (A/CNK~30), ferromagnesian yet silica-calcium and alkali-poor rock from the Makrohar granulite belt, part of the Proterozoic mobile belt, Central Indian Tectonic Zone. The study demonstrates a black, garnet-rich, massive rock composed of garnet, cordierite, sillimanite, quartz, and ilmenite, lacking gneissic banding and intruded by multiple veins in the outcrop. Thin microscopic veinlets consist of biotite (80% modal volume) with smaller proportions of quartz±cordierite and fibrolites. Late-stage veins of variable thickness, evident from the outcrop scale, contain coarse-grained sillimanite-quartz-garnet, with large sillimanite grains growing at high angles to the vein boundary, indicating a syntaxial growth. Vein garnets frequently grow inward from the vein wall, often growing on older garnet in the host. Phase equilibrium modelling, coupled with conventional thermobarometry, constrains the P-T conditions of the stabilization of the host rock at approximately 600ºC and 5 kbar. Slightly magnesian cores of the host garnet (XMg) yield marginally higher temperatures (~680ºC) than the rim (garnet isopleth yielding ~580ºC).

Garnet grains in the host rock display a distinct positive europium anomaly (Eu/Eu*), likely resulting from garnet growth in the absence of plagioclase. A moderate Gd/Dy ratio in the host garnet indicates stabilization at approximately 4 kbar, supporting low-pressure estimates from conventional barometry and phase-equilibria modelling. Rim-to-rim trace element profiles along host garnet grains show a uniform distribution of Sc, Y, and HREEs in the core, with oscillations and a sharp increase near the rim, suggesting that reverse zoning in HREEs was likely caused by homogenization by intragranular diffusion in the core but remained largely unaffected towards the rim. Whole-rock chemistry of the host, feldspar-free high-variance mineralogy, absence of leucosome and reverse zoning of Y-HREE, positive Eu/Eu* within garnet indicate potential metasomatic alteration of the host itself.

Garnets within the quartz-sillimanite veins exhibit distinct oscillations in trace element concentrations along wall-to-wall line scans, indicating minimal effects of diffusion and grain growth in the presence of vein-fluid. Ca and Mn zoning within vein garnet exactly replicate each other with gradual increase from vein-wall to vein-axis regions of the grains. Y and HREEs show resonating patterns with sharp central peaks in the mid-axis and oscillatory zoning within the vein-wall garnet portions. Sc and MREEs, i.e., Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb still show central peaks along with an annular maxima added with the oscillation within the vein-wall garnets. REE mobilization, at least in micro-scale, is further evident from large monazite clusters observed in sillimanite-quartz-garnet veins. The presence of large sillimanite grains further demonstrates the fluid's capacity to transport aluminium. The absence of any hydrous phases in the vein supports the prevalence of low-H2O-bearing fluid. XCO2-µK2O and µK2O-µFeO topology further confirms that the intrusion of low-H2O fluid presumably destabilized the host biotite, producing garnet and quartz in the vein.

How to cite: Chakrabarty, A., Anczkiewicz, R., and Sanyal, S.: Fluid-induced redistribution of REEs within alumino-silicate veins and peraluminous host rock in the Central Indian Tectonic Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7449, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7449, 2026.

EGU26-7493 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

How hard do crystals push when growing under confinement? Real-time measurements of surface forces during hydration of periclase to brucite 

Viktoria Trautner, Melania Rogowska, Oliver Plümper, Ola Nilsen, and Joanna Dziadkowiec

Interactions between minerals and reactive fluids in porous rocks and building materials often result in crystallization of new minerals. The forces exerted by minerals growing under confinement on the surrounding matrix can be large enough to cause fracturing. Fractures expose new reactive surfaces, leading to progressive disintegration of the material. These processes can result in severe damage to cultural heritage and modern infrastructure, as well as changes in the rheological properties and weathering of natural rocks. Understanding and controlling volume-expanding mineral replacement reactions in pore spaces is thus an important objective to address both societal and geological issues. While crystallization pressures have been measured at larger scales, nanoscale force evolution during confined mineral growth remains poorly constrained.

Here, we investigate volume-expansive mineral reactions in pores spaces by studying the hydration of MgO (periclase) in the Surface Forces Apparatus (SFA). Hydration of MgO to Mg(OH)­2 (brucite) causes a volume increase to 220%, yielding high crystallization pressures. We use MgO thin films (~90 nm) prepared by atomic layer deposition as reactive surfaces in our experiments, which are performed at the Flow Laboratory, Njord Center, University of Oslo. With the SFA, we measure distance-resolved adhesive and repulsive forces acting between two MgO surfaces under variable external load and how these change over time as the reaction progresses. Preliminary results indicate evolution of forces from strongly adhesive to repulsive during the hydration reaction, likely due to the presence of amorphous, gel-like precursors in the early stages of the reaction. As a reference for the SFA experiments, we study the hydration of isolated MgO surfaces with Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). This allows us to compare nucleation and growth rates, as well as microstructure and porosity of Mg(OH)­2 grown in SFA and AFM.

How to cite: Trautner, V., Rogowska, M., Plümper, O., Nilsen, O., and Dziadkowiec, J.: How hard do crystals push when growing under confinement? Real-time measurements of surface forces during hydration of periclase to brucite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7493, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7493, 2026.

We investigate infiltration of an aqueous fluid into granitic rocks by means of numerical models at the field scale. Our methodology is based on a finite difference approach for solving the transport problem in combination with lookup tables generated from precomputed thermodynamic equilibria covering the compositional space. We also compare results to an approach involving on-the-fly calculation of local equilibrium between fluid and rock. Porosity and density evolution is predicted based on mass conservation. The ability to predict porosity evolution is valuable to better understand applications such as enhanced geothermal systems (EGS). The prediction of reaction zone sequences is also helpful in the understanding of ore deposit formation. We demonstrate how sensitive the metasomatic zoning sequences are to varying rock and fluid composition. As an example, we model metasomatic zone sequences observed in topaz-greisen to show how metasomatic sequences comprising multiple lithologies can be formed in one event with constant incoming fluid composition as boundary condition. Lithological zones formed along fractures do not necessarily imply temporal changes in the fluid composition of the source.

How to cite: Vrijmoed, J. C. and John, T.: Numerical modelling of an aqueous F-Cl-Na-K-Al bearing fluid in local equilibrium with granitic rocks with relevance to enhanced geothermal systems and ore deposit formation., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7508, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7508, 2026.

Bedding-parallel fibrous calcite veins in organic-rich shale are commonly regarded as petrographic archives of abnormal pore-fluid overpressure and associated hydrocarbon expulsion and migration. Their formation reflects a dynamic cycle of fracture opening, fluid ingress and mineral precipitation, and subsequent re-opening. Constraining the evolutionary model of BPFVs and evaluating their influence on hydrocarbon accumulation are therefore of clear significance. In lacustrine shale systems, the sources of vein-forming fluids and the extent to which BPFV development couples with organic-matter maturation, overpressure generation, and hydrocarbon accumulation remain poorly constrained. This study investigates lacustrine shale of the second member of the Paleogene Funing Formation (E1f2) in the Qintong Sag, Subei Basin. Core observations, petrographic thin sections, and cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging were used to characterize vein petrography and constrain vein growth stages. Fluid inclusion petrography and microthermometry were conducted to define inclusion assemblages and homogenization-temperature (Th). Carbon–oxygen–strontium (C–O–Sr) isotopes and PAAS-normalized rare earth element (REE) patterns were integrated to diagnose vein forming fluid sources. These datasets were further evaluated against BasinMod-1D burial–thermal–hydrocarbon generation modeling to link Th stages with source-rock maturity and to assess the coupling between BPFVs and hydrocarbon accumulation. The results show that the BPFVs contain a well-defined median zone and symmetric antitaxial fibrous fabrics. Multiple internal growth records indicate repeated fracture opening and sealing. Oil inclusions commonly associated with aqueous inclusions, suggesting that hydrocarbons and formation water entered the bedding-parallel fractures during opening and were co-trapped during vein precipitation. Aqueous-inclusion Th values cluster into two populations (90–100°C and 120–130°C), matching the initial oil window and the main oil generation stage inferred from burial–thermal–hydrocarbon generation histories, and implying at least two vein filling episodes synchronous with source-rock thermal evolution. Geochemical data further show that vein calcite and host-rock carbonates share similar carbon sources and PAAS-normalized REE patterns, with no evidence for high temperature hydrothermal input. These observations indicate that vein forming fluids were dominated by basin-internal diagenetic pore waters, modified by fluids released during hydrocarbon generation and by sustained water–rock interaction. Based on these evidences, we propose a conceptual model for the development of BPFVs. Organic-matter thermal evolution elevates pore-fluid pressure and drives episodic opening of fractures along mechanically weak bedding planes. During opening, these fractures act as short-range pathways for hydrocarbon migration within the shale. Subsequent calcite precipitation partially to completely seals the fractures, preserving time-transgressive fluid properties and migration episodes in veins and fluid-inclusion assemblages. This framework provides key evidence for the dynamic coupling between the formation–evolution of bedding-parallel fractures and hydrocarbon accumulation in lacustrine shale, and offers a reference for reconstructing charging histories and timing in analogous lacustrine shale systems.

How to cite: Cao, S., Zeng, L., and Liu, G.: Fluid Sources of Bedding-Parallel Fibrous Veins in Lacustrine Shales and Their Implications for Hydrocarbon Accumulation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7664, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7664, 2026.

EGU26-8135 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.5

Controls of fault mechanics on mineral precipitation in gold-bearing fault-veins, Indiana Deposit, Northern Chile 

Ashley Stanton-Yonge, Michele Fondriest, Pamela Pérez-Flores, Martin Marquardt, Felipe Reinoso, and José Cembrano

Many epithermal ore deposits form in fault-veins that channel large volumes of vertical fluid flow synkinematic with fault slip. A key genetic process is the interplay among fluid flow, fault activation, and mineral precipitation; however, significant questions remain regarding the mechanics of fault slip under high fluid-flux conditions and its impact on mineralisation. A fundamental question is whether ore deposition is coseismic, post-seismic, or interseismic—specifically, whether pressure drops during seismic rupture are the dominant trigger for mineral precipitation, or whether mineralisation occurs during longer-lived, aseismic creep and sealing cycles. A deeper understanding of these processes is essential for predicting ore grade and spatial distribution.

The Cretaceous Indiana deposit, located in the Coastal Cordillera of northern Chile, is a Cu–Au (Mo–Co) fault-vein system composed of several subvertical NW- or ENE-striking fault veins, with lengths ranging from 300 m to 2 km. Artisanal tunnels provide access to multiple structural levels in oxides and sulphides mineralization, offering exceptional three-dimensional exposure. NW-striking fault-veins host Au–Cu-Fe–Co-rich mineral assemblages associated with pyrite, chalcopyrite, magnetite, actinolite, albite, garnet, epidote, quartz, tourmaline, and late jarosite, clay and hematite. These are cross-cut by ENE-striking fault-veins containing Au–Cu–Mo-Co mineralisation in pyrite and chalcopyrite paragenetically associated with garnet, epidote, actinolite, quartz, and less sericite. High-grade ore shoots commonly occur in dilatational jogs and at the intersections between these two structural sets.

Fault-veins are 1–3 m wide and display complex internal structures. Fault zones of variable thickness occur along the vein margins and mainly record strike-slip motion, expressed as thin (<10 cm) clay-rich gouge bands or thicker (20–80 cm) foliated cataclasites. Ore-bearing veins commonly occur adjacent to these zones and display varied widths, textures, and mineral assemblages. Gold is hosted by quartz or amorphous silica, either free or in pyrite. Brecciated and banded veins record multiple mineralisation events, whereas comb quartz textures with 2–5 cm euhedral crystals indicate slow growth in open space.

Microstructural analyses document multiple episodes of quartz deposition in the form of subparallel and superposed veins that cross-cut clasts of the andesitic host rock. Some brecciated bands contain spherical clasts completely surrounded by concentric cement bands, forming cockade-like structures that suggest fluidised conditions in which cement precipitation occurred while clasts were suspended.

This preliminary evidence indicates the coexistence of long-lived mineralisation processes and cyclic, short-lived deposition events, likely linked to repeated fault activation. Ongoing analyses integrating microstructural observations with mineral chemistry aim to constrain the fault-slip mechanisms responsible for specific mineralisation styles.

How to cite: Stanton-Yonge, A., Fondriest, M., Pérez-Flores, P., Marquardt, M., Reinoso, F., and Cembrano, J.: Controls of fault mechanics on mineral precipitation in gold-bearing fault-veins, Indiana Deposit, Northern Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8135, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8135, 2026.

EGU26-8177 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Grain-scale residual stress distribution associated with fluid-induced plagioclase breakdown  

Sascha Zertani, Hugo W. van Schrojenstein Lantman, Lisa Kaatz, Alireza Chogani, Oliver Plümper, Luca Menegon, and Timm John

The magnitude and distribution of stress in Earth’s crust is difficult to quantify, but impacts deformation behavior, phase stability, and metamorphic reactions. Stress is influenced by a variety of factors including compositional heterogeneities, volume changes during ongoing reactions, and the influence of far-field stresses. During metamorphic reactions the stress distribution may be modified, but prevailing stresses may also impact reaction kinetics, or which reactions take place. We studied one of the most impactful reactions within the continental crust; the fluid-induced breakdown of plagioclase at high-pressure conditions. The samples are from former lower-crustal granulites exposed on Holsnøy, western Norway. They preserve a reaction front along which the dry granulite is transformed into an eclogite. Reaction progress is intimately linked to fluid ingress and there is no microstructural evidence of deformation. This lack of deformation indicates that the studied microstructures are entirely related to fluid-induced metamorphic reactions. We measured the residual stress associated with plagioclase breakdown by high-angular resolution electron backscatter diffraction and contrasted the results with compositional variations (scanning electron microscope and electron probe micro analyzer). (Scanning) transmission electron microscopy was conducted on selected sites to link this information with the associated dislocation configuration. We find that intragrain residual stress associated with the breakdown of plagioclase is on the order of hundreds of megapascals, and dominantly caused by the elastic interactions of dislocations. Before the reaction plagioclase contains few, randomly oriented dislocations. Compositional modification of plagioclase during the reaction (increasing albite content) leads to dislocations occurring more frequently in the more albitic part of the plagioclase. In that case, dislocations have a preferred orientation, but no significant long-range increase in dislocation density, i.e., increased organization. Our results thus suggest that as plagioclase breaks down, dislocations are mobilized to accommodate the variations in lattice parameters associated with hundreds-of-megapascal stress variations on the grain scale.

How to cite: Zertani, S., van Schrojenstein Lantman, H. W., Kaatz, L., Chogani, A., Plümper, O., Menegon, L., and John, T.: Grain-scale residual stress distribution associated with fluid-induced plagioclase breakdown , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8177, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8177, 2026.

EGU26-9041 | Orals | TS1.5

High-pressure metamorphism induced porosity in mafic rocks – wet vs. dry 

Anna Rogowitz, Gerald Degenhart, Jürgen Konzett, Benjamin Huet, Wolfgang Stoiber, and Peter Tropper

Fluid–rock interaction, and thus fluid flow plays a fundamental role in geological processes from the shallow crust to mantle depths. In the upper crust, fluid flow is predominantly controlled by brittle features and interconnected porosity. In contrast, at lower crustal conditions, elevated lithostatic pressures are commonly assumed to inhibit fracturing and major porosity, leaving unresolved how fluids migrate at depth. To investigate porosity development during high-pressure metamorphism of initially impermeable mafic rocks, we conducted a series of piston-cylinder experiments that varied reaction duration and fluid availability. Dolerite from the Kerforne dyke (Brittany, France) was used as starting material. Cylindrical samples (2.8 mm diameter, ~3.5 mm length) were characterized prior to experimentation using X-ray micro-computed microtomography (µCT; 3 µm Isovoxel), enabling three-dimensional quantification of mineral fabric, modal proportions, and initial porosity. The starting dolerite consists of ~50–65% plagioclase, 20–30% pyroxene, up to 10% ilmenite, and minor quartz, with an initial porosity of ~0.1%. The fabric is near-isotropic and dominated by randomly oriented plagioclase grains up to 300 µm in length.

Experiments were performed under quasi hydrostatic conditions at 700 °C and 2.4 GPa for varying durations. To evaluate the influence of fluid availability on reaction progress and porosity evolution, three experimental setups were employed: (1) nominally dry conditions without added fluid, (2) addition of paragonite as a source of fluid and sodium, and (3) addition of 5 vol% water (“wet” conditions). Wet experiments were conducted for durations of 1, 7, and 21 days to assess the temporal evolution of reactions.

Following experimentation, all samples were re-imaged using µCT, allowing three-dimensional mapping of reaction progress and porosity development. Largely unreactive Fe–Ti oxides served as internal markers, enabling accurate registration of pre- and post-experimental µCT datasets and direct comparison between the protolith and reaction products. Three-dimensional observations were complemented by high-resolution two-dimensional analyses using electron probe microanalysis and scanning electron microscopy.
Reaction progress increases systematically with fluid availability, from dry to paragonite-bearing to water-added conditions. Under nominally dry conditions, reactions are restricted to narrow zones along pyroxene–plagioclase interfaces and plagioclase grain boundaries, producing predominantly fine-grained zoisite needles (<5 µm). In paragonite-bearing experiments, reaction intensity increases within plagioclase, characterized by the growth of zoisite and phengite, while jadeite forms along pyroxene–plagioclase boundaries. In contrast, wet experiments result in complete replacement of plagioclase within 7 days by an assemblage of zoisite, phengite, amphibole, and minor omphacite and quartz. Pyroxene develops narrow reaction rims (<30 µm wide) marked by increasing Al and Na and decreasing Fe and Ca contents, while garnet occurs as idiomorphic grains in the fine-grained matrix or as coronae surrounding oxides.
Porosity development is closely coupled to reaction progress, and three distinct porosity types are identified: (1) micro- to nanopores within plagioclase reaction products, (2) nanopores within pyroxene reaction rims, and (3) microfractures. The first two porosity types are interpreted to result from volume reduction associated with density increases during metamorphic reactions, whereas microfractures likely form in response to stress concentrations and elevated pore-fluid pressures.  

How to cite: Rogowitz, A., Degenhart, G., Konzett, J., Huet, B., Stoiber, W., and Tropper, P.: High-pressure metamorphism induced porosity in mafic rocks – wet vs. dry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9041, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9041, 2026.

The presence or absence of fluids strongly affects rock rheology. Lawsonite is a very hydrous mineral (~12 wt.% H2O), characteristic of cold subduction zones. Its destabilization may generate fluid overpressure, reduce effective stress, and trigger brittle failure through dehydration embrittlement. On the other hand, its H2O-consuming growth may deplete available fluids from the matrix and drive the rock dry. The quantity of lawsonite, the locus of maximum dehydration, and the amount of fluids produced/consumed depend on the pressure-temperature (P-T) path of the subducted crust. An accurate interpretation of P-T paths of natural blueschists is therefore crucial.

At Ile de Groix (Armorican Massif, France), garnet-bearing blueschists display cm-sized lawsonite pseudomorphs smoothly wrapped by an epidote- and glaucophane-bearing foliated matrix. Both garnet and pseudomorphed lawsonite porphyroblasts contain sigmoidal inclusion trails of fine-grained oriented epidote, glaucophane and titanite, continuous with the matrix schistosity. Garnet is zoned (rimward decrease of Mn and increase of Mg) and locally included in pseudomorphed lawsonite. Lawsonite pseudomorphs comprise coarse unoriented epidote, paragonite and chlorite. Textural analysis therefore suggests a prograde synkinematic growth of garnet and lawsonite in an epidote-bearing matrix. In the light of calculated phase diagrams, this points to a prograde P-T path dominated by a near-isothermal compression from LT epidote-blueschist facies toward peak pressure conditions in the epidote + lawsonite stability field, at ~19 kbar and ~550°C, consistent with garnet rim composition and modal proportions of major phases. 

Thermodynamic modeling further indicates that lawsonite growth in an epidote-bearing blueschist leads to the complete consumption of free fluid, resulting in a dry, fluid-absent rock near peak pressure conditions. However, dry rocks are commonly stronger than their wet equivalents. Our results thus suggest that, contrary to common expectations, hydration reactions may locally induce an increase in rock strength, as exemplified by lawsonite crystallization during the prograde transition from epidote- to lawsonite-blueschist subfacies. Such reactions could provide an explanation for earthquakes occurring within the lawsonite stability field, well prior to its destabilization.

How to cite: Pichouron, R., Pitra, P., and Yamato, P.: Prograde P-T path of lawsonite-bearing blueschists: insights from Ile de Groix and implications for fluid content and rheology of subducted oceanic crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9564, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9564, 2026.

EGU26-10026 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Experimental constraints on the kinetics of the albite = jadeite + quartz reaction depending on grain size and reaction overstepping 

Simon Schorn, Zongpeng Yang, Friedrich Hawemann, Stephan Buhre, Roman Botcharnikov, and Evangelos Moulas

Densification and deformation during eclogitization govern the strength and buoyancy of orogenic roots and the stability of mountain ranges over geological timespans. The breakdown of albite to jadeite + quartz represents a key end-member reaction that is associated with densification of about 20%; shear stresses induced by such volumetric changes may cause brittle failure and have been linked to intermediate-depth seismicity (Yamato et al., 2022). Eclogitization is a kinetically sluggish process that requires significant reaction overstepping and may proceed far beyond the equilibrium pressure–temperature conditions, and/or remain largely incomplete – particularly in fluid-deficient felsic crust as evidenced by field observations (Palin et al., 2017) and geophysical constraints (Hetényi et al., 2021). However, the kinetics of the albite = jadeite + quartz reaction is poorly constrained, especially regarding the roles of grain size, pressure–temperature overstepping, and reaction duration. To address this gap, we conducted high-pressure experiments using a piston-cylinder apparatus at the Institute of Geosciences, JGU Mainz. Natural albite crystals were crushed and sieved into grain size fractions between 50 and 500 µm, loaded into Au-capsules, and separated by Au-foils. A subset of experiments involved furnace-drying (~500°C) of the starting materials followed by hot-welding of the capsules to minimize atmospheric moisture contamination. In experimental stage I, pressure was initially set just below (~1 kbar) the albite = jadeite + quartz reaction boundary (Holland, 1980), followed by heating to target temperature. In stage II, pressure was increased at constant temperature to variable target pressures above the reaction to systematically explore the effect of reaction overstepping. Samples where quenched by power shutdown, and reaction progress was quantified using scanning electron microscopy (backscattered electron imaging and cathodoluminescence) based on the relative fractions of reactant albite and products jadeite–quartz. Preliminary results reveal highly variable degrees of reaction progress. Where present, jadeite–quartz occur as finely intergrown symplectites, typically decorating albite grains at the rims, as well as forming within larger albite grains. The latter textures indicate complications arising from fluid inclusions in the starting material. By combining constraints on P(T) overstep, grain size, and experimental run duration, we determine effective reaction rates for albite breakdown. These results provide end-member kinetic constraints on high-pressure transformation in fluid-deficient, coarse-grained felsic rocks, which constitute the bulk of many well-known (U)HP terranes such as the Western Gneiss Region (Norway) and the Dabie–Sulu belt (China).

References

Hetényi, G. et al. (2021). Metamorphic transformation rate over large spatial and temporal scales constrained by geophysical data and coupled modelling. Journal of Metamorphic Geology, 39(9), 1131–1143.

Holland, T. J. (1980). The reaction albite = jadeite + quartz determined experimentally in the range 600–1200°C. American Mineralogist, 65(1-2), 129–134.

Palin, R. et al. (2017). Subduction metamorphism in the Himalayan ultrahigh-pressure Tso Morari massif: an integrated geodynamic and petrological modelling approach. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 467, 108–119.

Yamato, P. et al. (2022). Reaction-induced volume change triggers brittle failure at eclogite facies conditions. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 584, 117520.

How to cite: Schorn, S., Yang, Z., Hawemann, F., Buhre, S., Botcharnikov, R., and Moulas, E.: Experimental constraints on the kinetics of the albite = jadeite + quartz reaction depending on grain size and reaction overstepping, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10026, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10026, 2026.

EGU26-10373 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Evolving fluid pathways in a shallow mega-thrust shear zone (Northern Apennines, Italy) 

Martina Rocca, Silvia Mittempergher, Francesca Remitti, Giancarlo Molli, Marta Gasparrini, Friedrich Hawemann, Renato Diamanti, Nereo Preto, and Telemaco Tesei

Megathrust shear zones are weak interplate faults that accommodate deformation under low effective stress in a fluid-rich environment. The evolution of stress and fluids during megathrusts activity can be reconstructed from syn- and post-tectonic mineral veins in exhumed settings.

The Sestola–Vidiciatico Unit (SVU) in the Northern Apennines is a fossil analogue of a shallow subduction megathrust mélange. It represents the plate boundary shear zone (200–400 m thick) between the Ligurian prism and the underthrusted Adria microplate active during the early–middle Miocene with peak temperatures of ~170 °C. The SVU is composed of kilometre-scale slices of marls, shales and sandstones derived from the Ligurian prism and its sedimentary cover, thrust along a basal décollement onto younger Adria-derived foredeep turbidites.

This study focuses on a well-exposed outcrop along a south-dipping thrust ramp of the basal décollement of the SVU. The footwall consists of sandstones and siltstones of Langhian age, overthrust by a slice of Aquitanian marls, and by an upper slice of Priabonian – Bartonian claystone. We performed structural mapping, microstructural and geochemical analyses (O-C stable isotopes, trace and major element geochemistry), and fluid inclusion studies on calcites filling shear and extensional veins and cementing tectonic breccias.

Marls and claystones within the SVU are bounded by sharp thrust surfaces decorated by multiple generations of shear veins. In the vicinity of the main thrusts, marls and claystone are crosscut by pervasive shear fractures, bounding flattened and elongated lithons defining a foliation at low angle to the thrusts. Deformation in the footwall includes oblique cleavage, bedding-parallel shear planes, and a conjugated set of NNE-SSW left-lateral and N-S trending right-lateral subvertical transtensional faults showing mutually crosscutting relationships with the basal thrust of the SVU. Calcite shear veins mark thrust surfaces, whereas transtensional faults in the footwall are marked by shear and extension veins, as well as calcite-cemented breccias. Two different calcite phases have been observed: an early-stage calcite, rich in host-rock inclusions and a later inclusion-free calcite.

Geochemical and thermometric results point to two groups of distinct mineralizing fluids circulating through the fracture network: (1) diluted seawater precipitating early-stage calcites at low temperatures (< 50 °C up to 70 °C); (2) an external low-salinity fluid precipitating later-stage calcites at higher temperatures (~80-100° C).

Our data suggest a transition from low temperature and low salinity fluids, possibly from mixing of seawater and fluids released from clay dehydration during progressive burial of the SVU, to the ingression of moderately hot fluids (up to 120 °C) external from the system. This indicates that the onset of fluid circulation by faulting is modulated by the embrittlement and seismic ruptures in subduction zones, favoured by a low-stressed environment.

How to cite: Rocca, M., Mittempergher, S., Remitti, F., Molli, G., Gasparrini, M., Hawemann, F., Diamanti, R., Preto, N., and Tesei, T.: Evolving fluid pathways in a shallow mega-thrust shear zone (Northern Apennines, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10373, 2026.

EGU26-11740 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.5

Carbonate concretions as proxy for methane-enriched fluid flow in high-porosity sandstone: example from Crotone forearc Basin, Italy 

Mattia Pizzati, Luigi Riccardo Berio, Cristian Cavozzi, Anita Torabi, and Fabrizio Balsamo

Diagenetic processes exert a strong control on reservoir potential, heavily impacting the exploitation of strategic fossil resources (oil and gas), preservation and management of aquifers, and underground storage of anthropogenic CO2. Therefore, in high porosity media such as sandstones, the study of selective cementation is crucial to the quantification of reservoir properties and quality. The outcrop-based analysis of cementation types and patterns could unravel fossil fluid flow pathways affecting porous reservoir analogues.

This study is focused on the selective cementation of fluvio-deltaic, Lower to Middle Pliocene age, sandstone to conglomeratic bodies exposed in the Crotone forearc Basin, South Italy. The siliciclastic unit was deposited in a shallow marine setting and reaches a maximum thickness of ~200 m, unconformably overlying the Paleozoic Sila Massif metamorphic basement. The sandstone sequence is almost devoid of diagenetic cement thus preserving most of the original primary porosity. Sandstone beds show a gentle tilting towards SE, with mild brittle deformation in the form of deformation bands and low-displacement faults. Selective cementation of host sandstone can be traced as diagenetic concretions of different shapes and sizes. Concretion types span from tabular-lens shaped with lateral extension up to 10’s m, elongate blade-shaped from 10 cm up to several 10’s meter-long, asymmetric drop-shaped and nodular-spherical bodies. The elongation direction of concretions parallels the southeastward dip of bedding surfaces, while in the vicinity of deformation bands and faults, elongate concretions are parallel to their dip. Pervasive calcite precipitation was responsible for the dramatic porosity loss from 27-32% down to 2-3%, leading to an increase in sandstone cohesion and stiffness. The stiffness increase can be documented in tightly cemented bodies that host 2-3 sets of joints abutting at the concretion-host rock boundary. Cold cathodoluminescence revealed the ubiquitous presence of bright yellow, granular to poikilitic calcite cement in all concretions. Carbon and Oxygen stable isotopes of calcite cement suggest two fluid sources responsible for the selective cementation. The first source can be traced in weakly cemented lens-shaped bodies and along secondary faults and is made of mixed marine-meteoric fluids with contributions from soil percolation. Conversely, the second source can be detected in tightly cemented lens-shaped and nodular to elongate concretions and is given by a mix of marine fluids with contributions from biogenic methane likely related to biological-bacterial activity in a shallow marine setting. The evolution of fluids from meteoric to marine can be associated with a transgressive sea level rise and upward basin-boundary fault propagation that occurred during and after sandstone deposition. The source of methane could be traced in the thick evaporitic (gypsum and anhydrite) sequence underneath the studied sandstone formation, providing large volume of biogenic methane. Methane enriched fluids migrated vertically following major basin-boundary faults permeating the high porosity sandstone and mixed with meteoric to marine fluids providing bed-parallel fluid flow imparted by the hydraulic and topographic gradient.

How to cite: Pizzati, M., Berio, L. R., Cavozzi, C., Torabi, A., and Balsamo, F.: Carbonate concretions as proxy for methane-enriched fluid flow in high-porosity sandstone: example from Crotone forearc Basin, Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11740, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11740, 2026.

EGU26-12642 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.5

Grain boundary processes from the deep continental crust to the surface (ICDP-DIVE, Drilling the Ivrea-Verbano Zone) 

Etienne Linden, Friedrich Hawemann, Marco Venier, and Virginia Toy and the DIVE science Team

Fluid transport, precipitation and accompanying mineral reactions along grain boundaries are among the most important processes impacting the rheology of the crust and the formation of mineral deposits. Porosity and permeability that constantly evolve during fluid flow govern major petrophysical properties of the rock. Most commonly, rocks are investigated in two-dimensional sections, where grain boundaries appear as thin lines and the three-dimensional structure cannot be captured. Computed tomography allows for a quantitative assessment of pore space but has a limited resolution. Additionally, it is difficult to assess the origin of pores, which may have been formed primarily in the crust or during near surface weathering or sampling.

In this study, we investigated grain boundaries directly using the “broken surface” technique: A cm-sized rock slice was broken and platinum-coated for scanning electron microscopy. In favorable cases, the rock slice broke along grain boundaries and pre-existing small-scale fractures, exposing these structures directly as true surfaces rather than sectioned traces. The samples investigated are from the ICDP-DIVE drilling project in the Ivrea Verbano Zone (Italy), an exhumed section of the lower continental crust, spanning the range of tens of meters to hundreds of meters of depth below surface; thus offer information about which grain boundary decorations can be clearly related to near-surface alteration. In addition, we compare samples from both amphibolite and granulite facies rocks to explore variations between supposedly fluid-rich and fluid-poor conditions.

Our observations contribute to the understanding of grain boundary processes through a catalogue of different features observed and interpreted, including, among other processes: formation of clays near the surface, sulfide precipitation, quartz recrystallisation and sericitization of feldspars.

How to cite: Linden, E., Hawemann, F., Venier, M., and Toy, V. and the DIVE science Team: Grain boundary processes from the deep continental crust to the surface (ICDP-DIVE, Drilling the Ivrea-Verbano Zone), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12642, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12642, 2026.

EGU26-12738 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Migration pathways of crustal and mantle fluids during the formation of the Betic Cordillera (SE Spain). 

Bérénice Cateland, Anne Battani, Frédéric Mouthereau, Matthias S. Brennwald, Antonio Caracausi, Benjamin Lefeuvre, and Magali Pujol

Crustal-to-lithospheric-scale strike-slip faults can act as major pathways for crustal and mantle fluids, with implications for natural resources (e.g., geothermal, ore deposits) as well as natural gas storage and migration. The Betic Cordillera (SE Spain) records a complex geodynamic evolution, from slab retreat, tearing and delamination to the later inversion of a thinned continental margin. This extreme crustal thinning (~15 km) associated with metamorphic dome exhumation during the Miocene was accommodated by crustal to lithospheric-scale faults that are still active today (e.g. the Mw 5.2 Lorca earthquake in 2011).

To determine the geochemical origin of fluids, their migration pathways, and fault-controlled permeability through time, we analyzed noble gases (He, Ne, Ar) as inert, non-reactive geochemical tracers in both paleo- and present-day fluids. Noble gases in paleo-fluids were analyzed in quartz and calcite minerals associated with faults (INGV, Palermo). We also analyzed noble gases dissolved in water discharged from thermal springs at ~20 to 53°C (Eawag/ETH Zürich).

In calcite and thermal water, low ³He/⁴He ratios (R/Ra ≤ 0.5) indicate mixing between a dominantly crustal component and a mantle contribution or a mixed crustal-atmospheric origins. Quartz samples show stronger atmospheric contamination than in calcite, although ⁴⁰Ar/³⁶Ar ratios may suggest deep input (mantle vs crust; ⁴⁰Ar/³⁶Ar values between 490 and 1215). He-Ne isotopes in paleo-fluids reveal two areas that show a likely mantle-derived noble gas signature: Sierra Elvira, with ~3% mantle contribution suggested, and the Carboneras Fault Zone, with ~6%. In contrast, present-day fluids could reflect a ~4% mantle contribution in the northeastern Betics at Mula and Archena. We infer that mantle-derived signatures detected in paleo-fluids are not preserved in the same locations in present-day fluids. For instance, along a single fault system (e.g., the Carboneras Fault), paleo-fluids display up to four times higher mantle contributions (Rc/Ra ≈ 0.5) than present-day fluids (Rc/Ra ≈ 0.1). This contrast opens new questions regarding potential changes in mantle fluid sources or migration pathways during the evolution of the Betic Cordillera, the impact of tectonic inversion on deep fault permeability, the residence time of fluids in the crust, and the role of fault geometry in controlling fluid pathways.

How to cite: Cateland, B., Battani, A., Mouthereau, F., Brennwald, M. S., Caracausi, A., Lefeuvre, B., and Pujol, M.: Migration pathways of crustal and mantle fluids during the formation of the Betic Cordillera (SE Spain)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12738, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12738, 2026.

In deep sedimentary basins, the formation and evolution of fracture-vein systems are critical for understanding fluid migration and overpressure history. This study investigates antitaxial fibrous illite veins in the Upper Triassic Xujiahe Formation of the Wubaochang area, Sichuan Basin, to decipher the mechanisms of fluid overpressure and diagenetic evolution. A multi-proxy approach was employed, combining detailed petrography, SEM, and micro-XRD. Crucially, we applied Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy (O-PTIR)  to achieve sub-micron resolution mapping of organic functional groups within single illite fibers, alongside in-situ REE and C-O isotope analysis. Detailed petrography and SEM analysis reveal that these veins exhibit typical antitaxial growth characteristics, where mineral fibers grow from a median plane toward the host rock, recording the continuous opening and synchronous filling of fractures. In-situ rare earth element (REE) and carbon-oxygen (C-O) isotope analyses identify two distinct fluid evolution stages: Stage I reflects an external, deep-circulating basin fluid system driven by regional tectonic stress, characterized by significant water-rock interaction with host rocks. Conversely, Stage II represents localized diagenetic and hydrocarbon-generated fluids, where isotopic signatures shift toward organic-derived carbon sources, indicating a transition to hydrocarbon-generation-induced overpressure. To definitively address the timing of fluid injection, sub-micron resolution O-PTIR (Optical-Photothermal Infrared) analysis was conducted, revealing the simultaneous presence of organic acid (1720cm-1), aromatic (1600cm-1), and aliphatic (1450cm-1) functional groups coexisting with the illite lattice vibration (1034 cm-1) within single fibrous crystals. The high ratio of organic acids to mineral signals indicates that organic acids directly mediated water-rock reactions and mineral precipitation rather than being late-stage infiltrations. Our findings demonstrate that these fibrous veins are coupled products of tectonic-induced fracturing and organic-acid-mediated mineral growth. This study highlights the power of O-PTIR as a novel tracer for deciphering organic-inorganic interplays, offering new insights into the mechanisms of fluid overpressure and hydrocarbon expulsion in deep, complex basin systems.

How to cite: Wang, Z., Zeng, L., and Gasparrini, M.: Fluid overpressure and diagenetic evolution recorded by antitaxial fibrous illite veins in deep coal-bearing strata: Insights from sub-micron O-PTIR and in-situ geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14497, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14497, 2026.

EGU26-15103 | Orals | TS1.5

Interplay between alteration and damage at the Nojima fault zone (Japan) revealed by borehole geophysics 

Mai-Linh Doan, Maxime Jamet, Romain Iaquinta, Benoît Gibert, Patricia Patrier, and Yann Lucas

Large active faults tend to differ from younger, fresh faults. They are the loci of the greatest earthquakes, but they often creep. The damage zone thickness tends to saturate with large displacement. Deep scientific drilling in large active faults systematically reveals differentiated fault gouge surrounded by a halo of fracturing and alteration. Despite its importance for fault evolution, the process of alteration in large active faults remains poorly understood.

After the devastating Mw 6.9 Nanbu-Kobe earthquake of 1995, a 750 m deep borehole was drilled into the Nojima fault, reaching the fault core at 625 m. The Hirabayashi borehole was drilled ~1 year after the earthquake and provided an extensive dataset on the structure of the fault where the earthquake originated. Continuous coring and borehole geophysics conducted within the borehole showed that the granodiorite protolith experienced several stages of alteration, including fault-related alteration that produced for example laumontite (Ca-rich zeolite) and smectite at T>150°C.

The ANR project AlterAction is revisiting this data with a multidisciplinary team to better understand the interplay between alteration and fault deformation, with 3D imaging of the core samples (see presentations by Romain Iaquinta and Maxime Jamet) and systematic petrophysical characterization.

This presentation will focus on the reanalysis of geophysical logs. Sonic velocities, electrical resistivities, and lithodensities progressively decrease when approaching the fault, starting to deviate from the protolith rock. In the granitoid rocks composing the borehole, variations in gamma-ray may reflect changes in the protolith rather than alteration. This fault zone starts at 370 m (255 m above the fault core) in the hanging wall, with a more pronounced decrease below 540m (85 m above the fault core, corresponding to a zone of thickness ~8 m, given the well trajectory, which is almost tangent to the fault dip). In the footwall, the strong decrease extends down to 680 m (55 m long zone), with lower velocities, resistivities and densities between 625 and 635m, below the fault core. Crossplotting the logging dataset shows the same trends, whether in the footwall or the hanging wall, regardless of the distance to the fault. This suggests that most of the fault zone is affected by the same interplay between alteration and damage. The fault core (623-626m) is singular owing to its relatively large sonic velocities, suggesting that sealing was strongly localized and effective in the fault core one year after the earthquake.

How to cite: Doan, M.-L., Jamet, M., Iaquinta, R., Gibert, B., Patrier, P., and Lucas, Y.: Interplay between alteration and damage at the Nojima fault zone (Japan) revealed by borehole geophysics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15103, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15103, 2026.

EGU26-15694 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.5

Reaction-induced fracturing and rheological effects of carbonation at the slab–mantle interface: Constraints from hydrostatic and shear experiments 

Shunya Okino, Atsushi Okamoto, Ryosuke Oyanagi, Yukiko Kita, Sando Sawa, and Jun Muto

Ultramafic rocks are increasingly recognized as promising reservoirs for long-term carbon fixation through mineral carbonation. However, carbonation reactions are inherently self-limiting, as they involve solid volume increases of up to ~68%, which clog pore spaces, drastically reduce permeability, and inhibit further fluid infiltration. Geological processes capable of sustaining permeability during carbonation have therefore been invoked, including (1) continuous tectonic deformation that generates microfractures (Menzel et al. 2022, Nat. Commun.), and (2) metasomatic mass transfer from mantle rocks to the crust that reduces net solid volume (Okamoto et al. 2021, Commun. Earth Environ.). Despite their importance for both natural and engineered carbon storage, the dynamic coupling between metasomatic reactions, volumetric changes, and deformation remains poorly constrained by experiments.

Here we investigate reaction–deformation coupling at the slab–mantle interface using a series of hydrostatic and shear deformation experiments conducted at 500 °C and 1.0 GPa in a Griggs-type piston-cylinder apparatus. Experimental assemblies consisted of a three-layer configuration in which a crustal lithology (pelitic schist from the Sanbagawa belt or quartzite) was sandwiched between harzburgite (Horoman peridotite) and serpentinite (Mikabu belt). Hydrostatic experiments were performed with pure H₂O, whereas shear experiments employed H₂O–CO₂ fluids (XCO₂ = 0.2) generated in situ by thermal decomposition of oxalic acid dihydrate.

Hydrostatic experiments reveal that metasomatic reaction pathways and resulting textures are strongly controlled by the chemical composition of the adjacent crustal rock. In experiments involving pelitic schist, albite phenocrysts are preferentially replaced by Mg-rich saponite, while talc precipitates within dendritic fracture networks in the serpentinite. Mass balance calculations indicate that Mg absorption by Al-bearing minerals in the sedimentary rocks promotes progressive Mg extraction from mantle lithologies. Importantly, textural contrasts between lithologies indicate opposite volumetric responses: reaction-induced fracturing in serpentinite is associated with net solid volume reduction, whereas reactions in harzburgite proceed with solid volume expansion.

Shear deformation experiments conducted along quartzite–serpentinite interfaces exhibit a pronounced reaction-duration dependence on mechanical behavior. Short time reaction (6 h), friction coefficients are relatively high. In contrast, long reaction duration (68 h) results in stable sliding with exceptionally low friction coefficients. Microstructural observations show the development of a reaction zone dominated by extensive carbonation (listvenite formation: quartz + magnesite) localized at the lithological interface. Deformation is strongly localized within the carbonation products, which display laminar fabrics and magnesite-filled fractures containing nanoscale porosity.

Integrating hydrostatic and shear experiments, we suggest that metasomatic mass transfer is essential for sustaining carbonation reactions. Furthermore, the pronounced mechanical weakening observed in shear experiments may not be solely attributable to talc precipitation, but possibly also to the dehydration accompanying carbonation. Instead, the dynamic coupling between chemical reactions, solid volume changes, and deformation promotes fracture formation, permeability maintenance, and extreme rheological weakening. These processes provide a viable mechanism for overcoming reaction-induced pore clogging during long-term carbonation and have profound implications for carbon transport, storage efficiency, and the mechanical behavior of the slab–mantle interface.

How to cite: Okino, S., Okamoto, A., Oyanagi, R., Kita, Y., Sawa, S., and Muto, J.: Reaction-induced fracturing and rheological effects of carbonation at the slab–mantle interface: Constraints from hydrostatic and shear experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15694, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15694, 2026.

EGU26-15970 | Orals | TS1.5

Linking Reactive Fluid Flow to Rheology of Eclogite-Facies Oceanic Crust 

Andrew Smye, Leonie Strobl, Hailey Forgeng, and Don Fisher

During subduction, progressive heating and burial drive dehydration reactions that release H₂O-rich fluids from altered oceanic crust. Under sub-arc conditions (2–4 GPa), the transition from blueschist- to eclogite-facies mineral assemblages is accompanied by the release of substantial amounts of water (up to ~5 wt.%). If fluid transport occurs on timescales that are short relative to subduction, these fluids migrate through the overlying oceanic crust into the mantle wedge or along the slab–wedge interface. This process is critical for the generation of arc magmas and for their enrichment in fluid-mobile trace elements. Despite the importance of this process, relatively few direct constraints exist on the extent to which such fluids react with the eclogite-facies crust through which they migrate.

Here, we present field, petrological and geochemical observations from a pristine suite of transport veins preserved in mafic eclogites of the Tauern Window, Eastern Alps. The veins are dominated by high-variance, quartz-rich mineral assemblages and are surrounded by well-developed, omphacite-dominated selvages. Phase equilibrium modeling indicates that vein formation occurred at or near peak pressure–temperature conditions of ~2.5 GPa and ~600 °C. A striking feature of the fluid–rock interaction is the near-complete consumption of garnet by the reactive fluid. Trace-element zoning in partially reacted garnet porphyroblasts records a fluid-driven dissolution–precipitation mechanism that mobilized middle and heavy rare earth elements (MREE and HREE). Isocon analysis of the altered eclogite selvages reveals bulk gains in Na and Li, accompanied by losses of REE, Sr, K, Cu, Fe, Al, Y, Mn, Ba, and Cr, while Ni, Sc, and Ti appear to have been conserved.

Pure omphacite layers and seams are commonplace throughout the Eclogite Zone and are interpreted as sealed transport veins. The associated microstructures record embrittlement and fracturing following fluid–rock interaction. Collectively, these observations indicate that reactive fluid flow under eclogite-facies conditions may influence the rheology of subducting oceanic crust.

How to cite: Smye, A., Strobl, L., Forgeng, H., and Fisher, D.: Linking Reactive Fluid Flow to Rheology of Eclogite-Facies Oceanic Crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15970, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15970, 2026.

EGU26-16106 | Posters on site | TS1.5

Triple oxygen isotope evidence for modified seawater during low-temperature submarine silicate alteration and weathering 

Justin Dodd, Gavin Piccione, Daniel Ibarra, David McNamara, Gabriel Pasquet, Melody Lindsay, Deborah Eason, Anne Briais, Ross Parnell-Turner, and Leah LeVay

The extent to which ambient seawater permeates and interacts with submarine lithologies (e.g., sediments and seafloor basalt) is a critical constraint on the timing and rate of in situ subseafloor silicate weathering. Oxygen isotope (δ18O) values of low-temperature silicate minerals in the marine record often present seemingly inconsistent oceanographic and diagenetic histories. These uncertainties largely arise because neither formation temperature (e.g., burial or alteration) nor the modification of seawater δ18O values through water–rock interactions are well constrained. However, the triple oxygen isotope (Δ17O) approach provides additional constraints on the diagenetic temperature and seawater modification. 

Here we present two case studies of Δ17O variations in low-temperature silicate minerals from widely disparate marine settings that represent potential endmembers in subseafloor diagenetic environments and seawater modification through water–rock interactions. Marine sediment cores from the Ross Sea, Antarctica, collected during IODP Expedition 374 and the ANDRILL McMurdo Ice Shelf program, contain well-preserved biogenic opal (diatomite) of Pleistocene to middle Miocene age (~2.2–16.5 Ma). The mineral structure of opal from these sites (IODP U1521 and U1523; AND-1b and AND-2a) ranges from opal-A to chert, and the Δ17O values reflect isotopic equilibrium with a significantly modified seawater at a range of temperatures consistent with the geothermal gradient and burial depth. Measured Δ17O values for all opal samples fall below the seawater equilibrium curve and likely reflect equilibration with pore waters. The abundance of hydrous mineral phases (e.g., mirabilite, authigenic clays) in the Ross Sea cores suggest that water-rock interactions may have altered the pore water Δ17O values. Pore water δ18O values and chemistry at the ANDRILL sites suggest the presence of a cryogenic brine with a low δ18O value; however, in the IODP sites on the continental shelf and slope, pore water δ18O values are closer to that of modern Ross Sea Bottom Water. In a very different geologic setting in the North Atlantic, similarly modified seawater Δ17O values are recorded in alteration minerals (e.g., celadonite, saponite, and zeolite) in submarine basalt veins/vesicles from IODP Site U1564, which is located east of the Reykjanes Ridge in ~32.4 Ma crust. The alteration minerals Δ17O values appear to show a mixing relationship between seawater and unaltered basalt endmember with varying water–rock ratios and/or formation temperatures, which suggests fluid evolution or mixing of fluids with different Δ17O values. Observed Δ17O values in ancient geologic materials (e.g. Archean cherts) have been interpreted as reflecting primary oceanographic conditions or subsequent diagenetic alteration by meteoric waters. In the geologic settings described here, the Δ17O variability appears to record significant in situ subseafloor modification of seawater oxygen isotope values through low-temperature water–rock interactions. Constraining the timing and extent of water–rock interactions are, therefore, essential for refining models of geochemical reactions, fluid flow, global element cycling, and deep-biosphere microbial processes in the marine subseafloor environment.

How to cite: Dodd, J., Piccione, G., Ibarra, D., McNamara, D., Pasquet, G., Lindsay, M., Eason, D., Briais, A., Parnell-Turner, R., and LeVay, L.: Triple oxygen isotope evidence for modified seawater during low-temperature submarine silicate alteration and weathering, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16106, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16106, 2026.

EGU26-16117 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Monazite occurrence and low-temperature alteration in river sediments from contrasting tectonostratigraphic units in southwestern Taiwan 

Han Lin Yeh, Yu Ting Wang, Chien Che Huang, and Yen Hua Chen

Monazite from placer deposits along the southwestern coast of Taiwan was previously exploited as a source of rare earth elements (REEs). However, the formation mechanisms of the distinct monazite types remain debated and are commonly attributed to fluid-related processes. Due to the extremely high denudation rates of rivers in Taiwan, sediments undergo rapid transport, allowing the protolith characteristics of their provenance to be preserved. In this study, we examine river sediments from the Zengwen, Ailiao, and Laonong Rivers, which drain contrasting tectonostratigraphic units within each catchment. We characterize the occurrence and elemental distributions (e.g., La, Th, Nd) of monazite and examine the REE geochemical behavior of the bulk sediments. This study provides a comprehensive mineralogical and geochemical assessment of monazite associated with specific tectonostratigraphic units, offering constraints on sediment provenance.

Preliminary results summarize the variations in monazite occurrence and alteration across different tectonostratigraphic units. In the sediments of the Zengwen River, which primarily drains the Western Foothills, we observed a predominance of detrital monazite (<10 µm), as well as monazite associated with TiO2, apatite, and clay minerals. These features suggest an origin primarily from the physical weathering of detritus or minor fluid precipitation, differing significantly from the occurrences of monazite found on the southwest coast.

Sediments from the Ailiao and Laonong rivers, which drain low-grade metamorphic rocks of the Central Range, exhibit evidence for variable degrees of low-temperature alteration affecting primary monazite. This includes inclusion-hosted, morphologically black monazite comparable to that observed along the southwestern coast of Taiwan. In the Laonong River, which additionally drains the Western Foothills, monazite occurs either within quartz grains or within the interlayers of clay minerals, similar to that observed in the Zengwen River. Furthermore, in rivers originating from the Slate Belt, in addition to monazite as a heavy mineral, we identified pyrite spherules comparable to those in the slate host rocks, as well as xenotime associated with thorite. Overall, these observations reveal distinct patterns in monazite occurrence and alteration among different tectonostratigraphic settings, with implications for sediment provenance in high-denudation river systems.

How to cite: Yeh, H. L., Wang, Y. T., Huang, C. C., and Chen, Y. H.: Monazite occurrence and low-temperature alteration in river sediments from contrasting tectonostratigraphic units in southwestern Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16117, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16117, 2026.

EGU26-16249 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.5

Classification and Provenance of Monazite in the Zhuoshui River System, Taiwan 

Po-Cheng Yang and Yan-Hua Chen

Monazite is a phosphate mineral that contains Rare-Earth Elements (REEs), whose micro-textures and chemical compositions can serve as effective indicators of sediment provenance. In Taiwan, monazite in fluvial and coastal sediments may reflect contributions from both external sources and orogenic recycling; however, a systematic classification framework and provenance constraints for monazite in major river systems remain limited. This study focuses on the Zhuoshui River catchment and establishes a monazite classification scheme based on integrated microtextural and geochemical characteristics, which is then applied to assess the provenance of the monazite.

    Bedrock and riverbed sediment samples were collected from the upper reaches and along the Zhuoshui River system during both wet and dry seasons. Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) backscattered electron (BSE) imaging and semi-quantitative Energy Dispersive Spectrometer (EDS) analyses were used to characterize grain morphology, inclusion features, and REE–Th–Y elemental systematics. The results show that monazite populations and La/Ce systematics are consistent between wet- and dry-season samples, indicating that the provenance signal is stable and not significantly affected by seasonal hydrological variability.

  Based on REE proportions, grain morphology, and inclusion characteristics, monazite grains can be classified into three types. Detrital monazite is generally larger, inclusion-free, relatively enriched in Th, and commonly displays rounded grain boundaries. Hydrothermal altered monazite is typically Th-depleted and LREE-dominated, commonly containing quartz–feldspar inclusions and occurring in association with hydrothermal minerals. Inclusion-hosted monazite shows distinct compositional boundaries and characteristic REE signatures, with relatively elevated middle-REE signals, suggesting early encapsulation rather than late-stage replacement. Similar micro textures and comparable La/Ce ratios observed in both upstream bedrock and downstream sediments support an orogen-derived provenance for monazite in the Zhuoshui River system. Two compositional clusters in La/Ce further imply at least two source regions, tentatively linked to metamorphic source rocks in the Central Range and the Hsuehshan Range. Ongoing U–Th–Pb geochronology using laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) will provide independent temporal constraints. These data will strengthen the proposed classification and provenance interpretations, clarifying sediment transport pathways in the Zhuoshui River.

How to cite: Yang, P.-C. and Chen, Y.-H.: Classification and Provenance of Monazite in the Zhuoshui River System, Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16249, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16249, 2026.

EGU26-16463 | Orals | TS1.5

Tectono-Thermal Evolution of the Laojunshan Gneiss Dome in Yunnan, China: Constraints from Multi-Mineral Deformation and Composition 

Yun Tian, Shuyun Cao, Lefan Zhan, Jianhua Liu, Dingkui Zhou, Qingsong Li, and Lirong Tao

Gneiss domes are typical tectonic types related to deep crustal exhumation, and their polyphase superimposed deformation characteristics make them ideal natural laboratories for studying deep crustal exhumation processes. The Laojunshan gneiss dome in Yunnan, China, lies at the junction of the Tethyan and Circum-Pacific tectonic domains, as well as the boundary between the South China Block and Indochina Block. Its tectonic setting, deep crustal tectono-thermal evolution and exhumation history are closely linked to the kinematic evolution of the two blocks, making it a key site for investigating the Tethyan tectonic domain’s spatiotemporal evolution and inter-block interactions. Based on systematic field investigations combined with microstructural analysis, stress field inversion, electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis, geochemical and geochronological analyses, significant findings on the dome’s exhumation-related tectono-thermal evolution are obtained. The Laojunshan tectonic units comprise a core dominated by high-grade metamorphosed-deformed rocks and granites, an arcuate detachment fault system, and a sedimentary cover. Regional stress field inversion reveals two distinct regimes (compressional and extensional), with the latter predominant and radially distributed, reflecting late exhumation tectonics. EBSD analysis of major exposed minerals indicates the core underwent high-temperature plastic deformation (620–710 °C). Mylonite parameters (fractal dimension, differential stress) in the detachment fault zone reflect transitions between high and medium-high temperature deformation. Epidote EBSD constrains late exhumation P-T conditions to 350–500 °C, which, combined with geochemical data, divides late exhumation into three stages: deep compression, uplift transition and shallow extension. Geochronological data show the Caledonian (445–420 Ma) as the main formation period of granitic gneiss protolith (synchronous with coeval magmatism), core leucogranite emplacement at 416–411 Ma, and metamorphic zircons in plagioclase constrain Indosinian high-temperature metamorphism and shortening deformation to 241–220 Ma. An exhumation model is proposed: the dome initiated with early Caledonian (445–420 Ma) regional extension and magmatism, followed by 420–410 Ma compressional orogeny, crustal thickening and anatexis. Indosinian (241–230 Ma) compression induced thrusting, folding and detachment faults. Yanshanian (144–80 Ma) extension and magmatism accelerated exhumation, and Cenozoic (33–21 Ma) strike-slip faulting drove rapid exhumation to the surface.

How to cite: Tian, Y., Cao, S., Zhan, L., Liu, J., Zhou, D., Li, Q., and Tao, L.: Tectono-Thermal Evolution of the Laojunshan Gneiss Dome in Yunnan, China: Constraints from Multi-Mineral Deformation and Composition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16463, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16463, 2026.

EGU26-16837 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Shear zone nucleation by fluid-assisted heterogeneous nucleation recorded in texturally homogeneous eclogitized mafic granulites 

Serena Cacciari, Giorgio Pennacchioni, Enrico Cannaò, Giovanni Toffol, Marco Scambelluri, and Jörg Hermann

Shear zone nucleation in massive rocks commonly exploits pre-existing planar structures, whose presence and type control fluid availability and redistribution. While fluids are widely recognized as key triggers for metamorphic reactions and mineralogical transformations that influence rock rheology, the exact feedback processes between fluid-rock interactions, metamorphism and deformation remain enigmatic. In specific cases, traditional softening mechanisms (e.g. reaction-induced grainsize reduction, crystallization of weak minerals) do not apply or are insufficient to explain shear zone nucleation and strain localization, implying the existence of alternative processes.

Paired shear zones developed at the selvages of hydration haoles are a common product of fluid infiltration along hydrofractures, and are a source of information to investigate the rheological effects of the different reaction extents occurring during fluid percolation. Here, we investigate a suite of samples containing eclogitic clinozoisite-filled veins surrounded by omphacite-rich haloes. The sample set includes haloes (a) weakly affected by ductile deformation, preserving pristine metasomatic textures, and (b) displaying paired shear zones at their selvages (Pennacchioni, 1996). The eclogitic host rock foliation, consisting of garnet, clinozoisite, amphibole and omphacite, is only partially obliterated in the hydration halo by the metasomatic overprint, dominated by replacement of clinozoisite by omphacite. EDS major element and in-situ LA-ICP-MS trace element analysis suggests that fluid propagation caused recrystallization, changes in mineral proportions and (re)distribution of major and trace elements, forming a compositional gradient across the halo. Garnet and clinozoisite rims record the gradient with a progressive decrease in the Fe2+ content and a progressive increase in LREE and Fe3+ concentrations from the vein selvage towards the reaction front, respectively.

Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) maps provide evidence for (i) a constant omphacite grainsize across the haloes and at their boundaries in samples weakly affected by ductile deformation, suggesting that metasomatism does not produce textural gradients, (ii) development of very fine-grained monomineralic ribbons of omphacite along the shear zones, suggesting that omphacite is responsible for weakening and localized shearing, (iii) local orientation of these ribbons at 20-30° to the shear zone trace, defining C' bands, and (iii) random orientation of the fine grains. We interpret these observations as evidence for diffusion-assisted grain boundary sliding (GBS) and creep cavitation as the main deformation mechanism active along the shear zones, and for heterogeneous nucleation of very fine-grained omphacite within fluid-filled cavities formed during GBS.

We conclude that, when metasomatic reactions do not directly result in textural gradients (e.g. grainsize decrease) traditionally considered responsible for softening at the propagation front (i.e. halo boundary), shear zones may develop by heterogeneous nucleation of fine grains during fluid-assisted GBS, which further fosters grainsize-sensitive deformation sustaining strain localization within fluid-rich domains.

[1] Pennacchioni, 1996. Journal of Structural Geology, 18, 549-561

How to cite: Cacciari, S., Pennacchioni, G., Cannaò, E., Toffol, G., Scambelluri, M., and Hermann, J.: Shear zone nucleation by fluid-assisted heterogeneous nucleation recorded in texturally homogeneous eclogitized mafic granulites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16837, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16837, 2026.

EGU26-17135 | Posters on site | TS1.5

Texture-controlled hydrothermal dolomitization experiments to investigate interface kinetics and pore-scale transport 

Nicolas Beaudoin, Kanchana Kularatne, Stephen Centrella, Benjamin Lefeuvre, Pascale Sénéchal, Matthieu Mascle, Souhail Youssef, and Fadi Henri Nader

Dolomitization is a key diagenetic process that reorganizes porosity and permeability in carbonate rocks, yet the coupling between interface kinetics and transport heterogeneity remains poorly constrained. We performed time-resolved hydrothermal dolomitization experiments on oolitic limestone and chalk to test how carbonate texture impacts the dynamics of replacement fronts. Pseudo 4D micro-CT, along with SEM, EBSD and microprobe analyses reveal that the mechanism of dolomitization is depending on the texture and on the chemistry of the fluid. We studied oolitic limestone, chalk and carrara marble, three rocks with different porosity and permeability. In both oostone and chalk, dolomite rims propagate rapidly and produce wavy reaction fronts, witnessing a progressive replacement inward rather than along pore-connected pathways, unlike in the carrara marble. However, mass-balance calculation of the fluid rock interaction returns similar mass and volume loss independently of the texture, suggesting that the chemistry of the fluid controls the reaction. This is consistent with the produced dolomite grain size, who follow a similar distribution law regardless the texture, suggesting some self-organization during the replacement controlled by the fluids. Roughness characterization of the front shows that in oostone and carrara marble, the scaling law of the front follows a Brownian Motion (H=0.5), while it shows a persistent behaviour in the chalk (H=0.8 to 0.6). This suggests that the expression of the replacement process is governed by random distribution of heterogeneities in some cases, following the interface coupled dissolution precipitation model, but that there is a memory effect in other cases. In this study, the memory effect can be related mechanical processes such as local microfracturing, suggesting a potential role of local pressure on replacement. We propose that the shape of the front is governed by the rate of the front propagation, as if the latter is fast like in chalk, the mass transfer becomes less efficient to compensate the volume change, and some local overpressure may appear to drive the reaction propagation. This rate of front propagation appears to be affected by both initial grain size and pore size homogeneity.

How to cite: Beaudoin, N., Kularatne, K., Centrella, S., Lefeuvre, B., Sénéchal, P., Mascle, M., Youssef, S., and Nader, F. H.: Texture-controlled hydrothermal dolomitization experiments to investigate interface kinetics and pore-scale transport, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17135, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17135, 2026.

EGU26-18428 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

The formation of the Münchberg Massif: New insights from petrology and chemistry of its serpentinite occurrences. 

Maximilian Hasch, Peter Klitzke, Meike Bagge, Nikola Koglin, and Christian Ostertag-Henning

Serpentinization is a hydration process that forms distinct serpentine minerals depending on the pressure and temperature conditions prevailing during the fluid-rock reaction. The chemistry and petrology of serpentinite rocks provide constraints on the protolith composition and on the tectonic setting of serpentinization through insights of pressure and temperature conditions.

The Münchberg Massif is a stack of four tectonic nappes of different metamorphic grade, which were emplaced during the Variscan Orogeny. Within the lowermost Prasinit-Phyllit-Serie, several serpentinite bodies are intercalated. Understanding the formation of these serpentinites will add further insights into the tectonic development of the Münchberg Massif.

We present new petrological and chemical data of serpentinites from ten locations along the southeastern margin of the Münchberg Massif, as well as at two locations in the western region of the Massif. The samples are dominated by the serpentine minerals lizardite in the western region and antigorite along the southeastern margin. Furthermore, significant differences in the degree of serpentinization and tectonic strain were observed between the two regions. The petrological and chemical characteristics of the samples indicate distinct protolith material and serpentinization setting. We propose that the protoliths of the western and southeastern serpentinites originated from different structural positions within, or adjacent to, a subduction zone. These findings provide new constraints on the tectonic assembly and metamorphic evolution of the Münchberg Massif.

How to cite: Hasch, M., Klitzke, P., Bagge, M., Koglin, N., and Ostertag-Henning, C.: The formation of the Münchberg Massif: New insights from petrology and chemistry of its serpentinite occurrences., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18428, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18428, 2026.

EGU26-19908 | ECS | Orals | TS1.5

Fault-related fluid circulation in the seismically active Irpinia region (southern Italy): insights from fluid inclusions and calcite veins 

Filippo Zummo, Antonio M. Alvarez-Valero, Andrea Billi, Dario Buttitta, Gabriele Carnevale, Barbara Marchesini, Ivana Pibiri, Rosa Sinisi, Luca Smeraglia, Antonio Caracausi, Fabrizio Agosta, and Michele Paternoster

The analysis of fault-related mineralization, with particular emphasis on fluid inclusions (FIs) trapped in syn-kinematic minerals, provides crucial insights into fluid circulation modality and fluid–rock interactions, so furnishing new tools to investigate the relationship between fluids and active tectonic. This study investigates the genesis, microstructural characteristics, and geochemical signatures of calcite veins associated with dip-slip faults in the Irpinia region (southern Apennines, Italy), a seismically active area located very close to the epicentral zone of the 1980 Mw 6.9 Irpinia earthquake. A comprehensive approach combining field observations, petrographic and microstructural analyses, fluid inclusion microthermometry, and geochemical profiling based on isotopic (δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O) and rare earth element (REE+Y) data reveals that the calcite veins precipitated from low-salinity H₂O–NaCl fluids, derived from the mixing of shallow and deep groundwater. These fluids, rich in CO₂ and coming from deep crustal reservoirs (8–12 km), migrated episodically through fault zones and were modified by mixing with post-depositional fluids produced during carbonate diagenesis, under varying thermal conditions (100–320 °C). Our study also proposes a computational model that reconstructs the isotopic evolution of the mineralizing fluids, capturing the sequential processes of fluid equilibration with dolostones, interaction with aquifer waters, and CO₂ degassing prior to calcite precipitation forming the mineralization. The good agreement between model predictions and measured isotopic data demonstrates the robustness of the model and highlights the dynamic fluid mixing processes within the fault zone. Furthermore, these findings highlight the role of episodic fluid migration, driven by fault-valve processes, in promoting calcite oversaturation and precipitation during seismic events. The integration of structural, geochemical, and modelling data refines our understanding of CO₂-rich fluid ascent, fault-related mineralization, and their link to fluid–rock interaction processes. This multidisciplinary approach offers new insights into fault mechanics and seismo-genesis, with implications for seismic hazard assessment and geochemical monitoring in active fault systems

How to cite: Zummo, F., Alvarez-Valero, A. M., Billi, A., Buttitta, D., Carnevale, G., Marchesini, B., Pibiri, I., Sinisi, R., Smeraglia, L., Caracausi, A., Agosta, F., and Paternoster, M.: Fault-related fluid circulation in the seismically active Irpinia region (southern Italy): insights from fluid inclusions and calcite veins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19908, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19908, 2026.

EGU26-22277 | Posters on site | TS1.5

Mechanisms of Micritization Revealedby Petrography, Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca Ratios of the Carbonate Sediments of theArabian (Persian) Gulf, Abu Dhabi 

Almog Ash, Boaz Lazar, Adi Torfstein, Gilad Antler, Tianyu Cao, Tanya Rivlin, Mohammad Alsuwaidi, Sadoon Morad, and Mordechai Stein

The solidity and porosity of calcium carbonate rocks are of major interest for oil-reservoir
evaluation, groundwater flow studies, and civil engineering applications. Micritization—an
early diagenetic process that converts carbonate shells and skeletal grains into
microcrystalline carbonate—significantly affects these rock properties, yet its underlying
mechanisms remain poorly constrained. The coastal environments of Abu Dhabi provide
natural laboratories for studying micritization, as they are modern analogues of the low-angle
carbonate ramps that were widespread in epeiric seas throughout much of the geological past.
In this study, we investigate calcium carbonate muds and associated pore waters from a range
of depositional environments, including mangroves, tidal channels, sabkhas, and offshore
settings, to better understand the processes controlling micritization. We apply an integrated
approach combining sedimentological, mineralogical, and geochemical methods. Preliminary
results indicate that the carbonate mud is predominantly composed of aragonite, with minor
amounts of low magnesium calcite. Boring intensity increases with depth, particularly in
tidal-channel environments, and is closely associated with physical erosion by endolithic
fauna. In contrast, crystal morphologies observed in sabkha sediments suggest that chemical
precipitation processes are more dominant in these settings.
Trace element systematics reveal that micritization is accompanied by systematic changes in
Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca ratios. In all tested environments, grain size reduction (i.e., micritization) is
associated with a significant increase in Mg/Ca, while Sr/Ca is much less sensitive to the
same process. While both Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca are incorporated within the diagenetic aragonite
lattice according to their respective partition coefficients, Mg/Ca ratios are strongly increased
by adsorption during micritization-related grain size changes. The decoupling of Mg and Sr
during the micritization process may provide new constraints on the question of the
mechanism of micrite formation.

How to cite: Ash, A., Lazar, B., Torfstein, A., Antler, G., Cao, T., Rivlin, T., Alsuwaidi, M., Morad, S., and Stein, M.: Mechanisms of Micritization Revealedby Petrography, Mg/Ca and Sr/Ca Ratios of the Carbonate Sediments of theArabian (Persian) Gulf, Abu Dhabi, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22277, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22277, 2026.

EGU26-271 | Posters on site | TS1.6

A Local Seafloor Pressure Anomaly Potentially Triggered by Pore Water Migration during Ocean Current Meander 

Keisuke Ariyoshi, Akira Nagano, Takuya Hasegawa, Masaru Nakano, Hiroyuki Matsumoto, Chastity Aiken, Eiichiro Araki, Narumi Takahashi, and Takane Hori

Owing to the Dense Oceanfloor Network System for Earthquakes and Tsunamis (DONET) and borehole observatories, slow slip events (SSEs) have been detected in the shallow extension of the source region of the 1944 Tonankai earthquake (DONET-1). However, a localized seafloor pressure anomaly—characterized by uplift and subsidence at two DONET-1 stations in 2013—has yet to be reasonably explained.

In this study, we explore possible source models for this pressure anomaly by assuming pore-water migration from compacted reservoirs, either arranged in layered formations or represented as swarms of small spheres, toward a dilated zone beneath the décollement. We also compile observations of seafloor crustal deformation driven by SSEs and oceanographic phenomena under baroclinic conditions to refine the spatio-temporal scaling relationship of seafloor pressure variations.

Our main findings are as follows. (i) The potential compacted pore-water reservoirs spatially overlap with the hypocenters of very low-frequency earthquakes (VLFEs), whereas the dilated zone lies in a region with normal-fault-type VLFE activity. (ii) A Kuroshio meander associated with an abrupt fluctuation in sea surface height (SSH) occurred around DONET-1 during the pressure event. (iii) Taken together, (i) and (ii) suggest that the local seafloor pressure change may be explained by pore-water migration destabilized by the Kuroshio current meander. (iv) As this is the first reported case in which a local seafloor pressure anomaly has been identified from only two observation points, the suggested causal link—namely, that the Kuroshio meander may have promoted pore-water migration—provides a strong scientific motivation for future geological surveys, particularly those monitoring seismic activity and seafloor crustal deformation before and after similar pore-water migration events.

How to cite: Ariyoshi, K., Nagano, A., Hasegawa, T., Nakano, M., Matsumoto, H., Aiken, C., Araki, E., Takahashi, N., and Hori, T.: A Local Seafloor Pressure Anomaly Potentially Triggered by Pore Water Migration during Ocean Current Meander, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-271, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-271, 2026.

EGU26-331 | ECS | Orals | TS1.6

Tracking dehydration reactions and fluid flow in exhuming shear zones using garnet microstructures 

Alessandro Petroccia, Francesco Giuntoli, Alissa Kotowski, Gianmarco Buono, Alireza Chogani, Eric Hellebrand, Lucia Pappalardo, and Ivan Callegari

Shear zones are preferential fluid pathways during prograde and retrograde stages of subduction cycles, but the drainage and permeability of subduction interfaces are poorly quantified. Analyzing exhumed rocks for preserved signatures of fluid production and flow provides insights into fluid circulation during burial and exhumation.

Here, we investigated fluid flow processes recorded by garnets in quartz-schists from the As Sheik shear zone (Saih Hatat window, NE Oman) that records evidence for burial during subduction and local overprinting during exhumation. Garnet occurs as equant, oblate, and honeycomb (i.e., skeletal) shapes, which each documents distinct fluid-related growth stages from peak-pressure to early exhumation associated with a thermal excursion, both occurring at broadly eclogite facies conditions. We show with thermodynamic models and microstructures that garnet first nucleated at 2.0–2.2 GPa and 500–550°C after the chloritoid-out dehydration reaction, which promoted dissolution–precipitation processes. We infer a pseudomorphic replacement of peak-pressure chloritoid by garnet, and based on the absence of internal lattice strain, we suggest that elongate garnet morphology reflects reaction-controlled growth rather than plastic deformation. Our microstructures and models suggest that subsequent decompression and heating (1.5–1.3 GPa, 600–650°C) promoted further fluid release and a renewed stage of honeycomb garnet growth.

We present a conceptual model in which dissolution, transport, and precipitation rates primarily influenced whether garnets grew as oblate grains  (i.e., as pseudomorphs on peak-pressure chloritoid grains), or as newly nucleated equant grains. In addition, we argue that honeycomb garnet represents a snapshot of the permeability network that allowed the fluids to escape from the shear zone using grain boundaries and through reaction-forming pathways.

Using measured maximum mass fraction of fluid released from all the hydrous phases modelled by thermodynamic modelling on a representative rock-scale column of 1000 meters, we estimate the time-integrated fluid flux of the studied shear zone was ~34 m3 m-2 at eclogite facies conditions for the entire duration of garnet growth. This volume represents a limited time-range of the shear zone lifetime during garnet growth, i.e., from peak-pressure to incipient exhumation still at eclogite facies conditions. Therefore, the full lifetime of the shear zone during prograde and retrograde conditions would indeed provide a higher fluid flux.

The different garnet morphologies analyzed all resulted from the chloritoid dehydration reaction, but reflect different rates of dissolution–precipitation and efficiency of dissolution. This study highlights garnet morphology as a tracer of transient fluid pathways during a burial-exhumation cycle of an eclogitic shear zone. The close connection between garnet morphology and fluids calls for a re-evaluation of similar microstructures in different tectonic settings.

How to cite: Petroccia, A., Giuntoli, F., Kotowski, A., Buono, G., Chogani, A., Hellebrand, E., Pappalardo, L., and Callegari, I.: Tracking dehydration reactions and fluid flow in exhuming shear zones using garnet microstructures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-331, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-331, 2026.

EGU26-492 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Towards Absolute dating of Fluid-Flow Remagnetizations: Initial results from Variscan Carbonates 

Catalina Galan, Daniel Pastor-Galán, and Fátima Martín Hernández

Absolute dating of remagnetization events remains the holy grail in paleomagnetism, with the potential to unlock thousands of rock units for new tectonic, metamorphic, and paleointensity studies. Constraining the timing of remagnetizations is especially crucial for understanding fluid flow and mineralogical transformations in orogenic systems.

As a first step toward dating fluid-flow–related remagnetizations, we investigate three Cambrian carbonate units from the northwestern Iberian Peninsula—Tamames, Láncara, and Vegadeo—remagnetized during the Carboniferous. Our goal is to identify, characterize, and ultimately constrain the age of these fluid-induced remagnetization events.

In this presentation we will show an integration of rock magnetism, paleomagnetism, mineralogical, and geochronology results. Magnetic characterization includes room-temperature and low-temperature hysteresis cycles, IRM acquisition curves, First‑Order Reversal Curve diagrams (FORC), thermomagnetic curves, thermal and AF demagnetization, and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS). In addition, targeted mineral separation procedures were performed to obtain magnetic sulfide fractions for Re–Os geochronology. The identification and spatial distribution of magnetic phases were examined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and quantum diamond microscopy (QDM), allowing us to distinguish primary from secondary magnetic minerals and to evaluate textural evidence of fluid-rock interaction. Complementary U–Pb carbonate geochemistry provides independent age constraints to compare with paleomagnetic and Re–Os datasets.

Together, these results initiate the development of a robust framework for identifying, characterizing, and dating fluid-induced remagnetizations, offering new insights into the tectonic and mineralogical evolution of Iberia’s orogenic systems.

How to cite: Galan, C., Pastor-Galán, D., and Martín Hernández, F.: Towards Absolute dating of Fluid-Flow Remagnetizations: Initial results from Variscan Carbonates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-492, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-492, 2026.

White micas breakdown in down-going slabs of subduction zones implies consequent fluids release, inducing element transport into the overlying hanging-wall mantle. Phengite is the most common white mica occurring in HP / UHP metasedimentary rocks, carrying significant amounts of H2O, LILE (K, Ba, Cs and Cr especially), and Li, B or N to the upper mantle. Here,  2H/1H (D/H) and 18O/16O ratios of 23 metapelites samples from the Devonian-Carboniferous Renge and Cretaceous Sambagawa belts are investigated to better understand the O and H isotope signatures of phengites in metapelites of the Pacific-type subduction zone. In addition, we try to constrain the stable isotopic compositions of metamorphic fluids equilibrated with phengites and see their behavior during continuous dehydration reactions.

The investigated pelitic blueschist-facies phengite samples presented non negligeable values of ∂D (∂D < -88‰). 14 of them belong to the Osayama serptentinite melange (central Chugoku Mountains, SW. Japan) of the Renge Belt and separated from lawsonite- and epidotes-grade. They presented a significantly negative ∂D composition, ranging from -113.2‰ to -88.3‰, and a ∂O composition ranging from 12.9‰ to 14.6‰ (∂D and ∂O values approximate SMOW). The 9 other samples are garnet-bearing metapelites of the Sarutagawa schists from Sambagawa Belt (central Shikoku, SW. Japan) and presented ∂D = -95.6‰ to -60.5‰ and ∂O = 12,3‰ to 14,4‰.

Fluids can be characterized as deep-sourced by looking at previous results on high-Si features and K-Ar ages of the investigated samples (Tsujimori & Itaya, 1999). The consequently low values of ∂D cannot be due to meteoric-hydrothermal alteration but by isotopic fractionation during prograde metamorphic dehydration of a plunging slab. Modelling on the obtained data and muscovite, H2O, H and O factors fractionation for nominal temperatures allowed to estimate an isotopic composition for metamorphic fluids equilibrated with phengites. We unveil through this study that slab-devolatilization derived fluids in Pacific-type subduction zone present low ∂D value, implying a non-negligeable role of the phengite breakdown on H isotope composition of nominally anhydrous minerals (NAMs) in deep mantle.

How to cite: Duringer, A., Pastor-Galán, D., Tsujimori, T., Yagi, K., and Álvarez-Valero, A.: Phengite breakdown and associated fluid flow in Pacific-type subduction zone: Investigating the nature of slab-derived fluids of blueschist-facies metapelites from the Renge and Sambagawa belts (SW. Japan)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-559, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-559, 2026.

EGU26-964 | ECS | Orals | TS1.6

Fluid-Assisted Deformation: Rhomb Slip Preference in Quartz from Metasomatic Reaction Zones of a Mobile Belt in India 

Subhrajyoti Behera, Anamitra Sikdar, Sumit Chakraborty, and Santanu Misra

Quartz slip systems are conventionally linked with their corresponding temperatures of activation, but fluid can affect them as well; and how the presence of syn-deformational fluid affects the slips system activation remains poorly constrained. Quartz textures are result of integrated effects of P-T-fluid-deformation, making it challenging to isolate the individual contribution of any single factor. The occurrence of metasomatic reaction zones (MRZs) due to fluid-rock interactions at the boundary between country rock, i.e., a pelitic garnet-mica schist and meta-mafic dykes (Dyke-I and -II) in the Northern Singhbhum Mobile Belt (NSMB) of eastern India, provides an opportunity to address this problem. This geometrically well-constrained system, whose P-T-reaction history has been petrologically and geochemically characterized, allows us to isolate and examine how fluids affect the quartz microstructure at same P-T-deformation conditions. We investigated samples from MRZs, using bulk-rock geochemistry, mineral chemistry, thermodynamic modelling and electron backscatter diffraction analysis.

Geochemical-reaction-path models show that MRZs (amphibole-epidote-plagioclase-quartz and chlorite) assemblage formed by Na-metasomatism at 2–3 kbar and 300–500°C after a post-peak condition (6–8.5 kbar and 550–600°C) of NSMB. The saline fluids reacted with the dykes, i.e., the source and then reacted with the pelite, facilitating the element-mass exchange between them. Our study covers two different scenarios, a fluid-abundant MRZs near Dyke-I (zone 1) and another fluid-limited near Dyke-II (zone 2). Zone 1 exhibits a plagioclase-quartz dominated polygonal mosaic matrix with complete removal of muscovite and garnet. The matrix is characterized by pervasive brown-colored anastomosing fluid networks along grain boundaries, fractures, and cleavages. Healed fractures containing Fe-oxide and fluid inclusion trails are abundant, and small epidote grains occur at grain boundaries and triple junctions. Zone 2 is more quartz-dominated with granoblastic texture subhedral grains showing straight to curved boundaries. Relict biotite and garnet are preserved. The matrix quartz shows isolated microfractures and trans-crystal fluid inclusion trails but lacks the extensive interconnected fluid-network architecture of Zone 1.

The slip system of quartz transitions from the country rock towards the two MRZs. Deformation in quartz of the country pelitic schist, was accommodated mainly via activation of prism <a> and <c> slips. They record abundant presence of <2° kernel average misorientation (KAM). Quartz in zone 1 shows deformation accommodation via rhomb <a> slip and near-complete absence of <2° KAM. The intensity of rhomb <a> slip increases towards its dyke-contact. Whereas in zone 2, quartz shows dominant prism <a> slip and abundant <2° KAM, just like the country rock. Near its corresponding dyke contact of zone 2, the quartz shows polygonization, emergence of rhomb <a> slip, and reduction in <2° KAM due to a relatively higher proportion of fluid presence at the contact.

This study demonstrates how fluid-rock-interaction intensity can play significant role in quartz deformations and display a preferred slip system activity under the same prevailing P-T condition. We propose that under fluid-abundant conditions, the quartz polygonised and rhomb <a> slips are activated in zone 1 due to complex reaction creep and hydrolytic weakening resulting from fluid-rock interactions at the same P-T-deformation conditions.

How to cite: Behera, S., Sikdar, A., Chakraborty, S., and Misra, S.: Fluid-Assisted Deformation: Rhomb Slip Preference in Quartz from Metasomatic Reaction Zones of a Mobile Belt in India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-964, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-964, 2026.

EGU26-1188 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Paragenesis of the Munster Basin Upper Devonian polymetallic veins, SW Ireland 

François-Xavier Bonin, Patrick Meere, and Richard Unitt

The Late Paleozoic Munster Basin of SW Ireland is predominantly composed of the non-marine siliciclastic-dominated fine-grained alluvial sediments of the Upper Old Red Sandstone magnafacies. Copper mineralisation in this sedimentary basin is important, either as sediment-hosted stratiform or locally abundant polymetallic vein-hosted copper. In the polymetallic extensional veins, the ore phases include chalcopyrite, tetrahedrite-tennantite, galena, and molybdenite, with gangue minerals commonly quartz, carbonates, chlorite, barite, and Fe-oxides. Recent Re-Os geochronology on molybdenite proved the latter veins opened ca. 367-366 Ma, during Upper Devonian basinal extension, and were deformed before ca. 316-312 Ma by the Variscan orogeny. However, the role of these two major geodynamic events on copper mineralisation was never studied in detail, such that the vein-hosted copper mineralisation and remobilisation processes are still poorly understood. A collection of mineralised vein samples from the western Munster Basin are characterised using reflected light microscopy, Raman spectrometry, and LA-ICPMS trace element analysis to better define the mineralised vein paragenesis. We have identified a pre-mineralisation chlorite veinlet generation. This generation appears to have been reopened by the quartz-rich polymetallic veins in a syntaxial manner, such that the chlorite rims the polymetallic veins. Both vein types show evidence of Variscan deformation (i.e., buckling, displacement). These new observations are critical as 1) the presence of chlorite may allow for precise geothermometry on the veins and 2) the veins appear to have used the same conduits, which may indicate important physicochemical variations (e.g., T, P, pH, fO2, etc.) and/or a pivotal switch in the fluid source(s).

How to cite: Bonin, F.-X., Meere, P., and Unitt, R.: Paragenesis of the Munster Basin Upper Devonian polymetallic veins, SW Ireland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1188, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1188, 2026.

The Allihies region on the Beara Peninsula, SW Ireland possesses a mining history for vein-hosted Cu sulphide mineralisation. Structural and chronological control of the deposit has been studied extensively (Fletcher, 1969; Lang et al., 2020; Reilly, 1986; Sheridan, 1964). However, the spatial distribution of fluid alteration in the host rock and associated mineralogy remain unstudied. Several alteration minerals linked with the sulphide mineralisation have been recorded, such as chlorite, muscovite, siderite, calcite, dolomite, kaolinite, montmorillonite, and goethite (Fletcher, 1969).

Reflectance spectroscopy can be used for identifying alteration minerals. Hunt (1977) showed, due to the different electron and molecular structure of the compounds, most minerals absorb unique amounts of energy upon the incident of electromagnetic radiation, thus the reflected energy show characteristics absorption features in the spectra. Certain mineral groups exhibit unique features in the visible-near (400 – 900 nm) and short-wave infrared (900 – 2500 nm) wavelength ranges (Clark et al., 1990; Hunt, 1977). High-spectral resolution (hyperspectral) imaging (HSI) techniques provide a large amount of spectral information where each pixel contains hundreds of narrow, contiguous wavelength bands (Goetz et al., 1985; Lodhi et al., 2019). This gives the ability to identify wavelength positions of mineral absorptions and their subtle deviations that reveal the compositional variations.

Consequently, HSI can be used for analysing the host-rock alterations around the Mountain Mine, Allihies, which will reveal the spatial patterns. The target sulphide mineralisation/lodes are oriented in E-W and N-S (Reilly, 1986), and systematic sampling from the mineralized vein across the alteration zone  will help determine if the fluid alteration has a recognisable detectable spectral signature. Mineral groups such as chlorites, carbonates, and clays (Clark et al., 1990) possibly be differentiated of the existing propylitic and sericitic alteration phases (Fletcher, 1969) as  one moves away from the veins into the country rock.

The current study will use laboratory HS data from a rock scanner for initial analysis, followed by a HS drone survey for extending the spatial scale. Principal Component Analysis will be used for extracting the relevant spectral information (Burger & Gowen, 2011). Subsequently, Minimum wavelength mapper can be incorporated for further analysis of dominating mineral occurrences (Hecker et al., 2019), by studying unique absorption features and their feature depths, for mapping variations across the samples. Specifically, the wavelength range of 2100 - 2400 nm contains the diagnostic absorption features for phyllosilicates and carbonates that highlight the different alteration stages the region has undergone.

The research model has the potential to be further developed for identifying regions with similar spectral responses with mineral exploration potential.

How to cite: Kulugammana, M., Meere, P. A., and Unitt, R. P.: Characterizing the rock alteration associated with vein-hosted Cu sulphide mineralization using hyperspectral reflectance spectroscopy; A case study from the Allihies region, SW Ireland., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1223, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1223, 2026.

EGU26-1362 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Fluid migration, albitization, and metal concentration in the Munster Basin, SW Ireland 

Hannah Vogel, Richard Unitt, and Patrick Meere

Fluids exert a fundamental control on mineral reactions and mass transfer in intracratonic basins, yet the drivers of Na-metasomatism in basins lacking classical evaporite sequences remain poorly understood. The Devonian–Carboniferous Munster Basin of SW Ireland, hosting widespread Cu mineralization, has traditionally been described as containing super-mature arenites with limited feldspar content. However, recent Raman spectroscopic mapping has identified feldspathic sandstones displaying pervasive albitization with at least three different structural varieties of albite providing new insights into a complex history of fluid-rock interaction, and associated metal concentration, across multiple scales.

A detailed petrographic and geochemical analysis is proposed to map the spatial and temporal evolution of albitization in the Munster Basin and investigate how this corresponds with sediment leaching, faulting, and the distribution of metalliferous deposits. To achieve this, three N–S traverses across the basin are conducted, integrating in-situ portable X-ray fluorescence (XRF) measurements to acquire major and trace element data and systematic hand-sampling for laboratory analyses. These basin-scale observations are combined with micro- to nano-scale analytical approaches to investigate (1) the distribution and timing of albitization, (2) the identification of precursor feldspar compositions (K-feldspar vs. plagioclase) through Raman geochemistry, and (3) the implications for sediment leaching and trace-metal mobilization. Portable XRF data are complemented by 2D confocal Raman imaging, petrography, and targeted LA-ICP-MS analysis to constrain fluid chemistry, flow pathways, and the conditions driving feldspar alteration. Particular attention is given to areas adjacent to volcanic centers and major faults, which may have acted as conduits for downward-migrating saline fluids during transgressive events, providing a source capable of inducing pervasive albitization even in the absence of evaporite sequences. 

Preliminary results show systematic variations in albite structural types and associated geochemical signatures that correlate with basin architecture and fault-controlled fluid pathways. By linking grain-scale mineral transformations to basin-scale structural and geochemical frameworks, this study provides new insights into the mechanisms controlling fluid migration, diagenetic alteration, and metalliferous enrichment in post-orogenic intracratonic basins. 

How to cite: Vogel, H., Unitt, R., and Meere, P.: Fluid migration, albitization, and metal concentration in the Munster Basin, SW Ireland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1362, 2026.

The Kettara mining district (Central Jebilet, Morocco) hosts a pyrrhotite-rich massive sulfide lens enclosed within the low-grade metamorphosed Sarhlef volcano-sedimentary sequence and spatially associated with a syntectonic mafic–ultramafic intrusion. The deposit lies within a dextral strike-slip shear zone of the Variscan belt. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the structural role of the Kettara shear zone in the genesis, architecture, and redistribution of the massive sulfide lens, and to determine whether it represents a pre-existing sulfide accumulation subsequently remobilized during ductile deformation or a syntectonic sulfide formation linked to shear-zone activity.

Structural observations reveal an increasing deformation gradient from the volcano-sedimentary wall rocks toward the ore lens, with maximum strain at the ore–host interface. Deformation produced several structural generations: an early S1 foliation with a general N45 orientation associated with anisopachous P1 folds; a penetrative S2 foliation accompanied by tight isoclinal P2 folds; and late chevron P3 folds, observed exclusively within the ore body, which has been tectonically rotated and progressively steepened to a subvertical attitude in direct response to shear-zone deformation. Localized shear corridors exhibit well-developed C/S fabrics, indicating strain partitioning and a strong simple-shear component. These structures acted as preferential pathways for fluid flow, locally accommodating transient porosity through grain-size reduction and recrystallization.

Microscopic studies reveal a mineral paragenesis characterized by two distinct metallogenic stages. The first stage corresponds to a silica- and sulfur-rich fluid, dominated by massive pyrrhotite displaying textures indicative of syn-metamorphic remobilization and recrystallization, accompanied by subordinate pyrite, chalcopyrite, galena, and sphalerite, with chlorite as the main gangue phase. The second stage is characterized by fissuring of pre-existing sulfides and the infiltration of Cu–Zn–Fe-rich fluids, causing disseminated precipitation of pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, galena, and quartz–carbonates, while reorganizing the minerals under the influence of ductile deformation and the preferential flow of fluids along the structural conduits of the shear zone. Collectively, these stages record the transition from an early Fe-rich massive sulfide accumulation to later fluid-mediated mineral precipitation.

These observations highlight the first-order structural control exerted by the Kettara dextral shear zone on hydrothermal fluid transfer. Although available data do not allow a definitive distinction between metamorphic remobilization of a pre-existing sulfide mineralization and the intervention of magmatic–hydrothermal fluids derived from the syntectonic intrusion, the structural control remains unequivocal. At all scales, the mineralization is strongly guided by the shear-zone architecture, forming anisotropic, high-permeability conduits that control fluid ingress, fluid–rock reactions, and the coupled chemical–mechanical evolution of the deforming rock mass.

Kettara thus represents a natural example of deformation-assisted fluid migration and shear-zone-controlled metallogenesis in an orogenic setting. Complementary petro-structural, geochronological, and isotope geochemistry investigations are needed to constrain the timing, sources, and physico-chemical conditions of the fluids involved.

Keywords: massive sulfides, C/S fabrics, ductile shear zones, fluid flow, remobilization, Kettara.

How to cite: Cisse, D. and Wafik, A.: Deformation-assisted fluid flow and massive sulfide evolution in a ductile shear zone: insights from the Kettara mining district (Central Jebilet, Morocco)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1754, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1754, 2026.

EGU26-1973 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Variation in elemental and Li isotope geochemistry during the weathering of two types of biotite 

Jong-Sik Ryu, Hojin Park, Minjune Yang, and Gi Young Jeong

Lithium (Li) isotopes have been widely used as powerful tracers of chemical weathering processes, providing insights into the coupling between climate and silicate weathering. Although Li isotope fractionation does not occur under equilibrium conditions but rather during kinetically controlled mineral dissolution, the relationship between incipient mineral weathering and Li isotope fractionation remains poorly constrained in natural weathering systems, particularly with respect to the direction and magnitude of fractionation. Here, we investigate elemental and Li isotope geochemistry in two types of biotite—oxidized biotite and hydrobiotite (a 1:1 regularly interstratified biotite–vermiculite)—collected from in situ granitoid weathering profiles. Both biotite types exhibit negative correlations between elemental concentrations and depth; however, Li shows the most pronounced depletion. Elemental loss reaches up to ~70% for Li, with more extensive depletion observed in hydrobiotite compared to oxidized biotite, despite the progressive transformation of biotite into secondary phases such as vermiculite and kaolinite. Lithium isotope analyses are currently underway. By integrating elemental geochemistry with Li isotope compositions, we aim to constrain Li isotope behavior during the initial stages of silicate weathering and to quantify potential Li isotope fractionation associated with distinct biotite alteration pathways. These results will provide new constraints on kinetic controls of Li isotope fractionation during incipient weathering and improve the interpretation of Li isotope signatures in natural weathering systems, including glacial and weathering-limited environments.

How to cite: Ryu, J.-S., Park, H., Yang, M., and Jeong, G. Y.: Variation in elemental and Li isotope geochemistry during the weathering of two types of biotite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1973, 2026.

Shale oil is predominantly stored in nanoscale pores with ultra-low porosity and permeability, where conventional waterflooding commonly delivers poor recovery. While CO₂-enhanced oil recovery (CO₂-EOR) can improve production by inducing oil swelling, reducing viscosity, and promoting desorption, many existing evaluations still rely on bulk-phase properties and thus inadequately capture nano-confinement and mineral-specific surface effects, obscuring quantitative relationships among CO₂ fraction, desorption efficiency, and mobility. In this study, equilibrium and non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations are performed to quantify density layering, competitive adsorption, and rheological/slip behavior of shale oil–CO₂ mixtures confined in quartz and kaolinite nanopores. The simulations show that CO₂ preferentially enriches near pore walls, displaces adsorbed oil, and weakens oil–rock interactions, facilitating the release of interfacial hydrocarbons. Compared with bulk behavior, confinement increases apparent viscosity by about two- to threefold, and kaolinite exhibits pronounced boundary resistance manifested as adverse (negative) slip. As the CO₂ fraction increases to ~20–40%, viscosity decreases markedly and interfacial transport improves, shifting the displacement from unstable fingering toward a more coherent piston-like front. Building on these pore-scale insights, a multiscale coupling framework is developed by embedding MD-derived transport and interfacial parameters into reservoir numerical simulations to conduct 3D field-scale forecasts for the Gulong Sag. The resulting recovery factors that account for nano-confinement (~8–20%) better match field behavior, whereas bulk-parameter simulations substantially overestimate performance. Sensitivity analyses further indicate mineral-dependent economically favorable CO₂ windows (>20% for quartz-dominated pores and ~30–40% for kaolinite-rich pores), highlighting the need for differentiated injection strategies; overall, the proposed multiscale approach bridges microscopic interfacial physics and macroscopic development prediction, providing quantitative support for optimizing CO₂-EOR and enhancing CO₂ utilization and storage in unconventional reservoirs.

Keywords: Shale oil; Nano-confinement effects; Molecular dynamics simulations; Unconventional reservoirs

How to cite: Liu, H. and Xue, H.: Effect of CO2 Pre-Extraction on Water Flooding in Nanopores: Insights from Molecular Dynamics Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2439, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2439, 2026.

EGU26-3448 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Interplay Between Migmatites and Deep Crustal Shear Zones 

Bruna B. Carvalho and Edward W. Sawyer

The presence of melt and associated fluids profoundly weakens the continental crust, promoting strain localization and establishing a close link between migmatites and ductile shear zones. Here we compare four migmatite case studies developed within major crustal-scale shear zones formed in contrasting tectonic settings, from collisional to extensional regimes: the Kinawa migmatite (Brazil), Opatica migmatite (Canada), Saint-Malo migmatite (France), and the Øksfjord Shear Zone (Norway). Our goal is to evaluate the connection between migmatites and shear zones, their impact on shear zone evolution, and the main macro- and microstructural features of migmatites in shear zones. We also examine the extent to which shear zones may serve as conduits for magma transport within the crust.

All migmatites formed at mid- to lower-crustal conditions (4–9 kbar; 650–820 °C) under both fluid-present and fluid-absent regimes. Macro- and microstructural observations reveal that the evolution of melt connectivity and permeability was strongly controlled by shear zone kinematics. In the Kinawa and Opatica examples, preservation of magmatic microstructures indicates that deformation ceased shortly after melt crystallization, suggesting limited post-melting deformation. In contrast, the Saint-Malo and Øksfjord shear zones record pervasive solid-state deformation overprinting magmatic fabrics, implying sustained deformation and continued microstructural reorganization after partial melting.

Across all examples, the spatial association between migmatites and shear zones highlights the role of deformation in enhancing melt segregation, extraction, and transient permeability. However, only some shear zones evolved into efficient pathways for melt migration. These and other case studies from the literature illustrate how ductile shear zones function as dynamic crustal domains in which deformation, partial melting, and fluid transport are tightly coupled, and where porosity and permeability evolve through time in response to changing rheology and strain.

How to cite: Carvalho, B. B. and Sawyer, E. W.: Interplay Between Migmatites and Deep Crustal Shear Zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3448, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3448, 2026.

Fluid-rock interactions drive critical lithospheric processes and industrial applications including CO₂ storage and geothermal energy extraction. In deep crystalline crust where static permeability is negligible and rocks do not deform, fluids primarily exploit transient pathways created through chemical reactions with minerals in disequilibrium. These reaction-induced pore networks dynamically alter rock permeability, yet their ephemeral nature makes direct characterization challenging.

We present an integrated methodology combining time-resolved synchrotron x-ray microtomographic imaging (4DSµCT) with generative artificial intelligence to quantify reaction-induced porosity evolution. Using 4DSµCT, we captured spatio-temporal pore network dynamics during KBr-KCl replacement, a well-established analogue for interface-coupled dissolution-precipitation processes. Advanced statistical microstructural descriptors and Minkowski functionals revealed intricate coupling between dissolution-precipitation mechanisms, transport regimes, and evolving connectivity governing transient permeability.

To extend insights beyond experimental limitations, particularly for high-temperature systems (>500°C) where direct imaging remains infeasible, we developed Pore-Edit GAN, a StyleGAN2-ADA framework trained on ~29,000 tomographic images. This model generates statistically realistic microstructures while enabling semantic editing of porosity and connectivity. We applied our approach to hydrothermally altered monzonite from the Oslo Rift, where feldspar replacement reactions at ~10 km depth created now-isolated pore networks. By navigating the GAN latent space along learned connectivity directions, we reconstructed plausible transient pore configurations, effectively reversing the porosity isolation that occurred as reactions ceased.

Voxel-based finite element simulations of incompressible Stokes flow through these AI-reconstructed networks yield permeabilities reaching 4.5×10⁻¹⁵ m², a two-order-of-magnitude enhancement upon pore reconnection, consistent with established transient crustal permeability-depth relations. This convergence of synchrotron capabilities, deep generative models, and computational fluid dynamics establishes a quantitative framework for predicting transport properties in reactive geological systems where direct observation remains challenging.

How to cite: Plümper, O., Amiri, H., and Fusseis, F.: Reaction-Induced Porosity During Fluid-Mineral Interaction: From 4D Synchrotron Imaging to AI-Driven Permeability Reconstruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3949, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3949, 2026.

Fluid flow through ductile shear zones is increasingly recognised as a key control on the localisation, upgrading, and redistribution of hydrothermal ore systems. We investigate how syn-deformational porosity evolves with increasing finite strain in a calcite-rich marble mylonite from the Western Mary Kathleen shear zone adjacent to the Mary Kathleen REE-U deposit (NW Queensland, Australia). Microstructural evolution and pore-network topology are tracked along a natural strain gradient using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and synchrotron micro-computed tomography (3-D micro-CT). EBSD reveals a progressive transition from twin-rich, dislocation-dominated calcite fabrics at lower strain to uniformly fine-grained, foam-like mosaics at higher strain, where grain-size-sensitive deformation (diffusion creep and grain-boundary sliding) dominates and crystallographic preferred orientations weaken. In lower-strain mylonites, pores occur mainly as isolated to weakly connected cavities along subgrain and grain boundaries, concentrated at boundary junctions and locally associated with twin lamellae. With increasing strain and grain-size reduction, porosity reorganises into fewer but larger, high-aspect-ratio grain-boundary networks that link into laterally continuous pore sheets. Micro-CT-derived orientations show that the normals to these sheets cluster near the instantaneous shortening direction, indicating that connected pore sheets are commonly oblique to both the S- and C-planes rather than strictly foliation-parallel. These results demonstrate that finite-strain-driven grain-size reduction can generate transient, strongly anisotropic permeability by organising boundary-hosted porosity into interconnected, sheet-like conduits, providing a plausible microstructural mechanism for deformation-controlled fluid focusing and REE-U-bearing fluid redistribution in carbonate shear zones.

How to cite: Olesch-Byrne, A., Finch, M., and Vieira Ribeiro, B.: The evolution of syn-deformational porosity in a marble mylonite over increasing strain: Insights from EBSD and 3-D microcomputed tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4662, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4662, 2026.

EGU26-6268 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Acoustic Characterization of Fluid Seepage Controlled by Tectonic Structures Offshore Southwestern Taiwan 

Cheng-Yu Ou, Tzu-Ting Chen, Ho-Han Hsu, and Yen-Chi Wu

This study quantifies spatial variations in acoustic seepage intensity offshore southwestern Taiwan and assesses whether margin setting or conduit continuity better explains the observed differences. Seepage variability was characterized using volume backscattering strength (Sv), plume geometry, and subsurface structural features. A total of 21 plumes from 14 seep sites were characterized based on Sv and geometry derived from Simrad EK60/EK80 echosounder data. After applying transmission-loss correction, seepage sites on the passive margin (e.g., Horseshoe Ridge, Pointer Ridge, and Formosa Ridge) exhibit higher Sv and taller plumes than those on the active margin. Integration with multichannel seismic profiles and sediment-core records reveals extensive free gas beneath bottom-simulating reflectors (BSRs) and gas chimneys, indicating sustained fluid migration through persistent conduits. In contrast, relatively weak Sv at the mixed-origin G96 site suggests partial conduit infilling. These observations indicate that although tectonic deformation establishes the first-order structural framework for fluid migration, the continuity and evolutionary state of seep conduits exert the dominant control on seepage intensity. Potential tidal modulation was further evaluated by comparing Sv with the rate of tidal pressure change, but only weak correlations were observed, suggesting that tidal forcing plays a secondary role in controlling seepage variability.

Keywords: seepage intensity, margin setting, conduit continuity, volume backscattering strength (Sv), offshore southwestern Taiwan

How to cite: Ou, C.-Y., Chen, T.-T., Hsu, H.-H., and Wu, Y.-C.: Acoustic Characterization of Fluid Seepage Controlled by Tectonic Structures Offshore Southwestern Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6268, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6268, 2026.

The Upper Rhine Graben (URG) is the central part of the European Cenozoic Rift System and holds a huge geothermal potential due to a reduced Moho depth and active hot brine convection cells. In addition to that appealing potential, hydrothermal brines of the URG show high Lithium concentrations. Yet, investors-relying deep geothermal energy companies face difficulties to predict fracture network permeability before drilling operations. This problem induces techno-economic risks, which frighten investments and in turn hinder the wide development of deep geothermal energy use. The goal of this work is to provide input data to develop modelling tools to help predict fracture network permeability before drilling operations. We will integrate data from both the French and German side of the URG, which is seldomly done in studies. Here we present a timeline that we’ll use as a data compilation base to reconstruct the URG setup and hydrothermal fracture clogging history. Once identified, the fracture clogging events will be deeper characterized to be implemented in a reconstruction model. A characterization of mineralized fractures all around the URG shoulders will help to complete the list of hydrothermal clogging events identified in the Black Forest (Permian, Jurassic-Cretaceous and Paleogene) and will allow to simulate the rate of precipitation in mineralized fractures and thus their clogging potential.

How to cite: Mazzinghi, L.: A timeline for the reconstruction of Upper Rhine Graben hydrothermal fracture mineralization events  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7761, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7761, 2026.

EGU26-7824 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Geological process understanding in space and time 

Daniel Koehn and Sandra Piazolo

Geological patterns in space and time are dependent on a number of processes that scale differently depending on whether or not they are linear or non-linear and on the involved constants (rate constants, diffusion constants). In order to predict geological processes and their occurrence in space and time one needs to understand at what spatio-temporal scales they are active. Quite often the slowest process is dominating the time scale of pattern evolution, therefore cross-over points in space and time are of special interest, where the dominance of one processes over another switches. When two processes are competing during the formation of a pattern, the cross-overs are critical points where the behavior of the system changes. Here we are exploring five important processes namely elastic wave propagation, fluid pressure diffusion, temperature diffusion, matter diffusion and reactions. While elastic wave propagation and reactions scale linearly, fluid pressure-, temperature-, and matter-diffusion have non-linear scaling behavior, which can be illustrated best in a log-log diagram of time versus space. In such a diagram the diffusion processes have a steeper slope than the two linear processes. Fluid pressure diffusion is 3 to 4 orders of magnitude faster than temperature diffusion, which itself is 3 orders of magnitude faster than matter diffusion (in a fluid). For example if a reactive fluid enters a fault, in a second the fluid pressure equilibrates on a m-scale, the temperature on a mm-scale and matter on the micro-meter scale. During fault slip that happens due to fluid overpressure, elastic wave propagation and fluid pressure diffusion act at the same time scale on micrometers but then diverge with fluid pressure diffusion equilibrating in seconds on the m-scale while elastic wave propagation reaches km-scale at the same time. We will discuss these scaling relations in details with examples from a variety of geological processes.

 

How to cite: Koehn, D. and Piazolo, S.: Geological process understanding in space and time, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7824, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7824, 2026.

EGU26-8033 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Wrinkled clocks in the crust: dating deformation in Archean gold-bearing shear zones 

Isabelle Komendat, David Schneider, and Renelle Dubosq

Mid-crustal shear zones localize strain and control the migration of heat and fluids, making them central to understanding metallic ore-forming processes. Mica are widely used to date deformation in shear zones, however their radiometric ages can be difficult to interpret because hydrothermal alteration and strain-induced microstructural defects can promote recrystallization and disrupt isotopic retention. In Archean gold camps, mica ages commonly postdate mineralization events by >100 Myr, raising questions about whether these ages reflect primary mineralization, metamorphic or hydrothermal growth, or post-orogenic remobilization. Robust interpretation of these ages requires direct integration of geochemical and micro- to nanoscale structural analysis. We examined mica from the Sunday Lake Deformation Zone, a regional scale deformation zone controlling gold mineralization at Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. giant Detour Lake Mine (DLM), in the northwestern Abitibi greenstone belt, Canada. The DLM orogenic gold deposit is characterized by c. 2734-2724 Ma volcanic rocks, comprising ultramafic-dominated lower units and mafic volcanic and volcaniclastic upper units, metamorphosed under greenschist to lower amphibolite facies conditions. Mafic host rocks are intruded by felsic to mafic sills and dikes. The main regional foliation is subvertical and axial-planar to west-trending, shallowly-plunging tight to isoclinal folds, which transposes the intrusive relationships. Gold mineralization occurred at c. 2670-2640 Ma in a syn-orogenic setting. Microstructural analyses were conducted on muscovite from felsic meta-intrusive rocks, collected from drill core, that are comprised of quartz, muscovite ± biotite, plagioclase, K-feldspar, chlorite, garnet, amphibole, carbonates and sulfides. Quartz microstructures record bulging recrystallization and nascent subgrain rotation, indicating deformation temperatures of ~300-400°C. Plagioclase display tapered deformation twins and brittle fracturing, consistent with low to moderate temperature deformation. Mica constitute between <5 and 30 vol% of the rock and occur as euhedral porphyroblasts/neoblasts to subhedral poikilitic, skeletal grains ranging in size from 15 x 50 μm to 250 x 650 μm. High-resolution electron channeling contrast imaging of the mica reveals weak undulatory orientation contrast patterns perpendicular to cleavage planes in ~20-50% of the grains. Such contrast patterns suggest deformation in the mica is accommodated primarily by dislocation glide. Backscatter electron imaging of the mica also revealed concentric chemical zoning, typically expressed as irregular and discontinuous rims along grain margins, which are weakly enriched in Fe and Al and depleted in Mg and Si relative to mica cores. Muscovite Ar-Ar analyses from unmineralized rocks at DLM yield single-crystal dates of 2600-2100 Ma, and complementary K-Ca and Rb-Sr dating will be conducted to assess the roles of Ar loss and element mobility in producing these younger and dispersed ages. The timing of metamorphism and deformation has important implications for understanding the nature and controls on mineralization at DLM, and whether the original geometry and mineralogy of the deposit has been modified through later stages of syn‐metamorphic deformation.

How to cite: Komendat, I., Schneider, D., and Dubosq, R.: Wrinkled clocks in the crust: dating deformation in Archean gold-bearing shear zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8033, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8033, 2026.

EGU26-8377 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Carbon gradients as tracers of structurally controlled fluid flow in homogeneous metabasaltic sills (Loch Stornoway, Scottish Highlands). 

Yessica González-Ixta, Barbara Kleine-Marshall, Alasdair Skelton, and Daniel Koehn

In the past decades, the extent of fluid-induced reaction halos in metabasaltic sills within the Argyll Group of the Dalradian Supergroup in the SW Scottish Highlands has been intensively used to constrain metamorphic fluid flow velocities (Skelton, 2011). However, recent findings revealed that reaction front propagation within numerous sills was primarily controlled by preferred fabric alignment at the margins during deformation events, as well as by mineralogical and chemical heterogeneities across the sills. Here, we revisit hydration and carbonation fronts in metabasaltic sills in the vicinity of major fluid pathways, i.e., the Loch Awe Syncline and Ardrishaig Anticline, to reevaluate fluid-induced reaction front propagation and constrain metamorphic fluid flow velocities.
This study integrates field observations, detailed petrological-textural analyses, and whole-rock geochemistry, including carbon and water contents as well as trace element data, along a transect across compositionally homogeneous metabasaltic sills. The aim is to constrain the mechanisms controlling fluid-induced reaction progress at the contact between metasedimentary rocks and metabasaltic sills.
The selected basaltic sills were metamorphosed under greenschist- and epidote-amphibolite-facies conditions and record at least four deformation events. In the sill margins, the rocks show increased calcite and chlorite contents and replacement of garnet, amphibole, and dark mica, reflecting localized retrogression. This retrograde overprint is also characterized by mobilization of large-ion lithophile elements (LILE; e.g., K, Na, Sr). In contrast, the sill interior preserves textural and mineralogical equilibrium among amphibole, dark mica, epidote, garnet, and titanite. Textural variations indicate a progressive decrease in hydration and carbonation toward the sill interior.
Carbon contents decrease systematically from 1.22-1.16 wt.% in the sill margins to 0.07-0.02 wt.% toward the sill interior. Similarly, water contents are highest in the sill margins (up to 1.95 wt.%) and lowest in the sill interior (0.52 wt.%). Petrographic observations further suggest that fluid infiltration and reaction are controlled by structural anisotropy inherited from earlier deformation during retrogression, rather than mineralogical heterogeneity. Fluid flow is preferentially channelized along lithological contacts and deformation-related weaknesses, such as foliation and mineral lineation, which are most developed near the sill margins.
The new dataset enables a recalculation of the true spatial extent of metamorphic fluid infiltration and allows time-integrated estimates of fluid fluxes based on carbonation and hydration reaction front geometries, as well as their relationships with trace element redistribution. Understanding the rates of CO₂ release and sequestration during orogenic processes provides new insights into the role of structural anisotropies and brittle-ductile processes in controlling the volume, pathways, and metal-enriching potential of metamorphic fluid flow.

How to cite: González-Ixta, Y., Kleine-Marshall, B., Skelton, A., and Koehn, D.: Carbon gradients as tracers of structurally controlled fluid flow in homogeneous metabasaltic sills (Loch Stornoway, Scottish Highlands)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8377, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8377, 2026.

EGU26-9560 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Strike-slip fault system and fluorite mineralization in the Hongjianbing area, Mazong Mountain, Gansu China 

Chao Bo, Genhou Wang, Peilie Zhang, and Jingqi Zhang

Abstract: The Beishan Orogenic Belt, located along the southern margin of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt, is one of the key mineral resource regions in northwestern China. The Hongjianbing fluorite deposit, located in the northern part of this belt, is a well-known quartz-vein-type fluorite deposit that has attracted considerable attention from researchers. Through field geological mapping, UAV and remote sensing measurements, and borehole structural recording, two east–west-trending strike-slip fault systems were identified in the study area, separated by a distance of 5 km, with nearly vertical dips. These faults exhibit multi-stage activity, with early deformation characterized by dextral strike-slip motion. The intervening blocks experienced ductile deformation, with S-C fabric development in the shear zones.39Ar-40Ar dating of biotite from the mylonite in the ductile shear zone yielded a plateau age of approximately 330 Ma, marking the timing of ductile deformation. Later, these two faults evolved into brittle left-lateral strike-slip faults, forming a Riedel shear system (R, R', T shears), and displaying fault breccia and fault gouge. K–Ar dating of authigenic illite from the fault gouge yielded an age of approximately 220 Ma, indicating a transition from ductile to brittle deformation over time.The host rocks of the fluorite deposit are mainly intermediate to acidic volcanic rocks from the Carboniferous Baishan Formation. Zircon U–Pb dating of these rocks yielded ages of approximately 330 Ma, suggesting that the host rocks may have formed during contemporaneous magmatic activity. All fluorite orebodies are located within the main damage zone of the southern brittle fault system, which exhibits left-lateral, right-stepping characteristics. The development of this brittle fault system provided the necessary space and conduits for ore-forming fluid migration, facilitating fluorite mineralization.The cataclastic texture of the ores further suggests that mineralization occurred after significant faulting, reflecting high fluid mobility within the fault damage zones. This high fluid mobility is also reflected in the characteristics of the fluorite ore bodies. After migrating along the brittle fault zones, mineralizing fluids precipitated fluorite as fine veinlets, which is the current form of mineralization observed in the deposit. A three-dimensional geological model of the ore body was constructed using GOCAD software, revealing the close temporal and spatial relationship between fluorite mineralization and fault activity.
Keywords: Structural control of mineralization; Fluorite deposit; Geochronology; Three-dimensional mineralization model;

How to cite: Bo, C., Wang, G., Zhang, P., and Zhang, J.: Strike-slip fault system and fluorite mineralization in the Hongjianbing area, Mazong Mountain, Gansu China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9560, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9560, 2026.

EGU26-10973 | ECS | Orals | TS1.6

Fluid–rock interactions in a crustal-scale upflow system: syn-rift albitization of the North-Pyrenean Massifs 

Camille Jansen, Yoann Denèle, Guillaume Estrade, Oscar Laurent, Mathieu Leisen, and Michel de Saint-Blanquat

Understanding how solid-state deformation and fluid flow interact is essential to constrain continental lithosphere evolution. The North-Pyrenean Zone, located in the Pyrenean retro-wedge, corresponds to an inverted Early Cretaceous rift that led to mantle exhumation. It comprises Mesozoic basins and Variscan basement massifs. Key rifting markers include: (i) thick Albian-Cenomanian detrital sequences, (ii) peridotite bodies reworked into pre-/syn-rift sediments, (iii) HT–LP metamorphic paragenesis in pre-/syn-rift series, and (iv) giant metasomatic stocks comprising talcschist and albitite. Although geochronological data show that metasomatic bodies are related to large-scale fluid circulation during Early Cretaceous rifting (130–90 Ma), the associated 3D–4D fluid circulation system remains poorly constrained.

Our study focuses on the eastern part of the Arize North-Pyrenean Massif, a syn-rift tilted block exposing, beneath a pre- and syn-rift halokinetic sedimentary cover, a complete Variscan metamorphic series from migmatites to the South, to low-grade Carboniferous pelites to the North. While foliation trajectories are homogeneously N100°-oriented across the western and central parts of the Arize massif, its eastern part is distinguished by a heterogeneous foliation pattern within a N140°E-oriented, transtensional folded and faulted zone. A pervasive metasomatic zone is developed within a 10 km² elliptical domain at the core of this structural system. It encompasses pure albitite stocks and results from a two-stage alteration process. The least metasomatized samples show minor plagioclase alteration and biotite destabilization, with newly crystallized titanite, apatite and epidote. Whole-rock data reveal a strong Ca-enrichment mainly hosted in the newly formed Ca-rich mineral assemblages. The most metasomatized samples exhibit quartz leaching and albitization of plagioclase associated to relatively limited net chemical change. Fluid inclusions trapped in metasomatized apatite contain H2O–NaCl–CaCl2 brines (≈ 16 wt.% NaCl eq.), recording trapping conditions of ~300 °C and ~205 MPa. Quartz generally shows no evidence of crystal-plastic deformation, despite its plasticity temperature being close to the inferred fluid trapping temperatures. Locally, a structural transition, marked by late low-angle normal faults associated with C-S structures and, in places, mylonites, documents increasing system temperature. This thermal increase is interpreted as resulting from progressive heating of the surrounding rocks by circulating fluids.

We interpret the Arize fossile hydrothermal fluid system as a transient reservoir of ascending hot fluids located above a transient brittle–ductile transition. In such a system, downwelling fluids are stored at the brittle–ductile transition, where subhorizontal anisotropy planes act as impermeable barriers. Locally, these fluids, heated to 300–400 °C, ascend into the upper crust along vertical anisotropy planes (tilted Variscan foliations) and brittle structures (faults). U–Pb dating of newly formed titanites at ca. 130 Ma supports the interpretation that metasomatism in the Arize upflow system occurred during the early stages of rifting. Finally, we demonstrate that, at the scale of the Pyrenean rift, the Arize hydrothermal system, located within an oblique transtensional zone, developed in a syn-rift linkage zone between N100°E-oriented rift segments. This integrated study underscores the role of fluid flow in linkage zones associated with continental crust stretching, with implications for hydrothermal and geothermal systems.

How to cite: Jansen, C., Denèle, Y., Estrade, G., Laurent, O., Leisen, M., and de Saint-Blanquat, M.: Fluid–rock interactions in a crustal-scale upflow system: syn-rift albitization of the North-Pyrenean Massifs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10973, 2026.

EGU26-11377 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Fluid flow in foreland basins: spatial and temporal scaling of their transport mechanisms 

Lisa Lebrun, Barbara Kleine-Marshall, and Daniel Koehn

Foreland basins often host important ore deposits (like MVT deposits; Bradley and Leach, 2003) which are associated with deep and shallow fluid circulation. Those fluids, expelled from the orogen, can have different origins like meteoric water, diagenetic fluid, metamorphic fluid or even deeper crustal origins (Oliver J., 1986). However, whether these fluids are expelled to the foreland as continuous flow or as series of rapid pulses remains largely unexplored. Here, we combine numerical modelling with geochemical data and petrographic observation of a sandstone and its associated veins and reaction halos to identify spatial and temporal fluid flow and its transport mechanism(s) in foreland basins.

Thin sections from a Rotliegend red arkose-sandstone formation (German Permian Variscan foreland) were investigated using microprobe analysis and BSE-EDS-SEM imaging. The arkose-sandstone exhibited tapering lighter reaction halos around veinlets, most likely produced through redox reactions upon fluid infiltration into the sandstone. The model Elle from Koehn et al., (2022) was subsequently applied to link fluid transport mechanism to the patterns and geometry observed in the samples. Pore pressure applied from a crack toward the host rock and a concentration gradient were used to create fluid flow in the sandstone from which a range of values for advection, diffusion and a reaction rate were deduced. In this way, the model allowed to mimic the same pattern/geometry as the sample on several scales and enabled a systematic assessment whether fluid flow may have been constant or pulsating.

Combining petrographic, geochemical and modelling investigations revealed that the reaction halos in the sandstone were in fact formed upon a single rapid fluid flow event, that presumably was fast and channelised in the vein, and pervasive and comparatively slow in the surrounding host rock. These preliminary results imply that fluid flow and transport in foreland basins may be of a more pulsating nature rather than continuous steady state fluid flow and transport mechanisms may thus be similar to what has been previously reported for subduction zone settings (e.g., Kleine et al., 2016).

Bradley, D. C., & Leach, D. L. (2003). Tectonic controls of Mississippi Valley-type lead–zinc mineralization in orogenic forelands. Mineralium deposita38(6), 652-667.

Kleine, B. I., Zhao, Z., & Skelton, A. D. (2016). Rapid fluid flow along fractures at greenschist facies conditions on Syros, Greece. American Journal of Science316(2), 169-201.

Koehn, D., Kelka, U., Toussaint, R., Siegel, C., Mullen, G., Boyce, A., & Piazolo, S. (2022). Outcrop scale mixing enhanced by permeability variations: the role of stationary and travelling waves of high saturation indices. Geological Magazine159(11-12), 2279-2292.

Oliver, J. (1986). Fluids expelled tectonically from orogenic belts: their role in hydrocarbon migration and other geologic phenomena. Geology14(2), 99-102.

How to cite: Lebrun, L., Kleine-Marshall, B., and Koehn, D.: Fluid flow in foreland basins: spatial and temporal scaling of their transport mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11377, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11377, 2026.

EGU26-11563 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Hydro-Mechanical Modeling of Over-Pressured Mobile Shale: Insights into Shear Dilation Effects on the Uplift at Zhong Liao Tunnel, Taiwan 

Eh Tan, Chia-Hsun Lin, Wei-Hau Wang, Maryline Le Beon, and Taras Gerya

Mobile shales strongly influence deformation, uplift, and fluid migration in compressional sedimentary basins, yet the mechanical pathway from "normal" shale to mobile shale is still debated. This study tests the idea that shear-induced dilation under high pore-fluid overpressure can trigger a positive feedback among shear localization, porosity–permeability increase, and fluid flow, thereby promoting long-lived, ductile-like shale mobility. We focus on the Zhongliao Tunnel area in southwestern Taiwan, where rapid uplift and sharp spatial gradients in vertical motion have been reported near major faults.

We develop a two-phase hydro-mechanical numerical model that couples a poro–visco–elasto–plastic solid with Darcy fluid flow. Porosity evolves through competing compaction and a strain-rate–dependent dilation term that is activated under elevated overpressure, allowing fault-related shear zones to dynamically transform into high-permeability conduits. In the reference experiment, a high-pressure layer sealed beneath a low-permeability cap sustains overpressure within mudstone. Once shear localizes, dilation increases porosity and permeability along damage zones, enhancing focused fluid discharge. The resulting seepage forces and reduced effective strength further intensify shear localization, producing sustained fault creep and pronounced uplift of the block bounded by the principal fault systems. The modeled uplift pattern reproduces key first-order observations: a sharp vertical-velocity contrast across the main fault and a more gradual decay of uplift away from it, with peak uplift rates reaching the order of centimeters per year.

Sensitivity tests demonstrate that overpressure alone generates only modest uplift without dilation-enabled conduit formation, while shear compaction suppresses localization and distributes deformation. Permeability exerts a non-monotonic control: very low permeability limits fluid flux and seepage forcing, whereas very high permeability drains overpressure too efficiently and weakens sustained creep. Overall, the results provide a mechanistic framework for how overpressured mudstone can evolve into mobile shale through coupled dilation and fluid flow, and offer testable criteria for identifying similar processes in other shale-dominated orogenic settings.

How to cite: Tan, E., Lin, C.-H., Wang, W.-H., Le Beon, M., and Gerya, T.: Hydro-Mechanical Modeling of Over-Pressured Mobile Shale: Insights into Shear Dilation Effects on the Uplift at Zhong Liao Tunnel, Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11563, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11563, 2026.

EGU26-12850 | ECS | Orals | TS1.6

A multi-scale hierarchical FEM-DEM approach for hydro-chemo-mechanical modeling of granular media 

Ehsan Ahmadi Olyaei and Daniel Koehn

Numerical study of phenomena in granular media is typically classified into two categories according to the scale of the domain: macro-scale modeling which relies primarily on continuum theories, such as the Finite Element Method (FEM), and micro-scale modeling, which is based on interparticle forces, commonly performed using the Discrete Element Method (DEM).

However, granular/porous media are inherently discontinuous due to their micro-structure, and traditional continuum-based approaches cannot accurately capture microstructure-induced anisotropy in these media. Particle-based approaches like DEM have therefore been widely used for the modeling of such discontinuous domains.

On the other hand, it is not computationally feasible to resolve the entire intricate microstructure of large domains using DEM. Thus, this work implements a multi-scale approach that combines the accuracy of DEM at the grain scale with the computational efficiency of FEM at the macro-scale.

The approach is called “Hierarchical FEM-DEM”, originally developed to study the mechanical response and strain localization (shear bands) in granular media [1]. It then has been extended to hydro-mechanical problems in saturated media [2]. In this framework DEM assemblies are treated as Representative Volume Elements (RVE) attached to Gauss (integration) points of a macroscopic FEM mesh. The DEM is used for the calculation of the homogenized effective stress corresponding to the interpolated strain field on each Gauss point, thereby eliminating the need for phenomenological constitutive assumptions for the solid skeleton, that are common in conventional nonlinear FEM analyses.

In this study we apply this method by implementing it in MATLAB to investigate the hydro-chemo-mechanics of granular media. The model is going to be used to study the effect of fluid flow and pore pressure on the solid skeleton deformation, and generation of shear bands, how micro-scale solute-related heterogeneities influence the macro-scale mechanical behavior, based on thin sections made from field sample collected by the authors.

We use periodic boundary conditions for DEM assemblies to satisfy the compatibility between the microscopic deformation and the macroscopic strain field imposed at the Gauss points, ensuring the condition for the satisfaction of Hill-Mandel micro-macro energy equivalence during homogenization. At the macroscopic level, the boundary conditions are prescribed to simulate the in-situ loading and hydraulic conditions, corresponding to the field sites from which the samples were extracted.

References

[1] Guo, N. and Zhao, J., 2014. A coupled FEM/DEM approach for hierarchical multiscale modelling of granular media. International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering99(11), pp.789-818.

[2] Guo, N. and Zhao, J., 2016. Parallel hierarchical multiscale modelling of hydro-mechanical problems for saturated granular soils. Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering305, pp.37-61.

How to cite: Ahmadi Olyaei, E. and Koehn, D.: A multi-scale hierarchical FEM-DEM approach for hydro-chemo-mechanical modeling of granular media, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12850, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12850, 2026.

The particle migration phenomenon in porous media exhibits dual effects: it can both impede fluid flow and regulate the flow field. The temporary plugging effect induced by particle migration can delay the formation of preferential flow paths in waterflooding and enhance recovery efficiency. However, research on actively controlling the flow field through particle migration to improve recovery efficiency is still limited. This study aims to investigate the generation of a temporary plugging effect within the pores by controlling the particle size and concentration in the injected water, thereby regulating the distribution of the flow field and enhancing oil recovery. The research combines numerical simulation techniques with core flooding experiments, constructing numerical models with different micro-pore structure characteristics, such as moldic pores and intrafossil pores, and physical models with varying permeability gradients. Experimental results show that after the formation of preferential flow paths in waterflooding, continued water injection can no longer effectively displace the remaining oil in the porous media. At this point, the addition of suspended particles (median particle size: 5 μm, concentration: 200 mg L⁻¹) to the injected water further enhances displacement. The particles migrate with the water flow and preferentially accumulate in high-connectivity pores and throats, forming a temporary plugging effect. This alters the local flow path, expanding the sweep volume of waterflooding and effectively mobilizing oil in low-permeability pores.

When the particle size exceeds 10 μm or the concentration exceeds 400 mg L⁻¹, bridging or sealing effects are likely to occur at pore entrances, severely obstructing fluid flow. Conversely, when the particle size is too small (<2 μm) or the concentration too low (<10 mg L⁻¹), the particles fail to effectively retain and do not form a significant temporary plugging effect. After the particle-based flow regulation treatment, the final oil recovery efficiency of the model can be increased by approximately 10% to 20%.

How to cite: Penglei, Y.: Regulation of Fluid Flow Behavior in Porous Media Based on Particle Migration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13057, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13057, 2026.

EGU26-14061 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Stylolite-controlled dolomitization and dedolomitization in low-porosity carbonates (Lessini Mountains, Southern Alps, Italy) 

Costantino Zuccari, Gianluca Vignaroli, Fabrizio Balsamo, Luigi Berio, Gianmarco Buono, Lucia Pappalardo, and Giulio Viola

Dolomitization is among the most widespread processes affecting carbonate rocks and may significantly overprint carbonate successions during post-diagenetic and deformation-related fluid infilling and circulation. The process is generally hindered in low-porosity/low-permeability carbonates (e.g., micritic limestones). However, primary (e.g., bedding interfaces) and secondary (e.g., fractures) rock planar anisotropies might compensate for this low porosity/permeability, acting as potential pathways for fluid ingress and as loci for the initiation of fluid-rock interaction. Among these anisotropies, burial stylolites are particularly widespread in carbonate successions, forming through progressive chemo-mechanical dissolution-precipitation over time. Their large lateral continuity (>1 km) and potentially high vertical frequency make stylolites key features in governing the syn-to-post diagenetic evolution of sedimentary successions.

Although stylolites have traditionally been considered fluid barriers, recent studies challenge this paradigm, a view that we further stress here. We present petrophysical data from micritic limestones of the Lessini Mountains (Italian Southern Alps), where a large portion of the exposed carbonate Jurassic-Cretaceous succession (>700 m thick) is almost entirely overprinted by a regional dolomitization event, which produced large volumes of massive, sandy, crystalline dolostones. We studied preserved patches of micritic limestone where the progression of dolomitization from initiation to complete overprint is clearly visible. Hg-porosimetry, SEM imaging, μ-CT and cathodoluminescence were combined to constrain petrophysical variations associated with dolomitization. Results show that burial stylolites (Hg injection capillary threshold pressure – HgP c. 4 Psi) affecting the micritic limestones (HgP c. 5140 Psi) were systematically exploited by the dolomitizing Mg-rich fluids, transiently aided by fluid overpressure surges, which locally induced brecciation and further enhanced fluid-rock interaction.

Progressive dolomitization increased rock porosity and density from ~1% to ~20% and from 2.65 g/cm3 to 2.9 g/cm3, respectively (from micritic limestone to massive dolostone). Pore characteristics (pore-size, sphericity, 3D-φ-angle and 3D-Eulerian characteristic - all constrained by μ-CT data and Hg-μporosimetry) indicate a complex evolution characterised by (i) early diffuse dolomitization followed by (ii) localised dedolomitization triggered by the later ingress along the porous stylolites of a Mg-poor fluid, which selectively infiltrated the dolomitized succession and created significant rock porosity. Dedolomitization appears to have been more efficient (and is better preserved) along the dolomitized stylolites than within the massive dolostones, where fluid-rock interaction was inhibited by the larger rock volume.

Spatio-temporal porosity variations related to dolomitization and dedolomitization, guided by- and preserved within stylolites, have significant implications for (i) reservoir quality evaluation, and (ii) the mechanical behaviour of carbonate rock masses during post-fluid-infiltration deformation phases. In these settings, dolomitization and dedolomitization promote long-term fluid ingress and circulation, thus even modulating further deformation localisation.

How to cite: Zuccari, C., Vignaroli, G., Balsamo, F., Berio, L., Buono, G., Pappalardo, L., and Viola, G.: Stylolite-controlled dolomitization and dedolomitization in low-porosity carbonates (Lessini Mountains, Southern Alps, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14061, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14061, 2026.

EGU26-14523 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Tectono-magmatic controls on fluid flow in a detachment-related porphyry system: Insights from magnetic petrofabric analyses at the Maronia deposit, NE Greece 

Elisa Toivanen, William McCarthy, Daniel Koehn, and Barbara Kleine-Marshall

The circulation of magmatic-hydrothermal fluids along crustal-scale fault systems plays a fundamental role in the formation of porphyry-type ore deposits, as these structures control magma emplacement, fluid pathways, and associated rock alteration. In the Rhodope magmatic-metallogenic belt of northern Greece, numerous Oligocene-Miocene porphyry-type ore deposits formed in an extensional back-arc environment. One example is the Maronia Cu-Mo±Re±Au porphyry deposit in the Mesozoic Circum-Rhodope metamorphic belt, where plutonic intrusion occurred during detachment fault activation. Despite this, the detailed sequence and timing of magmatic-hydrothermal fluid circulation related to ore formation remain poorly constrained.

In this study, we aim to unravel the relationship between magmatic and tectonic events to decipher the mechanisms of magmatic-hydrothermal fluid circulation along detachment faults associated with ore formation processes. A total of 20 rock samples were collected across the exposed detachment fault zone at Maronia, ranging from unaltered monzonite to the porphyry microgranite intrusion. We combined highly sensitive Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility and Remanence (AMS and ARM) petrofabric tools with geochemical analyses (e.g., EPMA, LA-ICP-MS/MS). Petrofabric analyses identified multiple magnetic fabrics within individual samples, providing insights into magmatic intrusion emplacement, deformation, and fluid flow, as well as into whether magmatic and tectonic processes occurred concurrently or successively.

Preliminary geochemical and magnetic analyses of minerals and whole rocks constrain the genetic relationship between microgranite intruding the mylonitic rocks within the detachment fault. Petrofabric data are coaxial with observed field fabrics, whereas preliminary ARM results indicate that higher coercivity mineral phases deviate from both field observations and AMS results. Petrographic observations reveal the nature of mineralization and allow evaluation of textural changes related to fluid-rock interaction. We suggest that the combined dataset reflects a strain archive of multi-stage tectonomagnetic processes that drove fluid flow and possibly mineralisation in this sector of the Circum-Rhodope belt.

This study further demonstrates the potential of integrating petrofabric data with geochemical methods to better resolve fluid flow processes and tectono-magmatic evolution in detachment-controlled porphyry systems, providing new insights into the structural controls on mineralization at Maronia.

How to cite: Toivanen, E., McCarthy, W., Koehn, D., and Kleine-Marshall, B.: Tectono-magmatic controls on fluid flow in a detachment-related porphyry system: Insights from magnetic petrofabric analyses at the Maronia deposit, NE Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14523, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14523, 2026.

EGU26-17657 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Fluid-induced strain softening during the formation of the Pyrenean orogenic prism: In situ Rb/Sr dating from the Cap de Creus shear zones (Eastern Pyrenees, Spain) 

Yoann Denele, Clémence Nicolas, Valérie Bosse, Olivier Merle, Emmanuel Gardés, and Caroline Lotout

The aims of this study is to understand how concurrent fluids and deformation influence the behaviour of the Rb/Sr geochronometer in micas. This study is conducted within a classical deformation framework, shear zones, key structures in the geodynamic evolution of rifts and orogens which can accommodate kilometer-scale displacements and facilitate significant mass transfer. While the last two decades have led to a better understanding of the processes of nucleation and widening of these structures, as illustrated by the world-famous case of Cap de Creus, the extreme localization of deformation they exhibit raises fundamental questions about the rheological evolution of the lithosphere.

By conducting a multiscale petro-tecto-geochronological study of the Cap de Creus shear zones, whose age is debated, we have underlined that these shear zones record a major event of fluid-induced strain softening during the formation of the Pyrenean prism. This event is characterized by concomitant muscovite blast neocrystallization and intense quartz dynamic recovery, whose contemporaneity can be uniquely demonstrated by evidence of Fe-rich surface-derived fluids that penetrated to depth. This event occurred between 60 and 50 Ma, as shown by in situ and in-context Rb/Sr dating of two shear zones. This study highlights the critical role of fluid-induced rheological softening in ductile reactivation of polycyclic basements and provides a context-dependent framework for interpreting the behaviour of the Rb/Sr geochronometer in muscovite during deformation.

The implications of these results for the three-dimensional formation and evolution of the Pyrenean orogenic prism, will be discussed, including the role of structural inheritance, fluid circulation, and their contribution to shear-zone reactivation processes.

How to cite: Denele, Y., Nicolas, C., Bosse, V., Merle, O., Gardés, E., and Lotout, C.: Fluid-induced strain softening during the formation of the Pyrenean orogenic prism: In situ Rb/Sr dating from the Cap de Creus shear zones (Eastern Pyrenees, Spain), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17657, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17657, 2026.

EGU26-17856 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Tectonics and Fluid Coupling in Critical Metal Enrichment 

Shuyun Cao, Xiaowen Li, Lefan Zhan, Dingkui Zhou, Jianhua Liu, Xuemei Cheng, Lirong Tao, Jing Guo, and Zhongtian Hu

This study investigates the coupled roles of solid-state deformation, hydrothermal fluid flow, and critical metal enrichment mineralization. Integrating structural analysis, mineral microtextures, EBSD, fluid inclusions, and H-O isotopes, we show that the deposit experienced Neoproterozoic Nb pre-enrichment in alkaline volcanic rocks, later overprinted by Early Paleozoic tectonic-hydrothermal events. Ductile shear zones that characterized by foliation and lineatio enhanced permeability and channeled F⁻-Cl⁻-CO₂-rich fluids from deep sources, with fluid inclusion planes confirming foliation-parallel migration. Syn-tectonic breakdown of amphibole, pyroxene, and titanite released Nb, Y, and REEs into solution as soluble complexes.

Fluid evolution—driven by alkali consumption and CO₂ influx, lowered pH and increased Nb solubility. Nb enrichment occurred via water-rock interaction within shear zones, though complex stability initially inhibited precipitation. Localized Nb deposition took place at altered mineral margins, where Fe²⁺ spikes destabilized complexes. Ore bodies formed in brittle–ductile to brittle domains, governed by the interplay of deformation-controlled permeability and chemical feedbacks.

Strain regime shifts further enhanced permeability, enabling mixing between deep NbF6⁻- YF63⁻-CO₂-rich fluids and external alkaline magmatic or Ca-rich fluids. This mixing triggered pH and redox changes that destabilized metal complexes, precipitating Nb minerals as magnetite/ilmenite-hosted inclusions or microveins, which direct evidence of strain and fluid pulsation. Fault-valve cycling induced fluid immiscibility and boiling, further disrupting complex stability. Our findings underscore that tectonically driven fluid migration is fundamental to Nb enrichment, providing a structural framework for exploring orogenic rare-metal deposits.

How to cite: Cao, S., Li, X., Zhan, L., Zhou, D., Liu, J., Cheng, X., Tao, L., Guo, J., and Hu, Z.: Tectonics and Fluid Coupling in Critical Metal Enrichment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17856, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17856, 2026.

EGU26-18788 | ECS | Orals | TS1.6

Investigating the Significance of Magnetic Fabrics Preserved in Hydrothermally Altered Rocks 

Ben Latimer, William McCarthy, Tobias Mattsson, and John Reavy

Anisotropy of Magnetic Susceptibility (AMS) and Anisotropy of Magnetic Remanence (AMR) are critical petrofabric tools commonly applied in investigating the evolution of volcano-magmatic, tectonic, and surface process systems. These highly sensitive techniques can distinguish multiple magnetic fabrics within individual samples, shown to be crucial in assessing archives of emplacement and deformation in intrusions where magmatic and tectonic processes occur concurrently or successively. They have also been used to understand magmatic processes within layered igneous complexes associated with the concentration of economic mineral phases. However, the application of AMS and AMR is hindered by the mineral phases that dominate magnetic properties and their susceptibility to hydrothermal alteration, potentially overprinting pre-existing petrofabrics. Despite the impacts of hydrothermal alteration being a well-known occurrence, the mechanisms and extent to which magnetic fabrics can be modified remains poorly constrained, raising concerns about the reliability of interpretations in studies involving hydrothermally altered rocks.

Our recent work assesses the significance of magnetic fabrics preserved in a hydrothermally altered fault zone that crosscuts a granitic pluton. Data were collected from unaltered granodiorite peripheral to the fault, the fault damage zone and the fault core to assess the impact of hydrothermal alteration on magnetic fabrics associated with magmatic and tectonic processes. Magnetic and hyperspectral data were used to characterise alteration distribution and intensity by quantifying changes in hydrous silicate and iron oxide phases. AMS and AMR fabrics were then measured and interpreted as either magma transport, tectonic, or hydrothermal alteration fabrics with context from field and petrographic data.

Our integrated hyperspectral-magnetic approach defines three alteration zones. Onset of hydrothermal alteration is identified from a subtle removal of white mica and low coercivity iron oxides (titanomagnetite) and the growth of new, high coercivity iron oxides (hematite) alongside chlorite and epidote. As alteration intensity increases, titanomagnetite and white mica are removed entirely, with hematite, epidote and chlorite becoming dominant in the system. In step with the changes in oxide and hydrous silicate mineralogy, we observe changes to AMS and AMR fabrics, with partial to complete destruction of tectonic and magmatic fabrics observed with increased alteration intensity. As these precursor fabrics are destroyed, they are replaced by a sub-vertical petrofabric defined by the alignment of hematite, interpreted as a product of hydrothermal fluid transport.

We demonstrate a threshold to alteration intensity, above which precursor petrofabrics are obliterated and replaced by fabrics associated with hydrothermal alteration. We envisage these results being highly informative in studies seeking to examine tectonic and mineralisation processes using rock magnetic methods.

How to cite: Latimer, B., McCarthy, W., Mattsson, T., and Reavy, J.: Investigating the Significance of Magnetic Fabrics Preserved in Hydrothermally Altered Rocks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18788, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18788, 2026.

EGU26-20074 | Posters on site | TS1.6

Permeability anisotropy under true triaxial stress states: strong flow reduction parallel to the maximum principal stress. 

Philip Meredith, Ashley Stanton-Yonge, Thomas Mitchell, John Browning, and David Healy

Rocks in the upper crust are generally subjected to true triaxial stress conditions, in which all three principal stresses are unequal (σ₁ > σ₂ > σ₃). Pore and fracture networks respond to anisotropic loading by opening in certain directions while closing in others, potentially inducing strong permeability anisotropy. However, most experimental constraints on stress-dependent permeability are derived from conventional triaxial tests, where two principal stresses are equal and permeability is measured in only one direction.

Here, we use a true triaxial apparatus equipped with a pore-fluid system to measure permeability parallel to all three principal stress axes in cubic samples of Etna basalt (EB) and Crab Orchard sandstone (COS) subjected to anisotropic loading.

For an initially isotropic EB sample, increasing stress along a single axis results in a sharp permeability decrease in the corresponding maximum stress direction, reaching up to two orders of magnitude (from ~10⁻¹⁶ to ~10⁻¹⁸ m²) at a differential stress (σ₁ − σ₃) of 215 MPa. In contrast, permeability parallel to σ₂ decreases mildly when stresses are increased up to ~75 MPa while permeability parallel to σ₃ remains largely unchanged. During unloading, permeability parallel to σ₁ recovers by approximately 1.5 orders of magnitude once σ₁ is reduced to 75 MPa.

Similarly, samples of the initially anisotropic COS also experience a decrease in permeability of two orders of magnitude (from ~10⁻¹7 to ~10⁻¹9 m²) along the maximum compressive stress at (σ₁ − σ₃) of just 100 MPa. Permeability along σ₁ recovers only partially after unloading, up to 10⁻¹8 m², indicating that some permanent compaction occurred along the maximum compression.

These results demonstrate that true triaxial stress conditions can induce pronounced permeability anisotropy through directional closure of pores and microcracks, with important implications for fluid transport in the upper crust, including fault zones, geothermal systems, and stressed reservoirs.

How to cite: Meredith, P., Stanton-Yonge, A., Mitchell, T., Browning, J., and Healy, D.: Permeability anisotropy under true triaxial stress states: strong flow reduction parallel to the maximum principal stress., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20074, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20074, 2026.

Graphite formation in deep crust during granulite facies metamorphism is documented in the Proterozoic gneisses of the Lofoten-Vesterålen Complex, northern Norway. Regionally distributed graphite zones are hosted in banded gneisses dominated by orthopyroxene-bearing quartzofeldspathic gneiss, including marble, calcsilicate rocks and amphibolite. The schist has major graphite, quartz, plagioclase, pyroxenes, biotite (Mg# = 0.67-0.91; Ti < 0.66 a.p.f.u.) and K-feldspar/perthite. Pyroxene is orthopyroxene (En69-74) and/or clinopyroxene (En33-53Fs1-14Wo44-53). Although graphite is usually described in pelitic rocks or as vein deposits in the granulite facies rocks, we document graphite in assemblage with metamorphic orthopyroxene.

Phase diagram modelling (plagioclase + orthopyroxene (Mg#-ratio = 0.74) + biotite + quartz + rutile + ilmenite + graphite-assemblage) constrains pressure-temperature conditions of 810-835 °C and 0.73-0.77 GPa; Zr-in-rutile thermometry 726-854°C. COH-fluids stabilise graphite and orthopyroxene; high Mg#-ratio of biotite and pyroxenes, and apatite Cl < 2 a.p.f.u. indicate importance of fluids during metamorphism.

Stable isotopic δ13Cgraphite in the graphite schist is -38 to -17‰; δ13Ccalcite of marbles +3‰ to +10‰. Samples with both graphite and calcite present give lighter values for δ13Ccalcite = -8.7‰ to -9.5‰ and heavier values for δ13Cgraphite = -11.5‰ to -8.9‰. δ18Ocalcite for marble shows lighter values ranging -15.4‰ to -7.5‰ (Engvik et al. 2023).  We interpret the graphite origin as organic carbon accumulated in sediments contemporaneous with the Early Proterozoic global Lomagundi-Jatuli isotopic excursion, while an isotopic exchange between graphite and calcite reflects metamorphic and hydrothermal re-equilibration.

The high-ordered graphite (< modality 39%) and biotite with a strong-preferred orientation defines the well-developed foliation. Increased graphite content resulted in high-conductivity zones with a contrast to the host low-conductive crust (Rodinov et al. 2013; Engvik et al. 2021). Enrichment of graphite resulted in zones with strong schistosity and a sharp strain gradient towards host massive granulite gneiss. The presence of graphite causes strain localisation in the granulite facies crust, reducing crustal strength and may thereby influence continental architecture and evolution of collision zones.

References:

Engvik AK et al. (2023) Proterozoic Deep Carbon—Characterisation, Origin and the Role of Fluids during High-Grade Metamorphism of Graphite (Lofoten–Vesterålen Complex, Norway). Minerals 13(10), 1279

Engvik AK et al. (2021) The control of shear-zone development and electric conductivity by graphite in granulite: An example from the Proterozoic Lofoten-Vesterålen Complex of northern Norway. Terra Nova, https://doi.org/10.111/ter.12545

Rodinov A et al. (2013) Helicopter-borne magnetic, electromagnetic and radiometric geophysical survey at Langøya in Vesterålen, Nordland. NGU Report 2013.044

How to cite: Engvik, A. K., Gautneb, H., and Knežević Solberg, J.: Characterisation, origin, petrophysical properties and the role of fluids during high-grade metamorphism of graphite (Lofoten-Vesterålen Complex, Norway), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21791, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21791, 2026.

Volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposits are among the world’s most important sources of copper (Cu), zinc (Zn), lead (Pb), gold (Au), and silver (Ag), metals that are critical for modern infrastructure and energy technologies. These deposits are characterized by systematic hydrothermal alteration halos that preserve mineralogical and chemical gradients generated by spatial and temporal variations in temperature, redox conditions, and hydrothermal fluid composition. Such alteration zones provide important vectors for mineralization; however, their traditional characterization is commonly qualitative, reliant on subjective geological interpretation, and difficult to collolate at scale across exploration projects. This study investigates the Rävliden deposits of the Paleoproterozoic (1.89 Ga) volcanic–sedimentary sequence of the Skellefte district, Sweden, to evaluate whether integrated rock magnetic and VNIR–SWIR hyperspectral data can be used to objectively characterize hydrothermal alteration in VMS deposits. In this study, rock magnetic measurements are cross-referenced with hyperspectral data and supported by mineral chemistry and sulfur isotope analyses to develop a quantitative and reproducible framework for fingerprinting hydrothermal alteration in both metalliferous and barren VMS systems. The approach comprises three objectives: (1) defining diagnostic magnetic and hyperspectral signatures of alteration mineral assemblages to construct a reference dataset, which is then validated using Raman spectroscopy; (2) evaluating trace-element variations in magnetite and associated sulfide minerals to assess their influence on magnetic properties across alteration zones; and (3) using sulfur isotope compositions (δ³⁴S) of sulfide minerals across alteration zones and structural domains to constrain fluid sources and reconstruct the hydrothermal fluid evolution of the system. This workflow systematically links observable physical alteration patterns to their underlying mineral-chemical controls and fluid origins, providing a robust and scalable tool for hydrothermal alteration characterization in VMS exploration.

How to cite: Aryani, L. and McCarthy, W.: Integrated Rock Magnetic and VNIR–SWIR Hyperspectral Characterization: A Quantitative Classification Tool for VMS Alteration Systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22148, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22148, 2026.

EGU26-22152 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.6

Go with the Flow : Investigating Petrofabric Evidence for Hydrothermal Flow in Thermal Aureoles 

Malou Pelletier and William McCarthy

Fluid flow in the Earth’s crust governs heat and mass transfer, critical metal mineralisation, rock rheology, and the development of deep, non-photosynthetic biospheres, yet its direction and mechanical drivers remain poorly constrained in natural systems. Conventional approaches infer fluid pathways from fractures, models, or geochemical tracers but rarely capture flow direction or mechanism directly. This PhD project develops a novel combination of fabric-based methods—integrating anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility and remanence (AMS/ARM), crystal preferred orientation analysis, and hyperspectral mineral mapping—to directly identify and quantify fluid-induced petrofabrics within the thermal aureoles of igneous intrusions, independent of fault kinematics. Similar integrated approaches have demonstrated their ability to track volatile-rich liquid migration through texturally layered intrusions, where permeability contrasts control fluid focusing and the development of REE-enriched horizons. Together, these methods provide new constraints on how fluids modify host-rock properties, localise permeability, and generate chemical enrichment, representing a step-change in our ability to observe and model crustal fluid flow.We present new petrofabric data from the Sherwood Sandstone Group, Northern Ireland, to assess fluid flow in permeable sandstones surrounding basaltic dykes. The study examines: (i) the geometry and extent of hydrothermal flow pathways, (ii) the interaction between thermally driven fluid circulation and pre-existing sedimentary anisotropy, and (iii) the impact of alteration on host-rock porosity and permeability. The Sherwood Sandstone Group forms the lowermost unit of the Triassic New Red Sandstone succession and is cross-cut by Palaeogene basaltic dykes related to North Atlantic rifting. Preliminary field observations and hyperspectral data identify laterally zoned alteration halos defined by systematic variations in clay, mica, and Fe-oxide mineralogy. AMS and ARM data reveal that primary sedimentary fabrics are preserved more than ~10 m from the dyke but are progressively overprinted toward the intrusion. Ongoing analyses test whether these overprinting fabrics record convective hydrothermal flow, with fluids ascending along dyke margins before dispersing laterally along bedding planes. We further evaluate the controls on stratigraphic fluid focusing and blockage, constraining the reciprocal relationship between fluid flow and evolving rock properties.

How to cite: Pelletier, M. and McCarthy, W.: Go with the Flow : Investigating Petrofabric Evidence for Hydrothermal Flow in Thermal Aureoles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22152, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22152, 2026.

As the key mechanism of shallow earthquakes, the fault stick-slip behavior is usually explored under the assumption of constant normal stress. However, dynamic natural processes (tides, far-field earthquakes, etc.) and human activities (blasting, water injection, mining, etc.) generate periodic stress disturbances in the fault zone. So far the coupled results of fault seismic slips under variable normal stress are poorly understood.

We performed laboratory direct shear tests on saw-cut granite joints under constant and cyclic normal stress (σn), considering the role of load point velocity (Vlp), normal stress oscillation amplitude (ε) and normal stress oscillation frequency (f). Under constant normal stress, the joint exhibits a spontaneous stick-slip phenomenon for different Vlp. The shear stress drops and recurrence timespans of stick-slip events are reduced with faster Vlp. Under equivalent σn level, the cyclic σn weakens the frictional strength when Vlp is small and enhances the strength when Vlp is large. As ε grows, the joint slip style switches from regular stick-slip to chaotic slip, and eventually to compound stick-slip. The frictional strength is first increased and later weakened. In respect to effect of f: when f is small, one σn cycle can produce several stick-slip events. When f is medium, the period of the stick-slip event is equal to the cyclic σn period. For further increase of f , the recurrence period of stick-slip events becomes double the cyclic σn period. The frictional strength is decreasing or increasing at the critical point for frictional resonance.

The improved spring-block model equipped with rate-and-state friction framework matches the lab observations satisfactorily. Especially, the introduction of a stiffness response coefficient (Ψ) allows the model to reflect realistic fault frictional behavior, where shear stiffness varies with σn. A new parameter Θ is defined whose symbol (+ or -) directly determines the compression/relaxation status of the spring, and satisfactorily explains transitions in shear stress trends. Comparative analysis with the conventional Linker-Dieterich model highlights the improved physical consistency of our new approach, particularly in preserving the physical interpretation of the state variable, θ. The model also demonstrates that under large σn disturbances, a frictional system can effectively exhibit stick-slip behavior even in the velocity-strengthening scope. More importantly, the modeling implies that fast slip events greatly reduce the contact density of the fault interface. The contact state of the stick-slip joint/fault cannot be judged solely by σn. The contact area during the shear process is determined by both, the real-time σn level and the state variable θ.

How to cite: Tao, K. and Konietzky, H.: Experimental and modeling insights into fault stick-slip behavior under dynamic normal stress condition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2318, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2318, 2026.

EGU26-3420 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.8

How an extensional pull-apart basin modulates fault slip and earthquake rupture on the Main Marmara Fault 

Deborah Osei-Tutu, Eyup Sopaci, and Luca Dal Zilio

Pull-apart basins introduce extensional bends and strong along-strike heterogeneity into otherwise strike-slip systems, potentially altering slow slip, earthquake nucleation, and multi-segment rupture. The Princes Islands segment of the Main Marmara Fault (MMF) hosts a ~30-40 km pull-apart basin within the Marmara seismic gap south of Istanbul, where geodetic and geological observations suggest partial unlocking and complex rupture behavior. Yet the mechanical role of this extensional geometry in controlling fault slip and rupture remains poorly constrained. We perform three-dimensional quasi-dynamic simulations using PyQuake3D (Tang et al., 2025) to quantify the impact of the Princes Islands pull-apart basin on interseismic loading, slow-slip transients, dynamic rupture propagation, and earthquake recurrence along the MMF. We model a continuous fault surface with variable dip, bends, and segmentation, and prescribe depth-dependent effective normal stress, spatial frictional contrasts, and stress heterogeneity representative of extensional basin environments, guided by published geophysical constraints. Our results show that the basin exerts a first-order control on slip style and rupture outcomes through the competition between geometric unclamping, frictional heterogeneity, and stress structure. Extensional bends favor localized unlocking and recurrent aseismic or slow-slip episodes, which in turn modulate where dynamic ruptures nucleate. At the event scale, the basin can behave either as a rupture barrier or a rupture accelerator: in many realizations, ruptures do not continue smoothly across the basin but instead produce triggered seismicity via static stress transfer and re-nucleation near segment boundaries. Stress concentrations at geometric transitions primarily govern nucleation locations, while frictional contrasts regulate rupture persistence and arrest. These findings highlight that explicitly representing extensional fault structures is critical for assessing multi-segment rupture potential and time-dependent seismic hazard on the MMF near Istanbul.

 

Tang, R., Gan, L., Li, F., & Dal Zilio, L. (2025). PyQuake3D: A Python tool for 3‐D earthquake sequence simulations of seismic and aseismic slip. Journal of Geophysical Research: Machine Learning and Computation, 2(4), e2025JH000871.

How to cite: Osei-Tutu, D., Sopaci, E., and Dal Zilio, L.: How an extensional pull-apart basin modulates fault slip and earthquake rupture on the Main Marmara Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3420, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3420, 2026.

EGU26-3472 | ECS | Orals | TS1.8

Spontaneous complexity in the dynamics of slow laboratory earthquakes. 

Giacomo Pozzi, Giuseppe Volpe, Jacopo Taddeucci, Massimo Cocco, Chris Marone, and Cristiano Collettini

Rock deformation experiments play a key role in our understanding of earthquake physics and friction constitutive laws. These laws commonly describe the response of analogue laboratory faults as a simple and homogeneous system, without accounting for the spatial-temporal evolution of structures in the sample. However, increasing experimental evidence suggests that slip instability is closely tied to heterogeneity, complex rheologies, and inhomogeneous boundary conditions. To address this, we designed a novel transparent setup to observe real-time deformation, track the spatial-temporal evolution of shear fabric, and document unstable slip in experimental faults. Our video documentation reveals that the progressive development of fault fabrics results in heterogeneous but not random stress redistribution. We show that stress and structural heterogeneities play a key role in the nucleation, propagation, and arrest of slip instabilities, raising questions about the robustness of scaling laboratory frictional laws to nature.

How to cite: Pozzi, G., Volpe, G., Taddeucci, J., Cocco, M., Marone, C., and Collettini, C.: Spontaneous complexity in the dynamics of slow laboratory earthquakes., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3472, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3472, 2026.

EGU26-4626 | Posters on site | TS1.8

Fluid-Driven Injection and Pressurization of Clay-Rich Gouge in the Yangsan Fault: Implications for the Long-Term Seismic Cycle 

Chang-Min Kim, Sangwoo Woo, Jiah Lee, and Jiwoong Choi

Elucidating fault zone processes during long-term seismic cycles is critical for mitigating earthquake hazards in intraplate regions. We investigated the hydro-mechanical evolution of a strike-slip branch of the Yangsan Fault, SE Korea, which bounds Triassic and Jurassic granites. By integrating multiscale observation with high-velocity rotary shear experiments and XRD, we characterized the fault architecture, which consists of a <35 m thick damage zone surrounding a <1 m thick core. The core contains breccia and foliated gouge rich in clay minerals (43 wt.%), specifically dominated by illite (21.2 wt.%) and smectite (13.3 wt.%). Shear experiments on the foliated gouge revealed a consistently low friction coefficient (μss<0.17). Notably, instantaneous flash dilation of the mixed smectite/illite gouge was observed at seismic slip rates (1.3 m/s) when total displacement exceeded ~5 m. Microstructural cross-cutting relationships indicate a distinct sequence of events: (1) vigorous injection of pressurized fluids from wall rocks into the densely packed, low-permeability gouge directly; (2) precipitation of fibrous calcite veins along foliation planes and perpendicular to the Y-shear direction; and (3) subsequent injection of fluidized gouge material into the damaged wall rock. These observations suggest that cyclic coseismic and aseismic faulting occurred following the low-temperature formation of expanding clay minerals. We conclude that the dynamic interplay between fluid pressurization and the fluidization properties of clay gouge acts as a primary driver of mechanical instability, playing a key role in the long-term seismic evolution of intraplate granitic fault zones.

How to cite: Kim, C.-M., Woo, S., Lee, J., and Choi, J.: Fluid-Driven Injection and Pressurization of Clay-Rich Gouge in the Yangsan Fault: Implications for the Long-Term Seismic Cycle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4626, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4626, 2026.

EGU26-4788 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.8

Seismic Fault Identification Based on Vision Transformer 

Haoran Pei and Guangzhi Zhang

To address the limitations of traditional convolutional neural networks (CNNs) in seismic fault identification—such as restricted local receptive fields, limited capability for modeling long-range structural correlations, and low sensitivity to small or subtle faults—this study proposes a seismic fault identification framework based on a Vision Transformer (ViT) architecture combined with self-supervised pretraining and transfer learning. Self-supervised pretraining is first conducted on large volumes of unlabeled three-dimensional seismic data to learn general representations of geological structures, thereby reducing the dependence on manually labeled samples. The pretrained ViT model is subsequently transferred to the fault identification task and systematically compared with a conventional U-Net architecture. Experiments on a publicly available synthetic seismic dataset show that the ViT-based model achieves improved fault localization accuracy, spatial continuity, and robustness to noise compared to U-Net. Application to real 3D seismic data from an oilfield further demonstrates that the proposed method is capable of detecting a larger number of small-scale faults with enhanced structural continuity, highlighting its applicability in structurally complex settings. The results suggest that Transformer-based global modeling provides an effective alternative for automated seismic fault interpretation.

How to cite: Pei, H. and Zhang, G.: Seismic Fault Identification Based on Vision Transformer, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4788, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4788, 2026.

EGU26-6156 | ECS | Orals | TS1.8

Hydraulic control of the foreshocks and mainshock of the 2017 Valparaiso earthquake in central Chile 

Carlos Peña, Leoncio Cabrera, Jesús Muñoz-Montecinos, Sergio Ruiz, and Oliver Heidbach

Slow-slip events (SSEs) are a well-known mode of aseismic deformation in subduction zones. Seismological and geological studies further suggest that SSEs enhance fault-zone permeability, enabling fluid migration from overpressured oceanic crust into the plate interface. However, it remains unclear whether the resulting pore-pressure changes dominate stress transfer and promote the commonly observed increase in seismicity during SSEs and, although less commonly, the occurrence of larger megathrust earthquakes. Here, we investigate the impact of an SSE that occurred three days before the 2017 Mw 6.9 Valparaíso earthquake in central Chile. We use a forward 4D hydromechanical (poroelastic) model and compare the resulting spatial stress changes with a high-resolution seismicity catalog of the foreshock sequence.

We simulate the SSE by prescribing a geodetically inferred slip distribution on the fault interface and assume an overpressured oceanic crust, together with transient permeability enhancement due to SSE-induced local fracturing of the plate interface. We compute stress transfer driven by these pore-pressure changes along the plate interface and compare the results with widely used models that consider elastic stress changes only. Our results show that fluid migration into the plate-interface zone generates stress changes of ~1–10 MPa, overwhelmingly dominated by pore-pressure variations. The largest stress (and pore-pressure) changes spatially correlate with zones of increased seismicity, repeating earthquakes, and the mainshock. In contrast, the elastic-only scenario produces stress changes that are two to three orders of magnitude smaller and shows a much weaker spatial correspondence with the observed seismicity.

Our modeling results indicate that transient permeability enhancement during SSEs enables fluid redistribution that fundamentally controls stress transfer along the plate interface. We conclude that pore-pressure changes exert first-order control on earthquake precursors in subduction zones, offering a physical explanation for foreshock clustering and the triggering of large earthquakes during SSEs. These findings highlight the importance of incorporating fluid–rock interactions in models of seismic hazard and earthquake nucleation.

How to cite: Peña, C., Cabrera, L., Muñoz-Montecinos, J., Ruiz, S., and Heidbach, O.: Hydraulic control of the foreshocks and mainshock of the 2017 Valparaiso earthquake in central Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6156, 2026.

EGU26-9583 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.8

Fluid induced fault slip behavior: frictional healing vs velocity dependence of friction 

Luca Coppola, Giuseppe Volpe, Carolina Giorgetti, Giacomo Pozzi, Christopher Wibberley, Frédéric Bourgeois, and Cristiano Collettini

Fluid-induced fault reactivation and associated seismicity is a critical process in reservoir exploitation and emerging geo-energy activities such as Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), Enhanced Geothermal Systems (EGS) and wastewater disposal. During fluid injection, the fault stress state progressively approaches the failure criterion τ = (σₙ - Pf) * µ + C , where τ is shear stress, σₙ normal stress, Pf fluid pressure, µ friction, and C cohesion. Once the stress state reaches the failure envelope, faults may reactivate either seismically or aseismically. However, the mechanisms governing aseismic versus seismic fault reactivation during fluid injection remain debated.

Previous laboratory studies suggest that this seismic vs. aseismic deformation may be influenced by fault frictional properties influenced by mineralogy, fault zone structure, stress state, and injection rate, yet the relative contribution of these factors remains unclear. To address this issue, we present an experimental study on binary and ternary fault gouges with variable fractions of quartz, calcite, and illite. These are minerals found along faults zones and within reservoir rocks commonly exploited for geo-energy applications.

For each mineralogical composition, two experimental datasets were acquired. In the first dataset, we performed slide–hold–slide and velocity-step tests to measure friction, frictional healing and the velocity dependence of friction. In the second dataset, we investigated fault slip behavior during fluid pressure-induced reactivation at three different stress states.

The frictional properties reveal a pronounced contrast between granular and platy phyllosilicate-rich gouges. Granular materials exhibit high friction (µ ≈ 0.6), positive frictional healing, and low a–b values, indicating velocity-weakening and potentially seismogenic behavior. In contrast, illite-rich gouges (illite > 40%) display low friction (0.28 < µ < 0.4), low to negative healing, and strongly positive a–b values, indicative of velocity-strengthening and aseismic behavior. Duringfluid injection induced-reactivation, granular-rich gouges reactivate through an exponential increase in slip velocity, mimicking seismic-like instability. Conversely, illite-rich gouges reactivate through aseismic but accelerated creep that does not evolve into dynamic failure.

Notably, reactivation in granular gouges is abrupt and occurs at stress states well above the predicted failure envelope, whereas in illite-rich gouges reactivation is gradual and occurs at or before the predicted failure envelope. In addition, at constant illite content, quartz-rich gouges reactivate faster than calcite-rich fault gouges.

The integration of these results suggests a conceptual framework in which fluid-induced fault reactivation is governed by the interplay between frictional healing and rate dependence, with mineralogy exerting a first-order control. In granular gouges, strong healing dominates the the fluid induced reactivation process, leading to delayed but abrupt fault reactivation that can overcome the stabilizing slight rate-strengthening effect, promoting an exponential acceleration under fluid pressurization. In contrast, in phyllosilicate-rich gouges, weak or negative healing combined with a marked rate strengthening behavior stabilizes slip, favoring continuous aseismic creep.

This framework demonstrates that the balance between healing and rate dependence, strongly linked to fault mineralogy, governs whether fluid-induced fault reactivation produces seismic slip or aseismic creep.

 

How to cite: Coppola, L., Volpe, G., Giorgetti, C., Pozzi, G., Wibberley, C., Bourgeois, F., and Collettini, C.: Fluid induced fault slip behavior: frictional healing vs velocity dependence of friction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9583, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9583, 2026.

EGU26-9842 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.8

The role of seamounts, fluids, and normal faults in slow slip regions: seismological insights from the northern Hikurangi margin 

Amy Woodward, Ian Bastow, Rebecca Bell, Laura Wallace, Katrina Jacobs, Stuart Henrys, Bill Fry, Thomas Merry, Victoria Lane, Laurene Ville, Phoebe Houldsworth-Bianek, and Luke Broadley

At the northern Hikurangi margin, Aotearoa New Zealand, slow slip events (SSEs) recur every 6-24 months to ~30 km depth. While shallow SSEs (0-10 km) are well-studied offshore, the deeper portion (10-30 km) remains poorly understood, limiting insight into SSE initiation. In Woodward et al. 2026 we investigate the relationships between newly resolved SSEs and seismicity. We combine passive seismological, geodetic, geochemical and seismic reflection data to analyse the relationships between seismicity and slow slip events, and the mechanisms that invoke them. Using time-dependent inversions, we resolve two small SSEs (MW 6.2 and 6.4), one of which extends unusually deeply from 15 to 30 km depth. Using data from a dense onshore seismograph network, deployed directly above this deeper portion from December 2017 to October 2018, we construct a catalog of 3,071 high-quality earthquakes with hypocentral uncertainties ≤5 km, located with a 3-D velocity model and our new 1-D model. Focal mechanisms reveal numerous normal-faulting earthquakes, including some within the slab mantle. Seismicity distributions and normal-faulting earthquakes occur along vertically aligned pathways that link the subducting slab mantle to surface seeps, where fluids show mantle-derived signatures. We infer that normal faults form due to slab bending and localized uplift of subducting seamounts, which enhance plate interface roughness, damage the upper plate, and promote fluid migration. Landward of ~100 km from the trench, both surface seeps and normal-faulting mechanisms cease, coinciding with the downdip limit of shallow SSEs. Together, these results suggest that the Hikurangi margin’s rough subducting plate interface exerts strong control on forearc dewatering and SSE genesis.

How to cite: Woodward, A., Bastow, I., Bell, R., Wallace, L., Jacobs, K., Henrys, S., Fry, B., Merry, T., Lane, V., Ville, L., Houldsworth-Bianek, P., and Broadley, L.: The role of seamounts, fluids, and normal faults in slow slip regions: seismological insights from the northern Hikurangi margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9842, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9842, 2026.

EGU26-12718 | ECS | Orals | TS1.8

Investigating seismic and aseismic fault motion caused by the 2024-2025 Fentale dyke intrusions in Ethiopia 

Simon Orrego, Juliet Biggs, Sam Wimpenny, Weiyu Zheng, Lin Way, Martin Vallée, Raphaël Grandin, and Elias Lewi

The faulting caused by dyke intrusions provide a novel opportunity to study the way natural fault systems respond to time-varying changes to the stress field. The recent 2024-2025 Fentale-Dofen dyking episode in the northern Main Ethiopian Rift (NMER) offers a rare opportunity to investigate these processes, as the surface deformation was captured in unusually high spatial and temporal resolution by satellite radar. 

In our study, we combine Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data from the COSMO-SkyMed satellite, high resolution Digital Elevation Model (DEM), with a catalogue of >150 relocated moderated-sized earthquakes (M4.5-6) to study the spatio-temporal evolution of seismic and aseismic fault slip linked to dyking in the NMER. We focus on an area ~15 km north of the tip of the dyke, where we find fault patches showing both repeated seismic and aseismic slip occurring in close proximity, associated with surface deformation of <13 cm in 3 months. We consider three possible mechanisms for the observed fault behaviour: (1) that this is normal mainshock-aftershock sequence on faults governed by rate-and-state friction, (2) that elastic stress perturbations from the ongoing dyke intrusions reloaded the fault patches, or (3) that elevated pore-fluid pressure caused transient reductions in effective normal stress on the faults. Using slip and stress modelling, we will test these hypotheses and quantify how much seismic/aseismic strain is accommodated by pre-existing and newly formed faults, as well as the relative contribution of seismic/aseismic strain to accommodating shallow crustal extension during the dyking episode.

These findings provide new constraints on fault mechanics and the interaction with magmatic processes in rifting environments, improving our understanding of dyke-induced seismicity and the evolving nature of faults with repeated earthquakes. 

How to cite: Orrego, S., Biggs, J., Wimpenny, S., Zheng, W., Way, L., Vallée, M., Grandin, R., and Lewi, E.: Investigating seismic and aseismic fault motion caused by the 2024-2025 Fentale dyke intrusions in Ethiopia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12718, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12718, 2026.

EGU26-12855 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.8

Fluids and Creeping Faults: Insights From Local Earthquake Tomography of the Creeping Section of the North Anatolian Fault 

Joel Szrek, Romain Jolivet, Bernd Schurr, Dirk Becker, Patricia Martínez-Garzón, Jorge Jara, and Ziyadin Çakir

Aseismic slip plays a key role in earthquake dynamics, but we currently do not fully understand why some faults slide aseismically. Aseismic slip is largely influenced by the fault zone's frictional behaviour, by its material composition, the presence of fluids, the geometry of the fault, and the fault zone fabric. Recent research has focused on the material composition, and more specifically on the evolution of resistance to slip with slip speed for different types of rocks. Generally, faults with rate-weakening behavior tend to host earthquakes, while faults with rate-strengthening behavior accommodate stress through aseismic slip. However, even in rate-weakening materials, low effective normal stress, induced by high pore fluid pressure, makes it unlikely for a slip instability to reach the critical size needed to nucleate regular earthquakes. Hence, the presence of high pressure fluid within fault zones may explain the presence of shallow aseismic slip along faults. However, we lack direct evidence of the presence of fluids along various faults where aseismic slip has been identified.

We use data from a dense network of seismometers along the North Anatolian Fault Zone SEISMENET1 to investigate spatial changes in seismic velocity along the section hosting aseismic slip. This section slips aseismically since at least 1944 and is the epicentral region of the last two large earthquakes that have struck the area, namely the 1944 M7.3 Bolu-Gerede and the 1943 M7.6 Tosia-Ladik earthquakes. Using local earthquake tomography, we test for a possible presence of fluids in the fault zone and a damage zone surrounding the epicentral region of the 1943 and 1944 earthquakes.

Our network includes 5 broadband seismometers and 10 geophones deployed around the creeping section along a narrow swath paralleling the fault trace. In addition to data from these 15 temporary stations, seismic data from 5 permanent broadband stations were collected. The final dataset includes 24,756 P arrivals and 21,311 S arrivals from 2,272 earthquakes, with magnitudes ranging from Mw0 to Mw4. We use the simul2023 code2 to simultaneously determine the 3D structure of the shallow crust and relocate the earthquake hypocenters.

We find kilometer-scale shallow high vp/vs anomalies (values in range of 1.8 up to 1.95), consistent with a damage asymmetry aligned with the observed rupture directions of historical earthquakes, indicating long-term preferred rupture directions along this segment of the NAF. Additionally, the creeping section of the North Anatolian Fault is shown to correspond to a 30-km-long zone of vp/vs above 1.8, consistent with the presence of high pore fluid pressure within the fault zone. The findings provide compelling evidence that fluid processes, rather than fault zone rheology alone, significantly influence aseismic slip behavior along the NAF. Together, these results suggest a dynamic interplay between structural damage, rupture history, and fluid migration in controlling fault zone mechanics, with implications for improving seismic hazard assessment in creeping fault segments.

 

1https://geofon.gfz.de/waveform/archive/network.php?ncode=1O&year=2022

2https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10695070

How to cite: Szrek, J., Jolivet, R., Schurr, B., Becker, D., Martínez-Garzón, P., Jara, J., and Çakir, Z.: Fluids and Creeping Faults: Insights From Local Earthquake Tomography of the Creeping Section of the North Anatolian Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12855, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12855, 2026.

Understanding the physical mechanisms governing megathrust seismicity and the geodynamic feedback between the megathrust and the overriding accretionary wedge remains critical in subduction zone geophysics. The structural complexity of accretionary wedges—characterized by heterogeneous porosity, permeability, and fault networks—critically influences the configuration of pore fluid pressure and frictional properties along the megathrust interface. To investigate these interactions, we employ a fully coupled hydro-mechanical numerical model (Gerya, 2019) that simulates two distinct timescales within a single, consistent rheological framework. Our approach incorporates temperature-dependent dehydration reactions, including smectite-to-illite and zeolite-to-greenschist transitions, to evaluate how fluid production and migration evolve during both subduction and seismic processes. Additionally, we implement a dynamic fault-valving mechanism where reference permeability evolves transiently to mimic fracture-induced permeability enhancement during fast slip. The simulation follows a two-stage workflow: first, we conduct long-term wedge accretion modeling with adaptive time steps (10–500 years) using a higher stress tolerance to construct realistic wedge architectures. Subsequently, we switch to a rupture simulation mode by reducing the stress tolerance, allowing the adaptive time-stepping scheme to automatically resolve short-term seismic cycles (from days to years). This methodology successfully introduces the structural and hydrological complexity inherited from long-term geological evolution into the analysis of short-term megathrust slip behaviors. Results indicate that fast slip events preferentially initiate at the transition zones between low and high overpressure regions, whereas domains characterized by high pore fluid pressure ratios () predominantly host slow slip events. Furthermore, we find that hydraulic properties control the spatiotemporal stability of rupture nucleation: higher permeability promotes significant temporal pore pressure variability, resulting in scattered initiation depths, while lower permeability maintains stable pressure configurations, leading to spatially consistent rupture nucleation. We conclude that the long-term hydro-mechanical evolution of the wedge governs megathrust nucleation and slip segmentation. 

How to cite: Lin, C.-H. and Tan, E.: Hydro-Mechanical Modeling of Fluid-Regulated Deformation in Accretionary Wedges and Its Implications for Megathrust Slip, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12927, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12927, 2026.

Independent lines of seismic evidence suggest that pore fluid pressure at the depth range of episodic slow slip events (SSEs) may undergo periodic fluctuations synced with the SSE slip cycles.  Here we develop a numerical simulation framework that integrates the SSE model governed by the rate- and state-dependent friction with Bayesian data assimilation to optimize time-variable fault friction parameters, using constraints from the northern Cascadia GNSS time series.  We first conduct synthetic experiments to calculate surface displacement time series from the rate-state SSE model generated fault slip history with imposed Gaussian noise. Both frictional parameters, effective normal stress (normal stress minus pore pressure) and characteristic slip distance, converge to their true values in 5-10 iterations from the initial guesses that are 10-20% off from the true values, demonstrating the feasibility of the data assimilation framework. We then apply this framework to 2009-2020 GNSS time series that encompasses SSE cycles recorded at ~ 30 stations along the northern Cascadia subduction zone.  We use a GNSS time series of 1000 days (~3 SSE cycles) in each inversion run to fully resolve the temporal changes in stress or friction; longer time series will cause inversion convergence issues due to the system nonlinearity. Within an inversion run, we choose a sliding time window of 9 months for each optimization epoch, which is a trade-off that on one hand includes sufficient information for the prediction of fault slip in the next time step and on the other hand allows temporal distinctions between the inter- versus intra-SSE time periods. Our inversion results show clear cyclic fluctuations in the optimized characteristic distance and effective normal stress values during SSE cycles. Specifically, effective normal stress increases (pore pressure drops) during the intra-SSE period; effective normal stress decreases (pore pressure increases) during the inter-SSE period.  The pore pressure oscillation pattern is independent of whether the characteristic slip distance is time-invariant during data assimilation, but the converse does not hold. Our results are thus consistent with the proposed pore pressure build-up and release processes, i.e., fault-valve model, at the SSE depth range. 

How to cite: Liu, Y. and Zhang, W.: Fault-valve behavior during slow slip cycles constrained using Bayesian data assimilation for a Cascadia subduction fault slip model, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13013, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13013, 2026.

EGU26-14122 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.8

Fault state evolution governed by cumulative slip history. 

Joaquin Julve Lillo, Ake Fagereng, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Martijn van den Ende, and Giovanni Toffol

Given the significant risk that earthquakes pose to society, understanding the spatiotemporal evolution of slip rates on natural faults has been a central research objective over recent decades. Geological and geophysical observations indicate that fault slip is accommodated by multiple deformation mechanisms operating both on the fault plane and within the surrounding damage zone. At the outcrop scale, structures formed by seismic and aseismic slip commonly coexist within the same fault system, implying that fault displacement involves a combination of deformation processes controlled by mineral-specific rheology. At larger scales, however, these processes may be masked by the limited spatial and temporal resolution of geophysical and geodetic observations.

From a theoretical and experimental perspective, rate-and-state friction (RSF) laws have been widely used to explain unstable fault slip through velocity-weakening behaviour, in which fault strength decreases with increasing slip rate. In this framework, fault friction is governed by slip velocity and a single state parameter that evolves with time and slip, commonly expressed either through an aging law, where fault healing occurs primarily during stationary contact, or a slip law, where state evolution is driven by slip-dependent renewal of contacts. Because both formulations are typically expressed as local, slip-rate-dependent laws, the explicit role of cumulative slip history in controlling the fault state remains implicit.

To investigate the effect of cumulative slip history, we perform a suite of 3D quasi-dynamic simulations assuming a homogeneous distribution of rate-weakening frictional properties, in which fault slip is governed by a classical RSF formulation. By systematically decreasing effective normal stress from 50 to 10 MPa and explicitly rewriting the aging law in a slip-dependent, event-integrated form, we show that the well-documented transition from characteristic earthquake behaviour to deterministic chaotic slip (e.g., Rubin, 2008; Cattania, 2019; Barbot, 2019) is accompanied by a change in the role of the state variable. Specifically, state evolution becomes increasingly governed by cumulative slip history and slip-filtered healing, which inhibits convergence toward a unique healed state and results in incomplete state recovery between successive events. Importantly, this behaviour arises without prescribing any spatial heterogeneity in frictional properties or fault-zone structure.

These results have direct implications for the interpretation of fault kinematics. While regions where slip rates remain below the prescribed background velocity may persist constant over interseismic periods, the shear stress within those regions in models of low effective normal stress need not be stationary. Instead, shear stress can evolve significantly because of incomplete state recovery driven by cumulative slip history and slip-limited healing, leading to temporally heterogeneous mechanical behaviour despite stable kinematic expression.

References

Rubin, A. M. (2008). Episodic slow slip events and rate‐and‐state friction. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 113(B11).

Cattania, C. (2019). Complex earthquake sequences on simple faults. Geophysical Research Letters, 46(17-18), 10384-10393.

Barbot, S. (2019). Slow-slip, slow earthquakes, period-two cycles, full and partial ruptures, and deterministic chaos in a single asperity fault. Tectonophysics, 768, 228171.

How to cite: Julve Lillo, J., Fagereng, A., Ampuero, J.-P., van den Ende, M., and Toffol, G.: Fault state evolution governed by cumulative slip history., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14122, 2026.

EGU26-14191 | Posters on site | TS1.8

PolystyQuakes : what can we learn from the use of polystyrene as analogue to earthquakes? From small to large scale and vice versa. 

Audrey Bonnelye, Bastien Walter, Abraham Gouedar, and Delphine Faure-Catteloin

Laboratory investigations into the behavior of fault zones have been a significant focus in experimental rock mechanics over the past decades. Various approaches have been developed, ranging from analog models to testing natural samples in triaxial cells. The primary goal of the latter is to infer the physical mechanisms responsible for failure under realistic conditions encountered in natural settings, albeit on small sample sizes (e.g., centimeter scale). In contrast, analog modeling aims to replicate similar mechanical behavior by applying scaling laws to geometry and material properties. In the present study we aim at combining large scale experiments (meter scale) with small scale experiments (cm scale) in order to highlight the underlying physical mechanisms preceding the slip.

To address the spatial scale limitations of classical rock mechanics, we developed new experiments that bridge the gap between traditional rock mechanics and analog experiments. These experiments utilize the unique capabilities of the DIMITRI setup, a giant true-triaxial apparatus (1.5m × 1.5m × 1m). Due to the size of this experimental device, the maximum stress it can apply is limited to 2 MPa per principal stress. Consequently, we chose polystyrene as an analog for rocks. The low elastic properties of polystyrene slow down physical processes, enabling comprehensive observation of rupture phenomena, from initiation to failure arrest. Our objective is to investigate the interplay between different types of slip occurring along the interface.

In this study, we conducted stick-slip experiments on large-scale polystyrene blocks with a pre-cut surface area of 1.5 m². We applied shortening rates ranging from 1 to 10 mm/min. Our experiments successfully reproduced stick-slip behavior, allowing us to observe variations in frictional behavior along the interface and identify different types of slip, from slow slip to dynamic slip.

In parallel, we performed small scale experiments uniaxial stick slip experiments, under the same conditions than the previous, that we monitored with 2D X-ray radiography at high frequency (12Hz). Preliminary observations highlight density contrasts in the bulk material around the fault plane, offering insight into potential precursory signs of slip.

Therefore, this study including two scales of observation demonstrates the relevance of our material to study the physical mechanisms controlling various slip types occuring along the seismic cycle.

How to cite: Bonnelye, A., Walter, B., Gouedar, A., and Faure-Catteloin, D.: PolystyQuakes : what can we learn from the use of polystyrene as analogue to earthquakes? From small to large scale and vice versa., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14191, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14191, 2026.

EGU26-14725 | ECS | Orals | TS1.8

Fluid-induced aseismic slip and seismicity on a natural fault: insights from the FEAR1 experiment at BedrettoLab 

Aurora Lambiase, Men-Andrin Meier, Elena Spagnuolo, Mehdi Nikkhoo, David Marsan, Antonio Pio Rinaldi, Valentin Gischig, Paul Selvadurai, Massimo Cocco, Domenico Giardini, and Stefan Wiemer

Aseismic slip is increasingly recognized as a fundamental driver of earthquake nucleation, affecting the spatio-temporal evolution of seismicity, yet its direct observation remains rare due to limited strain measurements close to a natural fault system. Here, we present results from the 'FEAR1' experiment conducted at the Bedretto Underground Laboratory for Geosciences and Geoenergies (Switzerland), where we used fluid injections to activate a natural fault and fracture network in crystalline rock under in-situ stress conditions at ~1 km depth. This experimental setting is particularly well suited to investigate induced seismicity and the role of aseismic processes in fault activation, thanks to dense near- and on-fault strain, pressure, and seismic monitoring.

During several injections performed in FEAR1, we observed the activation of a steeply dipping, highly permeable fracture zone, which intersects a densely instrumented borehole. Hydraulic stimulations triggered seismicity (−4.9 < Mw < −2.3) that organized along a plane whose orientation is consistent with geological observations in boreholes cores, logs and on the laboratory tunnel wall. Simultaneously, high-resolution Fiber Bragg Grating strain measurements revealed progressive, irreversible tensile deformation localized near the fracture intersection with the monitoring borehole, reaching nearly 1000 µε over the course of the experiment.

Static elastic modeling demonstrates that the cumulative strain produced by the recorded earthquakes accounts for less than 1% of the observed deformation, indicating that fault slip was dominantly aseismic. The spatial and temporal evolution of seismicity shows systematic up-dip migration toward the strain concentration zone and the emergence of families of repeating earthquakes. The recurrence rate and cumulative slip of these repeaters correlate with the measured strain rate and strain, suggesting a scenario where seismic asperities are embedded within a creeping fault segment sustained by pore pressure stress perturbations.

Inversions of irreversible strain for simplified slip sources indicate a predominantly strike-slip mechanism consistent with the estimated local stress field, although trade-offs between source location, source dimension and slip direction highlight the limits of 1D strain observations. Our results provide direct experimental evidence for fluid-driven aseismic slip on a natural fault and demonstrate how microseismicity and repeaters can serve as indirect proxies for underlying slow deformation.

How to cite: Lambiase, A., Meier, M.-A., Spagnuolo, E., Nikkhoo, M., Marsan, D., Rinaldi, A. P., Gischig, V., Selvadurai, P., Cocco, M., Giardini, D., and Wiemer, S.: Fluid-induced aseismic slip and seismicity on a natural fault: insights from the FEAR1 experiment at BedrettoLab, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14725, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14725, 2026.

EGU26-14991 | Orals | TS1.8

Pore Fluid Pressure Effects on Friction and Fracture 

Ake Fagereng, Wenlu Zhu, Olivier Gagliardini, Thomas V. Schuler, and Francois Renard

Slip instabilities leading to earthquakes, landslides, and glacier surges may be triggered by high fluid pressures. On the other hand, high fluid pressures also suppress instability because of large nucleation length-scales in overpressured systems. We review geological, glaciological, and rock mechanical observations and highlight two key scales that control pore pressure induced frictional instabilities: (1) the length scale over which pore fluid overpressure is maintained, and (2) a time scale defined by relative rates of deformation propagation and pore fluid transport. These scales are also dependent on rheological regime, and we find three end-member regimes: (1) shallow and/or low temperature deformation where ambient stress is low, faults are close to frictional failure, and shear is easily delocalised; (2) deformation in a brittle and frictionally unstable regime (such as the crustal seismogenic zone), where planes are close to frictional failure and slip tends to localise; and (3) environments where viscous deformation is preferred over frictional, and hence bulk stress is low, frictional strength is high, and delocalisation dominant. In regimes 1 and 3, fluid-driven instabilities tend to be confined to local areas of overpressure, because deformation delocalises in the bulk and dilatant hardening prevents further propagation. In regime 2, however, slip tends to localise and it is potentially favourable for fluid-induced instabilities to grow, provided slip surfaces are sufficiently close to failure. These regimes also apply to glaciers, where viscous flow of ice competes with frictional sliding on the glacier base - here, interconnected overpressured water at the glacier base is a commonly invoked mechanism that promotes frictional instability. These concepts imply that fluid-driven frictional instabilities are only as large as the areas where fluid overpressured patches can be interconnected, and therefore highlight the key role of fluid pressure heterogeneity in determining whether fluid-induced instabilities can propagate.

How to cite: Fagereng, A., Zhu, W., Gagliardini, O., V. Schuler, T., and Renard, F.: Pore Fluid Pressure Effects on Friction and Fracture, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14991, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14991, 2026.

In subduction zones, the depth-dependent release of fluids from compaction and metamorphic dehydration reactions in hydrous lithologies plays a key role in modulating pore fluid pressure, fault strength, and slip behavior along the megathrust. The depth-distribution of fluid release is also the primary control on volatile fluxes through the forearc, and on the residual volatile content of the subducting plate. Here, we investigate the inventory and release of fluids from altered oceanic crust by low-grade dehydration reactions (~50-350 °C) at the Northern Hikurangi subduction zone, where slip on the outer (shallow) megathrust is accommodated almost entirely in frequent, large shallow slow slip events (SSEs).

Regional geophysical surveys and drilling during International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 375 show that the incoming plate of the Hikurangi Plateau carries a thick (>1.5 km) and extensively altered volcaniclastic sediment blanket characterized by an abundance of phyllosilicates (primarily Mg-smectite) and zeolite, and mineral-bound water contents as high as 14-16 wt.%, into the SSE source region. We quantify the distribution of fluid release from this sediment package by combining compaction trends to assess compactive water loss and thermodynamic phase equilibria models using sediment drill-core compositions to compute water release from dehydration reactions.

We find that: (1) compactive dewatering dominates in the outermost 15-20 km of the forearc, where temperatures remain too low (<100 °C) to drive dehydration reactions; and (2) a large volume (~5-8 wt.%) of mineral-bound water is released step-wise over the region spanning from ~30-90 km from the trench (corresponding to depths of 5-15 km below seafloor and temperatures of 150-260 °C), primarily from decomposition of zeolite and phllyosilicate phases. This contrasts with the behavior of Ca- and Na-smectites typically found in detrital marine sediments and altered volcanic ash, which undergo dehydration between 80-150 °C.

Because the majority of compactive dewatering precedes dehydration, mineral-bound water is released where porosity, permeability, and compressibility are reduced, maximizing the potential for excess pore pressure generation along and beneath the megathrust. The broad region of low-temperature metamorphic fluid release directly overlaps the slip zone of recurring SSEs, supporting the idea that dehydration - and associated elevated pore pressures and low effective normal stress - favor SSE as the prevailing mode of strain release on the plate interface. The presence of thick extensively hydrated oceanic crust and persistence of fluid production from clay dehydration to ~260 °C contrasts with other subduction zones, where low-T metamorphism is dominated by the transformation of Ca- and Na-smectites to illite by 120-150 °C. We speculate that this difference may offer an underlying explanation for the lack of a locked seismogenic zone at the Northern Hikurangi margin, whereas at other subduction margins, a lack of significant fluid production from dehydration in the 150-350 °C window may lead to a better-drained megathrust and promote stick-slip behavior.

How to cite: Saffer, D. and Smye, A.: Links between Low-T Dehydration and Recurring Shallow Slow Slip Events in the Northern Hikurangi Subduction Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15863, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15863, 2026.

EGU26-16488 | ECS | Orals | TS1.8

Seismogenic width control on the dynamics and scaling of laboratory elongated ruptures 

Federica Paglialunga, Jean Paul Ampuero, and François Passèlegue

After an initial phase of circular expansion, very large earthquakes primarily grow horizontally, with their vertical extent limited by the seismogenic width of the Earth’s crust. This geometric evolution is accompanied by a transition in rupture dynamics from crack-like to pulse-like propagation. Such events are commonly referred to as elongated ruptures.

While classical models (f.e., Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics (Freund, 1998)) successfully describe small to moderate earthquakes, they fail to capture the dynamics of large events. Recent theoretical and numerical work by Weng and Ampuero (2019) introduced a physical framework for elongated ruptures, which, although supported by numerical validation and natural observations, has yet to be experimentally validated.

To address this, we conducted 2D rupture experiments in a biaxial direct shear apparatus under unbounded and bounded conditions. The unbounded case corresponds to a uniform velocity-weakening interface, while the bounded case consists of an elongated velocity-weakening region adjacent to a wide velocity-strengthening zone, mimicking a seismogenic layer whose width is bounded by deep aseismic regions. This experimental model successfully reproduces confined elongated ruptures and reveals distinct propagation styles: crack-like ruptures under unbounded conditions and pulse-like ruptures under bounded conditions. This transition is also reflected in the temporal evolution of seismic moment: during the initial phase of propagation, seismic moment scales cubically with rupture duration, while after saturation of the seismogenic width, it transitions to a linear scaling, as expected for pulse-like ruptures.

Together, these observations highlight the role of the seismogenic layer in controlling rupture style and provide experimental support for the proposed theory of elongated ruptures.

How to cite: Paglialunga, F., Ampuero, J. P., and Passèlegue, F.: Seismogenic width control on the dynamics and scaling of laboratory elongated ruptures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16488, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16488, 2026.

EGU26-17727 | Orals | TS1.8

Pore pressure change during nucleation and slip along experimental faults 

Nicolas Brantut, François Passelègue, and Pierre Dublanchet

Fluid pressure variations within fault zones impact fault strength and have the potential to produce detectable geophysical signals that can help characterise fault dynamics. One key process impacting fluid pressure is pore volume variations (dilation or compaction) due to stress changes and inelastic deformation. Slip-induced dilation and compaction have been thoroughly documented in laboratory experiments, but their impact on pore pressure has not. In nature, we expect slip to be associated with stress variations, and there might be cumulated effects of poroelastic and inelastic pore pressure changes. In order to document such effects, we conducted laboratory rock friction experiments where fluid pressure was monitored in situ during sequences of quasi-static loading followed by dynamic slip event. The simulated fault was a 30 degrees saw-cut in a Westerly granite cylinder, saturated with water, tested under triaxial conditions. The low hydraulic diffusivity of the rock made the fault and wall rock transiently undrained during deformation. During quasi-static loading with no fault slip, we observed pore pressure rises that we interpret as poroelastic closure of the fault. During dynamic slip events, pore pressure systematically dropped, approximately in proportion to the drop in normal stress. A large contribution to the pore pressure drop is interpreted as poroelastic opening of the fault. Prior to stick-slip events, we detected systematic pore pressure decreases by up to around 1 MPa, correlated to the occurrence of inhomogeneous slip along the fault. Slip nucleation, inferred by kinematic inversion of local strain gauge data, is linked to local slip magnitudes of the order of 1 to 10 µm, and appears to lead to inelastic dilation. A stability analysis of fault slip including dilatant and poroelastic effects shows that poroelastic coupling tends to compensate normal stress variations, leading to faults operating under mostly constant effective normal stress if conditions are undrained.

How to cite: Brantut, N., Passelègue, F., and Dublanchet, P.: Pore pressure change during nucleation and slip along experimental faults, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17727, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17727, 2026.

EGU26-18025 | Posters on site | TS1.8

Slip Rates on the Main Marmara Fault from Bayesian Inversion of Dense GNSS and InSAR Velocity Fields 

Émilie Klein, Estelle Neyrinck, Baptiste Rousset, Frédéric Masson, Ali Ozkan, Hakan Hasan Yavasoglu, Patrice Ulrich, Romain Jolivet, Cécile Doubre, Philippe Durand, and Marie-Pierre Doin

The Main Marmara Fault lies at the western termination of the North Anatolian Fault. While the North Anatolian Fault ruptured from its eastern termination to the Izmit segment over the 20th century through a westward‐propagating sequence of Mw ≥ 7 earthquakes, the underwater Marmara segment has not experienced a large earthquake in recent times. However, due to its proximity to the megacity of Istanbul, this segment represents one of the most hazardous fault systems in the Middle East. In particular, no historical earthquake has been identified on the Central Basin segment since at least 1766, potentially making it a major seismic gap.

To better assess seismic hazard along the Main Marmara Fault, we estimate the slip rate by jointly using a dense GNSS velocity field and four Sentinel-1 InSAR tracks. The GNSS velocity field consists of 111 measurements, including newly acquired densified sites along the northern shore of the Marmara Sea. The InSAR velocity field was processed automatically within the framework of the FLATSIM project, covering the period from October 2016 to April 2021. InSAR velocities are referenced to a Eurasia-fixed plate using the GNSS velocity field. We then perform a joint Bayesian inversion of slip rates using both datasets, allowing us to quantify uncertainties on the estimated slip rates.

Our results indicate that the Main Marmara Fault is predominantly creeping between longitudes 27.5 and 28.6, implying that the Central Basin segment is largely aseismic. Uncertainty estimates and forward modeling demonstrate that our datasets are capable of resolving slip behavior on this segment with good accuracy. However, the shallow portion of the Central Basin segment is still accumulating up to ~10 mm/yr of slip deficit, which could permit earthquakes of up to Mw 6.0 every few decades, similar to the 2025 sequence. West of longitude 27.5 and east of longitude 28.6, including the Prince Islands segment, the fault appears to be mostly locked down to 12 km depth. On the Prince Islands segment, close to Istanbul, the accumulated strain has the potential to generate an earthquake with Mw > 7.

How to cite: Klein, É., Neyrinck, E., Rousset, B., Masson, F., Ozkan, A., Yavasoglu, H. H., Ulrich, P., Jolivet, R., Doubre, C., Durand, P., and Doin, M.-P.: Slip Rates on the Main Marmara Fault from Bayesian Inversion of Dense GNSS and InSAR Velocity Fields, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18025, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18025, 2026.

EGU26-20370 | Posters on site | TS1.8

Seismic vs aseismic deformation in the Northern Apennines constrained from dense GNSS velocities 

Enrico Serpelloni, Riccardo Nucci, Giulio Poggiali, Mauro Buttinelli, Letizia Anderlini, Chris Marone, and Lauro Chiaraluce

The Upper Tiber Valley, in the Northern Apennines of Italy, is a key natural laboratory for investigating how continental extension is partitioned between seismic and aseismic deformation. Extension in this sector of the Apennines has been primarily accommodated by the Altotiberina Fault (ATF), a low-angle (~15°) normal fault that is mechanically unfavorable for elastic shear failure, and by a network of high-angle synthetic and antithetic faults in its hanging wall. While the ATF is characterized by persistent background micro-seismicity, the high-angle faults host larger historical earthquakes and frequent seismic swarms, likely induced by fluid circulation and elevated pore pressure. Since the study of Anderlini et al. (2016), the local GNSS network has been significantly densified within the framework of the Alto Tiberina Near Fault Observatory (TABOO-NFO). The updated dataset now better resolves a sharp ~3 mm/yr chain-normal interseismic velocity gradient across the Upper Tiber Valley, providing unprecedented constraints on how ongoing extension is distributed across the fault system. We use the new GNSS velocity field to reassess the relative contribution of low-angle versus high-angle faults to crustal deformation and to quantify the partitioning between seismic and aseismic slip. We apply a block-modeling approach that jointly estimates rigid block rotations and spatially variable interseismic coupling through a newly developed iterative inversion strategy. The model includes 3D geometries, discretized in triangular dislocation elements, of both the ATF and its antithetic structures, permitting assessment of distributed slip rates across the fault system. Preliminary results show that shallow locking on high-angle syn- and antithetic faults plays a first-order role in explaining the observed velocity gradient, whereas the ATF accommodates a significant fraction of extension through aseismic creep. These findings refine earlier interpretations and provide new insight into how low-angle normal faults can interact with steeper faults during the earthquake cycle.

How to cite: Serpelloni, E., Nucci, R., Poggiali, G., Buttinelli, M., Anderlini, L., Marone, C., and Chiaraluce, L.: Seismic vs aseismic deformation in the Northern Apennines constrained from dense GNSS velocities, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20370, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20370, 2026.

Shallow slow slip events have long been observed along the strike slip faults of the San Andreas fault system and are now increasingly observed on many other faults on Earth. Creep events are thought to episodically release a portion of the fault’s interseismic stress budget that has accumulated over the earthquake cycle. However, it is not known what portion of strain these events release, and what residual strain remains available to drive earthquake occurrence. Near-field surface creep measurements, like alignment arrays and creepmeters, are unable to constrain the depth of creep, meaning that is difficult to constrain the release of strain or stress in each creep event without additional assumptions. In this study, we use radar data from InSAR platforms to resolve the depth of creep during creep events along the Superstition Hills fault in Southern California. We mitigate atmospheric noise by stacking co-event interferograms and by using empirically derived covariance matrices in the modeling. We apply a new nonlinear dislocation modeling method that constrains the slip distribution to be elliptical at each point along the fault and uses field and creepmeter data as lower bounds on surface slip. Using this model, we compute the strain drop throughout the rupture. We apply this technique to the 2006, 2010, 2017, and 2023 aseismic ruptures in Envisat, UAVSAR, and Sentinel-1 data. Lastly, we compare the resulting strain drops to strain accumulation rates calculated from backslip, testing the hypothesis that shallowly released strain is equal to the strain applied from deep dislocations in the crust. Using only the creep events in the instrumental record, we find that interseismic slip rates on the SHF must be above 10 mm/yr to explain the observations, a result consistent with regional-scale block modeling. Our results have implications for the strength of faults, the expected modes of seismic moment release in the shallow crust, and for seismic hazard analyses near creeping faults.

How to cite: Materna, K. and Bilham, R.: Shallow Aseismic Slip and Stress/Strain Budgets on the Creeping Faults in the Imperial Valley, California, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21901, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21901, 2026.

Strike-slip faults critically control hydrocarbon migration in the Mesozoic clastic reservoirs of the Tahe Oilfield, NW China. However, their identification is challenged by weak seismic responses due to subtle impedance contrasts, steep dips, and small throws. This study conducts a systematic, multi-method comparison to optimize fault detection, evaluating both conventional seismic attributes and a novel deep learning (DL) approach.

We first applied structure-oriented filtering to enhance data continuity. Subsequently, key conventional attributes were computed: coherence and curvature to delineate major structural discontinuities and flexures, ant tracking to highlight fault pathways, and likelihood to map fault lineaments. The core of our DL approach involved a ResU-Net model, pre-trained on extensive datasets and refined via transfer learning using 65 manually interpreted fault traces from the target area. This process generated a high-resolution fault probability volume.

Results from the key T34 horizon demonstrate a clear performance hierarchy. While coherence and curvature effectively image major faults, they lack resolution for secondary networks. Ant tracking and likelihood show sensitivity to small-scale features but suffer from poor continuity and noise. In stark contrast, the AI probability volume integrates the strengths of these methods, simultaneously providing superior boundary clarity for major faults and enhanced detection of subtle, secondary strike-slip faults crucial for hydrocarbon migration. It presents a more continuous, spatially coherent, and geologically plausible 3D fault system.

This work underscores the significant advantage of an AI-driven, integrated workflow over individual conventional attributes. It provides a robust, scalable template for multi-scale fracture characterization in complex reservoirs, effectively bridging the gap between geophysical data analysis and geological interpretation.

How to cite: Jiang, Y. and Han, C.: Characterizing Mesozoic Strike-Slip Faults in China's Tahe Oilfield: A Multi-Method Comparison from Traditional Seismic Attributes to AI, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2170, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2170, 2026.

To clarify the migration characteristics of the X Sag trough in the Zhuyi depression of the Pearl River Mouth Basin and understand the distribution patterns of hydrocarbon source rocks, this study employs newly processed high-resolution 3D seismic data and integrates techniques such as fault activity period determination, fault displacement-distance curve analysis, and balanced section methods. It systematically investigates the deformation mechanism of the X Sag Fault in the Zhuyi Depression and its control over hydrocarbon source rock distribution. The study reveals: ① The X Sag is a north-dip, south-lobe scoop-shaped half-graben controlled by the NE-NEE-NWW multi-trend arc-shaped F1 fault, with three sets of secondary faults (NE, NEE, EW) developing within the depression. Based on the segmentation characteristics of the main boundary fault F1 and its combination patterns with secondary faults, the study area is divided into eastern and western sub-basins. ② The X Sag underwent multiple phases of tectonic evolution under the influence of multi-phase, multi-directional stress fields, primarily comprising four stages: Fracture Stage I, Fracture Stage II, Fracture Stage III, and the Tilting Stage. Based on the long-term activity characteristics of the main boundary fault F1 and the activity features of different phases of the secondary faults within the sag, five sets of fault systems were delineated: faults active only during the Early Wenchang Period, faults active during the Early Wenchang-Enping Period, faults active during the Late Wenchang-Enping Period, faults active only during the Enping Period, and long-term active faults. ③ The secondary faults within the X Sag are collectively controlled by a pre-existing arc-shaped NE-NEE-NWW-trending reverse-transform fault system. During basin formation, the western sub-sag underwent extensional deformation along pre-existing NE-NEE-trending faults, forming a series of secondary faults aligned with the main boundary fault strike. These appear in cross-section as structures reverse-cutting the main boundary fault. Conversely, the eastern sub-sag underwent extensional-torsional deformation along pre-existing NWW-trending strike-slip faults, generating a series of near-EW-trending secondary faults. During deformation, a “V”-shaped structural pattern formed in the profile. ④ The segmented growth and differential activity characteristics of different control-depression faults within the basin governed the migration of the depression trough sedimentary center from northwest to southeast and from the basin margin toward the basin interior, thereby influencing the distribution of hydrocarbon source rocks during the Early and Late Wenchang periods.

How to cite: Sun, X., Sun, Y., and Chen, F.: Deformation Mechanism and Its Depression Controlling-Source Controlling Effect of X Sag Fault System in Pearl River Mouth Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2947, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2947, 2026.

Tectonic fractures refer to a series of discontinuities formed in crustal rocks under the action of tectonic stress, serving as a key factor governing numerous geological processes and resource exploitation. In the field of oil and gas exploration, especially for the tight sandstone reservoirs in the Kuqa Depression of the Tarim Basin, the tectonic fracture system acts as the primary seepage pathway and reservoir space, directly determining the distribution of reservoir "sweet spots" and single-well productivity. To achieve quantitative characterization of reservoir fractures and accurate prediction of their spatial distribution, we innovatively introduced the principle of minimum energy dissipation and the principle of least action, which reflect the essential laws of nature. By fully integrating the complex tectonic evolution process with classical mechanics theory, we completed the quantitative prediction research on fractures during complex tectonic evolution based on four-dimensional (4D) dynamic stress field simulation. Based on the analysis of tectonic evolution history in the Keshen 8 area of the Kuqa Depression, combined with extensive field, seismic, core and logging data, as well as rock mechanics experiments and acoustic emission experiments, a reasonable paleotectonic geomechanical model was established. From a novel perspective, we introduced the principle of minimum energy dissipation and the principle of least action, and further combined them with classical mechanics theory and the variational principle of continuum media. A time-domain dynamic rock failure criterion and a fracture parameter characterization model were constructed, building a "bridge" between stress and fracture parameters. By selecting an optimal elastoplastic finite element simulation platform and setting appropriate time steps, we completed the time-domain 4D tectonic stress field simulation. On this basis, we implanted Python programs into the finite element simulation platform, realizing the quantitative prediction of the spatial distribution of reservoir fractures in the Keshen 8 area of the Kuqa Depression. The prediction results indicate that folding is the primary controlling factor for fracture development in the Keshen 8 gas reservoir. On the plane view, the linear fracture density in the structural high parts of the east-west anticlines is slightly higher than that in the saddle parts and both limbs, and the linear fracture density in the core of the eastern anticline is higher than that of the western anticline. The fracture dip angle gradually decreases from the structural high points to the two limbs of the anticlines. The prediction results are in high agreement with the actual well-point measurement data and production performance data. High-yield wells are basically located in fracture-developed zones with high linear density and near-vertical dip angles.

How to cite: Liu, S., Wang, G., and Feng, J.: Quantitative Prediction of Tectonic Fractures Coupled with Minimum Energy Dissipation and Least Action Principles: A Case Study of Keshen 8 Area, Kuqa Depression, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3308, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3308, 2026.

EGU26-3360 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Effective fracture porosity in crystalline rock 

Josse van den Berg and Elco Luijendijk

Crystalline rocks are typically  low in porosity, but they often contain fractures, which provide critical pathways for fluid flow and influence groundwater storage, resource estimation, and safety assessments for nuclear waste repositories. Despite their importance, effective fracture porosity in crystalline rocks remains poorly constrained due to limited and regionally biased measurements. In this study, we used global permeability datasets and modified an existing equation to estimate porosity from permeability, incorporating fracture roughness and aperture. This allowed us to calculate nearly 28,000 porosity values across a wide range of depths and geological settings. The resulting porosity distributions are highly right-skewed and show an exponential decrease with depth. Our findings indicate that porosity values in crystalline rocks are generally lower than previously assumed. Median porosity values in the upper 100 meters are several orders of magnitude lower than the commonly assumed 1% porosity, highlighting a significant discrepancy between our estimates and traditional assumptions. We quantified uncertainty using Monte Carlo simulations, which show that natural variability in porosity dominates over parameter uncertainty, underscoring the robustness of our global trends. These findings imply that groundwater storage in crystalline rocks is far smaller than previously estimated, and groundwater velocities may be higher than predicted by models assuming larger porosity, with implications for contaminant transport and nuclear waste safety.

How to cite: van den Berg, J. and Luijendijk, E.: Effective fracture porosity in crystalline rock, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3360, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3360, 2026.

EGU26-3968 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

New Integrated QDC-2D Toolbox for 2D Discontinuity Abundance Calculation 

Hrvoje Lukačić, Charlotte Wolff, Martin Krkač, and Michel Jaboyedoff

Quantitative characterisation of the geometrical properties of discontinuities in fractured rock masses is fundamental for understanding their mechanical behaviour, structural characterisation, and for performing reliable rockfall susceptibility assessments. Discontinuity abundance parameters, such as intensity and density, play a key role in rock mass classification and hazard analysis. Yet, accurately estimating them remains challenging due to limited accessibility, scale effects, and censoring bias in conventional field surveys.

Recent advances in remote sensing techniques, particularly UAV-based digital photogrammetry, enable the acquisition of high-resolution three-dimensional point clouds and ortho-view images, commonly referred to as Digital Outcrop Models (DOMs). These datasets significantly improve access to steep or unstable rock faces and enable detailed, reproducible discontinuity mapping. However, standardised, open-source tools for the quantitative analysis of discontinuity abundance from 2D ortho-view images remain limited.

Here, we present a new toolbox within the open-source MATLAB application QDC-2D (Quantitative Discontinuity Characterization, 2D) (Loiotine et al., 2021), focused on the calculation and spatial visualization of discontinuity abundance parameters. The toolbox computes commonly used linear (P10) and areal (P20, P21) discontinuity intensity and density metrics using two approaches. It uses well-established Mauldon estimators (Mauldon et al., 2001) and introduces a circular scan window approach that improves fracture intensity and density estimation through direct calculation of discontinuity trace segment lengths and number within the circular scan window. The toolbox further allows user-defined regions of interest (ROI) and cluster-based abundance calculation to capture spatial variability in discontinuity density and intensity. This approach enables the detection of high-fracturing zones with high certainty.

The toolbox's capabilities have been thoroughly tested and validated using multiple synthetic discontinuity datasets, demonstrating robust, reliable performance. This extension toolbox for QDC-2D provides a reproducible, accessible framework for quantitative discontinuity analysis, thereby supporting improved structural characterisation of fractured rock masses.

 

References:

Mauldon, M., Dunne, W. M., & Rohrbaugh, M. B., Jr. (2001). Circular scanlines and circular windows: New tools for characterizing the geometry of fracture traces. Journal of Structural Geology, 23(2–3), 247–258.

Loiotine, L., Wolff, C., Wyser, E., Andriani, G. F., Derron, M.-H., Jaboyedoff, M., & Parise, M. (2021). QDC-2D: A Semi-Automatic Tool for 2D Analysis of Discontinuities for Rock Mass Characterization. Remote Sensing13(24), 5086. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs13245086

 

How to cite: Lukačić, H., Wolff, C., Krkač, M., and Jaboyedoff, M.: New Integrated QDC-2D Toolbox for 2D Discontinuity Abundance Calculation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3968, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3968, 2026.

EGU26-4008 | Orals | TS1.9

Structural complexity and fault roughness properties of carbonate relay ramps 

Fabrizio Agosta, Stefania Dastoli, Carmela Taddeo, Ian Abdallah, Manuel Curzi, Marco Mercuri, and Amerigo Corradetti

The geometry and kinematics of small faults within relay ramps are affected by local stress perturbations due to coeval propagation of laterally overstepping normal faults with negligible separations. Independent of their stepping sense and relative fault slip rates, previous studies documented the high structural complexity of carbonate relay ramps cropping out in central Italy, where Mesozoic carbonates of the Lazio-Abruzzi Platform are crosscut by an active extensional fault system. Notably examples include the ~400 m-wide, ~900 m-long relay ramp within the Tre Monti fault dissected by small faults with variable attitudes and kinematics showing values of fault and fracture density peaks in its middle portion. Similarly, the ~3 km-wide, ~7km-long relay ramp bounded by the Venere-Gioia dei Marsi and Pescina-Parasano normal faults exhibits the highest amount of extensional strain within its central portion.

In order to gain new insights on the possible role of surface geometry of the main slipping planes on the spatial distribution of fault-related damage, we focus on the ca. 8 km-long, 110 m-offset, NW-SE striking and SW-dipping Monte Capo di Serre fault. This fault displaces Mesozoic-Tertiary platform carbonates and Pleistocene slope debris, and it is continuously exposed along a ~800 m-long along-strike outcrop. Studying a ~60 m-long and 32 m-wide relay ramp bounded by 100’s m- long fault segments forming a sinistral overstep, and at smaller scale a 9 m-long, 5 m-wide relay ramp bounded by 10’s of m-long dextral overstepping slip surfaces we first conduct field and digital structural analyses and then fault roughness analysis.

Results show that the slickenside attitude and kinematics are controlled by overstep geometry. In fact, dextral oversteps are associated with NNW-SSE to N-S striking high-angle slickensides recording pure-dip slip extension, whereas sinistral oversteps are characterized by ESE-WNW to E-W striking, moderate-angle slickensides recording left-lateral transtension. Independently of the overstep geometry, results of spectral analysis of the outcropping slickensides indicate they are significantly rougher (root mean square roughness, Rq≈25-68 mm) within relay ramps than along the main slip surfaces (Rq≈1 mm). Integration with microstructural observations suggests that the relay ramps localized diffuse post-seismic deformation and aftershock-related fracturing, as recorded by diffuse host rock brecciation and widespread fracturing. Conversely, the main slip surfaces predominantly accommodated seismic slip, as shown by truncated clasts and multiple generation of cataclasite and ultracataclasite layers. We argue that these results support the interpretation that fault-surface roughness within carbonate relay ramps might exert a primary control on local stress perturbations, thereby contribution to their complex structural and kinematics complexities.

How to cite: Agosta, F., Dastoli, S., Taddeo, C., Abdallah, I., Curzi, M., Mercuri, M., and Corradetti, A.: Structural complexity and fault roughness properties of carbonate relay ramps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4008, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4008, 2026.

EGU26-4297 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Integrated field and laboratory analyses of vein assemblages from the downfaulted southern Apennines fold-and-thrust belt, Italy. 

Aji Kyari, Filippo Zummo, Ian Abdallah, Michele Paternoster, Antonio Caracausi, and Fabrizio Agosta

Along the downfaulted axial zone of the southern Apennines fold-and-thrust belt of Italy, ongoing work focuses on field survey of high-angle extensional fault zones, and integrated microstructural, mineralogical, and stable isotope analyses of fault-related calcite veins. Two study areas are investigated. The first one lies in the southern portion of the seismically active Irpinia region, the second one along the southern flanks of the Raparo Mt., Basilicata. There, we study Mesozoic shallow-water carbonates that first underwent thrusting tectonics, and then extension and exhumation from shallow crustal depths. Within the fault zones, we select the high-angle Slip Parallel veins (SP-veins) and low-angle Comb veins (C-veins), respectively oriented parallel and perpendicular to the fault dip.

In the Irpinia region, results of microstructural analysis of the vein assemblage indicate that the high-angle faults are characterized by veins containing blocky to elongated and fibrous calcite. Blocky calcite minerals show type I and II twinning. Furthermore, inclusion bands associated with crack-and-seal processes are also present. In line with established microstructural interpretations, blocky calcite is interpreted as post-kinematics, whereas elongated and fibrous calcite is regarded as syn-kinematics. Occurrence of type I and II calcite twinning suggests that the intracrystalline deformation temperatures in these regions falls within ca. 150o C - 300o C.

At the Raparo Mt., microstructural data are consistent with blocky, elongate-blocky calcite textures of both SP- and C-veins. The former veins are dominated by blocky calcite with established presence of Type I and II calcite twinning, while the latter veins occasionally show blocky calcite. This area also shows widespread occurrence of both high- and low-angle veins with microcrystalline textures, which suggest that rapid cooling of the mineralizing fluids and precipitation took place in their formation process. Common tar-rich mineralization is also observed along the low-angle veins.

Aiming at deciphering the relative timing of formation and paleo stress regimes, present work is dedicated to the detailed microscale documentation of the crosscutting/abutting relations among the different vein sets. At the same time, extraction of powder samples is taking place for subsequent geochemical analyses. Results will be key to determine the source/s of the mineralizing fluids, determination of isotopic fractionation, and amount of fluid-rock interaction. These analyses will enable formulation of valuable hypotheses regarding the modalities of ingression of the mineralizing fault fluids within the study fault zones.

How to cite: Kyari, A., Zummo, F., Abdallah, I., Paternoster, M., Caracausi, A., and Agosta, F.: Integrated field and laboratory analyses of vein assemblages from the downfaulted southern Apennines fold-and-thrust belt, Italy., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4297, 2026.

EGU26-4842 | Orals | TS1.9

Refining the picture of fracture development in folded carbonate reservoirs : Insights from U-Pb geochronology of syn-kinematic calcite mineralizations in the Provence fold-and-thrust belt, France  

Olivier Lacombe, Nicolas Beaudoin, Anies Zeboudj, Jean-Paul Callot, Juliette Lamarche, Guilhem Hoareau, Abel Guihou, and Pierre Deschamps

LA-ICP-MS U–Pb geochronology of syn-kinematic calcite in faults and fractures provides a direct means of dating brittle deformation. We present U–Pb calcite geochronological data from deformation features across a range of scales—stylolites, veins, minor faults, and major thrusts—within the Provence fold-and-thrust belt. Whether in thrust-related cover folds (Mirabeau and Bimont) or in the more complex Nerthe Massif, the results illustrate how calcite geochronology can enhance or challenge our understanding of fracture pattern development in reservoirs.

Calcite geochronology validates the sequence of fracture development during layer-parallel shortening, fold growth, and late-stage fold tightening, previously inferred from structural orientations and cross-cutting relationships, regardless of fold type. Dating of calcite jogs formed at the tips of sedimentary or tectonic stylolites further constrains the timing of deformation stages. Geochronology also helps differentiate local from regional deformation by defining a more precise chronological framework where other geological markers are absent.

Across all investigated structures, deformation features show remarkable age consistency and slight overlaps between stages, providing a continuous and detailed record of fracture development. The age overlaps may indicate that deformation lasted less than the analytical uncertainty or that fracturing was more continuous throughout folding and thrusting than previously assumed. The consistency of ages across structural scales suggests either coeval deformation or events too close in time to be distinguished by U–Pb dating. This observation supports the syn-kinematic nature of calcite mineralization in small tectonic veins, even where infills display blocky, non-stretched textures. While precipitation may lag slightly behind fracture opening in individual veins, at the vein-set scale, both processes remain coeval within dating resolution. This broadens the applicability of U–Pb calcite geochronology to diverse mesoscale structures.

The dataset reveals the multi-phase development of similarly oriented fractures, which possibly initiated during burial and were reopened or densified during subsequent tectonic episodes. Geochronology provides a robust way to test whether fractures grouped by orientation, deformation mode, and relative chronology (‘fracture sets’), as well as classical associations of veins, stylolites, and conjugate faults defined by kinematic and mechanical compatibility, truly reflect the same deformation event. Veins with up to 60° strike variation sometimes yield indistinguishable ages (within a few Myr), challenging conventional definitions of fracture sets and implying local stress variations. This questions the presumed stability of the stress field in tectonic reconstructions.

Regionally, clusters of U–Pb calcite ages, if not reflecting sampling bias, hint towards variations in fluid activity, redox conditions, and/or uranium mobility, or distinct pulses of brittle rock damage and fluid flow. The latter interpretation suggests two deformation phases—late Cretaceous (81–67 Ma) and late Paleocene–Eocene (59–34 Ma)—separated by a Paleocene tectonic quiescence, matching the two already recognized Pyrenean shortening phases and indicating a likely, though not systematic, link between regional tectonic activity, brittle rock damage, fluid circulation, and calcite mineralization.

These examples demonstrate how U–Pb calcite geochronology not only constrains the timing and duration of brittle deformation but also helps reassess models of fracture development and fold–fracture relationships.

How to cite: Lacombe, O., Beaudoin, N., Zeboudj, A., Callot, J.-P., Lamarche, J., Hoareau, G., Guihou, A., and Deschamps, P.: Refining the picture of fracture development in folded carbonate reservoirs : Insights from U-Pb geochronology of syn-kinematic calcite mineralizations in the Provence fold-and-thrust belt, France , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4842, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4842, 2026.

EGU26-5002 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Analysis of post-metamorphism brittle deformation in marbles: insights from Montagnola Senese, Northern Apennine 

Giacomo Risaliti, Roberto Emanuele Rizzo, Stefano Tavani, Massimo Coli, Jacopo Nesi, and Paola Vannucchi

The Tuscan marbles, primarily exposed in the Alpi Apuane Metamorphic Complex and the Montagnola Senese ridge, record a protracted deformation history spanning the rheological spectrum from ductile flow to brittle fracturing. While the syn-metamorphic ductile evolution of these units has been extensively studied, the subsequent brittle deformation—specifically post-metamorphic faulting and fracturing—remains poorly constrained. These fracture networks are not only uplift-related features; they record a polyphase brittle history with direct implications for fluid migration, quarry slope stability, and Neogene–Quaternary stress field reconstruction.

In this work, we characterize brittle structures within marble from the Montagnola Senese, located along the Mid-Tuscan Ridge in the Northern Apennines. This marble has been quarried since Roman times, making rock mass characterization relevant for both scientific and practical purposes. We adopt a multidisciplinary approach, integrating classical field surveys with 3D digital outcrop models obtained by photogrammetry. Data were collected at the outcrop scale and subsequently extrapolated to define the fracture pattern across the entire Montagnola Senese ridge.

The detected fractures and faults cut the marble schistosity, therefore post-dating the last metamorphism event (middle Miocene). Our results reveal at least two brittle deformation phases: (I) a first, left-lateral strike-slip system, followed by (II) extensional structures, which crosscut or reuse the previous ones. Fracture attributes, such as fracture intensity and density, within the non-faulted rock mass were compared to those associated with fault damage zones. These data provide constraints on both quarrying operations and fluid circulation models, whilst contributing to the definition of the tectonic setting of this sector of the Mid-Tuscan Ridge from the middle Miocene to the present day.

How to cite: Risaliti, G., Rizzo, R. E., Tavani, S., Coli, M., Nesi, J., and Vannucchi, P.: Analysis of post-metamorphism brittle deformation in marbles: insights from Montagnola Senese, Northern Apennine, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5002, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5002, 2026.

EGU26-5148 | ECS | Orals | TS1.9

Permeability Anisotropy in Fractured Mesozoic Platform Carbonates under Variable Triaxial Stress Conditions 

Ian Bala Abdallah, David Healy, Jeffrey Hyman, Giacomo Prosser, and Fabrizio Agosta

This study investigates how local stress state governs permeability magnitude in fractured carbonate aquifers. By using outcrop-constrained Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) modelling from Mt. Viggiano of the southern Apennines, Italy, we investigate the control exerted by 500 m-depth tri-axial local stress state on computed horizontal permeability anisotropy. Fractured carbonate systems commonly exhibit strong permeability anisotropies that evolve with depth as fractures respond to changes in both normal and shear stresses. Accurately capturing this behaviour remains challenging due to the combined effects of fracture geometry and connectivity, as well as primary depositional architecture and stress-dependent aperture modification.
Field-derived fracture datasets from four carbonate outcrops representing two contrasting paleo depositional settings are used to construct three-dimensional DFN models at the bed-package scale. Two DFN-based modelling workflows are employed to explore how different representations of fracture connectivity and flow influence predicted permeability. One approach estimates bulk permeability from fracture population statistics within distinct geocellular volumes. Differently, the other one explicitly simulates steady-state fluid flow through hydraulically connected fracture networks within a fully meshed computational domain. This integrated strategy allows evaluation of how modelling assumptions related to connectivity, aperture scaling, and flow representation affect permeability predictions without implying a preferred modelling tool.
The results of this study show that increasing normal stress generally reduces horizontal permeability anisotropy, although local increases in permeability occur where favourably oriented fractures undergo shear induced dilation. Result are also consistent with the permeability response varying systematically with depositional architectures: (i) massive, high-energy carbonates dominated by non-strata bound fractures exhibit vertically persistent but weakly connected networks; (ii) on the contrary, layered, low-energy carbonates containing abundant strata-bound fractures display enhanced lateral connectivity and higher hydraulic effective transmissivity.
The main outcomes of this work demonstrate that permeability anisotropy in fractured carbonates evolves with stress through its interaction with fracture orientation, connectivity, and stratigraphic architecture. Incorporating stress dependent behaviour and explicit connectivity into DFN workflows therefore improves predictions of subsurface fluid flow relevant to groundwater resources, CO₂ storage, and geothermal systems.

How to cite: Abdallah, I. B., Healy, D., Hyman, J., Prosser, G., and Agosta, F.: Permeability Anisotropy in Fractured Mesozoic Platform Carbonates under Variable Triaxial Stress Conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5148, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5148, 2026.

EGU26-5516 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Cracks in our foundations: The nature and origin of fissures in the Kortrijk Formation 

Loic Piret, Maarten Van Daele, Bruno Stuyts, Marc De Batist, Stijn Dewaele, Anis Kheffache, and Meghdad Payan

The stiff Ypresian clays of the Kortrijk Formation occur extensively throughout the subsurface of the Princess Elizabeth Zone (PEZ), North Sea. The formation is pervasively deformed with large-scale polygonal fault networks, so-called Clay Tectonic Features (CTF; e.g. Verschuren, 2019, Marine Geology). Moreover, recently acquired samples from the Kortrijk Formation in the PEZ suggest a heavily fissured internal structure of these clays at the centimeter scale. The presence of faults and fissures in this formation have strong implications for its geotechnical properties, such as strength and stiffness, which may pose challenges for the foundations of the planned offshore wind energy farms.

With this in mind, we study the physical, mineralogical and chemical properties of the Kortrijk Formation in high-resolution using a multi-methodological approach including X-ray CT scanning, organic and inorganic geochemical analyses (LOI, organic material, calcimetry, pH, stable carbon isotopes, pXRF, XRD and ICP-OES) and sedimentological investigations (grain size, thin sections). The first samples were collected from a 20m deep borehole with alternating rotary coring and hydraulic push sampling in Rumbeke (from a section that is considered stratigraphically equivalent to the PEZ) and multiple drilling campaigns at other locations are planned.

Initial X-Ray CT scans of these samples reveal a heterogenous internal architecture containing four main feature types: bioturbation, concretions, fissures, and faults. Bioturbation occurs throughout the cores, often appearing as millimeter-thick, centimeters-long, high-density features, likely reflecting the presence of precipitated minerals such as pyrite, following microbially-mediated sulfate reduction. In contrast, concretions (siderite-fluorapatite) are rare in the core sections, consistent with their observed scattered presence in land-based observations. Fissures are recognized as low CT-density features which do not occur throughout all the core sections but are concentrated in localized zones, leaving intervening volumes of clay intact. The observed cm-scale normal faulting structures point to a local extensional regime. The geometry, pattern, and textures of the observed fissures and fractures are tested against established criteria (e.g. radial and axisymmetry, bending near the core rim, etc.) to conclusively differentiate natural features from coring-induced artifacts (Adriaens et al., 2024, Geoenergy). To quantitatively analyze all features, the X-ray CT data are processed using a comprehensive workflow involving filtering, segmentation, and grouping of features based on multi-ROI analysis using 3D connectivity. Following isolation, we perform a detailed analysis of the morphological characteristics (e.g., volume, surface area) and the three-dimensional orientation of the segmented features. The high-resolution 3D model of the features in the clay derived from CT scanning will be used to inform numerical models which will test the stiffness and long-term mechanical stability of the Kortrijk formation clays under different geotechnical loading scenarios.

By combining detailed sedimentological, mineralogical and geochemical characterization with the high-resolution CT-based structural analysis, we aim to establish the origin of the fissures and faults in the Kortrijk formation, thereby providing the geological context for their impact on geotechnical stability.

How to cite: Piret, L., Van Daele, M., Stuyts, B., De Batist, M., Dewaele, S., Kheffache, A., and Payan, M.: Cracks in our foundations: The nature and origin of fissures in the Kortrijk Formation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5516, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5516, 2026.

The structural architecture of the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia is defined by a complex interplay between localized halokinesis and regional compressional stresses. This study provides a comprehensive geological investigation into the mechanical and tectonic linkages between the heavily fractured Late Miocene-Pliocene Hofuf Formation and the Eocene Rus Formation situated at the apex of the Dammam Dome. Historically, these two units have been studied as distinct stratigraphic entities; however, this analysis integrates field observations from Jabal Al-Shuʿba with regional geophysical data to demonstrate a shared deformation history. The Dammam Dome, an oval-shaped structure covering approximately 500 km, is cored by the Infracambrian Hormuz Salt. Its diapiric rise, occurring at rates of up to 7.5 m/Ma during the Neogene, induced a systematic fracture network in the Rus Formation characterized by radial and concentric Mode I tension joints. Concurrently, the Arabian Plate's collision with Eurasia, the Zagros Orogeny, transmitted far-field intraplate stresses that reactivated these older structural grains. Field data from the Hofuf Formation at Jabal Al-Shuʿba reveal a high-intensity, multidirectional fracture system within alternating sandstone and mudstone beds. Unlike the uniform patterns observed at the Dammam Dome apex, the Hofuf fractures exhibit bimodal and conjugate orientations (NNE-NE and NW-SE) with apertures reaching 15 cm. This disparity is attributed to mechanical stratigraphy; the bed-bounded nature of fracturing in the clastic Hofuf Formation prevents the stress relief found in the massive Eocene carbonates, leading to increased fracture density. Furthermore, the identification of a soft-sediment detachment within the Rus Formation suggests that the Dammam Dome served as a sensitive stress sensor for the initial stages of the Zagros collision. By establishing a structural bridge between the Eocene and the Neogene, this study explains how salt-induced uplift and plate-scale compression have combined to create the heavily fractured landscape of Al-Ahsa. These findings offer critical insights for reservoir characterization, groundwater flow modeling, and urban geomechanical stability in the region.

How to cite: Osman, M.: Integrative Structural Evolution of the Eastern Arabian Platform: Decoupling Salt-induced Halokinesis and Zagros-related Compression in the Fractured Neogene and Paleogene Successions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5893, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5893, 2026.

EGU26-6648 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Implications of stress field evolution on groundwater flow at the northern Variscan front and its relevance for the Einstein Telescope site selection (Euregion Meuse-Rhine) 

Raphael Burchartz, Michal Kruszewski, Geert-Jan Vis, Hannes Claes, Alexander Müller, Yves VanBrabant, Jef Deckers, Philippe Orban, Daniel Drimmer, Mark Scheltens, Bjorn Vink, Michael Kiehn, Florian Amann, and Yvonne Spychala

The Einstein Telescope (ET), a proposed third-generation underground gravitational-waves observatory requires an acoustically quiet subsurface environment to minimize the effect of seismic ambient noise. A detailed site characterization is currently underway in the Euregion Meuse-Rhine (Germany, Belgium, Netherlands), one of the potential locations for the ET. The site is wedged between the northern margin of the Variscan deformation front and the subsiding Lower Rhine Graben. Subsurface fluid flow, including natural groundwater circulation and drainage constitute sources of induced seismic and gravity-gradient variations. Pre-existing faults and fractures act as preferential flow paths and, critically control potential water inflow into the infrastructure and influence related water management strategies. Consequently, characterizing the relationship between the tectonic stress field and hydraulic characteristics of the host-rock formations is essential for a resilient ET design. In this study, we investigate the evolution of the tectonic stress field (i.e., from paleo- to recent in-situ stresses) and its control on fracture permeability, using an integrated dataset of boreholes drilled in the study area from 2021 to 2025 and down to 250 to 420 m. Paleo-stress conditions are reconstructed from fracture orientations and kinematic indicators observed on drill core material and borehole-televiewer data. The present-day stress-state is evaluated using hydraulic fracturing and hydraulic testing of pre-existing fractures tests. Fracture architectures are characterized using televiewer imagery and core samples, while their hydraulic relevance is assessed through in-situ methods such as impeller flow-meter measurements, temperature logs, and hydraulic packer tests. Slip versus dilation tendency analysis is applied to evaluate deformation modes and associated permeability anisotropies. These results are compared to independent hydraulic indicators to distinguish between hydraulically active and inactive discontinuities. Our findings demonstrate how the complex tectonic history governs the present-day fracture network and associated groundwater pathways, providing key constraints on groundwater management and suitability assessments for the site selection of the ET project in naturally fractured sedimentary host-rocks.

How to cite: Burchartz, R., Kruszewski, M., Vis, G.-J., Claes, H., Müller, A., VanBrabant, Y., Deckers, J., Orban, P., Drimmer, D., Scheltens, M., Vink, B., Kiehn, M., Amann, F., and Spychala, Y.: Implications of stress field evolution on groundwater flow at the northern Variscan front and its relevance for the Einstein Telescope site selection (Euregion Meuse-Rhine), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6648, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6648, 2026.

EGU26-6896 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Investigating controls on exfoliation fracture geometry across glaciated and non-glaciated granitic domes, Yosemite National Park, USA 

Aislin N. Reynolds, Greg M. Stock, and Brian D. Collins

Exfoliation fractures are a defining feature of Yosemite’s granitic landscapes, yet the relative roles of lithology, glacial history, inherited structural fabrics, and near-surface thermal processes in controlling their geometry remain incompletely constrained. To evaluate these controls, we collected detailed field measurements across a suite of granitic domes spanning glaciated (Pothole Dome, Puppy Dome, Lembert Dome, Turtleback Dome, Olmsted Point) and non-glaciated (Half Dome, Sentinel Dome, North Dome) settings. Field investigations included systematic measurements of exfoliation sheet thickness and length, fracture orientation data, photographic documentation, and GPS surveys to assess spatial distributions of exfoliation fractures on individual domes. These data are integrated with lidar-derived topographic measurements to provide surface context and support geometry-based analyses.

Preliminary results indicate that exfoliation sheet thickness varies between domes, with glaciated domes tending to display thicker sheets and broader thickness distributions than non-glaciated domes, although substantial overlap exists between groups. Non-glaciated domes commonly exhibit thinner sheets and more variable geometries, potentially due to longer near-surface exposure and progressive weathering accumulation. Across all sites, exfoliation sheet length shows weak to moderate scaling with thickness; however, prevalent scatter in the data suggests that sheet geometry may not be influenced by thickness alone, but also by pre-existing joint sets and cross-cutting structural features that may limit lateral fracture propagation. Spatial context from GPS transects demonstrates that measurements were collected across broad surface positions on individual domes, with transects capturing tens to nearly 300 m of relief, reducing sampling bias and supporting dome-scale interpretation. Prior monitoring studies and field observations of rockfalls and active surface cracking in Yosemite suggest diurnal and seasonal thermal fluctuations contribute to ongoing subcritical crack growth, implicating thermal stresses as an active modern process superimposed onto background stresses (e.g., inherited structural features, removal of overburden, and tectonic and topographic stress). By comparing exfoliation characteristics across contrasting geomorphic settings, this study better constrains how factors such as lithology, glaciation history, inherited structures, and thermal forcing interact to shape near-surface fracture development in granitic terrains, with implications for rockfall hazard assessment and climate-sensitive rock damage processes.

How to cite: Reynolds, A. N., Stock, G. M., and Collins, B. D.: Investigating controls on exfoliation fracture geometry across glaciated and non-glaciated granitic domes, Yosemite National Park, USA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6896, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6896, 2026.

EGU26-11582 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

The role of pre-existing microcrack geometry in fracture initiation and propagation during elastic deformation: integrating LEFM analysis with FEM modeling 

Ludovico Manna, Matteo Maino, Leonardo Casini, and Marcin Dabrowski

Understanding the processes that govern fracture development in upper crustal rocks is crucial for characterizing the mechanical response of the Earth’s crust. While conventional failure criteria capture many aspects of fracturing observed in laboratory experiments, they fall short in explaining how system-spanning fractures emerge from the interaction and coalescence of microcracks distributed throughout a deforming rock mass. Additionally, empirical rupture models rarely distinguish the relative roles of tensile and shear mechanisms in macroscopic failure. In this study, we explore the influence of the geometrical arrangement of pre-existing microcracks on fracture formation by analyzing the elastic stress perturbations they generate, employing two-dimensional Finite Element Method (FEM) simulations. This approach allows us to quantify how cracks with different orientations modify the surrounding stress field, producing localized zones of elevated tensile and/or shear stress that may act as favorable pathways for fracture propagation. By systematically varying microcrack orientation and distribution, we can map how stress concentration patterns interact, providing a framework for understanding fracture coalescence in heterogeneous rock materials. Our results reveal that the orientation and spatial arrangement of pre-existing microcracks dictate the directions and magnitudes of stress perturbations, creating preferential trajectories for system-spanning fractures. In particular, regions of high tensile and shear stress develop between interacting cracks, offering a physical explanation for the formation of interconnected fracture networks, including en echelon fracture systems, under varying geometrical configurations. These findings indicate that macroscopic shear fractures may originate not only from the coalescence of tensile cracks formed during early deformation stages but also from the interaction of pre-existing cracks with different orientations, especially where tensile stress is concentrated at crack tips. The study demonstrates that the geometry of pre-existing microcracks is a primary factor controlling the spatial organization of resulting fracture networks. Fractures accommodating shear deformation, typically oriented at approximately ±30° to the axis of maximum compression, can arise from the coalescence of mode I cracks due to localized tensile stress concentration, rather than requiring shear-dominated initial conditions. This insight bridges a gap between classical fracture mechanics and observations of natural and experimental rock fracture systems, highlighting the interplay between tensile and shear mechanisms in shaping macroscopic failure patterns. Overall, our work emphasizes the importance of microstructural geometry in governing fracture evolution, offering a quantitative, framework which integrates LEFM analytical results with FEM-based models to predict the emergence of complex fracture networks from initial microcrack distributions. By linking local stress perturbations to large-scale fracture patterns, this study provides a more comprehensive understanding of the conditions leading to system-spanning fractures in the upper crust.

How to cite: Manna, L., Maino, M., Casini, L., and Dabrowski, M.: The role of pre-existing microcrack geometry in fracture initiation and propagation during elastic deformation: integrating LEFM analysis with FEM modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11582, 2026.

EGU26-12013 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Variability of Fault Damage Zone Width in Strike−Slip Faults: A Case Study from the Coast of Geoje Island, Korea 

Jinhyeon So, Yeoeun Seo, Kiwoong Park, Sangyeol Bae, and Young-Seog Kim

Fault damage zones are regions surrounding a fault core where secondary fractures are intensely developed due to distributed deformation. Previous studies on small-scale faults (consisting of one or two geometric segments) have predicted that the characteristics of the damage zone vary depending on the position along the fault. However, applying these models to large-scale fault zones is challenging due to the lack of continuous exposure and their inherent structural complexity.

This study aims to analyze the spatial variability of damage zone width in relation to fault geometry, focusing on medium-scale strike-slip faults (comprising three or more geometric segments), which offer a balance between structural complexity and observable continuity. The study area, Geoje Island, consists of hornfelsic Cretaceous lacustrine sedimentary rocks. The extensive wave-cut platforms along the coast provide excellent exposure for characterizing the geometry of the master fault and associated damage zones.

Fracture density (P21) was systematically quantified across fault segments and boundaries using circular scanlines arranged along strike-perpendicular traverses. The width of the damage zone along each traverse scanlines was determined by analyzing the changes in fracture density relative to the distance from the Principal Displacement Zone (PDZ). The results indicate that the width of the damage zone is highly variable and exhibits significant asymmetry in certain sections. Specifically, in linking damage zones, a widespread distribution of damage is observed beyond the extensional overlap zones, contrasting with patterns typically seen in small-scale faults. Furthermore, strong asymmetry is prominent in regions where the fault strike changes. However, such widespread damage distribution and asymmetry are well consistent with the characteristics of tip damage zones observed in small-scale faults.

These observations indicate that geometric complexity at these locations contributed to arresting rupture propagation during reactivation. Although individual rupture mechanics are similar across scales, the cumulative effect of geometric barriers in medium-scale faults appears to dictate the spatial evolution of the damage zone.  These findings are expected to provide valuable insights for predicting and understanding the architectural evolution of large-scale fault zones.

 

This research was supported by a grant (2022-MOIS62-001(RS-2022-ND640011)) of National Disaster Risk Analysis and Management Technology in Earthquake funded by Ministry of Interior and Safety (MOIS, Korea).

How to cite: So, J., Seo, Y., Park, K., Bae, S., and Kim, Y.-S.: Variability of Fault Damage Zone Width in Strike−Slip Faults: A Case Study from the Coast of Geoje Island, Korea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12013, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12013, 2026.

EGU26-12608 | Posters on site | TS1.9

Syn-depositional fracture network prediction in carbonates through process-based forward modelling. 

Gerd Winterleitner, Sven Maerz, Nadezda Meier, and Jan Niederau

Early fracture networks in carbonate reservoirs may constitute long-lasting fluid flow conduits and their characterisation is pivotal in reservoir modelling. These fractures are, however, often overlooked in reservoir characterisation due to a lack of predictive workflows. Yet, syn-depositional fracture networks significantly affect reservoir quality and performance due to (1) providing an early and effective fluid flow network, (2) are prone to reactivation during later tectonic events and (3) are pathways for early dolomitising fluids.

Understanding the processes of fracture formation is vital for predicting their spatial distribution. Syn-depositional fracture modelling is, however, challenging as they form without tectonic drivers, influenced instead by intrinsic stresses due to the internal geometries of carbonate platforms. Early lithification of carbonates further aids fracture formation due to internal weaknesses and rapid sediment progradation. In reef-rimmed platforms, fractures generally align perpendicular to the platform’s trajectory, while internal patterns vary without a predominant orientation.

Traditional Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) models are inadequate for predicting these networks, as fractures result from complex geometries rather than regional stress fields. Process-based stratigraphic modelling offers a powerful workflow to model carbonate internal geometries and their lithofacies zones, linking progradation/aggradation patterns to fracture intensity and spacing.

We developed a novel approach for syn-depositional fracture characterization, combining stratigraphic and fracture forward modelling to improve reservoir quality predictions and well placements. Outcrop analogue studies are used for ground-truthing and to validate the findings against digital outcrop models. This innovative workflow has the potential to significantly improve flow performance assessment for carbonate geothermal reservoirs.

How to cite: Winterleitner, G., Maerz, S., Meier, N., and Niederau, J.: Syn-depositional fracture network prediction in carbonates through process-based forward modelling., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12608, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12608, 2026.

EGU26-13667 | ECS | Orals | TS1.9

Natural Fractures of the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale 

Cristina Mariana Ruse and Mehdi Mokhtari

The Tuscaloosa Marine Shale (TMS) is an unconventional play in southwestern Mississippi and southeastern Louisiana characterized by a well-developed network of natural fractures that strongly influences reservoir behavior and hydraulic fracturing performance. The play is significant to the energy industry due to its substantial hydrocarbon resources—estimated at approximately 1.5 billion barrels of oil and 4.6 TCF of gas—and its proximity to existing infrastructure. Although more than 80 wells have been hydraulically fractured in the formation, producing a total of 13.82 million barrels of oil and 9.04 BCF of gas, development remains challenging due to the shale’s high clay content, complex mineralogy, and the poorly constrained impact of natural fractures on production.

This study employs an integrated workflow to characterize natural fractures in the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale using electrical borehole image logs, shear-wave splitting data, and core descriptions from seven wells distributed across the play. The analysis indicates that the natural fractures are predominantly vertical to subvertical extension fractures, commonly fully mineralized, with heights ranging from 1 to 3 feet. These fractures preferentially trend east–west, are associated with calcite-rich intervals, and are capable of transecting the entire borehole. Smaller fractures often terminate at lithological boundaries but commonly reactivate along parallel planes.

The proposed methodology provides critical insight for optimizing hydraulic fracturing design by identifying stress orientation and optimal lateral placement relative to natural fracture distribution. In one lateral well alone, approximately 500 closed fractures were identified. Furthermore, the maximum horizontal stress orientation is shown to be consistent across the formation and aligned with the regional stress regime of the Gulf Coast Basin.

How to cite: Ruse, C. M. and Mokhtari, M.: Natural Fractures of the Tuscaloosa Marine Shale, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13667, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13667, 2026.

EGU26-13737 | Posters on site | TS1.9

NE-SW fault system in the eastern sector of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt: Origin, deformation, and reactivation 

Alberto Vasquez Serrano, Elizabeth Rangel Granados, and José Luis Arce Saldaña

A NE-SW fault system described in the eastern sector of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB) has been active since the Pliocene and continued up to the Holocene with dip-slip kinematics. In a broad view, these NE-SW faults can be correlated to the Tenochtitlan fault system that extends from the southwest coast of Mexico to central Mexico, into the TMVB. The length of the faults, the damage zone width, and more than one slickensides on the fault planes suggests a complex deformation history. In this study, we investigate the geometry and kinematics of the NE-SW faults in the Miocene-Pleistocene rocks in the eastern sector of the TMVB to determine the kinematics of these faults during the Late Miocene to Holocene, for which it is unknown. Our results suggest that the Miocene rocks record two deformation events, one of which is related to crustal shortening that produced a strike-slip activity in the NE-SW faults during the Late Miocene. The second one is associated with crustal extension and the activity of the NE-SW faults with dip-slip kinematics. This extensional event was active during the Pliocene-Holocene. The reactivation analysis and our field observations suggest that the NE-SW normal faults are related to the reactivation of previous NE-SW strike-slip faults. The change in the kinematics of the NE-SW faults explains the complex geometry of the damage zones of the kilometric NE-SW faults and the highly fractured Miocene rocks.

Based on the fault system orientation, it is clear that these faults are incompatible with the field stress recorded in the eastern sector of the TMVB. This fact suggests that the NE-SW fault system is probably related to reactivated basement structures within a three-dimensional deformation with a complex deformation history. The activity type of the NE-SW faults is probably related to the dynamics of the subduction process in the southwest of Mexico, associated with the change in the dip (decrease) and the convergence velocity of the Cocos plate.

How to cite: Vasquez Serrano, A., Rangel Granados, E., and Arce Saldaña, J. L.: NE-SW fault system in the eastern sector of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt: Origin, deformation, and reactivation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13737, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13737, 2026.

EGU26-14987 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Strike-slip fault zone architecture in folded Upper Malm limestones at Gorges de l’Orbe, Central Internal Jura, Switzerland 

Jefter Caldeira, Anindita Samsu, Ana Tanaka, and Loïc Bazalgette

Strike-slip fault zones often play a key role in controlling brittle deformation patterns in fold-and-thrust belts. Yet, the distribution of associated fractures and their interactions with fold-related structures remain insufficiently understood across scales and as part of the deformation history. In the Jura Mountains, previous work in the Central Internal Jura, notably at Creux-du-Van, proposed a multi-scale hierarchy of strike-slip faults and associated fracture networks based on sub-seismic structures spanning meter- to kilometer-scale. This study extends the multi-scale structural analysis to a regionally mappable ~12 km long N–S striking sinistral fault zone, the Suchet Fault. The fault is exposed along the E–W-oriented Gorges de l’Orbe, where incision into Upper Malm limestones enables largely continuous outcrop-scale access to fault-related damage zones.

To address the multi-scale character of this system, we combine field-based structural mapping at 1:5,000 scale and three-dimensional structural interpretation of publicly available aerial LiDAR data (SwissALTI3D) with systematic fracture data acquisition along four scanlines totaling 157 m. Scanlines are positioned at varying distances from the fault core, defined by the presence of fault breccia and gouge lenses, and across western and eastern structural compartments, spanning fault-proximal to fault-distal domains. This configuration enables comparison between fracture populations associated with fault-zone architecture and those interpreted as fold-related or background fracturing.

The Suchet Fault separates two contrasting structural domains. The western compartment is characterized by NW–SE striking fold trains, whereas the eastern compartment exhibits a comparatively flatter structural geometry. Within the vicinity of the fault trace, bedding orientations rotate progressively toward the N–S fault trend, with gentle eastward dips (~15°). Locally, near the fault core, bedding dips steepen and may reach up to 70°, indicating increased strain localization within the damage zone. LiDAR-based structural interpretation identifies three dominant fracture populations, with the NW–SE striking set displaying comparatively longer fractures than the N–S and NE–SW sets.

Fault-slip indicators show dominant subvertical conjugate strike-slip pairs at outcrop scale, comprising sinistral N–S to NNE-SSW striking faults and dextral NW–SE striking faults. Preliminary paleostress inversion analysis indicates a strike-slip regime characterized by a subhorizontal NW-directed maximum principal stress and a subvertical intermediate stress, consistent with results from other sectors of the Central Internal Jura. Fracture density (P10) increases toward the fault core, with values close to the brecciated core notably higher than those measured beyond 100 m.

This study emphasizes the need for robust fracture set definition and sequencing as a basis for structural analysis, including paleostress orientations and spatial variations in fracture intensity and anisotropy. This study evaluates whether structural patterns and paleostress behaviors identified at Creux-du-Van are comparable to those observed in the Gorges de l’Orbe area, at the scale of larger strike-slip fault zones. It also considers the potential regional implications of these structural features for fracture-controlled fluid flow in the Jura Mountains and potentially downstream, in the geothermal reservoirs beneath the Molasse Basin.

How to cite: Caldeira, J., Samsu, A., Tanaka, A., and Bazalgette, L.: Strike-slip fault zone architecture in folded Upper Malm limestones at Gorges de l’Orbe, Central Internal Jura, Switzerland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14987, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14987, 2026.

China hosts substantial lacustrine shale-oil resources and represents a key strategic replacement for sustaining reserves growth and production. Natural fractures are critical for enhancing the flow capacity of low-porosity, low-permeability, strongly heterogeneous lacustrine shale reservoirs and also exert fundamental controls on shale-oil accumulation and preservation. In the second member of the Funing Formation (E1f2) in the Qintong Sag, Subei Basin (eastern China), fractures are abundant and diverse, yet their development characteristics remain insufficiently constrained and a systematic evaluation of controlling factors has not been fully conducted. This study integrates core-based fracture description, thin-section petrography, and borehole image logs. Fractures are classified according to geological origin, mechanical mechanism, and geometric relationships with bedding, and their development characteristics are quantitatively documented. For multiple geological attributes—including distance to faults, mechanical layer thickness, TOC, and XRD-derived mineral contents—we employ Theil–Sen estimators to conduct a “score–confidence interval” ranking of effect strength and thereby delineate the hierarchy of controlling factors.Results indicate that bedding-parallel fractures, intra-layer shear fractures, and cross-layer shear fractures are dominant, whereas intra-layer tensile fractures and bedding-parallel shear fractures are subordinate. Fractures are predominantly high-angle, with apparent fracture height on core surfaces generally <15 cm. Fracture strikes comprise multiple sets, with a dominant NNE–SSW orientation. Fractures exhibit an overall moderate degree of infilling, and calcite is the principal cement. Distance to faults is negatively correlated with structural-fracture density and is identified as the primary control, whereas mechanical layer thickness and clay-mineral content are secondary factors and also show negative correlations with structural-fracture density. In contrast, higher TOC and greater lamination density promote the development of bedding-parallel fractures and constitute the primary controls, whereas higher clay-mineral content and greater mechanical layer thickness act as secondary factors that are unfavorable for bedding-parallel fracture development. These results clarify fracture distribution patterns in E1f2 and provide geological constraints for shale-oil exploration and development in eastern China, while also offering a transferable framework for the quantitative evaluation and ranking of fracture-controlling factors.

How to cite: Li, S., Lyu, W., Zeng, L., Shen, B., Ma, X., and Li, P.: Development characteristics and controlling factors of natural fractures in lacustrine shale oil reservoirs: A case study of the second member of the Funing Formation (E1f2), Qintong Sag, Subei Basin, eastern China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15124, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15124, 2026.

EGU26-18303 | Posters on site | TS1.9

Anisotropy of fracture nodes using wavelet analysis 

Pradeep Gairola and Sandeep Bhatt

 Abstract:

Fracture networks play a critical role in controlling rock mechanics, fluid flow, and crustal deformation. However, many conventional analytical approaches do not adequately account for the spatial anisotropy of fracture nodes. This study introduces a wavelet-based angular variance method to quantify multiscale anisotropy in fracture network nodes, including I-, Y-, X-, and X + Y-nodes, as well as barycenters, using both synthetic and natural datasets.

Synthetic experiments demonstrate that isotropic fracture systems produce spatially random node distributions, whereas anisotropic systems generate distinct directional clustering, such as cross-shaped patterns aligned along NE–SW and NW–SE orientations. Application of the method to field data reveals strong correspondence between node anisotropy and underlying structural features. In the Jabal Akhdar dataset, X- and X + Y-nodes show pronounced elongation along an ENE–WSW direction, I-nodes exhibit weaker lobation in the same orientation, and barycenters remain largely isotropic. In contrast, the Getaberget dataset displays significant anisotropy across barycenters and multiple node types (Y, X, and X + Y), with dominant N–S to NNW trends consistent with NE–SW and NW–SE fracture sets.

These results demonstrate that wavelet-based node analysis is capable of detecting subtle, scale-dependent anisotropy in fracture systems. The proposed approach provides a sensitive, continuous, and scalable framework for quantifying fracture network organization, offering valuable insights for reservoir characterization, geothermal resource assessment, and the analysis of fracture-controlled fluid flow in geological systems.

 Keywords: Fracture network; Nodes; Spatial analysis; Point anisotropy; Wavelet analysis

 Acknowledgement

PG acknowledges the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee and the Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), Government of India, for support through a PhD fellowship. SB acknowledges financial support from the Department of Science and Technology (DST), Government of India (Project No: SRG/2021/001903), and from FIG (Grant No: FIG-100886-ESD), Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, India.

How to cite: Gairola, P. and Bhatt, S.: Anisotropy of fracture nodes using wavelet analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18303, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18303, 2026.

EGU26-18351 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

Indirect Rock Mass Characterization Using High-Resolution 3D Point Clouds Applied in Hazardous Rock Slopes 

Giampiero Mineo, Marco Rosone, Chiara Martinello, Claudio Mercurio, Edoardo Rotigliano, and Chiara Cappadonia

Rockfalls are among the most critical phenomena in geomechanics due to the significant risk they pose to human lives and infrastructure. Rockfall risk is defined by the interplay between hazard and the potential impact on exposed elements. Specifically, hazard assessment relies on the propensity for detachment (estimated frequency), event magnitude (volume), and intensity (kinetic energy).
Detachment propensity is governed by predisposing structural conditions and analyzed by the probability of failure modes, such as planar sliding, wedge sliding, or toppling, in relation to the main discontinuity sets. Conversely, magnitude and intensity depend on the probable volume of the unstable block and its potential propagation path.
Traditional geo-structural surveys, based on direct acquisition using standard instruments (e.g., geological compass and measuring tape), characterize, among other parameters, discontinuities in terms of orientation (dip angle/dip direction), spacing, and persistence. While the orientation of discontinuities, combined with mechanical properties, allows for the evaluation of the propensity to detachment, the definition of spacing and persistence is crucial for estimating block volume. However, this deterministic approach is often difficult to generalize to an entire slope, making accurate volume definition a persistent challenge.
To address this limitation and avoid the risks associated with direct data acquisition in hazardous areas, indirect remote sensing approaches have gained prominence. This study addresses the rockfall hazard characterization of a critical slope in the Palermo Mountain System (Sicily, southern Italy), where frequent rockfalls have disrupted vehicular traffic. Utilizing a Terrestrial Laser Scanner (TLS), the authors applied an indirect characterization method. Multitemporal acquisitions enabled a high-resolution 3D Point Cloud-based analysis, allowing for a more accurate and safe definition of hazard parameters in this complex environment.

How to cite: Mineo, G., Rosone, M., Martinello, C., Mercurio, C., Rotigliano, E., and Cappadonia, C.: Indirect Rock Mass Characterization Using High-Resolution 3D Point Clouds Applied in Hazardous Rock Slopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18351, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18351, 2026.

EGU26-20377 | ECS | Posters on site | TS1.9

A multi-methodological workflow for fractured rock slope stability and block volume estimation  

Matteo Foletti, Niccolò Menegoni, Eugenio Poggi, Gianluca Benedetti, Massimo Comedini, Davide Elmo, and Matteo Maino

Fracture networks characterization is fundamental for assessing the stability of engineered slopes; although fractures are primary drivers of rock mass behavior, capturing their complexity across scales remains a significant challenge. This study presents a multidisciplinary workflow that integrates field-based geological interpretation with advanced remote sensing and numerical modeling to characterize fractured rock slopes. While recent progress in Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS) and Structure from Motion (SfM) has optimized 3D data acquisition, a gap persists in standardizing the transition from Digital Outcrop Models (DOMs) to representative geomechanical models, such as the rock block volume (Vb).

To bridge this gap, we propose an integrated workflow that compares and integrates results from field surveys, DOM and Discrete Fracture Networks (DFNs). By moving beyond traditional analyses (e.g., Markland Test and ISRM suggested approaches), which often oversimplify spatial complexity, our approach leverages high-resolution 3D data to improve the identification and prioritization of critical structural features. This framework was applied to the Molassana quarry (Genoa, Italy) as part of the SkyMetro project, demonstrating how us a multi-methodological workflow provides a more robust, data-driven assessment for large-scale engineered fracture slopes.

How to cite: Foletti, M., Menegoni, N., Poggi, E., Benedetti, G., Comedini, M., Elmo, D., and Maino, M.: A multi-methodological workflow for fractured rock slope stability and block volume estimation , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20377, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20377, 2026.

Successful pilot projects, e.g., CarbFix (Iceland) and Wallula (USA), where CO2 has been injected into subsurface basaltic rocks, have demonstrated the potential and advantages of mafic and ultramafic rocks (unconventional reservoirs) for long-term, safe CO2 storage by mineral trapping. Despite the advantages, the CO2 storage potential in unconventional reservoirs is relatively underexplored. Consequently, the key factors (and/or their interplay) that impact secondary mineralisation and the storage capacity of basaltic lava flows in the subsurface are less well understood. In this study, we integrate field-based geological investigation with whole-rock geochemical-, mineralogical-, and SEM- analysis, to characterise Miocene age Kaldakvísl basaltic lava flows, and associated deformation structures exposed along the western and eastern coastline of the Husavík–Tjörnes Peninsula, northern Iceland. Our results reveal at least two phases of fault activities and vein development in the western coast, associated with deformation along a major normal-dextral strike-slip fault, the Husavik-Flatey Fault Zone (HFFZ), whereas the eastern coast is far less deformed. Overall, the lava flows were largely characterized by tabular, sheet-like geometry, variable thicknesses ranging from c. 1 – 7 m, and sometimes interbedded with thin volcaniclastics and paleosols. Individual lava flows exhibited large variability in intra-flow vesicle morphology, intensity, connectivity, and mineral fill that allows us to subdivide each flow sequence into three distinct units: vesicular base-, massive core-, and vesicular top- of flow. Field observations and petrological analysis of lava flow sequences from the western coast show that the flow tops have been subjected to intense and higher degrees of hydrothermal alteration and secondary mineralization (e.g., zeolites and minor carbonates) compared to the flow base and core. Conversely, lava flow sequences from the eastern coast are generally less altered, preserving the primary composition and open vesicles of the lava flows. This suggests a strong correlation between the degree of deformation and tectonic fracturing, and the degree of hydrothermal alteration and secondary mineralization, underpinning the control the former has on the latter. Furthermore, the results of XRD analysis and optical microscopy identified zeolite minerals that formed both at lower temperatures (55-110 °C), such as chabazite and heulandite, and higher temperatures (70 °C up to 300 °C), such as stilbite and analcime. We propose that these zeolite minerals form from distinct hydrothermal events, reflecting a multi-stage rather than a continuous mineralization and alteration process. Our observations suggest that the multi-stage alteration process was most likely driven by the multiple phases of fault activities and vein formation associated with the HFFZ and subsidiary faults, which provided pathways for hydrothermal fluids. This study improves our understanding of the factors that influence hydrothermal alteration and secondary mineralization in basaltic rocks and has implications for evaluating the potential role of fractures in CO2 storage in unconventional reservoirs.

How to cite: Osagiede, E. E., Brechan, C. A., Bjørnsen, T. W., Nixon, C., and Rotevatn, A.: Fracture-controlled multi-stage secondary mineralization and alteration in Kaldakvísl basaltic lava group, Husavik–Tjörnes Peninsula, northern Iceland: implications for subsurface CO2 storage via carbon mineralization, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20981, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20981, 2026.

Shale oil reservoirs are typically characterized by ultra-low porosity and permeability, in which natural fractures provide key pathways for hydrocarbon migration from the matrix to the wellbore. These fractures significantly influence production performance. In the Mahu Sag of the Junggar Basin (NW China), the Permian Fengcheng Formation comprises saline lake–facies mixed shales with limited primary porosity, where natural fractures and dissolution pores dominate the available storage space. The sustained high single-well production (exceeding 100 t/day in parts of the sag) underscores the importance of understanding fracture occurrence and effectiveness for efficient reservoir development. In this study, we interpret Full-bore Micro-scanner Imager (FMI) borehole image logs using Schlumberger Techlog to identify and quantify both drilling-induced and natural fractures. The results show that drilling-induced fractures, which appear as short vertical features with symmetric “feather” or en-echelon patterns, are used to infer the orientation of the current maximum horizontal stress (SHmax). SHmax varies across structural domains: it trends near E–W to ENE–WSW adjacent to the Wuxia fault belt, shifts locally toward NE–SW at the junction of the Wuxia and Kebai fault belts, and transitions back to ENE–WSW to E–W toward the southwestern and southernmost regions. Natural fractures are abundant, predominantly striking NE–SW and near E–W (40°–100° and 220°–280°, accounting for 51% of fractures), with a secondary set trending NNW–SSE (140°–160° and 320°–350°, accounting for 22%). These orientations largely align with major fault trends. Fracture dip distributions vary significantly between wells and are primarily controlled by bedding attitude, with the apparent dip deflection closely mirroring the formation dip. In proximity to faults, tectonic fractures tend to exhibit lower dips. Aperture statistics reveal that fracture effectiveness is strongly stress-dependent: fractures more closely aligned with SHmax exhibit larger apertures and higher inferred effectiveness, while aperture size decreases with increasing misalignment angle. In a representative well, ENE–WSW fractures exhibit the largest mean apertures (tens of micrometers) compared to other fracture sets. Overall, SHmax) in the Fengcheng Formation shale is predominantly oriented E–W to ENE–WSW, and natural-fracture trends broadly match the strikes of major faults. Fracture dip angles are largely governed by bedding attitude, whereas fracture effectiveness is strongly stress-dependent. These results provide a direct basis for sweet-spot evaluation (targeting intervals with larger apertures under more favorable stress conditions) and for optimizing stimulation orientation and treatment design.

How to cite: Du, X. and Zeng, L.: Present-day stress control on natural fracture effectiveness: quantitative evidence from borehole image logs in the Fengcheng Formation shales, Mahu Sag, Junggar Basin, NW China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21984, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21984, 2026.

TS2 – Tectonics of Plate Boundaries: From Rifting to Orogenesis

EGU26-156 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Reconstruction of exhumation history along magma-poor rifted margins - Insights from numerical models 

João Pedro Macedo Silva, Victor Sacek, Gianreto Manatschal, and Carlos Eduardo Ganade

Continental rifting gives rise to margins with variable magmatic budgets, producing endmembers that range from magma-poor to magma-rich. At some magma-poor rifted margins like Australia-Antarctica conjugate margins and fossil margins seafloor preserved in Western Alps, portions of the lithospheric mantle were exhumed to the surface during the late phases of rifting. However, the key factors controlling this exhumation remain poorly constrained. From thermomechanical numerical scenarios, we investigated the controlling factors of the mantle exhumation process during rifting by varying crustal thickness, lithospheric mantle structure and rifting velocity. The results show that lower crustal strength and consequent lithospheric coupling drive the formation of exhumed mantle domains at magma-poor rifted margins. The exhumation process distributes different portions of lithospheric mantle along the rifted margins where at the most distal regions corresponding to initially deeper portions of lithospheric mantle. Factor as crustal thickness and mantle lithospheric structure affected the width of exhumed mantle domains. We observe that the stretching processes can exhume mantle particles from different lithospheric depths, sampling both shallow particles near the base of the crust and deeper portions of the lithosphere, especially in scenarios with an initially high degree of coupling between crust and lithospheric mantle. We also tracked the P-T-t paths of lithospheric mantle particles and our results agree with P-T-t paths from Iberian Margin, Diamantina Zone at SW Australian Margin and also from fossil rifted margins of the Western Tethys in the Alps and P-T estimation data for exhumed mantle samples from Newfoundland Margin and Terre Adélie seamount B at Antarctic Margin showing the potential of numerical models to explore the exhumation process in the context of magma-poor rifted margins.

How to cite: Macedo Silva, J. P., Sacek, V., Manatschal, G., and Ganade, C. E.: Reconstruction of exhumation history along magma-poor rifted margins - Insights from numerical models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-156, 2026.

EGU26-979 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Flat Moho beneath orogens and extensional regions: What controls it? 

Ömer Bodur, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Elif Nihan Çavdar, and Gökhan Çalınak

Flat Moho is a characteristic feature beneath extended continental lithosphere and orogenic plateaus; however, the physical processes that govern their formation remain poorly understood. In particular, the mechanical conditions required for lower crustal flow to effectively suppress Moho deflection are still debated. It has been proposed that lower crustal flow may facilitate lateral mass redistribution, thereby limiting Moho deflection and Moho relief during extension. Here, we compare seismological (receiver function) and gravity data and geodynamic models to identify the controls of Moho variation across various tectonic regions. Namely, we perform two suites of two-dimensional visco-plastic numerical models using the finite element code ASPECT with systematically vary (1) the minimum effective viscosity of the lower crust, and (2) its brittle strength, represented by cohesion. Each model simulates the extension of a 50 km-thick crust overlying a previously thinned lithospheric mantle, allowing us to isolate the rheological controls on Moho geometry and crustal deformation. Our results show that the primary factor governing Moho topography is the viscosity of the lower crust. When the lower crust is weak (≤ 10¹⁸ Pa·s), the viscous flow efficiently redistributes the material, leading to diffuse deformation and flat Moho (ΔMoho < 5 km). In contrast, high-viscosity models (≥ 10²¹ Pa·s) exhibit localized crustal thinning and pronounced Moho deflection, with relief up to 50 km and slopes exceeding 0.04 km/km. Varying the cohesion of the upper crust influences the distribution of brittle strain, but has a limited effect on Moho morphology. We conclude that flat Moho geometries arise from the integrated mechanical response of the crustal column where a sufficiently weak lower crust accommodates crust-mantle decoupling. These findings provide a quantitative framework to interpret observed flat Moho patterns in extensional settings such as the western Anatolia, the Basin and Range Province, and Tibetan Plateau.

How to cite: Bodur, Ö., Göğüş, O. H., Çavdar, E. N., and Çalınak, G.: Flat Moho beneath orogens and extensional regions: What controls it?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-979, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-979, 2026.

EGU26-1035 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Neotectonics of the Central Kenya Rift 

Daniel Botha, Alastair Sloan, Simon Kübler, and Beth Kahle

The Central Kenya RIft (CKR) is one of the fastest deforming sections of the Eastern African Rift System (EARS). Extensive tectonic research has been performed on the rift in northern and southern Kenya, but the modern tectonic geomorphology of the CKR remains understudied. Existing fault maps show a change in the orientation of the EARS within the CKR, although faults have not been mapped in detail with modern techniques. Despite the numerous fault scarps that offset the rift floor, few large earthquakes have been recorded in the recent past, with the exception of a MS 6.9 event in 1928. Maturing rifts demonstrate a shift from border fault seismicity to increased aseismic deformation dsitributed along intra-rift faults. This study aims to map active fault scarps within the CKR to better understand the modern tectonics, which may give insights into seismic hazard for an area with a high population growth rate. Rigorous examination of the high resolution TanDEM-X Digital Elevation Model (DEM) was used to formulate a digital fault database, which includes attributes about individual fault lengths and orientations. The NNW-SSE orientated CKR represents an intersection between NNE-SSW orientated EARS rifts to the north and south, and older NNW-SSE orientated structural fabrics. While the CKR itself shows a traditional mature rift morphology containing a developed inner graben with recent volcanism, the junction between the CKR and Northern Kenya Rift appears to be less mature. The 1928 earthquake, which occurred along a border fault in this junction, challenges the theory of axial strain concentration in an aging rift. Calculations on the balance of extension accommodated by larger border faults vs younger intra-rift grid faults allows for the possibility of continued border fault slip. The lack of large earthquakes in the CKR itself suggests an aseismic model to describe deformation, while seismic hazard appears to be greater in the junctions between rift segments of alternate orientations. 

How to cite: Botha, D., Sloan, A., Kübler, S., and Kahle, B.: Neotectonics of the Central Kenya Rift, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1035, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1035, 2026.

EGU26-1953 | Orals | TS2.1

Diagnostic criteria for mapping rifted margin architecture using seismic reflection profiles 

Gianreto Manatschal and Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic

Rifted margins result from the complex interaction between tectonic, magmatic and sedimentary processes. Conceptual models explaining their evolution have changed considerably over the last few decades, moving from simple stretching models to more complex polyphase rift models that distinguish between structural domains (proximal, necking, distal) and distinct rift modes. Advances in dynamic numerical modelling have made it possible to not only reproduce the predicted sequential evolution of rift modes and the related rift domains, but also to create complex 2D and even 3D computer-generated simulations, which must be compared with real world examples. While increasingly sophisticated 2D and 3D seismic images of rifted margins allow theoretically to rigorously test and calibrate the models, the problem resides that their geological interpretations are none unique. It is therefore more important than ever to develop a ‘protocol’ which allows for objective, verifiable, consistent and reproducible geological interpretations of seismic data.

 

Rifted margins present, indeed, first- and second-order diagnostic geometries and seismic facies that can be mapped on seismic reflection profiles. Our contribution aims to synthesise current knowledge on margin architecture and present a systematic approach to seismic interpretation, supported by representative “champion” seismic lines. For each domain, we describe the main structural and stratigraphic characteristics and provide diagnostic criteria commonly observable on seismic reflection profiles. Rather than revisiting the mechanisms of margin formation, we assess whether first- and second-order observational features capture the full range of architectures between existing endmember models. While using the magma-rich/magma-poor dichotomy aids communication, natural rift systems span a continuum of intermediate and hybrid configurations. Our approach accommodates this variability and promotes standardized, reproducible interpretations, allowing to close the loop between increasingly sophisticated modelling and imaging techniques and their testable, reproducible, across-scales coherent geological interpretation.

How to cite: Manatschal, G. and Peron-Pinvidic, G.: Diagnostic criteria for mapping rifted margin architecture using seismic reflection profiles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1953, 2026.

Many rift-related triple-junctions from various geological periods have been previously investigated worldwide. Some of these large extensional lithospheric phenomena even involved complex circular configurations composed of numerous omnidirectionally spaced radial and arcuate elements, thereby having a general multi-junction character. Although pointing to close association of horizontal plate kinematics with centrally directed vertical updoming as two conjugated significant geodynamic phenomena, such annular dichotomy of features penetrating and segmenting the surrounding upper Earth's mass has yet been addressed only poorly.

Based on spatial analysis of regional topography and/or hydrography, an extensive Cenozoic circular structure (> 6,000 km in diameter) even including recently active tectonic elements appears to have developed in whole Europe and some adjacent areas of Africa and Asia centred at a common intersection point of the Upper Rhine Graben, Lower Rhine grabens (with significant Roer structure), Hessian grabens (involving Leine structure), and more distant Eger Graben current axes. The pervasive surface fracturing of both higher / lower topographic levels was taken into account (numerous concentric boundaries between mountain summit blocks visualized by closed contours / ubiquitous multi-arc- and fan-shaped geometries within piedmonts and lowlands indicated in continental river network, less along important block-bounding slopes, and locally on sea floor). The fairly regular annular lithospheric fragmentation is expressed by a wide-scale spectrum of features from general mountain or basin belt orientations through trends of circumferential, centrifugal, or centripetal river sections and corresponding valleys to consistent sets of sharp stream bends.

Using a similar research approach, several analogous circular phenomena were detected within the Red Sea rift system. Despite possible links to various known geometrically consistent geological structures including magma plumbings or mantle plumes, it is yet hard to determine the main evolutionary processes and the closer time constraints of the circular systems. Their role should be considered and discussed on a broad disciplinary basis, among others, because similar surface configurations seem to exist in different tectonic settings such as large uplifting basement massifs or arcuate orogenic belts and intermontane basins. An attempt to invoke related communication is made also by means of this contribution.

How to cite: Roštínský, P.: Rhine Graben rift system-related multi-junction and other analogs: Large-scale circular lithospheric segmentation indicated in regional topographic and hydrographic data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2582, 2026.

The massive Orphan Basin, offshore Newfoundland, preserves evidence of a complex, multiphase rift history influenced by structural inheritance tied to the Appalachian-Caledonian orogen. Despite recent advances in plate kinematic reconstructions of the Southern North Atlantic, the tectonic evolution of the Orphan Basin remains poorly constrained, largely due to limited seismic and well coverage. As a result, the contributions of structural constraints on deformation have been oversimplified, leading to the misrepresentation of their influence on continental breakup.

This study prioritizes the interpretation of recently available 2D seismic reflection datasets acquired by TGS/PGS and ION Geophysical, developing stratigraphic and structural constraints to inform plate kinematic modelling. An analysis of the spatial distribution of Jurassic to Early Cretaceous syn-rift sediments and the geometries of major fault systems provide new insights into rift migration and the temporal variability of strain localization in the Orphan Basin during continental breakup.

Seismic interpretation and fault analysis identify two temporally distinct hyperextended rift basins separated by a region of thick crust, highlighting the importance of mechanically rigid blocks, such as the Orphan Knoll, in focusing strain, controlling basin development, and influencing the timing and geometry of rift propagation. While previous reconstructions have represented extension within the Orphan Basin as continuous and uniform, our analysis indicates that strain was instead focused within discrete extensional corridors controlled by large detachment faults.

Using GPlates, these seismic constraints are integrated into a deformable plate tectonic reconstruction, refining the kinematic plate model of the Southern North Atlantic while improving its geological accuracy and reducing the reliance on uniform crustal stretching assumptions. The updated reconstruction aims to provide a significant step towards a reproducible analogue model for hyperextended rift basins during magma-poor continental breakup. 

How to cite: Nickson, T. and Welford, J. K.: Integrating Seismic Interpretation of the Orphan Basin, Offshore Newfoundland, with Deformable Plate Tectonic Modelling of the Southern North Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3101, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3101, 2026.

Stretching of the crust, seafloor spreading, and volcanism commonly affect the overriding plate above retreating slabs in subduction settings. The Vavilov Basin (Tyrrhenian Sea) is a Pliocene–Quaternary back-arc basin formed in response to the eastward rollback of the Apennine–Tyrrhenian subduction system. The basin has a roughly triangular shape and it is bounded by major escarpments (e.g. the Selli Line) separating it from the continental margins (Cornaglia Terrace, De Marchi Seamount and Flavio Gioia Seamount). Its western sector is characterized by N–S–oriented ridges interpreted as the surface expression of basaltic magma injections during, or shortly after, mantle exhumation (e.g. the Gortani and the D’Ancona Ridges).

Near the centre of the basin, the Vavilov Volcano (VAV), a large volcanic edifice ~60 km long and ~32 km wide, rises from ~3600 m below sea level (b.s.l.) to a minimum depth of ~795 m b.s.l. The VAV consists of three main volcanic units: (i) west-tilted pillow lava flows below ~1500 m b.s.l., (ii) radial lava flows between ~1500 and 1000 m b.s.l., and (iii) scoriaceous lava flows from ~1000 m b.s.l. to the summit. K–Ar dating of pillow lavas sampled along the eastern flank at ~1000 m depth yields Pleistocene ages of 0.37 and 0.09 Ma, consistent with the observed magnetic pattern. Magnetic data show a positive anomaly over the shallow part of the volcano related to the Brunhes geomagnetic chron, and contrasting with negative anomalies on the outer flanks and surrounding basin.

Here we present an integrated magnetic and morphologic analysis of VAV aimed at constraining its internal plumbing system and the relationship with surface volcanic and tectonic structures. We develop an inverse magnetic model that images subsurface structural elements related to both an early spreading ridge and a later central volcanic system. Our results indicate that intervening intrusive ridges in small back-arc basins may evolve following a polyphasic evolution with a transition from fissural to central-type volcanism and developing a multi-level plumbing system. The VAV morphological asymmetry reflects an eastward migration of volcanic activity through time, possibly associated with asymmetric basin opening. The shallow plumbing system comprises: (a) an early NNE–SSW–elongated dike sheet feeding fissural volcanism along the summit ridge, and (b) a younger central magma reservoir beneath the summit feeding central vents. A NW–SE–oriented apophysis extending southeastward from the central reservoir likely supplied volcanic cones on the eastern flank.

 

How to cite: Cocchi, L., Muccini, F., Palmiotto, C., and Ventura, G.: Reconstructing the plumbing system of the Vavilov Seamount (southern Tyrrhenian Sea): insights into the transition from fissural to central-type volcanism back-arcs , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3400, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3400, 2026.

EGU26-4342 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Geological structure related to the Mienhua Submarine Volcano in southern Okinawa Trough from High-Resolution Sparker Seismic profiles  

Hsin-Wen Li, Shu-Kun Hsu, Lien-Kai Lin, and Ching-Hui Tsai

Located in the northern margin of the southern Okinawa Trough, the Mienhua Submarine Volcano (MSV) is probably formed during the post-collision of the former Taiwan orogeny. The MSV is accompanied by vigorous hydrothermal activities. To understand the related tectonic faults, volcanic intrusions, and hydrothermal activity of the MSV, we have collected several high-resolution sparker seismic profiles surrounding the MSV. Our results show that the east and west sides of the MSV show different features. In the east side, we have found unconformities, high-amplitude seismic reflectors, and acoustic blanking zones. The acoustic blanking zones indicate that hydrothermal fluid has penetrated the strata and migrated upwards and laterally. Many hydrothermal plumes are also found in the water column. In other words, hydrothermal activity is active in the eastern region. In contrast, in the west side of MSV, few unconformities or hydrothermal activities were found. Besides, large-scale mass-transport deposits (MTDs) are formed, possibly due to submarine landslides.

How to cite: Li, H.-W., Hsu, S.-K., Lin, L.-K., and Tsai, C.-H.: Geological structure related to the Mienhua Submarine Volcano in southern Okinawa Trough from High-Resolution Sparker Seismic profiles , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4342, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4342, 2026.

We present a new first-approach methodology, applicable to thermally re-equilibrated rifted margins, to determine margin crustal architecture and magmatic type from the TWTT of top basement of time-domain seismic reflection data. The method invokes Warner’s 10s Moho rule (Warner, 1987) to give the TWTT crustal basement thickness from top basement TWTT from which we determine crustal basement thickness. It does not require the Moho to be seismically imaged or sediment thickness to be known.

Determining rifted margin crustal thickness and assessing whether a margin is magma-normal, magma-starved or magma-rich is fundamental to understanding margin structure and formation processes. This is often a difficult task compounded by the absence of clear or unambiguous seismic Moho.

Warner observed that, for a thermally re-equilibrated margin, the Moho seismic reflection is approximately flat at ~10s TWTT and is constant irrespective of the complexity of geology above. Moho TWTT is at 10s for unthinned continental crust, oceanic crust, and for crust in between, and applies equally to magma-rich, magma-starved and magma-normal rifted margins.

We apply the new methodology using Warner’s 10s Moho rule to map crustal basement thickness for the Campos and Santos rifted margins offshore Brazil from TWTT of top basement observed on seismic reflection data. We show that the resulting map of crustal thickness determined from top basement TWTT shows a good correlation with that determined using gravity inversion.

Modelling shows that different magmatic-margin types have distinct shapes of top basement TWTT that is independent of sediment thickness. The lateral transition from downward-sloping to flat top basement TWTT corresponds to the oceanward taper of thinned continental crust to boxed-shaped oceanic crust, providing an estimate of the landward-limit of oceanic crust (LaLOC). Magma-starved margins show a step-up of top basement TWTT onto oceanic crust. For margins with magma, lateral inflections in the TWTT of base sediment provide information of the onset of magmatic-volcanic addition and the formation of hybrid crust consisting of thinned continental crust plus new magmatic crust. For magma-normal margins this lateral inflections of TWTT corresponds to the start of deep-water volcanics (SDRs) at 6-7s TWTT. For magma-rich margins (with sub-aerially erupted volcanic SDRs) this TWTT inflection occurs at 2-3s.

We interpret the top basement TWTT profiles on the Southern Campos Margin to indicate a slightly magma-poor margin. The thinnest crust occurs between thinned continental crust and normal-thickness oceanic crust, consistent with a simple isostatic model where maximum decompression melting to form oceanic crust does not occur until after continental crust separation.

On the SW Santos Margin, we interpret the top basement TWTT profiles to indicate a slightly magma-rich margin. A broad region separates the end of the crustal thinning taper and the LaLOC. A simple isostatic model can generate this top basement TWTT shape as a broad region of hybrid crust or thicker-than-normal early oceanic crust.

Top basement TWTT cannot reliably identify the margin domain transition between the necking zone and hyperextended crust. This transition coincides with the onset of normal decompression melting and the start of hybrid crust.

How to cite: Graça, M., Kusznir, N., and Manatschal, G.: Rifted Margin Crustal Architecture and Magmatic Type from Time-Domain Seismic Reflection Data Using the Warner 10 second Moho TWTT Rule: A New First-Approach Methodology , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4961, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4961, 2026.

The Newfoundland rifted margin (NLRM) exhibits complex lithospheric features, including failed rifts, continental ribbons, transfer zones, and along-strike segmentation. Although the spatial variability of these tectonic features is central to understanding the region’s tectonic evolution, their interactions and broader implications remain debated. In this study, drawing on an unprecedented deep multichannel seismic dataset, we interpret a grid of margin-scale seismic reflection profiles to examine the variability of crustal necking and rift domain architectures along the NLRM and the associated Orphan Basin–Flemish Pass failed rift. Our interpretation reveals asymmetrical crustal necking on the conjugate sides of the failed rift, consistent with published numerical modelling studies, which suggest that asymmetric rifting is an early-stage process, potentially occurring before the necking phase. We observe more gradual crustal necking in regions of thinned and inferred weaker crust. In contrast, more abrupt crustal necking is associated with areas of thicker, inferred stronger crust, where transcrustal faults extending to depths greater than 20 km are imaged. Mantle serpentinization interpreted beneath both the NLRM and the failed rift zone indicates that serpentinization is not contingent on rift success or failure but is primarily governed by rheology and the availability of transcrustal faults. For magma-poor rifted margins, in contrast to magma-assisted rifting, transcrustal faulting linked with mantle serpentinization appears to facilitate continental breakup. Our systematic mapping reveals pronounced across-strike and along-strike variations in rift domain distributions, predominantly controlled by inherited transfer zones that segment the margin and that range from localized to diffuse, accommodating extension and giving rise to alternating strong and weak margin segments.  

How to cite: Alehegn, W. N. and Welford, J. K.: Nature of Crustal Necking and Rift Domain Architecture Along the Newfoundland Margin, Eastern Canada: Improved Seismic Perspectives and Interpretational Uncertainties, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5349, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5349, 2026.

Tectonic inheritance often plays a significant role in the evolution from continental rifts to passive rifted margins in extensional settings. Continental ribbons, which constitute intact continental fragments that remain tethered to their parent plates within rift systems, can form through interacting propagating rifts in pristine lithosphere but can also represent the lasting manifestation of pre-rift lithospheric heterogeneity. In the southern North Atlantic rift system, which transects the vestiges of the older Paleozoic Appalachian-Caledonian orogen, large continental ribbons are plentiful, arguably more so than anywhere else in the entire Atlantic Ocean. The spatial distribution of these ribbons, wrenched away from the North American, European, and Iberian plates during Mesozoic rifting and breakup of the Pangean supercontinent, provides insights into the pre-rift orogenic architecture of the lithosphere. This complex inheritance would go on to influence strain partitioning and sedimentary basin evolution during subsequent rifting and extensional reactivation. Studying these key components of rift systems and their consequences is often complicated by sparse seismic coverage due to their limited resource potential and their more distal locations. Yet, the characterization of continental ribbons at the lithospheric scale is necessary for their faithful incorporation into basin and plate reconstructions. To that end, alternate and complementary geophysical methodologies, such as potential field analysis, are needed to infill sparse seismic constraints and properly capture the physical characteristics of these impactful features. In this presentation, I will discuss the continental ribbons of the southern North Atlantic, the methods used to characterize their attributes, their likely tectonic origins, and how this information can be used to improve and quantify their contribution to reconstructions of the region.

How to cite: Welford, J. K.: Continental ribbons within the southern North Atlantic rift system: attributes, origins, and consequences, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5429, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5429, 2026.

EGU26-5886 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Unified Mapping of the African Rift System: Lithospheric Strength and Magmatic Evolution 

Margaret Maenner, Jean-Joel Legre, D Sarah Stamps, Aubreya Adams, and Tolulope Olugboji

The interaction between mantle plumes and continental lithosphere results in a complex spectrum of rifting outcomes, ranging from magma-rich breakups to failed rifts. Current research in the Turkana Depression posits a "Refractory Paradox," suggesting that failed rifts like the Anza Graben remain "dead zones" because prior melting events extracted volatiles, leaving behind a mechanically strong, dried-out lithosphere resistant to modification. However, it remains unclear if this "baked-dry" signature is a global requirement for rift failure or a local anomaly. We investigate this hypothesis by mapping the subtle architectural differences—specifically Moho sharpness and seismic lid preservation—that distinguish magma-poor regions from their magma-rich counterparts. To overcome the limitations of standard receiver function (RF) analysis, which is often degraded by noise and reverberations, we apply a rigorous, high-resolution workflow. We first denoise seismic data using the CRISP-RF algorithm, employing sparsity-promoting Radon transforms to suppress incoherent noise while preserving full-wavefield phases. These clean data are then inverted alongside surface wave dispersion measurements using a transdimensional probabilistic Bayesian  framework. This approach allows us to quantify non-uniqueness and robustly constrain multi-layered crustal properties (Vp/Vs ratios) and lithospheric velocity structure without placing limiting assumptions on elastic properties. By integrating these refined seismic constraints with common-conversion-point (CCP) stacking, we resolve the trade-off between magmatic underplating (gradational Moho, Vp/Vs > 1.8) and tectonic thinning (sharp Moho, Vp/Vs ~1.74). Finally, we pair these structural observations with thermo-chemical modeling (WINTERC-G/PerPleX) to convert velocities into temperature and composition. This study aims to determine if the lithospheric strength beneath the African Rift is governed by volatile depletion or alternative weakening mechanisms, such as anisotropy or eclogitization.

How to cite: Maenner, M., Legre, J.-J., Stamps, D. S., Adams, A., and Olugboji, T.: Unified Mapping of the African Rift System: Lithospheric Strength and Magmatic Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5886, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5886, 2026.

The Continent-Ocean Transition (COT) in the young Tyrrhenian basin documents mantle exhumation punctuated with multiple episodes of discrete oceanic crust formation. This observation challenges prevailing models of magma-poor COTs, which typically describe mantle exhumation preceding the emplacement of oceanic crust. Notably, this COT developed without the conventional conditions associated with magma-poor rifted margins, such as slow rifting velocities and chemically depleted mantle sources. A key observation is the low shear-wave velocity observed in the uppermost mantle of the Tyrrhenian basin and its adjacent onshore regions correlates with subduction-related volcanism, suggesting the presence of a hydrated mantle wedge with low rheological strength. Here we show that, based on 3D magmatic-thermomechanical numerical modeling, the episodic formation of oceanic crust within the Tyrrhenian basin’s COT results from the mechanical weakness of the mantle. The lithospheric mantle is exhumed to the surface through exhumation channels initiated within the weak mantle zone. The subsequent flow of partially molten mantle toward these channels leads to the development of multiple short-lived spreading centers. Our findings shed light on characteristics and mechanisms shaping the COT of marginal basins, where their opening is influenced by subduction processes.

How to cite: Su, H. and Leng, W.: Weak mantle wedge causes mantle exhumation punctuated with discrete oceanic crust in the Tyrrhenian basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7005, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7005, 2026.

EGU26-7229 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

New constraints on active normal faulting in the South Gulf of Evia, Greece 

Saoirse Coveney, Alex Whittaker, Rebecca Bell, James Wood, Haris Kranis, and Athanassios Ganas

In many areas of active faulting, the continuity of normal faults with a short or incomplete historical earthquake record and subtle topographic expression is not fully understood: as a result the seismic potential of these faults is often underestimated. The Southern Gulf of Evia rift, Greece is an example of a poorly explored normal fault bounded system, where the location and spatiotemporal evolution of the major basin bounding faults is not well constrained. We integrate geomorphic and structural field data, topographic analyses and geodetic data to constrain the locations, footwall geometries and structural evolution of 8 major extensional structures bounding the Southern margin of the South Gulf of Evia. We propose that this fault system comprises two isolated fault groups containing both partially and fully linked segments. These fault linkage scenarios suggest that the eastern fault group may have a total linked length of ca. 40 km with a maximum credible earthquake size of Mw 7.0. Further, we reconcile new analysis of vintage sparker seismic reflection data previously acquired and interpreted in the 1980s, with onshore geomorphic indicators of tectonic uplift to provide new constraints on the continuity of active normal faults offshore, including the major normal fault zones bounding the northern margin of the rift. By comparing our reconstructions of footwall relief with the seismic reflection and Ocean Bottom Seismometer (OBS) data, we suggest footwall uplift to hanging wall subsidence ratios of 1:2-1:3 and total slip rates in the order of 2-3 mm/yr. Finally, based on the correlation of seismic stratigraphy with a global eustatic sea level curve and a comparison of estimated sediment fluxes into the Gulf with measured sediment volumes in the South Gulf, we propose updated Pleistocene-Holocene ages for the basin stratigraphy and suggest possible timescales for fault evolution and linkage along the rift margins.

How to cite: Coveney, S., Whittaker, A., Bell, R., Wood, J., Kranis, H., and Ganas, A.: New constraints on active normal faulting in the South Gulf of Evia, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7229, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7229, 2026.

EGU26-7348 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Normal fault migration and basin evolution in complex rift settings: insights from the North Gulf of Evia, Central Greece 

James Wood, Rebecca Bell, Alexander Whittaker, Saoirse Coveney, Frank Chanier, Fabien Caroir, Haralambos Kranis, and Athanassios Ganas

The North Gulf of Evia is a young, active continental rift system located in Central Greece. Extension of 2-4 mm/yr is accommodated by large normal fault systems, such as the onshore Coastal Faults near Kammena Vourla, but slip rates and timing of initiation of these structures and intrabasinal offshore faults are poorly constrained. Extension is also coupled with strong rotational and strike-slip influence from the westward-propagating North Anatolian Fault, providing contrast to the nearby, orthogonal rifting in the Gulf of Corinth. The geodynamic setting of the rift has resulted in a complex configuration of normal, oblique and strike-slip faults across the North Gulf of Evia rift system. Detailed, high resolution study of faulting processes (initiation, linkage and migration) and the temporal evolution of such systems requires a high-resolution age model of syn-kinematic sedimentation. To date, no pre-Holocene sedimentary correlation has been proposed for the North Gulf of Evia, restricting the temporal scope of evolutionary studies.

We aim to unlock the temporal evolution of late-Quaternary (0-~325 ka) sedimentation and faulting in the North Gulf of Evia through the development of a syn-tectonic depositional age model for the Western Basin of the Gulf. To do this, we exploit a high resolution, high density 2D seismic reflection dataset (WATER I and II) to identify three key mappable horizons across the semi-enclosed basin using seismic stratigraphic principles including reflection terminations and onlap relationships. Based on observed late-Pleistocene deltaic clinoform packages, ages of ~12 ka (MIS 2), ~130 ka (MIS 6) and ~325 ka (MIS 9) are attributed to these horizons within our sequence stratigraphic model. The age model is applied across the Western Basin alongside a new network of offshore faults to determine the major structural components, depocentres and evolutionary history of the rift system for the first time.

We resolve the major modern structural controls on the basin to be the Kalypso Fault at the southern margin of the rift and the axial Central Graben. Holocene throw on the extensional Kalypso Fault is ~3.75 mm/yr with faults of the Central Graben deforming at throw rates of ~0.9 - 1.7 mm/yr. We show that the Kalypso Fault is linked to the western part of the onshore Coastal Fault System, widely considered the most active fault zone of the North Gulf of Evia and uplifts the hanging wall of the active Arkitsa Fault, where a sequence of uplifted Pleistocene marine terraces is preserved. Initiation of the Kalypso Fault is temporally constrained to ~325 ka from thickening relationships of syn-kinematic sediment packages following a strain migration event from the Arkitsa Fault. This migration event occurs across non-parallel structures with evolving strike of >20°, likely reflecting the regional rotational influence of the North Anatolian Fault on Central Greece. The Kalypso Fault represents the most active resolved normal fault in the Western North Gulf of Evia and presents significant, previously unrecognised seismic hazard.

How to cite: Wood, J., Bell, R., Whittaker, A., Coveney, S., Chanier, F., Caroir, F., Kranis, H., and Ganas, A.: Normal fault migration and basin evolution in complex rift settings: insights from the North Gulf of Evia, Central Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7348, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7348, 2026.

EGU26-7459 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Basement Inheritance and Its Influence on Rift Evolution and Rifted Margin Architecture: The North Sea and Mid-Norwegian Margin. 

Chloé Castagné, Gwenn Péron-Pinvidic, and Gianreto Manatschal

The Mid-Norwegian margin and the North Sea rift are among the most extensively studied regions in the world, owing to their abundant geological and geophysical datasets. Their basement architecture is complex, having been shaped by the Silurian Caledonian orogeny and subsequent gravitational collapse during the Devonian. This was followed by multiple rifting episodes, separated by periods of tectonic quiescence. While the North Sea subsequently entered a post-rift phase dominated by thermal subsidence, rifting along the Mid-Norwegian margin persisted until continental breakup in the early Eocene.

Despite these studies, the mechanisms by which remnants of the Caledonian orogeny influenced later rifting stages remain unclear. For many years, seismic imaging could not penetrate to the depths required to investigate the complete basement architecture. Recent advances in seismic reflection imaging, however, have enabled the acquisition of long-offset, deep, high-resolution profiles extending up to 16 seconds two-way travel time (s-TWTT). The GeoexMCG Regional Deep Imaging (RDI) dataset thus provides an unprecedented opportunity to study the entire basement architecture, including the lower crust and lithospheric mantle.

This contribution summarizes the first results of a PhD study focused on a large-scale interpretation of the RDI dataset, supported by offshore-onshore geological correlations and gravity and magnetic modelling. Units with distinct seismic facies -i.e., zones of consistent reflectivity characterized by amplitude, frequency, and continuity - were defined in Petrel after multiple mapping iterations. Based on these results, the aim of the PhD study is to explore how inherited basement structures influence continental rifting and the formation of rifted margins at large scales.

How to cite: Castagné, C., Péron-Pinvidic, G., and Manatschal, G.: Basement Inheritance and Its Influence on Rift Evolution and Rifted Margin Architecture: The North Sea and Mid-Norwegian Margin., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7459, 2026.

Plate motion directions, and the orientations of rift zones and oceanic spreading ridges, and of transform faults and fracture zones that are perpendicular to these ridges, are generally controlled by tectonic forces such as slab pull, mantle convection, and mantle plumes. Here, it is hypothesized that within the confines of these general orientations, the exact orientations of these structures, and therefore plate motion directions, are partially controlled by suitably oriented sets of steep continental lithospheric discontinuities (CLDs), which work in concert with these larger tectonic forces.

Previously, the observation has been made that oceanic fracture zones are contiguous with CLDs, such as suture zones and other lithospheric fault zones. Based on high-resolution bathymetry, geological and geophysical data, it is demonstrated here that continents have multiple sets of lineaments parallel to such CLDs, or contiguous with CLDs where they occur farther inland and do not reach the ocean. Published analog experiments suggest that the orientations of transform faults and fracture zones are controlled by these CLDs if the angle between the spreading direction and the CLDs is no more than ~45°. Spreading ridge segments evolve in an orientation perpendicular to these transform faults and fracture zones, so that the spreading direction becomes parallel to the transform faults and fracture zones. The implication is that the exact plate motion directions are controlled by CLDs, if a set of CLDs is orientated at low angle with the spreading direction. When plate motion directions need to change due to tectonic forces, the new hypothesis predicts that the exact directions may be controlled by a different set of suitably orientated CLDs. During later stages of oceanic spreading, the larger tectonic forces such as slab pull, mantle convection, and mantle plumes become increasingly dominant and plate motion directions may no longer be controlled by the CLDs.

While the hypothesis needs further testing, it has potentially far-reaching implications. For example, Euler pole reconstructions are commonly based on small circle patterns formed by fracture zones and transform faults in the oceanic lithosphere. Oceanic crust older than ~200 Ma is typically destroyed by subduction, and pre-Mesozoic Euler poles can therefore not be reconstructed based on that method. If the hypothesis presented above is correct, the orientations of CLDs and associated lineament sets may be used as proxies for orientations of past transform faults and fracture zones, at least during early oceanic spreading. The locations of past Euler poles may thus be better estimated based on these CLDs and lineaments, and pre-Mesozoic plate tectonic reconstructions may be much improved in deep geologic time.

How to cite: Kuiper, Y.: Do continental lithospheric discontinuities exert control on tectonic plate motion directions?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8469, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8469, 2026.

The Meso-Neoproterozoic period is sometimes referred to as the “Boring Billion” or “Earth’s Middle Age,” spanning the time between the formation of the Columbia supercontinent and the Rodinia supercontinent. This period records a key transition in the supercontinent cycle, shaping the global tectonic regime and paleogeographic pattern. In this study, laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) zircon U-Pb geochronological analysis was conducted on five sandstone samples from the Ordos Rift Zone in the western North China Craton to constrain the regional tectonic evolution and basin development processes. The detrital zircon ages can be divided into multiple age groups, with zircon grains older than 1.8 Ga derived from the basement of the North China Craton, while the younger zircon populations (< 1.8 Ga) are associated with Mesoproterozoic magmatic events. Through an integrated approach combining zircon geochronology, major and trace element analysis, and sandstone modal analysis, the tectonic setting and parent rock properties of the provenance area were identified. The tripartite sedimentary cycle of volcanic rocks, continental-margin clastic rocks, and marine carbonate rocks in the Changcheng Period of the Ordos Rift Zone was finely delineated, and the response times (2.0  Ga, 1.8  Ga, and 1.6  Ga) of the assembly, consolidation, and breakup processes of the Columbia supercontinent in the western North China Craton were calibrated, respectively. The results show that the vertical sedimentary sequence of the Changcheng System in the Ordos Rift Zone corresponds to the rift evolution stages, forming a tripartite evolutionary cycle of igneous rocks–continental-margin clastic rocks–marine carbonate rocks, which records the transition process of tectonic activity from intense to stable. Three distinct stages of basin evolution during 1.8–1.4 Ga were defined: the initial rift stage and the rift expansion stage correspond to the disintegration of the Columbia supercontinent (1.8–1.6 Ga), and the passive continental margin stage coincides with a slowdown of the late supercontinent breakup rate (1.6–1.4 Ga). The detailed characterization of the regional tectonic evolution and rift zone sedimentary filling process during the Changcheng Period in the Ordos Basin reveals the source‑to‑sink spatiotemporal sedimentary pattern controlled by the rift system, providing key constraints for the evolution of the western margin of the North China Craton during the Precambrian supercontinent transition and offering new insights into the response of the North China Craton to global-scale geodynamic processes.

How to cite: Liu, G.: Detrital Zircon Records and Tectono-Sedimentary Evolution of the Mesoproterozoic Changcheng Period Strata in the Ordos Rift Zone, Western North China Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8574, 2026.

EGU26-8746 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Effects of inheritance and surface processes on strain localization during the early stages of the Corinth Rift system development  

Ingra Barbosa, Ritske Huismans, Casey Nixon, Robert Gawthorpe, and Delphine Rouby

From 5 to ca. 2 million years ago, faulting in the Corinth Rift, in central Greece, was concentrated onshore, to the south of the present-day Gulf of Corinth. Between 2 to 1.8 Ma the active fault network migrated northward, accompanied by footwall uplift, which led to active faulting and the rift being localized offshore in the present-day Gulf of Corinth. The factors controlling this fault migration remain unknown. Overall rift evolution is controlled by tectonics, but climate-driven surface processes affect rift topography, the development and longevity of normal faults, and overall rift evolution. A simple yet effective method for assessing strain distribution within a fractured region is the Kuiper’s test, which quantifies how much a line sampled through a faulted area deviates from a uniform distribution. By calculating the cumulative extension of faults distributed along a line, it is possible to infer if the strain in this section is distributed homogeneously throughout the fractures (values close to the uniform distribution) or if the strain is localized in few large faults (large departure of the uniform distribution), and whether this variation is statistically significant. We use the finite element thermo‐mechanical numerical model Fantom-2D coupled with the landscape evolution model FastScape to investigate how inheritance and surface processes control rift faulting and progressive localization during the early stages of continental rift evolution. We test different values of crustal strength and of frictional-plastic strain weakening to evaluate the response of the models. We tested each model without surface processes, and with different aggradation and progradation rates. We evaluated fault distribution, depocenter migration and rift localization through time and compared them to high resolution datasets from the present-day Corinth Rift and central Greece. The degree of localization obtained through the Kuiper’s test for five regions in the Corinth Rift were used to further validate the models. Using datasets of a rift system with a relatively simple extension history such as the Corinth Rift helps to better constrain numerical modelling parameters and improve rift evolution models.

How to cite: Barbosa, I., Huismans, R., Nixon, C., Gawthorpe, R., and Rouby, D.: Effects of inheritance and surface processes on strain localization during the early stages of the Corinth Rift system development , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8746, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8746, 2026.

EGU26-9303 | Posters on site | TS2.1

A New Approach to Rift Kinematics During the Formation of the Black Sea Basin 

Armagan Kaykun and Russell Pysklywec

As recent hydrocarbon discoveries rekindle exploration activities in the Black Sea Basin (BSB), efforts to understand the geodynamic processes that led to the formation and evolution of the basin have started to play a significant role in understanding the structural trends formed during rifting. The debate on whether the basin rifted open as one east-west oriented basin, or as two separate basins named the Eastern and Western Black Sea Basins, has been discussed in numerous models. Evidence for the two-basin hypothesis focuses on the basin's semi-parallel ridge and depression architecture, which trends NW-SE in the east and W-E in the west. Conversely, the single-basin model is supported by the correspondence between the regional structure and geodynamic rifting models, specifically those involving an asymmetrical rift pivoting on an eastern hinge caused by slab roll-back of the subducting plate located in the south of the basin.
To address existing tectonic uncertainties, we established a new structural framework for the BSB by reinterpreting 24 long-offset 2D seismic lines. These structural constraints enabled the development of two 2D computational models, allowing us to simulate the distinct kinematic evolution of the basin's western and eastern sections. Our 2D sectioned models show that rift velocities vary significantly in the east-west direction. This contradicts previous analog models showing that the formation of the BSB was related to a simple asymmetrical rift with constantly increasing velocities towards the west from a hinge point located at the eastern margin of the basin. The complex velocity changes throughout the rift axis suggest an uneven movement throughout the subduction zone that drives the back-arc rift. Ultimately, proposing a new complex kinematic history during the evolution of the rift and alternating rift velocities throughout the rift axis, provide a better understanding of the timing of all tectonic events and the final ridge depression geometry observed throughout the BSB.

How to cite: Kaykun, A. and Pysklywec, R.: A New Approach to Rift Kinematics During the Formation of the Black Sea Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9303, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9303, 2026.

The kinematic of the southern North Atlantic is still debated and new kinematic markers are needed to improve our knowledge of the earliest movements. In this frame, we focus on the location of the first evidence of steady-state oceanic spreading offshore Galicia Bank. Such marker is a spatial criterion that can be used to propose refined new kinematic models. Galicia Bank is part of the magma-poor rifted margins of the southern North Atlantic. The margin is located west of Iberia and is conjugated to the southeastern margin of Flemish Cap. These plate corners are key for understanding the kinematics of the Iberia plate, as they are suspected to act as microplates with complex movements during the Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous. Studies already proposed domains of exhumed continental and oceanic mantle along a seismic reflection and wide-angle profile offshore Galicia Bank (Dean et al., 2015; Davy et al., 2016) but this boundary is poorly defined on a large scale along the margin. As rift phases occurred during the ‘Cretaceous Quiet Zone’ (118–83 Ma), it is not possible to identify the first oceanic crust using Earth's magnetic field reversal. We propose to interpret several E/W to NW/SE oriented seismic reflection profiles from the BREOGHAM-2005 cruise (P.I. Luis Somoza) to better constrain these areas of exhumed mantle. We based our interpretation method on previous studies of the eastern part of the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR) that described a domain of exhumed mantle with successive detachment faults on either side of the ridge axis occurring over the last 11 million years (e.g. Sauter et al., 2013; Reston et al., 2018). In addition, recent seismic reflection data allowed the definition of new criteria for characterising ultra-slow nearly amagmatic spreading ridges. We therefore map these criteria in order to locate this domain along the West Iberia margin. We provide new spatial observations of landward-dipping reflectors and exhumed mantle ridges. They are interpreted as seismic indicators of the presence of flipping detachments. A new boundary is thus proposed along the West Iberia margin separating continental mantle exhumation from steady-state ultra-slow oceanic spreading, which could serve as a constraint in kinematic constructions. The indicators of early steady-state oceanic spreading may be applied to other magma-poor rifted margins. This study may indeed be supported by the presence of the same flip-flop structures in symmetry offshore the Flemish Cap southeast margin.

How to cite: Etcheverry, L., Autin, J., and Somoza, L.: Localisation of steady-state ultra-slow oceanic spreading along magma-poor rifted margins: Case example offshore Galicia Bank (West Iberia)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9482, 2026.

EGU26-9582 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Integrated Seismic–Potential Field Constraints on the Evolution of the Dniepr–Donets Rift Basin 

Ali Nasiri, Randell Stephenson, Sergiy Stovba, Sergey Drachev, Łukasz Słonka, and Stanisław Mazur

The Dniepr–Donets Basin (DDB) is one of the largest and best-preserved intracontinental rift systems in Europe, yet the geodynamic processes responsible for its formation remain uncertain. There are two end-member models possible: (1) passive rifting driven by far-field tectonic stresses transmitted through the lithosphere, such as back-arc extension or plate boundary forces, and (2) active rifting associated with localized thermal anomalies in the mantle, potentially linked to plume-like upwellings. Distinguishing between these mechanisms is important for understanding why some continental rifts evolve toward oceanic break-up, whereas others, such as the DDB, remain confined within continental interiors.

This study aims to reassess the tectonic evolution of the DDB by integrating regional-scale seismic, borehole, gravity, and magnetic datasets into a coherent crustal and lithospheric framework. The core of the analysis is based on the interpretation of approximately 40 regional seismic reflection and refraction profiles, including classical and widely used datasets such as DOBRE’99 and Georift-2013. These seismic data are calibrated using stratigraphic, lithological, and velocity information from nearly 1,900 boreholes distributed across the basin. Fourteen key stratigraphic horizons are mapped consistently throughout the DDB, covering an area of ~76,900 km² and spanning the pre-rift, syn-rift, and post-rift sedimentary sequences.

Seismic interpretation is complemented by gravity and magnetic anomaly data, which are used to refine the geometry and continuity of major fault systems and crustal domains. The combined datasets allow the timing and kinematics of major faulting episodes and regional unconformities to be constrained with improved confidence. Balanced cross-section analysis along selected regional profiles provides quantitative estimates of crustal extension, fault displacement, and basin asymmetry, offering direct tests of competing rift models.

A three-dimensional structural model of the DDB that integrates seismic surfaces with borehole stratigraphy and velocity data is a key outcome of the work. Although still under development, this model reveals the three-dimensional architecture of the basin, including variations in sediment thickness, fault segmentation, and structural asymmetry along strike. Particular attention is paid to identifying systematic asymmetries in fault geometry and basin fill, which may indicate simple-shear deformation and lithospheric-scale detachment processes commonly associated with passive rifting. Linking shallow geological observations with deep crustal reflectivity patterns enables a more robust reconstruction of the basin’s long-term evolution.

Potential field data further provide constraints on the role of mantle processes during rifting. Spatial variations in gravity and magnetic anomalies are analyzed to detect possible mafic intrusions, high-density lower-crustal bodies, or anomalous mantle domains. These observations are used to evaluate whether thermal weakening of the lithosphere and magmatic underplating played a primary role, or whether rifting was dominated by mechanical stretching of a relatively cold lithosphere.

Overall, this ongoing research integrates crustal- and mantle-scale observations to explore the interplay between mantle dynamics, faulting, sedimentation, and basin subsidence. The results are expected to refine models of intracontinental rifting and clarify the conditions under which continental rifts either progress toward break-up or remain long-lived but abortive systems, as exemplified by the Dniepr–Donets Basin.

How to cite: Nasiri, A., Stephenson, R., Stovba, S., Drachev, S., Słonka, Ł., and Mazur, S.: Integrated Seismic–Potential Field Constraints on the Evolution of the Dniepr–Donets Rift Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9582, 2026.

EGU26-9953 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Controls on the spatio-temporal distribution of plume-related excess melting during continental rifting 

Abigail Plimmer, Ritske Huismans, and Sebastian Wolf

The complexity in the relationship between mantle and lithosphere processes may be most directly exemplified in the coupling between upwelling plumes and extending lithosphere at rifted margins, and the distribution of excess melting across these regions through space and time. Rifted margins are often described in two end-member classes; magma-rich and magma-poor, typified by the emplacement of seaward dipping reflector sequences (SDRs) and high velocity lower crustal bodies (HVLC) or the exhumation of serpentinised mantle with little extrusive melt, respectively. Previous studies have linked margin architecture and magmatic budget to extension velocity, lithosphere thickness, and rheology. The role of mantle plumes remains poorly constrained, with plumes associated with both magma-poor and magma-rich margins, implying that their influence on excess melt production is not straightforward. Our study aims to better constrain the relationship between mantle plumes and excess melting at rifted margins by exploring the interaction of plumes originating from the mantle transition zone and rifting.

We present two-dimensional numerical simulations to investigate how mantle plumes interact with lithosphere extension during continental rifting. Rifting is simulation using the ALE finite-element code FANTOM, incorporating a thermal anomaly at the base of the upper mantle to represent a stalled plume source. We systematically vary velocity, plume temperature anomaly, and plume position relative to the rift axis to explore how these parameters control the timing, magnitude, and spatial distribution of excess melting during breakup.

Our results indicate that excess melting associated with mantle plumes is both transient and spatially distributed. The timing, magnitude and lateral distribution of excess melting depends non-linearly on the interaction between plume buoyancy and lithospheric extension rate, with the strongest plume influence occurring at intermediate extension velocities. Plumes residing directly beneath the rift axis focus melt, producing temporally concentrated, focussed melt zones that promote earlier rift breakup whereas plumes which lie adjacent to the rift axis produce spatially offset and temporally delayed melt focussing, resulting in narrower but less efficiently coupled melt zones. These results demonstrate that plume-driven excess melting may be highly time-dependent with an evolving spatial distribution that reflects the efficiency of melt focussing relative to the thinning lithosphere.

How to cite: Plimmer, A., Huismans, R., and Wolf, S.: Controls on the spatio-temporal distribution of plume-related excess melting during continental rifting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9953, 2026.

EGU26-10165 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Fault activity along the western margin of the Argos Gulf (Peloponnese, Greece) revealed by tectonic geomorphology analysis 

Amélie Viger, Haralambos Kranis, Alexander Whittaker, Rebecca Bell, and Athanassios Ganas

The Gulf of Argos, Greece, is a post-Miocene basin at the north-western extremity of the Cretan Sea (southern Aegean). Its formation is attributed to NE-SW-oriented back-arc extension, induced by rollback of the subducting slab in the Hellenic arc.

The western margin of the Gulf of Argos is marked by the almost linear coastline of the eastern Peloponnese, and is related to a c.100 km long, NNW-SSE normal fault system, stretching from Kiveri to Ariana. Despite it being a recognizable structure, there are few, if any, constraints related to its degree of activity, possible segmentation, and seismic hazard potential. The immediate footwall to this fault system, which we name Western Argos Fault System (WAFS), hosts several similarly striking high-angle normal faults, whose Quaternary degree of activity is also poorly understood.

To better understand fault activity and evolution in the Gulf of Argos, we study the mid- to long-term (several kyr to a few Myr) development of the footwall of the West Argos Fault System. Our study focuses on how drainage river long profiles and footwall relief have responded dynamically to tectonic activity. We estimate an uplift rate for each footwall catchment along the WAFS from knickpoint analysis and estimates of bedrock erodibility. We then compare these results with vertical motion data collected in the field and topographical data along the western margin of the Gulf of Argos.

We propose a throw rate of 0.9-2.4 mm/yr along the WAFS, which comprises at least four segments and an overall southward migration of fault activity, as the northernmost segments appear to be significantly less active than the southern ones.

How to cite: Viger, A., Kranis, H., Whittaker, A., Bell, R., and Ganas, A.: Fault activity along the western margin of the Argos Gulf (Peloponnese, Greece) revealed by tectonic geomorphology analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10165, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10165, 2026.

EGU26-10868 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Early opening of the Central Atlantic and its connection to the Western Tethys 

Benjamin Heudes, Julie Tugend, Geoffroy Mohn, and Nick Kusznir

                Deciphering the dynamics of continental breakup is fundamental to understanding how oceanic basins initiate, segment, propagate and connect to the global oceanic system. However, constraining the spatial and temporal evolution of continental rupture is challenging as it precedes the establishment of continuous oceanic spreading and reliable kinematic markers such as marine magnetic anomalies. Here we focus on the earliest stage of Pangea breakup, with the aim of constraining basin segmentation during the initial opening of the Central Atlantic Ocean (CAO), prior to its connection with the main Panthalassa Ocean through the Western Tethys.

                The CAO corresponds to the earliest opened branch of the Atlantic.  The timing of its continental breakup and onset of oceanic spreading remains debated, with proposed breakup ages ranging from 195 Ma to 175 Ma. This uncertainty leads to major ambiguities in the geodynamic context of continental rupture, with consequences for the interpretation of rifted and nascent oceanic basins segmentation, connectivity, and associated depositional environments. It also affects the interpretation of major Jurassic magnetic anomalies identified across the CAO: the East Coast Magnetic Anomaly (ECMA) and Blake Spur Magnetic Anomaly (BSMA), which are commonly used as kinematic markers in early Atlantic reconstruction.

                To address these issues, we have compiled a regional database to integrate major rift structures and basins, Upper Triassic salt distribution, and variations in the nature of the ocean-continent-transition and magmatic type. We present interpretations of seismic reflection data along the Central Atlantic rifted margins, calibrated using available drilling results. These data allow us to constrain rift basin age and architecture, fault system development and the distribution of rift-related salt provinces. In parallel, regional crustal thickness maps derived from gravity inversion are used to investigate along-strike variations in magmatic budget during continental breakup and the early stages of oceanic accretion, relation with the spatial distribution of the ECMA and BSMA.

                Our first results confirm pronounced along-strike variations in magmatic volumes emplaced during continental breakup and the initial phases of oceanic spreading. The newly compiled database will provide key constraints for paleogeographic reconstructions, with the aim of clarifying the duration of oceanic basin isolation, the timing of basin connectivity through the Western Tethys and sedimentation pathways associated with the early Atlantic evolution.

How to cite: Heudes, B., Tugend, J., Mohn, G., and Kusznir, N.: Early opening of the Central Atlantic and its connection to the Western Tethys, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10868, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10868, 2026.

EGU26-11130 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Strain partitioning in the Natron Basin, East African Rift: Insights from geodetic and seismic moment rates. 

Ivan Navarrete, Jean-Arthur Olive, Eric Calais, Derek Keir, and Manon Dalaison

The Natron Basin is located within the eastern branch of the East African Rift, a segment characterized by greater magmatic activity compared to the western branch. This activity has been shown to play a key role in accommodating deformation in the eastern rift, alongside crustal-scale faulting. The Natron Basin represents a particularly suitable natural laboratory to investigate the interaction between active tectonic and magmatic deformation, as previous studies have documented magmatic intrusion events associated with active rifting episodes in the region.

In this study, we use new geodetic observations acquired during a GNSS campaign conducted in the Natron Basin in summer 2025, and started in 2013, to investigate present-day deformation patterns. Campaign-derived horizontal (and vertical) velocities are used to estimate regional strain rates and to derive geodetic moment rates under standard mechanical assumptions. These geodetic estimates provide an integrated measure of ongoing extension across the basin.

To assess how this deformation is released seismically, we compare geodetic moment rates with seismic moment rates inferred from global earthquake catalogs, including NEIC and ISC; over comparable spatial and temporal scales. This comparison allows us to place bounds on the seismic coupling coefficient of rift normal faults.

The observed mismatch between geodetic and seismic moment rates suggest that a significant fraction of present-day deformation in the Natron Basin is accommodated though aseismic processes. These may include distributed crustal deformation and contributions from magma intrusions, which are known to influence rift evolution in magma-rich segments of the East African Rift. These observations illustrate the potential of combined geodetic and seismic analyses to investigate strain partitioning in magma-rich segments of continental rifts.

How to cite: Navarrete, I., Olive, J.-A., Calais, E., Keir, D., and Dalaison, M.: Strain partitioning in the Natron Basin, East African Rift: Insights from geodetic and seismic moment rates., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11130, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11130, 2026.

EGU26-11281 | Orals | TS2.1

Reassessing modes of Plume-Rift Magmatism 

Jason P. Morgan and César R. Ranero

Several types of magmatism are typically associated with continental stretching and rift formation. The South Atlantic Rifted Margin is a particularly well-studied system that exhibits: (1) Thousands-km-long massive dike swarms – likely linked to the Tristan Plume/hotspot; (2) the Parana-Etendeka continental flood basalt (CFB); and (3) the formation of extensive seaward dipping reflector sequences (SDRs) along the southern portion of this rifted margin. Here we review the distribution, timing, and volumes of these different modes of rift-related magmatism in relation to rift evolution.

Great dike swarms formed prior to, during, and soon after the Parana-Etendeka flood basalt event at 136.5-135.5 Ma. Although comparable in spatial extent and volume to the well-known Proterozoic Mackenzie dike swarm that similarly extended from a continental flood basalt, summed dike volumes appear to only be ~10% (0.15e6 km^3) of the Parana CFB magmatism (~1.5e6) and ~2% of total magmatism (~6e6) associated with South Atlantic Rifting including SDR provinces.

The defining characteristic of the CFB event is that it occurred very rapidly, which appears most consistent with a sudden lithospheric thinning event (e.g. lower lithospheric delamination) in the presence of hot plume material. A plume-head rising under thick continental lithosphere simply could not create this sudden burst of volcanic activity, thus an abrupt lithospheric thinning event appears needed to explain this melting anomaly. Note that there is seismic evidence consistent with such a delamination event both in the thinned lower lithosphere beneath Parana and the presence of a delaminated lithospheric fragment in the transition zone near the site of the modern Tristan Plume.

Finally, the largest volcanism associated with South Atlantic rifting is linked to the SDR province including associated underplated magmas offshore the southern margins of South American and Africa. This post-CFB magmatic activity can be quantitatively explained by more extensive melting of southward flowing Tristan Plume material after extensive rifting has thinned the extending lithosphere to <~80km. The later timing of this activity (~130-125 Ma) relative to the CFB (136.5-135.5 Ma) suggests that it, too, was not linked to the arrival of a plume head, but rather the persistent ‘tail’ of the Tristan Plume.  We will also briefly discuss potential implications for the epeirogeny linked to plume-rift evolution.

 

How to cite: Morgan, J. P. and Ranero, C. R.: Reassessing modes of Plume-Rift Magmatism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11281, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11281, 2026.

EGU26-11555 | Orals | TS2.1

Styles of extensional reactivation in rifted margins – comparing numerical modeling results to nature 

Zoltán Erdős, Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic, Susanne Buiter, and Joya Tetreault

Many rifted margins develop in regions that previously experienced oceanic subduction and continent–continent collision. This implies that continental rifting commonly occurs in a lithosphere that contains significant inherited features, rather than in a homogeneous medium. Such inheritance can be broadly classified into three categories – structural, rheological, and thermal – which typically coexist. Inherited features may strongly influence rift evolution and resulting margin architecture.

In this study, we use 2D thermo-mechanical numerical models to investigate how complex inheritance, featuring structural, rheological and thermal components, affects subsequent phases of continental rifting. Our models simulate rifting following orogenesis that occurs through oceanic subduction, microcontinent accretion, and continental collision. By varying the size and complexity of the pre-rift orogen, we evaluate the relative importance of different types of inheritance in the development of rifted margins. We compare the resulting margin architectures with natural examples.

We find that a dynamic interplay exists between structural, rheological, and thermal inheritance, strongly influencing the resulting rifted margin architectures. In small, cold orogens, structural inheritance is predominant, whereas in large, warm orogens, thermal and rheological inheritance play more significant roles. The relative importance of thermal and rheological inheritance is particularly challenging to assess, but we propose that the former plays the more prominent role. To illustrate these contrasts, we compare conjugate rifted margin architectures of two end-member models with natural examples from the opening of the North and South Atlantic Oceans. Our experiments reproduce a diverse array of features observed in the natural examples, including the formation of continental fragments and allochthons. They illustrate the complex deformation pathways through which rifted margin structures may have been achieved. Our results thus highlight the critical role of deformation history in shaping the evolution of continental rifting.

How to cite: Erdős, Z., Peron-Pinvidic, G., Buiter, S., and Tetreault, J.: Styles of extensional reactivation in rifted margins – comparing numerical modeling results to nature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11555, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11555, 2026.

EGU26-12670 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Intermediate-complexity modeling of magma–tectonic interaction in continental rifts 

Menno Fraters, Sascha Brune, Eleonora Rivalta, Rene Gassmöller, Sibiao Liu, Ameha Atnafu Muluneh, and Cedric Thieulot

Continental rifting often induces decompression melting and the ascent of magma that intrudes into the brittle crust in the form of dikes and sills and that extrudes along volcanic fields. At the same time, continental rifts experience stress from topographic loading due to rift flank uplift. It is clear that these two processes interact in magmatic rifts such as the Kenya Rift, the Main Ethiopian Rift, the Afar triple junction, and at the Icelandic plate boundary. However, separating the interplay between tectonic and magmatic processes, the evolving topography and the rift-related stress field, as well as the impact of these processes on dike-fault interactions from field observations alone remains difficult.


Previous modeling studies of time-dependent magma-tectonic interactions in extensional tectonic settings generally fall into two categories: (1) Simple models (e.g. Buck et al., 2005) represent diking by a prescribed fixed rectangular zone of horizontal divergence. While this approach can be applied to model tens of millions of years of dike injection along spreading ridges, its simplicity prevents applications to continental rifts where magmatism manifests over broad areas. (2) More complex setups simulating magma ascent via porous flow and fluid-driven fracture (e.g., Li et al. 2023). This approach allows to study the evolution of individual dikes, but its computational costs prevent application to lithosphere-scale rifts over geological time scales. 

Here, we present a numerical workflow that can be categorized as a model of intermediate complexity. The dikes are nucleated at the brittle-ductile transition above zones of partial melt. They are then propagated perpendicular to the minimum compressive stress, similar to the approach of Maccaferri et al. (2014), until they reach their freezing depth or the surface. In this presentation, we show how we  approach this problem and how we implement it in the open-source community geodynamics model ASPECT. We demonstrate that the generated dikes are being focused in specific regions, and how the directional dilation and heat injection during magma intrusion through dikes influence the long-term rifting evolution. 

References:

Buck, W. Roger, Luc L. Lavier, and Alexei N. B. Poliakov. “Modes of Faulting at Mid-Ocean Ridges.” Nature 434, no. 7034 (April 2005): 719–23. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03358.

Li, Yuan, Adina E Pusok, Timothy Davis, Dave A May, and Richard F Katz. “Continuum Approximation of Dyking with a Theory for Poro-Viscoelastic–Viscoplastic Deformation.” Geophysical Journal International 234, no. 3 (September 1, 2023): 2007–31. https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggad173.

Maccaferri, Francesco, Eleonora Rivalta, Derek Keir, and Valerio Acocella. “Off-Rift Volcanism in Rift Zones Determined by Crustal Unloading.” Nature Geoscience 7, no. 4 (April 2014): 297–300. https://doi.org/10.1038/ngeo2110.

How to cite: Fraters, M., Brune, S., Rivalta, E., Gassmöller, R., Liu, S., Muluneh, A. A., and Thieulot, C.: Intermediate-complexity modeling of magma–tectonic interaction in continental rifts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12670, 2026.

The presence of pre- to early synrift salt leads to varying degrees of decoupling between supra- and subsalt deformation during rifting. Decoupling is favored by thick salt or small fault displacement. This has been examined in detail in low-𝛽settings such as the southern and central North Sea and is applicable to the proximal domains of rifted margins. In addition, the role of late syn-rift salt on margins has been extensively studied. But the behavior of pre- to early synrift salt in the high-𝛽 necking, hyperextended, and exhumed mantle domains remains poorly understood.

A common suprasalt geometry in the necking and hyperextended domains of the western Iberian margin is that of strata that dip and thicken basinward. These might be mistaken for growth strata adjacent to a landward-dipping fault bounding a horst or for salt evacuation structures in a half graben, with both interpretations invoking low-𝛽, high-angle normal faults. However, they more likely record extension associated with large-offset detachment faults, but with thickening onto the top of the hanging wall instead of the fault. Slip ceases on the low-angle, basinward-dipping fault between the hanging- and footwall cutoffs of the salt, with continued extension on the deeper part of the fault transferred to slip on the steeper, landward-dipping hanging-wall salt in a zig-zag pattern like that of fish-tail thrusts. This simple concept can guide interpretations in areas with inadequate imaging.

The same idea also explains the presence of significant volumes of pre- to early synrift salt in the exhumed mantle domain, as seen in the Mauléon Basin of the NW Pyrenees. This relationship is enigmatic because mantle represents new real estate that formed after salt deposition and, moreover, any salt should be highly attenuated. The solution is that as mantle is exhumed from beneath the upper plate, extension on the landward-dipping exhumation detachment is transferred to the basinward-dipping salt detachment on that upper plate, thereby generating a zig-zag fault geometry. Effectively, the upper plate moves out from between both detachments, which merge at the hanging-wall cutoff of the upper plate such that salt and suprasalt strata end up juxtaposed above the footwall of the exhumation detachment. That part of the detachment becomes locked and the salt above the mantle does not get attenuated by further extension.

How to cite: Rowan, M., Chenin, P., and Manatschal, G.: Using stratal geometries above prerift to early synrift salt to constrain crustal fault interpretations in the distal domains of magma-poor rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12780, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12780, 2026.

The Meso-Neoproterozoic Yanliao Aulacogen in the northern North China Craton (NCC) preserves a critical sedimentary record of the Columbia supercontinent breakup. However, the geodynamic mechanism driving its episodic subsidence and distinct asymmetric architecture (e.g., the "north-faulted, south-overlapping" geometry) remains debated. Specifically, how the rigid cratonic lithosphere accommodated significant extension under the hotter thermal conditions of the Mesoproterozoic represents a geodynamic paradox. To address this, we integrate geological prototype basin reconstruction with 2D thermo-mechanical modeling (ASPECT).

Constrained by stratigraphic correlations and detrital zircon provenance data from the Yanliao and Liaodong areas, we performed a systematic parametric study to test the sensitivity of rift evolution to mantle potential temperature (Tp) and lithospheric rheology. Our reconstruction reveals a rapid subsidence phase coincident with regional magmatism (~1.38 Ga). Correspondingly, numerical results indicate that simple mechanical stretching is insufficient to localize strain within the thick cratonic keel. Instead, a melt- or fluid-induced rheological weakening mechanism is required to reproduce the observed lithospheric thinning and basin depth. We propose that the Yanliao Aulacogen marks a transition in tectonic style, where the interplay between a hot, weak lower crust and magmatic pulses controlled basin evolution. This study provides new quantitative constraints on the geodynamic regime of NCC and highlights the necessity of incorporating Precambrian-specific rheological laws in ancient basin analysis. It not only reconstructs the paleogeography of the Yanliao Aulacogen but also provides quantitative constraints on the geodynamic regime of the NCC during the supercontinent cycle.

How to cite: Liu, J.: Rheological Controls on Intracratonic Rifting: Insights from Stratigraphic Reconstruction and Geodynamic Modeling of the Mesoproterozoic Yanliao Aulacogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13025, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13025, 2026.

EGU26-13086 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Magma-poor spreading at the Southwest Indian ridge: new insights from multichannel seismic reflection data and implications for magma-poor rifted margins 

Julia Autin, Daniel Sauter, Sylvie Leroy, Mathilde Cannat, and Victor Cabiativa Pico

Observations at active magma-poor mid-oceanic ridges during ultraslow spreading (< 20 km/Myr full rate) are crucial for understanding the oceanization processes taking place during tectonic plate breakup. Particularly along magma-poor rifted margins, where subcontinental mantle is exhumed prior to the onset of oceanic spreading. It is hypothesized that this exhumation, occurring along detachment faults, is accompanied by a progressive increase in the magmatic budget, ultimately leading to the formation of a spreading ridge. These exhumation processes are believed to be similar to those observed in magma-poor areas along ultra-slow-spreading ridges, such as the easternmost part of the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR).

There, dredging revealed an oceanic basement composed of serpentinized exhumed mantle intruded by gabbros and locally overlain by variable amounts of basalts (Sauter et al., 2013). The morphology of the serpentinite ridges allowed to propose a "flip-flop" evolution of the detachment faults, characterized by alternating fault vergences. In this study, we analyse large-scale seismic reflection profiles of the Sismosmooth cruise (2014), over a series of peridotite ridges formed by flip-flop detachment processes. The absence of sedimentary cover allows for direct observation and ground-truthing of the nature of the exhumed basement at the seafloor (dredges, sub-marine images, bathymetry, TOBI side-scan sonar data). However, seismic reflection data are challenging to interpret due to the high impedance contrast between the water column and the basement, which limits wave penetration in the basement (Canales et al., 2004).

Our objective is to identify new criteria for identifying flip-flop detachment faults in contexts where the basement surface is covered by sediments, i.e. at continental margins. We also aim at identifying differences between flip-flop faulting at mid-ocean ridges and magma-poor rifted-margins. Detachment fault blocks in the easternmost SWIR form large amplitude, regularly spaced (11-18 km), mostly rounded and asymmetric ridges that expose serpentinized peridotites, locally with a thin basaltic cover. Seismic reflection data shows that the reflective top basement is locally affected by normal faults dipping mostly toward the ridge axis. Deep reflectors parallel to the top basement (~0.8 s TWT below top basement) occur locally, mostly beneath the inward-facing slopes of ridges, where the basement top is concave. We propose that they result from magma entrapment in the axial rift, when a new, antithetic, detachment fault cuts the previous one. Higher heat flow and hydrothermalism in the fault damage zone could prevent melt ascension to the seafloor.

We next look for these features (smooth reflective top basement ridges and reflectors ~0.8 s TWT below top basement) in seismic reflection profiles acquired across magma-poor rifted margins where flip-flop processes are suspected. We propose an interpretation of smooth basement ridges in the most distal magma-poor rifted margins as proto-oceanic or oceanic domains. We apply this approach to the Iberia and Antarctica fossil margins and show how this new criteria, allowing us to propose that flip-flop detachment processes took place during or directly after the final breakup of the lithospheric mantle, may help map and interpret key domains of the most distal part of magma-poor rifted margins.

How to cite: Autin, J., Sauter, D., Leroy, S., Cannat, M., and Cabiativa Pico, V.: Magma-poor spreading at the Southwest Indian ridge: new insights from multichannel seismic reflection data and implications for magma-poor rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13086, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13086, 2026.

EGU26-13194 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Mapping the Moho Geometry around the exhumated mantle in the Tyrrhenian Sea: A Synthesis of Multi-vintage Seismic Data and DSDP/ODP/IODP Drilling Results 

Lining Yang, Manel Prada, César R. Ranero, Maria Filomena Loreto, and Nevio Zitellini

The Tyrrhenian Sea is a young back-arc basin that began to open in the Langhian/Serravallian (15.97-13.82 Ma). Its formation was driven by the eastward roll-back of the Apennine-Maghrebide subduction system, leading to the exhumation of the mantle in the Vavilov Basin. The spatio-temporal evolution of this exhumation occurred just after the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC). Consequently, the distribution and thickness of Messinian evaporites (5.97–5.33 Ma) provide a chronostratigraphic marker to constrain the transition from continental rifting to mantle exhumation. Within this framework, the present study aims to reconstruct a refined 3D Moho topography to reveal the relationship between crustal thinning and mantle exhumation.

In the Tyrrhenian Sea, we analysed a comprehensive suite of legacy seismic lines, including the SITHERE (1985), CS (1989), CROP (1995), and MEDOC and CHIANTI (2010 and 2015) surveys. We then converted Two-Way Travel time (TWT) into depth, integrating a robust velocity-depth model generated from five 2D seismic reflection profiles with coincident refraction data collected during the Spanish Survey MEDOC/CHIANTI. The resulting Moho geometry and the boundaries of mantle exhumation are validated and constrained by a synthesis of borehole data from DSDP, ODP (Sites 651 and 655), and the recent IODP Expedition 402 (Sites U1612, U1615, and U1616).

Our mapping reveals that a prominent, high-amplitude reflector is consistently observed across the region, typically occurring around 7s TWT. Once converted into depth, this interface deepens toward the continental margins and shallows toward the basin centres. In the Vavilov Basin, where mantle exhumation has been confirmed by drilling (U1614, U1616, and 651), we have identified reflectors within the exhumed basement. Notably, as imaged by the MEDOC-9 seismic profile crossing the heterogeneous exhumed domain at IODP Site U1612, one of these reflectors is sub-horizontal and truncates a set of rotated reflectors, suggesting a possible complex fault-like feature within the mantle.

The identified reflectors occurring within the mantle may be either a tectonic or hydrothermal boundary, such as a serpentinization front or a major detachment fault within the exhumed domains. Spatial correlations between Moho shallowing and the thinning of Messinian units indicate that the most intense phase of crustal thinning and mantle exhumation in the Vavilov Basin occurred shortly after the Messinian. Our new 3D Moho contour map provides a refined geodynamic framework for constraining the timing and magnitude of lithospheric extension in this back-arc region and for guiding future geodynamic modelling.   

How to cite: Yang, L., Prada, M., Ranero, C. R., Loreto, M. F., and Zitellini, N.: Mapping the Moho Geometry around the exhumated mantle in the Tyrrhenian Sea: A Synthesis of Multi-vintage Seismic Data and DSDP/ODP/IODP Drilling Results, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13194, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13194, 2026.

EGU26-13499 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Consequences of Elevated Pre-Rift Lithosphere Geotherm on the Rifting and Breakup of the South China Sea 

Nick Kusznir, Brian Taylor, Francois Sapin, Cuimei Zhang, Gianreto Manatschal, and Pauline Chenin

Before Oligocene continental breakup at ~30 Ma, the South China Sea (SCS) lithosphere had an elevated geotherm following Cretaceous northward subduction of Pacific or Proto-SCS oceanic lithosphere under the continental South China block resulting in an Andean style orogeny and volcanic arc. We examine the consequences of this elevated geotherm on SCS crustal thickness determined from gravity inversion and determine the amount of lithosphere extension required for continental breakup and sea-floor spreading initiation.

Subsidence analysis of the northern SCS rifted margin shows up to 2 km subsidence of the base Oligocene unconformity to the present day that cannot be explained by observed extensional faulting and that we attribute to thermal subsidence from a very large pre-breakup lithosphere thermal perturbation. Parameterising the magnitude of this thermal perturbation by a McKenzie β factor requires a very large β factor > 4.

SCS crustal thickness predicted from gravity inversion incorporating an elevated pre-Oligocene lithosphere geotherm (GI model P3) is compared with that produced using an equilibrium initial lithosphere (GI model K1b). For very thinned continental crust and oceanic crust, GI models K1b and P3 give similar Moho depths that calibrate well against seismic reflection Moho depth. GI model K1b produces Moho depths consistently too deep (~ 5 km) for the northern SCS margin. In contrast GI model P3 with an elevated pre-rift geotherm produces Moho depths that calibrate well against seismic observations.

We examine profiles crossing the SCS to determine how much extension is required to stretch and thin continental lithosphere to generate continental breakup and initiate sea-floor spreading? Cumulative extension is calculated by integrating lithosphere thinning factor (1-1/β) determined by gravity inversion using GI model P3. Measured lithosphere extension prior to continental breakup and sea-floor spreading initiation in the SCS ranges between 303 km in the east and 558 km in the west predicted by GI model P3. In contrast measured lithosphere extension prior to rupture and separation of continental crust on the Iberia-Newfoundland conjugate rifted margins is 180 +/-20 km. Substantially more extension of continental crust (>200%) occurs before continental crustal breakup in the SCS compared with that between the Iberia and Newfoundland Atlantic margins

Our gravity inversion predicts a very wide region of continental crust with thicknesses between 25 and 10 km in the SCS, very much wider than for Atlantic type margins, due to a weak inherited SCS lithosphere rheology. The hot lithosphere geotherm prior to rifting and breakup gives a weak lithosphere rheology favouring extensional boudinage of the continental crust rather than crustal rupture and separation. Hot SCS lithosphere deformation contrasts with colder Atlantic Ocean type margins (e.g. Iberia-Newfoundland) where colder and stronger lithosphere rheology generates necking and focussing of lithosphere stretching and thinning.

How to cite: Kusznir, N., Taylor, B., Sapin, F., Zhang, C., Manatschal, G., and Chenin, P.: Consequences of Elevated Pre-Rift Lithosphere Geotherm on the Rifting and Breakup of the South China Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13499, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13499, 2026.

EGU26-13577 | Posters on site | TS2.1

SOSEM, South Santos Seismic and modelling experiment: analyzing rift-plume interaction during break-up - Preliminary results. 

Marta Perez-Gussinye, Jenny S. Collier, Yuhan Li, Tim Minshull, Jenny Duckworth, Yuan Nie, Sergio Fontes, Adelvison Alves, Gilberto Neto, Ingo Grevemeyer, Mario Araujo, Maryline Moulin, and Daniel Aslanian

What are the factors that control the generation and emplacement of magma during the rifting and breakup of continents? The Southeastern margin of Brazil along the South Atlantic Ocean offers an unprecedented opportunity to analyze this question. Here, the Tristan mantle plume appears to have exerted a significant influence on the magmatic processes associated with rifting. Yet, the influence of the plume on magmatism was spatially variable and heterogeneous along the margin. The basins south of the Rio Grande Fracture Zone (RGFZ) show clear evidence of magma-rich rifting, characterised by seaward-dipping reflectors and lower crustal magmatic intrusions emplaced during rifting. However, to the north of the RGFZ, the Santos and Campos Basins, generally lack the typical features of magma-rich margins. This asymmetric distribution of magmatism around the original plume head, differs from the classical view of plume-rift interaction which assumes that volcanism should be symmetrically distributed with respect to the plume head, as observed in the North Atlantic1.

To unravel the geological controls on the spatio-temporal distribution of magmatism during rifting, we carried out a wide-angle seismic experiment across the transitional zone between the Santos and Pelotas basins in November 2025. This area has been well-imaged with deep commercial MCS imaging (e.g. [2]). However, information on the nature of the crust is currently lacking and questions persist on the compositional nature of the São Paulo plateau, which has been interpreted as either extended and potentially intruded continental crust (e.g. [3], [4]) or as an oceanic plateau5.

During cruise MSM141 on board the R/V Maria S. Merian we acquired three wide-angle lines overlapping with pre-existing ION-GXT multichannel seismic lines 150 and 140 across the margin and 220 across the RGFZ. In total, 126 stations were deployed at ~8.5 km spacing. Simultaneously, 29 onshore stations were deployed along a ~200-km-long transect aligned with line 150. These three-component broadband stations were spaced 5-10 km apart and operated continuously at 250 Hz for up to 42 days. During shooting, an airgun array with a total volume of 64 L (4,160 in3) was used as the seismic source. The seismic experiment aims to reveal how magmatism changed with distance from the RGFZ, and the crustal nature of the Abimael Ridge and of the São Paulo Plateau. Our specific goals are to understand the 3D kinematic history of the area, and the role of the preexisting lithospheric structure and the RGFZ in controlling the spatio-temporal distribution of magmatism. The project has been funded by DFG and Petrobras and will include seismic tomography of the wide angle data and numerical modelling of the opening of this area of the South Atlantic.

References

Morgan, J. P. et al. (2020). PNAS, 117(45), 27877-27883. doi:10.1073/pnas.2012246117

McDermott et al. (2019). EPSL, 521, 14-24. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2019.05.049

Evain et al., 2015. JGR, v. 120, p. 5401–5431.

Araujo et al. (2022). Geol. Soc. Lon. Spec. Publ., 524(1). doi:10.1144/SP524-2021-123

Karner et al. 2021, in Marcio R. Mello, Pinar O. Yilmaz, and Barry J. Katz, eds., AAPG Memoir 124, p.215–256.

How to cite: Perez-Gussinye, M., Collier, J. S., Li, Y., Minshull, T., Duckworth, J., Nie, Y., Fontes, S., Alves, A., Neto, G., Grevemeyer, I., Araujo, M., Moulin, M., and Aslanian, D.: SOSEM, South Santos Seismic and modelling experiment: analyzing rift-plume interaction during break-up - Preliminary results., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13577, 2026.

EGU26-13740 | Orals | TS2.1

Multi-Physics Imaging of the Goban Spur Magma-Poor Rifted Margin: New Constraints on Breakup Processes Across the Continent–Ocean Transition 

Gaye Bayrakci, Tim A. Minshull, Steven Constable, Kyle Ivey, Raghu Ram, Alexander Lane, Marta Perez-Gussinye, and Javier Garcia-Pintado

Magma-poor rifted margins record late-stage continental breakup characterised by extreme thinning, mantle exhumation and serpentinisation, and variable magmatic addition across the continent–ocean transition. Disentangling these processes remains challenging using seismic P-wave velocities alone, because serpentinisation and mafic additions can produce overlapping velocity signatures. Electrical resistivity provides a complementary constraint because serpentinisation is thought to increase conductivity, while mafic additions are expected to generate resistive structures.

In September 2023, we acquired a ~200 km multi-physics geophysical profile across the Goban Spur magma-poor rifted margin offshore Ireland, which records continental breakup and the opening of the Atlantic basin at ~100–125 Ma. We deployed 49 multi-sensor seafloor instruments, most of which recorded wide-angle controlled-source seismic, controlled-source electromagnetic (CSEM), and magnetotelluric (MT) data. All data were sampled at 250 Hz. The profile is collinear with two high-quality multichannel seismic (MCS) reflection profiles acquired in 2013 and 2024.

Seismic traveltime tomography images a sharp transition from >10 km-thick continental crust to an exhumed mantle domain where pristine peridotite velocities are reached at ~4 km below the seabed, implying the presence of a ~3-4 km-thick zone comprising of serpentinised peridotite beneath the thin (< 1 km) sediment cover. Additional tomographic constraints come from refracted arrivals in the MCS streamer data. This transition coincides with a lateral decrease in resistivity inferred from MT inversions. Toward the oceanward end of the profile, magnetic anomaly C33r marks the transition to oceanic crust; oceanward of C33r, velocities indicate a more complex structure than typical mature oceanic crust, remaining similar to those in the exhumed mantle domain. MT inversions at the oceanward end further reveal a shallow lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary (LAB) at ~55–60 km depth expressed as a sharp increase in conductivity, which we interpret as due to the presence of partial melt. This shallow LAB is consistent with independent surface-wave constraints and is potentially sustained by ongoing small-scale convection as suggested by geodynamic modelling. These multi-physics results provide new constraints on lithospheric structure and breakup processes at a magma-poor rifted margin.

How to cite: Bayrakci, G., Minshull, T. A., Constable, S., Ivey, K., Ram, R., Lane, A., Perez-Gussinye, M., and Garcia-Pintado, J.: Multi-Physics Imaging of the Goban Spur Magma-Poor Rifted Margin: New Constraints on Breakup Processes Across the Continent–Ocean Transition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13740, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13740, 2026.

EGU26-13752 | ECS | Orals | TS2.1

Along-rift variations in magma system geometry observed using Sentinel-1 InSAR data from the East African Rift System 

Ben Ireland, Juliet Biggs, Fabien Albino, and William Hutchison

Volcano deformation signals detected using InSAR can be used to infer and contrast magmatic system geometry between volcanoes, although their observations present only a brief ‘snapshot’ of the system in geological time. Thus, whilst varying deformation signals may reflect ‘permanent’ differences in magmatic system architecture between systems, they may also simply reflect temporal variability in activity within otherwise similar systems. On geological timescales, magmatic system processes are controlled by tectonics, chiefly crustal properties and mantle melt supply, whereas their shorter-term activity is controlled by the relative strengths of the interacting mafic, tectonic, and silicic parts of the system, varying on timescales of 10s, 100s and 1000s of years, respectively.

Here, using this framework, we combine systematic InSAR-based analytical modelling with additional geochemical and geophysical observations to 16 deforming volcanoes in the Eastern Branch of the East African Rift System (EARS), to assess the prevalence and ‘permanence’ of along-rift variations in magma system geometry. The EARS is characterised by a wide variety of volcanism, rift tectonics, and deformation signals; mature continental rifts with large, central silicic caldera systems, thick crust (25-40 km), and low spreading rates (2-5 mm/yr) further south give way to nascent seafloor spreading ridges further north predominantly mafic volcanism, thinner crust (15-25 km), and higher spreading rates (10-17 mm/yr). The impacts of these variations on volcano deformation signals are important for understanding how architecture and activity of magmatic systems varies along-rift, and for the first time, routinely acquired and processed Sentinel-1 InSAR data presents the opportunity assess them.

To model each signal, we compare up to 9 possible source geometries, assessing model preference using Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC). The modelled deformation sources show a systematic change in melt geometry from dominantly horizontal in the mature continental rifts to vertical in the Erta Ale Volcanic Range (EAVR), indicating structural differences in magmatic system architecture. The extent and magnitude of deformation signals in the Kenyan Rift and Central Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) are also generally larger than in the EAVR during this period. Elsewhere, differences between the Northern and Central MER are attributed to temporal variability. Overall, along-rift differences in deformation patterns are attributed to both temporal variability and permanent differences in magmatic system architecture, with the latter influenced by crustal thickness and melt supply, impacting melt residence times and fractionation.

How to cite: Ireland, B., Biggs, J., Albino, F., and Hutchison, W.: Along-rift variations in magma system geometry observed using Sentinel-1 InSAR data from the East African Rift System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13752, 2026.

EGU26-13890 | Orals | TS2.1

A method to check the structural coherence of magma-poor rifted margins seismic interpretations: application to the Iberian margin 

Pauline Chenin, Nick J. Kusznir, Mark G. Rowan, and Gianreto Manatschal

During continental rifting, two main types of faults accommodate crustal extension and thinning, namely high-angle normal faults and large-offset (“low-angle”) detachment faults. Classical interpretations of Atlantic-type rifted margins assume a predominance of high-angle normal faults in the proximal margin and of extensional detachment faults in the most distal domain; however, the structural interpretation of the so-called necking domain in between remains disputed.

Identifying high-angle faults and extensional detachment faults at rifted margins is challenging because: (1) seismic reflection images may not allow interpreters to indisputably locate the top basement and/or recognize syn-tectonic sedimentary sequences; and (2) the interpretation of extensional detachment faults is often debatable due to their faint topographic and stratigraphic expressions and the common overprint of their exhumed footwall by high-angle normal faults or erosion. Yet, the accurate identification of high-angle and extensional detachment faults is crucial for understanding the stratigraphic, thermal and isostatic evolutions of rift systems, all of which are fundamental to successful predictions.

We present a methodology to interpret crustal-scale seismic reflection images of magma-poor rifted margins and test the reliability of structural interpretations via geometrical criteria. We use TGS line 140 located offshore Portugal, north of the Peniche peninsula, as a case study. 

How to cite: Chenin, P., Kusznir, N. J., Rowan, M. G., and Manatschal, G.: A method to check the structural coherence of magma-poor rifted margins seismic interpretations: application to the Iberian margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13890, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13890, 2026.

EGU26-14128 | Posters on site | TS2.1

 The Newfoundland margin crust: Understanding the Atlantic rifting. 

Laura Gómez de la Peña, César R. Ranero, Manel Prada, Irene Merino, Donna Shillington, and Valentí Sallarès

The structure of the Newfoundland–West Iberian conjugate margins has been extensively studied during the past 50 years in hundreds of papers. The crustal structure has been evaluated through seismic surveys and drilling expeditions, but those are not equally distributed in Iberia and Newfoundland. More work, and in particular recent studies on the West Iberian margin, have identified a complex crustal architecture characterised by continental, oceanic, and exhumed mantle domains that vary along the margin. This structural complexity has only been recently documented with modern data that allow to image the basement domains in detail.

In contrast, the Newfoundland basement remains comparatively less well understood due to a relative scarcity of seismic and drilling data. The main wide-angle and streamer data for this area, the SCREECH survey, were acquired in 2000 and modelled under the computational limitations of that time. The resulting models and images have been subject to debate and failed to unequivocally define the nature of the basement domains of the margins. This uncertainty has left open key questions regarding the evolution of deformation during rifting and, thus, also the degree of symmetry of this conjugate pair of margins.

The SCREECH acquisition parameters were similar to modern marine acquisition standards. We leveraged their inherent data quality with the current computational facilities and up-to-date methodologies to re-process the data, imaging the structure and modelling seismic phases. Recent advancements in parallel computing and novel geophysical techniques now allow for enhanced-resolution seismic models and a mathematically robust uncertainty analysis—tasks that were previously very computationally demanding.

Our study utilises the original SCREECH field data, consisting of three transects with coincident multichannel seismic (MCS) reflection data (6-km streamer) and wide-angle data recorded by short-period OBS and OBH stations at ~15 km spacing. By performing a joint inversion of the streamer and wide-angle data (utilising both reflection and refraction arrivals), we significantly improved the definition of geological units and the spatial resolution of the velocity models. A statistical uncertainty analysis was conducted to validate the reliability of these observed features.

Our findings reveal previously unrecognised crustal heterogeneity at the Newfoundland margin, including significant variations in thickness and composition along the margin. Notably, we challenge prior classifications of the crustal domains and the location and dimensions of the Continent-Ocean Transition (COT). Previous models identified an intra-basement deep reflector as the Moho, defining a 4–5 km thick layer interpreted as continental crust. However, our results suggest this reflector may not represent the Moho, as the observed crustal properties are inconsistent with typical continental or oceanic crust, and rather support a COT formed by >250 km of exhumed mantle. By integrating MCS imagery with these new velocity models, we provide a re-interpretation of the margin’s crustal structure and propose a refined evolutionary model for the West Iberian–Newfoundland conjugate system.

How to cite: Gómez de la Peña, L., R. Ranero, C., Prada, M., Merino, I., Shillington, D., and Sallarès, V.:  The Newfoundland margin crust: Understanding the Atlantic rifting., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14128, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14128, 2026.

We investigate the magnetic structure of the M-series and J-anomaly oceanic crust in the Central Atlantic with the integration of seismic data in magnetic anomaly modelling. We find that traditional magnetic models of oceanic crust, which assume uniform layers with constant magnetization and geomagnetic polarity reversals, fail to explain the observed anomalies, especially the lack of high-frequency reversals. This suggests that the complex 3D crustal structure created at slow to intermediate spreading rates plays a significant role in the anomaly patterns, because faulting and magmatic processes act as geological filters. Our new modelling approach includes defining the magnetic structure using the crustal seismic structure to adjust the magnetic layer thickness, and laterally varying the magnetization intensity. We explain the high amplitude of the J-anomaly due to a Fe-Ti enrichment in the magma and not to increases in layer thickness as previously proposed. We also discover a previously unrecognized K-anomaly, younger than the J-anomaly. We provide a new kinematic reconstruction of the central Atlantic showing asymmetry in the magnetic and crustal structure between the African and American plates. These findings emphasize the importance of combining seismic data to realistically model magnetic data and better understand crustal formation at slow-spreading ridges.

This work has been funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation MCIN/AEI under project ATLANTIS (ref. PID2019-109559RB-I00), and by the Portuguese Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia FCT, I.P. / MCTES under project LISA (https://doi.org/10.54499/PTDC/CTA-GEF/1666/2020) and through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020 (https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020), UID/50019/2025  (https://doi.org /10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025), UID/PRR2/50019/2025.

How to cite: Neres, M. and Ranero, C.: Magnetic modelling of the J-anomaly in the Central Atlantic constrains the structure of slow-spreading oceanic crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15111, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15111, 2026.

As the proximal zone of the passive continental margin in the northern South China Sea, the Zhu I Depression developed on the complex basement of the pre-Cenozoic active continental margin. It has long been located at the intersection of the West Pacific and Paleo-Tethys tectonic domains, characterized by a complex basin-forming setting, multiple stages of tectonic evolution, and significant spatiotemporal differences in its fault system. Based on seismic data interpretation, tectonic physical modeling, and regional tectonic analysis, this study systematically explores the controlling effect of the matching relationship between pre-existing faults and late-stage Cenozoic regional stress field on the fault system. Results show that: (1) Multiple superimposed "compression-extension-strike-slip" tectonic movements during the Mesozoic Indosinian and Yanshanian periods generated NE- and NW-trending pre-existing faults in the Cenozoic basement of the Zhu I Depression. The distribution density and strike of these basement faults controlled the spatial pattern of the Cenozoic fault system, with pre-existing faults being "dense in the east and sparse in the west" and Cenozoic faults "abundant in the northeast and scarce in the southwest", showing an orderly strike transition from NE to E-W to NWW from southwest to northeast. (2) The Cenozoic regional stress field of the Zhu I Depression underwent a clockwise transition: NW-SE extensional (Eocene) → nearly N-S extensional (early Oligocene) → NE-SW extensional (post-late Oligocene). Correspondingly, the dominant strike of the fault system changed from NE (Eocene) to nearly E-W (early Oligocene) and then to NW (post-late Oligocene). (3) Tectonic physical modeling reveals that stage-specific and direction-selective reactivation of NE- and NW-trending pre-existing faults under varying regional stress conditions caused the spatiotemporal differences in the Cenozoic fault system. Under Eocene NW-SE extension, NE-trending pre-existing faults were reactivated as depression-controlling faults, while NW-trending basement faults acted as weak vertical transfer zones, leading to segmented NE-trending faults with slight strike-slip components.During early Oligocene nearly N-S extension, NE-trending faults continued normal faulting with weakened intensity, while NW-trending faults intensified. Under oblique extension, both showed combined strike-slip-extensional characteristics, with new nearly E-W extensional faults or "arc-shaped" faults formed at conjugate positions. Post-late Oligocene, with NE-SW extension, NW-trending faults became dominant with enhanced activity, while NE- and NEE-trending faults diminished and became extinct.This indicates that selective reactivation of NE- and NW-trending basement pre-existing faults during the clockwise transition of the regional stress field from the Wenchang to Enping periods is the primary factor controlling the differential development of the Cenozoic fault system in the Zhu I Depression.

How to cite: Ma, C. and Wu, Z.: Matching Relationship Between Pre-existing Faults and Regional Stress Field Controls the Differential Development of the Cenozoic Fault System in the Zhu I Depression, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15587, 2026.

   The growth and linkage of basin-bounding normal faults play a pivotal role in controlling the structural architecture and tectono-stratigraphic evolution of rift basins. High quality, well-constrained 3D seismic data from the Xihu sag, East China Sea Basin document the growth history and transtensional reactivation of the basin-bounding fault system along the Western Slope Zone. The Pinghu fault system in the Xihu Sag is characterized by pronounced segmentation and progressive segment linkage, comprising six major fault segments that together define an overall “X”-shaped fault zone. 
   Our analysis identifies three distinct evolutionary stages: (1) isolated segment growth, characterized by independently evolving NNE-striking segments; (2) soft linkage, during which interactions between overlapping segments led to the formation of relay ramps; and (3) hard linkage, when continued displacement accumulation resulted in the breaching of relay ramps and the development of a through-going basin-bounding fault zone. This multi-stage fault evolution was jointly controlled by segmented fault growth during Eocene rifting and subsequent rotation of the regional stress field.
   The spatiotemporal evolution of the Pinghu fault exerted a first-order control on syn-rift sedimentation within the Pinghu Formation. During the fault linkage stage, intact relay ramps functioned as a key sediment entry pathways, channeling sediment supply into the basin and controlling the distribution of deltaic sandbodies. Progressive fault growth and linkage strongly influenced syn-depositional architectures: variations in thickness and facies within the Pinghu Formation record shifting depocenters and sedimentary responses to evolving fault activity.
   This study demonstrates the critical importance of basin-bounding fault segmentation and linkage histories in controlling sand-body distribution and understanding the tectono-sedimentary coupling processes in continental marginal rift basins.

How to cite: Zheng, J., Wu, Z., and Miocic, J.: Growth and Linkage of a Basin-Bounding Normal Fault System: Insights from the Pinghu Fault, Xihu Sag, East China Sea Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16764, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16764, 2026.

EGU26-16781 | ECS | Orals | TS2.1 | Highlight

The Importance of Past Rifting in Large Igneous Province Development: Insights from the Turkana Depression, East Africa  

Rita Kounoudis, Ian Bastow, Cindy Ebinger, Saskia Goes, Pengzhe Zhou, Martin Musila, Christopher Ogden, and Atalay Ayele

Lithospheric thin zones, such as recently failed rifts, are generally assumed to be weak spots where magmatism and deformation can concentrate during rifting and large igneous province development. Yet, the Turkana Depression in East Africa, the site of the failed 66-million-year-old Anza Rift, did not experience the widespread flood magmatism seen on the adjacent Ethiopian Plateau, despite being a lithospheric thin spot when the region encountered hot plume material around 45 million years ago. Using data from the 2019-2021 Turkana Rift Arrays Investigating Lithospheric Structure (TRAILS) project and surrounding seismograph networks we jointly invert surface-wave and receiver function data to constrain crustal and upper-mantle seismic structure and evaluate lithospheric thermo-mechanical modification. Evidence for thick lower crustal intrusions, ubiquitous below the uplifted Ethiopian Plateau, is comparatively lacking below the Depression’s failed Anza Rift system, which ongoing East African rifting is circumnavigating, not exploiting. The mantle lithosphere below the Depression has also retained its cool, fast-wavespeed ‘lid’ character, contrasting the Ethiopian Plateau. Volatile depletion during failed Anza rifting probably rendered the thinned lithosphere refractory without later rejuvenation. Subsequent rifting and magmatism thus initiated away from the still-thin Anza Rift, in regions where fertile lithosphere enabled melting and the sufficient lowering of plate yield strength. Areas of thinned lithosphere are thus not necessarily persistent weak zones where significant extension and magmatic provinces will develop.

 

Kounoudis, R., Bastow, I.D., Ebinger, C.J. et al. The importance of past rifting in large igneous province development. Nature 647, 115–120 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09668-7

How to cite: Kounoudis, R., Bastow, I., Ebinger, C., Goes, S., Zhou, P., Musila, M., Ogden, C., and Ayele, A.: The Importance of Past Rifting in Large Igneous Province Development: Insights from the Turkana Depression, East Africa , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16781, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16781, 2026.

EGU26-17705 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

LAB depth constraints from the Turkana Depression, East African Rift: implications for rifting and magmatism development in lithospheric thin spots, from S-to-p receiver functions 

Laurene Ville, Ian Bastow, Meghan Miller, Rita Kounoudis, Bryony Renwick, and Cynthia Ebinger

The East African Rift provides a natural laboratory to study the influence of pre-existing lithospheric thin spots on the development of rifting and hotspot tectonism. Below the Ethiopian Rift and elevated Ethiopian Plateau, extensive magmatic and thermal modification due to Eocene-Oligocene flood basalt magmatism and Miocene-Recent rifting has resulted in slow lithospheric mantle velocities (< 4.1km/s; Dugda et al., 2007, JGR). In contrast, below the previously rifted, lower-lying Turkana Depression to the south, the lithospheric mantle appears relatively unmodified (4.2-4.8 km/s; Kounoudis et al., 2023, EPSL), despite being underlain by hot, mantle plume material. Important in this picture are detailed constraints on the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB).

Why the Turkana Depression, and particularly the failed Anza Rift terranes, remained resistant to thermal and magmatic modification, is debated. Although the Turkana Depression was a lithospheric thin spot at the onset of plume magmatism, Cenozoic rifting is now circumnavigating, not exploiting, the Anza Rift terranes (Musila et al., 2023, G3). Lithospheric thin spots therefore don't necessarily mark weak zones that are exploited by subsequent rifting and magmatism. One hypothesis for the apparently refractory nature of the Anza lithosphere is that Mesozoic rifting removed easily fusible phases, suppressing subsequent melting and associated strain localisation (Kounoudis et al., 2025, Nature).

To test this geodynamic scenario, we calculated teleseismic S-to-p receiver functions and examined lithospheric thickness variations in the Turkana Depression, where the contrast between fast, relatively unmodified lithospheric mantle and slow, partially molten, plume-infiltrated asthenosphere is expected to provide impulsive S-to-p conversions at the LAB. We observe that the least impulsive and shallowest LAB conversions are associated with Miocene-Recent rift zones, and isolated shield volcanoes. Elsewhere, sharper and deeper S-to-p conversions attest to a lithosphere that has resisted thermo-mechanical modification.

How to cite: Ville, L., Bastow, I., Miller, M., Kounoudis, R., Renwick, B., and Ebinger, C.: LAB depth constraints from the Turkana Depression, East African Rift: implications for rifting and magmatism development in lithospheric thin spots, from S-to-p receiver functions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17705, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17705, 2026.

EGU26-17798 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Global rift analysis of tectonic and magmatic characteristics: towards constraining rift-related CO₂ degassing over geological timescales 

Luisa Hirche, Sascha Brune, Christian Heine, Simon Williams, and Anna Jentsch

The release of carbon at plate boundaries strongly influences Earth’s long-term climate over geological timescales. Continental rifts, in particular, are thought to play a major role in CO₂ degassing by activating carbon reservoirs in the deep lithosphere, with magmatic rifting enabling efficient CO₂ transport via carbonate-rich melts, especially during the early stages of rift development (Foley and Fischer, 2017). Substantial uncertainties in global degassing rates remain, as the incomplete geological record limits precise constraints on the timing, magnitude, and controlling factors of rift-related CO₂ release.

To reduce these uncertainties and enable time-dependent estimates of CO₂ degassing at continental rifts worldwide, we quantify first-order rift characteristics that are expected to control CO₂ degassing. Our analysis employs automated geoinformation workflows and builds on a newly compiled global database of more than 1500 Phanerozoic rifting events, providing a systematic framework for quantifying rift properties.

Here, we focus on three key characteristics: (I) proximity to cratonic lithosphere as an indicator of access to deep carbon reservoirs, (II) crustal thickness as a proxy for rift maturity and tectonic evolution, and (III) the distinction between magmatic and non-magmatic rifting styles, as provided by the global rift database, reflecting differences in the role of magma and volatile transport pathways. Crustal thickness and craton proximity are evaluated using multiple global crustal models and alternative craton boundary interpretations. These characteristics are linked to published present-day CO₂ flux measurements from active rift systems to derive relationships between rift properties and degassing rates. In the future, we aim to use these relationships in conjunction with plate tectonic reconstructions to derive global, time-dependent CO₂ degassing estimates throughout Phanerozoic times.

 

References:
Foley, S. F., & Fischer, T. P. (2017). An essential role for continental rifts and lithosphere in the deep carbon cycle. Nature Geoscience, 1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-017-0002-7

How to cite: Hirche, L., Brune, S., Heine, C., Williams, S., and Jentsch, A.: Global rift analysis of tectonic and magmatic characteristics: towards constraining rift-related CO₂ degassing over geological timescales, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17798, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17798, 2026.

EGU26-18129 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Factors controlling the rift basin formation in the Black sea region inferred from geodynamic models 

Ceyda Tonguç, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Ömer Bodur, Elif Nihan Çavdar, Can Aslan, and Özge Dinç Göğüş

Geodynamic modeling studies have shown that rift basin formation and their transition to sea floor spreading is controlled by tectonic deformation and surface processes. Furthermore, models are used to identify the controlling factors of symmetric vs asymmetric characteristics of the rift basins and the fault network patterns. Here, we use Black sea rift basin as a case study to test how varying model parameters can help to understand rapid subsidence and crustal stretching as well as up to 14 km of sediment thickness in the region. Namely,  we use high-resolution 2D geodynamic models (ASPECT) coupled with a landscape evolution code (FastScape) to investigate rift development under changing model parameters. We also reconcile model results against a number of geological and seismic reflection data where different types of stretching modes, such as pure vs simple have been described in the eastern and western sub basins. Our geodynamic model results provide important insight into how rifting has evolved in the black sea where thick sedimentary deposits are accumulated and possibly delayed continental break up.  That is, the thick sedimentary cover (Maykop) probably impeded serpentinization (sediment blanket) by modifying thermal structure of the crust. Models also explain the pure shear stretching (basin symmetry) in the eastern sub-basin compared to the west where migration of rift axis has been suggested and causing a broad zone of hyperextended crust.

How to cite: Tonguç, C., Göğüş, O. H., Bodur, Ö., Çavdar, E. N., Aslan, C., and Dinç Göğüş, Ö.: Factors controlling the rift basin formation in the Black sea region inferred from geodynamic models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18129, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18129, 2026.

EGU26-18234 | Orals | TS2.1

Magmatic-tectonic interactions in the Natron rift revealed by seismic anisotropy 

Frederik Link and Miriam Christina Reiss

Oldoinyo Lengai volcano is located the Natron Basin, a young (~3 Ma) magmatic rift segment of the East African Rift System. In this setting, magma transport, lithospheric deformation, and stress distribution are closely coupled, yet their relative roles in controlling volcanic and tectonic processes remain poorly constrained. The coexistence of an unusual natrocarbonatitic magmatic system with nearby silicic and basaltic volcanism points to a complex and evolving magma plumbing architecture that may both respond to and modify the regional stress field. Seismic anisotropy provides a sensitive indicator of stress-aligned fabric, deformation, and melt distribution within the crust and uppermost mantle.

Here, we combine local shear-wave splitting measurements with an inversion of anisotropic receiver functions to investigate stress modification and lithospheric deformation beneath Oldoinyo Lengai and the Natron Rift. We use data from the dense SEISVOL seismic network, spanning the region from Lake Natron to the extinct Gelai shield volcano, the monogentetic cone field Naibor Soito and active Oldoinyo Lengai volcano. We use the eigenvalue minimization method to analyze shear wave splitting of over ~10 000 volcano tectonic earthquakes. This provides a unique data set of shallow crustal anisotropy at unprecedented resolution. Azimuthally varying receiver-function signals are decomposed using harmonic regression and inverted within a probabilistic Bayesian framework, allowing us to resolve complex anisotropic layering and quantify uncertainties.

Our results reveal distinct anisotropic domains within the upper and mid-crust. Across much of the study area, fast-axis orientations align parallel to the rift axis, consistent with regional extensional stress. In contrast, pronounced lateral and depth-dependent variations in fast-axis orientation are observed beneath Oldoinyo Lengai and above a previously imaged sill complex underneath Naibor Soito, indicating localized stress perturbations associated with magmatic processes. These patterns closely correspond to the tension axes derived from focal mechanism solutions and stress modeling. However, local shear-wave splitting provides a much better spatial resolution of stress orientations at the scale of individual earthquake–station pairs and may even be susceptible to temporal changes of the magmatic plumbing system. Together, the combined anisotropic observations provide new constraints on the interaction between rift-related deformation and magmatic plumbing in the Natron Basin highlighting how seismic anisotropy offers substantial advantages to study these processes at high spatial and temporal resolution.

How to cite: Link, F. and Reiss, M. C.: Magmatic-tectonic interactions in the Natron rift revealed by seismic anisotropy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18234, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18234, 2026.

EGU26-18425 | ECS | Orals | TS2.1

Early development of a transform fault in a young ocean basin: insights from the Zabargad Fracture Zone, Northern Red Sea 

Margherita Fittipaldi, Adrien Moulin, Daniele Trippanera, Nico Augustin, Froukje van der Zwan, Laura Parisi, Hasbi Shiddiqi, and Sigurjon Jónsson

The Red Sea hosts a young (< 13 Ma) ultra-slow spreading ridge organized into right-stepping segments. The largest ridge offset, about 100 km in the N–S direction, occurs at the transition between the northern and central Red Sea and is known as the Zabargad Fracture Zone (ZFZ). However, its precise geometry and tectonic structure remain poorly determined owing to widespread Miocene evaporites that obscure basement structures. This limited knowledge prevents addressing first-order questions such as: What can we learn about the early development of large ridge offsets from the structure of the ZFZ and its relationships with inherited continental fabrics? What is the seismic hazard posed by this structure for coastal communities, and how does it relate to a reported Mw ~6.5 historical earthquake? To address these questions, we acquired new high-resolution bathymetric data of the ZFZ seafloor, performed detailed mapping of a range of different seafloor structures, and analyzed the outcome in combination with existing geophysical and geological studies. Our results indicate that the ZFZ is composed of one 50-km-long and seismically active transform fault along with smaller non-transform offsets that gradually connect to the Mabahiss Deep spreading center in the northern Red Sea. Moreover, the transform fault runs in continuity with a seismically inactive shear zone that is marked by highly deformed seafloor and extends towards the Saudi coastline before apparently connecting with an inherited Proterozoic shear zone onshore. We propose that this inactive shear zone acted as a transfer zone during the continental rifting phase of the Red Sea. We further reconstructed the early development of the ZFZ by sequentially restoring the oceanic basin to specific time periods. This reconstruction suggests that the initiation of the transform fault was delayed by a few million years relative to the onset of oceanic spreading along nearby ridge segments, an interval during which plate motion was accommodated through an evolving ridge-offset geometry initiated from the transfer zone.

How to cite: Fittipaldi, M., Moulin, A., Trippanera, D., Augustin, N., van der Zwan, F., Parisi, L., Shiddiqi, H., and Jónsson, S.: Early development of a transform fault in a young ocean basin: insights from the Zabargad Fracture Zone, Northern Red Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18425, 2026.

EGU26-19254 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Dynamics of detachment faulting at North Atlantic magma-poor rifted margins 

Irene Merino and Leila Mezri

At continent–ocean transition zones (COTs) of magma-poor rifted margins, the basement is typically shaped by highs and large domes with variable elevation and spacing. These features expose large portions of serpentinized mantle, locally intruded by variable volumes of gabbroic bodies. In these environments, the mantle is exhumed to the seafloor through detachment faulting, which promotes deep hydrothermal fluid circulation and pervasive alteration. However, how hydrothermal processes, magmatic accretion, and detachment faulting interact and evolve over geological timescales remains poorly understood. We address this problem using a 2-D geodynamic model coupled with thermodynamic calculations of water–rock interactions. The model accounts for sedimentation, magmatic accretion, and hydrothermal processes. We focus on the well-documented magma-poor Iberia margin, one of the best documented COTs, supported by extensive geophysical data and deep drilling results. Our simulations reproduce the observed basement morphology through successive episodes of detachment faulting. We find, however, that the development of multiple detachments does not necessarily take place following a flip-flop mode, in which, alternately, oppositely dipping detachments sequentially cut through their predecessors. Instead, deformation may evolve through sequential non-flipping detachment faulting, where polarity remains constant. While the flip-flop mode leads to a geologically symmetrical architecture between conjugate margins, the sequential non-flipping mode results in an asymmetric lithosphere structure, characterized by larger volumes of gabbros on one conjugate margin. The development of one mode or the other depends on the depth at which magma is partitioned across the lithosphere axis and on how faulting redistributes accreted magma and weaker serpentinized mantle. Model predictions for both symmetric (flip-flop) and asymmetric (sequential non-flipping) deformation modes closely match observations, reproducing basement morphology, P-wave velocity (Vp) structure, and the petrological architecture consistent with geological IODP samples from Iberia. This suggests that, in magma-poor settings, first-order Vp variations within the oceanic crust primarily reflect alteration paragenesis and fault geometries rather than mafic-ultramafic distinctions. Consequently, alteration may mask underlying geological differences, with a potentially non-flipping detachment mode that leads to widely spaced domes of exhumed serpentinized mantle at COTs. The choice between these modes hinges on the long-term interplay of axial magma-partitioning, detachment faulting, and hydration processes.

How to cite: Merino, I. and Mezri, L.: Dynamics of detachment faulting at North Atlantic magma-poor rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19254, 2026.

The Permo-Triassic Gondwana rift basins of Eastern India formed after the East Gondwana amalgamation, resulting from the collision of India, East Antarctica, and Australia. This study investigates the roles of longitudinal and transverse drainages in supplying Permo-Triassic sediments and delineates the sources that contributed towards sedimentation. Paleocurrent data, petrography of sandstones, heavy mineral chemistry, and monazite geochronology track the axial drainage to the Shillong-Meghalaya Complex, southwest Australia, and transverse drainage to the Chhotanagpur Gneissic Complex, East Antarctica, and Eastern Ghat Metamorphic Belt. Modal analysis of sandstones, along with the mineral chemistry of detrital rutile, tourmaline, and garnet, suggests that granitoids and metamorphic rocks are the primary sources of sediment. The detrital garnet of almandine variety exhibits maximum similarity with that of the Shillong-Meghalaya Complex, East Antarctica, and southwest Australia. The detrital tourmalines of the dravite variety show compositional similarity with the Chhotanagpur Gneissic Complex. The detrital monazites give four age populations: 500-400 Ma, 700-600 Ma, 900-800 Ma, and 1100-1000 Ma. The 900-800 Ma age population is dominant and occurs in all the formations. The 1100-1000 Ma and 500-400 Ma age populations are the second most abundant and show considerable variation in appearance. The age populations of detrital monazite from 500-400 Ma and 1100-900 Ma, as well as the similarity in garnet chemistry with the Shillong Meghalaya Granite Complex in East Antarctica and southwestern Australia, indicate that the sediment supply was dominated by longitudinal drainage during the early Permian Barakar Formation. The absence of 500-400 Ma age groups in the overlying middle Permian Barren Measures Formations suggests that supply from longitudinal drainage became subordinate. The late Permian Raniganj Formation, with the reappearance of Cambrian ages, indicates axial drainage became active again. The Triassic Panchet Formation, with age groups of 500-400 Ma, 700-600 Ma, and 1100-900 Ma, suggests that supply came from both proximal and distal sources actively. This study, therefore, establishes that the interplay of axial and transverse drainages brought sediments into the Permo-Triassic Gondwana Basins of Eastern India from a unified East Gondwana.

How to cite: Dutta, A. and Banerjee, S.: Role of axial and transverse drainages in sedimentation of the Permo-Triassic rift basins at the eastern continental margin of India: Implications for East-Gondwana reconstruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20195, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20195, 2026.

EGU26-21605 | Posters on site | TS2.1

Current and past state of the Reykjanes ridge, from Bight to Langjökull SW Iceland. Magmatic and tectonic evolution 

Armann Hoskuldsson, Fernando Martinez, Ingibjörg Jónsdóttir, and Þorvaldur Þordarson

In this presentation, we shall present results from studies of the Reykjanes Ridge (RR). RR is a continuous plate boundary extending some 1200 km from the Bight in the south to the north of Langjökull, Iceland. The boundary is oblique to the current plate motion. The RR has been mapped by multibeam techniques from the Bight fracture zone in the south to the Reykjanes peninsula. On land, however, the part of it that includes Reykjanes and extends to the Langjökull area in SW Iceland has been mapped by satellite techniques and photogrammetry. Thus, we have compiled all data for a morphometric study of its evolution. In this presentation, we shall focus on the past 1 Ma. The southernmost part of RR is characterised by a deep, well-defined rift valley, about 15 km wide, populated by en-echelon AVRs, extending to about 59° north. From there to Reykjanes (63.8° north), rift valleys are discontinuous and shallow, with densely populated and overlapping AVRs. On Reykjanes itself, the plate boundary becomes highly oblique, characterised by en-echelon fissures and AVRs, until it reaches the Hengill area (64° north). From Hengill to Langjökull (64.9° north), the system comprises shallow-to-deep rift valleys that widen to the north (13 → 30 km wide), with parallel AVRs. North of Langjökull, there is no clear evidence of RR continuation. The heading of different segments of the RR varies: from Bight to the Icelandic continental shelf at ~36°, on the continental shelf at ~50°, on the Reykjanes peninsula at ~65°, and from Hengill to its end at ~36°. At the same time, the spreading along the RR is at ~99°. The number of AVRs and thus magma production varies along the RR, being smallest in the south and increasing towards the north.

How to cite: Hoskuldsson, A., Martinez, F., Jónsdóttir, I., and Þordarson, Þ.: Current and past state of the Reykjanes ridge, from Bight to Langjökull SW Iceland. Magmatic and tectonic evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21605, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21605, 2026.

EGU26-23214 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.1

Mechanical evolution of the wide diamond-shaped Española linkage zone, Rio Grande Rift: insights from structural analysis and analogue modelling 

Nicolas Dall Asta, Yoann Denèle, Monica Hernandez Leal, Vincent Regard, Anne Frayssignes, Bastien Hermant, Stéphane Bonnet, Mael Derian, Delphine Rouby, Paul Angrand, and Mathieu Bellanger

In heterogeneous continental lithosphere, rifts propagate by growth and linkage of discrete segments. Linkage zone geometries reflect this process with different segment overlaps, kinematics, and mechanical properties. Recently, analogue and numerical models compared to natural examples (East African and West European rifts) have allowed significant progresses in understanding the localized transfer zones. Here, we focus instead on wide linkage zones in exceptionally hot crust settings, which is relevant for geothermal exploration.

The Rio Grande Rift is a relatively narrow intra-mountainous system, active since the Miocene, contemporaneous with the Basin and Range extension. Despite substantial extension, rift basins remain at high elevations (>1000 m) with inherited rift shoulders reaching up to ~3700 m. These high elevations and Moho temperatures (800-900°C), indicate significant dynamic support.

To investigate linkage kinematics and strain distribution, we compared analogue models inspired from and structural analysis from DEM-derived fault trajectories and published slip data of the Española basin, a 60-km-wide linkage zone connecting the San Luis and Albuquerque segments. We tested various model rheologies (sand-silicone ratios) and extension velocities to assess their impact on the rift architecture, strain partitioning and fault network.  Our approach aims to constrain the 3D strain field evolution in the linkage zones and highlight the role of crustal rheology and inherited structures on the linkage zone geometry.

The NE-SW trending Española basin comprises early-rift grabens and half-grabens preserved, beneath younger volcano-sedimentary deposits, as ‘embayments’ along the basin margins. Seismic data reveals a two-stage evolution. The early wide rift stage (30-15 Ma) produced distributed shallow basins above low-angle normal faults, consistent with the extension of a thermally weakened crust after the Oligocene magmatism. The late narrow-rift stage (15 Ma-present) showed higher extension rates and high-angle normal faults, with thicker and narrower basins. Española basin is bounded by the NE-SW trending Embudo and Tijeras left-lateral fault systems. Within the linkage zone, fault traces are both concave and convex, indicating a rotational strain component. Late-rift faulting forms multi-scale en-echelon patterns resulting from interaction between the N-S intra-basin faults and the oblique border faults.

Xenolith studies documented Miocene crustal rheological changes: Oligocene crustal melting produced progressive granulitization and mechanical strengthening of the lower crust, which could have caused the localization of deformation during late rifting.

Analogue sand-silicone models with a brittle-ductile transition at 5-10 km depth reproduced the Española basin architecture. The distributed deformation across then multiple N-S to NE-SW sub-basins, matching the observed alternation of narrow half-graben and graben tips forming ‘embayment’. Rotational strain in the linkage zone, produce convex-concave faults similar to those observed in the Española basin. Increasing extension velocity promotes strain localization, particularly along the NE-SW left-lateral fault, replicating the present-day strain pattern.

These results demonstrate that the Española basin formed by rift segment linkage under simple orthogonal extension with increasing strain rate and progressive strengthening of the crust. Segment propagation drove a progressive tip rotation, oblique faulting, and localized strike-slip motion. The models reveal high fault connectivity within the linkage zones, with significant implications for geothermal exploration.

How to cite: Dall Asta, N., Denèle, Y., Hernandez Leal, M., Regard, V., Frayssignes, A., Hermant, B., Bonnet, S., Derian, M., Rouby, D., Angrand, P., and Bellanger, M.: Mechanical evolution of the wide diamond-shaped Española linkage zone, Rio Grande Rift: insights from structural analysis and analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23214, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23214, 2026.

EGU26-596 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Multi-stage detachment localization and evolution of the Akapnou Forest Oceanic Core Complex, Troodos Ophiolite, Cyprus 

Marit Jeijsman, Peter Hegeman, Richard Wessels, Vasilis Symeou, and Anouk Beniest

Oceanic core complexes (OCCs) are key features of the oceanic crust, yet their geometry and formation remain poorly constrained as the oceanic crust is largely submerged. While the Troodos Ophiolite is one of the most well-preserved ophiolites in the world, the tectonic origin of the Southern Troodos Fault Zone (STFZ) remains contested, with interpretations suggesting either a leaky transform fault zone or an OCC setting. This study investigates the kinematics and structure of the tectonic contacts surrounding the Akapnou Forest Complex (AFC) in the STFZ by field mapping and drone photogrammetric models. Fieldwork reveals that domed mantle material, interpreted as an OCC, is bounded by a high-angle serpentinite shear zone (HASSZ), interpreted as the segment end of a mid-oceanic ridge, and multiple low-angle serpentinite shear zones (LASSZs), interpreted as detachment faults. The LASSZs have a consistent top-to-WNW movement. Three distinct LASSZs were identified, suggesting the detachment system evolved through multiple stages. Initial detachment localized along the ultramafic cumulates that subsequently isostatically folded, causing the detachment to step up to a shallower rheological horizon through the sheeted dike-gabbro transition. This younger detachment underwent multiple locking events, creating rafted blocks of the hanging wall. Laterally, fault locking may have varied. Lower friction closer to the segment end allowed for continuous slip, facilitating mantle exhumation to the surface. We conclude that the AFC represents a fossil OCC, and the derived conceptual model provides key insights into the multi-stage dynamics of mantle exhumation along sequentially localized detachment zones.

How to cite: Jeijsman, M., Hegeman, P., Wessels, R., Symeou, V., and Beniest, A.: Multi-stage detachment localization and evolution of the Akapnou Forest Oceanic Core Complex, Troodos Ophiolite, Cyprus, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-596, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-596, 2026.

EGU26-986 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Understanding crustal strain and seismicity in normal faults and shear zones 

Elif Nihan Çavdar, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Sascha Brune, and Ömer Bodur

The Western Anatolia–Aegean region is characterized by active extension and well-documented seismicity. Yet the relationships among fault geometries, the depth distribution of earthquakes, and crustal strain patterns remain poorly understood. In particular, the existence of two outward-dipping low-angle normal faults in the central Menderes Massif poses a challenge to current geodynamic and seismological interpretations. In this study, we investigate the evolution of low-angle ductile–brittle shear zones using high-resolution viscoplastic thermo-mechanical forward models. Employing the finite-element code ASPECT, we simulate the initiation and development of shear zones in extensional settings, explicitly coupling surface processes and syn-extensional sedimentation to assess how progressive sediment loading may influence fault evolution. The model domain spans 500 km in width and 150 km in depth, and we explore two sets of models that vary in extension velocity and crustal layering. Our results show that shear zones initiate as high-angle (50°–55°) structures and progressively rotate to lower angles (30°–35°) as deformation localizes, suggesting that low-angle fault geometries may arise through time-dependent processes rather than pre-existing configurations. The models further indicate that the brittle–ductile transition extends into the upper portions of the lower crust, consistent with observed seismicity depths of 20–25 km beneath the Gediz Graben. By integrating model predictions with regional seismicity patterns, this work provides new constraints on the mechanical stratification and fault-system evolution of extended terranes, offering improved insight into active faulting and the characterization of seismogenic zones.

How to cite: Çavdar, E. N., Göğüş, O. H., Brune, S., and Bodur, Ö.: Understanding crustal strain and seismicity in normal faults and shear zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-986, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-986, 2026.

Over the past decade, high-quality industrial 3D seismic surveys acquired along both the northern (Lei et al., 2018; Zhang et al., 2020) and southern (Legeay et al., 2024) rifted margins of the South China Sea (SCS) have imaged and documented the development of low-angle normal faults (<30°) locally accommodating the formation of metamorphic core complexes. Such structures had previously been recognized only in field analogues, such as the Aegean region or the Basin and Range Province. In this contribution, we present new high-resolution 3D seismic data that enable us to map, observe, and characterize the tectono-sedimentary evolution of hyper-extended rift basins associated with crustal thinning and deformation.

The SCS exhibits a wide rift domain characterized by large-scale crustal boudinage, expressed as a series of hyper-extended basins separated by basement highs. Rifting in the SCS initiated during the early Cenozoic and evolved with a NE–SW-oriented oceanic propagation between 32 and 16 Ma. This extensional event overprinted a pre-existing Andean-type orogenic system, defined by a Mesozoic magmatic arc extending from Borneo to Korea above the west-dipping Pacific subduction zone. A major tectonic reorganization occurred during the Late Cretaceous following the collision of the Luconia block with the active Eurasian margin. This pre-rift configuration resulted in a highly heterogeneous basement composition, including remnants of the magmatic arc, the Luconia block, and intervening thrust wedges.

Our observations across several hyper-extended rift basins from both the northern and southern SCS margins highlight the three-dimensional geometry of low-angle fault systems characterized by corrugated and domal morphologies. The hanging walls are composed of extensional allochthonous blocks consisting of pre-rift sediments and basement rocks, while the syn-rift infill is organized into alternating wedges bounded by antithetic faults relative to the main low-angle detachment systems.

At depth, the footwalls display shallow-dipping seismic reflections interpreted as reactivated thrust wedges that likely facilitated the development of low-angle extensional structures.

The exhumation of deeper crustal levels is spatially correlated with zones of maximum displacement along the normal faults, which locally exhibit domal geometries and evidence for sheath folding.

How to cite: Ringenbach, J.-C. R. and Mohn, G.: 3D Seismic observations into the Development of Extensional Low-Angle Normal Faults and Metamorphic Core Complexes: South China Sea, Malaysia , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3541, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3541, 2026.

EGU26-7952 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Tectonic exhumation of the Corinth Rift (Greece): preliminary results from low-temperature carbonate luminescence thermochronology 

Giorgio Arriga, Francesca Rossetti, Maria Giuditta Fellin, Silvia Crosetto, Paolo Ballato, Junjie Zhang, Sumiko Tsukamoto, and Claudio Faccenna

Understanding how continental rifts propagate requires resolving the interactions between tectonic and geodynamic processes operating over different timescales. The Corinth Rift in southern Greece provides a natural laboratory in which active subduction, back-arc extension, and inherited crustal structures interact within a rapidly evolving continental rift system. The rift architecture is characterized by shallow-dipping low-angle normal faults (LANFs), such as the Chelmos Fault, in the south, and a series of high-angle normal faults (HANFs) that developed in the hanging walls of the LANFs toward the north. Stratigraphic and volcanic records suggest two main rifting phases: an early phase between ~5.0 and ~2.0 Ma and a younger phase from ~2.0 Ma to the present. However, the timing and propagation of fault development remain poorly constrained due to the lack of direct tectonic and exhumation data from carbonate rocks. Here, we apply low-temperature carbonate thermochronology to footwall samples from major faults to quantitatively constrain tectonic exhumation across the Corinth Rift. Our preliminary results suggest that rifting initiated during the Early Pliocene with activity along low-angle detachments and subsequently migrated northward to distributed high-angle normal faulting since the Early Pleistocene. Consistent with stratigraphic and volcanic constraints, our data support a two-stage rift evolution and provide independent constraints on the timing and spatial propagation of faulting. More broadly, this study demonstrates the potential of carbonate thermochronology as a quantitative tool for constraining tectonic exhumation in carbonate-dominated rift systems worldwide.

How to cite: Arriga, G., Rossetti, F., Fellin, M. G., Crosetto, S., Ballato, P., Zhang, J., Tsukamoto, S., and Faccenna, C.: Tectonic exhumation of the Corinth Rift (Greece): preliminary results from low-temperature carbonate luminescence thermochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7952, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7952, 2026.

EGU26-8084 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Co-seismic selective rock pulverization in the footwall of a Miocene low-angle normal fault 

Simone Masoch and Christie Rowe

Large-magnitude earthquakes capable of rupturing to the surface have rarely occurred along detachment faults or low-angle normal faults (LANFs), leaving their seismic potential and related co-seismic damage poorly constrained. Here we document the presence of pulverized rocks formed during final slip stages of the Miocene Waterman Hills detachment (Mojave extensional belt, California).

The Waterman Hills detachment accommodated ~40-50 km of top-to-NE extension and juxtaposes syn-extensional Miocene volcanic and sedimentary sequences onto syn-extensional granodiorites intruded into amphibolite-facies meta-sedimentary and meta-igneous rocks. Early bivergent doming of the metamorphic core complex initiated at amphibolite-facies conditions and localized into NE-dipping mylonites in the greenschist facies, coevally with intrusion and stretching of the granodioritic pluton at ~7-10 km depths. Progressive strain localization led to greenschist-facies mylonitic and ultramylonitic horizons that were overprinted by brittle faulting. The latter includes: (i) gently-dipping (≤30°) anastomosing foliated cataclasites and breccias cemented by chlorite + quartz + epidote ± calcite ± albite, crosscut by (ii) pseudotachylytes and tourmaline-cemented ultracataclasites and fault surfaces, crosscut by (iii) steeply-dipping (>60°) calcite-hematite-cemented faults and veins. The tourmaline- and calcite-cemented faults crosscut both the footwall and hanging wall rocks, pinning the current juxtaposition during final stages of the detachment slip.

Patchy meter-thick lenses of pulverized siliceous rocks are found in the uppermost ~11 m of the footwall damage zone and show very little evidence of post-pulverization displacement. Pulverization occurred at the latest, shallowest stage of detachment faulting, only in the stiffest, fine-grained siliceous footwall lithologies, consistent with the inference that co-seismic tensile stress perturbation due to propagating seismic ruptures caused rock pulverization. The pulverized rocks recorded repeated events of extensional fracturing and healing.

We interpret these pulverized rocks to have recorded the cumulative effects of multiple MW 5-6 earthquakes propagating to depths ≤ 2 km, in agreement with experimental constraints on dynamic rock pulverization. Our discovery represents the first documentation of dynamic off-fault damage in the footwall of a LANF and demonstrates that shallow portions of LANFs can locally experience co-seismic stress conditions sufficient to induce pulverization, despite their unfavorable orientation for slip.

How to cite: Masoch, S. and Rowe, C.: Co-seismic selective rock pulverization in the footwall of a Miocene low-angle normal fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8084, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8084, 2026.

EGU26-8477 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Friction or fiction: seismic indicators along the Okanagan Valley Shear Zone (Western Canada) 

Olivia Rolfe and Renelle Dubosq

Paleo-seismic indicators, such as pseudotachylytes and ultracataclasites, provide direct insight into the weakening mechanisms that promote deformation along shear zones during the co- and interseismic cycles. These structures are particularly relevant along low-angle normal faults, where the fault geometry necessitates efficient weakening mechanisms to enable seismic slip. The Okanagan Valley Shear Zone (OVSZ) is a crustal-scale low-angle normal fault that facilitated Eocene exhumation of the Shuswap metamorphic core complex, the largest core complex in North America. Although previous work has reported the presence of pseudotachylyte veins along the detachment, their origin and significance have yet to be investigated. We conducted fieldwork at a central exposure of the OVSZ footwall in the southern Okanagan Valley (British Columbia, Canada), where amphibolite and quartzofeldspathic gneisses display a strong WNW-trending stretching lineation and S-C and S-C-C' fabrics indicating top-to-W kinematics. Apparent pseudotachylyte veins hosted within the gneiss were identified and sampled for 2D microstructural and geochemical characterization. These analyses provide the foundation for evaluating the deformation mechanisms governing strain localization along the OVSZ. In outcrop, the "pseudotachylytes" occur as thick (5 mm–16 cm), laterally continuous layers of black, glassy material that are sub-parallel to the host-rock foliation (~069/14) and lack offshoot injection veins or vein networks typical of pseudotachylytes. Preliminary scanning electron microscopy (SEM) imaging and energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) of the veins reveal an ultra-fine-grained matrix (<0.5µm–5µm) primarily composed of anhedral biotite (~65%), quartz (~22%), and plagioclase (~13%) grains, with curved to irregular grain boundaries. The vein matrix exhibits a strong foliation defined by aligned biotite grains. This foliation wraps around heavily rounded, equant to elongated host-rock porphyroclasts (30 µm–2.2 mm) of plagioclase and quartz, with minor apatite and monazite. Many plagioclase porphyroclasts display δ- and σ-type mantles that record a top-to-the-west sense of shear. Bands of dynamically recrystallized quartz (grain diameters of <10–120 µm; band widths of 45–220 µm) commonly form quarter fold structures around feldspar porphyroclasts. Contacts between the veins and host rock range from sharp boundaries, locally marked by recrystallized quartz bands (up to 0.74 mm), to transitional zones characterized by progressive grain-size reduction from ~1.8 mm to ~2 µm toward the vein boundary. Collectively, these preliminary microstructural observations are more consistent with ultramylonitic layers produced by intense localized ductile deformation than with frictional melts. These results suggest that slip along low-angle normal faults may involve limited frictional heating and instead be accommodated predominantly by solid-state processes, producing seismic indicators that differ from classical pseudotachylyte structures associated with steeper faults. 

How to cite: Rolfe, O. and Dubosq, R.: Friction or fiction: seismic indicators along the Okanagan Valley Shear Zone (Western Canada), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8477, 2026.

EGU26-10064 * | Posters on site | TS2.3 | Highlight

How detachments connect shallow and deep crust during mass redistribution in orogens 

Donna Whitney, Christian Teyssier, and Patrice Rey

The thermal, physical, and chemical processes of detachment faults profoundly influence the dynamics of continental lithosphere far beyond the fault zones. The conditions and timing of deformation in detachment fault zones are therefore important to investigate in order to evaluate how these faults are dynamically linked to tectonic processes over a wide range of spatial scales, laterally and vertically.

Detachments are exhuming structures in which the amount of exhumation accommodated by a particular fault ranges from a few to tens of kilometers. This magnitude depends primarily on the total extension, its spatial distribution/localization, and the buoyancy of the exhumed crust. Exhumation-related deformation is accompanied by (hydro)thermal processes that may be recorded in the composition and zoning of minerals such as quartz and micas, particularly in lithologies such as quartzites that may preserve a diachronous record of deformation in incompletely-overprinted domains. These minerals provide pressure-temperature-time-deformation information, as well as serving as geochemical tracers of syn-tectonic fluid-rock interaction. Excellent examples are the detachment-footwall quartzites of metamorphic core complexes (mcc) in the North American Cordillera. Results of integrated microstructure, thermobarometry, geochemistry, and thermochronology studies track the conditions and timing of deformation during exhumation and cooling. In cases of detachment faults bounding exhumed deep crust, footwall rocks display a sharp metamorphic gradient caused by a combination of thinning and shearing. Metamorphic conditions and paths may reflect exhumation trajectories rather than maximum temperature/depth; this is supported by numerical models that predict that rocks from similar pre-extension depths can be exhumed during extension to create an apparent progressive metamorphic sequence from detachment faults into mcc footwalls.

Integrated studies from nature and numerical experiments also give insights at a larger scale, indicating that regions of thickened continental crust flow towards regions of thinner crust, driving contraction in the latter. Formation of detachment faults may be driven actively by extension of the lithosphere and/or by gravitational crustal flow away from the orogenic core and towards the foreland, where coeval thrusting may occur. In this case also, pressure-temperature-time-deformation studies coupled with geochemistry provide insights into the mechanisms, conditions, and timing/rates of mass redistribution in orogens. The significance of this phenomenon is indicated by the prevalence in orogens of coeval domains of extension (detachment faulting / metamorphic core complexes) and contraction (fold-and-thrust belts).

How to cite: Whitney, D., Teyssier, C., and Rey, P.: How detachments connect shallow and deep crust during mass redistribution in orogens, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10064, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10064, 2026.

EGU26-10273 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Formation and dismantling of rider blocks related to low-angle normal faults in rifted margins 

Leïla Morzelle, Geoffroy Mohn, Julie Tugend, Peter Betlem, and Jean-Claude Ringenbach

Rider blocks (or extensional allochthonous blocks) represent small blocks of pre-rift sediments and/or basement rocks transported over long-offset extensional fault zones. They are often related to low-angle normal faults (LANFs), with dips of less than 30°, and are commonly observed in post orogenic context and in rifted margins. However, the mechanisms controlling the formation, transport, and dismantling of rider blocks along LANFs remain poorly constrained. This raises critical questions regarding the origin of the blocks (hanging wall versus footwall), the influence of rheology, their three-dimensional geometry, and their evolution during extension. Addressing these issues is essential for improving our understanding of extensional processes, including continental crust thinning and the overall architecture, tectonic and sedimentary evolution of sedimentary basins.

Here, we present new observations from both active and fossil extensional systems: southern South China Sea rifted margin offshore Malaysia, and a fossil analogue preserved in Err and Bernina LANF systems within the lower Austroalpine nappes of the Central Alps, investigated through new fieldwork approaches.

To bridge the scale gap between seismic and field observations, we created Digital Outcrop Models (DOMs) in the Err and Bernina units, covering an area of 42.925 km². These DOMs are based on Structure-from-Motion photogrammetry and constitute the FATDOM database, which is openly available under FAIR (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable) conditions. The high resolution of the 12 DOMs enables centimetre- to decimetre-scale analysis, allowing detailed mapping of the spatial evolution of LANFs and the tectono-sedimentary architecture of the overlying rider blocks.

Based on these new observations, we present a new classification of rider blocks and identify three different types defined by their size, geometry, and mode of formation. The first type consists of blocks composed of pre-rift sediments that are passively transported along the LANFs and locally dismembered. The second type, either hanging-wall or footwall derived, preserves both basement and pre-rift sediments. Finally, the third type corresponds to break-away blocks in-between two LANF systems. For each type, we provide a detailed interpretation of their internal structure, including lithological variations, deformation patterns, and fault architecture across multiple scales. These field-based observations are further illustrated by examples from 3D reflection seismic data from the southern South China Sea rifted margin.

Our iterative comparison between present-day rifted margins and fossil analogues enables us to propose a conceptual model for the formation of rider blocks related to LANFs, applicable to extensional systems worldwide (e.g., Basin and range, Papua New Guinea…), and providing new insights into the dynamics of LANFs.

How to cite: Morzelle, L., Mohn, G., Tugend, J., Betlem, P., and Ringenbach, J.-C.: Formation and dismantling of rider blocks related to low-angle normal faults in rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10273, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10273, 2026.

EGU26-14895 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.3

Complex Kinematics During Exhumation of the Atlantis Massif: New Paleomagnetic Evidence from Hole U1601C 

Ethan Lopes, Sonia Tikoo, Andrew Parsons, Rebecca Kuehn, Barbara John, and Jeremy Deans

Large-offset oceanic detachment faults play a key role in accommodating asymmetric plate spreading at slow and ultraslow mid-ocean ridges. IODP Expedition 399 drilled a 1268-m-deep borehole (Hole U1601C; 30°N, Mid-Atlantic Ridge) into the footwall of an oceanic detachment near the southern wall of Atlantis Massif, recovering variably serpentinized peridotites (~70%) with lesser gabbro (~30%). In contrast, Hole U1309D (IODP Expeditions 304/305), drilled ~5 km to the north toward the segment center, predominantly recovering gabbros (99%).

Previous paleomagnetic analyses of reoriented, declination-constrained samples from Hole U1309D (Morris et al., 2009) document ≥46±6° of anticlockwise footwall rotation around a horizontal, ridge–parallel axis; the majority of this rotation occurred after the C1r.1r chron (i.e. within the past 781k years). The magnitude of this rotation is consistent with predictions from conventional single-axis flexural rotation models that use the average site inclination (–38° for U1309D) as input. In contrast, our new paleomagnetic analyses of Hole U1601C show characteristic remanent magnetizations with inclinations that match the site-specific expected geomagnetic field at the time of magnetization acquisition (~ –49°, independent of rock type). Applying single-axis rotation models to these U1601C inclinations implies minimal horizontal-axis rotation (~<20°), despite the site lying in the same footwall beneath the same detachment surface, some 5 km from U1309D. The consistent inclinations recorded by serpentinized peridotites and gabbros at U1601C constrain the timing of deformation, indicating that <20° rotation occurred below ~350 °C, after formation of magnetite during serpentinization, and little to no rotation between gabbroic remanence acquisition (~580°C), and later magnetite-forming serpentinization.

These contrasting inclination results (U1309D vs U1601C) indicate that both sites are not easily explained by a simple, single rotation axis, and instead imply that vertical transport dominated footwall exhumation at U1601C. A vertically dominated component may reflect the mechanical influence of the adjacent transform fault, which could act to shallow rotation axes. Together, these paleomagnetic findings point to spatially heterogeneous structural evolution within a single oceanic core complex. Possible structural frameworks and evolutionary pathways for the Atlantis Massif will be discussed.

How to cite: Lopes, E., Tikoo, S., Parsons, A., Kuehn, R., John, B., and Deans, J.: Complex Kinematics During Exhumation of the Atlantis Massif: New Paleomagnetic Evidence from Hole U1601C, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14895, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14895, 2026.

The classical two end-member classification of continental rifting (magma-rich vs. magma-poor) fails to explain the atypical thermo-mechanical conditions of the Qiongdongnan Basin (QDNB), located southeast of Hainan Island along the northern margin of the South China Sea. The basin is surrounded by Late Cenozoic magmatism commonly linked to deep-seated mantle upwelling associated with the putative Hainan mantle plume. The QDNB exhibits pronounced west–east variations in deformation style, reflecting strong spatial heterogeneity in lithospheric strength. These characteristics suggest that time-dependent mantle-lithosphere interactions played a critical role in controlling rift evolution.

Integrated analyses of multiple seismic profiles reveal strong along-strike contrasts in structural style and subsidence history within the QDNB. Following the onset of South China Sea break-up in the early Oligocene (~32-30 Ma), the QDNB rifted diachronously from east to west and subsequently transitioned into the post-rift stage in the same direction, culminating at ~23 Ma. The western QDNB displays a strongly asymmetric architecture with a mid-crustal detachment system and records a relatively late onset of rapid subsidence at ~5.5 Ma. In contrast, the eastern QDNB is characterized by a more symmetric structure approaching complete continental rupture, accompanied by an earlier phase of rapid subsidence at ~10.5 Ma. These contrasting detachment styles and subsidence histories indicate distinct thermo-mechanical regimes, with rapid extension and cooling promoting lower-crustal embrittlement in the east, whereas more prolonged extension under longer-lived thermal weakening conditions maintained ductile lower-crustal behavior in the west.

To test these interpretations quantitatively, we perform a series of two-dimensional thermo-mechanical numerical models that explicitly incorporate westward migration of a secondary mantle plume associated with the Hainan mantle plume together with slab-pull forces from subduction of the Proto-South China Sea. By systematically varying plume migration contributions, the models evaluate its relative role in generating along-strike heterogeneity in extension style, subsidence history, and lower-crustal rheology within the QDNB. The modelling results highlight that plume migration exerts a first-order control on the thermal field of the QDNB, providing a key mechanism for the observed non-uniform lithospheric extension.

How to cite: Li, C., Koptev, A., Pons, M., and Brune, S.: Non-uniform lithospheric extension of the Qiongdongnan Basin driven by Hainan mantle plume migration: Insights from thermo-mechanical 2D modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15610, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15610, 2026.

EGU26-17121 | Posters on site | TS2.3

Emergent Low-Angle Detachments in 3D Transtension: Influence of Crustal Inheritance and Strike-Slip Partitioning 

Laetitia Le Pourhiet, Anthony Jourdon, Alexis Plunder, and Mathis Bergogne

Low-angle normal faults (LANFs) and extensional detachments commonly nucleate and evolve within complex three-dimensional strain fields, especially where strike-slip motion interacts with extension in post-orogenic settings. In many orogens (Norway, the Aegean, Turkey, Variscan Europe), field evidence shows that transtensional transfer zones exert a first-order control on the geometry of metamorphic core complexes and on the activation of low-angle shear zones. Despite this, the mechanics allowing LANFs to initiate, rotate, and exhume deep crustal rocks in oblique strike-slip systems remain poorly constrained, and existing numerical studies rarely allow detachment localisation to emerge without kinematic prescription.

We present new three-dimensional thermo-mechanical models that track the spontaneous development of LANFs and metamorphic core complexes in transtensional right-lateral systems. Boundary conditions impose only far-field oblique motion; the location and orientation of strike-slip faults and low-angle detachments are not prescribed but arise from crustal rheology and stress evolution. We test three end-member crustal architectures capturing different forms of tectonic inheritance: a homogeneous reference column (REF), a vertically heterogeneous but continuous Buckling column, and a Nappe Stack column containing a weak décollement inherited from crustal-scale nappe stacking.

The models reveal that tectonic inheritance exerts the primary control on LANF initiation and MCC geometry in 3D transtension. Nappe Stack configurations produce large low-angle detachments and a-type metamorphic domes with significant exhumation, whereas Buckling configurations generate oblique wide rifts with incomplete exhumation, and REF architectures form non-detached spreading domes. These results show that the evolution of LANFs and detachment systems in transtensional environments strongly depends on inherited crustal layering, the 3D strain field, and the degree of strike-slip partitioning.

How to cite: Le Pourhiet, L., Jourdon, A., Plunder, A., and Bergogne, M.: Emergent Low-Angle Detachments in 3D Transtension: Influence of Crustal Inheritance and Strike-Slip Partitioning, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17121, 2026.

EGU26-19229 | Posters on site | TS2.3

3D seismic anatomy of a low angle normal fault in the southern South China Sea rifted margin 

Geoffroy Mohn and Jean-Claude Ringenbach

This study investigates the fault zones of a low-angle extensional structure along the southern South China Sea (SCS) rifted margin. The SCS in Southeast Asia is the best-known marginal basin. It is characterized by a V-shaped oceanic domain formed by seafloor spreading propagating from northwest to southeast between the earliest Oligocene and middle Miocene. Rifting produced broad margins (>600 km) with hyper-extended basins exhibiting varying degrees of crustal thinning. Our study focuses on the southern edge of Dangerous Grounds, in the proximal domain of the southern SCS margin, at its transition to the Sabah Trough.

High-resolution 3D seismic data reveal a well-defined top-basement low-angle normal fault zone. The continental basement preserves evidence of a former orogenic wedge characterized by succession of shallow dipping reflectors similar to thrust sheets. Although not drilled, this geometrical relationship is consistent with imbricated thrust sheets of metasediments likely associated with the Yanshan orogen.

The fault surface exhibits pronounced corrugations with wavelengths of 500m-1 km and a fault zone thickness of up to several 500-700m meters based on seismic resolution. Seismic reflections immediately beneath the fault surface show shear zones of variable thickness with phacoidal blocks, analogous to structures observed in oceanic core complexes.

Overlying the fault surface, we identify dismembered blocks ranging from tens of meters to kilometers in size. They are interpreted as basement material scrapped from the underlying basement made of imbricated thrust sheets. These “rider blocks” are associated with seismic facies consistent with breccias, forming a discontinuous cover over the fault plane. Breccias are interpreted in two categories: mechanical breccias dragged as a tail downdip of the allochthons and classical sedimentary breccias associated with the fault scarps.

These observations provide new insights into the geometry, kinematics, and lateral variability of low-angle normal fault systems, with implications for the evolution of hyper-extended rifted margins.

How to cite: Mohn, G. and Ringenbach, J.-C.: 3D seismic anatomy of a low angle normal fault in the southern South China Sea rifted margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19229, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19229, 2026.

A significant portion of deformation accommodated during continent–continent collision is localized within mechanically weak domains, particularly those inherited from earlier tectonic phases. While previous studies have highlighted the role of rift-inherited thermal and structural heterogeneities in controlling collision dynamics, the mechanical strength of the continental crust itself is expected to exert a first-order control on crustal accretion, burial, and exhumation processes. In particular, variations in crustal strength may strongly influence the pressure–temperature (P–T) evolution of accreted continental material during collision.

In this study, I investigate the effect of continental crustal strength on the thermo-mechanical evolution of accreted crust using two-dimensional geodynamic numerical modelling. I employ the finite-difference code Norma, using a fully staggered Eulerian grid coupled with a Lagrangian marker field to track material properties and P–T histories. The numerical experiments consist of an initial phase of lithospheric extension, followed by tectonic quiescence and subsequent convergence leading to continental collision. All experiments use an identical rifted margin architecture and thermal setup, while systematically varying the rheological strength of the continental crust.

The parametric study explores a range of crustal strength profiles depending on published crustal flow laws, thereby isolating the mechanical effect of crustal rheology on collision dynamics. The resulting models reveal pronounced differences in deformation style, crustal accretion mechanisms, and P–T paths of accreted crustal slivers. Weaker crust promotes distributed deformation, enhanced crustal thickening, and prolonged residence at mid- to lower-crustal pressures and temperatures, whereas stronger crust favors localized accretion, steeper burial trajectories, and more efficient exhumation along discrete shear zones.

How to cite: Ruh, J. B.: The role of continental crustal strength in controlling deformation and P–T evolution during collision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3847, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3847, 2026.

EGU26-10963 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.4

The influence of pre-collisional rift linkage on mountain building – a 3D geodynamic modelling study 

Sebastian G. Wolf, Ritske S. Huismans, Josep Anton Muñoz, and Dave A. May

It is well documented that many mountain belts - such as the Pyrenees, European Alps, Greater Caucasus, or Atlas - form through inversion of pre-collisional extensional basins. Looking in plan-view at these mountain belts, we observe along-strike variations in topography, orientation, and deformation patterns. However, the relationship between these characteristics and the inherited extensional architecture remains poorly known. Here, we use the 3D thermo-mechanical geodynamic model pTatin3D coupled to the landscape evolution model FastScape to investigate how pre-collisional rift-linkage influences rift inversion and mountain belt evolution. Presenting numerical models and a work minimization analysis, we show that rift basin offset and pre-existing weaknesses determine mountain belt evolution, which can be divided into a juvenile and mature stage. In the juvenile stage, extensional structures are reactivated, creating an orogen that resembles the rift structure. During the mature stage, the evolution depends on the subduction polarity, which is controlled by basin offset and existing structural weaknesses. Same polarity subduction retains the inherited basin configuration and creates an orogen with continuous high topography. Opposite polarity subduction overprints the pre-existing rift configuration and creates a discontinuous mountain belt with a characteristic topographic low in the transition zone. Comparison with the Greater Caucasus, Atlas, and Pyrenees suggests that the Greater Caucasus is a mature same-polarity orogen, the Atlas is a juvenile inversion orogen where subduction polarity plays no significant role, and the Pyrenees are a mature same-polarity orogen in which lateral variabilty is overprinted by differences in the amount of crustal shortening. Based on our results, we propose a simple diagnostic framework that establishes a direct link between topography and deep lithospheric structures, showing how extensional inheritance influences mountain building on Earth.

Associated article:
Wolf, S.G., Huismans, R.S., Muñoz, J.A., May, D.A. (2026) Rift linkage and inheritance determine collisional mountain belt evolution. Nature Communications 17, 84. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-66695-8

How to cite: Wolf, S. G., Huismans, R. S., Muñoz, J. A., and May, D. A.: The influence of pre-collisional rift linkage on mountain building – a 3D geodynamic modelling study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10963, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10963, 2026.

EGU26-14081 | Posters on site | TS2.4 | Highlight

The Role of Rift Structure on the Contractional Deformation of Magma-Poor Rifted Margins: Insights from the Reactivated Iberian Atlantic Margins 

Patricia Cadenas, Gianreto Manatschal, Gabriela Fernández-Viejo, J. Kim Welford, João C. Duarte, and Luis Somoza

Intraplate lithospheric contractional deformation followed by subduction and continent collision affect oceanic basins and rifted margins during a complete cycle of positive tectonic inversion. Magma-poor rifted margins, in particular, display significant compositional and structural contrasts from continent to ocean that strongly influence the distribution of tectonic structures, especially during the early stages of contractional deformation that precede and/or accompany subduction initiation. The Mesozoic magma-poor Iberian Atlantic margins uniquely recorded contractional lithospheric deformation and aborted, incipient subduction in the Bay of Biscay during the Alpine Orogeny, enabling the investigation of the influence of inherited rift structures in governing the type and spatial distribution of contractional structures. Using seismic images, we map contractional tectonic structures, basement domains, extensional faults and rift basins along the North and West Iberian margins to analyse the rift parameters that conditioned deformation distribution and localisation, with particular emphasis on thrust emplacement.

Along the North Iberian margin, we identified three overlapped multi-stage Mesozoic rift systems that accommodated distinctive types of contractional structures, amplifying the inherited margin segmentation. Halokynetic-related structures developed within a diffuse rift system, whereas mild inversion of pre-existing extensional faults and the formation of reverse faults deforming the sedimentary cover occurred in a transtensional rift system. In contrast, thrusting developed distinctly within a hyperextended rift, consisting of two segments. Continentward-dipping thrusts that sole out in the pre-rift sediments and in the basement, along with inverted oceanward-dipping extensional faults, affected thinned continental crust. Continentward-dipping thrusts deformed and decoupled in the deeper transitional basement, consisting of highly thinned crust and exhumed serpentinized mantle, resulting in basement duplication and thickening. We mapped large thrusts that caused basement and sediment uplift, erosion, and landward backtilting, as well as large thrusts that produced erosion in the frontal part of the thrust sheet. The former are confined to regions of sharp top-basement deepening, suggesting significant crustal thickness variations, while the second are localised in zones of basement-structure changes that may correspond to transitions between different basement types. Distributed thrusts, however, internally deformed the upper part of ultra-thinned transitional basement and soled out at highly reflective levels that may correspond to relicts of ductile lower crust or serpentinized levels within the exhumed mantle. The West Iberian margin exhibits comparable patterns of reverse-fault formation and pre-existing faults reactivation, with extensional faults reactivated within thinned continental crust, and large, newly formed landward- and oceanward-dipping thrusts deforming the transitional basement. Our results show that rift segmentation conditions the type of reactivation along magma-poor rifted margins. Segment boundaries, together with internal variations in crustal thickness and the structure of weak transitional basement along hyperextended rift systems, localise large thrusts that may accommodate significant and potentially underestimated intraplate contractional deformation.  

How to cite: Cadenas, P., Manatschal, G., Fernández-Viejo, G., Welford, J. K., C. Duarte, J., and Somoza, L.: The Role of Rift Structure on the Contractional Deformation of Magma-Poor Rifted Margins: Insights from the Reactivated Iberian Atlantic Margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14081, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14081, 2026.

EGU26-14841 | Posters on site | TS2.4

Rift inheritance controls ramp-dominated thrusting and Quaternary normal-fault geometry in the Umbria–Marche Apennines (Italy 

Matteo Pedini, Stefano Mazzoli, Pietro Paolo Pierantoni, Federico Cella, Claudio Di Celma, and Miller Zambrano

Continental collision commonly overprints rifted continental margins, such that inherited extensional architecture and mechanical stratigraphy exert first-order controls on strain partitioning during shortening and on the structural pathways exploited during subsequent extension. The Umbria–Marche sector of the Northern Apennines constitutes a well-constrained natural laboratory for addressing these issues, as Neogene shortening of the Adria passive-margin multilayer produced a fold-and-thrust belt that was later dissected by Quaternary normal faulting.

We integrate field structural constraints with regional seismic interpretation tied to boreholes, balanced and restored cross-sections, gravity modelling, and 3D structural modelling. We further quantify fault-system kinematics using along-strike length–displacement profiles and displacement–length scaling derived from the 3D framework. This integrated workflow constrains shortening partitioning between the sedimentary cover and the upper crust and assesses the extent to which inherited rift structures and stratigraphic thickness variations governed thrust segmentation and the subsequent extensional overprint.

Our reconstruction indicates a ramp-dominated contractional style. Shortening was mainly accommodated on moderately dipping thrust ramps that cut through the sedimentary succession and link downwards into the upper crust, without requiring large displacements along a laterally continuous basal décollement within – or at the base of – the sedimentary cover. Thrust-related folding and progressive ramp linkage generated pronounced along-strike segmentation, while shortening was distributed between thrust slip, associated folding, and subsidiary distributed deformation. Along-strike variability is systematic and reflects the interaction between inherited Mesozoic extensional discontinuities and lateral stratigraphic heterogeneity, which preconditioned ramp nucleation, guided linkage pathways, and modulated cover–basement coupling during Neogene shortening. This framework reconciles surface structures with deep crustal architecture independently supported by gravity constraints and is consistent with progressive cover–upper crust coupling and strain localisation within a mechanically heterogeneous carbonate–siliciclastic multilayer.

Quaternary extension is expressed by segmented, high-angle normal fault systems that dissect the pre-existing thrust stack and penetrate the upper crust. Their 3D geometry and segmentation indicate that extension is superposed on – but does not represent a kinematic reversal of – contractional structures. Cross-cutting relationships document limited systematic reactivation of thrust faults under extension, whereas extensional structures are primarily guided by inherited crustal anisotropies and mechanical layering.

Overall, the Umbria–Marche Apennines show how rift-related inheritance promotes ramp-dominated thrusting and segmented fold-and-thrust belt development, while also conditioning the localisation and segmentation of late-orogenic normal faults within a mechanically layered, anisotropic crustal architecture.

How to cite: Pedini, M., Mazzoli, S., Pierantoni, P. P., Cella, F., Di Celma, C., and Zambrano, M.: Rift inheritance controls ramp-dominated thrusting and Quaternary normal-fault geometry in the Umbria–Marche Apennines (Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14841, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14841, 2026.

EGU26-18797 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.4

Force changes in response to fault growth and out-of-sequence thrusting in brittle compressional analogue models 

Joris Didden, Ehsan Kosari, and Ernst Willingshofer

Much of our current understanding of fold-and-thrust belt (FTB) structure and evolution is based on the critical taper theory. Even though this concept successfully explains the first-order relationship between FTB dynamics and shape via certain physical parameters, it does not account for transient force changes associated with the FTB's internal dynamics, including lateral fault growth or out-of-sequence thrusting. We implement a novel measurement technique to analogue modelling that uses an array of five force sensors aligned at the backstop to characterize the evolution of force. Combined with optical data that monitors surface deformation, this approach provides a methodological framework for capturing second-order force variations associated with non-coaxial deformation within FTBs.

This novel approach enables the prediction of lateral thrust fault growth prior to surface emergence and of out-of-sequence reactivation of earlier-formed thrusts, thereby informing FTB evolution.  We examine these relationships by assessing force responses to thrust propagation across pre-existing basement steps, with the ramp angle as the main variable. Our results indicate that a 90° ramp angle generates a pronounced second-order force component, which correlates with enhanced lateral fault variability and associated out-of-sequence thrusting driven by back-thrust activation. A similar structural and force response is observed for a 25° ramp angle, whereas 60° ramp angles produce negligible force disturbances and almost no out-of-sequence thrusting. These results demonstrate the sensitivity of FTB dynamics to structural inheritance.

How to cite: Didden, J., Kosari, E., and Willingshofer, E.: Force changes in response to fault growth and out-of-sequence thrusting in brittle compressional analogue models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18797, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18797, 2026.

EGU26-19157 | Posters on site | TS2.4

Contrasting fault reactivation patterns along the Betic foreland (Gibraltar arc, southern Spain) 

Alejandro Jiménez-Bonilla, Manuel Díaz-Azpíroz, Juan Carlos Balanyá, Lucía Alonso, Pablo Nadal, Alfredo Vázquez, Jalil Shahsavar, and Inmaculada Expósito

During the Miocene formation of the Gibraltar Arc (western Mediterranean), the orogenic load on the SSE margin of the Betics (northern branch) foreland basin led to the formation of an ENE-WSW flexural relief on the foreland (forebulge), producing orthogonal extension accommodated by normal faults oriented parallel to the forebulge strike. However, structural and geomorphic results point to Quaternary relief rejuvenation of the Betics foreland that would account for buckling of the Iberian lithosphere, produced by mechanical coupling and strain transfer from the orogenic wedge to the under-thrusted foreland. This process has been attributed to the Africa-Eurasia convergence and/or to the westward migration of the arc.

In detail, relief rejuvenation of the Betic foreland is mostly accommodated through reactivation of inherited structures, although shows significant differences along strike. In the westernmost sector of the study area, most reactivated structures strike ca. NW-SE to WNW-ESE, which track the Variscan-Paleozoic structural pattern (folds and reverse and left-lateral tanspressional shear zones) of the foreland as well as transfer faults of the Triassic rifting event, and show a main reverse-lateral kinematics. By contrast, in the easternmost sector of the study area, former NE-SW to ENE-WSW extensional faults, likely inherited from the Triassic rifted margin, were reactivated with reverse kinematics.

Other differences between these two sectors are: (1) the eastern sector presents Triassic marly and evaporitic deposits, suggesting a more pronounced extension during the rifting event; (2) the boundary between the foreland basin and the foreland is NE-SW in the eastern sector and ENE-WSW in the western one; (3) the fold-and-thrust in front of the eastern sector defines a rough NE-SW striking secondary arc (the Cazorla arc) with orthogonal convergence kinematics, whereas in front of the western sector, it corresponds to a transitional zone (the Algodonales-Torcal zone) between two secondary arcs and shows dextral transpressional kinematics.

The transitional zone between these two sectors of the foreland shows a hybrid reactivation pattern. The fold-and-thrust in front of this intermediate segment is a ca. E-W striking secondary arc (the Central Betics) with orthogonal convergence kinematics.

The geometrical relationship between the two main sets of inherited structures of the foreland (WNW-ESE and NE-SW to ENE-WSW) and the tentative bulk convergence vector (WNW-ESE) in both sectors is very similar, thus it cannot account for the observed differences between them. Alternatively, in both sectors, the main reactivated structures seem to localize at former extensional faults regardless their age (e.g., the faults controlling the Miocene Bailén and Andújar basins in the eastern sector and the Permian Viar basin and other minor ones of the same age in the western sector). Ongoing research on the architecture of the reactivated faults and numerical modeling will contribute to constrain the main parameters responsible for the observed differences between the two studied sectors of the Betic foreland.

How to cite: Jiménez-Bonilla, A., Díaz-Azpíroz, M., Balanyá, J. C., Alonso, L., Nadal, P., Vázquez, A., Shahsavar, J., and Expósito, I.: Contrasting fault reactivation patterns along the Betic foreland (Gibraltar arc, southern Spain), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19157, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19157, 2026.

EGU26-21735 | Posters on site | TS2.4

Geometry of a foreland basin over an inherited diffuse rift transfer zone: the western Jaca-Pamplona Basin 

Esther Izquierdo Llavall, Josep Anton Muñoz, Pablo Santolaria, Emilio L. Pueyo, and Juan Cruz Larrasoaña

The geometry and evolution of foreland basins in orogenic systems that overprint earlier rifts largely depends on the distribution of rift inheritance. Particularly, the inversion of inherited rift transfer zones drives regional-scale non-cylindrical geometries which impose strong constraints on the 3D distribution of shortening, orogenic topography and syn-orogenic sedimentary depocenters and dispersal patterns. This work addresses the 3D geometrical study of the western part of the Jaca-Pamplona Basin (southern Pyrenees), which represents the early South Pyrenean foreland basin. At its western part, the foreland basin transitions and overlaps the Pamplona transfer zone, a major fringe of oblique structures that resulted from the inversion of a Cretaceous, diffuse rift transfer zone. While basement and cover geometries have been recently revisited in the central and eastern Jaca–Pamplona Basin, the western basin segment remains comparatively underexplored.

To tackle this gap in subsurface characterization, we compiled and interpreted available seismic information. Seismic profiles extend along ~ 3500 km and provide an acceptable 3D coverage of the study area. They are tied by 13 exploration wells, seven of them with associated delta time well log data. The integration of surface geology, seismic surveys and exploration wells has allowed a regional-scale characterization of basement geometries and syn-orogenic depocenters across the study area. Seismic profiles depict a basement that is involved in the deep structure of the western Jaca-Pamplona Basin. Basement units are affected by numerous thrusts that partly result from the reactivation of inherited Permian-Triassic and Early Cretaceous extensional faults. Inverted basement structures are neither cylindrical nor coaxial within the study area, resulting in oblique basement thrust ramps and an along-strike partitioning of outcropping folds and thrusts.

How to cite: Izquierdo Llavall, E., Muñoz, J. A., Santolaria, P., Pueyo, E. L., and Larrasoaña, J. C.: Geometry of a foreland basin over an inherited diffuse rift transfer zone: the western Jaca-Pamplona Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21735, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21735, 2026.

EGU26-425 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Of slabs, sutures and ophiolites: Reinterpreting the Mesozoic geodynamics of the Balkan peninsula supported by numerical modelling 

Nikola Stanković, Vladica Cvetković, Attila Balázs, Dejan Prelević, Ana Mladenović, Vesna Cvetkov, and Taras Gerya

For decades, the Mesozoic geodynamics of the Balkan sector of the Alpine–Himalayan orogenic belt has been interpreted through contrasting geological and geodynamic models. Key debates have focused on the number of oceanic domains, the mode and timing of their closure, the mechanisms responsible for the emplacement of the Vardar Zone ophiolites, and the very existence of the enigmatic Sava-Vardar Zone (SVZ). In this contribution, we provide a synthesis of our recently published results together with ongoing numerical modelling efforts aimed at resolving the full complexity of Mesozoic Balkan geodynamics. To this end, we have used both 2D and 3D numerical geodynamic modelling based on the I2VIS and I3VIS codes, utilizing conservative finite-differences and marker-in-cell approach for solving the continuity, momentum and temperature equations.
While earlier models frequently invoked multiple oceanic basins, more recent studies have largely converged on a more parsimonious single-ocean scenario. Nevertheless, a major question persisted: how could compositionally and structurally distinct yet contemporaneous ophiolite belts have formed within a single Tethyan ocean? Our numerical models address this issue by demonstrating that a single NE-dipping subduction system can account for these contrasts, consistent with geological evidence indicating similar obduction ages on both the Europe- and Adria-derived continental units. In our models, this configuration leads to complete consumption of the ocean by the end of the Jurassic.
These results, however, stand in contrast to the widely held interpretation that a separate oceanic domain persisted into the Cretaceous – the so-called Cretaceous Sava Ocean. This idea came to prominence with the discovery of Upper Cretaceous basalts in the SVZ, initially interpreted as parts of ophiolite sequences. Subsequent work has shown this interpretation to be erroneous, leaving the subduction-like geochemical affinity of the Upper Cretaceous Apuseni–Banat–Timok–Srednogorie (ABTS) magmatic and metallogenic belt as the primary remaining argument. Our modelling demonstrates that the complex dynamics of an already-subducted Jurassic slab can generate this post-obduction magmatism, removing the need to invoke an active Cretaceous subduction zone. The model shows that in a post-obduction stage, a hydrated subducted slab undergoes detachment, rebound and subsequent partial melting, allowing for delayed subduction-like magmatism to occur after ocean closure.
The final unresolved issue concerns the origin of the Upper Cretaceous magmatism within the SVZ. We propose that these occurrences reflect localized reactivation of the suture in response to strike-slip motion between the European and Adriatic plates, producing zones of transtensional opening along the former plate boundary. New 3D numerical models support this interpretation, demonstrating that transtension can indeed reactivate a suture and generate mantle-derived magmatism within associated pull-apart basins.

How to cite: Stanković, N., Cvetković, V., Balázs, A., Prelević, D., Mladenović, A., Cvetkov, V., and Gerya, T.: Of slabs, sutures and ophiolites: Reinterpreting the Mesozoic geodynamics of the Balkan peninsula supported by numerical modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-425, 2026.

EGU26-1054 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

Geodynamics of the Western Anatolia-Aegean Region: Linking tectonics and seismicity 

Can Aslan, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Sascha Brune, Ömer Bodur, Kai Li, Ethem Görgün, and Kıvanç Kekovalı

Active continental extension in the western Anatolia-Aegean (since approximately 25 Ma) drives exhumation of several metamorphic core complexes, low angle normal (detachment) faulting, and NE-SW and NW-SE trending strike-slip tectonics. However, the causative relationships among these processes and structures remain poorly understood. Here, we use 3-D thermomechanical numerical models to investigate how strain localization evolves in a stretching continent with plate rotations along a vertical axis. Namely, we test the obliquity of extension between 15° and 60°, the extension velocity of 1–2 cm/yr applied at the plate boundary, an initial crustal thickness of 50 km and a lithospheric thickness of 130 km, as well as the temperature gradient. To characterize the geometry of the fault systems, we calculate the Regime Stress Ratio (RSR) from the stress tensor and evaluate it in regions of high strain rate. We reconcile our model results with up-to-date structural features, including velocity fields from GPS, InSAR data, seismic receiver functions, and regional earthquake datasets from various sources. Preliminary results show that obliquity angle and initial layer thicknesses are first order parameters controlling strain localization, while simultaneously generating significant conjugate strike-slip tectonics. This is in accord with the formation of NE-SW and an array of NW-SE trending faults and clustering of earthquakes (relocated between 2010–2025) along the boundaries of the Gediz, Büyük Menderes and Simav grabens. These findings provide a modeling framework that links fault geometries, metamorphic core complex exhumation, and strike-slip deformation to the extensional tectonics and deeper lithospheric structure beneath the region.

How to cite: Aslan, C., Göğüş, O. H., Brune, S., Bodur, Ö., Li, K., Görgün, E., and Kekovalı, K.: Geodynamics of the Western Anatolia-Aegean Region: Linking tectonics and seismicity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1054, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1054, 2026.

EGU26-1729 | Posters on site | TS2.5

Late-orogenic extension ceases with waning plate convergence: The case of the Simplon normal fault (Swiss Alps) 

Reinhard Wolff, Ralf Hetzel, Kyra Hölzer, István Dunkl, and Aneta A. Anczkiewicz

Abstract

The Simplon normal fault in the Western Alps caused tens of kilometers of orogen-parallel extension during convergence of the European and Adriatic plates, but the slip rate of the fault and the time when normal faulting ended are still debated. Here, we constrain the slip history of the Simplon fault with low-T thermochronology and thermo-kinematic modeling (Wolff et al. 2024). Closely spaced samples from an elevation profile in the center of the fault yield zircon (U-Th)/He ages (ZHe) that are nearly invariant over an altitude of 1.4 km and cluster around ~6 Ma. In contrast, apatite (U-Th)/He ages (AHe) increase with altitude from 3.4±0.3 to 4.6±0.7 Ma, while the AFT ages range from 4.4±0.7 to 5.8±1.5 Ma. In addition, recently published 40Ar/39Ar ages constrain that our samples moved through the brittle-ductile transition (i.e., ~300°C) at 8–10 Ma. Our thermo-kinematic inverse modeling shows that these age data can be explained by a single phase of normal faulting, which lasted from 19.8±1.8 to 5.3±0.3 Ma and caused 45±10 km of extension. The slip rate of the 30°-dipping model fault is 3.5±0.3 km/Myr and equivalent to an exhumation rate of ~1.8 km/Myr. Our modeling reveals that the altitude-dependent difference between ZHe and AHe ages reflects the thermal relaxation after faulting stopped at ~5.3 Ma. Since then, exhumation by erosion continued at a rate of ~0.5 km/Myr. Remarkably, the end of slip on the Simplon fault coincides with the cessation of reverse faulting at 6±2 Ma in the external crystalline massifs of the Alps (Aar, Mont Blanc, Aiguilles Rouges) and with a decrease in strain rate by one order of magnitude at 5-4 Ma in the Swiss molasse basin and the Jura mountains. This temporal coincidence suggests that normal faulting in the internal part of the Alps ceased when plate convergence waned and the under-thrusting of European continental lithosphere beneath the Adriatic plate came to an end.

References

Wolff, R., Hölzer, K., Hetzel, R., Dunkl, I., Anczkiewicz, A.A. 2024. Late-orogenic extension ceases with waning plate convergence: The case of the Simplon normal fault (Swiss Alps). Journal of Structural Geology 179, 105049. https://www.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2024.105049

How to cite: Wolff, R., Hetzel, R., Hölzer, K., Dunkl, I., and A. Anczkiewicz, A.: Late-orogenic extension ceases with waning plate convergence: The case of the Simplon normal fault (Swiss Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1729, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1729, 2026.

Accurate understanding of the tectonic architecture from early in the evolution of orogenic belts is important for charting how they amplify into modern-day structures. However, this understanding is hampered by this subsequent deformation. But, as collision mountain belts generally initiate underwater, early synorogenic turbidite systems can reveal this architecture as represented not only by the connectivity and relative bathymetry ahead and across orogens but also by detecting deformation ahead of the main orogenic “front”. This presentation shows how sand fairway mapping is a key, but under-used, tool for understanding basin configuration in evolving convergent plate boundaries. It is underpinned by a simple statement: turbidity currents go downhill. Arguably the most useful are turbidite systems developed early in the evolution of orogenic belts where sand, derived external to the orogen, is flushed across substrates largely comprising pre-orogenic limestones and basinal marls and clays. This allows detection of potential contamination by entrained substrate particles and hence justify long-range correlations along fairways that are subsequently deformed during progressive orogenesis. Modern research has shown that turbidity currents, when confined by seafloor bathymetry, can run out for hundreds of km along rather low bathymetric gradients. The application of modern depositional understanding of confined turbidites provides a diagnostic suite of observations and facies associations to test correlations and detect active basin-floor deformation structures. Two examples are discussed from circum-Mediterranean orogens – the Numidian (early Miocene) of the Maghreb-Apennine orogen and the Annot-Champsaur (early Oligocene) of the Western Alps.

The Numidian sand fairway, derived from North Africa, extends for over 300 km in the central Mediterranean into modern-day central Italy. Turbidites deposited along confined sinuous corridors created by active submarine thrusting. Palaeobathymetry across the submarine thrust belt increased northwards into the future Apennines. The sands overlying various substrate facies, from deep-water clays to platform carbonates – indicating the designations of Mesozoic blocks and basins are unreliable guide for subsequent intra-Mediterranean palaeogeography. It is the down-system palaeobathymetry that benchmarks the water-depth back up-system. The composite Apennine–Calabrian–Maghrebian orogen with its submarine thrust belt had occluded deep-water Tethyan connections through the central Mediterranean by early Miocene times.

The Annot system can be mapped northwards from its source (Corsica-Maures-Esterel) around the Alpine arc, along what is generally interpreted to be a foredeep ahead of the orogen.  However, the turbidites are confined by active basin-floor structures, indicating their setting as thrust-top. Both the Ecrins and Argentera basement massifs were over-flowed by Annot turbidites. They are indicative of active crustal shortening partitioned ahead of the main orogen while other tracts of European continental crust were being subducted. This challenges conventional over-simplified descriptions of orogens as “foreland-migrating” and the use of transgressive unconformities in charting this migration.

Although both case-studies are classically-described orogenic “flysch” systems, their deformed segments now caught up in the orogens have, until now, been under-represented. These studies illustrate the utility of turbidite sedimentology, especially reconstructing sand fairways, in building the palaeogeographical reconstructions necessary to characterise the complex, early tectonic regimes of Mediterranean orogens. The results challenge convention.

How to cite: Butler, R.: Early orogenic turbidite systems as tectonic tracers – examples from circum-Mediterranean orogens , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3521, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3521, 2026.

EGU26-4097 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

What does radial anisotropy tell us about the Alpine collision? 

Henrique Berger Roisenberg, Felix Eckel, Amr El-Sharkawy, Claudio Rosenberg, Lapo Boschi, Thomas Meier, and Fabio Cammarano

The Alpine–Apennine–Dinaric system records the complex interaction between continental collision, subduction, slab rollback, and lithospheric deformation involving the Eurasian and Adriatic plates. While isotropic seismic velocity models have significantly advanced our understanding of Alpine deep structure, they often fail to uniquely resolve deformation styles, slab geometry, and crust–mantle coupling. Here we use seismic radial anisotropy as a tool to investigate how deformation is distributed from the upper crust to the upper mantle across the Alpine collision zone.

Using the AlpRA25 model, a new high-resolution 3-D shear-wave velocity and radial anisotropy model derived from joint inversion of Rayleigh and Love surface waves, we image systematic variations in the radial anisotropy parameter ξ = Vsh²/Vsv² from 5 to 250 km depth. The AlpRA25 model reveals spatially coherent variations in radial anisotropy that correlate with major tectonic features and deformation domains.

In the upper crust, negative radial anisotropy (ξ < 1) spatially correlates with major fold-and-thrust belts, steeply dipping fault systems, and the Eurasian–Adriatic plate interface, indicating the dominance of subvertical fabrics produced by shortening and tectonic stacking. Similar signatures are observed in regions of extended or oceanic crust in the western Mediterranean, consistent with steep faults and dyke intrusions formed during rifting and back-arc extension. In the Northern Apennines, radial anisotropy in the upper crust reflects the overprint by extensional structures in the Tyrrhenian domain (ξ > 1), and the compressive tectonic structures in the Adriatic domain (ξ < 1). 

The lower crust beneath much of the Alps and Northern Apennines is characterized by strong positive radial anisotropy (ξ > 1) likely of Eurasian origin, indicating pervasive subhorizontal fabrics and ductile deformation, consistent with lower-crustal flow and, locally, with crustal thickening related to delamination.

In the upper mantle, pronounced negative radial anisotropy is imaged within the subvertical segments of recent Eurasian and Apenninic slabs, consistent with vertically oriented olivine fabrics produced by slab descent. Surrounding mantle domains including the western Alps, are dominated by positive radial anisotropy.

Overall, radial anisotropy provides independent constraints on deformation geometry, slab dynamics, and crust–mantle coupling in the Alpine region, demonstrating that anisotropy is essential for discriminating between competing geodynamic models of continental collision that cannot be resolved using isotropic velocities alone.

How to cite: Berger Roisenberg, H., Eckel, F., El-Sharkawy, A., Rosenberg, C., Boschi, L., Meier, T., and Cammarano, F.: What does radial anisotropy tell us about the Alpine collision?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4097, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4097, 2026.

EGU26-5396 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Reconstructing the Alpine crustal architecture of the Ligurian Flysch Nappes through integrated structural cross-sections, RSCM and constrained thermo-kinematic modeling 

Lorys Tigroudja, Nicolas Espurt, Bruno Scalabrino, Abdeltif Lahfid, Carole Petit, and Bertrand Fasentieux

The structural and thermal architecture of the Ligurian Flysch Nappes in the southwestern Alps remains poorly constrained, despite their key role in late Alpine wedge construction. Reconstructing their burial history and kinematic evolution requires an integrated approach combining structural geometry, independent thermal constraints, and physically consistent numerical modeling. Here, we couple balanced and restored geological cross-sections with Raman Spectroscopy of Carbonaceous Material (RSCM) thermometry to tightly constrain 1D thermo-kinematic modeling of nappe emplacement. Three NE-SW-trending balanced cross-sections (30 to 46.5 km long) were constructed across the para-autochthonous Subalpine foreland, the four main Ligurian Flysch Nappes (Sanremo, Moglio-Testico, Borghetto-Colla Domenica, and Albenga), and the internal Briançonnais domain. Structural restorations provide quantitative constraints on nappe geometries, burial depths, shortening, and kinematics, which are used as boundary conditions for thermal modeling. RSCM thermometry performed on 71 samples yields peak temperatures (TRSCM) ranging from 140 ± 20 °C to 341 ± 10 °C, systematically increasing with structural depth and toward internal domains. Maximum temperatures are recorded in the inner Subalpine footwall, the deeper nappes (notably the Albenga Nappe), and the Briançonnais units. The thermal overprint in the Subalpine Zone is interpreted as syn-orogenic tectonic burial, supported by the Eocene–Oligocene age of the sampled formations and the thermal continuity observed between nappes and para-autochthonous units. In contrast, a marked thermal inversion in the southwestern frontal sector, where a structural window exposes colder para-autochthonous rocks (~180 °C) beneath the warmer Sanremo Nappe (~250 °C), indicates inherited thermal contrasts during nappe emplacement. These structural and thermal constraints are used to parameterize a 1D thermo-kinematic model of nappe emplacement, in which geometries, thicknesses, and velocities are directly derived from the restored cross-sections. The model accounts for crustal heat production, conductive heat transfer, and basal shear heating. Model results show that the measured TRSCM values can be fully reproduced by syn-tectonic burial associated with thrust nappe emplacement, assuming a constant geothermal gradient of ~30 °C/km, consistent with independent estimates of paleo-burial depths and eroded overburden. Achieving a satisfactory fit between modeled and measured temperatures requires basal shear heating localized within a finite shear zone, with effective thicknesses ranging from ~4 to 35 m and systematically increasing toward the frontal parts of the orogenic wedge (foreland). The models imply up to ~11 km of eroded overburden in the hinterland and ~6 km in the foreland. Overall, this study demonstrates that structurally and thermally constrained 1D modeling provides a robust and internally consistent framework to quantify nappe emplacement, tectonic burial, and the kinematic architecture of the southwestern Alpine orogenic wedge.

How to cite: Tigroudja, L., Espurt, N., Scalabrino, B., Lahfid, A., Petit, C., and Fasentieux, B.: Reconstructing the Alpine crustal architecture of the Ligurian Flysch Nappes through integrated structural cross-sections, RSCM and constrained thermo-kinematic modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5396, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5396, 2026.

EGU26-5400 | Orals | TS2.5

Don’t leave me hanging: Where is the hanging wall in the western Cyclades (Greece)? 

Bernhard Grasemann, David A. Schneider, Konstantinos Soukis, Benjamin Huet, Karoline Lindner, Johannes Loisl, Alexander H.N. Rice, Stelios Lozios, Erich Draganits, and Anna Rogowitz

Miocene crustal extension in the Cyclades resulted in the development of major low-angle detachment systems, typically juxtaposing the Cycladic Blueschist Unit (CBU) in the footwall against the Pelagonian Unit (PU) in the hanging wall. Although the footwall CBU is well-documented, the PU hanging wall remains poorly understood in the western Cyclades due to extensive erosion. This study presents new geological, geochronological, and thermochronological data from two uninhabited islands, Makronisos and Agios Georgios, to better constrain the architecture and displacement of the West Cycladic Detachment System (WCDS). Our results demonstrate that Makronisos constitutes part of the WCDS footwall, with Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material temperatures of ~450°C indicating it belongs to the Lower Cycladic Nappe of the CBU. The island preserves intense top-to-SSW shear strain localized within marble ultramylonites, correlative with structures on neighboring Kea. New white mica 40Ar/39Ar ages indicate Middle to Late Miocene deformation, consistent with CBU exhumation documented elsewhere along the WCDS. Conversely, Agios Georgios represents a hanging-wall remnant situated structurally above the WCDS. It comprises Triassic granitic orthogneiss and metasediments that underwent upper greenschist to amphibolite facies metamorphism. New U-Pb zircon dating confirms an Early Triassic magmatic protolith, and 40Ar/39Ar and zircon (U-Th)/He data reveal a Late Cretaceous-Paleogene metamorphic overprint followed by cooling to shallow crustal levels by c. 20 Ma. The lithological and tectonometamorphic evolution of Agios Georgios closely matches the Vari and Akrotiri units of Syros and Tinos, respectively. This correlation extends the known distribution of Late Cretaceous-Paleogene Pelagonian domain remnants ~100 km westward. The divergent thermal histories, Miocene cooling in the footwall versus Paleogene cooling in the hanging wall, constrain a total WCDS displacement of 20-30 km between 20 Ma and 8 Ma, yielding an estimated slip rate of 1.5-2.5 mm/yr.

How to cite: Grasemann, B., Schneider, D. A., Soukis, K., Huet, B., Lindner, K., Loisl, J., Rice, A. H. N., Lozios, S., Draganits, E., and Rogowitz, A.: Don’t leave me hanging: Where is the hanging wall in the western Cyclades (Greece)?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5400, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5400, 2026.

EGU26-5855 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Resolving the chronological gap in the Olympos-Ossa-Pelion transect: New Rb-Sr constraints on Cycladic Blueschist Unit subduction and exhumation in mainland Greece 

Yangbaihe Hong,  Johannes  Glodny, Rolf Romer, Alasdair Skelton, Alexandre Peillod, and Uwe Ring

The Cycladic Blueschist Unit (CBU) records Eocene-Oligocene high-pressure/low-temperature metamorphism across the Aegean, providing critical constraints on subduction-exhumation processes during Hellenic orogenesis. While extensively studied in the Cycladic islands, the CBU's northern continuation through the Olympos-Ossa-Pelion transect in mainland Greece remains poorly constrained, resulting in conflicting tectonic models regarding nappe emplacement mechanisms, thrust transport direction, and the timing of exhumation.

Multi-mineral Rb-Sr isochrons of syn-kinematic white mica allows us to link isotopic ages to specific deformation events. To resolve the four-dimensional tectonic evolution of the Olympos-Ossa-Pelion transect, we present 34 new Rb-Sr ages integrated with detailed structural and metamorphic analysis. Our results reveal three distinct episodes of high-pressure metamorphism with systematic along-strike variations: (1) In the Olympos-Ossa region, the Ampelakia Unit (CBU equivalent) records peak metamorphism at 48–41 Ma with top-to-SW kinematics and syn-orogenic exhumation at ~40 Ma, correlating with the Middle-CBU nappe in the Cyclades; (2) The underlying Olympos-Ossa Unit (Basal Unit equivalent) experienced high-pressure metamorphism at 34–26 Ma during continued SW-wards underthrusting, with syn-orogenic exhumation starting at ~28 Ma; (3) In the Pelion region, the Pelion Blueschist Unit (also a CBU equivalent) yields preliminary high-pressure metamorphic ages of ~27 Ma, followed by (sub)greenschist-facies top-to-NE shearing at 22 Ma and 14 Ma, potentially representing the equivalent of the Bottom-CBU nappe in the Cyclades. Exhumation of the CBU in the Olympos-Ossa-Pelion transect occurred in two stages: (1) Eocene to Oligocene syn-orogenic extrusion driven by simultaneous top-to-NE normal faulting above and top-to-SW out-of-sequence thrusting below; followed by (2) Miocene post-orogenic extension accommodated by top-to-the-NE detachment faults synchronous with Aegean-wide slab rollback. These findings bridge the geochronological gap of CBU nappes between mainland Greece and the Cyclades, providing direct age constraints on the timing of underthrusting and exhumation for the northern sector of the Hellenic high-pressure metamorphic belt.

How to cite: Hong, Y.,  Glodny,  ., Romer, R., Skelton, A., Peillod, A., and Ring, U.: Resolving the chronological gap in the Olympos-Ossa-Pelion transect: New Rb-Sr constraints on Cycladic Blueschist Unit subduction and exhumation in mainland Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5855, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5855, 2026.

The Main Marmara Fault - a segment of the active North Anatolian Fault Zone - poses significant seismic hazard to the metropolitan area of Istanbul, where a potentially hazardous earthquake of M>7 is overdue.  This part of the larger strike slip system extends across the northern Sea of Marmara and exhibits a still poorly understood segmentation along‐strike, with creeping and locked parts.  Continuous research in the recent years using data collected in the GONAF observatory initiated by the ICDP and results obtained in the frame of the DFG-ICDP priority program enabled the construction of a new 3D lithospheric‐scale model of the Sea of Marmara. We combined gravity modelling and seismic tomography analysis with thermal and rheological modelling to derive the crustal density structure to gain insights into the temperature and density configuration of the uppermost mantle, and the geometry of the 1330°C isotherm. We find a lower‐density crust over the western and creeping part of the Main Marmara Fault, and a denser crust below the locked part of the Main Marmara Fault at the Istanbul Zone and analyse and discuss the implications of these structural heterogeneities.

How to cite: Scheck-Wenderoth, L., Fernandez, N., Cacace, M., and Rodriguez Piceda, C.: Thermal and rheological characteristics of the Main Marmara Fault - a segment of the North Anatolian Fault - and its surrounding regions in the Eastern Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6464, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6464, 2026.

EGU26-6587 | Orals | TS2.5

Revisiting the Late Permian – Jurassic paleogeography of the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathians and tectonic implications  

Oscar Fernandez, Szilvia Köver, László Fodor, Tomáš Potočný, Lajos Adam Csicsek, Hugo Ortner, Diethard Sanders, Marína Molčan-Matejová, Dušan Plašienka, Stanisław Mazur, Tanishka Soni, Mark G. Rowan, Josep Anton Muñoz, Gianreto Manatschal, and Bernhard Grasemann

The ALCAPA (Alps-Carpathians-Pannonia) megaunit, encompassing most of the Eastern Alps (Austroalpine units) and the Western Carpathians (Inner and Central part), has traditionally been interpreted to represent the Neo-Tethys-facing Permo-Triassic passive margin of Pangaea. Multiple tectonic units within the ALCAPA and wider Dinaridic-Balkanic domain have been regarded as continental sutures formed during the closure of the Neo-Tethyan Ocean. A long-standing debate concerns whether the Neo-Tethys comprised a single or multiple oceanic basins. In the ALCAPA region, the Neo-Tethys is commonly called the Meliata-Hallstatt Ocean and considered to represent an oceanic branch located south (in present-day coordinates) of the salt-rich Austroalpine-Carpathian passive margins. This interpretation assumes a simple and linear arrangement of Permo-Triassic facies, from shallow water platforms in the north to pelagic and bathyal deposits in the south. This facies scheme has been generally used as the basis to explain the distribution of Permo-Triassic units in the present-day fold-and-thrust belts.

Recent advances in the understanding of salt tectonics and passive margin geodynamics, however, calls this linear paleogeographic model into question. In this contribution we present new observations from the Inner Western Carpathians and a reevaluation of the Austroalpine domain and argue that the Permo-Triassic palegeography of ALCAPA was far more complex than previously assumed. We propose that the Permo-Triassic rift system formed an anastomosing network of rift branches, some of which remained aborted while others progressed to continental breakup and mantle exhumation. This evolution produced a complex mosaic of microcontinental blocks separated by rift basins and domains of exhumed subcontinental mantle, in stark contrast to the conventional linear continent-to-ocean model. This revised paleogeographic framework has significant implications for deciphering the distribution of Permo-Triassic facies in the pre-orogenic setting. Understanding the role of continental hyperextension in the ALCAPA also satisfactorily explains the frequent (and apparently incongruous) contacts of shallow crustal units on sub-continental mantle (e.g., evaporites or platform carbonates on serpentinized mantle).

We argue that Jurassic subduction nucleated preferentially along domains of Triassic exhumed mantle, and that recognizing the complex paleogeographic architecture substantially simplifies the tectonic interpretation of the subsequent Mesozoic evolution of the region. These observations further call for a redefinition of what is considered the Neo-Tethys Ocean within the ALCAPA domain.

How to cite: Fernandez, O., Köver, S., Fodor, L., Potočný, T., Csicsek, L. A., Ortner, H., Sanders, D., Molčan-Matejová, M., Plašienka, D., Mazur, S., Soni, T., Rowan, M. G., Muñoz, J. A., Manatschal, G., and Grasemann, B.: Revisiting the Late Permian – Jurassic paleogeography of the Eastern Alps and Western Carpathians and tectonic implications , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6587, 2026.

EGU26-6876 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

Timing of rotation and kinematic evolution of the Albano-Hellenides within the Aegean orocline 

Fabio Feriozzi, Fabio Speranza, Gaia Siravo, Eline Le Breton, Paola Cipollari, Claudio Faccenna, and Lilla Spagnuolo

The Aegean arc represents the most prominent salient in the Mediterranean region and is characterized by large vertical-axis rotations along its limbs. Paleomagnetic studies along its western limb indicate that the external Ionian and Kruja zones of the Albano-Hellenides experienced ~40° of clockwise (CW) rotation relative to Africa/Adria, yet the timing of this rotation remains controversial. Previous interpretations have proposed either two (Miocene and Plio–Pleistocene) rotation episodes, or a single post mid-Miocene rotation accelerating along time. These uncertainties partly reflect the contribution of local thrust tectonics and/or strike-slip faults biasing the regional rotational trend.
We present new paleomagnetic data from 41 sites located in the virtually continuous Eocene-Early Pliocene sedimentary succession of the Tragjasi thrust sheet (Ionian zone, SW Albania). Sampled layers lie on the backlimb of a 50 km-long anticline subparallel to the regional orogenic trend and located away from major strike-slip faults. Eocene to early Early Pliocene sediments consistently record a 35°±9° CW rotation, demonstrating that rotation in the external Albanides began not earlier than the late Early Pliocene (~4 Ma).
Such new timing constraints were integrated into a quantitative kinematic reconstruction of the Aegean orocline over the last 20 Myr, developed in GPlates by combining paleomagnetic rotations with published kinematic models of the Peloponnese–Aegean domain. The reconstruction further integrates geophysical constraints on slab geometry and the amount of subducted oceanic lithosphere, allowing us to propose an updated kinematic evolution of the Aegean orocline.
Our results show that the post-Messinian tectonic evolution was characterized by synchronous CW rotation of the Albano-Hellenides and the Peloponnese, accompanied by a marked acceleration of subduction rates. We interpret this kinematic reorganization as due to multiple geodynamic processes, including (i) enhanced slab pull driven by the subduction of ~150 km of negatively buoyant Ionian (Neo-Tethys) oceanic lithosphere, (ii) mechanical coupling across the Kefalonia-Lefkada Fault, (iii) westward propagation of the North Anatolian Fault into the Aegean region, and (iv) the progressive development of a slab tear beneath the southern Dinarides. Together, these results highlight the tight coupling between slab dynamics and oroclinal bending in the late Cenozoic evolution of the Aegean orocline.

How to cite: Feriozzi, F., Speranza, F., Siravo, G., Le Breton, E., Cipollari, P., Faccenna, C., and Spagnuolo, L.: Timing of rotation and kinematic evolution of the Albano-Hellenides within the Aegean orocline, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6876, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6876, 2026.

EGU26-7872 | Posters on site | TS2.5

A quiet surface above a noisy slab: Eocene-Oligocene switch from shortening to extension on Astypalaia island, Aegean Sea, Greece 

David Schneider, Vincent Roche, Bernhard Grasemann, and Kostis Soukis

A correlation of the tectonostratigraphy and tectonic structures across the Attic-Cycladic belt to the Dodecanese islands and the western Menderes massif is required to reconstruct the pre-Eocene high pressure-subduction crustal architecture of the eastern Mediterranean. Notable, the transition from Cyclades to Dodecanese resides above a subduction slab tear that formed in the Miocene, which has offset the downgoing plate by >100 km, yet few tectonic structures exposed at the surface record the deeper geodynamic phenomenon. Residing along the NE-SW striking Santorini-Amorgos Fault Zone, the Astypalaia Platform exposes unmetamorphosed to weakly metamorphosed Triassic-Cretaceous neritic limestones, including Rudist- and Megalodont-bearing units. Unconformably above the limestone is an Eocene Nummulitic limestone-flysch package that contains km-scale marble and mafic volcanic olistoliths. The sequence, here named Analipsi subunit, was deformed into a series of NW-SE trending upright folds that preserves ductile top-to-N structures. The Vardia subunit, a weakly deformed Jurassic(?)-Cretaceous marble and limestone sequence capped by Eocene flysch, was thrust northward over the Analipsi subunit along the Vardia Thrust. This contact is characterized by a ductile strain gradient that increases toward the base of the hanging wall, marked by several tens of meters of marble ultramylonites on top of cataclasites. Top-to-S cataclasis overprints the earlier shortening structures localizing at the base of the Vardia Thrust. Unlike the other Dodecanese islands to the east, neither Variscan nor Paleozoic rocks are exposed on Astypalaia, indicating a higher structural level is present. Zircon (U-Th)/He dates from eight Eocene Analipsi flysch samples are partially reset, yielding single crystal ages of 130 Ma to 30 Ma, lacking a correlation to effective uranium concentrations, and exhibiting a dominant Paleocene-Early Eocene population. The overlap of the younger ZHe cooling dates and the depositional age of the Nummulite-bearing flysch suggests deposition, lithification, and subsequent deformation occurred rapidly in the Middle to Upper Eocene and under shallow crustal (<200°C) conditions. We propose that the Analipsi and Vardia subunits are part of the Pelagonian domain, which were imbricated after deposition of the Eocene flysch as the high pressure Cycladic Blueschist Unit was subducted beneath it. Although the magnitude of top-to-S extension on Astypalaia is significantly lower than the displacements recorded along the Oligocene Kalymnos and Kos detachments to the east, we correlate these events to argue that the transition from subduction to extension is constrained to 35-30 Ma, which occurred 20 Myr before the slab tear. This timing coincides with the onset of slab retreat throughout the Aegean region, mainly inferred from the migration of the volcanic arc.

How to cite: Schneider, D., Roche, V., Grasemann, B., and Soukis, K.: A quiet surface above a noisy slab: Eocene-Oligocene switch from shortening to extension on Astypalaia island, Aegean Sea, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7872, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7872, 2026.

EGU26-9471 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

New Insights into the Adria lithosphere from Joint Inversion of Teleseismic and Ambient-Noise Surface-Wave Dispersion 

Irene Menichelli, Irene Molinari, Fabio Cammarano, Lapo Boschi, Fabrizio Magrini, and Claudia Piromallo

The central Mediterranean’s complex tectonic evolution is driven by the geodynamic interplay of the Adriatic microplate within the Eurasian-African convergence. Adria plays a pivotal role in the development of the surrounding orogenic systems, including the Alps, Apennines, Dinarides, and Hellenides.

So far, the sparse seismic station coverage in the western Balkans and eastern Mediterranean has limited the resolution of the tomographic models throughout that area. Today,  with the deployment of the dense, high quality, AdriaArray network, the improved seismic coverage affords an unprecedented opportunity to image the lithospheric and mantle structure beneath Adria. These images provide new constraints on the mechanisms governing the complex double-sided subduction of Adria, particularly beneath the Dinarides and the Albanides–Hellenides system, where several key geodynamic questions remain debated and unsolved.

Here, we present the results of a preliminary analysis of continuous seismic data recorded at more than 1,500 stations, with the aim of inferring a new three-dimensional shear-wave velocity model. Using SeisLib, a Python framework developed by Magrini et al. (2022),  we extracted teleseismic and ambient noise surface-wave dispersion curves and then inverted them jointly to obtain phase velocity and group velocity maps for Rayleigh and Love waves over a wide time range (3–150 s). Through a Bayesian-probabilistic inversion approach (Magrini et al., 2025), the dispersion maps are converted into a large-scale, high-resolution 3D Vs model. In this framework, multiple data types with complementary sensitivity are inverted jointly, yielding a new image and a more robust characterization of the Adria lithosphere.

How to cite: Menichelli, I., Molinari, I., Cammarano, F., Boschi, L., Magrini, F., and Piromallo, C.: New Insights into the Adria lithosphere from Joint Inversion of Teleseismic and Ambient-Noise Surface-Wave Dispersion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9471, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9471, 2026.

EGU26-9565 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Sequential restoration of a thrust system constrained by cross-section balancing and U-Pb calcite dating: the Cannet-des-Maures structure, Eastern Provence, France 

mohamed amine Mskine, Nicolas Espurt, laurent beccaletto, Nathalie Marçot, Christophe Matonti, Abel Guihou, Pierre Deschamps, Abdeltif Lahfid, and Oriane Parizot

The eastern Provence in southeastern France comprises a complex fold-thrust system developed in a Mesozoic sedimentary cover detached above ductile Triassic evaporitic-carbonate levels. The timing of deformation is difficult to constrain due to the absence of syntectonic sedimentary strata. In this study, we investigate the Cannet-des-Maures structure, a key example of the eastern Provence fold-thrust belt, by integrating a balanced, sequentially restored cross-section with U-Pb calcite dating to reconstruct its structural evolution and quantify the time-dependent vertical partitioning of shortening. The present-day geometry of the structure is characterized by a large-scale NE-verging overturned anticline, with second-order SW-verging thrusts developed in its forelimb, that were subsequently tilted and sheared by anticline growth. This architecture reflects limited frontal propagation and strong internal strain localization, kinematically linked to the presence of Triassic evaporitic-carbonate layers in the core of the structure. Theses ductile units acted as décollement levels promoting vertical partitioning of the shortening (from 0.14 to 2.7km) and disharmonic folding between the basement and the overlying Jurassic cover. Structural restoration reveals that the current geometry results from the inversion of an inherited Jurassic rollover structure initially shaped by listric normal fault rooted in Triassic evaporitic-carbonate layers. The basement displays a reactivated, south-dipping extensional fault, which originally controlled the development of the rollover geometry.  U-Pb ages of syn-kinematic calcite range from 94 to 4 Ma, providing a robust temporal framework linking Cretaceous extension to Provençal and Alpine compressions. These absolute ages validate the structural interpretation of inverted extensional geometries and demonstrate a long-lived deformation from Provençal to Alpine tectonic regimes. Based on these deformation ages, we propose a five-stage kinematic model identified through sequential restoration between the Late Cenomanian to the Eocene. This reconstruction highlights that the highest shortening rate occurred during the Eocene. Kinematic relationships reveal a combination of thin- and thick-skinned tectonic styles during the Provençal orogeny, later overprinted by reactivation of the Triassic décollement levels during the Alpine phase. By integrating absolute geochronology with structural restoration, this study refines the timing and mechanical understanding of tectonic inversion processes and emphasizes the long-term control of inherited basement structures and ductile Triassic units. The results further indicate southwestward propagation of Alpine deformation into the European foreland, expressed in Provence as a far-field Alpine overprint.

How to cite: Mskine, M. A., Espurt, N., beccaletto, L., Marçot, N., Matonti, C., Guihou, A., Deschamps, P., Lahfid, A., and Parizot, O.: Sequential restoration of a thrust system constrained by cross-section balancing and U-Pb calcite dating: the Cannet-des-Maures structure, Eastern Provence, France, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9565, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9565, 2026.

EGU26-11321 | Orals | TS2.5

Slab Evolution in the Early Pliocene Establishment of the Modern Tectonic Regime in the Adria-Aegean-Anatolian Region 

Taylor Schildgen, Claudio Faccenna, Laurent Jolivet, Paolo Ballato, Ebru Şengül, Cengiz Yıldırım, and Domenico Cosentino

The Eastern Mediterranean marks a region of ongoing ocean closure, starting when Arabia collided with Eurasia around Eocene-Oligocene time, but the modern tectonic configuration has only been established since ca. 4 to 5 Ma. To identify the main drivers of this tectonic evolution and explain delays between apparent drivers and responses, we review evidence for how crustal deformation, surface elevations, and volcanism in the upper plate spanning the Dinarides-Hellenides to Eastern Anatolia evolved in the context of plate reconstructions. We also use geophysical observations to guide a reconstruction of the modern slab geometries and the positions of oceanic-continental lithosphere transitions within the slabs. We then infer how the slabs evolved through time in three dimensions, using the plate reconstructions and geologic history as guides for changes in slab geometry. From this review, we reconstruct a series of paleographic maps (15, 9, and 5 Ma) and cartoons illustrating the 3D geometry of slabs at the same time frames.

Following break-off of the Bitlis slab at least 20 million years ago, the next major event in establishing the modern tectonic regime was the acceleration of Hellenic Trench retreat around 15 Ma, likely associated with the initiation of a trench-orthogonal tear along the east side of the Aegean slab. We show that initiation of the tear could relate to entrance of the Ionian oceanic lithosphere into the subduction zone, as well as the presence of Pindos oceanic lithosphere at greater depths within the slab. The trench-orthogonal tear in turn induced accelerated Hellenic Trench retreat, faster extension in the Aegean, and the start of a “proto-escape” phase of Anatolia. At 5 to 4 Ma, segmentation of the slab beneath the Kefalonia Transfer Fault Zone and further acceleration in Hellenic Trench retreat likely facilitated the localization of the North Anatolian Fault western Turkey, the formation of the East Anatolian Fault, and independent motion of the Adria plate, establishing the modern tectonic regime. Our reconstructions highlight the role of slab dynamics in driving not only the long-term, progressive tectonic evolution of the region, but also sudden plate reconfigurations.

How to cite: Schildgen, T., Faccenna, C., Jolivet, L., Ballato, P., Şengül, E., Yıldırım, C., and Cosentino, D.: Slab Evolution in the Early Pliocene Establishment of the Modern Tectonic Regime in the Adria-Aegean-Anatolian Region, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11321, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11321, 2026.

EGU26-11455 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Tracing Slabs and Mantle Flow in the Mediterranean with 3D Anisotropic Tomography 

Rosalia Lo Bue, Francesco Rappisi, Brandon Paul VanderBeek, Judith Confal, Ceyhun Erman, Paola Baccheschi, Silvia Pondrelli, Tuna Eken, Seda Yolsal-Cevikbilen, and Manuele Faccenda

We present the first comprehensive three-dimensional anisotropic tomographic model of the entire Mediterranean mantle (ani-MR25, Rappisi et al., 2025), obtained through the simultaneous inversion of teleseismic and regional P-wave travel-time combined with SKS splitting intensity measurements. This dual input dataset approach allows us to resolve both isotropic velocity structures and the directional properties of mantle anisotropy, providing a detailed view of lithospheric slabs and surrounding asthenospheric flow. Our results identify fast anomalies associated with retreating, stagnant, and detached slab segments,—including the Alboran, Apennine, Alpine, Dinaric, Carpathian, and Hellenic systems—and slower regions associated with slab windows and back-arc basins, such as in the Tyrrhenian and Hellenic areas. The recovered anisotropic patterns provide crucial markers of the region's tectonic history. We observe a wide range of P-wave fast axis plunge angles, with steeply dipping fabrics correlating with slab tearing, detachment zones, and volcanic provinces. Trench-parallel anisotropy beneath slabs and trench-perpendicular orientations in back-arc regions reflect the imprint of trench retreat and subduction-driven corner flow.

By integrating isotropic and anisotropic observations, we construct a detailed 3-D model of Mediterranean slab geometries and surrounding mantle flow, offering new insights into the tectonic evolution and geodynamic processes of this complex region.

 

Rappisi, F., Lo Bue, R., Vanderbeek, B. P., Confal, J. M., Erman, C., Baccheschi, P., ... & Faccenda, M. (2025). 3‐D mantle flow and structure of the Mediterranean from combined P‐wave and splitting intensity anisotropic tomography. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth130(6), e2024JB030883.

How to cite: Lo Bue, R., Rappisi, F., VanderBeek, B. P., Confal, J., Erman, C., Baccheschi, P., Pondrelli, S., Eken, T., Yolsal-Cevikbilen, S., and Faccenda, M.: Tracing Slabs and Mantle Flow in the Mediterranean with 3D Anisotropic Tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11455, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11455, 2026.

EGU26-12040 | Orals | TS2.5

The opening of the Ligurian Sea seen through combined deep seismic, gravity and kinematic analyses 

Jean-Xavier Dessa, Nicolas Chamot-Rooke, Albane Canva, Matthias Delescluse, Ribodetti Alessandra, Beslier Marie-Odile, Schenini Laure, Asti Riccardo, Thinon Isabelle, and Bulois Cédric

The Western Mediterranean is constituted by a series of back-arc basins that opened in response to the African slab rollback throughout the Alpine orogenies. The Ligurian Basin occupies the northeastern termination of this realm and resulted from the rifting and subsequent drift of the Corsica-Sardinia block, between Oligocene and Burdigalian-Langhian times, coevally with the neighbouring Western Alpine collision. The nature of its basement, beneath thick sedimentary deposits, has long remained elusive. The SEFASILS cruise acquired deep penetrating wide angle seismic data from densely deployed ocean bottom sensors, as well as long offset reflection and gravity data. The obtained tomographic images unequivocally reveal a large expanse of exhumed mantle flooring the northern half of the basin beneath basinal deposits. Further south, intermediate crustal velocities are found and the nature of the basement is more ambiguous. Using satellite-derived gravity measurements and taking into account the documented kinematics of the main phase of the Ligurian opening, we show that most of the seafloor—if not all—is indeed of oceanic origin and that the observed mantle tract was emplaced from an accretion centre inside the basin rather than from under the flanking margin. In particular, the extinct spreading axis is revealed by free-air gravity anomalies. These results thus show that, albeit significant opening rates of ~4 cm/yr or more are inferred here, seafloor spreading consisted essentially in mantle unroofing with little to no melt production. Moreover, a domain of ultrathinned continental crust is also evidenced at the toe of the northern margin, that is evocative of some ductile-dominant deformation immediately prior to breakup. Mantle exhumation seems to have occurred successively and somewhat continuously throughout the basin formation on opposite-verging continental and oceanic detachment systems, active prior to and after breakup respectively.

How to cite: Dessa, J.-X., Chamot-Rooke, N., Canva, A., Delescluse, M., Alessandra, R., Marie-Odile, B., Laure, S., Riccardo, A., Isabelle, T., and Cédric, B.: The opening of the Ligurian Sea seen through combined deep seismic, gravity and kinematic analyses, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12040, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12040, 2026.

EGU26-12256 | Orals | TS2.5

Mapping large-scale thickness variations in the Helvetic domain (Switzerland) using a new semi-automated method 

Lukas Nibourel, Thomas Galfetti, Ferdinando Musso-Piantelli, Matteo Furlan, and Stefan Heuberger

We present semi-automatically generated maps showing the variability of the stratigraphic thickness of the Helvetic Kieselkalk, a siliceous limestone-dominated geological unit which is widely exposed across different Helvetic nappes over more than 300 km along the Swiss Alps. The Helvetic Kieselkalk is commonly extracted to produce hard rock aggregates for the national road and railway infrastructure. The deposition of this unit onto the European (Helvetic) continental margin during the Early Cretaceous was affected by normal faulting, which lead to strong lateral thickness variations.

The Python and MATLAB approach used to create the thickness maps was developed as part of a Switzerland-wide mineral resource mapping project, funded by the Swiss Geological Survey (swisstopo). It is designed to rapidly generate large-scale map overviews of the stratigraphic thickness by analysing geological vector data such as the GeoCover dataset in Switzerland. The same approach is currently used in the framework of the swisstopo-funded Swiss Alps 3D project. There, automatically extracted and validated thickness data are used to improve the quality of the large-scale 3D geological model of the Swiss Alps.

Our results highlight an increase in thickness of the Helvetic Kieselkalk along the strike of the Alps from ca. 100 m in the western Helvetics (Wildhorn Nappe) to up to 1000 m in the eastern Helvetics (Drusberg and Säntis nappes). The depositional thickness was certainly affected by burial, folding and faulting during the formation of the Helvetic nappes. Nevertheless, two distinct thickness jumps indicate the presence of three sedimentary basins in east-west direction with a half-graben-like geometry. These thickness jumps coincide with present-day nappe boundaries and suggest that the inherited basin geometry influenced the formation of the Helvetic nappes.

The large-scale thickness maps and the improved undestanding of the paleogeography and tectonic evolution are helpful to identify stratiform mineral occurrences with favourable geometry and to refine 3D geological models.

How to cite: Nibourel, L., Galfetti, T., Musso-Piantelli, F., Furlan, M., and Heuberger, S.: Mapping large-scale thickness variations in the Helvetic domain (Switzerland) using a new semi-automated method, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12256, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12256, 2026.

EGU26-12419 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

Characterisation of the pre-Mesozoic basement within the Tell Orogeny (Northwestern Algeria ): Implications for the Tethys realm 

Margot Patry, Rémi Leprêtre, Moulley Charaf Chabou, Oubaida Hachemaoui, and Geoffroy Mohn

The Alpine Tell and Rif orogenic belts of northern Algeria and Morocco formed in response to the southward closure of the Tethys Ocean from the Late Cretaceous onward. During the Cenozoic, it was associated with the coeval opening of the western Mediterranean basin and the collision between the AlKaPeCa blocks and the North African rifted margin.

While the pre-Mesozoic basement is accessible south of the Tell-Rif front, this basement is poorly exposed within the Tell-Rif orogenic belt where it remains largely unknown. Yet, the Tell-Rif basement bears key informations : (1) on the late Variscan collision between European blocks and Gondwana mainland with the potential existence of a Paleotethyan domain, and (2) on the Maghrebian Tethys evolution from Triassic rifting to Cenozoic closure.

In the Western Tell, especially in the Oran region, remnants of the North African margin basement occur in two types of outcrops: (1) a variety of xenoliths from the basement, including metamorphic and mafic rocks, that can be found within the Triassic salt-related structures and brought to the surface by the salt and (2) the “external metamorphic massifs”, affected by a subduction-related metamorphism of maximum Oligocene age, often associated with ultramafic rocks. Although these two complementary features offer a rare opportunity to sample the North African margin basement, it has almost never been studied.

In this work, we focused first on the xenoliths. An extensive sampling has been done within a dozen of Triassic salt related structures in the Oran region. These rocks are ranging from magmatic to high-temperature metamorphic rocks and can be either mafic or felsic. This vast diversity allowed us to do petrological studies as well as geochronological work (U-Pb on zircons) to characterise the basement, with a particular interest to the highest grade metamorphic rocks such as sillimanite-rich micaschists,  kinzigites and mafic granulites.

The results provide a unique opportunity to better understand the North African margin basement composition and its Palaeozoic to Cenozoic geodynamic evolution.

How to cite: Patry, M., Leprêtre, R., Chabou, M. C., Hachemaoui, O., and Mohn, G.: Characterisation of the pre-Mesozoic basement within the Tell Orogeny (Northwestern Algeria ): Implications for the Tethys realm, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12419, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12419, 2026.

EGU26-12576 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

Basement-cover thermochronological coupling reveals lithospheric-scale geodynamics in the Western Mediterranean realm (South-East France) 

Louise Boschetti, Frederic Mouthereau, Stephane Schwartz, and Yann Rolland

The thermo-tectonic evolution of the Western Mediterranean realm reflects the superimposition of several orogenic phases inclusing the Pyrenean convergence, the Alpine collision and subsequent back-arc extension related to the opening of the Liguro-Provençal Basin. However, the long-wavelength geodynamic forcing driving this evolution remains debated. Most reconstructions rely either on basement-derived thermochronology or on basin-scale stratigraphic records, leading to segmented and sometimes conflicting interpretations. Here, we present a coupled thermochronological approach integrating crystalline basement massifs and their sedimentary cover to reconstruct the continuous geodynamic evolution of southeastern France within the Western Mediterranean realm from the Cretaceous to the Oligo-Miocene. We combine apatite and zircon fission-track and (U–Th)/He data from the Maures–Tanneron and Pelvoux crystalline massifs with new oxy-hydroxide (U–Th)/He constraints from karst-hosted bauxites and subalpine sedimentary systems of the Vocontian Basin. These datasets are jointly interpreted to derive regionally consistent time–temperature paths.

Results reveal a coherent lithospheric-scale thermal signal characterized by (i) mid-Cretaceous oxide crystallization related to Durancian Isthmus uplift, coeval with heating of the crystalline massifs, (ii) Late Cretaceous to Paleogene heating followed by cooling of bauxites driven by flexural and tectonic burial during Pyrenean convergence, synchronous with exhumation of adjacent crystalline massifs, and (iii) Oligo-Miocene heating and cooling associated with Liguro-Provençal back-arc rifting. These thermal trends are independently supported by U-Pb calcite ages documenting brittle deformation and fluid circulation within subalpine and Vocontian basins.

Basement and cover record synchronous thermal responses, while U-Pb calcite ages constrain the brittle response of sedimentary basins to the same lithospheric-scale deformation, indicating that sedimentary basins acted as passive recorders of lithospheric-scale forcing rather than isolated depocenters. This coupled approach demonstrates that long-wavelength geodynamic forcing controlled both exhumation of crystalline massifs and subsidence of adjacent basins, providing a unified thermo-tectonic framework for the Western Mediterranean realm.

How to cite: Boschetti, L., Mouthereau, F., Schwartz, S., and Rolland, Y.: Basement-cover thermochronological coupling reveals lithospheric-scale geodynamics in the Western Mediterranean realm (South-East France), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12576, 2026.

EGU26-12737 | Posters on site | TS2.5

 Adria Microplate Structure and its Geodynamic History Since Early Mesozoic  

Jaume Vergés, Estefania Bravo-Gutiérrez, Montserrat Torne, Daniel García-Castellanos, Ana Maria Negredo, Wentao Zhang, David Cruset, Marc Viaplana-Muzas, Mahdi Najafi, and Ivone Jiménez-Munt

Despite decades of extensive research, the precise lithospheric architecture and evolutionary trajectory of the Adria microplate, sandwiched between the converging Eurasian and African plates, remain subjects of intense geological debate. Although numerous paleotectonic models have been proposed over the last 100 years, the crustal evolution and dimensions of the Adria remain subjects of significant debate, often yielding conflicting results.

Conducted within the framework of the GeoAdria project, this study addresses existing tectonic uncertainties by integrating crustal-scale balanced and restored cross-sections with numerical lithospheric models. We investigate the structural architecture of the Apennine and Dinaride fold-and-thrust belts and their shared Adriatic foreland. Our numerical modeling results reveal a deep-seated lithospheric structure defined by two distinct lithospheric slabs with opposite dips. We interpret the slab beneath the Apennines as the western Adriatic continental lithosphere, which was originally contiguous with the Ionian Ocean. Conversely, the slab beneath the Dinarides represents the eastern continental margin of Adria, formerly adjacent to the consumed Vardar Ocean. These opposing slabs are interpreted as the products of continental delamination triggered at the end of oceanic subduction.

Quantitative analysis of a 758-km-long transect across southern Adria, indicates a minimum total shortening of 291 km (~28%). Of this total, 148 km (31%) was accommodated within the Southern Apennines, while 143 km (25%) occurred in the Southern Dinarides. Based on these numbers, we conclude that the Adria microplate had a minimum NE-SW width of 1050 km during the Jurassic, and thus between 126 and 621 km narrower than suggested by previous paleogeographic reconstructions.

By assuming basement area preservation, we calculated a restored Jurassic crustal thickness of 23–28 km for the central and eastern Adria domains. This crustal framework facilitated a paleogeography of shallow-water carbonate platforms limited from deep basins steep slopes analogous to the modern Bahamas Carbonate Platform.

In this geodynamic frame, we reconstruct the Adria microplate as an integral part of the African plate prior to the breakup of Pangea (~250 Ma). In this configuration, Adria was situated south of the subducting Paleo-Tethys Ocean, allowing for a direct connection between the shelf-basin systems of Southern Adria and the Pelagian Basin offshore Tunisia. Following the fragmentation of the African margin, Adria drifted toward the NNE, eventually reaching a position near the Eurasian margin as Paleo-Tethys subduction was almost consumed at this paleolatitude. This migration occurred during the Early­–Middle Jurassic, preceding the Middle–Late Jurassic opening of the Ligurian-Tethys Ocean between Iberia-Eurasia and Africa.

This research is funded by the GEOADRIA (PID2022-139943NB-I00) project from the Spanish Government

How to cite: Vergés, J., Bravo-Gutiérrez, E., Torne, M., García-Castellanos, D., Negredo, A. M., Zhang, W., Cruset, D., Viaplana-Muzas, M., Najafi, M., and Jiménez-Munt, I.:  Adria Microplate Structure and its Geodynamic History Since Early Mesozoic , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12737, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12737, 2026.

EGU26-13468 | Orals | TS2.5

Setting the sequence of deep slicing events along the Hellenic subduction zone from the P-T-t evolution of the HP-LT Cretan paleo-accretionary duplex (Greece) 

Armel Menant, Johannes Glodny, Samuel Angiboust, Edward Sobel, Eloïse Bessière, Laurent Jolivet, Romain Augier, and Onno Oncken

Subduction dynamics in the Mediterranean realm is largely controlled by the Eurasia-Africa convergence and by the protracted accretion, since the late Cretaceous, of successive oceanic domains and microcontinents to the overriding Eurasian margin. Among these processes, basal accretion of coherent tectonic slices at the base of the forearc domain is one of the most difficult to investigate, as it occurs at high depth along the subduction interface and is only rarely preserved in the geological record. Yet, basal accretion is of prime importance, as it is suspected to remain active beneath active Mediterranean subduction zones and to contribute to the deformation and topographic signals monitored along them. To assess the spatial and temporal scales of the accretion-controlled forearc dynamics, it is therefore crucial to constrain the sequence of slicing episodes forming deep accretionary duplexes.

We address this issue through an integrated structural, petro-metamorphic and geochronological study of a high-pressure/low-temperature paleo-duplex exposed in western Crete and formed along the Hellenic subduction zone during the Oligocene–Miocene. We combine field-based structural mapping, petrological characterization, Raman spectroscopy on carbonaceous material, thermodynamic modelling, Rb/Sr multi-mineral geochronology and zircon (U–Th–Sm)/He thermochronology to identify distinct tectono-metamorphic slices, quantify their peak pressure–temperature conditions and constrain their timing of accretion and exhumation.

Our results reveal a dome-shaped nappe stack composed of five tectono-metamorphic units bounded by major shear zones, with a systematic down-stepping of peak temperatures (~450 to ~350 °C), pressures (17–18 to 7–8.5 kbar) and Rb/Sr ages (~26 Ma and ~15 Ma) toward lower structural levels. These indicate five basal-accretion episodes that successively migrated to shallower depths (~55–60 km to ~25–30 km) between the late Oligocene and middle Miocene. Subsequent fast exhumation of the duplex, with rates of ~3-11 mm/yr, decreasing to ~2-4 mm/yr at shallow levels, was mainly accommodated by top-to-the-N and subordinate top-to-the-S detachments associated with trench-perpendicular extension, intermittently overprinted by trench-parallel deformation.

This study further suggests a sequence of ~2-3-Myr-long deep slicing events, providing a critical timescale for trackingthe tectonic and topographic signatures of deep mass fluxes along active forearc margins in the Mediterranean region and beyond.

How to cite: Menant, A., Glodny, J., Angiboust, S., Sobel, E., Bessière, E., Jolivet, L., Augier, R., and Oncken, O.: Setting the sequence of deep slicing events along the Hellenic subduction zone from the P-T-t evolution of the HP-LT Cretan paleo-accretionary duplex (Greece), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13468, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13468, 2026.

In the Tauern Window of the Eastern Alps, Miocene exhumation is commonly linked to erosion driven by relatively high topography coupled to structural doming, yet erosion alone cannot account for the observed magnitude of unroofing of the once deep-seated rocks. Recent work by our group in the eastern Tauern sub-dome identified the Eastern Tauern Detachment System (ETDS), an Oligo-Miocene crustal-scale extensional fault network, but its contribution to the overall exhumation remains unresolved. We report eleven new apatite fission track (AFT) ages from a north-south transect in the footwall of the Schuhflicker Detachment that yield three distinct age domains: i) early Miocene dates in the northern limb of the sub-dome, separating younger late Miocene dates in the ii) sub-dome core and iii) the northern edge of the window. Because AFT dates can be biased by partial annealing and kinetic heterogeneity, apatite grain-specific chemistry was quantified via electron microprobe to calculate rmr0, a proxy for fission track annealing kinetics. Thermal history models incorporating rmr0 were generated for one representative sample from each of the three domains. Models yield plausible cooling rates in the sub-dome core from c. 11-7 Ma at ~17°C/Myr, whereas the northern limb cooled earlier and slightly more slowly (c. 19-13 Ma at ~12°C/Myr). Although Miocene cooling in the sub-dome core fits the tectonic model of unroofing via erosion during doming, the older AFT ages in the northern limb record cooling associated with exhumation of the footwall of the Oligocene Schuhflicker Detachment, suggesting ductile thinning and east-directed extension contributed to tectonic exhumation prior to, and synchronous with, Miocene doming. Based on this model, 19-22 km of exhumation has occurred in the eastern Tauern sub-dome between 30 Ma and 19 Ma. Our model attempts to account for the proposed >20 km of exhumation since the Oligocene that has been proposed for parts of the Tauern Window, and supports accelerated unroofing during the Oligocene to earliest Miocene. These results indicate a complex exhumation history that involves tectonic unroofing and surface processes, and demonstrate both the utility and limitations of incorporating apatite chemistry into thermal history modeling.

How to cite: Spalding, J., Schneider, D., Huet, B., and Grasemann, B.: More than erosion: Oligo-Miocene tectonic unroofing of the eastern Tauern Window resolved via AFT thermal history models accounting for grain-specific annealing kinetics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13681, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13681, 2026.

EGU26-13695 | Posters on site | TS2.5

Primary and tectonic mélange in the eclogitic Zermatt-Saas Zone, Western Alps 

Davide Zanoni, Thomas Gusmeo, Pietro Luoni, Gisella Rebay, and Maria Iole Spalla

Within the Alpine nappe stack of the Western European Alps, the Zermatt-Saas Zone (ZSZ) is a remnant of the Piedmont-Ligurian Ocean. The oceanic lithosphere formed in Middle-to-Late Jurassic times and was subducted during the Alpine convergence up to UHP-to-HP metamorphic conditions, between the Late Cretaceous and middle Eocene. The ZSZ consists of serpentinite, metabasite, and metasedimentary rocks that are interpreted as a metamorphosed ophiolitic assemblage. This rock assemblage records multiple stages of ductile deformation that developed during the Alpine subduction, collision, and exhumation. In this assemblage, chaotic complexes consist of metasediments with a matrix containing variable amount of carbonatic and quarzitic components, including metabasite (some with gabbro texture) and ultramafite elements. In this kind of rocks, clear primary structures are hardly preserved due to intense transposition developed under UHP and HP conditions. However, we detected poorly preserved primary features that allow to define this metasedimentary matrix as a former sedimentary mélange. Additionally, we envisaged some primary genetic processes for the protoliths formation such as: tabular basalt flows disrupted within ocean floor sediments; mass transport at the ocean floor, possibly from serpentinite and gabbro exposed at structural highs; mass transport from the continental margins and/or interaction with trench sediments. Close to serpentinite, some portions of this metasedimentary matrix are interpreted as metasomatic products. Alpine transposition affected also serpentinite and metabasite and determined pervasive reorganization of the lithostratigraphy, with the formation of hectometer-sized meta-gabbro bodies forming lenses wrapped by the UHP/HP transposition foliation of serpentinite. Serpentinite also includes meter-sized rodingite lenses and layers that are variably folded and disrupted into the dominant foliation, deriving from former gabbro dykes metasomatized at the ocean floor. Serpentinite contains millimeter-sized clinopyroxene and micrometer-sized zircon porphyroclasts that are partially recrystallized during transposition. Clinopyroxene and zircon porphyroclasts show trace element composition consistent with gabbro protoliths and therefore are actually interpreted as remnants of mafic veinlets that percolated serpentinite during ocean floor evolution. On the other hand, serpentinite also preserves Ti-condrodite porphyroclasts that formed during UHP metamorphism predating the pervasive foliation development. In addition, the tectono-metamorphic history predating the dominant fabric at the regional scale is composite and variable in adjacent portions of the ZSZ. These lithostratigraphic, structural and metamorphic data are compatible with the existence of a tectonic mélange, in which the metasedimentary cover displays preserved original features that are consistent with various types of deformed and transformed primary sedimentary mélanges. Thus, the ZSZ can be regarded as an ophiolitic polygenetic mélange formed by HP pressure transposition, which almost completely obliterated primary and tectono-metamorphic features.

How to cite: Zanoni, D., Gusmeo, T., Luoni, P., Rebay, G., and Spalla, M. I.: Primary and tectonic mélange in the eclogitic Zermatt-Saas Zone, Western Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13695, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13695, 2026.

EGU26-13720 | Orals | TS2.5

The lithosphere and upper mantle of Adria microplate from integrated geophysical-geochemical and geodynamic modeling 

Ivone Jiménez Munt, Jaume Verges, Wentao Zhang, Ana Maria Negredo, Mahdi Najafi, Angela Maria Gómez-García, Daniel García-Castellanos, Marc Viaplana-Muzas, Olga Ortega-Gelabert, David Cruset, and Montserrat Torné

The Central Mediterranean region is characterized by a wide diversity of geodynamic processes in the context of the long-term plate convergence between Africa and Eurasia during the entire Alpine Cycle. The Adria microplate, deformed amid the two major converging plates of Africa and Eurasia, results in a key piece for the reconstruction of this complex tectonic region. Adria is surrounded by highly deformed converging margins involving three plate subductions with different polarity and with Adria acting as both upper plate in the Alps and lower plate in the Apennines and Dinarides. One of the striking aspects of these subducted/delaminated slabs is their conspicuous segmentation at depth, as observed in tomographic studies, separated by lithospheric gaps that have been commonly interpreted as occurring during the subduction processes. Moreover, the NW-dipping Ionian subduction under the Calabrian Arc seems to be connected with the SE termination of the slab beneath the Apennines. Unveiling the lithospheric structure of the Calabrian subduction zone, one of the narrowest arcs on Earth, is crucial for understanding the geodynamic evolution of the Mediterranean and adjacent marginal seas.

In this presentation, we will show our findings of a geophysical-geochemical model of the lithosphere and uppermost sublithospheric mantle of the Adria microplate and its surroundings. We will present the lithospheric structure of the Adria microplate and the two opposing mantle slabs along its NE and SW margins. The modeling shows the presence of two asthenospheric mantle wedges aligning with the Apennine and Dinaride continental mantle slab rollback, along with cold sublithospheric anomalies beneath the NE and SW margins of Adria. The structure of the northern Adria region, is consistent with the northeastward rollback of the SW Adriatic slab (beneath Northern Apennines), leading to subsequent delamination of the continental mantle. In the southern Adria region (southern Apennines), the complex deep structure results from the variably oriented lithospheric slabs, and nearly 90-degree shift of the tectonic grain between the southern Apennines and the Calabrian Arc. At the SW Adria margin, beneath the northern Apennines, we interpret the subducting slab attached to the shallower lithosphere, while a slab gap is modeled in the southern Apennines. Our studies suggest that they may represent inherited segments of the Mesozoic Adria plate margins. Underneath the Ionian Sea, our results show a thick crust and a relatively deep Lithosphere-Asthenosphere Boundary (LAB), contrasting with the thinner magmatic crust and lithospheric mantle of the Tyrrhenian Basin. The sharp change in lithosphere thickness, from the Calabrian accretionary wedge to the Tyrrhenian back-arc basin, contrasts with the greater lithosphere thickening below the subduction zone. Our results confirm the presence of an attached Ionian slab beneath the Calabrian Arc. The slab is colder and denser than the surrounding mantle and has a more fertile composition than the lithospheric mantle of the Southern Tyrrhenian.

This research is funded by the GEOADRIA (PID2022-139943NB-I00) project from the Spanish Government

How to cite: Jiménez Munt, I., Verges, J., Zhang, W., Negredo, A. M., Najafi, M., Gómez-García, A. M., García-Castellanos, D., Viaplana-Muzas, M., Ortega-Gelabert, O., Cruset, D., and Torné, M.: The lithosphere and upper mantle of Adria microplate from integrated geophysical-geochemical and geodynamic modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13720, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13720, 2026.

EGU26-13747 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Unveiling the crustal structure of the central-eastern Betic Cordillera, Southern Spain: a potential geological hazard? 

Víctor Mora-Bajén, Jesús Galindo-Zaldívar, Gemma Ercilla, Salvador Baena-Ortola, and Lourdes González-Castillo

The Gibraltar Arc, comprising a northern branch in southern Spain and a southern limb in northern Africa separated by the back-arc Alboran Sea basin, is a key sector of the plate boundary between Africa and Eurasia, which represents the most tectonically active region of the western Mediterranean. In this region, plate convergence is accommodated through a complex pattern of deformation involving compressional and extensional regimes. In the central Betic Cordillera, deformation is dominated by WSW-directed extension and normal faulting, producing moderate seismicity in the Granada basin. In contrast, NNW–SSE compression prevails in the northern Alboran Sea. The interaction and mechanical coupling between these contrasting deformation styles occur across a structurally complex zone defined by two major antiforms, the Sierra Nevada to the north and the coastal Sierra de Lújar–Contraviesa–Gádor to the south, separated by a synformal domain, whose roles in stress transfer and seismicity remain poorly understood. Seismicity propagates onshore northward from the marine faults, yet no major surface structures have been identified on land that could account for this activity. To the west, significant seismicity is absent until reaching the southernmost normal faults of the Granada Basin, located approximately 50 km away. In this sector, the Padul fault accommodates most of the WSW extension, characterized by a significant creep component.

In this study, magnetic data have been collected along several N-S profiles, revealing a prominent regional E-W elongated dipole, consistent with existing aeromagnetic data. Moreover, a well-defined N-S dipole suggests the existence of a shallower conductive body. Preliminary processing and modelling of long-period magnetoteluric data from a dense survey of 20 sites further indicate the existence of conductive bodies at multiple crustal depths. Incipient field reconnaissance identifies widely spread NW-SE trending joints affecting marble lithologies, consistent with dominant regional extension NE-SW. Peridotite bodies crop out in the central-western Betic Cordillera, suggesting that similar lithologies and their associated high conductivity may also be present in depth in the study area. Our results point to the existence of a hidden crustal structure, expressed as conductive anomalies at different crustal levels, which localize brittle deformation and act as a mechanical link between these contrasting deformation styles. This hidden structure plays a key role in focusing deformation and controlling the propagation of seismicity onshore, despite the absence of major mapped surface faults, with important implications for seismic hazard assessment in the region.

Acknowledgements

This publication is part of the PID2022-136678NB-I00 project, funded by Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities/State Research Agency MICIU/AEI (10.13039/501100011033) and by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), EU. In addition, the author V.M.B. gratefully acknowledges the pre-doctoral fellowship associated with grant PREP2022-000591, financed by MICIU/AEI (10.13039/501100011033) and by the European Social Fund (ESF+).

How to cite: Mora-Bajén, V., Galindo-Zaldívar, J., Ercilla, G., Baena-Ortola, S., and González-Castillo, L.: Unveiling the crustal structure of the central-eastern Betic Cordillera, Southern Spain: a potential geological hazard?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13747, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13747, 2026.

EGU26-14050 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Delamination of Continental Mantle Lithosphere driving volcanism at Mount Etna 

Felix Eckel, Amr El-Sharkawy, Luciano Scarfì, Graziella Barberi, Giovanni Barreca, Horst Langer, Thor Hansteen, Sergei Lebedev, and Thomas Meier

As one of Europe’s most active volcanoes, Mount Etna poses a significant geohazard, with recurrent eruptive activity directly affecting a population of over a million in eastern Sicily. Accordingly, Mount Etna has been the in the focus of enduring scientific research concerning the relation of the volcano to the subduction of the Ionian Sea beneath the Calabrian Arc. Contrary to its famous neighbors in the Aeolian archipelago like Stromboli or Vulcano, Mount Etna is not a back-arc volcano. However, during the Holocene its overall intraplate-type geochemical composition has increasingly been influenced by subduction-related magma geochemistry. Its location and compositional anomalies have been explained with asthenospheric flows at the Ionian slab edge, slab windows in the region or oceanic slab brake-offs beneath Sicily.

This research is based on a combined inversion of ambient noise and earthquake-derived data to develop a comprehensive 3D shear-wave velocity model for the broader southern Central Mediterranean resolving the crust and upper mantle. The inversion utilizes an extensive dataset comprising 95,000 Rayleigh wave phase velocity dispersion curves and 40,000 Love wave curves from ambient noise and teleseismic earthquake measurements. Azimuthally anisotropic phase velocity maps were generated using a regularized least-squares approach and then inverted for depth using a stochastic inversion.

The resulting radially anisotropic 3D velocity model reveals a segment of delaminated but still attached African continental mantle lithosphere beneath Western and Central Sicily. A vertical tear beneath Mount Etna separates the delaminated lithosphere from the Ionian slab in the East. These two lithospheric units form a funnel allowing asthenospheric mantle to flow towards the crust beneath Mount Etna, picking up the subduction related contamination of its geochemical composition on its way. Where the mantle flow connects to the crust, we can evidence – together with local seismicity – the crustal pathways of magmatic fluids fueling Mount Etna. Our model not only explains the particular geochemical signature of Mount Etna but also relevant tectonic processes in the crust as surface expressions of the delamination and tearing processes like deep-seated thrusting in Central Sicily or observed uplift in northern Sicily.

How to cite: Eckel, F., El-Sharkawy, A., Scarfì, L., Barberi, G., Barreca, G., Langer, H., Hansteen, T., Lebedev, S., and Meier, T.: Delamination of Continental Mantle Lithosphere driving volcanism at Mount Etna, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14050, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14050, 2026.

EGU26-14417 | Posters on site | TS2.5

Early Miocene tectono-sedimentary shift in the eastern North Alpine Foreland Basin and its relation to changes in tectonic style of the Eastern Alps 

Eline Le Breton, Anne Bernhardt, Robert Neumeister, Claudia Heismann, Julian Hülscher, Richard Sanders, Patrick Grunert, and Mark Handy

A striking difference along the Alpine Orogen is the style of collisional tectonics during the Oligo-Miocene, with the onset of escape tectonics in the Eastern Alps. The indentation of the Adriatic Plate into the Eastern Alpine Orogen resulted in the formation of conjugate dextral and sinistral strike-slip faults in the vicinity of the Tauern Window. Moreover, major changes occurred in the foreland of the Eastern and Southern Alps in the Early Miocene, with the cessation of the northern Alpine front propagation and the onset of thrusting along the Southern Alpine Front. In this study, we present new results from structural, stratigraphic and subsidence analyses of the eastern North Alpine Foreland Basin (NAFB).

Our results show an initial phase of foreland sedimentation in the eastern NAFB between ca. 33-28 Ma, followed by a period of strong, tectonically driven subsidence between ca. 28-25 Ma, ending with a phase of erosion and formation of the basin-wide erosional unconformity, the Northern Slope Unconformity (NSU). During this time, the rift-related Mesozoic normal faults of the European platform were reactivated and then capped by the NSU. We interpret this phase as an increase in the flexure of the subducting European Plate under the growing Alpine Orogen. Between 25-19 Ma, the eastern NAFB remained in a deep-marine, underfilled state with a gentle increase in subsidence. A major shift took place around 19-17 Ma with tectonic uplift, ranging from 200 m (absolute minimum) to 1200 m depending on uncertainties on paleo-water depths, and rapid sedimentary infill of the basin. We discuss the possible causes for this major tectono-sedimentary shift in the eastern NAFB in relation to changes in collisional tectonics within the Eastern and Southern Alps, including a potential Early Miocene slab break-off event beneath the Eastern Alps.

How to cite: Le Breton, E., Bernhardt, A., Neumeister, R., Heismann, C., Hülscher, J., Sanders, R., Grunert, P., and Handy, M.: Early Miocene tectono-sedimentary shift in the eastern North Alpine Foreland Basin and its relation to changes in tectonic style of the Eastern Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14417, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14417, 2026.

The initiation of a subduction zone is commonly characterized by rapid dynamic refrigeration of the subduction channel, resulting in an inverted thermal gradient due to underthrusting of the cold oceanic slab. This rapid initial cooling after subduction initiation is recorded by metamorphic rocks, referred to as the metamorphic sole, that were progressively accreted along the base of the upper-plate mantle wedge. The metamorphic sole is often characterized by highly attenuated, discrete tectonic slivers of early underplated material commonly classified as an upper high-temperature granulite or amphibolite and a lower low-temperature greenschist. Determining the metamorphic ages of the different slivers of the metamorphic sole itself and the associated surrounding HP-LT schists provide critical insights into subduction initiation.

A high-temperature and low-temperature metamorphic sole has been proposed on in Tinos Island, Greece, above the Attic-Cycladic Crystalline Complex, allowing for the study of subduction initiation and early stages of the Cycladic Subduction Complex (CSC). This metamorphic sole lies beneath the metamorphosed late Jurassic Tsiknias Ophiolite suite (161.9 ± 2.8 Ma) and above the early Eocene HP-LT metamorphosed Cycladic Blueschist Unit (CBU). This proposed metamorphic sole was likely further sheared and attenuated during Miocene crustal-scale extension, accommodated along the North Cycladic Detachment system.

Samples from the Tinos metamorphic sole at the base of the Tsiknias Ophiolite are characterized by garnet amphiboles above greenschists. Petrochronological data from the metamorphic sole is scarce but provides important information. Previous work has dated a leucodioritic vein within the metamorphic sole as Late Cretaceous (74 ± 3.5 Ma). This study provides new U-Pb petrochronological data for both the high- and low-temperature metamorphic sole rocks that provide new insights into the early tectono-metamorphic evolution of the Cycladic subduction complex prior to early Eocene peak HP-LT metamorphism.

How to cite: Turek, S., Stockli, D., Soukis, K., and Laskari, S.: Determining the Timing and Type of Subduction Initiation Along the Cycladic Subduction Complex: The High and Low Temperature Sole in Tinos Island, Greece., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14858, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14858, 2026.

EGU26-16412 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

Tectonic control of the petroleum system characteristics in the South Caspian Basin 

Israfil Asgarov, Elchin Bagirov, Aziz Farajov, and Ulviya Bagirova

The South Caspian Basin (SCB) is known as prolific petroleum province. The proven petroleum system is related with Oligocene-Miocene (Maikopian) marine type source rocks and Pliocene fluvial-deltaic sands, as a reservoir. Rich oil and gas fields are known in the northern and central part of the basin. At the same time in the south-western part of the basin a number of dry holes were drilled in early 2000’s. Overall the main reason of the failure was related with lack of charge.

Simultaneously, there is a distinct difference in structural shapes in two zones. The anticlines of the southern-south-western part of the basins have smaller wavelengths comparing with the anticlinal structures of the central South Caspian. This observation led to the question whether the difference in hydrocarbon behavior was related to the geodynamic nature.

South Caspian is genetically classified as a back-arc basin, whose evolution is closely linked to the subduction of the Neotethys oceanic lithosphere beneath the Eurasian continental margin during the Early Jurassic. Basin opening persisted until the early Late Cretaceous, followed by the progressive closure of the Neotethys Ocean. The subsequent collision of the Arabian Plate with the Eurasian Plate in the Late Cretaceous initiated a regional compressional tectonic regime, resulting in further subsidence and structural reorganization of the basin.

Tectonically, the basin can be subdivided into two distinct domains: an arc-distal zone, characterized by relatively wide and gently deformed structures, and an arc-proximal zone, marked by narrow, asymmetric, and intensely folded structural geometries. Variations in the thickness, burial depth, and rheological properties of the Maikop detachment layer exert primary control on this structural differentiation. In the central, deeply buried parts of the basin, increased gas saturation within the Maikop sequence reduces effective viscosity, facilitating detachment-controlled deformation.

From north to south, the detachment layer thins by more than a factor of two and becomes progressively shallower. This systematic variation governs the width and geometry of anticlinal structures: thin and shallow detachments favor the development of narrow and asymmetric folds, whereas thick and deeply buried detachments promote broader and more laterally extensive structures. Overall, arc-distal areas are characterized by a thick sedimentary cover and relatively low tectonic stress, while arc-proximal zones exhibit higher stress regimes and more intense deformation. Thus, the thickness and depth of the source interval in the southern portion of the basin lead to the lack of charge in that area.

How to cite: Asgarov, I., Bagirov, E., Farajov, A., and Bagirova, U.: Tectonic control of the petroleum system characteristics in the South Caspian Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16412, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16412, 2026.

EGU26-17118 | Posters on site | TS2.5

Tools for the joint interpretation of geoscientific datasets: the AdriaArray GeometryPicker 

Marcel Thielmann and Amr El-Sharkawy

Creating data-driven realistic numerical models of certain regions on Earth is a challenging task, as a large number of input parameters are required to constrain the subsurface structure. These input parameters range from geometric parameters describing e.g. slab configurations to rheological input parameters.

With the advent of AdriaArray and related scientific initiatives, a large amount of geophysical, geodetic and geological datasets will become available. Interpreting these datasets together to create consistent interpretations and to facilitate meaningful data-driven numerical models remains problematic. This is due several issues: 1) formats of geoscientific datasets range from ASCII files to netCDF files, with the data often being ordered in different ways and 2) different datasets may have different spatial dimensions, depending on whether they relate to volume, surface or point data. With the julia-based open-source package GeophysicalModelGenerator.jl, a toolbox to merge and process such diverse datasets has been recently become available.

However, to interpret these merged datasets in an efficient manner, additional tools are required. Here we present the software package AdriaArrayGeometryPicker.jl that allows to visualize and interpret a large variety of datasets with a graphical user interface. We show how taking into account different datasets may help their interpretation, but also how different datasets may result in vastly different interpretations.

How to cite: Thielmann, M. and El-Sharkawy, A.: Tools for the joint interpretation of geoscientific datasets: the AdriaArray GeometryPicker, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17118, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17118, 2026.

EGU26-17352 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

GNSS velocities and kenematic block model in Tunisia : quantifying present-day active deformation along the Africa-Eurasia plate boundary 

Hamza Kristou, Frederic Masson, Najib Bahrouni, Mustapha Meghraoui, and Patrice Ulrich

Tunisia occupies a critical position at the eastern termination of the Atlas system, within the central Mediterranean plate boundary zone. The oblique convergence between the Nubian and Eurasian plates is here accommodated by a network of strike-slip and thrust faults that characterize transpressio tectonics. Moderate but persistent seismicity marks the occurrence of destructive historical earthquakes (Utique 408 AD, Kairouan 859 AD) and damaging instrumental events such as Metlaoui 2023 (Mw 5)  and Meknassy 2025  (Mw 4.8)  underscoring the need to quantify present-day deformation for seismic hazard assessment.

To address this need, the collaborative ONM-ITES project has built a multi-scale GNSS network. It integrates data from 21 stations of the OTC (Office de Topographie et Cadastre) network with 6 days of record per year from 2012 to 2019, an expanded national campaign grid of 24 TU stations (with 3 days of record per campaign 2019, 2021, 2023 and 2025), five new permanent stations strategically installed since June 2023, and two dense temporary networks of 16 stations each on the Gafsa-Metlaoui (TG) and Kairouan (TK) fault zones (with 3 days of record per campaign each year from 2021 to 2025) totaling 82 GNSS stations with known precise velocities in Tunisia. Processing is done in ITRF2020 with respect to a fixed Eurasia reference frame yields a robust horizontal velocity field.

Our velocity field reveals a non-linear south-to-north decreasing gradient, with rates ranging from 5.8 mm/yr in the south to as low as 0.8 mm/yr in the far north. This pattern reflects the partitioning of Nubia-Eurasia convergence across Tunisia's distinct tectonic domains. The derived strain rate field shows a striking spatial correlation between areas of high strain concentration and zones of intense historical and instrumental seismicity. The strain pattern provides independent validation and precise location of major deformation boundaries.

Building on this, we present a first order block model developed to interpret the observed velocity field and active tectonics. This model delineates the main tectonic blocks and strain distribution of Tunisia based on residual velocity analysis and quantifies the slip rates along their bounding faults. It provides the first geodetically-derived estimates of long-term slip rates in agreement with key seismogenic fault systems in Tunisia.

This integrated analysis synthesizes the geodetic deformation and related seismic cycle from the derived slip rates and localized strain concentrations. It provides critical constraints to assess the seismic potential and seismic hazard evaluation in Tunisia.

How to cite: Kristou, H., Masson, F., Bahrouni, N., Meghraoui, M., and Ulrich, P.: GNSS velocities and kenematic block model in Tunisia : quantifying present-day active deformation along the Africa-Eurasia plate boundary, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17352, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17352, 2026.

EGU26-18811 | Orals | TS2.5

The structure and evolution of the Santorini-Amorgos basin: numerical modelling simulation of the interplay between extensional deformation and magmatism 

Konstantinos Soukis, Stavropoulou Maria, Kranis Haralambos, Skourtsos Emmanuel, and Exadaktylos George

In areas of prolonged extensional deformation, subsequent crustal thinning creates pathways for magma to ascend to shallow crustal levels, leading to a complex interplay between extensional deformation and magmatism with strong feedback. Numerical modeling can provide valuable insights into the involved processes and their temporal evolution.

The Attic-Cycladic Crystalline Complex (ACCC, central Aegean, Greece) formed as a result of prolonged syn- to late-orogenic exhumation, the latter associated with subduction zone retreat in the Neogene to recent. Late-orogenic exhumation was achieved through low-angle crustal-scale detachment systems rooted in the brittle-ductile transition. At present, the central part of the ACCC is generally aseismic, with major active faults and earthquake activity located along the north and, especially, the southern margins. The southern margin also hosts a large part of the modern volcanic arc, which has been established since the Pliocene. At the southeastern margin, the NE-SW Santorini–Amorgos basin represents a complex horst-and-graben structure with sediments exceeding 1000m in thickness. It is characterized by marginal and internal NE-SW oblique-slip normal faults with a significant dextral sense of motion, such as the Santorini–Amorgos Fault Zone, where the > 7 Mw 1956 Amorgos  earthquake occurred. In January-March 2025, swarm-type earthquakes with magnitudes 1≤M≤5.2 were recorded, with hypocenters at depths mainly between 4 km and 15 km, concentrated along a narrow zone extending offshore of Santorini near the Columbo volcanic center towards the NE and south of Amorgos Island.

A plane-strain numerical model was constructed in the NW-SE extension direction to investigate the structural evolution of the region, driven by combined tectonic forces and magmatism. Simulations were performed using a large-strain finite-difference software in two stages. The first stage of the simulation aimed to recreate the basin's structure without interference from magmatic activity. In the second stage, a magmatic chamber was introduced at the weakest point within the obtained structural configuration of the first sequence. The application of this numerical model highlighted key aspects of the interplay between tectonics and magmatism. It successfully simulated the present structural configuration of the Santorini-Amorgos basin and the January-March 2025 swarm-type earthquakes resulting from the initiation and propagation of new cracks, above the brittle-ductile transition.

How to cite: Soukis, K., Maria, S., Haralambos, K., Emmanuel, S., and George, E.: The structure and evolution of the Santorini-Amorgos basin: numerical modelling simulation of the interplay between extensional deformation and magmatism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18811, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18811, 2026.

EGU26-18953 | ECS | Orals | TS2.5

Combining automatic detection of maximum gravity gradients with seismology and geodetic data to illuminate the crustal architecture of the Mediterranean 

Oluwatimilehin Benjamin Balogun, Matthew Agius, Sabrina Metzger, and Sebastiano D'Amico

The Mediterranean constitutes a complex plate boundary between converging continental plates marked by a wide range of deformation mechanisms, the presence of multiple micro-blocks, and extensional and compressional tectonics. While seismicity and surface kinematics from geodesy highlight (onshore) active plate boundaries and faults, we mostly rely on bathymetry to identify offshore tectonic segmentation. In this work, we explore the potential of automatic detection of maximum gravity gradients to complement our existing seismotectonic databases.

We present a holistic examination of the Mediterranean that integrates gravity, seismology and geodesy to localize weak zones and how they align with the current seismicity and highly-strained areas. We first extracted linear geological features and calculated the Moho depth from Bouguer and free-air anomaly gravity data through gradient computations and minimum-structure inversion modelling, respectively. Then, we synthesized published seismic catalogs, focal mechanisms and surface deformation rates to qualitatively assess the state of crustal stress/strain. We also included a quantitative approach that makes use of clustering. Areas bounded by large-scale gravitational lineaments that agree with large-scale faults and potential kinematic boundaries were classified as tectonic units.

Seismicity, geodesy and delineated maximum gravity gradients agree – to first order – well in highlighting the tectonic boundaries in the region. The maximum gravity gradients showed high potential in accentuating some overprinted/inherited geological structures in the eastern Mediterranean and particularly identified the fault system separating the West Anatolian Graben System and the Cyprian unit, the Aksu-Dinar fault system, which was found to extend to Samsun, Northern Türkiye. We also reproduce the full stretch of the South Levantine Sea fault system whose western end only was previously identified as the North Cyrenaica fault system. While more prominent in Northern Türkiye, the North Anatolian Fault zone was found to extend from Kermanshah, Iran to Vasilevo, Macedonia, covering about 2473 km.

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon Europe research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 101180812.

How to cite: Balogun, O. B., Agius, M., Metzger, S., and D'Amico, S.: Combining automatic detection of maximum gravity gradients with seismology and geodetic data to illuminate the crustal architecture of the Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18953, 2026.

EGU26-19848 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.5

Dynamics of the Adria region using mantle tomography, geophysical-petrological modeling and mantle flow 

Olga Ortega-Gelabert, Ivone Jiménez‐Munt, Ajay Kumar, Daniel García‐Castellanos, Judith Bott, Mahdi Najafi, Maria-Gema Llorens, and Sergio Zlotnik

Mantle dynamics beneath the Adria region are characterized by a complex interaction of lithospheric and sublithospheric processes, reflecting its role within the broader geodynamic framework of the Central Mediterranean. Seismic tomography provides valuable constraints on present-day mantle structure. On other hand, recent geophysical-petrological studies also inferred the slab geometry beneath the Apennines, Dinarides and Calabrian. However, linking these observations to mantle flow and surface expressions remains a challenging task.

In this study, we establish a numerical framework linking regional seismic tomography and geophysical-petrological models with simulations of instantaneous viscous flow of the mantle, to evaluate their contributions to present-day dynamic topography. Our approach consists of two main steps. First, isotropic shear-wave velocity anomalies from a selected tomographic model are converted into three-dimensional temperature and density fields. Second, these density anomalies, together with prescribed rheological laws, are used to compute instantaneous mantle flow by solving the Stokes equations, from which normal stresses at the surface are derived to estimate dynamic topography. In this second stage, we consider the previously modeled slab geometries to better define the viscosity boundaries.

The model domain is defined as a three-dimensional Cartesian volume extending from 30°N to 51°N in latitude, from 10°W to 36°E in longitude, and down to a depth of 660 km. The conversion from seismic velocities to temperature and density is performed using the V2RhoT_gibbs Python tool, which relies on Gibbs free-energy minimization and pre-computed thermodynamic lookup tables for a given mantle composition. Several material models are explored in order to better capture both lithospheric and asthenospheric structures.

The resulting density fields are implemented in the open-source geodynamic code ASPECT to compute the instantaneous mantle flow and its surface response. Different rheological scenarios are investigated, ranging from constant viscosity to temperature- and stress-dependent diffusion–dislocation creep laws. We present preliminary results illustrating the inferred mantle flow patterns and associated dynamic topography, and discuss their implications for the present-day dynamics of the Adria region.

How to cite: Ortega-Gelabert, O., Jiménez‐Munt, I., Kumar, A., García‐Castellanos, D., Bott, J., Najafi, M., Llorens, M.-G., and Zlotnik, S.: Dynamics of the Adria region using mantle tomography, geophysical-petrological modeling and mantle flow, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19848, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19848, 2026.

EGU26-21815 | Posters on site | TS2.5

The Malta Graben: Insight into recent tectonic activity in the Sicily Channel (Central Mediterranean Sea) in response to Africa-Eurasia convergence  

Andrea Artoni, Nicolò Chizzini, Aasiya Qadir, Simona Bongiovanni, Mimmo Palano, Alina Polonia, Eline Le Breton, Luca Gasperini, Mariagiada Maiorana, and Attilio Sulli

The NW-SE-trending Malta Graben is one of the main extensional structures of the Sicily Channel, whose tectonic evolution within the broader Africa-Eurasia convergent setting remains debated. We reconstruct the tectono-stratigraphic evolution of the Malta Graben since the Pliocene through the interpretation of seismic reflection profiles, integrated with bathymetric, geodetic, and seismological data. The Plio–Pleistocene succession is organized into syn-extensional sequences, which are bounded by unconformities and record the progressive development of the rift above a Miocene–Mesozoic basement. The structural architecture is dominated by high-angle normal faults and negative flower structures, which controlled the growth of the graben. Moreover, some normal faults remain active today, while some have been locally inverted, producing folding and a prominent seafloor bulge in the northern part of the Malta Graben. The geometry and distribution of these inverted structures indicate that contractional reactivation occurred in recent geological times, since the Upper Pliocene-Lower Pleistocene. We propose that these coeval extensional and contractional structures reflect differential foreland deformation style within the Sicily Channel in response to the Africa–Eurasia plate convergence. The Malta Graben is therefore a valuable natural laboratory for better understanding how foreland region responds locally to competing tectonic forces at major plate boundaries. 

How to cite: Artoni, A., Chizzini, N., Qadir, A., Bongiovanni, S., Palano, M., Polonia, A., Le Breton, E., Gasperini, L., Maiorana, M., and Sulli, A.: The Malta Graben: Insight into recent tectonic activity in the Sicily Channel (Central Mediterranean Sea) in response to Africa-Eurasia convergence , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21815, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21815, 2026.

EGU26-489 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.6

Solving the western European Rheic Puzzle Through Orogenic Architecture Diagrams 

Alice Maremmani, Daniel Pastor-Galán, and Ana Negredo

The Rheic ocean is one of the many oceanic basins inferred to form part of the intricate puzzle of continents and microcontinents in the Paleozoic. It opened in the Early Ordovician, separating the microcontinent Avalonia from Gondwana, and subsequently closed in the late Paleozoic with the amalgamation of the supercontinent Pangea, playing a major role in the Variscan orogeny. The existence of the Rheic ocean is accepted and required in plate reconstructions. However, its actual width, along-strike length, and relationships with other oceans and seaways (e.g., the Rhenohercynian, Galicia-Moldanubian, Saxo-Thuringian oceans) are unconstrained and controversial.

To address these issues, we perform a detailed review of available data on lithostratigraphy, magmatism, geochronology, geochemistry, structural geology, and metamorphism of tectonostratigraphic units in Iberia and the British Isles, where the Variscan belt comprises accreted units of Gondwana, Avalonia and their intervening ocean(s). We compile these datasets in orogenic architecture diagrams, with the aim of objectively assessing the current state of knowledge on the paleogeographic limits and evolution of the Rheic ocean and on the nature and continuity of its suture. Through our preliminary compilation, we identify what data constitutes solid evidence for the existence of the Rheic ocean and whether gaps in the current knowledge exist that have been filled by interpretative work, and discuss tectonic implications and potential paths forward.

How to cite: Maremmani, A., Pastor-Galán, D., and Negredo, A.: Solving the western European Rheic Puzzle Through Orogenic Architecture Diagrams, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-489, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-489, 2026.

Lithogeochemical and Sr-Nd-Pb isotope data obtained on gabbro, metagabbro, amphibolite, garnet amphibolite and diorite from the Palaeozoic Odenwald basement, Mid-German Crystalline Rise, Germany, show that their protolithic melts formed from different mantle source regions and were emplaced in different tectonic environments. Four geochemically different rock groups can be distinguished. The calc-alkaline Group I (mostly gabbro and amphibolite) and Group IV rocks (diorite) have low TiO2 and high to intermediate Mg#, whereas the tholeiitic Group II and III rocks (predominantly garnet amphibolite) have intermediate to very high TiO2 and low to intermediate Mg#. The Group I and II rocks have N- to E-MORB affinities, with the N-MORB type rocks having depleted Nd isotope compositions of eNd, initial =4.5-7.7. The precursor melts of all Group I and II rocks formed by partial melting in the shallow depleted mid-ocean ridge mantle and were emplaced in a divergent setting, possibly in a back-arc environment. Group III garnet amphibolite is strongly enriched in TiO2, FeOtotal and V (TiO2 of up to 4 wt. % and FeOtotal ranging from 14.4-17.6 wt. %). The parental melts of these high Ti-Fe rocks formed most likely by low-degree melting from a deep-seated, fractionated magma source. We propose that the melts were generated in an extensional setting, possibly in a continental rift environment during incipient rifting. The protolithic melts of the Group IV diorite formed by partial melting in the subcontinental lithospheric mantle in a supra-subduction setting (mature volcanic arc). The chemical features of the diorite are virtually identical to those of 340 Ma old western Odenwald and Spessart diorite. Thus, we propose that all diorite from the Spessart-Odenwald basement are part of one coherent intrusion that underlies the whole area. We think it likely that diorite formation was related to the presence of a mantle plume, which was also responsible for the widespread late Carboniferous magmatism and the associated high-temperature metamorphism in the Mid-German Crystalline Rise and other areas of the Variscan orogen. Most likely, this marks the beginning of lithospheric extension in the central European Variscides and may correlate with the incipient break-up of Pangaea.

How to cite: Will, T. and Schmädicke, E.: Mantle sources of Palaeozoic mafic rocks from the eastern Odenwald basement, Mid-German Crystalline Rise, Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3387, 2026.

EGU26-4548 | Posters on site | TS2.6

Repeated recycling of sedimentary continental margin sequences during extensional and contractional orogenic episodes (Cenerian and Variscan orogenic cycles, Central Alps) 

Urs Schaltegger, Alfons Berger, Eliana Noroña Muñoz, Axel Gerdes, Jürgen Abrecht, and Michael Wiederkehr

Gneisses, granites and migmatites of the Central Alpine basement (Aar Massif and Gotthard Nappe, Helvetic Zone of the Swiss Alps) record a long-lasting geological history over several hundred million years. This complex history is resolved through detailed zircon U-Pb geochronology and Hf isotope analysis:

(1) Inherited cores in zircon record a 750-550 Ma old orogenic and magmatic history during Rodinia disintegration and Gondwana amalgamation. The cores reflect zircon crystallization during the Pan-African and Cadomian orogenies with the involvement of cratonic and oceanic materials, leading to scattering initial epsilon Hf values of +10 to -15. (2) The Cenerian orogeny caused widespread melting of sedimentary wedge material consisting of this Pan-African and Cadomian siliciclastic detritus during a phase of lithospheric thinning along an accretionary continental margin. Large volumes of anatectic melts formed at ca. 460-440 Ma, which occur today as gneisses, migmatites and metagranites. The Hf isotope systematics of the detrital precursor zircon was recycled into the new magmatic zircon and homogenized. (3) Some of the quartz-feldspar rich Ordovician-age migmatites and granites were remelted at a late stage of the Variscan orogeny at around 315 Ma, facilitated by addition of several volume percent of water to a near-minimum melt quartz-feldspar composition. The resulting anatectic melts formed heterogeneous granite bodies with diffuse borders. Newly grown U-rich zircon rims around older zircon again recycled and somewhat homogenized the initial epsilon Hf composition of partially consumed previous zircon generations. This generation of anatectic granites is coeval with more deeply sourced intrusive suites at 335 and 300 Ma. High-temperature metamorphism and magmatism are explained by late-orogenic lithospheric thinning in the back-arc area of the retreating Paleotethys subduction. (4) Alpine deformation in greenschist facies at around 25 Ma partly reactivated existing structures and led to low-temperature hydrous alteration of previous mineral assemblages.

The new data confirm existing hypotheses that the Variscan orogeny mainly recycled fertile igneous protoliths of early to late Ordovician age, which ultimately originated to a overwhelming extent from the melting of Neoproterozoic and Cambrian siliciclastic orogenic detritus. The Variscan orogeny is thus characterized by abundant crustal recycling and little juvenile addition.

How to cite: Schaltegger, U., Berger, A., Noroña Muñoz, E., Gerdes, A., Abrecht, J., and Wiederkehr, M.: Repeated recycling of sedimentary continental margin sequences during extensional and contractional orogenic episodes (Cenerian and Variscan orogenic cycles, Central Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4548, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4548, 2026.

EGU26-6494 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.6

Polyphase metamorphism of Austroalpine basement units in the Eastern Alps: hints to Early Devonian subduction 

Kevin Karner-Ruehl, Walter Kurz, Hauzenberger Christoph A., Fritz Harald, Gallhofer Daniela, Schuster Ralf, and Mali Heinrich

The Austroalpine nappe stack includes basement units with a partly polyphase pre-Alpine history that were part of the northern Gondwana margin before the Variscan orogeny. Although Alpine metamorphism strongly overprinted many of these units, parts of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System preserve a complex record of earlier metamorphic events. This study reconstructs the pressure-temperature-time (P-T-t) evolution of the Seckau and Speik complexes, two key elements of the Silvretta-Seckau Nappe System, to refine models for the tectonic evolution of the Eastern Alps.

Metapelitic rocks of the Seckau Complex (Glaneck Metamorphic Suite) document a polyphase metamorphic evolution. Garnet textures and compositions record two distinct growth stages. Early garnet nucleation occurred at approximately 550°C and 0.4-0.5 GPa, followed by rim growth at higher pressures (1.1-1.4 GPa) and temperatures of 570-620°C, the latter being characteristic for conditions of Eo-Alpine metamorphism. Zr-in-rutile thermometry consistently yields temperatures around 600°C, corroborating these estimates. Locally, EPMA monazite ages of metapelites in the range of ~68-64 Ma indicate Late Cretaceous metamorphic overprinting, suggesting a tectonic affinity of parts of the Seckau Complex with the adjacent Koralpe-Wölz Nappe System. The Glaneck Metamorphic Suite is associated with plutonic suites, that are related to magmatic episodes from the late Cambrian-Early Ordovician (Mandl et al., 2018) through early Carboniferous to the late Permian, as constrained by U-Pb zircon ages from calc-alkaline and predominantly peraluminous metagranitoids with I- to S-type characteristics.

In contrast, the Speik Complex preserves evidence of high-pressure metamorphism related to Early Devonian oceanic subduction. This ophiolitic unit comprises serpentinized ultramafics, (garnet-) amphibolites, rare eclogites, and subordinate gneisses and marbles. Eclogites contain garnet, omphacite/clinopyroxene, amphibole and zoisite, typical of high-pressure metamorphism. Garnet textures show homogeneous compositions with spessartine-rich cores, while others display two-stage growth with rims having higher grossular and pyrope contents. Geothermobarometry and thermodynamic modelling indicate peak conditions of 600-650°C at 1.3-2.0 GPa. Whole-rock geochemistry shows a tholeiitic trend, with dominantly MORB, but also arc-related affinities, confirming an oceanic protolith. U-Pb zircon ages from metabasaltic dikes within serpentinite (403-395 Ma), together with Sm-Nd garnet-whole rock isochrons on amphibolite (413-406 Ma) and 40Ar/39Ar amphibole cooling ages of ~397 Ma (Faryad et al., 2002) constrain high-pressure metamorphism in the Early Devonian, preceding Variscan continental collision. Metagranitoids of the Speik Complex yield late Cambrian (503-493 Ma) ages, consistent with recently published ages from Guan et al. (2025). However, a metagranitoid sample from the same area yields a middle Permian age of 272.3 ± 3.2 Ma.

Together, these results indicate that the Seckau Complex preserves a polyphase metamorphic history from pre-Variscan to Alpine times, whereas the Speik Complex represents remnants of oceanic lithosphere as part of an Early Devonian suture zone, related to subduction of an oceanic basin that formed along the northern Gondwana margin (Neubauer et al., 2022; Finger & Riegler, 2023). Their combined P-T-t paths highlight a complex mosaic of continental and oceanic domains later assembled during Alpine orogeny.

How to cite: Karner-Ruehl, K., Kurz, W., Christoph A., H., Harald, F., Daniela, G., Ralf, S., and Heinrich, M.: Polyphase metamorphism of Austroalpine basement units in the Eastern Alps: hints to Early Devonian subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6494, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6494, 2026.

EGU26-6700 | Orals | TS2.6

Palaeoceanographic constraints on the Devonian evolution of the north-western Gondwana margin 

Michal Jakubowicz, Jolanta Dopieralska, Michael Joachimski, Aleksandra Walczak-Parus, and Zdzislaw Belka

The palaeogeographic configuration of the continental fragments and seaways that developed during the Devonian evolution of the Rheic Ocean remains insufficiently understood. One of the elusive elements is the palaeogeography of north-western Gondwana, and most notably the position of the Moroccan Meseta – the central part of the Moroccan Variscides, comprising a collage of blocks once located at the northern periphery of Gondwana. While some reconstructions place the Meseta as a distal, continuous segment of the Gondwana margin, others depict a very different scenario, envisaging that at some point the Meseta became separated from Gondwana by a wide oceanic basin. Here, we aim to better understand the Late Devonian position of the Meseta using a novel approach that combines two palaeoceanographic tracers: neodymium (Nd) and oxygen isotopes. These proxies, applied together on conodont apatite – an established archive of the composition (Nd and O isotopes) and temperature (O isotopes) of past seawater – provide new constraints on the pre-Variscan oceanography of the Gondwana margin. The analysed, uppermost Givetian-lower Famennian sections, which are representative of the Gondwana mainland (eastern Anti-Atlas) and the cratonward part of the Western Meseta (Middle Atlas) show similar, relatively unradiogenic εNd values. These signatures point to dominance of continental weathering-derived Nd sources in the epicontinental seas of northwestern Gondwana. The temporal trends observed in the studied sections also show notable similarities, which are primarily interpreted as reflecting variations in the continental-runoff vs. open-oceanic contributions to the local marine Nd isotope budget. These variations were controlled by changes in sea level, local tectonic movements, and the evolution of vascular plants on land. The distal, outboard margin of the Western Meseta exhibits less variable and more radiogenic εNd values, indicating a greater contribution from open-oceanic seawater. While the observed trends in  oxygen isotope signatures are generally consistent with global records, the δ18O values are significantly lower than those reported from other parts of the Rheic realm. The most likely explanation for the observed 18O depletion is the increased role of freshwater input in the relatively high-latitude, semi-restricted epicontinental basins. Overall, the observed εNd–δ18O signatures are consistent with the location of Moroccan Meseta at the northern Gondwana margin. Some local variations in the isotope signals can be attributed to the semi-isolated nature of the studied basins, rather than to a presence of an extensive Late Devonian oceanic seaway between the Anti-Atlas and Meseta domains.

This work was supported by the National Science Centre, Poland, grant No. 2022/47/ST10/00205.

How to cite: Jakubowicz, M., Dopieralska, J., Joachimski, M., Walczak-Parus, A., and Belka, Z.: Palaeoceanographic constraints on the Devonian evolution of the north-western Gondwana margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6700, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6700, 2026.

EGU26-8021 | Orals | TS2.6

Indenters and Ribbons: Cratonic Lithosphere in the Variscan Belt 

Stanislaw Mazur, Stephen Collett, Imma Palomeras, Christian Schiffer, and Olivier Vanderhaeghe

The Variscan orogen of Europe and northwestern Africa represents one of the most complex collisional systems on Earth, assembled during the diachronous convergence of Laurussia and Gondwana in the late Palaeozoic. Unlike classic continent–continent collisions dominated by the interaction of two large cratonic masses, the Variscan belt developed through the progressive accretion, reworking, and collision of numerous continental fragments derived mainly from Gondwana. Here, we synthesize geological, geophysical, and provenance data to evaluate how the inherited architecture of cratonic and transitional lithosphere controlled the construction, geometry, and internal differentiation of the Variscan orogen.

Our compilation integrates crustal thickness models, lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary (LAB) depth estimates, lithospheric mantle–to–crust thickness ratios, and detrital zircon provenance constraints across western and central Europe and adjacent Gondwanan domains. These datasets allow us to distinguish preserved cratonic lithosphere from zones that experienced partial or complete destruction of their cratonic character during rifting and collision-tectonic accretion. Particular emphasis is placed on the contrasting behaviour of Baltica, Brunia, Avalonia, Armorica, and Gondwana-derived terranes such as Saxo–Thuringia, Teplá–Barrandia, and the Variscan Internal Zone.

The results show that Baltica is the only cratonic block involved in the European Variscides that fully retained its thick, cold lithospheric mantle, with a LAB reaching depths of ~250 km. This cratonic lithosphere directly underthrust the Variscan orogen for distances of up to 100–150 km and acted as a rigid mechanical buttress, exerting a first-order control on the curvature and reorientation of the Variscan belt from a NE–SW trend in western Europe to a NW–SE trend in central Europe. In contrast, Gondwana-derived terranes are characterized by systematically thinned lithospheric mantle and shallow LAB depths, reflecting extensive pre-Variscan lithospheric modification during Ordovician rifting along the northern Gondwana margin. These terranes preserve widespread Gondwanan zircon age signatures, yet their lithospheric architecture indicates that they were already detached from the Gondwanan craton prior to collision.

Avalonia and Armorica occupy an intermediate position. Avalonia retained a relatively deep LAB inherited from its cratonic ancestry, but its moderately thin and reflective crust suggests significant pre-Variscan thinning. Armorica is the only Gondwana-derived terrane with a deep LAB comparable to cratonic domains, although its crustal structure resembles that of transitional lithosphere. The Variscan Internal Zone represents the most intensely reworked segment of the orogen, where Gondwana-derived lithosphere underwent profound crust–mantle decoupling, subduction, and syn- to post-collisional reworking.

We conclude that the European Variscan belt is fundamentally shaped by inherited lithospheric heterogeneity. Rigid cratonic blocks of Laurussian and peri-Gondwanan affinity acted as indenters, while mechanically weakened Gondwana-derived ribbons localized deformation, metamorphism, and magmatism. This dominance of reworked Gondwanan lithosphere distinguishes the Variscan system from other major collisional orogens and highlights the critical role of cratonic lithosphere and inherited rift architecture in the assembly of Pangaea.

How to cite: Mazur, S., Collett, S., Palomeras, I., Schiffer, C., and Vanderhaeghe, O.: Indenters and Ribbons: Cratonic Lithosphere in the Variscan Belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8021, 2026.

EGU26-8483 | Orals | TS2.6

Assembling Pangaea – The Complex Morphology of the Laurussia – Gondwana Collision 

Yvette Kuiper, Brendan Murphy, Damian Nance, Karel Schulmann, and José Martínez Catalán

The Late Paleozoic convergence and collision between Gondwana and Laurentia resulted in along-strike variations in the Alleghanian–Mauritanide–Variscan orogeny during the assembly of the greater part of Pangaea. A series of ca. 380–290 Ma events segmented the orogen into two principal geodynamic domains with contrasting tectonic evolutions. In the northeast, the European Variscan belt records multiple subduction–collisional tectonic events, including indentation by Laurussian and later Gondwanan promontories and by Gondwana-derived terranes. Late-stage events (330–290 Ma) produced strongly curved deformation belts (oroclines), and late- to postorogenic extension. In contrast, the southern Appalachians formed southwest of the promontory collisions where subduction of Rheic Ocean remnants produced a continuous Andean-style orogenic arc that preceded ca. 290 Ma terminal collision. We explain Pangaea amalgamation using a global model of mantle convection like that of modern Earth.

How to cite: Kuiper, Y., Murphy, B., Nance, D., Schulmann, K., and Martínez Catalán, J.: Assembling Pangaea – The Complex Morphology of the Laurussia – Gondwana Collision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8483, 2026.

The main Variscan phase in Northwest Africa occurred in the late Carboniferous-Permian, which is a late event compared to Western Europe. Yet, an early tectono-metamorphic event is recorded in so-called “Eovariscan” outcrops, mainly in Morocco. In spite of the debate that exists on the tectonic meaning of the Eovariscan event, its P-T conditions and timing are still poorly precised. In only one case are LP-HT conditions recognized and estimated (High Moulouya, Morocco) at 2–4 kbar and 450–650 °C (Filali et al., 1999).

The Mekkam inlier (Northeast Morocco) shows Eovariscan deformation affecting Upper Devonian rocks, sealed below unconformable late Visean sedimentary rocks. This deformation overprints inherited metamorphic cordierite and biotite, originally formed during contact metamorphism due to a granodiorite intrusion. The P-T conditions of the deformation have been evaluated through the use of classical metamorphic petrology in addition with Raman Spectroscopy on Carbonaceous Matter for independent temperature estimates. These conditions were then compared to the P-T conditions of emplacement of the granodiorite, determined using the Al-in-amphibole geobarometer (Mutch et al., 2016) and the Holland & Blundy (1994) amphibole-plagioclase geothermometer. P-T conditions for both the granodiorite emplacement and the cordierite-bearing mica schists largely overlap those recorded in the High Moulouya inlier. At last, zircon U-Pb dating on the granodiorite and a late leucogranite have been carried out, whose results are used in order to precise the chronology of events in the Mekkam inlier.

The P-T conditions do not support a compressive tectonic context and are more consistent with an extensional one. Our new data confirm the peculiarity of the Eovariscan event in Northwest Africa, which is significantly distinct from the late Carboniferous-Cisuralian Variscan phase. The classical Eovariscan compressional context must be significantly modified because it cannot account for our results and suggest that Northwest Africa behaved in a different manner than Western Europe at the same time. A generalized early Carboniferous rifting context is more suitable to explain our results and data from literature. This could be related to the opening of the Paleotethys, whose influence would be effective as far as northern Morocco and northern Algeria.

How to cite: Leprêtre, R., El Houicha, M., and Chopin, F.: The Eovariscan in the Northwest Africa Variscan belt, a key to Paleozoic Africa-Europe connexions: Example of the Mekkam inlier, Morocco, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10151, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10151, 2026.

EGU26-13688 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.6

 Late Ediacaran adakites from Middle Köli Nappe Complex in Northern Caledonides of Sweden 

Gabriel Gitter-Dentz, Katarzyna Walczak, Simon Cuthbert, Karol Greczyński, Isabel Carter, and Jiři Sláma

The Scandinavian Caledonides consist of a stack of thrust nappes emplaced during the Caledonian Orogeny. The Upper Allochthon of the Caledonides in Norway and Sweden is dominated by Iapetus derived rocks of the Köli Nappe Complex (KNC), which is traditionally separated into the Lower, Middle, and Upper KNC. In the Hammaren-Stáddátjåhkkå region, located to the North of the Sulitjelma ophiolite, the Middle KNC is composed of metasedimentary rocks of Cryogenian to early Ordovician age (Stephens et al. 1985), intruded by various igneous rocks including gabbros, trondhjemites and diabase dikes of unknown age.

Hereby we report new geochemical and geochronological results from three adakite samples, previously believed to be trondhjemites, from the region, and reveal unusually old magmatic ages within zircon grains. Collected samples were originally mapped as trondhjemite (Thelander 2009). However, bulk-rock geochemical data suggests that two of the samples are high-silica adakites related to a supra-subduction environment, which formed on an active continental margin or intra-oceanic arc, and the third is an adakite-like trachyandesite with the geochemical signature of a subduction-related environment. 

The absence of an Eu anomaly in zircon trace element patterns indicates that the source of melt was feldspar-free, while the low Ce anomaly suggests reducing conditions during melt formation. Such features also corroborate the thesis that the melt was derived from eclogitized oceanic crust in a subduction environment. In each sample, 14 zircons were analysed for 206Pb/U238 dating, and the calculated concordia ages are 549.3 ± 2.4 Ma (n=8), 551.9 ± 1.7 (n=13), and 559.8 ± 2.8 Ma (n=5), respectively. 

Both the geochemical signatures and the age of the adakites are quite rare in the Caledonides. Similar ages were only reported from the Seiland Igneous Province, however, they are believed to have formed in extensional settings. Regarding the age of the Northern branch of Iapetus opening (starting c. 590 Ma), it is highly improbable to develop a subduction zone in such a short time.  Thus, we claim the Middle KNC of the Hammaren-Stáddátjåhkkå area to be of exotic, possibly Timanian origin. However, the possibility that Iapetus was “infected” with early subduction, by a process similar to that described by Waldron et al. (2014), cannot be excluded.

This study underlines the importance of geochronological work on igneous and sedimentary rocks from the Hammaren area, which is emerging as a key locality to yield novel insights about the origin of the Iapetus terranes of the Northern Caledonides. 

 

Stephens, M.B., Furnes, H., Robins, B. and Sturt, B.A. 1985a. Igneous activity within the Scandinavian Caledonides. In: Gee, D. G. and Sturt, B. A. (eds) The Caledonide Orogen – Scandinavia and Related Areas, pp. 623–656.

Thelander, T., 2009: Berggrundskartan Kaledoniderna i norra Sverige, skala 1:250 000. Södra delen. Sveriges geologiska undersökning K 222:2.

Waldron J.W.F., Schofield D.I., Murphy J.B., Thomas C.W., 2014. How was the Iapetus Ocean infected with subduction? Geology  42 (12): 1095–1098.

How to cite: Gitter-Dentz, G., Walczak, K., Cuthbert, S., Greczyński, K., Carter, I., and Sláma, J.:  Late Ediacaran adakites from Middle Köli Nappe Complex in Northern Caledonides of Sweden, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13688, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13688, 2026.

EGU26-14033 | Orals | TS2.6

The Afterlife of the Svalbard Caledonides 

Jaroslaw Majka

Traditionally, the Early Devonian Scandian collision of Baltica and Laurentia is considered to mark the dusk of the Caledonian Orogeny. However, in the High Arctic, the deformation and metamorphism continued at least into the Mississippian. The rock complexes affected by the aforementioned Late Devonian to Mississippian tectonic event, known as the Ellesmerian Orogeny, can be traced within an up to 400 km wide fold-and-thrust belt extending from the Canadian Arctic Islands through North Greenland to Svalbard. It is proposed that the Ellesmerian event resulted from the docking of the Pearya Terrane (currently northern Ellesmere Island), Svalbard, and other equivalent terranes to the northern Laurentian margin. However, until recently, a geochronological record of this event was largely obscure and based mostly on observations rather than radiometric data. This has changed since an amphibolite facies metamorphic complex in Prins Karls Forland of Svalbard was dated to c. 359–355 Ma (Kośmińska et al. 2020, JMetGeol). The latter discovery prompted further geochronological campaigns to define the extent of age-equivalent crystalline units in Svalbard and triggered a critical evaluation of all possible Middle/Late Devonian to Mississippian equivalents elsewhere in the High Arctic.

In this contribution, the current state of knowledge on the so-called Ellesmerian orogenic event in Svalbard will be presented. This synthesis is anchored in a broader High Arctic perspective, including new insights from the Pearya Terrane and the East Greenland Caledonides. The ultimate question arising from this summary is whether the dusk of the Caledonian orogeny and the dawn of the Ellesmerian orogeny merely overlap in time and space, or whether the two orogenic events form mutually connected subsystems of a much larger superorogenic cycle that ultimately led to the amalgamation of Pangea.

How to cite: Majka, J.: The Afterlife of the Svalbard Caledonides, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14033, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14033, 2026.

EGU26-15562 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.6

New mapping and geochronology constraints on the Variscan plutonism, metamorphism and deformation in the Ossa-Morena Zone (SW Iberian Massif) 

Lourenço Steel Hart, Aitor Cambeses, Manuel Francisco Pereira, Antonio García Casco, João C. Duarte, and Ícaro Dias da Silva

The western-central European Variscan orogen developed during the Upper Devonian to Carboniferous continental collision between Gondwana and Laurussia, culminating in the assembly of Pangea. This orogen records a complex sequence of tectono-thermal events providing insights into continental crustal evolution and lithospheric deformation mechanisms. Late Devonian D1 contractional deformation is associated with crustal thickening, Mississippian D2 extensional deformation was probably caused by gravitational collapse of the mountain range, and Pennsylvanian D3 contractional deformation represents subsequent crustal shortening. The Iberian Massif, located at the core of the Variscan Orogen, offers exceptional conditions for detailed analysis of deep-to-shallow crustal Variscan tectono-thermal processes, preserving these three superimposed deformation events.

In the Ossa-Morena Zone (SW Iberian Massif), the youngest Variscan orogenic activity is associated with the emplacement of syn- to late-D3 plutons. We present new geological mapping, whole-rock geochemistry, and zircon U-Pb geochronology from the Pennsylvanian Figueira e Barros-Ervedal and Fronteira plutons (west-central Ossa-Morena Zone). These shallow-crustal, calc-alkaline, peraluminous granodioritic to granitic intrusions are syn- to late-D3 because they crosscut D2-D3. SHRIMP U-Pb zircon dating indicates crystallisation ages of 307 ± 3 Ma and 308 ± 2 Ma for the Figueira e Barros-Ervedal and Fronteira plutons, respectively.

Their host metamorphic succession consists of Silurian-Devonian siliciclastic flysch, containing olistostromes and olistoliths, overlying a bimodal volcanic-sedimentary complex assigned to the Cambrian-Ordovician (?). Both stratigraphic units underwent post-kinematic contact metamorphism associated with the emplacement of these Pennsylvanian plutons, producing pelitic hornfels, dominated by spotted mica schists with post-kinematic porphyroblasts. Prior to this contact metamorphism, regional M2 Buchan-type metamorphism produced pre- to syn-kinematic garnet porphyroblasts and syn-kinematic andalusite and staurolite porphyroblasts. These mineral assemblages are associated with the development of a flat-lying pervasive S2 foliation and mineral lineation, defined by biotite and muscovite (after sillimanite?), which is comparable to that observed in the hanging-wall blocks of Mississippian gneiss domes in the Iberian Massif, including in nearby sectors of the Ossa-Morena Zone. It should also be noted that locally, pre-early-kinematic garnets preserved as cores or as isolated minerals, together with possible high-pressure/low-temperature mineral assemblages in the kyanite zone, were also identified, pointing to a pre-D2 process of regional pressurisation (Barrovian metamorphism), which possibly represents D1-M1(?). About 20 km northwest of the Pennsylvanian Figueira e Barros-Ervedal and Fronteira plutons, the Mississippian Ponte-de-Sôr gneiss dome exhibits a pervasive S2 foliation and top-to-the-SE tectonic transport synchronous with M2 Buchan-type metamorphism. We propose that a comparable, though cryptic, D2 gneiss dome developed in the study area prior to the emplacement of the syn- to late-D3 Figueira e Barros-Ervedal and Fronteira plutons.

Work supported by FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020- https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020, UID/50019/2025, https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025, UID/PRR2/50019/2025, and by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Fondos Feder, PID2023-149105NA-I00. L.S.H. benefits from the FCT PhD scholarship UI/BD/154616/2023, I.D.S from the FCT research contract DL57/2016/CP1479/CT0030 (https://doi.org/10.54499/DL57/2016/CP1479/CT0030), J.C.D. from FCT contract CEECINST/00032/2018/CP1523/CT0002  (https://doi.org/10.54499/CEECINST/00032/2018/CP1523/CT0002), and M.F.P. from grant Nº. FCT/UIDB/06107-Center for Sci-Tech Research in Earth System and Energy-CREATE.

How to cite: Steel Hart, L., Cambeses, A., Pereira, M. F., García Casco, A., C. Duarte, J., and Dias da Silva, Í.: New mapping and geochronology constraints on the Variscan plutonism, metamorphism and deformation in the Ossa-Morena Zone (SW Iberian Massif), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15562, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15562, 2026.

EGU26-15589 | ECS | Orals | TS2.6

From Variscan to Neotethyan tectonic processes in the Central Srednogorie and Sakar-Strandja Zones in Bulgaria: Evidence from Geochronology and Geochemistry 

Lirong Tao, Shuyun Cao, Franz Neubauer, Christoph von Hagke, Lefan Zhan, Xuemei Cheng, and Shuting Wang

The Apuseni-Banat-Timok-Srednogorie (ABTS) belt, located in east-central Europe, forms part of the Alpine-Mediterranean orogenic system and represents a continental margin magmatic arc. Its development is generally interpreted to be closely related to the northwestward subduction of the Neotethyan Vardar Ocean beneath the Serbo-Macedonian-Rhodope Massif. The Srednogorie Zone is composed of a Variscan basement overlain by a Permo–Mesozoic cover sequence and an Upper Cretaceous sedimentary basin. To the south, the Sakar-Strandja Zone is exposed and consists of a crystalline basement intruded by Permian to Triassic granites, which relate to Paleotethys subduction processes. However, detailed geochronological constraints and sedimentary provenance data for both tectonic zones remain scarce. Based on systematic field investigations in the Srednogorie and Sakar-Strandja zones, this study presents integrated petrological, geochemical, and geochronological analyses of basement gneisses, Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks, and granites. Geochemical analyses reveal that the granites in both zones are peraluminous, exhibiting similar rare earth element distribution patterns characterized by relative fractionation of light rare earth elements over heavy rare earth elements and distinct negative Eu anomalies (δEu = 0.08–0.46). They are consistently enriched in Rb, Pb, and Th but depleted in Ba, Nd, and Eu. Geochronological results show that the basement gneisses in the central Srednogorie zone have crystallization ages of Ediacaran (612.6±2.2 Ma) and Ordovician (475.0–454.8 Ma), and record a distinct Variscan metamorphic age (351.4–327.7 Ma). Detrital zircon ages from Upper Cretaceous sandstones indicate that their provenance is the Srednogorie basement, with dominant ages of Ordovician and Carboniferous. Additionally, their Ediacaran and Late Cambrian age components constrain connections the link to the Cadomian-Avalonian belts. The Upper Cretaceous sheared granites in the southern Srednogorie tectonic belt have ages of 85 and 83 Ma, and their formation is related to the subduction of the Vardar Ocean, which also constrain a second stage of the ductile overprint at the boundary to Rhodopes in the south. In contrast, the Sakar granite yielded an Early Triassic age (248 Ma), indicative of magmatism associated with Paleotethys subduction.

How to cite: Tao, L., Cao, S., Neubauer, F., von Hagke, C., Zhan, L., Cheng, X., and Wang, S.: From Variscan to Neotethyan tectonic processes in the Central Srednogorie and Sakar-Strandja Zones in Bulgaria: Evidence from Geochronology and Geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15589, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15589, 2026.

EGU26-16159 | Posters on site | TS2.6

Recent insights into the metamorphic evolution of high-pressure rocks from Svalbard 

Karolina Kośmińska, Jarosław Majka, Christopher Barnes, and Mattia Gilio

Metamorphic rocks exposed on Svalbard document a complex tectonothermal history associated with the early stages of the Caledonian orogeny. Particularly high-pressure (HP) rocks are key-targets for reconstructing the geodynamic evolution of the Arctic. Two HP units crop out on Svalbard, namely the Richarddalen and Vestgötabreen complexes. Although the rocks have been recognized since the 1960s, the age of the HP metamorphism was not unequivocally resolved. Here, we present new petrochronological data for both units.

The Richarddalen Complex comprises HP orthogneisses, eclogites, and metagabbros. Peak conditions for the eclogite reached 2.4–2.5 GPa and 720–740°C, followed by decompression to ~1.2 GPa (Elvevold et al. 2013, GSL, Spec Pub). The prograde conditions estimated using quartz in garnet and Zr in rutile thermometry yield 1.7–1.8 GPa at 700°C for eclogite and 1.2–1.4 GPa at 700°C for orthogneiss. In-situ Lu-Hf dating of garnet from augen gneiss and mylonitic orthogneiss yields Tonian ages of 967±44 Ma and 959±28, respectively. Smaller, II-generation garnet yields a poorly constrained age of 477±98 Ma. In-situ Rb-Sr dating provides Early Ordovician ages of 470±12 Ma for white mica from mylonitic orthogneiss, and 473±4 Ma for biotite from augen gneiss. A recent geochronological study constrained Neoproterozoic age of HP metamorphism based on U-Pb zircon dating (Koglin et al., 2022, JGSL), while Mazur et al. (2022, Terra Nova) presented Ar-Ar dating of white mica interpreted as cooling after HP event and further deformation and tectonic assembly with lower-P units at ca. 440–438 Ma. The latter ages together with the new geochronological data presented here, rule out the Neoproterozoic age of HP metamorphism proposed by Koglin et al. (2022). Additionally, Lu-Hf data further confirm the Tonian age of the protoliths (e.g. Pettersson et al. 2009, JGSL; Gromet&Gee 1998, GFF).

The Vestgötabreen Complex represents HP low-temperature units composed of eclogites, blueschists, schists, and serpentinites. Geothermobarometry defines three stages for eclogite: prograde at 1.6±0.3 GPa and 460±60°C, peak-P at 2.3±0.3 GPa and 507±60°C, and peak-temperature at 2.1±0.3 GPa and 553±60°C (Kośmińska et al. 2023, ConMinPet). U-Pb zircon age of 482±10 Ma records prograde growth, whereas U-Pb monazite age of 471±6 Ma is interpreted as post-peak P growth. Peak-P conditions of 2.0±0.03 GPa and 500±30 °C were estimated for blueschist. Lu-Hf garnet dating yields 471±4 Ma for blueschist. Barnes et al. (2021, Minerals) presented an extended dataset of Ar-Ar ages and interpreted age populations as: cooling after HP metamorphism at 476±2 Ma, assembling the Upper and Lower units at 454±6 Ma, and late deformation in the Lower Unit at c. 430–400 Ma. This data provides further support for an early Ordovician subduction system along the Baltican margin in the High Arctic sector of the orogen.

The recent studies are extending our understanding of the geological evolution of this part of the Arctic during the early stages of the Caledonian orogeny. However, further integrated field and analytical studies are needed to help develop the geodynamic reconstructions for the Arctic. This study was supported by the NCN projects 2021/43/D/ST10/02305 (KK) and 2019/33/B/ST10/01728 (JM).

How to cite: Kośmińska, K., Majka, J., Barnes, C., and Gilio, M.: Recent insights into the metamorphic evolution of high-pressure rocks from Svalbard, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16159, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16159, 2026.

EGU26-16185 | ECS | Orals | TS2.6

Variscan tectonism in the Eastern Alps: Insights from the Schladming Complex in the Austroalpine mega-unit 

Qianwen Huang, Yongjiang Liu, Franz Neubauer, Johann Genser, Sihua Yuan, Qingbin Guan, Boran Liu, and Ruihong Chang

        The last known supercontinent, Pangea, formed through the Variscan orogeny as the result of closure of Rheic ocean and collision between Gondwana and Laurussia. The Schladming Complex is the key part of the arc-like Silvetta-Gleinalpe basement of the Austroalpine Unit in the Eastern Alps (Neubauer et al., 2022). The Devonian to Carboniferous magmatism/metamorphism in the Schladming Complex record the Variscan orogeny that collision between Laurasia and assembly of Paleo-Adria and Galatian terranes (Neubauer et al., 2022). The continental arc like granitic gneisses in the southeast Schladming Complex have protolith ages of 485 – 483 Ma, and records the three metamorphic ages: ca. 420 Ma, ca. 380 Ma, and ca. 350 Ma. In addition, subduction related hornblendites, amphibolites, and granites have crystallization ages of 380 – 350 Ma, and host the metamorphic ages of 330 – 300 Ma. Therefore, our new data of Schladming Complex reveal three Variscan stages in the Eastern Alps: an early stage at ~ 420 – 380 Ma, high-grade metamorphism at ~380 – 330 Ma, and second metamorphism at ~330 – 300 Ma.

To sum up, we combine the regional geological evidences, geochemical features and distribution characteristics of the samples, to reconstruct tectonic evolution history of the Eastern Alps during the Devonian to Late Corboniferous. The subduction and rollback of the Rheic Ocean crust led to opening of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean and its brunch ocean (Balkan-Carpathians ocean) in the Early Devonian (~420 Ma; Guan et al., 2025). In the Late Devonian (~380 Ma), with the southward subduction of the Rheic Ocean and the northward subduction of Paleo-Tethys Ocean, the Eastern Alps and the Western Carpathians in extension setting and instruded by instensive continental arc-related magma. The Tournaisian (~350 Ma) magmatism marking the initial closure of Balkan-Carpathians ocean, which cause collision between the Paleo-Adria and the Galatia hosting Schladming. After Tournaisian (~350 Ma), the Paleo-Adria and the Galatia initially collided with the Laurasia, which marking the closure of Rheic Ocean and beginning of Variscan orogeny, followed by syn-collision stage in the Late Carboniferous. Our study suggest that the basement of Eastern Alps had been strongly overprinted by the Variscan orogeny.

 

References

Guan, Q.B., Liu, Y.J., Neubauer, F., Genser, J., Chang, R.H., Liu, B.R., Li, S.Z., Huang, Q.W., Yuan, S.H., 2025. Early Paleozoic subduction initiation in the West Proto-Tethys Ocean: Insights from ophiolitic Speik Complex in the Eastern Alps. Geoscience Frontiers 16, 102121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gsf.2025.102121

Neubauer, F., Liu, Y.J, Dong, Y.P., Chang, R.H., Genser, J., Yuan, S.H., 2022. Pre-Alpine tectonic evolution of the Eastern Alps: From Prototethys to Paleotethys. Earth-Science Reviews 226, 103923. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2022.103923

How to cite: Huang, Q., Liu, Y., Neubauer, F., Genser, J., Yuan, S., Guan, Q., Liu, B., and Chang, R.: Variscan tectonism in the Eastern Alps: Insights from the Schladming Complex in the Austroalpine mega-unit, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16185, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16185, 2026.

EGU26-16586 | Orals | TS2.6

Pre-Variscan tectonics in Sardinia: insight into Lower Palaeozoic geodynamic processes along the Gondwanan margin 

Fabrizio Cocco, Alfredo Loi, Antonio Funedda, Leonardo Casini, and Giacomo Oggiano

The tectonic evolution of continental palaeo-margins involved in the Variscan Orogeny remain debated. Along the northern Gondwana margin, contrasting Ordovician geodynamic settings have been proposed, including rifting, ocean spreading, passive margins, subduction–accretion complexes, non-collisional orogens, and volcanic arcs. Southern Sardinia represents a key area to investigate these processes, owing to the very low-grade Variscan metamorphic overprint and the limited post-Variscan deformation.

Here we reconstruct the Ordovician tectonic evolution of the Variscan basement of southern Sardinia through the analysis of stratigraphic architectures and structural features of the External and Nappe zones, which record two distinct but partly coeval geodynamic scenarios.

The External Zone is characterized by two main stratigraphic successions separated by the regional Sardic angular unconformity. The lower succession (Cambrian–Lower Ordovician) comprises a basal terrigenous unit with minor limestone intercalations, overlain by a thick carbonate platform and upper siliciclastic deposits. The overlying Upper Ordovician succession starts with coarse conglomerates that grade upward into finer-grained siliciclastic deposits.

The Nappe Zone consists of three stratigraphic successions separated by the Sarrabese angular unconformity and the Katian nonconformity. These include: (i) a Cambrian–Lower Ordovician terrigenous succession with interlayered volcanic levels; (ii) a Middle–Upper Ordovician volcano-sedimentary succession; and (iii) an Upper Ordovician succession dominated by siliciclastic deposits. In both zones, Silurian–Devonian black shales and limestones are overlain by syn-orogenic Lower Carboniferous deposits.

The Sardic and Sarrabese unconformities are interpreted as the result of folding events (Sardic and Sarrabese tectonic phases) affecting the Cambrian–Lower Ordovician successions. Their precise ages remain poorly constrained and are likely not synchronous, as suggested by the different durations of the associated stratigraphic gaps (ca. 17 Ma for the Sardic unconformity and ca. 6 Ma for the Sarrabese unconformity).

The post-Sardic stratigraphic evolution of the External Zone is consistent with non-volcanic rifting, which initiated approximately 10 Ma after the onset of subduction-related volcanic arc activity recorded in the Nappe Zone. These contrasting geodynamic settings coexisted for at least ~8 Ma during the Sandbian to early Katian. During this interval, the External Zone evolved along a divergent margin, whereas the Nappe Zone was part of a convergent margin characterized by active arc magmatism. Volcanic activity ceased during the middle Katian, marking the transition to passive margin conditions above the former arc.

The coexistence of contrasting tectonic evolutions in coeval stratigraphic successions suggests that the External and Nappe zones occupied distinct palaeogeographic positions along the same continental margin, likely separated by large distances along the northern Gondwana margin, without evidence for intervening oceanic basin closure. During the Early Carboniferous, Variscan tectonics ultimately assembled these domains into their present configuration, with the Nappe Zone thrust above the External Zone.

How to cite: Cocco, F., Loi, A., Funedda, A., Casini, L., and Oggiano, G.: Pre-Variscan tectonics in Sardinia: insight into Lower Palaeozoic geodynamic processes along the Gondwanan margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16586, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16586, 2026.

EGU26-21025 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.6

In situ Lu-Hf dating of garnets: reconstructing subduction zone histories in the Seve Nappe Complex, Scandinavian Caledonides 

Antonia Roos, Christopher J. Barnes, Riccardo Callegari, Iwona Klonowska, and Jarosław Majka

The Seve Nappe Complex (SNC) of the Scandinavian Caledonides preserves a record of HP-UHP metamorphism related to continental subduction along the Baltican margin. Geochronological studies traditionally identified a late Cambrian (c. 490–480 Ma) (U)HP event in the northern SNC, whereas the southern SNC was interpreted to record younger Ordovician metamorphism at c. 470–455 Ma (Gee et al. 2020, and references therein), leading to models of localized late Cambrian subduction restricted to the north.

In this contribution, we present a new approach using in situ Lu-Hf geochronology on polymetamorphic garnets to further constrain the subduction histories in the SNC. It is a powerful tool to directly date garnet growth associated with (U)HP conditions and allows recovery of early metamorphic histories in the Scandinavian Caledonides.

Preliminary results show ages of 495-480 Ma for a paragneiss in Marsfjället, a garnet schist in Avardo, two garnet schists in Lillfjället, two eclogites in Sjouten, and a schist in EASU. This extends the late Cambrian-early Ordovician subduction record to the central SNC. Furthermore, three Avardo eclogites yield ages of 460-450 Ma, indicating that the central SNC was affected by two metamorphic events, both possibly (U)HP.

In the ongoing project, in situ Lu-Hf dating will be applied on garnets farther south in the SNC to constrain the spatial extent of late Cambrian subduction of Baltica.

 

References:

Gee, D.G., Klonowska, I., Andréasson, P.G. and Stephens, M.B. 2020. Middle thrust sheets in the Caledonide orogen, Sweden: the outer margin of Baltica, the continent–ocean transition zone and late Cambrian–Ordovician subduction–accretion. Geological Society Memoir, 50, 517–548, https://doi.org/10. 1144/M50-2018-73

How to cite: Roos, A., Barnes, C. J., Callegari, R., Klonowska, I., and Majka, J.: In situ Lu-Hf dating of garnets: reconstructing subduction zone histories in the Seve Nappe Complex, Scandinavian Caledonides, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21025, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21025, 2026.

EGU26-21576 | ECS | Orals | TS2.6

Variscan to late-Variscan record in Lesser Kabylia (Northeastern Algeria) 

Cerine Bouadani, Francis Chopin, Pavla Stipska, Abderrahmane Bendaoud, El-Hocine Fettous, Karel Schulmann, Andrew RC Kylander-Clark, and Remi Leprêtre

AlKaPeCa terranes—comprising the Alboran, Kabylia, Peloritani, and Calabria domains—represent Mesozoic terranes involving Paleozoic metamorphic basement that was dispersed to form the allochthonous internal zones of peri-Mediterranean orogens (Betics and Maghrebides). Our study focuses on the Lesser Kabylia Massif (Algerian Tell), where a granitoid-gneiss-schist high-grade basement divides structurally into the Texenna-Skikda Upper Nappe (TS-UN) overthrust onto the Beni-Ferguen Lower Nappe, both with Alpine overprint on Variscan basement.

To update the petro-geochronological framework, we combined petrological analysis, thermodynamic modelling, in-situ LA-ICP-MS U-Th-Pb dating of zircon and monazite, and LA-SS-ICP-MS U-Pb monazite      dating in key lithologies. The high-grade rocks in TS-UN comprise felsic migmatites (Grt–Pl–Kfs–Qtz–Bt ± Sill/F ± Sp) cross-cut by Permian Grt–Trm-bearing Beni Khettab granitoid and enclosing mafic-to-ultramafic granulite lenses, including Opx–Cpx–Amp–Pl–Qtz–Ilm mafic granulites. Pseudosection modelling of Sill–Grt-bearing felsic migmatite constrains peak conditions to ~7.5–6 kbar and ~790–770 °Cand mafic granulite records comparable high-grade conditions of ~7–6.4 kbar) and ~830–780 °C. Monazite U–Pb dates form a ca. 30 Myr spread from ca. 290 to 260 Ma. The monazite textures and compositional maps show embayment into high Y monazite core and porosity, textures typical of coupled dissolution–precipitation (CDP) replacement. The age spread is therefore interpreted as a result of monazite growth at ca. 300–290 Ma and its replacement at ca. 280–270 Ma rather than continuous monazite growth over ca. 30 Myr. This age continuum coincides with those first order one obtained from zircons  .

We note that no significant Alpine metamorphic imprint occurs in the migmatites of TS-UN, except one xenotime grain (ca. 17 Ma). In contrast, the underlying kinzigities of the TS-UN and Beni-Ferguen Lower Nappe record HP Alpine reworking at ~28 Ma and retrogression at ~25 Ma. This bimodality matches Rif observations (Bakili et al., 2024).

Our results will be integrated into a compilation at the scale of the AlKaPeCa blocks. Together with a comparison to the rest of the Variscan orogen, this will help decipher the Variscan versus Alpine imprint and improve our understanding of the role of these blocks in the final closure of the Paleotethys Ocean and the amalgamation of Pangea

How to cite: Bouadani, C., Chopin, F., Stipska, P., Bendaoud, A., Fettous, E.-H., Schulmann, K., Kylander-Clark, A. R., and Leprêtre, R.: Variscan to late-Variscan record in Lesser Kabylia (Northeastern Algeria), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21576, 2026.

EGU26-21996 | Orals | TS2.6

Granites and the nature of the Variscan Crust 

Jean-François Moyen, Alexandra Guy, Patrizia Fiannacca, Vojtech Janoušek, Carlos Villaseca, and Puy Ayarza Arribas

Unlike the neighbouring cratonic crust, the orogenic crust of the European Variscan belt is granite-rich and seldom has a mafic lower layer. In this work, we compiled a database of ca. 1500 plutons, classified by type, to elucidate the evolution of the Belt and the origin of this uncommon crust. The core of the belt originated by massive melting of fertile quartzo-feldspathic sources (felsic meta-igneous or meta-sediments) derived from an Ediacaran–Ordovician accretionary system. As a consequence of Variscan processes, an unusually felsic lower crust formed either by relamination or by extensive crustal anatexis producing a granitic upper crust and a laminated, restitic lower crust. This is in strong contrast to conventional models, formulated mainly in magmatic arcs, assuming mafic lower crustal compositions. Thus, global estimates on nature and evolution of the continental crust should take into account the specificity of orogenic systems resulting in distinct crustal structures and compositions.

How to cite: Moyen, J.-F., Guy, A., Fiannacca, P., Janoušek, V., Villaseca, C., and Ayarza Arribas, P.: Granites and the nature of the Variscan Crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21996, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21996, 2026.

Closure of the Iapetus and Rheic oceans occurred diachronously along the Appalachian orogen, and documentation of sutures is complicated by post-collisional deformation and by irregularities in the original Laurentian margin along which accretion of terranes occurred. In Nova Scotia, at least four cryptic terrane boundaries involved ocean closures but do not show the typical geological assemblages associated with subduction-related accretion of terranes. Three collisions discussed here are (i) between two Ganderian terranes (Aspy and Bras d’Or), (ii) between the Ganderian Bras d’Or terrane and Avalonian Mira terrane, and (iii) between the Meguma terrane and Avalonia in northern mainland Nova Scotia. In Cape Breton Island arc magmatism spanned the Ediacaran to Cambrian (620 Ma – 530 Ma) in both Aspy and Bras d’Or terranes, but only the Aspy terrane records arc magmatism in the Ordovician to Silurian. The Eastern Highlands shear zone (EHSZ) juxtaposed the Ganderian Aspy and Bras d’Or terranes at ca. 420-390 Ma. Minor magmatism at ca. 402 Ma likely occurred in a syn-collisional pull-apart basin that formed in an overall transpressional environment. No evidence is preserved in Nova Scotia of a magmatic or metamorphic event associated with collision of the Ganderian Bras d’Or terrane with the Avalonian Mira terrane, and the suture is not exposed at the surface. Geophysical data and clasts in a conglomerate overlying the suture constrain the location and age of the boundary, but its nature is not well understood. However, in Newfoundland this collision is marked by extensive subduction-related Silurian to Devonian magmatism and metamorphism, suggesting that in the Nova Scotian segment the collision was mainly transpressional. The accretion of the Meguma terrane to the southern Avalonian margin in Nova Scotia is also a well- documented transpressional collision. No subduction-related magmatism has been associated with the collision, but it was coeval with voluminous S-type magmatism throughout the Meguma terrane.  The transpressional character of these three accretionary events in Nova Scotia, in contrast to the equivalent events elsewhere in the northern Appalachians, suggests that the Nova Scotian segments of each collision may have repeatedly developed as transform boundaries.

How to cite: Barr, S., van Rooyen, D., and White, C.: A tale of three collisions: terrane accretions and cryptic ocean closures in the Nova Scotia segment of the Appalachian orogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22522, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22522, 2026.

EGU26-22526 | Posters on site | TS2.6

Deconstructing the Iapetus Suture: Terrane assemblage map of the northern Appalachians and western Caledonides 

John Waldron, Sandra Barr, Phil McCausland, David Schofield, Chunzeng Wang, Martin Schwangler, Deanne van Rooyen, Chris White, and Shawna White

Maps of the Appalachian–Caledonide Orogen have sought to identify a unique Iapetus suture marking either a collision between Laurentian and Gondwanan crust, or final closure of the Iapetus Ocean. However, orogen syntheses based in Britain and Ireland show the Iapetus suture as Silurian; those in Newfoundland show a Late Ordovician suture; those in Cape Breton Island show no Iapetus suture, and those in southern New England show closure in the Early Ordovician. The provenance and the timing of accretion can be examined using detrital zircon distributions and stratigraphic relationships. For example, the approach of a Ganderian terrane to the Laurentian margin is typically marked by an influx of ~1 Ga zircon from the Grenville Orogen. The end of accretion is typically bracketed by an angular unconformity, above which forearc basin sedimentary and volcanic rocks contain both Laurentian and non-Laurentian zircon. This approach allows identification of terrane assembages separated by multiple anastomosing sutures, ranging in age from Early Ordovician to Devonian. Terranes derived from peri-Gondwanan Ganderia arrived diachronously, such that the Laurentia–Gondwana boundary is marked by sutures of different age along the orogen. We therefore argue that efforts to identify a single Appalachian–Caledonide "Iapetus suture" are not worthwhile.

 

How to cite: Waldron, J., Barr, S., McCausland, P., Schofield, D., Wang, C., Schwangler, M., van Rooyen, D., White, C., and White, S.: Deconstructing the Iapetus Suture: Terrane assemblage map of the northern Appalachians and western Caledonides, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22526, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22526, 2026.

EGU26-22775 | ECS | Posters on site | TS2.6

Petrology and geochronology of the Handöl mélange lithologies, Köli Nappe Complex, Scandinavian Caledonides: deciphering orogenic and post-orogenic signatures  

Cornelia Nilsson, Iwona Klonowska, Daniel Buczko, and Jaroslaw Majka

The Scandinavian Caledonides formed as a result of plate convergence, closing of the Iapetus Ocean, and continental collision between Baltica and Laurentia. The orogen is composed of allochthonous units, situated on top of the autochthonous basement of Baltica. The Köli Nappe Complex (KNC) of the Upper Allochthon and Seve Nappe Complex (SNC) of the Middle Allochthon of the Scandinavian Caledonides represent a transition between the oceanic terranes of the Iapetus Ocean and Baltica’s outer margin, respectively. Located at the interface between the KNC and the SNC is the Bunnerviken soapstone quarry in Handöl (west-central Jämtland, Sweden), interpreted as mélange-like lithology (Bergman, 1993) containing abundant lithic fragments. The suite of fragments is commonly deformed and reworked together with the host rock, showing a range of textural and compositional characteristics. Up to five groups are currently recognized, possibly reflecting different origins.

This preliminary study focuses on the characterization of the lithic fragments within the soapstone. Special emphasis is put on a single sample representing heavily altered amphibolite with an albite + amphibole + chlorite + calcite + titanite + Fe-Ti phase assemblage. Amphibole and albite are widespread throughout all zones of this lithology, suggesting they are a primary mineral assemblage. However, chemical zoning in amphibole and euhedral to subhedral titanite, dominantly associated with chlorite + calcite, indicates alteration and metamorphic record. U–Pb geochronology of titanite reveals a young, post-Caledonian lower-intercept age of 382 ±10 Ma.

The obtained age is younger than the Scandian collisional phase of the Caledonian orogeny. However, extensional, post-orogenic collapse of the orogen offers an alternative explanation. Normal faulting, thinning of the crust and the development of a post-orogenic metamorphic core complexes (Fossen et al. 2024) in the area could explain intense, prolonged heating, resulting in re-opening of the U-Pb system and the recorded post-Caledonian, Middle to Late Devonian age. The record from Bunnerviken quarry is consistent with earlier local observations by Sjöström et al. (1991) on the Röragen Detachment and may offer additional evidence for post-collisional evolution of the Caledonian allochthons.

References

Bergman, S. (1993). Geology and geochemistry of mafic-ultramafic rocks (Köli) in the Handöl area, central Scandinavian Caledonides. Norsk Geologisk Tidskrift, 73(1), 21-42.

Fossen, H., Polonio, I., Bauck, M.S., Cavalcante, C. (2024). The North Sea rift basement records extensional collapse of the Caledonian orogen. Commun Earth Environ, 5, 206. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01374-y

Sjöström, H., Bergman, S., & Sokoutis, D. (1991). Nappe geometry, basement structure and normal faulting in the central Scandinavian Caledonides; kinematic implications. Geologiska Föreningen i Stockholm Förhandlingar, 113(2–3), 265–269. https://doi.org/10.1080/11035899109453877

How to cite: Nilsson, C., Klonowska, I., Buczko, D., and Majka, J.: Petrology and geochronology of the Handöl mélange lithologies, Köli Nappe Complex, Scandinavian Caledonides: deciphering orogenic and post-orogenic signatures , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22775, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22775, 2026.

EGU26-268 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Quantitative Estimation of Leucosome Volume in Migmatized Eclogite and Implications for Exhumation Dynamics of Mafic Crust 

Chao Yan, Lu Wang, Zhe Chen, Michael Brown, Xiandeng Yang, and Mengwei Zhang

Numerical experiments have shown that the presence of fluid or melt during exhumation of deeply subducted ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) eclogite significantly reduces the bulk strength and density, promoting exhumation. However, quantitative studies of the leucosome volume in natural migmatitic eclogites as a proxy for the amount of melt present during exhumation are rare, hindering a deeper understanding of exhumation dynamics of mafic crust. Here, we report results of a systematic study from an extensive outcrop of migmatized eclogite within host gneisses at General's Hill in the Sulu belt, China. Two types of leucosome are distinguished at outcrop and thin-section scales: one type was derived exclusively from UHP eclogite and the other represents a blend of melts derived from both eclogite and host gneiss. We develop a comprehensive set of quantitative methods to estimate the total leucosome volume and the proportion derived from eclogite, and to evaluate the density change of mafic crust due to the presence of melt and effects of retrogression during exhumation. First, we identified leucosome types, subsequently verified by petrographic analysis, and estimated leucosome proportion along one-dimensional transects totaling ~239 meters in length. Second, we estimated the area of different leucosome types using two-dimensional drone-based orthophotos covering ~4000 m2 in area. Based on linear proportion or area as a proxy for volume, the total leucosome amount in the migmatized mafic crust varies from 20 to 30 vol.% with ~83% of the leucosome sourced from eclogite. Retrogression during exhumation leads to between 5 and 19% density reduction of the eclogites on a per sample basis compared to representative unmigmatized UHP eclogites from the adjacent Yangkou Bay outcrop, and overall, the presence of leucosome leads to between 18 and 20% density reduction of the local mafic crust investigated in this study. These results provide critical parameterized constraints for use in geodynamic models of exhumation of eclogite-dominated tectonic units in continental subduction zones.

How to cite: Yan, C., Wang, L., Chen, Z., Brown, M., Yang, X., and Zhang, M.: Quantitative Estimation of Leucosome Volume in Migmatized Eclogite and Implications for Exhumation Dynamics of Mafic Crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-268, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-268, 2026.

The Mantle Transition Zone (MTZ) is a geophysically and geochemically significant yet incompletely constrained region of Earth’s interior. Among the high-pressure mineral phases stable under MTZ conditions, akimotoite is especially relevant in the context of cold subducting slabs. The phase transition between akimotoite and bridgmanite near the 660 km discontinuity is thought to influence slab behaviour and associated mantle features. Experimental and meteoritic studies have shown that akimotoite can incorporate a range of cations, such as Fe and Al, which may significantly affect its phase stability and the pressure–temperature conditions governing its transformation to bridgmanite. In this study, we employ first-principles calculations within the quasi-harmonic approximation to quantify the thermodynamic and thermoelastic effects of cationic substitution on the akimotoite-to-bridgmanite transition. To capture realistic mantle compositional variability, we construct a two-phase coexisting region for Fe- and Al-bearing systems to better constrain the solid solution effect in this regime. Our results demonstrate that increasing Fe2+ content significantly decreases the akimotoite–bridgmanite transition pressure and enhances the acoustic velocity contrast across the boundary. The associated modification of the Clapeyron slope implies possible changes in slab buoyancy and stagnation behaviour near the 660-km discontinuity (Pandit et al., 2025). These results underscore the importance of compositional effects in modulating phase stability and provide new constraints on the role of the akimotoite–bridgmanite transition in MTZ subduction dynamics.

 

Reference:

Pandit, P., Chandrashekhar, P., Sharma, S., & Shukla, G. (2025). Effect of Fe2+ on akimotoite to bridgmanite transition: Its implication on subduction dynamics. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems26(3), e2024GC012010.

How to cite: Pandit, P. and Shukla, G.: Compositional Effects on the Akimotoite–Bridgmanite Phase Transition and Their Significance for Subducting Slab Behavior, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-590, 2026.

EGU26-684 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Plagiogranites derived from high-Mg Andesitic magmas: An example from the Andaman Ophiolite 

Sree Bhuvan Gandrapu, Jyotiranjan S Ray, and Rajneesh Bhutani

Plagiogranites are the felsic plutonic rocks occurring amidst a suite of predominantly mafic and ultramafic rocks. Their occurrence ranges from newly formed oceanic crust to Archean ophiolites, and they are usually associated with the crustal section, i.e., gabbros and sheeted dykes. Sometimes, they have been observed in the mantle sections as well. The Andaman ophiolite (AO) is a dismembered ophiolite suite located on the forearc of the Andaman subduction zone, where the Indian plate obliquely subducts beneath the Burma microplate. Plagiogranites of the AO are found to be intruding into gabbros and serpentinized mantle peridotites. They have been dated to 98-93Ma, and are contemporaneous with the other rocks of the ophiolite. Earlier studies propose that these have been generated by crystal fractionation or an immiscible separation from a parental basaltic magma. In this study, we utilize new whole-rock geochemical data and Sr-Nd isotopic ratios of these rocks to constrain their petrogenesis. Geochemically, these rocks are classified as diorites to tonalites-trondhjemites, characterized by plagioclase+amphibole+quartz assemblage. Petrographic observations reveal that euhedral plagioclase and amphiboles were the early crystallizing phases, while anhedral quartz crystallized later in the sequence. The plagiogranites exhibit LREE-enriched patterns on chondrite-normalized plots and negative Nb-Ta and Zr-Hf anomalies on primitive mantle-normalized plots, suggesting derivation from a metasomatized source. Sr-Nd isotopic compositions strongly overlap with other rocks of the ophiolite suite, pointing to a common mantle parentage. Low TiO2 contents, overlapping trace element patterns with the mafic rocks of the AO, and REE-SiO2 systematics negate the possibility of plagiogranite formation by fractional crystallization from a basaltic magma. The occurrence of amphiboles in the plagiogranites suggests that the parent magma was hydrous, implying that liquid immiscibility was not the genetic mechanism. Therefore, we explore the possibility that they are crystallized products of a high-magnesian andesitic magma (HMA) derived by the partial melting of a metasomatized mantle source at low pressure, followed by fractional crystallization of plagioclase±amphibole, to explain their genesis and the observed compositional variation. We demonstrate, using the results of alphaMELTS simulations, that compositional variation and the mineral assemblages observed in the plagiogranites of the AO can be explained by this model and suggest that derivation from HMAs is a viable mechanism for the genesis of plagiogranites in similar settings. We propose that the plagiogranites of AO have formed during the initiation of an intra-oceanic subduction, which can explain their geochemical features and geochronological results.

How to cite: Gandrapu, S. B., Ray, J. S., and Bhutani, R.: Plagiogranites derived from high-Mg Andesitic magmas: An example from the Andaman Ophiolite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-684, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-684, 2026.

Ophiolites, as fragments of ancient oceanic lithosphere emplaced onto continental margins, offer a valuable record of the magmatic, tectonic, and mantle processes that shaped former oceanic basins. This study investigates crust–mantle interactions within ophiolite complexes of the northeastern Himalaya using a multi-proxy geochemical approach that integrates whole-rock major and trace element chemistry, mineral chemistry, isotopic signatures, and Platinum Group Element (PGE) systematics. PGEs provide a robust means of tracing mantle processes due to their sensitivity to degrees of partial melting, sulphur saturation, and redox conditions. By examining PGEs in mantle-derived peridotites, chromitites, and associated crustal rocks, this research aims to delineate the roles of partial melting, fractional crystallization, and post-magmatic alteration in shaping the composition of ophiolitic sequences. The study further assesses how variations in PGE distribution reflect differences in tectonic setting, from mid-ocean ridge to supra-subduction zone environments. Through comparative analysis of ophiolites formed in diverse geodynamic contexts, this work addresses existing gaps in understanding the processes governing ophiolite genesis and emplacement during subduction, obduction, and continental collision. The results are expected to refine current models of oceanic lithosphere formation, improve constraints on mantle melting regimes, and enhance interpretations of crust–mantle evolution in convergent margin systems. Overall, this research contributes to a more comprehensive understanding of mantle geochemistry, magmatic differentiation, and tectonic reconstruction in the northeastern Himalayan region.

How to cite: Chaubey, M.: Exploring Crust–Mantle Relationships in Northeastern Himalayan Ophiolites Through Integrated Geochemical and PGE Systematics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-978, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-978, 2026.

Olivine, as the first crystallization product from basaltic melt, provides important information about the magma origin. Here we provide a detailed textural, major and trace element, and noble gas isotope compositional data for a alkaline basalt suite from the Persani volcanic field (PVF) of the Carpathian-Pannonian Region. This is the youngest monogenetic volcanic field (1,3 Ma - 0,6 Ma) formed in a geodynamically still active zone. A descending, vertical lithospheric slab result in frequent earthquakes, whereas nearby, another young volcanic system is found (Ciomadul). The alkali basalt magmas were formed due to decompression melting in the asthenosphere, at 60–80 km depth.

Thus, olivine composition can be used to characterize the nature of asthenospheric mantle in a postcollisional area. Noble gas isotope ratios, especially the 3He/4He, are sensisitve indicators of the mantle composition. There are relatively comprehensive data on mantle xenoliths, however, only sporadic data are from olivine crystals of basalts. This is due the challenge of such studies, because of the need of clean olivine separates and detection of low amount of gases from the primary fluid inclusions.

In the Carpathian-Pannonian Region, we firstly detected noble gas isotopes from phenocrysts of basaltic rocks. We sampled different eruption products of the PVF from different eruption episodes. Following a multi-step sample preparation process, we analysed the olivine separates with noble gas mass spectrometer. Petrographic characteristics and major element composition of most olivine phenocrysts suggest crystallization from primary basaltic magma. Due to fast magma ascent, the olivine crystals preserved the original noble gas isotope ratios in their primary fluid inclusions in most samples.

We got relatively low, ~2-5 R/Ra values (3He/4He of the sample divided by 3He/4He of the atmosphere) which are lower than the R/Ra values obtained from the olivine and pyroxene crystals of lithospheric mantle xenoliths in the PVF alkaline basalts (~6 R/Ra), suggesting geochemical differences between the local asthenospheric and lithospheric mantle. Our results are also significantly lower than the usual R/Ra of the depleted mantle (~8 R/Ra). The low values can be explained by metasomatism of the asthenospheric magma source region with crustal fluids during former subduction and/or 4He addition to the asthenosphere from the radioactive decay of U and Th originated from the subducted lithospheric slab. Another possible explanation could be the lithologic heterogeneity of the magma source region. The Mn, Ca and Zn content of olivine autocrysts also indicate the presence of recycled crustal material in the mantle source, in agreement with the noble gas isotope compositional data. Our results suggest that in a postcollisional setting the asthenosphere is contaminated by recycled crustal material and subduction-related fluids.

How to cite: Pánczél, E., Harangi, S., Molnár, K., Czuppon, G., and Lukács, R.: Major, trace element and noble gas isotope composition of olivine from the alkaline basalts of the Persani Volcanic Field, Romania: constraints on the magma source region, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1256, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1256, 2026.

EGU26-1461 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Compositions of basaltic arc lavas track temporal changes in the global Sr cycle  

Paul Sotiriou, Marcel Regelous, and Karsten Haase

Active arc basalts have higher Sr/Nd ratios than the bulk continental crust. The significant delamination of low-density Sr-bearing plagioclase-rich lower arc crust cumulates is unlikely. Here, we compile geochemical data from 1875 – 0 Ma arc basalts (5.5-6.5 wt.% MgO) and demonstrate that Phanerozoic fossil (6.2 – 52.8; average: (26.5 ± 11.5 (1 σ)) and active (27.8 – 67.9; average: 42.1 ± 9.8 (1 σ)) arc basalts have higher average Sr6/Nd6 ratios than those of Proterozoic fossil arcs (6.6 – 45.4; average: 16.9 ± 9.8 (1 σ)). There were increases in the average Sr6/Nd6 ratios of arc basalts at 800 – 600 and 150 – 100 Ma. The average Sr/Nd ratios of global subducting sediment (12) and depleted mantle (14) are considerably lower than those of active arc basalts. The Sr6/Nd6 ratios of active arc basalts do not correlate with Th6/La6, 143Nd/144Nd and 87Sr/86Sr and crustal thickness. Active arc basalts have high Nd6/Sr6 and Sr6/Th6 and low 87Sr/86Sr ratios. This indicates the high Sr6/Nd6 ratios are not influenced by crustal thickness or siliciclastic sediment subduction but rather slab-derived fluids. Higher Sr contents in seawater due to increased continental weathering associated with the rise of the continents in the Neoproterozoic, and increases in the amount of abiogenic and biogenic carbonate being subducted at 800 and 150 Ma, respectively, led to the high Sr6/Nd6 ratios of basalts from Phanerozoic fossil and active arcs. The increase in the Sr contents of seawater led to the generation of more Sr-rich basaltic magmas following the dehydration and/or melting of altered oceanic crust. The subduction of pelagic carbonates after 150 Ma resulted in the generation of the high Sr6/Nd6 of basaltic lavas from active arcs. Therefore, the compositions of basaltic arc lavas track temporal changes in the global Sr and C cycles.

How to cite: Sotiriou, P., Regelous, M., and Haase, K.: Compositions of basaltic arc lavas track temporal changes in the global Sr cycle , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1461, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1461, 2026.

EGU26-3055 | Posters on site | GD2.1

Transient water storage in the mantle transition zone governed by subduction and water-induced buoyancy 

Taras Gerya, Nickolas Moccetti Bardi, Shun-ichiro Karato, and Motohiko Murakami

The nominally unhydrous wadsleyite and ringwoodite present in the mantle transition zone (MTZ), can contain up to 1–2 wt% of water, which creates large potential water storage capacity of this upper mantle zone. However, whether these water reservoirs in the MTZ can be eventually filled remains debatable. We developed new empirical model of deep hydrous mantle melting and performed systematic investigation of water dynamics in the MTZ by using new 2D thermo-hydro-mechanical-chemical (THMC) upper mantle models. Our results suggest that relatively cold solid-state mantle upwellings can start from thermally relaxed hydrated stagnant subducted slabs present at the bottom of the MTZ. These water-bearing plumes rise to and interact with the wadsleyite-olivine phase transition. Depending on the water content and temperature of these thermal-chemical plumes, they may trigger hydrous melting by water release from the wadsleyite upon its conversion to olivine. The hydrous melts are less dense than the solid matrix and rise upward in the form of either melt diapirs or porosity waives. Similar dehydration-induced melting process is also documented for subducting slabs crossing the lower MTZ boundary, where they can generate buoyant melt diapirs rising through the MTZ. Based on the investigated water dynamics, we propose that relatively small amounts of water (<0.1 wt%, <0.2 ocean masses) and a geologically moderate duration (<500 Myr) of the transient water residence should be characteristic for the MTZ. These findings also have implications for the long-term stability of the surface ocean mass on Earth and Earth-like rocky exoplanets due to rather small dynamic water storage in the MTZ.

 

How to cite: Gerya, T., Moccetti Bardi, N., Karato, S., and Murakami, M.: Transient water storage in the mantle transition zone governed by subduction and water-induced buoyancy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3055, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3055, 2026.

EGU26-3122 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Hydration at the Base of the Mantle Transition Zone by Ancient Subductions in Asia 

Jiyu Liu, Zhongqing Wu, Wenzhong Wang, Wenjiao Xiao, and Zhu Mao

Whether and how subduction results in water enrichment at the base of the mantle transition zone (MTZ) remain elusive. The major orogenic belts of the Asian continent, including the Central Asian, Tethyan, and Alpine–Himalayan belts, which record extensive subduction processes, offer an ideal target to address the hydration of the MTZ and its relationship with subduction. Here, we map water content at the MTZ base by combing mineral physics constraints on hydrous pyrolite and global seismic observations of velocity structure and 660-km discontinuity topography. Our results indicate an average global water content of approximately 0.13 wt%, with pronounced hydration anomalies in parts of Asia. Linking these anomalies with reconstructions of past subduction events since 410 Ma reveals extensive water delivery to the MTZ, particularly beneath the Baikal region and across northwestern China, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Iran, and western Pakistan, where water content exceeds 0.5 wt%. These results connect ancient subduction history to present-day mantle hydration, offering new insights into Earth’s deep water cycle and highlighting the MTZ as a key reservoir for water.

How to cite: Liu, J., Wu, Z., Wang, W., Xiao, W., and Mao, Z.: Hydration at the Base of the Mantle Transition Zone by Ancient Subductions in Asia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3122, 2026.

EGU26-4050 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Preconditioning of subduction zone initiation at passive margins by gravitational instabilities 

Valeria Fedeli, Alessandro Regorda, and Anna Maria Marotta

Subduction zone initiation (SZI) represents a critical step in the evolution of plate tectonics, yet its controlling mechanisms remain debated. While SZI is commonly classified as induced or spontaneous depending on the dominance of far-field convergence or local buoyancy forces (Stern, 2004; Stern and Gerya, 2018), geological and numerical studies suggest that purely spontaneous subduction at passive margins is unlikely under present-day conditions (Arcay et al., 2020; Lallemand and Arcay, 2021). Nevertheless, passive margins are characterised by strong lateral contrasts in density, rheology, thermal structure and sedimentary loading, which may generate gravitational instabilities capable of locally weakening the lithosphere.

In this study, we investigate whether gravitational instabilities at passive margins can act as a preconditioning mechanism for subduction, facilitating induced SZI and influencing the early evolution and geometry of the subduction zone once convergence is applied. We perform several hundred two-dimensional thermo-mechanical simulations using the finite-element code FALCON (Regorda et al., 2023), modelling a passive margin.

The models include an initial gravitational phase, followed by an induced convergence phase with velocities ranging from 0.01 to 1 cm/yr. To systematically explore lithospheric weakening, we vary viscous weakening intervals and plastic weakening laws, allowing us to quantify deformation localization through strain-rate analysis near the margin.

Our results show that, for sufficiently weak rheological configurations, gravitational instabilities lead to transient strain-rate localization within the passive margin, controlled by plastic weakening at shallow levels and viscous weakening at depth. The mechanically damaged zone may be efficiently reactivated when convergence starts. In these cases, subduction initiates and develops readily into a coherent subduction interface, particularly at moderate to high convergence rates.

References  

Arcay, Diane, Serge Lallemand, Sarah Abecassis, and Fanny Garel (2020). “Can subduction initiation at a transform fault be spontaneous?” In: Solid Earth 11. DOI: 10.5194/se-11-37-2020. 

Lallemand, Serge and Diane Arcay (2021). “Subduction initiation from the earliest stages to self-sustained subduction: Insights from the analysis of 70 Cenozoic sites”. In: Earth-Science Reviews 221. DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2021.103779. 

Regorda, Alessandro, Cedric Thieulot, Iris van Zelst, Zoltán Erdős, Julia Maia, and Susanne Buiter (2023). “Rifting Venus: Insights From Numerical Modeling”. In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets 128. DOI: 10.1029/2022JE007588. 

Stern, Robert J. (2004). “Subduction initiation: Spontaneous and induced”. In: Earth and Planetary Science Letters 226. DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2004.08.007. 

Stern, Robert J. and Taras Gerya (2018). “Subduction initiation in nature and models: A review”. In: Tectonophysics 746. DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2017.10.014. 

How to cite: Fedeli, V., Regorda, A., and Marotta, A. M.: Preconditioning of subduction zone initiation at passive margins by gravitational instabilities, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4050, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4050, 2026.

EGU26-4702 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Slab Breakoff Induced by Weak Crustal-Scale Heterogeneities 

Madhusudan Sharma, Ivone Jiménez-Munt, Ana María Negredo Moreno, Ángela María Gómez-García, Michael Pons, Claudio Faccenna, Jaume Vergés, Montserrat Torne, Wentao Zhang, and Daniel García-Castellanos

Slab breakoff is most commonly associated with continental collision. However, recent geodynamic studies have documented slab breakoff in non-collisional subduction settings, indicating that additional mechanisms may facilitate slab failure. The processes enabling breakoff in the absence of pronounced buoyancy contrasts remain poorly understood. Here, we use two-dimensional thermo-mechanical numerical models to investigate the role of weak crustal-scale heterogeneities embedded within a subducting oceanic plate on slab breakoff dynamics. The models are developed using the ASPECT code coupled with the Geodynamic World Builder for the setting of the initial geometry of the models. We systematically vary the viscosity, length, and distance to trench of weak crustal strips representing inherited compositional heterogeneities, such as sedimentary depocenters. Our results suggest that in models where the subducting slab is fixed or subjected to slow push from the lateral boundary, low-viscosity heterogeneities strongly localize deformation at the subduction interface. Meanwhile, the slab may stretch within the asthenosphere and accelerate as it sinks, ultimately leading to slab necking and breakoff. We identify a clear relationship between slab breakoff depth and the distance of the weak strip from the trench, with breakoff occurring at shallower depths for more trench-distal heterogeneities. This behaviour arises from the combined effects of enhanced slab pull and the presence of weak material farther from the trench, which localizes deformation at shallower depths and promotes shallow slab breakoff. Following slab breakoff, subduction commonly resumes when remnants of the weak strip remain at the plate interface, initiating a second phase of subduction. In addition, we find that the presence of a weak strip increases trench retreat velocities by up to a factor of two compared to a homogeneous reference model. These results demonstrate that relatively small-scale variations in oceanic crustal strength can precondition subducting slabs for breakoff without the need for continental collision, providing a viable explanation for episodic slab detachment observed in natural subduction zones.

How to cite: Sharma, M., Jiménez-Munt, I., María Negredo Moreno, A., María Gómez-García, Á., Pons, M., Faccenna, C., Vergés, J., Torne, M., Zhang, W., and García-Castellanos, D.: Slab Breakoff Induced by Weak Crustal-Scale Heterogeneities, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4702, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4702, 2026.

EGU26-4812 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Effects of surface processes on nature of arc magmas in subduction zones revealed by Mo-Zn isotopes 

Wushuang Zhang, Jie Tang, Wenliang Xu, Feng Wang, and Kechun Hong

The subduction zones are vital places for material cycling and energy exchange between the Earth's surface and interior. Previous researches mainly focuses on the effects of deep magma activities in controlling surface processes. However, the influence of surface processes on the nature of arc magmas in subduction zones remains poorly understood. Nevertheless, subducted sediments may preserve records of surface climatic fluctuations, leading to distinct chemical heterogeneities in Earth's interior. Northeast (NE) Asia, as a typical region of sequential tectonic regimes, provides potential in studying various influences of surface processes on the nature of arc magmas in subduction zones owing to occurrence of Permian and early Mesozoic mafic arc rocks with different geochemical features.

Previous studies suggest that the early Permian calc-alkaline volcanic rocks in the eastern margin of the Jiamusi Massif, together with the Yuejinshan accretionary complex, reveal that westward subduction of the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate occurred beneath the Jiamusi Massif, whereas the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic calc-alkaline igneous rocks, along with the coeval porphyry-type Cu-Mo deposits and Jurassic accretionary complexes in eastern Jilin and Heilongjiang provinces (NE China), indicate that the initial subduction of the Paleo-Pacific plate beneath Eurasia took place during the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic.

New whole-rock Mo-Zn-Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic data for these early Permian (293 Ma) and the Late Triassic (202–213 Ma)-Early Jurassic (183–185 Ma) mafic igneous rocks indicate: 1) that the synergistic changes in Sr-Nd-Pb isotope compositions have revealed the contribution of global subducting sediments (GLOSS); 2) that the consistent Zn isotopic compositions (δ66Zn = 0.20‰ to 0.30‰), similar to those of mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB, δ66Zn = 0.28‰ ± 0.06‰; Wang et al., 2017), excluded the potential contribution of carbonates (generally low δ66Zn) and the mantle partial melting (no correlations with MgO); 3) that the early Permian basaltic rocks exhibit generally lighter Mo isotopic signatures (δ98Mo = -0.99‰ to -0.07‰) compared to the depleted MORB mantle (DMM, δ98Mo = -0.204‰ ± 0.008‰; McCoy-West et al., 2019), suggesting that the early Permian mafic arc magmas were sourced from a lithospheric mantle modified by oxidized sediment; and 4) that the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic gabbros display generally heavier Mo isotopic compositions (δ98Mo = -0.18‰ to 0.54‰) than DMM, suggesting the Late Triassic-Early Jurassic gabbros were sourced from a lithospheric mantle modified by reduced sediment. Taken together, we conclude that the lithospheric mantle in NE Asia experienced the transformation from oxidized to reduced sediment modifications during early Permian to early Mesozoic and that different surface processes control nature of arc magmas in subduction zones. These conclusions are also supported by the late Paleozoic-early Mesozoic stratigraphic records. In summary, our investigation demonstrates that arc magmas exhibit limited geochemical variability in non-redox-sensitive elemental signature despite extreme environmental perturbations, but redox-sensitive isotopes (such as Mo) could serve as sensitive tracers of recording climatic fluctuations, especially in paleo-surface redox events.

This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant: U2244201).

  • Wang et al. (2017). Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 198, 151–167.
  • McCoy-West et al. (2019). Nature Geoscience, 12, 946–951.

How to cite: Zhang, W., Tang, J., Xu, W., Wang, F., and Hong, K.: Effects of surface processes on nature of arc magmas in subduction zones revealed by Mo-Zn isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4812, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4812, 2026.

Fluid production from dehydration reactions and fluid migration in the subducting slab impact various subduction processes, including intraslab and megathrust earthquakes, episodic tremor and slip, mantle wedge metasomatism, and arc-magma genesis. To better understand these processes, it is crucial to determine the migration and the resulting distribution of fluids within the slab and along the slab surface.

A variety of geophysical observations and field studies suggest that intraslab updip fluid migration is plausible, yet quantitative numerical investigations of this process remain limited. So far, only models that incorporate compaction pressure gradients generated by fluids released during dehydration reactions have offered a convincing mechanism [1]. These models, however, are still not widely explored, and the influence of pre-subduction hydration of the oceanic mantle is particularly poorly constrained. In our study [2], we use a 2-D two-phase flow model to investigate this effect under various initial slab-mantle hydration states and slab thermal conditions, both of which impact the depth extent of the stability of hydrous minerals. We focus on the lateral shift between the site of dehydration reactions and the location of fluid outflux at the top of the slab due to intraslab updip migration. Our simulations indicate that prominent updip pathways develop along the segments of antigorite and chlorite breakdown fronts that run sub-parallel to the slab interface. The resulting updip fluid migration to depths as shallow as 30–40 km increases the volume of fluids that flux out across the slab surface at relatively shallow depths. Such behavior is most pronounced in young (< ~30 Ma), warm slabs, where the stability zones of hydrous phases in the incoming oceanic mantle are relatively thin (< ~20-km thick), enabling the development of the slab-parallel dehydration fronts that enhance updip flow.

 

[1] Wison et al., 2014, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2014.05.052
[2] Cerpa & Wada, 2025, https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JB030609

How to cite: Cerpa, N. and Wada, I.: Hydration state of the incoming plate and updip fluid migration in the slab mantle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5051, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5051, 2026.

EGU26-6115 | Posters on site | GD2.1

Spatial clustering of deep earthquakes controlled by water carriers 

Feng Wang and Wen-Yuan Zhao

Deep earthquakes within subducting slab into the mantle transition zone (MTZ) often exhibit spatial variations along the strike of the slab. Existing mechanisms, including dehydration embrittlement, transformational faulting, and thermal shear instability, have been proposed to explain the cause of deep earthquakes; however, these hypotheses fail to account for the deep earthquake cluster within stagnant slab. Given that variable water input plays a crucial role in the distribution of seismicity within the arc system, spatial variations in the transport of subducted water could potentially control the clustering of deep-focus earthquakes in the MTZ. Northeast (NE) Asia is an ideal region to investigate this problem, where the Pacific slab stagnates continuously from north to south and extends westward for <1000 km in the MTZ, with deep seismicity occurring in clusters in the MTZ. Meanwhile, previous studies have shown that surficial water can be transported to the MTZ in this region (Xing et al., 2024), and the thermal state of subducting slab beneath NE Japan exhibits along-strike variability, with slab temperature decreasing gradually from north to south (Wada et al., 2015), implying the potential spatial variations in deep water cycling.

Here, we report major and trace element compositions, together with Sr-Nd-B isotopic data of basalts in NE Asia to trace deep water cycling and investigate the spatial co-variations between water carriers and deep earthquakes in Northeast Asia. Our results reveal prominent along-strike differences in B isotopic compositions. Northern arc basalts from Hokkaido show heavy and variable δ11B values (−14.55‰ to +6.47‰), whereas associated intraplate basalts have light δ11B values (−10.44‰ to −5.15‰). In contrast, southern arc basalts from Honshu display homogeneous and light δ11B values (−4.7‰ to −3.1‰; Moriguti et al., 2004), against variable intraplate region (−8.42‰ to +7.71‰). These contrasts reflect distinct carriers transporting water into the MTZ. In the north, dehydration of hydrous minerals leaves minimal water carried by nominally anhydrous minerals, which corresponds to the absence of deep-focus earthquakes in the MTZ. Conversely, dense hydrous magnesium silicates transport large amounts of water into the MTZ in the south, consistent with a notable cluster of deep-focus earthquakes. Therefore, we conclude that water carriers into the MTZ critically control along-strike earthquake clustering.

This work was financially supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (Grant 2022YFF0801002) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 42372065).

 

References:

Wada et al., 2015, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, v. 426, p. 76-88.

Moriguti et al., 2004, Chemical Geology, v. 212, p. 81-100.

Xing et al., 2024, Nature Geoscience, v. 17, p. 579-585.

How to cite: Wang, F. and Zhao, W.-Y.: Spatial clustering of deep earthquakes controlled by water carriers, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6115, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6115, 2026.

EGU26-6193 | Orals | GD2.1

Revisiting the temporal evolution of oceanic subduction 

Lijun Liu, Zebin Cao, Yanchong Li, Xinyu Li, Hao Dong, and Diandian Peng

Although based off the elegant theory of thermal boundary layer, the evolution of oceanic plate remains debated, especially regarding its fate after subduction. Traditional geodynamic exercises tend to approximate oceanic subduction using regional 2D or 3D models, but models that evaluate the full history of subduction are still rare, largely due to the challenge in reproducing realistic Earth subduction and unaffordable computational costs. In recent years, we devoted to the development of multi-scale subduction models with data assimilation that simultaneously simulate all relevant subduction processes through geological history while taking various observational constraints into account. Based on these models, we revisited several aspects of the evolving oceanic slabs within the convective mantle. For example, we examined the trajectory of subducted slabs over time, quantified the sinking rate of slabs, as well as reevaluated the driving forces of plate motion, the asthenosphere-lithosphere interaction, and associated plume dynamics. In this presentation, we will share our recent progress on these topics.

How to cite: Liu, L., Cao, Z., Li, Y., Li, X., Dong, H., and Peng, D.: Revisiting the temporal evolution of oceanic subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6193, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6193, 2026.

Trench curvature, as the surface expression of the three-dimensional subduction system, has a close affinity with the subduction dynamics; however, the underlying mechanisms remain enigmatic. Back-arc basins, as natural products of subduction zone evolution, record the development of arcuate trenches. Most modern back-arc basins occur in the western Pacific, where subduction zone trenches commonly exhibit no-linear geometries. Among them, the Japan Sea represents a typical example, characterized by the trench convex toward the subducting plate.

Here, we present major and trace element together with Sr-Nd-Mg isotopic data of back-arc basalts (BABB) drilled along strike in the Japan Sea to explore the potential link between trench curvature and lateral variations in subducted materials. The Nb/Zr ratios of BABB in the central segment increase and subsequently decrease, whereas those in the north show a markedly delayed decrease, which indicates that the central back-arc basin had reached a mature spreading stage. In addition, Nd isotopic values of central BABB show higher than those in the south, indicating a negligible contribution from slab-derived components. This implies that the central back-arc basin is located far away from the trench and experienced nearly complete extension. These observations reveal pronounced along-strike variations in the extent of back-arc spreading, with the northern basin remaining nascent, whereas the central segment has evolved to a mature stage. This is consistent with the observation that the central segment of the trench develops a progressive curvature toward the subducting plate, suggesting that the evolution of back-arc spreading exerts a primary control on trench curvature. In particular, along-strike changes in Mg isotopes reveal the lateral variations in volatile cycling. BABB from the northern region with limited spreading exhibit extremely heavy δ26Mg values (−0.30‰ to +0.34‰), suggesting contributions of water-dominated fluids derived from serpentinite. In contrast, BABB from the central region with mature back-arc spreading show relatively light δ26Mg values (-0.57‰ to 0.06‰), primarily reflecting the involvement of deep subducted carbonates.

The spatial variations in volatile cycling correlate well with the extent of back-arc spreading. Volatiles reduce mantle viscosity and weaken the overlying mantle wedge, thereby regulating mantle rheology. It is noted that the magnitude of this effect varies substantially among different volatile species. Among them, carbon exerts a stronger influence on mantle rheology than water (Fei et al., 2013; Kono et al., 2014). This is consistent with the greater extent of back-arc spreading in the central segment, suggesting that along-strike variations in volatile cycling modulate the mantle rheology, thereby governing the evolution of trench curvature.

This work was financially supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (Grant 2022YFF0801002) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 42372065).

References:

Fei et al., 2013, Nature, v. 498, p.213-215.

Kono et al., 2014, Nature Communications, v. 5, p.5091.

How to cite: Zhao, W.-Y. and Wang, F.: Along-strike variations in volatile cycling control trench curvature associated with back-arc spreading, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6329, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6329, 2026.

Preserving vital insights into deep-crustal processes and the tectonic evolution of the Tonian northwestern Yangtze Block, the Liujiaping intrusive complex remains enigmatic regarding its precise petrogenesis and tectonic context. Herein, we present new data on petrography, zircon U–Pb geochronology, zircon Hf isotopes, whole-rock major and trace elements, whole-rock Sr–Nd isotopes and mineral chemistry of the Xiangfengkou granodiorite, the Maoping granite and the Chenjiagou granite from the Liujiaping batholith. LA–ICP–MS zircon U–Pb dating reveals their crystallization ages at ca. 802–796 Ma in the Tonian. The Xiangfengkou granodiorite is characterized by high A/CNK ratios of 1.00–1.10 and molar (Fe+Mg) values of 0.08–0.11. Zircons exhibit εHf(t) values of −0.39 to +6.79, while the whole rocks have initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios of 0.707189–0.708169 and εNd(t) values of −1.07 to +0.55. The Maoping and Chenjiagou granites show similar geochemical compositions (A/CNK=0.94–1.09, molar Fe+Mg=0.03–0.05), with zircon εHf(t) values ranging from +1.26 to +7.93, initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios of 0.706313–0.706315, and εNd(t) values of 0.00 to +0.32. All samples display a pronounced negative correlation between A/CNK and Fe + Mg, indicative of the typical high-mafic I-type granitoid characteristics. Combined mineralogical and geochemical data suggest that these granitoids were mainly generated by the partial melting of a newly formed mafic lower crust. The notably high Fe, Mg, Ti and Ca contents further imply the entrainment of Fe-Mg-Ti-Ca-rich minerals during melt segregation. Strong positive correlations between Ti and Ca contents with maficity, as well as a negative correlation between A/CNK and maficity, indicate that a peritectic assemblage entrainment process involving transitional minerals (e.g., clinopyroxene, plagioclase and ilmenite) occurred during biotite-hornblende coupled melting. The geochemical, isotopic and mineralogical evidence collectively support the view that the Liujiaping granitoids formed in a subduction-related active continental margin setting. Together with previous studies, these results further demonstrate that the northwestern to western margin of the Yangtze Block was part of a long-lived subduction-related active continental margin, consistent with its tectonic position along the periphery of the Rodinia supercontinent.

How to cite: Li, Y.: Tonian crustal melting triggered by subduction along the Rodinia periphery: Evidence from the Liujiaping batholith, NW Yangtze Block, South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6351, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6351, 2026.

EGU26-6355 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Lithospheric mantle multi-stage metasomatism: Constraints from Sr-Nd-Pb-Mo isotopes of Mesozoic basaltic andesites in the Xing'an Massif 

Yiting Xue, Jie Tang, Wenliang Xu, Feng Wang, and Zhigao Wang

Subduction zones represent primary sites for material exchange between the mantle and crust. Over the long course of geological history, the mantle is frequently subjected to superimposed reworking by materials derived from distinct subduction zones. However, relatively few studies have focused on mantle multi-stage metasomatism driven by different tectonic systems. The Xing’an Massif, situated in the eastern segment of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt, was influenced by the Mongol-Okhotsk and Paleo-Pacific tectonic systems during the Mesozoic. Consequently, systematic analysis of spatiotemporal geochemical variations in Mesozoic igneous rocks across this region provides valuable constraints for deciphering mantle multi-stage metasomatism. Here, we report integrated elemental and Sr-Nd-Pb-Mo isotopic analyses of the Late Triassic and late Early Cretaceous basaltic andesites from the Xing’an Massif. The Late Triassic samples exhibit elevated δ98/95Mo values (+0.49‰ to +0.56‰), which are significantly higher than the normal mantle value of -0.20‰ ±0.01‰. They also show enrichment in fluid-mobile elements (e.g., Ba, Cs) and high Sr/Nd ratios (34 to 36). Combined with high Ce/Mo ratios (115 to 145) and moderately enriched Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions, these features indicate the mantle source originated from the partial melting of a mantle wedge metasomatized by both serpentinite-derived fluids and sediment-derived melts during the southward subduction of the Mongol-Okhotsk oceanic plate. The late Early Cretaceous basaltic andesites exhibit high δ98/95Mo values (-0.13‰ to +0.70‰) and pronounced enrichment in fluid-mobile elements, demonstrating geochemical affinities to the Late Triassic rocks. This similarity implies that the late Early Cretaceous mantle source components were inherited from pre-existing Late Triassic metasomatized mantle domains. However, their more enriched Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions than those of Late Triassic counterparts suggest the addition of subsequent sediment melts contributed to their mantle source. Magmatism, tectonism, and paleomagnetic evidence indicate that the eastern segment of the Mongol-Okhotsk Ocean closed during the Middle Jurassic to Early Cretaceous. Therefore, these additional sediment melts should have been derived from the Paleo-Pacific Plate. Collectively, this study identifies the multi-stage metasomatism of mantle by materials derived from different subduction zones, thereby providing new constraints for reconstructing the multi-stage tectonic transition processes and the spatiotemporal extent of their impacts in Northeast Asia.

This work was financially supported by the China National Science and Technology Major Project (No. 2024ZD1001104) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. U2244201).

How to cite: Xue, Y., Tang, J., Xu, W., Wang, F., and Wang, Z.: Lithospheric mantle multi-stage metasomatism: Constraints from Sr-Nd-Pb-Mo isotopes of Mesozoic basaltic andesites in the Xing'an Massif, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6355, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6355, 2026.

EGU26-6402 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

The conditions for Oligocene diapiric melting of the subducted mélange in the NE Asia 

Kechun Hong, Feng Wang, and Wenliang Xu

Subduction zones are the main sites of surficial material transfer from subducted slab into the mantle wedge. Increasing numbers of studies have proposed a material-transport models that subducted mélanges detach as solid-state diapirs from the slab-top and then partially melt at higher temperatures as they ascend through the mantle wedge (Nielsen and Marschall, 2017). While the ability to diapiric melting of subducted mélanges was previously constrained in experimental and numerical models, the conditions for its formation were poorly investigated in actual subduction zones.

Here, we report major- and trace-element, and Sr-Nd-Mg-Zn isotopic results for the Oligocene syenites in NE Asia, inferring their affinity with diapiric melting of subducted mélanges as well as mantle dynamics. Furthermore, we investigate the partial melting behaviors of natural mélanges at estimated P-T conditions at which mélange melting begins. These syenites exhibit Hf-Nd fractionation but little variation in Nd isotopes (Nielsen and Marschall, 2017). Moreover, these syenites have heavy Mg isotopic compositions (δ26Mg=−0.02‰~+0.57‰), consistent with the inferred residual components of mélange after dehydration, jointly supporting the mélange-diapir melting model. Our results and the tectonic setting indicate that melting of mélange diapirs occurred pref­erentially during tectonic transitions, such as the formation of a back-arc basin triggered by trench-perpendicular mantle flow. The low-viscosity mantle with an incompressible stress field triggered melting of the mélange diapirs. We roughly constrain the P-T conditions at which mélange melting begins. These syenites have higher LREEs and HFSEs contents than the experimental melts of subducted mélange, which is consistent with the addition of the carbonated silicate melts derived from the carbonated peridotites. The Zn-Sr-Nd isotopic compositions of syenites exhibit trends toward carbonated peridotites, jointly indicating the interaction between molten subducted mélange and carbonated peridotites. Generation of carbonated silicate melts occurs at ≤6 GPa. Moreover, magnesite was involved in the magmatic processes of carbonated peridotites, as recorded by relatively heavy Zn isotopic compositions with depleted Sr and Nd isotopic compositions. Magnesite is stable at pressures of ≥4.5 GPa. Therefore, the Oligocene mélange diapiric melting possibly occurred at the asthenospheric depths assumed by the seismic tomography (Tamura et al., 2002; Hong et al., 2024).

We further investigate the partial melting behaviors on natural sediment-dominated mélange materials from the NE Asian Margin. We performed a series of three melting experiments using large-volume press at estimated P-T conditions (4-6 GPa, 1300-1400 ℃). Partial melts produced in our experiments have trace-element abundance patterns that are typical of alkaline arc lavas, such as enrichment in LILEs and depletion in Nb and Ta. The major- and trace-element compositions of experimental melts are consistent with the Oligocene syenites in NE Asia. These findings confirmed that mélange diapiric melting more possibly occurred in asthenosphere, which is deeper than the depth inferred in previous studies.

This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 42372065 and 424B2017).

 

References:

Hong, et al., 2024, Geology, v. 52, p. 539-544.

Nielsen, and Marschall, 2017, Science Advances, v. 3.

Tamura, et al., 2002, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, v. 197, p. 105-116.

How to cite: Hong, K., Wang, F., and Xu, W.: The conditions for Oligocene diapiric melting of the subducted mélange in the NE Asia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6402, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6402, 2026.

EGU26-6502 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Evaluating the role of the overriding-plate tectonics on the position of arc volcanism 

Lorine Bonnamy, Nestor Cerpa, Serge Lallemand, and Diane Arcay

The mechanisms that have been proposed to control the position of volcanic arcs in subduction zones can be broadly divided into two categories. Geophysical and geodynamical studies emphasize a “deep-thermal control” related to the thermal state of the subducting plate and the mantle wedge, whereas field-based regional studies highlight a “tectonic control” driven by deformation and the tectonic configuration of the overriding plate. While the deep-thermal controls have been widely investigated statistically at the global scale, the influence of overriding-plate tectonics on arc position remains underexplored. 

In this study, we investigate both perspectives for the majority of present-day subduction zones, with a particular focus on tectonic controls. We first build an accurate dataset of the position of the Holocene arc volcanoes, using the Smithsonian Institution Global Volcanism Program, with respect to the subducting plate as defined by the Slab2.0 model (Hayes et al., 2018). We then construct a dataset describing the mean tectonic regime of arc regions by inverting the stress state from focal mechanisms compiled from global and regional catalogs, complemented by information on major active geological structures near the arc. These two datasets, arc location relative to the subducting plate and tectonic regime in the arc vicinity, are combined to address the dominant control on the volcanic arc position. 

In regions such as those spanning from the Mariana Islands to the southern Kuril Islands and the Tonga-Kermadec subduction zones, we find that slab-top depth beneath the volcanic front (i.e., the volcanoes closest to the trench, HVF) increases with slab age and decreases with increasing subduction velocity. These trends are consistent with the volcanic front position being primarily controlled by the thermal state near the slab top or within the proximal mantle wedge. 

In contrast, in regions lacking trends indicative of deep-thermal controls (i.e., Indonesia), another control likely dominates. In particular, we show that in Mexico-Central America and the Ryukyu-Nankai subduction zones, HVF values vary with the tectonic regime: HVF tends to be slightly lower in extensional settings than in compressional ones. Our interpretation is that, in these regions, deep-thermal controls are overprinted by the tectonic regime of the overriding plate. 

For a large subset of regions, including the Andes and the Alaska-Aleutian subduction zones, we do not identify any clear signal.

At the global scale, arcs governed by deep-thermal controls seem to occur mostly where the overriding plate is oceanic, whereas those whose position varies with the tectonic regime are mainly found in continental settings, suggesting the influence of the overriding-plate nature.



How to cite: Bonnamy, L., Cerpa, N., Lallemand, S., and Arcay, D.: Evaluating the role of the overriding-plate tectonics on the position of arc volcanism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6502, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6502, 2026.

EGU26-6886 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Beyond Equilibrium: Kinetic Thresholds and Rheological Feedbacks Create a Potentially Complex 410 in Slab Regions 

Buchanan Kerswell, John Wheeler, Rene Gassmöller, J. Huw Davies, Isabel Papanagnou, and Sanne Cottaar

The seismic expression of Earth's 410 km discontinuity varies across tectonic settings, from sharp, high-amplitude interfaces to broad transitions—patterns that cannot be explained by equilibrium thermodynamics without invoking large-scale thermal or compositional heterogeneities. Laboratory experiments show the olivine ⇔ wadsleyite phase transition responsible for the 410 is rate-limited, yet previous numerical studies have not directly evaluated the sensitivity of 410 structure to kinetic and rheological factors. Here we investigate these relationships by coupling a grain-scale, interface-controlled olivine ⇔ wadsleyite growth model to compressible simulations of mantle plumes and subducting slabs. We vary kinetic parameters across seven orders of magnitude and quantify the resulting 410 displacements and widths. Our results reveal an asymmetry between hot and cold environments. In plumes, high temperatures produce sharp 410s (2–3 km wide) regardless of kinetics. In slabs, kinetics exert first-order control on 410 structure through three regimes: (1) quasi-equilibrium conditions producing narrow, uplifted 410s and continuous slab descent; (2) intermediate reaction rates generating broader, deeper 410s with metastable olivine wedges resisting downward slab motion; and (3) ultra-sluggish reaction rates causing slab stagnation with re-sharpened, deeply displaced 410s (< 100 km). Rheological contrasts modulate these kinetic effects by controlling slab geometry and residence time in the phase transition zone. These findings demonstrate that reaction rates strongly influence 410 structure in subduction zones, establishing the 410 as a potential seismological constraint on upper mantle kinetic processes, particularly in cold environments where disequilibrium effects are amplified.

How to cite: Kerswell, B., Wheeler, J., Gassmöller, R., Davies, J. H., Papanagnou, I., and Cottaar, S.: Beyond Equilibrium: Kinetic Thresholds and Rheological Feedbacks Create a Potentially Complex 410 in Slab Regions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6886, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6886, 2026.

EGU26-7076 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Tin isotope fractionation in arc magmas controlled by degassing and slab input 

Weicheng Jiang, Jiaxin She, Alexandra Davidson, Chunfei Chen, Chris Firth, Simon Turner, Weiqiang Li, Trevor Ireland, Paolo Sossi, Jinghua Wu, and Shane Cronin

Arc magmatism plays a critical role in continental crustal growth and the formation of significant metal deposits, including granite-related tin (Sn) systems. However, the mechanisms governing Sn transport and isotopic fractionation at convergent margins remain poorly constrained due to a lack of systematic studies across spatial variations (arc-front to rear-arc) and magmatic-hydrothermal transitions. In this study, we present high-precision Sn isotopic data for lavas, pumices, and hydrothermal products from Whakaari (arc-front) and Taranaki (rear-arc) in the Kermadec system, alongside magmatic H2O concentrations estimated from clinopyroxene. Whakaari lavas exhibit significant variation (δ122/118Sn = –0.241‰ to 0.361‰). The heaviest values are attributed to extensive shallow degassing (>40%), with Rayleigh modeling indicating the preferential partitioning of light Sn isotopes into the vapor phase—a process corroborated by low magmatic water contents (avg. 0.83 wt.%). In contrast, Taranaki samples show limited variation (δ122/118Sn = 0.124 to 0.235‰). While amphibole and titanomagnetite fractionation may lower bulk-rock values, these processes cannot explain why both volcanoes are isotopically lighter than MORB (0.367 ± 0.087‰).

We propose that this light Sn signature originates from the subducted slab. Simulations suggest that the addition of 5–20% reduced, Cl-rich fluids derived from altered oceanic crust (AOC) can effectively lower arc magma δ122/118Sn. Regardless of the specific redox mechanism, slab-derived fluids dominate the Sn budget of the mantle wedge and the resulting arc magmas. Our results suggest that widespread light Sn isotope signatures serve as a diagnostic feature of fluid-mediated mass transfer in subduction zones. By combining spatial variations from arc-front to rear-arc, this study provides a robust geochemical framework to decipher slab-mantle interactions and the dynamic cycling of metals at convergent margins.

How to cite: Jiang, W., She, J., Davidson, A., Chen, C., Firth, C., Turner, S., Li, W., Ireland, T., Sossi, P., Wu, J., and Cronin, S.: Tin isotope fractionation in arc magmas controlled by degassing and slab input, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7076, 2026.

We present new zircon U–Pb–Hf and whole-rock geochemical data for Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous volcanic rocks of the Great Xing’an Range, NE China, to constrain the influence of overprinting by the Mongol–Okhotsk and Paleo-Pacific tectonic regimes on NE Asia. The results of SIMS and LA–ICP–MS zircon U–Pb dating indicate that the late Mesozoic volcanism in the Great Xing’an Range occurred in three stages: Late Jurassic (158–153 Ma), early Early Cretaceous (ca. 141 Ma), and late Early Cretaceous (131–130 Ma). Based on our results and data from the literature, we revise the late Mesozoic stratigraphic framework of the Great Xing’an Range. The Middle Jurassic hiatus in the northern part of the range suggests crustal thickening related to the closure of the Mongol–Okhotsk Ocean. Late Jurassic andesites are geochemically similar to adakites generated by partial melting of delaminated lower crust. The early Early Cretaceous volcanic rocks are dominated by A-type rhyolites with zircon eHf(t) values of + 5.3 to + 10.1 and TDM2 ages of 857–498 Ma, which suggest that the primary magma was derived via partial melting of newly accreted crust. The Late Jurassic–early Early Cretaceous volcanic rocks were formed in an extensional environment related to the collapse of thickened lithosphere after the closure of the Mongol–Okhotsk Ocean. The late Early Cretaceous A-type rhyolites, bimodal volcanic rocks, and coeval rift basins were formed in an extensional setting related to westward subduction of the Paleo-Pacific Plate.

How to cite: Li, Y.: Late Mesozoic stratigraphic framework of the Great Xing’an Range, NEChina, and overprinting by the Mongol–Okhotsk and Paleo-Pacifictectonic regimes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7429, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7429, 2026.

EGU26-7936 | Orals | GD2.1

Metasomatization of the mantle by slab-derived silicic- and carbonate-rich fluids: a record from the world’s youngest UHP terrane, Papua New Guinea 

Stacia M. Gordon, Joel W. DesOrmeau, Roberto F. Weinberg, Chris M. Fisher, Johannes Hammerli, Anthony I.S. Kemp, Jessie Shields, Timothy A. Little, and Andrew Tomkins

Fluids from subducted slabs are thought to play a major role in mass transfer between the solid Earth and the atmosphere, yet their properties are typically inferred rather than observed. Direct evidence is rare because of their transient properties and later melting and tectonism overwriting their signatures. The active Woodlark rift in southeastern Papua New Guinea exposes the youngest known (ca. 5 Ma) ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) terrane on Earth. Structural data indicates that the PNG UHP terrane was exhumed as a diapir that rose through the former mantle wedge within the active continental rift. Multiple eclogites within the UHP terrane preserve evidence for metasomatic interaction with a fluid that crystallized apatite+Fe-rich dolomite+zircon+rutile+multiple sulfur phases (pyrite, anhydrite, barite) in a vein-like network within the matrix. The zircon associated with the fluid also contain abundant multi-phase solid inclusions, including nanogranite and carbonate-bearing assemblages, plus omphacite and anhydrite+pyrite inclusions that suggest crystallization at high-pressures (>1.6 GPa). To investigate the source and composition of the fluid, we collected major- and trace-element data and Sr-Nd isotopes from apatite and dolomite and trace-element data from rutile in the vein network. Apatite is more enriched in F and OH, compared to Cl, and also is enriched in SO3 and Sr. Apatite yields uniform εNdi = ~+3 and initial 87Sr/86Sr = ~0.70427. Dolomite is enriched in Sr and LREE and yields 87Sr/86Sr = ~0.70424. Finally, rutile yields Nb/Ta of 15–26, falling mostly within chondritic- to superchondritic values. The mineral assemblage and their trace-element signatures indicate the phases crystallized out of a fluid at eclogite-facies conditions, likely during early exhumation, and that overall, the fluid was volatile-rich (C-O-H-S-F) and transported abundant incompatible (Zr, Hf, Ti, Nb, Ta) and heat-producing (K, U, Th) elements. The fluid is interpreted to be sourced from subducted, carbonate-rich sediments from earlier subducted oceanic crust. The fluid ascended from the downgoing plate to metasomatize sub-arc mantle. Subsequently, the UHP terrane was subducted and then interacted with fluids derived from this metasomatized mantle, as both the UHP terrane and former mantle wedge underwent near isothermal-decompression within the active rift. The results have multiple implications. Fluids with this composition can lead to the formation of exotic lava/magma compositions, such as ultrapotassic and alkaline lavas. In addition, the presence of sulfate phases and the elevated SO3 content in apatite indicates the fluid was oxidized, which enhances the potential to form porphyry copper-gold deposits commonly associated with arc systems. Finally, the superchrondritic Nb/Ta values observed in the rutile crystallized from the fluid indicate that some of the missing elements of the Nb-Ta paradox are likely stored within the metasomatized mantle. This study is the first to directly sample the composition of these fluids captured by subducted crustal rocks moving through a former mantle wedge, rather than relying on inferences from exhumed peridotites or volcanic rock compositions.

How to cite: Gordon, S. M., DesOrmeau, J. W., Weinberg, R. F., Fisher, C. M., Hammerli, J., Kemp, A. I. S., Shields, J., Little, T. A., and Tomkins, A.: Metasomatization of the mantle by slab-derived silicic- and carbonate-rich fluids: a record from the world’s youngest UHP terrane, Papua New Guinea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7936, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7936, 2026.

EGU26-7953 | Orals | GD2.1 | Highlight

Subduction invasion of the Atlantic 

João C. Duarte, Nicolas Riel, Wouter P. Schellart, Filipe Rosas, and Jaime Almeida

Subduction initiation in Atlantic-type oceans is a fundamental process in the evolution of oceanic basins, described by the Wilson cycle. However, it is widely known that subduction zones are not easy to initiate and require a combination of factors, including forcing from nearby active subduction zones. There are currently three subduction systems in the Atlantic: the Lesser Antilles, Scotia and Gibraltar arcs. In recent years, these subduction systems have been studied using a combination of methods, including advanced numerical models that have yielded new insights into the dynamics of subduction initiation. Both the Scotia and Lesser Antilles arcs seem to be cases of subduction transfer from the Pacific into the Atlantic, while the Gibraltar Arc may constitute a case of a direct invasion of a Mediterranean slab. Here, we will briefly review the main characteristics of these arcs and present recent geodynamic models of their evolution. Models show that, while these arcs share some commonalities, they are also fundamentally different. These results suggest that despite subduction initiation being a non-trivial process, it is an unescapable outcome of the Earth’s oceans evolution.

 

This work is supported by FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020 - https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020, UID/50019/2025, https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025, UID/PRR2/50019/2025

 

How to cite: Duarte, J. C., Riel, N., Schellart, W. P., Rosas, F., and Almeida, J.: Subduction invasion of the Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7953, 2026.

EGU26-8436 | Posters on site | GD2.1

Morphological and geothermal features around subducted seamount in Hyuga-Nada, western Nankai Trough 

Masataka Kinoshita, Yoshitaka Hashimoto, Yohei Hamada, Tomohiro Toki, and Rie Nakata

The interaction between subducting seamounts and overriding sediments perturbs the stress field and effective strength, affecting the conditions for megathrust earthquake generation and likely weakens interplate coupling. In the westernmost Nankai Trough around Hyuga-nada, M8-class earthquakes have not been reported yet. The Kyushu–Palau Ridge (KPR), marking the boundary between the Shikoku Basin and the West Philippine Basin (WPB), is subducting beneath Hyuga-nada. Slow earthquakes are frequently observed around the subducted KPR (sKPR). Key controlling factors for earthquake generation include seamount geometry, stress perturbations induced by subduction, and weakening plus permeability enhancement due to fracturing of the overriding strata.

In addition to estimating the BSR-derived heat flow, we conducted seafloor heat flow measurements, combined with interpretation of reflection seismic data, to delineate the morphology of the overriding plate and near-surface deformation structures. The sKPR lies beneath the Toi Seamount (Tsmt, exposed above the seafloor). Its eastern and western edges coincide with magnetic anomaly boundaries, while its northern edge corresponds to the northern slope of Tsmt. The coincidence between steep basement slopes and areas of frequent low-frequency tremors (LFTs) suggests that LFT activity is controlled by the “edges” of sKPR.

The influence of KPR subduction is evident in seafloor morphology and deformation structures. Numerous faults and lineaments are identified beneath the seafloor, with compressional structures dominant to the N–NW and extensional structures to SE. In the N–NW, multiple NE–SW trending ridges are present, and thrusts formed during accretionary prism development may have been exhumed by seamount collision. In contrast, the SE side is characterized by abundant collapse and landslide deposits.

Heat flow estimated from BSR depths around sKPR is ~40 mW/m² or lower, consistent with surface heat flow measurements, reflecting the cold (old) nature of the subducted sKPR and WPB. On the northern (leading) side, BSR-derived heat flow is lower (~25 mW/m²) above SW–NE trending thrust faults. This is likely due to seamount-driven compression and thickening of sediments, and reducing the thermal gradient. Blockage of sediment transport by Tsmt, also promotes thickening and cooling. Conversely, surface heat flows exceeding 300 mW/m² were observed near thrusts in front of Tsmt. While water temperature fluctuations, deep-sea turbidites, or slope erosion may contribute, the proximity to the base of a thrust-fault scarp, the identification of a low-velocity zone near the LFT cluster from OBS data, and chemical anomalies in pore waters suggest fluid expulsion along fault conduits under frontal compression. Poroealstic modeling supports this interpretation, showing pore fluid circulation induced by seamount loading if high permeability around the KPR is assumed. The fluid discharge is driven by the horizontal compression leading to overpressure and the fault pathway formation. However, the number of data points remains limited, alternative explanations cannot be excluded. Direct evidence of fluid discharge (e.g., biological communities) is lacking. Verification must therefore await future investigations.

How to cite: Kinoshita, M., Hashimoto, Y., Hamada, Y., Toki, T., and Nakata, R.: Morphological and geothermal features around subducted seamount in Hyuga-Nada, western Nankai Trough, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8436, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8436, 2026.

EGU26-9603 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Proxying Archean subduction using Phanerozoic I-type magmatism 

Daniel Gómez-Frutos and Hugo Moreira

Modern day crustal evolution is controlled by plate tectonics. I-type magmatism dominates Phanerozoic crustal growth and has been extensively used to study modern subduction systems and slab-mantle interactions. In contrast, Archean geodynamics remain poorly constrained, with no consensus on the existence of a primitive form of plate tectonics or subduction. This uncertainty largely results from a preservation bias: most Archean crust has been destroyed, and the surviving rock record shows an overprint of billions of years of overlapping, non-mutually exclusive processes such as metamorphism or hydrothermal alteration. As a result, identifying primary geochemical signatures indicative of specific Archean geodynamic mechanisms is not straightforward. In this work, we present a viable Phanerozoic proxy to Archean geodynamics using a global assessment of geochemical and experimental data. A comparison between Phanerozoic post-collisional magmatism and the Archean sanukitoid suite reveals a conspicuous geochemical resemblance based on major and trace element criteria. This common signature is coherent with derivation from a metasomatized-mantle source. The requirement for mantle metasomatism by felsic, upper-crustal material implies a mechanism capable of juxtaposing upper crust with the lithospheric mantle, potentially through continental subduction. Although this geochemical parallel does not necessarily imply a tectonic analogy, it demands active geodynamics during the Archean capable of generating hybrid lithospheric sources. Together, these observations support the use of Phanerozoic magmatic analogues as a framework for investigating Archean geodynamic processes.

How to cite: Gómez-Frutos, D. and Moreira, H.: Proxying Archean subduction using Phanerozoic I-type magmatism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9603, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9603, 2026.

EGU26-9783 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Slab dip angle variation controlled by evolving lateral pressure gradients 

Xiaoyi Li and Lijun Liu

The dip angle of subducting slabs is one of the key factors controlling mantle flow and upper-plate tectonic evolution. In the extreme case, flat subduction forms when the dip angle of the slab is less than 15°. Although this scenario accounts for only about 10% of the present-day global subduction system, it has profound geological significance for continental tectonic evolution, magmatic activities, and mantle–crust interactions. Previous studies have proposed multiple mechanisms influencing the evolution of slab dip, with the proposed controlling factors including the properties of the overriding plate, the buoyancy of the subducting slab, and plate convergence rates; however, a unified dynamical understanding has not yet been established. Based on a global geodynamical model with data assimilation that systematically simulates subduction evolution over the past 200 Ma, we quantitatively investigate the relationship between slab dip and its dynamical origin. We select representative subduction systems in East Asia, South America, and North America to analyze the evolution of slab dip over time from subduction initiation to termination.

The results reveal a new mechanism controlling slab dip angle: dynamic pressure in the mantle wedge. As subduction proceeds, the dynamic pressure in the mantle wedge generally decreases, leading to an increasing pressure difference across the subducting slab; this directly reduces the slab dip angle over time, as confirmed from all subduction zones considered. More tests show that the lateral pressure difference also fluctuates with time, with the slab dip angle demonstrating the same variation, further confirming their causal relationship. We conclude that this lateral force represents an important new mechanism driving changes in slab dip.

How to cite: Li, X. and Liu, L.: Slab dip angle variation controlled by evolving lateral pressure gradients, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9783, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9783, 2026.

EGU26-10032 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Can subducting slab dynamics induce intraplate shortening at the trailing passive margins? 

Guy Fisch, Sascha Brune, Michael Pons, and Roi Granot

The pull force exerted by the down-going subducting oceanic slabs is the primary force driving the motion of the tectonic plates. This force has been shown to generate tensional stresses within the trailing part of subducting plates, which can induce extensional reactivation of inherited discontinuities and weaknesses, such as passive margins. Surprisingly, compressive intraplate stress conditions have also developed during subduction at the trailing passive margins, such as in northern Africa, resulting in spectacular geological fold-and-thrust belts. Whether these compressional features were formed due to the processes acting at the subduction plate boundary (e.g., the arrival of continental fragments into the subduction zone) or, instead, are related to the dynamics of the leading oceanic slab (e.g., the arrival of the down-going slab to the 660-km-deep mantle discontinuity) is unclear.

            Here we present a series of 2D numerical subduction models, utilizing the ASPECT geodynamic code. The models are kinematically driven, mimicking the far-field boundary forces acting on the subducting plate. We track the evolution of stresses and strains within the trailing passive margins, incorporated as a weak and thin crust between the oceanic and continental domains. Our preliminary results suggest that the stress field in the trailing passive margin responds to the behavior of the slab at depth. During the slab’s free sinking phase or during slab rollback, slab sinking rates across the upper mantle exceed the prescribed plate velocity, resulting in extensional stresses that are transmitted to, and concentrated at, the passive margin. In contrast, during the anchoring of the slab to the lower mantle (i.e., at 670 km depth) and during slab folding, the rates at which the leading slab is sinking in the upper mantle are lower than the prescribed plate velocity, inducing intraplate shortening at the trailing passive margin. The timescales and temporal behavior of passive margin deformation match those of slab dynamics, with fast slab buckling behavior leading to likewise fast oscillating stress changes in the margins. Our results may help explain the observed switches between tensional and compressional phases at the northern African passive margins and the overall heterogeneity of passive margin deformation styles within subducting plates, ranging from normal faulting and magmatism to shortening and folding.

How to cite: Fisch, G., Brune, S., Pons, M., and Granot, R.: Can subducting slab dynamics induce intraplate shortening at the trailing passive margins?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10032, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10032, 2026.

The pressure-temperature (P-T) evolution of subduction‐zone plate interfaces controls metamorphism, fluid flow, deformation, and seismicity. However, temperature estimates derived from exhumed rocks frequently exceed those predicted by subduction models, particularly at pressures below ~2.5 GPa. There are two main types of numerical subduction models: models that simulate subduction only without exhumation and models that simulate subduction and simultaneously ongoing exhumation. To investigate the discrepancy between modelled and rock-based temperature estimates, published numerical models that simulate both subduction and rock exhumation are re-examined. The analysis demonstrates that, at equivalent pressure, subduction plate interface temperatures are substantially lower during pure subduction (without exhumation) than during later stages when subduction and exhumation occur simultaneously. This increase in temperature results from advective heat transport, whereby exhuming rocks transfer heat from deeper, hotter regions to shallower levels of the subduction interface. Clockwise P-T paths recorded by exhumed rocks are consistent with this mechanism. Accounting for exhumation-related heat advection significantly improves agreement between modeled interface temperatures and rock-based P-T estimates. This heat advection effect is illustrated using as representative example the two-dimensional petrological-thermo-mechanical model of Vaughan-Hammon et al. (2022), which successfully reproduces P-T paths and metamorphic facies distributions in the Western Alps. Comparisons between interface P-T profiles during pure subduction and during combined subduction-exhumation stages show that interface temperatures at a given pressure can be elevated by more than 200 °C once exhumation initiates. A scaling analysis based on the Péclet number (Pe) combined with systematic two-dimensional numerical simulations of heat advection and diffusion along a channel generalize these results and provide a criterion for assessing the thermal impact of exhumation. Where exhumation occurs along the subduction interface and Pe > 1, advective heat transport can substantially raise interface temperatures. This framework applies to both oceanic and continental subduction zones and offers a potential explanation for the long-standing mismatch between subduction model temperature predictions and rock-based P-T data, particularly those associated with clockwise P-T paths.

Reference

Vaughan‐Hammon, J. D., Candioti, L. G., Duretz, T., & Schmalholz, S. M. (2022). Metamorphic facies distribution in the Western Alps predicted by petrological‐thermomechanical models of syn‐convergent exhumation. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 23(8), e2021GC009898, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GC009898.

How to cite: Schmalholz, S. M.: Heat advection during exhumation can explain high temperatures along the subduction plate interface, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10328, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10328, 2026.

EGU26-10383 | Posters on site | GD2.1

Coupled Serpentinization and Carbonation in the Outer-Rise Mantle: Implications for Slab Volatile Budgets 

Rui Zhang, Jianfeng Yang, and Liang Zhao

Volatile cycling in subduction zones plays a pivotal role in regulating long-term carbon storage and the habitability of Earth's deep biosphere. In particular, serpentinization of the subducting lithospheric mantle at outer-rise regions plays a pivotal role in shallow volatile cycling, facilitating both carbonation and the production of reduced volatiles such as hydrogen and methane. These reactions not only contribute to deep carbon storage but also provide chemical energy for sustaining subsurface microbial ecosystems. However, volatile fluxes associated with this process remain poorly constrained, primarily due to the inaccessibility of the outer-rise mantle, the scarcity of direct samples, and the inherent limitations of geophysical resolution at depth. Consequently, the partitioning and fate of slab-derived volatiles prior to deep subduction remain critical unknowns. Here, we present high-resolution two-dimensional visco-elasto-plastic models that simulate coupled serpentinization and carbonation within the faulted oceanic mantle seaward of the trench. Our results show that carbonation efficiency is primarily governed by the degree of serpentinization and the partial pressure of CO₂ in infiltrating fluids. These findings provide quantitative constraints on volatile processing in the shallow slab mantle and underscore the role of tectonically focused hydration in shaping deep carbon fluxes. More broadly, they highlight how slab deformation influences the geochemical and energetic architecture of Earth's deep subsurface.

How to cite: Zhang, R., Yang, J., and Zhao, L.: Coupled Serpentinization and Carbonation in the Outer-Rise Mantle: Implications for Slab Volatile Budgets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10383, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10383, 2026.

EGU26-10759 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Interactions between spatial-dislocated mantle plumes and subduction plates 

Zhuo Fan, Jie Liao, and Zewei Wang

Plumes ascending from deep mantle and subducting plates sinking from lithosphere play vital roles in the recycling of the Earth system. Although mantle plumes and subduction zones are considered independent in their spatial distribution, many geophysical and geochemical investigations suggest frequent interactions between them (Fletcher & Wyman, 2015; Saki et al., 2024). Furthermore, increasing tomography research have shown globally widespread low-velocity anomalies beneath the subduction zones (Amaru, 2007; Lu et al., 2019; Yang et al., 2025). These observations and evidence lead us to a conjecture: Is there a mutual attraction between mantle plume and subducting plates?

To verify our hypothesis, we use geodynamic modeling to investigate the long-distance interactions between the spatial-dislocated plume and subduction zones. The results show that plate subductions will always try to capture upwelling plumes, even with an evident spatial dislocation. The main insights from the numerical experiments are as follows: (a) Attraction between subducting plate and mantle plume is mainly achieved by the horizontal movement of the upwelling plume, which will result in tilted upwelling channels of them. (b) Interactions between the spatial-dislocated plumes and subduction zones show different patterns depending on whether the plate motions of the subduction plates have evolved. (c) Stronger plume (with greater volume or excess temperature) and faster plate subduction will enhance the interactions between them. And therefore, change their geodynamic processes and responses.

The geodynamic models present fine agreements with the tomography investigations in different subduction zones, which can be used to interpret the morphological characteristics of both the plumes and the slabs. The mechanism revealed by our research suggests a widespread attraction between mantle plumes and subduction plates, which also proposes a possible contributing factor of the spatial distribution for certain hotspots.

 

References

Amaru, M., 2007. Global travel time tomography with 3-D reference models. Doctoral Thesis, Utrecht University.

Fletcher, M., & Wyman, D., 2015. Mantle plume–subduction zone interactions over the past 60 Ma. Lithos, 233:162-173. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2015.06.026

Lu, C., Grand, S. P., Lai, H., & Garnero, E. J., 2019. TX2019slab: a new P and S tomography model incorporating subducting slabs. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 124: 11549-11567. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JB017448

Saki, M., Wirp, S. A., Billen, M., & Thomas, C., 2024. Seismic evidence for possible entrainment of rising plumes by subducting slab induced flow in three subduction zones surrounding the Caribbean Plate. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 352: 107212. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2024.107212

Yang, J., Faccenda, M., Chen, L., Wang, X., Shen, H., VanderBeek, B. P., & Zhao, L., 2025. The origin and fate of subslab partial melts at convergent margins. National Science Review, 12: nwaf314. https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwaf314

How to cite: Fan, Z., Liao, J., and Wang, Z.: Interactions between spatial-dislocated mantle plumes and subduction plates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10759, 2026.

EGU26-11741 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Diachronous slab break-off in oppositely-dipping double subduction system: Insights from 3D numerical experiments 

Giridas Maiti, Nevena Andrić-Tomašević, Alexander Koptev, Claudio Faccenna, and Taras Gerya

Diachronous slab break-off around the Adriatic microplate is inferred to occur with contrasting timing and kinematics on its western (Apennine) and eastern (Dinaride–Hellenide) margins. While the Apennines exhibit long-lived slab rollback followed by laterally migrating slab break-off, the eastern margin appears to have experienced earlier continental-collision-related shortening and slab break-off. To investigate the controlling factors on slab break-off and tearing in such a double-sided, oppositely dipping subduction system, we conduct 3D thermo-mechanical numerical experiments in which two subduction zones interact through a shared lower plate. We vary three key parameters: (1) the initial length of the oceanic lithosphere, (2) the initial subduction trench obliquities on each side (symmetric vs. asymmetric), and (3) oceanic plate ages, which collectively control the slab rollback velocity, trench rotation, interacting mantle flow, slab break-off, and tear propagation. In a symmetric reference experiment (with identical initial trench obliquity and oceanic plate length on both sides), closure of the short oceanic segment does not immediately trigger slab break-off. Instead, oceanic subduction evolves into intra-continental subduction, followed by a late-stage slab break-off. In contrast, on the longer oceanic segment, slab rollback drives trench retreat and rotation, causing progressive lateral plate decoupling that propagates along strike, and slab break-off initiates after the retreating trench meets the continent, long before continental collision. Asymmetric experiments (with different initial trench obliquity and oceanic plate length) demonstrate diachronous slab break-off on opposite sides. Here, on the shorter oceanic domain with lower trench obliquity, earlier continental collision and slab break-off occur, whereas on the longer oceanic domain with higher trench obliquity, slab rollback persists for a longer duration, accompanied by pronounced trench rotation, resulting in delayed slab break-off and tear propagation. Overall, our results indicate that (1) oceanic closure alone is not always sufficient to trigger slab break-off, (2) trench rotation linked to obliquity is a key factor controlling delayed slab break-off and tear propagation, and (3) a shorter oceanic domain with lower margin obliquity facilitates earlier continental collision and slab break-off. We propose that the tectonics around the Adriatic microplate can be interpreted as an interactive two-sided asymmetric subduction system in which the western margin evolves through obliquity-driven trench rotation and delayed slab break-off propagation, whereas the eastern margin experiences earlier slab break-off due to continental collision.

How to cite: Maiti, G., Andrić-Tomašević, N., Koptev, A., Faccenna, C., and Gerya, T.: Diachronous slab break-off in oppositely-dipping double subduction system: Insights from 3D numerical experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11741, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11741, 2026.

EGU26-12482 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Investigating the Role of Fluid–Solid Coupling on Subduction Dynamics and Fluid Pathways 

Daniel Douglas, Frederick LaCombe, Liang Xue, John Naliboff, Juliane Dannberg, and Robert Myhill

Constraining the complex nonlinear feedbacks between patterns of fluid transport and solid deformation in subduction systems remains a key area of research towards understanding subduction zone seismicity, magmatism, and volatile cycling. In this study, we use 2D geodynamic simulations to constrain how distinct physical approximations for reactive volatile transport and fluid-solid coupling affect both long-term subduction dynamics and fluid transport pathways. 

The simulations use the open-source geodynamic software package ASPECT, which provides a framework for modeling coupled nonlinear viscoplastic deformation and reactive fluid transport in combination with a free surface, adaptive mesh refinement, advanced nonlinear solvers, and massive parallel scaling. Fluid–rock interaction follows a previously published parameterization of volatile–rock interaction within subduction systems (Tian et al., 2019), which provides an analytical solution for water partitioning between bound and free water phases across pressure–temperature space for sediment, mid-ocean ridge basalt, gabbro, and peridotite lithologies. We simulate fluid transport as either partially coupled Darcy flow (ignoring compaction terms) or fully coupled two-phase flow following the McKenzie equations (including compaction terms) (McKenzie 1984). In both cases, fluid–solid coupling also occurs through exponential reduction of the solid viscosity as a function of the volume of free-water. Furthermore, we examine the additional fluid-solid coupling through a reduction in the brittle strength of the solid in the presence of free-water and of the solid viscosity as a function of the bound H2O content.

Consistent with previous work, our model results demonstrate that the choice of partially or fully coupled two-phase flow significantly impacts fluid pathways, and that increased fluid–solid coupling leads to increased convergence rates between the subducting and overriding plates. When ignoring compaction terms, the partially coupled Darcy models promote vertical fluid pathways as the slab dehydrates, while including compaction prevents immediate release of the fluid from the subducting plate, promoting updip fluid pathways within the slab before fluids are released into the mantle wedge. Significantly, fluid release into the mantle wedge in the deeper and mechanically strong portions of the slab does not occur until a sufficiently high porosity is reached to locally reduce the solid viscosity and thereby enable the compaction pressure to overcome compaction viscosities. 

Extensive serpentinization of the subducting mantle lithosphere enables the transport of large fluid volumes to beyond the arc. When including the full degree of fluid–solid coupling (including additional brittle and ductile weakening), this large volume of fluid carried to the back-arc promotes sufficient weakening of the overriding plate to drive the dynamic initiation of back-arc spreading. In contrast, reduced degrees of serpentinization inhibit back-arc rifting. We propose that variations in mantle lithosphere hydration provide a fundamental control on the occurrence of back-arc spreading, with less hydrated subducting plates corresponding to subduction zones lacking back-arc extension.

How to cite: Douglas, D., LaCombe, F., Xue, L., Naliboff, J., Dannberg, J., and Myhill, R.: Investigating the Role of Fluid–Solid Coupling on Subduction Dynamics and Fluid Pathways, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12482, 2026.

EGU26-12622 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Testing the link between Panthalassa tectonic evolution and subduction-modified mantle heterogeneity 

Chia Yu Yeh, Jeremy Tsung-Jui Wu, and Eh Tan

Subduction zones provide a structured pathway for the transfer of Earth-surface materials into the mantle, whereby slab dehydration and melting release water-rich components primarily into the mantle wedge, regulating their initial entry into the convecting upper mantle.

Recent studies (e.g., Yang et al., 2021) suggest that the upper mantle can be broadly divided into subduction-modified and subduction-unmodified domains at a global scale. The former is widely distributed in the Indian Ocean and in parts of the Atlantic, reflecting the asthenospheric metasomatism and recycling associated with subducted materials. In contrast, the subduction-unmodified domain is largely restricted to the Pacific basin and shows little evidence for the involvement of subducted components. This contrast highlights the critical role of circum-Pacific region, which has experienced nearly continuous subduction for at least the past 200 Myr, and may have acted as a long-existing “subduction shield”, limiting the dispersal of slab-derived materials into the Pacific mantle, and providing an ideal setting to examine how long-term subduction processes have contributed to upper mantle heterogeneity.  However, whether such large-scale geometry patterns can be reproduced dynamically, and whether it is geodynamically reasonable to classify the upper mantle into subduction-modified and subduction-unmodified domains mantle, remain open questions.

In this study, we employ CitcomS, a finite-element geodynamic code that solves thermo-chemical convection in a spherical shell, to simulate mantle convection and examine the transport of subduction-modified material through the upper mantle, constrained by GPlates-derived plate velocities based on published plate tectonic reconstruction model. Passive tracers are introduced to track material transport over time. By identifying tracers that pass through the mantle wedge, we determine materials acquire subduction signals and evaluate how they are redistributed within the convective mantle.

This analysis provides a quantitative framework for accessing whether the modeled mantle can be conceptually classified into subduction-modified and subduction-unmodified regions, and for investigating how long-term subduction contributes to global upper-mantle heterogeneity. More broadly, our results offer a new perspective for investigating the long-term dynamic evolution of the circum-Pacific subduction system and its role in shaping mantle structure.

How to cite: Yeh, C. Y., Wu, J. T.-J., and Tan, E.: Testing the link between Panthalassa tectonic evolution and subduction-modified mantle heterogeneity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12622, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12622, 2026.

There are three main types of volcanism on Earth: rifting volcanism at diverging plate margins (e.g. mid-ocean ridges), arc volcanism at converging plate margins (e.g. Japan and the Andes), and intraplate volcanism occurring relatively far from plate boundaries. Identifying the source of intraplate volcanism, however, remains one of the most challenging problems in geoscience.

Intra-oceanic volcanoes (e.g. Hawaii) are generally attributed to the ascent of hot and buoyant mantle material (plumes) rising from the core–mantle boundary (CMB). These volcanoes are characterised by frequent eruptions (every few years), a clear age progression (volcanic landforms are older away from the active eruption centre), sub-alkaline tholeiitic magmas, and high 3He/4He ratios, indicating a deep mantle source.

In contrast, intraplate continental volcanoes are more enigmatic. They typically display sporadic eruptions (every few thousand years), no systematic age progression, alkaline and SiO2-undersaturated magmas, and low 3He/4He ratios, which exclude a deep mantle reservoir. Several volcanic provinces in the Mediterranean region exhibit these features.

Among them, a group of provinces located north of the Alps constitutes the European Cenozoic Rift System (ECRiS): (1) Massif Central (France), (2) Eifel (Germany), (3) Eger Rift (Czech Republic), and (4) Pannonian Basin (Hungary). Seismic tomography beneath these regions reveals slow seismic velocity anomalies in the upper mantle, interpreted as warm or partially molten material, overlying fast velocity anomalies in the mantle transition zone (MTZ). These fast anomalies are commonly interpreted as cold, stagnant slabs subducted during the closure of the Tethys Ocean.

Plumes rising from the MTZ differ fundamentally from those originating at the CMB. Their ascent is thought to be driven primarily by the chemical buoyancy of relatively light and possibly volatile-rich material, whereas CMB plumes (e.g. Hawaii and Iceland) are driven by the thermal buoyancy of very hot mantle material (>3000 K). A recent hypothesis proposes that intraplate volcanism within the ECRiS is caused by hydrous plumes generated by flux melting of the subducted Tethyan oceanic crust, now stagnating in the MTZ beneath Europe. This geodynamic setting is referred to as a Big Mantle Wedge (BMW).

How to cite: Marzotto, E.: Unravelling the Origin of European Cenozoic Rift System (ECRiS) Intra-Continental Volcanism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12955, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12955, 2026.

EGU26-13587 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Towards a Reconstruction of the Magmatic and Tectonic Evolution of the Demise of the Antarctic Peninsula Subduction Zone 

Katie Lucas, Tiffany Barry, Catherine Greenfield, Teal Riley, Phil Leat, and John Smellie

The Antarctic Peninsula preserves the life cycle of a subduction zone from initiation to demise. The Antarctic-Phoenix subduction zone was active from the Late Jurassic till the initiation of its demise, 53Ma1. This demise was triggered by the collision of the Antarctic-Phoenix spreading ridge with the subduction zone trench, leading to the development of a slab window. This ridge crest-trench interaction occurred segmentally from the southern end of the arc to the northern end. Today three segments of the mid-ocean ridge exist west of the South Shetland Islands, but there is no longer any subduction, leaving a paleo-subduction zone. The progressive shut down and subsequent lack of overprinting or tectonic events, allows an assessment of the stages of collision and slab-window formation, and the impact this has had on the magma generation and volcanism.

Limited work has been conducted on linking the evolution of the volcanism with the evolution of the subduction zone, however, recent efforts have worked to classify different geochemical groups within the subduction volcanism and to assess the spread of geochronological data2,3. From this, it has been possible to highlight some key questions which warrant further data collection and analysis.

This work focusses on the assessment of a potential migration of the volcanic axis trench-wards in response to the approaching mid-ocean ridge. It also works to marry the spatial and temporal assessment with a geochemical analysis. With the aim to observe changes in mantle conditions and magma generation through the evolving geochemistry of the volcanic activity and link it to the changing tectonic setting.

To achieve this, 64 additional major and trace element analysis, and 14 new U-Pb dates have been collected. Which have been applied to a spatial analysis and detailed tectonic/coastal reconstruction. From this a new look at the structure, evolution and impact of subduction demise and slab-window formation within the Antarctic Peninsula can be gleaned.

References:
[1] Smellie, et al. (2021), Geological Society of London, Memoirs, https://doi.org/10.1144/M55-2020-14
[2] Leat and Riley (2021a), Geological Society of London, Memoirs, https://doi.org/10.1144/m55-2018-68
[3] Leat and Riley (2021b), Geological Society of London, Memoirs, https://doi.org/10.1144/m55-2018-52

How to cite: Lucas, K., Barry, T., Greenfield, C., Riley, T., Leat, P., and Smellie, J.: Towards a Reconstruction of the Magmatic and Tectonic Evolution of the Demise of the Antarctic Peninsula Subduction Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13587, 2026.

EGU26-14019 | Orals | GD2.1

Geodynamic Modelling of Passive Margin Stability with Grain Damage: Conditions for Subduction Initiation 

Juliane Dannberg, Arushi Saxena, Rene Gassmöller, Menno Fraters, and Ranpeng Li

Subduction initiation remains a key open problem in geodynamics. One hypothesis for the spontaneous initiation of subduction is passive margin collapse triggered by grain damage: a rapid plunge in grain size in the lower parts of the lithosphere leads to strong rheological weakening and the formation of a localised shear zone that facilitates subduction. This mechanism has been proposed and tested in 1D models (Mulyukova & Bercovici, 2018), but has not been incorporated into fully dynamic subduction models because grain-size-dependent rheologies have a high complexity and computational cost. As a result, its viability as a trigger for subduction initiation remains uncertain.

Here we present high-resolution 2-D thermo-mechanical models that test whether grain damage can enable passive margin collapse and subduction initiation. We model the life cycle of an entire oceanic plate from mid-ocean ridge formation to the potential collapse at the passive margin (or stable evolution if no collapse occurs). The lithosphere is represented as a two-phase assemblage of 60% olivine and 40% pyroxene, which are well-mixed at the grain scale. Because grains of each phase impede the growth of the other through Zener pinning, grain growth is suppressed relative to single-phase compositions. This promotes strain localisation due to grain size reduction. Simulating this process requires accurate tracking of the mineral grain size, which is both history-dependent and sensitive to stress changes. Recent advancements in the community code ASPECT, including a higher-order particle method and adaptive time stepping for the grain-size evolution equation via the ARKode solver, now make this feasible.

Our models demonstrate that subduction initiation by grain damage is possible, but only within a narrow range of grain size evolution parameters. Passive margin collapse requires that a large fraction of deformational work in cold lithospheric regions is partitioned into interface damage rather than dissipated as shear heating. Even under these favourable conditions, additional weakening is needed to break the upper ≥15 km of the plate. In our models, we impose a narrow, weak zone to represent this shallow weakening. Elevated stresses in and around the weak zone promote grain damage, producing a grain size plunge and associated viscosity drop at mid- to lower-lithosphere depths. The resulting zone of small grain size propagates downward through the lower lithosphere until a narrow, continuous shear zone forms that enables passive margin collapse. However, the same imposed weak zone does not lead to subduction initiation in otherwise identical models with a fixed grain size.

These results indicate that grain damage alone is unlikely to be the primary trigger for passive margin collapse, but that it can substantially enhance strain localisation and modulate the conditions for subduction initiation when combined with additional weakening mechanisms.

 

References: Mulyukova, E., & Bercovici, D. (2018). Collapse of passive margins by lithospheric damage and plunging grain size. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 484, 341-352.

How to cite: Dannberg, J., Saxena, A., Gassmöller, R., Fraters, M., and Li, R.: Geodynamic Modelling of Passive Margin Stability with Grain Damage: Conditions for Subduction Initiation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14019, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14019, 2026.

EGU26-16495 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Incompatible trace element transport in phosphorus enriched peridotitic mantle across the upper to lower mantle boundary 

Tristan Pausch, Bastian Joachim-Mrosko, Thomas Ludwig, and Jürgen Konzett

Increasing pressure and temperature causes progressive dehydration of subducted oceanic lithosphere. This process generates incompatible trace element and halogen-enriched fluids that migrate into the mantle wedge, thereby causing metasomatism across a large depth range. Apatite is a common constituent of metasomatic assemblages in mantle wedge peridotites and melange zones, indicating that phosphorus is a significant component of the trace element flux directed into the mantle wedge. During progressive subduction, tuite [γ-Ca3(PO4)2] forms from apatite at depths of ~220-230 km (7-7.5 GPa) and ~250-280 km (8-9 GPa) in basaltic and peridotitic lithologies, respectively, thereby replacing apatite as phosphorus-saturating phase and major carrier of Y+REE, LILE, U and Th. The significance of Ca-phosphates compared to silicates for phosphorus and incompatible trace element storage and transport is expected to evolve with increasing depth and temperature. Upon crossing the upper-to-lower mantle boundary, major phosphorus and/or LREE carriers such as majoritic garnet and ringwoodite disappear, while new competitors for LILE-LREE-HFSE storage, such as davemaoite, the CAS-phase, and K-hollandite emerge (e.g. Hirose et al., 2004; Suzuki et al., 2012). No experimental data are currently available on the distribution of incompatible trace elements in Ca-phosphate-bearing assemblages at P-T conditions covering this depth interval. This study aims to address the gap in our understanding of upper-to-lower mantle trace element fluxes (1) by determining incompatible trace element concentrations in tuite and its coexisting phases within a peridotite bulk composition at pressures straddling the upper-to-lower mantle transition, and (2) by assessing the role of tuite in trace element storage and transport across this boundary. For this purpose, multi anvil experiments were performed at 15 to 25 GPa and 1600 to 2000°C, using a moderately fertile peridotite doped with 3% synthetic β-Ca3(PO4)2, approximately 2200 µg/g Cl and Br, each, and 1% of a trace element mix containing Y+REE along with selected LILE, HFSE and light elements (Li, B, Be) with concentrations in the range 1-230 µg/g.

In metasomatized peridotites, Ca-phosphates are stable only if the bulk phosphorus concentration exceeds the saturation capacity of the coexisting silicate-(oxide) assemblage. In this case, apatite and tuite can be present throughout the upper and in the uppermost lower mantle and constitute principal hosts of REE, LILE, U, and Th in this depth range. Upon entry of peridotite into the lower mantle, the breakdown of Ca-P-bearing majorite leads to the formation of davemaoite and tuite, both phases becoming the dominant incompatible trace element carriers. In the absence of Ca-phosphates, clinopyroxene, majoritic garnet and davemaoite dominate incompatible trace element storage in the upper and uppermost lower mantle.

Hirose, K. et al., (2004) Phys. Earth Planet. Inter. 146, 249-260.

Suzuki, T. et al., (2012) Phys. Earth Planet. Inter. 208-209, 59-73.

How to cite: Pausch, T., Joachim-Mrosko, B., Ludwig, T., and Konzett, J.: Incompatible trace element transport in phosphorus enriched peridotitic mantle across the upper to lower mantle boundary, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16495, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16495, 2026.

EGU26-16907 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Geochemical Evidence for Island Arc Subduction Beneath the New Hebrides Island Arc 

Nils B. Baumann, Karsten M. Haase, Kathrin P. Schneider, Marcel Regelous, and Allan R. Chivas

The tectonic history of the New Hebrides Island Arc (NHIA) is complex and characterized by collisions of oceanic plateaus, subduction interface rotation, as well as fragmentation and ultimately subduction polarity changes. Despite the intricate tecto-magmatic evolution of the NHIA, geochemical data are sparse and the geodynamic processes governing magmatism in the NHIA are poorly understood.

Between 14° and 17° South, along the New Hebrides Trench, collision and subsequent subduction of the d’Entrecasteaux Zone (DEZ) with the NHIA results in various erosional and accretionary processes. The DEZ encompasses the North d’Entrecasteaux Ridge (NDR) and Bougainville Guyot, which represent the immediate interface of the collision zone. In the vicinity of New Caledonia, the DEZ was previously interpreted as a horst-graben system, while the Bougainville Guyot is commonly referred to as part of a southern seamount chain.

Here, we present new geochemical and Sr-Nd-Hf-Pb isotopic data on volcanic rocks from drill sites 831 (Bougainville Guyot), 828 (NDR), 829 (NHIA fore-arc), as well as from the island of Espiritu Santo which formed in the Miocene Melanesian island arc. Drill site and volcanic arc samples differ distinctly in Nd-Hf isotopic records, indicating that fore-arc samples from drill site 829 comprise accreted material from the subducting plate, while the island arc samples exhibit a mantle source consistent with previous arc formation above Indian MORB-like mantle.

In addition, our new data suggest a strong slab-derived fluid influence on the chemical composition of samples from all locations. Relatively radiogenic Sr isotopic records together with negative Nb-Ta anomalies and positive Pb anomalies in samples originating the d’Entrecasteaux Zone, support the model that the DEZ represents a fossil island arc.

We refine the understanding of the tectonic evolution of the NHIA by providing further geochemical constraints on the mantle composition and magma genesis of arc, fore-arc as well as of the subducting DEZ. Isotope and trace element data of the NDR and Bougainville Guyot resemble island arc tholeiites from the Mariana and Kermadec island arcs. Thus, the DEZ probably represents an immature island arc, implying that such magmatically thickened and therefore buoyant structures can be subducted.

How to cite: Baumann, N. B., Haase, K. M., Schneider, K. P., Regelous, M., and Chivas, A. R.: Geochemical Evidence for Island Arc Subduction Beneath the New Hebrides Island Arc, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16907, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16907, 2026.

EGU26-17281 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.1

Geochemical and Isotopic Constraints on the Genesis of Granitoids in the Aegean Subduction Zone 

Julian Wolf, Karsten M. Haase, Marcel Regelous, Christina Stouraiti, Michael Bröcker, Esther M. Hars, and Panagiotis C. Voudouris

Granitoid magmas are abundant in subduction zones and form large portions of the upper continental crust. However, the formation of granitoid magmas remains debated, with models proposing (1) evolution from mantle-derived mafic melts by assimilation-fractional crystallization (AFC), (2) partial melting of lower to middle continental crust induced by mafic underplating, and (3) partial melting of metasomatized pyroxenite in the mantle. Since the Oligocene, slab rollback and trench retreat have caused the Aegean subduction zone to migrate approximately 350 km southwestward, resulting in extensive mafic to felsic magmatism with numerous granitoid intrusions in the region. We present new whole-rock major and trace element data together with Sr-Nd-Pb isotope compositions for the 15 to 8 Ma granitoids from Tinos, Mykonos, Naxos, Paros, Lavrion, and Serifos, as well as metasedimentary rocks of the Cycladic Blueschist Unit (CBU) from Tinos, Syros, Andros, and Sifnos. The CBU metamorphic rocks comprise low-grade metamorphic schists, marbles, and high-pressure mélanges and were subducted at the Aegean subduction zone. The metasediments received a high-pressure metamorphic imprint between 55 and 30 Ma. They exhibit element compositions similar to modern Eastern Mediterranean sediments, but many have higher initial 207Pb/204Pb and 208Pb/204Pb than the sediments from the Hellenic Trench. These differences indicate that the composition of subducted sediments changed over time at the Aegean subduction zone. Most granitoids display geochemical signatures characteristic of arc magmas and represent an isotopic end-member of Aegean magmatism in Sr-Nd-Pb isotope space. The isotopic compositions of many granitoids overlap with those of sediments and CBU metasediments, whereas others display distinctly more radiogenic (Pb) signatures. The Cyclades Continental Basement has much higher Sr isotope ratios than the granitoids. Consequently, the isotope composition of the granitoids does not support partial melting of lower continental crustal rocks. Partial melting of metasomatized pyroxenite is unlikely, as most granitoids lie on fractional crystallization trends. The high Th/Nd and low Ce/Pb of the granitoids indicate a fractionation of these elements by accessory minerals during partial melting of the upper crustal rocks. We propose that most granitoid magmas in the Aegean form by fractional crystallization of mafic magmas derived from mantle sources modified by subducted upper continental crustal components. The granitoids require a more radiogenic (Sr and Pb) subducted component than observed in the CBU metasediments or modern sediments, possibly related to the subduction of microcontinental fragments.

How to cite: Wolf, J., Haase, K. M., Regelous, M., Stouraiti, C., Bröcker, M., Hars, E. M., and Voudouris, P. C.: Geochemical and Isotopic Constraints on the Genesis of Granitoids in the Aegean Subduction Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17281, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17281, 2026.

EGU26-19998 | Orals | GD2.1

Subduction segmentation induced by along-strike variations in overriding plate structure 

Ana M. Negredo, Pedro J. Gea, Flor dL. Mancilla, Haoyuan Li, and Magali I. Billen

Subduction zones are inherently three-dimensional systems and exhibit pronounced trench-parallel variability in key observables, including the deformation style of the overriding plate, trench migration rates, slab geometry, and mantle flow patterns. Geodynamic models typically invoke external mantle flow and/or along-strike variations in the properties of the subducting slab to explain this variability, often neglecting the influence of the overriding plate, despite growing evidence of its strong control on subduction dynamics. In this study, we use self-consistent three-dimensional numerical models to explore how along-strike heterogeneities in the overriding plate structure can generate significant variations in subduction dynamics and mantle flow. Our results demonstrate that trench-parallel variations in overriding plate thickness produce large along-strike differences in trench retreat velocities, leading to strongly arcuate trench geometries.

We further conducted a suite of models incorporating a mechanically weak zone in the subducting plate, representing the subduction of a transform fault oriented perpendicular to the trench. These experiments show that along-strike variations in overriding plate thickness can promote vertical slab tearing and segmentation of the subduction system into distinct slab segments. Slab tearing facilitates focused mantle upwelling through the tear, potentially triggering tear-related magmatism during slab rollback. Natural examples of subduction zones characterized by vertical slab tears include the Melanesian subduction system, the South Shetland margin and the Tyrrhenian–Apennines collision system. We propose that the interplay between overriding plate heterogeneity and the subduction of transform faults has been a key factor controlling oroclinal bending and subduction segmentation in the Mediterranean region.

How to cite: Negredo, A. M., Gea, P. J., Mancilla, F. dL., Li, H., and Billen, M. I.: Subduction segmentation induced by along-strike variations in overriding plate structure, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19998, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19998, 2026.

EGU26-20466 | ECS | Orals | GD2.1

Massive Mg-rich fluid release across the brucite + serpentine reaction in subduction zones 

Emma Legros, Benjamin Malvoisin, Fabrice Brunet, Zaccaria El Yousfi, Valentina Batanova, Alexander Sobolev, and Anne-Line Auzende

The dehydration of altered oceanic lithosphere is a source of aqueous fluids in subduction zones. Serpentine minerals, hosting ~ 13 wt.% H2O, are one of the main water carriers of the hydrated oceanic mantle. Antigorite, the stable serpentine mineral in deep subduction conditions, breaks down at temperature above 600 °C (Atg-out reaction), releasing free aqueous fluid. Compilation of bulk compositions of oceanic and exhumed subduction-collision zones serpentinites from the literature indicates that brucite (Brc) should also be an important hydrous (30 wt.% H2O) component of the oceanic lithosphere. Thermodynamic modeling with an updated thermochemical database shows that the Brc + Atg = Ol + H2O reaction (Atg-Brc reaction) occurs at lower temperature and can even produce more fluid than the Atg-out reaction. Moreover, the Atg-Brc reaction occurs in a narrow temperature range (< 10 °C), implying relatively high dehydration rates in the slab. Furthermore, the released aqueous fluid is calculated to be highly magnesian (> 1 mol/kg) with MgOaq as the dominant aqueous species. We studied the products of the Atg-Brc reaction in Zermatt-Saas (Swiss Alps) and Mont Avic (Italian Alps) meta-ophiolites, involved in the Alpine subduction. The development of metamorphic olivine and Ti-clinohumite veins within metamorphic serpentinites crosscut by pure magnesian brucite (Mg# > 99) indicates strong magnesian segregation, in agreement with thermodynamic modeling. From the size of the segregation, it is estimated that a Mg-rich fluid interacted with the host rock for around a hundred years before being drained. Finally, based on the idea that dehydration reactions can trigger seismicity in subduction zones, we located in a PT diagram the Low-Frequency Earthquakes (LFE) recorded in present-day subduction zones (Mexican, Nankai and Cascadia). The conditions under which these LFE are generated coincide with the PT conditions of the Atg-Brc dehydration reaction, supporting its central role as a main source of aqueous fluid in subduction zones.

How to cite: Legros, E., Malvoisin, B., Brunet, F., El Yousfi, Z., Batanova, V., Sobolev, A., and Auzende, A.-L.: Massive Mg-rich fluid release across the brucite + serpentine reaction in subduction zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20466, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20466, 2026.

EGU26-21443 | Orals | GD2.1

Slab Tearing, Fluid Pathways, and Seismic Segmentation in the Hellenic–Aegean Subduction Zone Revealed by Receiver Functions and OBS Tomography 

Maria Sachpazi, Mireille Laigle, Vasileios Kapetanidis, Jordi Diaz, Alexandrine Gerset, Audrey Galve, Marinos Charalampakis, and Edi Kissling

The Hellenic–Aegean subduction zone is a key natural laboratory for studying convergent margin dynamics, with well-documented surface deformation, upper-crustal geology, and deep mantle processes such as slab rollback. The architecture of the subduction system at intermediate depths (∼50–150 km), however, still remains insufficiently resolved.

Using receiver-function analyses from a dense seismic network deployed across the Peloponnesus and central Greece within the EU-funded THALES WAS RIGHT project, we have resolved the three-dimensional geometry of the subducting slab Moho in unprecedented detail. These studies revealed a systematic segmentation of the Ionian oceanic lithosphere by nine trench-normal, subvertical fault zones that remain seismically active at intermediate depths beneath the entire Peloponnesus and the marine forearc domain. This fault-controlled architecture provided compelling evidence for slab tearing and highlights the role of internal slab deformation. Clustered seismicity in the mantle wedge above the tear faults suggests their potential role as pathways for fluid migration.

These slab faults appear to influence seismicity up to the forearc backstop. New results from ocean-bottom seismometer local tomography in the forearc domain further illuminate upper plate structural segmentation. We image a strongly imbricated upper-crustal wedge composed of blocks with contrasted P-wave velocities overlying the megathrust down to ~30 km depth. These blocks likely correspond to accreted terranes previously inferred from geological reconstructions but never imaged seismically. Beyond their geodynamic significance, this segmentation may modulate megathrust slip behaviour, as illustrated by our study of the Methoni earthquake. We propose that in the southwestern Hellenic subduction zone, megathrust rupture propagation is limited by the combined effects of small-scale upper-plate discontinuities and larger-scale lower-plate segmentation associated with slab tearing.

Complementary receiver-function results reveal a low-velocity layer -over 200km wide- located within the mantle wedge, below the shallow Aegean Moho and above the slab top at depths of ~50–70 km. Owing to the dense 2-D profile coverage, we resolve that this layer is segmented into distinct panels that closely mirror the along-strike segmentation of the retreating slab. This layer may represent inherited underplated material accreted during earlier subduction episodes, in a process analogous to the accretion of the Hellenic tectonostratigraphic terranes. Our observation of slab-parallel segmentation provides a key constraint on mantle wedge rheology, implying that slab faulting not only governs slab dynamics, associated upper plate deformation and fluid flow pathways but also structurally organizes the mantle wedge. Future finer scale imaging derived from multiscale analysis methods and synthetic modelling are planned to better constrain the nature of this layer and its role in fluid transfer and mantle wedge seismicity.

How to cite: Sachpazi, M., Laigle, M., Kapetanidis, V., Diaz, J., Gerset, A., Galve, A., Charalampakis, M., and Kissling, E.: Slab Tearing, Fluid Pathways, and Seismic Segmentation in the Hellenic–Aegean Subduction Zone Revealed by Receiver Functions and OBS Tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21443, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21443, 2026.

The increase in space geodetic measurements for examining plate motion in the past three decades has significantly advanced our understanding of complex deformation processes in subduction zones throughout the earthquake cycle. We now recognize a spectrum of seismic and aseismic behaviors, including slow slip events, non-volcanic tremor, low-frequency earthquakes, fault creep, episodic tremor and slip (ETS), postseismic afterslip, and viscoelastic mantle flow transients. Notably, Materna et al. (2019) observed dynamically triggered increases and decreases in plate coupling associated with nearby earthquakes in southern Cascadia. We have reproduced and extended these findings using an improved semi-automated detection method, which reveals additional examples of time-dependent coupling changes in the region. 

This study applies our method to the Chilean subduction zone to investigate similar temporal variability in plate coupling changes. In southern Chile, Klein et al. (2016) and Melnick et al. (2017) documented GNSS velocity increases near the boundaries of the unruptured segments following the 2010 Maule earthquake. GNSS rates south of 21°S accelerate up to 10 mm/year in the second year following the 2014 Iquique earthquake, potentially reflecting a coupling increase (Hoffmann et al., 2018). Additionally, Luo et al. (2020) reported a systematic decrease in seaward velocities from 2010–2019 across the southern half of the great 1960 Valdivia rupture zone. Our ongoing work seeks to detect and characterize such abrupt GNSS velocity changes in Chile using our semi-automated approach and to better understand the underlying physical mechanisms. In particular, we aim to constrain the recently identified phenomenon of dynamically triggered coupling changes, with implications for earthquake cycle models and seismic hazard assessment across global subduction zones.

How to cite: Roy, A. and Jackson, N. M.: The Search for Time-Dependent Coupling Changes on the Plate Interface following the Great Earthquakes of Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-866, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-866, 2026.

EGU26-1489 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

A dense focal mechanisms catalogue for the Atacama segment in Chile (24◦S - 31◦S) using deep learning polarity picking 

Tatiana Kartseva, Jannes Münchmeyer, Blandine Gardonio, Agnès Helmstetter, David Marsan, and Anne Socquet

The Atacama segment in Northern Chile, a persistent seismic gap since 1922, represents a complex and highly active subduction zone. The region’s seismicity spans a broad magnitude range (M -0.8 to 6.2) and encompasses diverse sources including intraslab, interface, upper-mantle, and outer-rise events. While a dense earthquake catalog exists, systematic information on focal mechanisms has remained sparse, limiting detailed understanding of stress distribution and seismotectonic processes.

Here, we construct a comprehensive focal mechanism catalog for the Atacama seismic gap using P-wave polarity inversions implemented via the SKHASH algorithm based on a grid-search of nodal planes. First-motion polarities were automatically picked using a CNN model trained on 3 millions human-picked examples from diverse tectonic settings to improve cross-regional transferability. Rigorous quality selection was applied, accounting for signal-to-noise ratio, azimuthal coverage and minimum allowed number of polarities, ensuring robust mechanism determination. Under current network configuration and resolution constraints, around ~30% of the catalog (initially counting ~166 000 events) can be resolved. 

The resulting catalog provides a detailed statistical overview of mechanisms across different seismic classes and magnitudes. Particular attention is given to markers of slab stress state - along-dip compressions and tensions, its distribution across the double plane seismicity zone, and to mechanisms of upper-plate seismicity, which may reflect fluid transfer and crustal heterogeneities. 

How to cite: Kartseva, T., Münchmeyer, J., Gardonio, B., Helmstetter, A., Marsan, D., and Socquet, A.: A dense focal mechanisms catalogue for the Atacama segment in Chile (24◦S - 31◦S) using deep learning polarity picking, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1489, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1489, 2026.

EGU26-1674 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Detrital zircon mixing and sediment-routing partitioning from rivers to coastal and canyon–fan systems along the Colombian Caribbean margin 

Estefany Villanueva-García, Yamirka Rojas-Agramonte, Daniel Rincón-Martínez, Óscar Álvarez-Silva, Delia Rösel, Andres Mora, and Christian Winter

The tectonically active northern Colombian Caribbean margin, where the Magdalena Canyons System (MCS) lies adjacent to the structurally confined La Aguja Canyon (LAC), provides an exceptional natural laboratory to investigate sediment mixing and the partitioning of transport pathways between coastal and deep-marine environments. Here, we integrate new detrital zircon U–Pb geochronology from 18 coastal and offshore samples (~1,900 grains) with published river and coastal datasets to assess how provenance signals are transferred from onshore sources through submarine canyon systems into offshore depocenters. Detrital zircon ages span from <1 Ma to ~2700 Ma.

Our dataset includes 10 offshore samples distributed across the MCS, LAC, and distal sectors of the Magdalena Submarine Fan, together with 8 newly analyzed coastal samples. The coastal samples capture sediment supplied by two contrasting source regions: the Magdalena River, which delivers the largest sediment load to the Caribbean and carries a characteristically multimodal Andean-derived zircon signature, and rivers draining the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta (SNSM), which provide a lower sediment flux but a compositionally distinct crystalline signal directly to the coast. All samples were analyzed using detrital zircon U–Pb geochronology (LA-ICP-MS), complemented by grain-size analysis, cathodoluminescence imaging, and bulk mineralogical characterization by X-ray diffraction. Detrital zircon U–Pb age distributions were evaluated using kernel density estimates, multidimensional scaling, and inverse mixing models.

River and coastal datasets define two robust provenance end members. Sediments associated with the Magdalena River exhibit a multimodal Andean-derived age spectrum characterized by Neogene–Quaternary (<8 Ma), Jurassic–Cretaceous (~75–180 Ma), and Neoproterozoic (~990 Ma) populations. In contrast, sediments sourced from the SNSM display a narrower Paleogene–Jurassic–Proterozoic spectrum, with prominent peaks at ~50 Ma, ~180 Ma, and ~990 Ma. Offshore samples reflect this partitioning across distinct canyon domains: MCS samples retain the multimodal Magdalena signature, whereas LAC samples preserve the restricted SNSM signal. Distal fan samples integrate both age populations, delineating a downslope mixing zone where sediment contributions from both canyon systems may converge. Statistical analyses consistently support this sediment-routing partitioning, indicating dominant Magdalena-derived input to the MCS and distal fan, and a strongly confined SNSM signal within the LAC with limited distal transfer.

These results demonstrate that sediment routing along the northern Colombian Caribbean margin is strongly partitioned between adjacent submarine canyon systems, yet becomes progressively integrated downslope within the Magdalena Submarine Fan. While Magdalena-derived sediments are routed through the MCS and SNSM-derived material remains largely confined within the LAC at proximal and canyon scales, their provenance signals converge and mix within distal fan depocenters. This transition from canyon-scale partitioning to fan-scale mixing, controlled by tectonic confinement, source-area configuration, and canyon morphology, illustrates how sediment-routing systems operate in tectonically complex, actively deforming continental margins worldwide.

Keywords: detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology, source-to-sink systems, submarine canyons, marine sediment provenance, Caribbean margin

How to cite: Villanueva-García, E., Rojas-Agramonte, Y., Rincón-Martínez, D., Álvarez-Silva, Ó., Rösel, D., Mora, A., and Winter, C.: Detrital zircon mixing and sediment-routing partitioning from rivers to coastal and canyon–fan systems along the Colombian Caribbean margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1674, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1674, 2026.

EGU26-5379 | ECS | Orals | GD2.4

Active tectonics of Central Andes from GNSS and InSAR time series 

Bertrand Lovery, Mohamed Chlieh, Mathilde Radiguet, Marie-Pierre Doin, Juan Carlos Villegas-Lanza, Laurence Audin, Caroline Chalumeau, Edmundo Norabuena, Hernando Tavera, Philippe Durand, and Anne Socquet

The Central Andes are a place of considerable interest for the study of the physical processes involved in subduction. Indeed, it hosts significant seismic events relatively frequently, with four earthquakes of magnitude greater than eight in the last three decades: the 1995 Mw8.0 Antofagasta, the 2001 Mw8.4 Arequipa, the 2007 Mw8.0 Pisco, and the 2014 Mw8.1 Iquique earthquakes. In addition, structural heterogeneities, such as the Nazca and Perdida oceanic ridges, appear to segment seismic ruptures along the Peru-Chile trench. Estimating the seismogenic potential of the Central Andes, particularly in Southern Peru, where the amount of geodetic data available has increased considerably in recent years, is therefore a key issue.

Using 200+ GNSS sites, and InSAR mean velocity maps (2015-2021) processed in the framework of the FLATSIM Andes project (FormaTerre, 2020), we measured the deformation of the overriding plate on the horizontal and vertical components. In order to model interseismic and postseismic processes with a realistic structure and rheology, we developed a finite element method model of the subduction, featuring Newtonian viscoelastic Burgers rheology in the asthenosphere and an elastic cold nose. Accounting for the postseismic displacements associated with great subduction earthquakes, we propose a viscoelastic interseismic coupling model with unprecedented resolution in the area. This model shows significant heterogeneity, with high coupling off the coast of South Peru and Chile, and weaker coupling where oceanic structures, notably the Nazca Ridge and the Nazca Fracture Zone, subduct beneath the South American continent.

The spatial resolution provided by InSAR, notably on the vertical component, is of great interest to investigate the partitioning of the deformation in the upper plate, which is a fundamental aspect in the perspective of a unified interseismic coupling model at the scale of Peru and Chile. For this purpose, we quantified the East and vertical displacements across the Cuzco fault system (up to 3 mm/yr and 2 mm/yr on the East and vertical components respectively) and the Cordillera Blanca (up to 1.5 mm/yr and 3 mm/yr on the East and vertical components respectively), which have been proposed by Villegas-Lanza et al., 2016 to delimitate a rigid block motion referred as the Peruvian Sliver. In addition to this partitioning at crustal structures, primary (3-4 mm/yr) and secondary (2 mm/yr) zones of uplift are observed in Peru and Chile, at about 130 and 250 km from the trench, respectively. The secondary zone of uplift is associated with high topography, suggesting partial interseismic plastic deformation of the upper plate. Also, the secondary uplift zone in Peru is primarily observed in the flat-slab region and tapers with the transition to dipping-slab. Both the primary and secondary uplift zones are collocated with trench-parallel stripes of intraslab seismicity, which could be linked to fluid migration processes or fracturing of the slab.

How to cite: Lovery, B., Chlieh, M., Radiguet, M., Doin, M.-P., Villegas-Lanza, J. C., Audin, L., Chalumeau, C., Norabuena, E., Tavera, H., Durand, P., and Socquet, A.: Active tectonics of Central Andes from GNSS and InSAR time series, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5379, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5379, 2026.

EGU26-5993 | Orals | GD2.4 | Highlight

Subduction zone obliquity and rheology dictate global trench-parallel inner forearc deformation 

Kristin Morell, Theron Finley, and Andrew Newman

Subduction zones are defined by plate convergence, yet their upper plates exhibit a wide range of deformation styles globally. While various hypotheses have been proposed to explain this global variability, the controlling factors remain poorly understood. We analyzed ~24,000 km of active global subduction zones to investigate how subduction obliquity influences trench-parallel and horizontal deformation in the terrestrial inner forearc overriding plate. Using global datasets of GNSS velocities and active fault catalogs, we examined inner deformation across 13 forearcs on both short (decadal) timescales, captured by GNSS, and long (millennial to million-year) timescales, inferred from trench-parallel active strike-slip faults. Our results reveal a strong link between subduction zone obliquity and both the sense and magnitude of upper plate rotation observed in GNSS data, as well as the sense and rate of deformation along trench-parallel strike-slip faults. Unlike earlier studies suggesting that obliquity influences deformation only above a certain threshold, we find that even low to moderate obliquity affects forearc behavior. High-obliquity margins, such as New Zealand and the Philippines, show the highest GNSS-derived vorticity and cumulative slip rates on trench-parallel strike-slip faults. In contrast, lower-obliquity regions, like portions of Cascadia and Peru, exhibit reduced vorticity and either diffuse strike-slip faulting or broadly distributed deformation. Across all forearcs, we find strong correlations between obliquity and both GNSS vorticity and trench-parallel fault slip rates in the inner forearc.

Beyond controlling the magnitude and sense of inner forearc deformation, our results suggest that rheologic factors also influence how trench-parallel shear is accommodated within the inner forearc. We observe a continuum of trench-parallel strike-slip deformation styles within the inner forearc, ranging from motion accommodated on a single, through-going sliver fault with high slip rates to more distributed deformation expressed across multiple shorter strike-slip faults with lower slip rates. Emerging results suggest that this variability is linked to the distance between the down-dip extent of megathrust locking and the volcanic arc. Subduction segments with a short trench-to–locked-zone distance preferentially develop coherent sliver faulting, whereas those with a greater distance between the down-dip locking limit and the arc tend to exhibit more distributed strike-slip deformation across the forearc. We interpret this pattern to reflect a rheological control on how trench-parallel shear is accommodated. If shear strain is concentrated near the down-dip edge of locking, as predicted by simple elastic models, deformation localizes above this region. Where this localization occurs within or near the arc, conditions favor development of a single, through-going strike-slip fault. In contrast, when the locus of strain concentration lies farther trenchward within the forearc, deformation is more likely to be partitioned across pre-existing structures, resulting in distributed strike-slip faulting. These results suggest that while subduction obliquity exerts a first-order control on the sense and magnitude of inner forearc deformation, additional geometric and rheologic factors govern the style of trench-parallel inner forearc strain accommodation.

How to cite: Morell, K., Finley, T., and Newman, A.: Subduction zone obliquity and rheology dictate global trench-parallel inner forearc deformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5993, 2026.

EGU26-6298 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Dynamics of slab-plume interaction in Central America 

Jian Wang, Lijun Liu, Zebin Cao, and Hao Dong

Subducting slabs and mantle plumes are two end-member mechanisms for driving vertical flow inside the Earth. However, their mutual interactions remain underexplored. One example is the potential interaction between the Galápagos plume and the Cocos slab in Central America. This region hosts many abnormal tectonic features, such as dramatic along-trench variations in heat flow and surface topography, which may represent surface responses to the interacting Cocos slab and Galápagos plume at depth. The slab is found to be torn in tomographic studies and may provide a channel for plume material to travel from the Pacific to the Caribbean mantle. We design 3D finite-element subduction models using the code CitcomS to study the plausible geodynamic processes. In our initial experiments, we find that the evolution of the subducting Cocos slab is strongly influenced by far-field forces associated with the ancient Farallon slab. As the Farallon slab below the eastern Caribbean continues to sink, the increasing lateral pressure gradient across the Cocos trench induces repeated episodes of slab tearing and renewed subduction of the Cocos slab. This process ultimately leads to the formation of an imbricate slab geometry, consistent with structures observed in seismic tomography. After incorporating the Galápagos plume into our model, hot plume material ascends through the tear in the Cocos slab and enters the Central American mantle wedge. The resulting present-day distribution of plume material shows a strong spatial correlation with regions of elevated heat flow and high topography in Central America. These results suggest that that slab–plume interaction dynamically enhances surface heat flow and contributes to regional topographic uplift. Our study provides new insights into slab–mantle dynamics in other subduction systems around the Pacific where nearby hotspots are present.

 

How to cite: Wang, J., Liu, L., Cao, Z., and Dong, H.: Dynamics of slab-plume interaction in Central America, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6298, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6298, 2026.

EGU26-6387 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Thermal Segmentation, Interplate Coupling Variability, and Fluid Circulation in the Ecuadorian Subduction Zone  

Frederique Rolandone, Boris Marcaillou, Jeffrey Poort, François Michaud, and Jean-Noël Proust

In the Ecuadorian subduction zone, Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) measurements indicate significant spatial variations in the interseismic coupling of the interplate contact, along with diverse seismic and aseismic slip behaviors. These variations are likely linked to local differences in the thermo-mechanical properties of the Ecuadorian margin. The thermal and rheological characteristics of the subducting Nazca plate depend on multiple factors, including lithology, sediment thickness, fracturing degree, structural heterogeneities, frictional properties, and fluid circulation. Surface heat flow variations provide indirect insights into some of these deep-seated features. Heat flow profiles derived from "Bottom Simulating Reflectors" (BSRs) reveal a clear north-south thermal segmentation of the Ecuadorian margin. These profiles consistently show a decrease in heat flow on the accretionary prism with increasing distance from the deformation front, stabilizing at approximately ~40 mW.m−2 along the upper slope. However, heat flow values at the deformation front display significant heterogeneity, ranging from ~60 mW.m−2 to ~160 mW.m−2. During the SUPER-MOUV campaign, 18 heat flow measurements were collected to address the following objectives: 1- To evaluate the reliability of heat flow estimations derived from BSRs in Ecuador by conducting direct measurements at the margin front, allowing for a comparison between in-situ data and BSR-derived values. 2- To measure heat flow within the trench, a region where BSRs are absent. 3- To assess heat flow on the Nazca plate before subduction, an area also lacking BSRs, for which no heat flow data exist within 200 km of the deformation front, and for which numerous seamounts, potential sites of fluid circulation, have been identified near the Ecuadorian margin.

How to cite: Rolandone, F., Marcaillou, B., Poort, J., Michaud, F., and Proust, J.-N.: Thermal Segmentation, Interplate Coupling Variability, and Fluid Circulation in the Ecuadorian Subduction Zone , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6387, 2026.

EGU26-7483 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

3D P-wave velocity structure of the Northern Ecuadorian seismogenic zone, host to the 2016 M7.8 Pedernales earthquake. 

Arnaud Delsuc, Audrey Galvé, Mireille Laigle, Janis Heuel, Michael Frietsch, and Andreas Rietbrock

In Ecuador, in the vicinity of the seismic rupture of the 2016 Mw 7.8 Pedernales earthquake, the megathrust fault is also affected by aseismic slip at shallow depths, including slow earthquakes and post-seismic slow slip. 

The Ecuadorian margin is an exceptional natural laboratory. Its relatively narrow marine forearc and shallow megathrust make it an ideal location for studying the relationship between ongoing subduction of topographic highs, such as ridge and seamount, and seismic and aseismic slip behaviour on the plate interface.

The HIPER Project (2020–2022), which aims to better characterize the 3D structure of the Ecuadorian forearc domain, is based on an international collaboration funded by the French Oceanographic Fleet, the French ANR, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT, Germany), American NSF and IG-EPN (Ecuador). We successfully deployed a large number of OBSs (47), land stations (~200) and nodes (~500) to record both R/V L’Atalante shots and seismic activity.

Here, we present preliminary results from a 3D inversion of P-wave refraction and reflection data, which was performed with TOMO3D. Thanks to our newly developed semi-automatic picking tool, DeepFB, we were able to efficiently compile the catalogue of ~230,000 picks.. DeepFB is a U-Net based neural network designed for robust automatic first-break picking in active-source seismic data. It was extensively applied to our dataset and accounts for approximately 50% of the picked first arrivals. The resulting 3D P-wave velocity model provides new insights into the lateral velocity variations of the Ecuadorian margin and the subducting plate along the trench between latitudes 1°25′N and 0°10′S.

How to cite: Delsuc, A., Galvé, A., Laigle, M., Heuel, J., Frietsch, M., and Rietbrock, A.: 3D P-wave velocity structure of the Northern Ecuadorian seismogenic zone, host to the 2016 M7.8 Pedernales earthquake., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7483, 2026.

EGU26-8350 | Posters on site | GD2.4

The MUSICA Seismic Deployment: Illuminating subduction complexities at the northern end of the South American Cordillera 

Lara Wagner, Gaspar Monsalve, Christopher Carchedi, and David Avellaneda-Jiménez

The northern end of the South American convergent margin is influenced by the interplay between the Nazca, South American, and Caribbean plates. The relatively recently (Miocene) accretion of the Panama arc along the western margin of northernmost South America adds further uncertainty to an already complex tectonic region. Of note is the offset in the Wadati Benioff Zone (WBZ) at ~5.5° N, often referred to as the “Caldas Tear”. The shallowest (50-60 km depth) reach of the northern WBZ lies over 400 km from the nearest plate boundary, an observation that requires one or more subducting slabs to be horizontally emplaced (a.k.a. “flat slab”). But which plate (or plates) comprises this northern WBZ? We know that both the Caribbean and Nazca plates are subducting, but the spatial extent of each plate and their resultant interactions remain unclear. To address these (and many other questions) about this complex region, we installed a temporary array of 66 broadband seismometers straddling the Caldas Tear north-to-south and extending across both WBZs east-to-west as part of the NSF-funded Modeling, Uplift, Seismology, and Igneous geochemistry in the Colombian Andes (MUSICA) project. This deployment was installed in phases from July 2022 to July 2023. The full array was in place from July 2023 until June 2025. Preliminary results of our novel dataset indicate the presence of complex crustal and slab structures, as well as indications of the mantle’s response to the multiple downgoing slabs. Here we present information about our deployment (including the use of direct burial seismometers and Carnegie Quick-Deploy Boxes), as well as early insights from preliminary results.

How to cite: Wagner, L., Monsalve, G., Carchedi, C., and Avellaneda-Jiménez, D.: The MUSICA Seismic Deployment: Illuminating subduction complexities at the northern end of the South American Cordillera, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8350, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8350, 2026.

EGU26-9352 | ECS | Orals | GD2.4

Influence of ridge subduction on seismicity in South Peru 

Caroline Chalumeau, Hugo Sanchez Reyes, Jannes Münchmeyer, Mickael Langlais, Juan Carlos Villegas Lanza, Alex Gonzales, Edmundo Norabuena, Hernando Tavera, and Anne Socquet

The South Peru subduction zone is a complex, highly active region, where the flat slab associated with the Nazca Ridge subduction in the North transitions to a much steeper subduction in the South. This transition not only causes the slab to contort, but affects seismicity patterns in the region. Here we use data from 26 seismic stations active from March 2022 to December 2024 as part of the DEEPTrigger project, along with 16 permanent Peruvian stations and 15 permanent Chilean stations, to create a 3-year seismicity catalogue of South Peru. Using PhaseNet for phase picking and PyOcto for phase association, we obtain a total of 166 971 events. These earthquakes are located with NonLinLoc-SSST using a new 3-D P and S-wave velocity model of the region obtained from full-waveform inversion (Kan et al., 2025), then relocated using double difference methods with cross-correlation times to obtain precise locations. We thus obtain the first dense and precisely-located earthquake catalog of the region.

With this new catalog, we are able to demonstrate the influence of the Nazca Ridge on seismicity patterns. We find numerous shallow seismic swarms where the ridge enters subduction, while they are absent from the rest of the margin. In combination with GPS records of nearby stations, they hint at the likely presence of slow slip. We also find that the edge of the Nazca Ridge is particularly active, down to depths below 80 km. This same edge was activated by the Mw 7.2 Acari earthquake which occurred on June 28th 2024 at the plate interface, and was preceded by a Mw 6.0 intraslab foreshock on June 16th 2024. The Acari mainshock triggered a large aftershock expansion towards the northwest where the Nazca Ridge subducts, and a triggered swarm and possible SSE in that region. It also caused an increase of intraplate seismicity directly downdip along the Nazca Ridge edge, demonstrating the ridge’s ability to concentrate stress. 

How to cite: Chalumeau, C., Sanchez Reyes, H., Münchmeyer, J., Langlais, M., Villegas Lanza, J. C., Gonzales, A., Norabuena, E., Tavera, H., and Socquet, A.: Influence of ridge subduction on seismicity in South Peru, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9352, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9352, 2026.

EGU26-10298 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Impact of seamount subduction on margin fluid dynamics: distribution, seafloor emissions, and upwards migration pathways at the northern Ecuador continental shelf (SUPER-MOUV cruise, 2024) 

François Michaud, Mireille Laigle, Maria Fernanda Ramirez Parrales, Jean-Yves Collot, Alexandre Caplette, Audrey Galvé, Laure Schenini, Jean Frederic Lebrun, Clara Lebourgois, Boris Marcaillou, Gueorgui Ratzov, Cédric Boulart, Laura Noël, Aurélien Gay, and Jean Noel Proust

Fluid circulation along active margins represents a key geological process that influences geochemical cycles, sedimentary dynamics and the occurrence of seismic activity and associated natural hazards. The SUPER-MOUV oceanographic cruise (January–February 2024) aimed to investigate seafloor manifestations of these fluid circulations and their relationship with seismic activity along the active margin of northern Ecuador. Multibeam data (bathymetry), water column data (seismic profiles and bathymetry), high-resolution seismic profiles, and in-situ observations from the Nautile submersible were combined to complement data from the HIPER cruises (bathymetry, deep seismic imaging) and a dense grid of industrial seismic profiles. This dataset allows us to reveal seabed fluid manifestations in areas where topographic irregularities, such as seamounts, subduct and create preferential pathways for fluid migration within the upper plate. At approximately latitude ~0°15’N latitude, the subduction of the Atacames seamounts oceanic topography carried by the Nazca plate correlates spatially with extensive seabed fields of carbonate mounds (up to 300 meters long and 15 meters high) build on the continental shelf, the majority of which is associated with active fluid emissions in the water column. Samples collected by the Nautile submersible reveal that these concretions incorporate centimetric clasts containing Eocene foraminifers. This finding suggests a vigorous, “mud-volcano-type” fluid circulation event, which was capable of transporting clasts from the earliest sedimentary deposits resting on the oceanic basement of the Ecuadorian forearc basins, to the seabed surface. Seismic profiles interpretation, including seismic attribute analysis, enabled the characterization of fluid accumulations at depths and highlight their circulation pathways associated with faults, fractures, diapirs and litho-stratigraphic discontinuities. Notably, some diapiric structures, located directly beneath seabed fluid emissions, root as deep as 3 seconds two-way travel time (TWT) into a highly fractured acoustic basement, consistent with the presence of Eocene clasts on the seafloor and suggests the existence of a potentially deeper fluid source.

How to cite: Michaud, F., Laigle, M., Ramirez Parrales, M. F., Collot, J.-Y., Caplette, A., Galvé, A., Schenini, L., Lebrun, J. F., Lebourgois, C., Marcaillou, B., Ratzov, G., Boulart, C., Noël, L., Gay, A., and Proust, J. N.: Impact of seamount subduction on margin fluid dynamics: distribution, seafloor emissions, and upwards migration pathways at the northern Ecuador continental shelf (SUPER-MOUV cruise, 2024), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10298, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10298, 2026.

EGU26-11901 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Variable detachment strength along the Peruvian margin estimated from Critical Taper Analysis 

Florian Kusche and Nina Kukowski

Along the Peruvian margin, the subduction of the Nazca Plate beneath the South American Plate shows significant along-strike variability, including changes in slab dip and the subduction of major bathymetric features such as the Nazca Ridge and several fault zones. Seismic behavior along the Peruvian margin is likewise highly variable, ranging from frequent large megathrust earthquakes in southern Peru to comparably low seismicity in the north, where tsunami earthquakes have nevertheless caused significant historical damage.

To investigate the mechanical strength of the Peruvian forearc, we perform an areal critical taper analysis based on gridded surface slope and slab dip data. The results reveal significant spatial variations in detachment strength along the margin. South of the Nazca Ridge (~15°S), the forearc is characterized by a relatively strong detachment. The central segment (15°S–10°S) shows moderate to weak detachment strength, with particularly weak conditions near the trench. In northern Peru (10°S–4°S), the detachment is generally weak across the entire forearc. Overall, detachment strength tends to decrease toward the trench, except in the region affected by the subducting Nazca Ridge, where an increase in strength is observed.

The long-time-scale spatial variability in detachment strength correlates fairly well with interseismic coupling patterns derived from short-time-scale geodetic observations, with locked portions of the subduction interface generally characterized by higher detachment strength. In our study, we address the question of whether and how short-term seismic behavior is controlled by the long-term mechanical properties of the Peruvian forearc.

How to cite: Kusche, F. and Kukowski, N.: Variable detachment strength along the Peruvian margin estimated from Critical Taper Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11901, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11901, 2026.

EGU26-12561 | ECS | Orals | GD2.4

Revisiting force balance on subduction zones: the missing bridge to numerical simulations 

Jorge Sanhueza and Samuel Angiboust

Subduction zone geodynamics have been a primary area of focus since the early days of plate tectonics theory. Initial approaches using analytical solutions sought to understand the fundamental driving forces, moment balances, and energetics governing oceanic plate subduction. Despite the limitations of scarce geophysical imaging, limited geological sampling, and emerging numerical techniques, these studies provided the foundations of modern geodynamics. As numerical techniques improved, power-law rheologies and complex geological processes were integrated into various codes. These provided more realistic simulations to understand a wide variety of regions on Earth, but they are rarely presented in the context of classical physical approaches. Nowadays, a unique opportunity exists to revisit these classical frameworks, aided by improved subducting slab imaging, an excellent geological record, and a deeper understanding of slab dynamics across active and ancient subduction zones.

In this work, a simplified but physically transparent framework is developed to revisit the force/moment balance, energetic conditions, and dissipation analyses governing slab dynamics. For this purpose, three representative slab geometries (steep, normal, and flat) were selected based on their dip below 40 km depth, where slab behavior is dominated by internal negative buoyancy and viscous lifting forces from the mantle. Slab pull was estimated by varying density contrasts and thickness, while viscous forces were derived from semi-analytical Stokes flow solutions to resolve pressure distributions along the slab surface. Gravitational potential energy changes were calculated to test whether internal density variations (e.g., eclogitization) and crustal thickening from oceanic plateaus drive changes in geometry.

Results show that mantle wedge suction can counteract slab weight in a flat subduction setting, while increased density from eclogitization destabilizes flat slabs and promotes steepening, linking moment balance and buoyancy to the global diversity of slab dips. Total energy dissipation is mainly controlled by mantle wedge flow, with low-angle and flat subduction representing the most dissipative configurations. Once moment balance allows, these tend to evolve toward steeper, more energetically stable states. Slab flattening occurs with increased buoyancy, higher convergence velocities, and greater mantle viscosities, producing flattening within 10–30 Myr. Conversely, reduced buoyancy, slower convergence, and lower viscosities favor steepening and slab rollback on comparable or shorter timescales of 5–10 Myr. This integrated and physically transparent analysis is consistent with the development of arc magmas on western margins of the Americas and provides a clear perspective to explain the diverse slab morphologies observed on Earth.

How to cite: Sanhueza, J. and Angiboust, S.: Revisiting force balance on subduction zones: the missing bridge to numerical simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12561, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12561, 2026.

EGU26-12929 | Orals | GD2.4

Hydration clues from the Nazca plate subduction zone in the northern part of the Ecuadorian subduction zone 

Mireille Laigle, Audrey Galve, François Michaud, Alexandra Skrubej, Laure Schenini, Alessandra Ribodetti, Arnaud Delsuc, Anaïs Erb, Constance Duclos, Monica Segovia, Sandro Vaca, Anca Higaki, Yvonne Font, Marc Régnier, David Ambrois, Jérôme Chèze, and Andreas Rietbrock

Fluid circulation through the Earth system plays a particularly important role in subduction zones, where it has a significant influence on seismic activity and metamorphic processes. Fluid circulation around the shallow seismogenic zone is considered to promote episodes of seismic/aseismic slips on the megathrust fault plane as well as on active satellite faults, leading in earthquakes, slow slips, clusters, repeaters, non-volcanic tremors activity.

Recent marine surveys conducted along the Ecuadorian margin, as part of the Fluid2Slip ANR project, have collected bathymetric dataset focusing on the Pedernales segment that ruptured during the M7.8 earthquake in 2016 (HiPER 2020 & 2022, SUPER-MOUV 2024). These data, combined with seismic reflection and refraction profiles, as well as seismological data from temporary dense deployments, provide preliminary insights on the structures potentially involved in the hydration hints of the Nazca oceanic plate.

Interpretation of MCS profiles enables the identification of the network of bending faults along the trench outer-wall and the characterization of the geometry of these faults. These faults exhibit vertical offsets of up to 300 m at the seafloor and, in some cases, shift the oceanic Moho, which may facilitate the hydration of the relatively young Nazca Plate in this area (< 15 Myr).

For the first time, a trench-normal dense OBS profile north of the Atacames seamounts characterizes the geometry and structure of the northern flank area of the Carnegie Ridge. We were able to show that the oceanic crust in this area is significantly thicker than expected (>12 km), well beyond the topographic signature of the Carnegie Ridge. By recording converted P-to-S waves along this OBS profile, we were able to quantify the P and S velocities of the oceanic crust at the trench. Local seismicity detected by the OBS refraction grid in the plate bending area close to the trench provides highlights to the in-depth crustal structure.

This work is complemented by the 3D tomographic inversion of HIPER2 cruise and by new hints on fluid pathways through the margin by the SUPER-MOUV cruise, both presented in the same session.

How to cite: Laigle, M., Galve, A., Michaud, F., Skrubej, A., Schenini, L., Ribodetti, A., Delsuc, A., Erb, A., Duclos, C., Segovia, M., Vaca, S., Higaki, A., Font, Y., Régnier, M., Ambrois, D., Chèze, J., and Rietbrock, A.: Hydration clues from the Nazca plate subduction zone in the northern part of the Ecuadorian subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12929, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12929, 2026.

EGU26-14468 | ECS | Orals | GD2.4

Interseismic Strain Accumulation and Partitioning in Hispaniola from GNSS and InSAR 

Christian Emmanuel, Bryan Raimbault, Eric Calais, and Romain Jolivet

The northeastern Caribbean plate boundary provides a natural laboratory to investigate strain partitioning, fault slip rates, and crustal rheology in an actively deforming tectonic setting, where seismic hazard is a major concern. In this study, we combine GNSS and InSAR observations to improve our understanding of how strain is accommodated and how slip rates are distributed across this plate boundary, with a specific focus on the island of Hispaniola. The inclusion of InSAR data substantially mitigates the effects of the sparse and uneven spatial distribution of GNSS stations that limited earlier models. 

Using the combined GNSS-InSAR velocity field, we propose a new kinematic model that allows for internal deformation within selected tectonic blocks, incorporating InSAR-derived velocities for the first time in this type of modeling for the region. While our results are broadly consistent with previous studies, they identify and quantify compressional deformation within the Gulf of Gon\^ave, consistent with independent offshore observations.

We identify and quantify the impact of spatially correlated noise in the InSAR measurements, which is especially significant in this tropical, topographically complex region, where atmospheric artifacts can compete with or obscure the tectonic signal. We ultimately estimate surface strain rates and their associated uncertainties and compare these results with the geometry of faults imposed in block models as well as with the spatial distribution of current seismicity.

Our results confirm that the Enriquillo–Plantain Garden Fault Zone in southern Haiti is dominated by localized strike-slip motion. In contrast, deformation along the Septentrional Fault Zone in the Dominican Republic appears more distributed, suggesting that strain is accommodated by multiple fault strands rather than a single localized structure.

How to cite: Emmanuel, C., Raimbault, B., Calais, E., and Jolivet, R.: Interseismic Strain Accumulation and Partitioning in Hispaniola from GNSS and InSAR, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14468, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14468, 2026.

EGU26-14677 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Crustal and Mantle Structure Across Puerto Rico —From the Caribbean Plate to the Puerto Rico Trench— From an Onshore-Offshore Wide-Angle Seismic Transect  

Juan Pablo Canales, Elizabeth Vanacore, Claudia Flores, Shuoshuo Han, Uri ten Brink, and Ingo Grevemeyer

The Puerto Rico Trench (PRT) marks the oblique subduction of the North American Plate under the Greater Antilles Island Arc and the Caribbean Plate. In 2023 we conducted a geophysical survey of the PRT and across the island of Puerto Rico (PR) using the RV Langseth (cruises MGL2315 and MGL2316). PRISTINA (Puerto RIco Subduction Tectonics seismic INvestigAtion) consists of: a) 2D ultra-long-offset (13.65 km) multichannel seismic (MCS) reflection data; b) a N-S island-crossing wide-angle seismic profile sampling the incoming plate, PRT, Puerto Rico, Muertos thrust belt and Caribbean Plate instrumented with nodal land stations and ocean bottom seismometers (OBS); c) a wide-angle OBS profile crossing the PRT north of the British Virgin Islands; d) Four wide-angle fan profiles; e) Underway bathymetry, gravity and magnetics; and f) a temporary deployment of broadband stations in Puerto Rico.

Here we present a 2-D P-wave velocity (Vp) model along a 310-km-long, North-South-trending seismic transect at Longitude 66°30’W that illuminates the crustal and mantle structure of the Muertos Trough south of PR on the Caribbean Plate, the island of PR, and the PRT. The model is derived from traveltime tomography of active-source wide-angle data acquired with 30 ocean bottom seismometers (nominal spacing of 5-10 km), a temporary land deployment of 48 short-period nodal seismometers (nominal spacing of ~1 km), and 4 permanent broadband stations, all of which recorded marine airgun shots.

Our preliminary results show that along the southern section of the transect, an ~11.5-km-thick Caribbean crust underthrusts the frontal ~30 km of the Muertos Thrust Belt where 2-7-km-thick sediments (Vp<4 km/s) have been accreted against a crystalline terrain (Vp~5.5 km/s) forming the southern submarine slope of PR. Beneath Central-Southern PR, velocities of 6.5 kms are not reached until ~22 km depth, and Vp of 7 km/s at 32 km depth, suggesting an island arc crust of normal thickness but abnormally low Vp. Beneath Central-Northern PR high velocities (6.5-7 km/s) are found at 4-10 km depth, similar to global averages of island arc crustal structure. Along the northern section of the transect beneath the PRT, a narrow sedimentary wedge with very low Vp (3 km/s at 5 km depth) overlies a heavily faulted Cretaceous Atlantic lithosphere shallowly subducting (9°) beneath the northern submarine flank of PR, where Vp of 5-7 km/s suggests a crystalline nature.

How to cite: Canales, J. P., Vanacore, E., Flores, C., Han, S., ten Brink, U., and Grevemeyer, I.: Crustal and Mantle Structure Across Puerto Rico —From the Caribbean Plate to the Puerto Rico Trench— From an Onshore-Offshore Wide-Angle Seismic Transect , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14677, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14677, 2026.

EGU26-15337 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Relationship between magnitudes commonly calculated by the French observatories and the moment magnitude Mw, and variability of stress drop in the Lesser Antilles subduction zone 

Jordane Corbeau, O'Leary Gonzalez, Claudio Satriano, Jean-Marie Saurel, Marie-Paule Bouin, and Arnaud Lemarchand

Published catalog of instrumental seismicity from French observatories in the Lesser Antilles (OVSG in Guadeloupe and OVSM in Martinique) ranging from 2014 to 2022 is very extensive in space and time but the computed magnitudes are based on various local scales (Saurel et al., 2022; 2024), a common issue for hazard assessment studies. The aim of this study is to unify the magnitudes of this catalog, by establishing a regression relationship between the magnitudes commonly calculated by the observatories and the moment magnitude Mw, and studying the variability of stress drop depending on the tectonic context from trench to depth. The catalog contains 18,784 earthquakes recorded by, with small variations, the same regional seismic stations during the whole period, and with magnitudes ranging from -2.0 to 6.2. Completeness analysis for the entire Lesser Antilles arc reveals two main maximum values: one at M = -0.2, related to volcanic earthquakes from active volcanoes; another at M = 2.5, indicating the approximate completeness magnitude threshold for earthquakes of tectonic origin. In this study we focus on 8,569 earthquakes with M > 2.0. Moment magnitudes Mw were estimated using SourceSpec codes (SSp) (Satriano et al., 2016; 2025), which performs spectral inversion of S-wave displacement spectra. The inversion also provides key parameters such as corner frequency, seismic moment, radiated energy, static stress drop, and apparent stress. Mw values calculated with SSp are consistent with Mw calculated by moment tensor inversion with the Isola software or reported by international agencies, and may support the retroactive inclusion of Mw in older catalogues. Finally, magnitudes Mw computed with SSp codes were validated for 4,238 earthquakes. The relationship between magnitudes does not appear to be linear for the entire M range, and variations in slope and intercept values are observed with depth. Several orthogonal distance regressions with exponential models were then computed for each type of magnitude and for different range of magnitudes and depths. Md appears less stable and, where possible, should be avoided in earthquake location analyses. Uncertainties in magnitude estimations coming from the original catalog were incorporated in the regressions to enhance the results. The different final laws will enable the conversion and incorporation of additional data from instrumental data before 2014. Regarding the preliminary observations of variability of median stress drop values, we observe small differences between the seismotectonic domains from trench to depth. 

How to cite: Corbeau, J., Gonzalez, O., Satriano, C., Saurel, J.-M., Bouin, M.-P., and Lemarchand, A.: Relationship between magnitudes commonly calculated by the French observatories and the moment magnitude Mw, and variability of stress drop in the Lesser Antilles subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15337, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15337, 2026.

EGU26-15378 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Evaluating Tectonic Models for the Pelona, Orocopia, and Rand schists in the Southwestern USA 

Harold Stowell, Nikki Seymour, Suzanne Autrey, and Connor Gregory

Flat slab subduction has been proposed along the southwestern U.S. margin during the Late Cretaceous. The model is partly based on exposures of garnet-bearing Pelona, Orocopia, and Rand schists (PORS), which crop out in isolated mountain ranges extending from the Los Angeles California area eastward >400 km into western Arizona. These chlorite+muscovite+/-biotite+/-garnet schists have distinctive characteristics that include graphitic inclusions in albite porphyroblasts, interlayering with mafic schists of MORB composition and Mn-rich siliceous marbles and cherts, and local blocks of metasomatized mantle peridotite. The flat slab model interprets the PORS association as oceanic sediment underplated to North American crust and subsequently exhumed by Basin and Range extension. Other models of the tectonic development of the western US call this interpretation into question. Ongoing research focuses on using Quartz-in-Garnet elastic geobarometry (QuiG), elemental exchange thermometry (e.g., GArnet-BIotite - GABI), Phase Diagram Sections (PhaDS), and garnet Sm-Nd geochronology to construct new Pressure-Temperature-time (P-T-t) paths for select PORS rocks along a west-east transect to evaluate the tectono-metamorphic history of this assemblage. We report temperature estimates of 603, 627, and 620°C (±25°C GABI) obtained from the San Emigdio, Portal Ridge, and Plomosa mountains, respectively. QuiG pressure estimates of 0.72-0.97 GPa at 627°C were obtained from Portal Ridge. These new results are consistent with PhaDS models that predict <0.9 GPa for equilibrium of quartz + plagioclase + muscovite + biotite + chlorite + magnetite + ilmenite. We interpret the results from Portal Ridge and the San Emigdios, the two westernmost sites in this study, to indicate shallow depths of 28-38 km of overlying crust. These crustal thicknesses are significantly lower than ~70 km estimates for North American crustal thickness during the Late Cretaceous. Future P-T-t paths, including garnet Sm-Nd ages, will provide a critical test for models of accretion to the base of the western Cordilleran continental crust by shallow/flat slab subduction of the Farallon oceanic plate.

How to cite: Stowell, H., Seymour, N., Autrey, S., and Gregory, C.: Evaluating Tectonic Models for the Pelona, Orocopia, and Rand schists in the Southwestern USA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15378, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15378, 2026.

EGU26-15914 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

From ductile shearing to brittle reactivation of a tectonic suture: The evolution of the Cauca–Romeral Fault System, Northern Andes  

Laura Cristina Calderón Díaz, Sebastian Zapata, Agustín Cardona, Mauricio Parra, Daniel Ortiz, Sara Villa, and Veronica Paverelli

Andean-type orogens are characterized by prolonged subduction, in which the upper plate can record alternation between contractional and extensional phases. Subduction may involve the accretion of anomalies in the subducted slab, resulting in upper plate deformation and mountain building. The collision of the Caribbean Large Igneous Province (CLIP) with the western margin of South America between 75 - 62 Ma marked the evolution of the Northern Andes.

Despite this structure playing a fundamental role as an inherited structure that could control reactivations during the construction of the Northern Andes, the timing of this collisional event has been constrained through field-based structural observations and cross-cutting relationships. There is still no direct dating of the deformation, nor an understanding of the deformation mechanisms and metamorphic conditions of the shear zone during the collision and the subsequent reactivations. To address this, we propose an integrated study combining field observations, petrographic, geochronological, and mineral chemical analysis.

Extending approximately 2,000 km from Colombia to Ecuador, the Cauca–Romeral Fault System (CRFS) is the tectonic suture between the continental basement of South America and allochthonous oceanic terranes associated with the Caribbean Plate. Along this system, a mylonitic belt with well-developed ductile fabrics locally overprinted by brittle structures reflects a complex history of deformation and reactivation, which is used in this work to constrain the timing and conditions of the deformational phases.

Field relationships and petrographic observations suggest multiple deformation phases, including at least two ductile events and brittle reactivations. The ductile deformation is evidenced by shear zones with well-developed mylonitic fabrics affecting both oceanic and continental domains. The mylonites exhibit a first fabric defined by rotated and fractured hornblende and plagioclase porphyroclasts, with grain boundary migration (GBM) textures in quartz. This fabric is overprinted by a second foliation with neoformed chlorite and titanite, and subgrain rotation (SGR) textures in quartz. Both ductile fabrics are cross-cut by multiple fracture sets filled with epidote and calcite, which are fractured and displaced, as well as by extensive feldspar alteration to sericite, associated with brittle conditions.

These observations are consistent with the chemical compositions of chlorite, which indicate deformation under greenschist facies conditions, whereas hornblende porphyroclasts preserve inherited chemical signatures from the protolith or earlier metamorphic stages.

Apatite fission-track ages of 27.1 ± 1.6 and 28.0 ± 1.57 Ma from mylonites in the western fault of the CRFS suggest that the hanging wall of this fault reached temperatures above ~120°C before the Miocene.

The CRFS records a polyphase deformational history marked by ductile shearing and subsequent brittle reactivation. Textural and chemical evidence in quartz, hornblende, and chlorite suggest that the mylonitic deformation occurred under amphibolite facies conditions (~600°C), possibly associated with the collision of the CLIP, and was subsequently overprinted by lower-temperature deformation under greenschist facies (~350-450°C). These phases are overprinted by hydrothermal alteration, veining, and faulting, reflecting brittle deformation, which can be related to the AFT ages that indicate cooling to shallow crustal levels by the Oligocene.

This work is part of project 111193, funded by Minciencias, Colombia.

How to cite: Calderón Díaz, L. C., Zapata, S., Cardona, A., Parra, M., Ortiz, D., Villa, S., and Paverelli, V.: From ductile shearing to brittle reactivation of a tectonic suture: The evolution of the Cauca–Romeral Fault System, Northern Andes , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15914, 2026.

Volcanoes, earthquakes and natural resources along the margins of the Caribbean plate have been shaped by a history of subduction. In this presentation I will provide an overview how a dense deployment of Broadband Ocean Bottom Seismometer (BOBS) helped us to investigate several fundamental processes caused by the subduction of lithospheric crust and mantle through the upper mantel down to the mantle transition zone (MTZ). Using teleseismic tomography and plate reconstruction techniques we unraveled the tectonic history of the Caribbean plate showing clear evidence of a slab window and tear along the subducted Proto-Caribbean ridge, which also hosted one of the largest intermediate depth earthquakes in the region. Using local earthquake tomography, we developed a new slab model for the region and combining travel time and attenuation tomography we were able to identify melt ponds under the upper plate. We also found that serpentine most likely residing along major fracture zones is the dominant supplier of subducted water in the central arc of the Caribbean. Finally, by using P-to-S receiver functions to image the slab and the mantle transition zone beneath the Lesser Antilles we find that the slab flows directly though the mantle transition zone exhibiting super-deep (>700 km) discontinuities caused by a large basalt-rich chemical anomaly. All our findings point in the direction that the tectonic history of the subducting lithospheric crust and mantle has a strong influence on the observed geodynamic processes we image with geophysical techniques in subduction zone settings. 

How to cite: Rietbrock, A.:  Imaging subduction zone processes along the Lesser Antilles using a broadband ocean bottom seismometer network: The VoiLA experiment , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16545, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16545, 2026.

EGU26-17108 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Shallow crustal imaging with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) offshore central Chile 

Clara Vernet, Diane Rivet, Alister Trabattoni, and Marie Baillet

In subduction zones, shallow crustal faults accommodate a fraction of the tectonic deformation and modulate the distribution of marine sediments. The interplay between active faults and sedimentary basins influences seismic hazards and the potential for submarine landslides. Imaging these active structures is crucial for constraining their geometry, physical properties, and contributions to regional geodynamic processes. Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) offers an opportunity to passively image shallow offshore sediments at high spatial resolution, by converting preexisting submarine telecommunication cables into dense seismic arrays. Using hundreds of kilometers of submarine fibers, DAS enables ambient seismic noise tomography with resolutions of a few hundred meters near the coastline, sufficient to resolve detailed sedimentary velocity structures beneath the cables. Beyond velocity imaging, identifying strong impedance contrasts enables the localization of diffracting structures, such as faults and sedimentary basin edges.

In this study, we present a set of complementary imaging approaches based on both ambient noise and earthquake records, which we use to investigate shallow marine sediments offshore central Chile. Our analysis uses over two years of continuous DAS recordings from three submarine cables located within the study area. Firstly, we apply wavefield separation to the earthquake recordings within a local back-projection framework in order to image fault-related structures at sub-kilometer scales, identifying scattered wavefields that are consistent with fault zones intersecting the cables. Secondly, we use the autocorrelation and cross-correlation of ambient seismic noise to image strong impedance contrasts and reveal sedimentary basin edges along the three cables. Thirdly, we analyze high-resolution power spectral density using earthquakes, ambient noise, and autocorrelation functions to investigate the relationship between high-frequency resonances, shallow sedimentary deposits, local attenuation, and basin-edge effects. These are all key factors in quantifying site response offshore. Finally, we validate our interpretations using numerical wave propagation simulations, which show good agreement with the observed DAS data.

Together, these methods reveal sedimentary accumulations within basins and fault-related structures that are consistent with regional geological constraints. Although variability in coupling and the use of two-dimensional models limit full structural characterization, our results demonstrate the ability of DAS to resolve fine-scale offshore structures and highlight its potential for studying offshore faulting, sediment dynamics, and site effects along the central Chilean margin.

How to cite: Vernet, C., Rivet, D., Trabattoni, A., and Baillet, M.: Shallow crustal imaging with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) offshore central Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17108, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17108, 2026.

EGU26-17997 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Surface deformation of the Eastern Central Andes, observed by wide-swath radar interferometric time-series. 

Blanca Symmes Lopetegui, Sabrina Metzger, Bodo Bookhagen, and Laura Giambiagi

Active deformation in the Eastern Central Andes backarc involves ongoing east-west shortening, and crustal strain with the potential to trigger a Mw 7.8 earthquake is accumulating, as indicated by geological records and geodetic data. We focus on the sparsely instrumented northwestern Argentina and southwestern Bolivia to quantify and localize ongoing E–W shortening of the Eastern Andes, and to characterize localized deformation related to other active processes in the backarc. 

We analyzed ten years of Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data to measure rates of surface deformation and generate time series. We rely on descending ALOS-2 radar imagery (L-band) and wide-swath (~350 km) ScanSAR mode. We used the “alos2stack” workflow in the ISCE-2 software, and substantially downsampled the interferograms to suppress noise, resulting in a ground-range pixel spacing of ~136 m. We then generated deformation time-series with the MintPy software and applied corrections for topography, solid Earth tides, and stratified tropospheric signal delay using ERA5 weather models. We further applied a range split-spectrum method to suppress the ionospheric phase contribution.  

The resulting surface deformation rate maps are complemented by pointwise displacement rates from accurate positioning (GNSS), projected into the satellite line-of-sight (LOS). We also compare InSAR-derived rate maps and LOS gradients along multiple cross-orogen transects with geologic fault maps, seismicity, and topography. 

The resulting rates describe the kinematics from the Puna Plateau through the Eastern Cordillera to the highly vegetated Subandes, including the frontal Mandeyapecua thrust. They reveal a variety of active processes in the Central Andean backarc: The long-wavelength E–W crustal shortening signal (~1 cm/yr LOS) is overlaid by local processes like inflation at Cerro Overo volcano (~1.5 cm/yr LOS), the dynamics of salars such as the Salar de Arizaro (~0.5 cm/yr LOS), coseismic displacement of ~8 cm associated with the 2020 Mw 5.8 Humahuaca earthquake, and several landslides.  

 

How to cite: Symmes Lopetegui, B., Metzger, S., Bookhagen, B., and Giambiagi, L.: Surface deformation of the Eastern Central Andes, observed by wide-swath radar interferometric time-series., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17997, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17997, 2026.

EGU26-18593 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Lesser Antilles instrumental seismic catalog from the French observatories for seismic hazard assessment 

Jean-Marie Saurel, Jordane Corbeau, O'Leary Gonzalez, and Claudio Satriano

With the upcoming adoption of a new version of the European construction codes, the French agency for risk mitigation (DGPR) has initiated the update of the probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA) on its territories. For the French Lesser Antilles territories of Martinique, Guadeloupe, Saint-Martin and Saint-Barthélémy islands, this PSHA update is done in the framework of the ATLAS project. Long period and broad coverage seismic catalogs with homogeneous magnitude estimates are needed as input in PSHA calculation. In the French Antilles, IPGP volcanological and seismological observatories in Martinique (OVSM) and Guadeloupe (OVSG) locate all events seen by their seismic networks since 1981. In 2013, in the framework of the CDSA regional project (centre de données sismologique des Antilles), Massin et al has merged all phases bulletin and location from different agencies, including OVSM and OVSG to produce a multi-origin, automatic relocated catalog available in QuakeML format.

Since 2014 and the completion of the WI VSAT regional network, IPGP publishes every year a validated and unique catalog with the data from both IPGP observatories. In 2025, this catalog between 2014  and 2022 was processed by Gonzalez et al to compute moment magnitudes and establish robust regression laws between Mw and the most commonly used local magnitude scales in OVSM and OVSG.

Based on those two previous studies, we were able to retrieve the original manually validated OVSM and OVSG catalogs from the CDSA database in QuakeML format. We then applied the same validation process we are using to produce the unique yearly catalog since 2014. This process includes identifying and merging events that were located by both observatories, selecting the best solution. A thorough manual review is performed to eliminate any false or badly located event and to ensure no significant events were missed. All events without any magnitude are removed from the database.

Prior to 2013, only one magnitude was used in routine at the observatory, consistently since 1981: the duration magnitude. However, for significant events, this magnitude which saturates around M 4 was replaced by local or moment magnitude from international agencies. For events with magnitude higher than 4, we then look in the ISC earthquake database to replace the local magnitude by GCMT Mw magnitude if it exists, or to tag the observatory magnitude as local. Finally, we apply the regression laws established by Gonzalez et al to produce a final catalog with all magnitude either in calculated Mw or in converted Mw.

This validated catalog of more than 30 000 events covers the central portion of the Lesser Antilles between 1981 and 2013. In addition to the PSHA studies performed in the framework of the ATLAS project, this reference catalog can be used for numerous studies, such as long-term seismo-tectonic variations of the subduction and crustal faults.

How to cite: Saurel, J.-M., Corbeau, J., Gonzalez, O., and Satriano, C.: Lesser Antilles instrumental seismic catalog from the French observatories for seismic hazard assessment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18593, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18593, 2026.

EGU26-19381 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Structure and evolution of the Cayman Trough oriental margin : Legacy seismic data and samples 

Thomas Joyeux, Sylvie Leroy, Nicolas Saspiturry, Philippe Munch, Yamirka Rojas-Agramonte, Mélody Philippon, Elia d'Acremont, and Bernard Mercier de Lepinay

The Northern boundary of the Caribbean plate, and more specifically the Gonâve microplate, is the locus of intense tectonic activity partly accommodated by two strike-slip fault systems (the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden Fault Zone (EPGFZ) to the south and the Septentrional-Oriente Fault Zone (SOFZ) to the North) and by the opening of the Cayman Trough to the west and the Haitian fold-and-thrust belt in the east. This region has been extensively studied for several years since the earthquake of 12 January 2010; however, the deformation in the Gonâve Gulf to the west of Hispaniola island has not yet been well characterised. Multibeam bathymetric and seismic reflection data from multiple oceanographic campaigns in the study area have enabled us to identify tilted blocks from the eastern Cayman Through continental margin with low-angle normal faults. Seismic horizons allow us to identify the roof of syn-rift units in the Gonâve Gulf with an initiation of the rifting between 49 and 56 My.

New Ar/Ar dating of granodiorites recovered during submersible dives (CAYVIC cruise) on tilted blocks in the distal part of the margin, together with the interpretation of newly processed seismic profiles from the CASIS oceanographic campaign crossing the Ocean Continent transition, provide the timing and geometry of the tectonic structures of the eastern continental margin. Extending from north of Jamaica to at least the eastern part of the Gonâve Gulf, with a length of 450 km, the continental margin appears relatively classical, with a beta factor of 2.7.

NE-SW compression in the Gonâve Gulf, linked to the collision with the North American plate, reactivates the extensive structures and creates new compressive structures. We propose a spatio-temporal evolution of tectonic structures from the formation of the Eastern Cayman trough margin to the west to its reactivation in the Haitian fold-and-thrust belt to the east.

How to cite: Joyeux, T., Leroy, S., Saspiturry, N., Munch, P., Rojas-Agramonte, Y., Philippon, M., d'Acremont, E., and Mercier de Lepinay, B.: Structure and evolution of the Cayman Trough oriental margin : Legacy seismic data and samples, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19381, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19381, 2026.

EGU26-19696 | Orals | GD2.4

Linking Postseismic Deformation and Slab Rheology to Seismic Segmentation in Central Chile 

Diego Molina, Bertrand Lovery, Mathilde Radiguet, Marie Pierre, and Anne Socquet

Understanding the rheological structure of the lithosphere and the frictional behavior of the interface is essential to evaluate the mechanisms controlling surface deformation and seismic behavior along subduction margins. Postseismic deformation following large megathrust earthquakes provides a unique opportunity to constrain these properties, as it is strongly influenced by afterslip and viscoelastic relaxation processes.

In this study, we analyze the postseismic deformation associated with the 2015 Mw 8.3 Illapel earthquake in Central Chile by jointly exploiting GNSS and InSAR time series spanning up to eight years after the event. While GNSS data offer high temporal resolution, InSAR provides continuous spatial coverage, allowing us to characterize postseismic deformation at both local and regional scales. To separate the contributions of different deformation processes, we perform an Independent Component Analysis (ICA) on GNSS time series, and a pixel-by-pixel parametric decomposition on InSAR data.

Our results reveal two main postseismic deformation patterns. The first one is spatially correlated with the coseismic rupture area and displays a logarithmic temporal decay, consistent with afterslip-driven deformation. The second pattern is located north of the main rupture zone and is characterized by a nearly linear temporal evolution. This signal spatially coincides with a region of persistently low interseismic coupling, suggesting a distinct physical origin.

Based on these observations, we perform numerical modeling using the finite-element solver PyLith to investigate the potential sources of deformation. The models incorporate realistic fault geometry and rheological layering, and are driven by the imposed coseismic slip distribution. Our results indicate that the observed deformation patterns are best explained by the presence of a low-viscosity channel at a ~40 km depth, located at the base of the slab interface. This rheological anomaly spatially correlates with the subduction of the Challenger Fracture Zone (~30°S).

We propose that the subduction of this bathymetric anomaly enhances fluid release, which, through serpentinization processes, reduces the effective viscosity of the medium. These findings have important implications for seismic segmentation and earthquake behavior, as this region commonly acts as a boundary for the rupture of large megathrust earthquakes.

 

How to cite: Molina, D., Lovery, B., Radiguet, M., Pierre, M., and Socquet, A.: Linking Postseismic Deformation and Slab Rheology to Seismic Segmentation in Central Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19696, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19696, 2026.

EGU26-19752 | ECS | Orals | GD2.4

From Elastic Strain to Permanent Uplift Along the North Chilean Forearc 

Ehsan Kosari, Sabrina Metzger, Victor Navarro-Sanchez, Onno Oncken, Bernd Schurr, Matthias Rosenau, Pia Victor, Christian Sippl, and Ylona van Dinther

Along-strike variations in megathrust coupling modulate forearc deformation through both elastic, seismic-cycle processes and permanent tectonic uplift. Yet the degree to which short-term interseismic deformation is translated into long-term geomorphic expression remains poorly constrained. We investigate this relationship along the hyperarid North Chilean forearc using Sentinel-1 InSAR time series and a set of geomorphic uplift proxies, including marine terraces, coastal topography, and alluvial fan slopes. The preservation of landforms allows direct comparison between geodetic and geomorphic signals across spatial and temporal scales.

The relationship between geodetic uplift rates and long-term uplift indicators varies along strike and becomes weak or alternates between positive and negative correlations in the Mejillones Peninsula region. This peninsula constitutes a tectonic hinge separating two seismotectonic segments characterized by distinct deformation patterns. Alternating correlations and anticorrelations between geodetic uplift and uplifted marine traces imply episodic uplift governed by the interplay of interseismic and coseismic vertical motions. Coastal alluvial fan slopes correlate with geodetic uplift only in the  segment north of Mejillones towards the north, whereas south of it their independence from uplift suggests a dominant climatic control. The geodetic uplift rates and coastal topography preserve similar large-scale trends while differing in finer-scale, and the local correlation remains mostly positive across the latitude range. Upper-plate faults align with the north–south aligned inflection zone of geodetic uplift, suggesting that their geometry and distribution may be influenced by regional bending and strain gradients across the uplift–subsidence transition. Their low slip-rates may indicate that these faults do not accommodate significant long-term plate motion; instead, they remain largely quiescent interseismically and are preferentially activated during megathrust earthquakes through transient stress transfer. Our results suggest that long-wavelength, long-term deformation dominates forearc topography, whereas short-wavelength, seismic-cycle deformation adds variability that may be preserved differently across geomorphic features. 

How to cite: Kosari, E., Metzger, S., Navarro-Sanchez, V., Oncken, O., Schurr, B., Rosenau, M., Victor, P., Sippl, C., and van Dinther, Y.: From Elastic Strain to Permanent Uplift Along the North Chilean Forearc, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19752, 2026.

EGU26-20693 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

New Bathymetric and Seismic Reflection Data along the Northern Haiti Margin: Preliminary Results on the Active Geological Processes 

Marina Rueda-Fort, José-Luis Granja-Bruña, Alfonso Muñoz-Martín, Miguel-Ángel De la Fuente-Oliver, María Berriolópez-Llamosas, Alfonso Muñoz-Cemillán, and Francisco-José Martínez-Moreno and the GEOMARHIS

The convergence of the North American plate with Caribbean plate occurs at a rate of 20.0 ± 0.4 mm/yr towards 254 ± 1º. This results in a highly oblique convergence (20-10º), which is accommodated in the Hispaniola Island by means of strain partitioning, represented in its northern margin by the Northern Hispaniola Deformed Belt (NHDB), accommodating the normal shortening, and the Septentrional Fault Zone (SFZ), which accommodates the along-strike convergence component. Here, we show the preliminary results of an integrated multiscale analysis based on new data acquired at the end of 2025, during the GEOMARHIS marine geophysical cruise, onboard the RRS James Cook. These new data include swath bathymetry data and a dense set of 2D seismic reflection profiles comprising medium, high and ultra high-resolution data. The integration and combined interpretation allow for an identification of the along-strike variability of fault geometry and sediment deformation along the northern Haiti margin. New data reveal active N-verging thrusts and fault-propagation folds in the NHDB, sub-vertical faults associated with the SFZ that produce seafloor scarps, and an extensive field of irregular-shaped seafloor depressions. These features suggest a complex interaction between tectonic, gravitational, and oceanographic processes. This continuous multi-scale approach will advance our understanding of active tectonic and sedimentary processes, which will help future studies assess seismic and tsunami risks in the region.

How to cite: Rueda-Fort, M., Granja-Bruña, J.-L., Muñoz-Martín, A., De la Fuente-Oliver, M.-Á., Berriolópez-Llamosas, M., Muñoz-Cemillán, A., and Martínez-Moreno, F.-J. and the GEOMARHIS: New Bathymetric and Seismic Reflection Data along the Northern Haiti Margin: Preliminary Results on the Active Geological Processes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20693, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20693, 2026.

EGU26-20993 | Posters on site | GD2.4

New multi-scale geophysical data in the northern Hispaniola offshore margin (GEOMARHIS experiment): Preliminary results on oblique tectonics, strain partitioning and associated geological hazards. 

Jose-Luis Granja-Bruña, Alfonso Muñoz-Martín, Marina Rueda-Fort, Miguel Ángel De la Fuente-Oliver, Irene Díez-García, Natalia Martínez-Carreño, Julián Fiz Barrena, María Berriolópez Llamosas, Alfonso Muñoz-Cemillán, Thomas Joyeux, and Francisco José Martínez-Moreno and the GEOMARHIS TEAM

Geophysical and geological records attest that the Northern Hispaniola margin poses major earthquake and tsunami hazards for the Greater Antilles. Along this margin it is located the oblique boundary between the Caribbean and the North American plates. This boundary plate is characterized by the coexistence of seismogenic compressive deformed belts and the strike-slip fault zones that represent a strain partitioning model. Between December 3rd of 2025 and January 3rd of 2026, we carried out a multi-scale controlled-seismic source marine survey between Puerto Rico and Cuba (GEOMARHIS experiment). During the marine cruise we acquired multi-channel seismic reflection profiles along- and across-strike of plate boundary using several experimental setups: 1) 2000 km seismic profiles using a 3 km-long streamer of 240 channels (12.5 m-interval) and a 1760 ci airgun array, 900 km of high-resolution seismic profiles using a streamer of 40 channels (6.25 m-interval), and a 420 ci airgun array and a 3.6 kJ sparker sources. In addition, we acquired systematic continuous ultra-high-resolution seismic data, swath bathymetry-backscatter, gravity and magnetics. Here, we show a preliminary interpretation of the tectonic structure based the new data that will provide key information to assess the seismic and tsunami hazard for Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, Haiti and Cuba. 

How to cite: Granja-Bruña, J.-L., Muñoz-Martín, A., Rueda-Fort, M., De la Fuente-Oliver, M. Á., Díez-García, I., Martínez-Carreño, N., Fiz Barrena, J., Berriolópez Llamosas, M., Muñoz-Cemillán, A., Joyeux, T., and Martínez-Moreno, F. J. and the GEOMARHIS TEAM: New multi-scale geophysical data in the northern Hispaniola offshore margin (GEOMARHIS experiment): Preliminary results on oblique tectonics, strain partitioning and associated geological hazards., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20993, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20993, 2026.

EGU26-21390 | Posters on site | GD2.4

Tectonic Reorganization and Transient Connectivity in the Northeastern Caribbean 

Mélody Philippon, Leny Montheil, Douwe van Hinsbergen, Jean-Jacques Cornée, Franck Audemard, Sylvie Leroy, and Simon Bufferal

The northeastern Caribbean is a key region for understanding how subduction dynamics, internal plate deformation, and paleogeographic change interact to shape long-term Earth surface systems. Traditionally modeled as part of a rigid Caribbean plate, this region is now recognized as having undergone substantial internal deformation since the Eocene. Integrating paleomagnetic constraints with kinematic and paleogeographic reconstructions reveals a far more dynamic tectonic evolution than previously assumed. Significant vertical-axis rotations and relative translations affected major tectonic domains of the northeastern Caribbean throughout the Cenozoic. These rotations, reaching several tens of degrees, occurred in multiple phases and reflect the cumulative effects of oblique subduction, arc-parallel shearing, and progressive reorganization of plate-boundary structures. Deformation was distributed across rotating blocks rather than localized along discrete plate boundaries, fundamentally modifying regional geometry and challenging rigid-plate models. Incorporating these kinematic constraints into plate reconstructions highlights a highly variable paleogeographic history. Subduction-related uplift, subsidence, and arc migration episodically altered the extent and connectivity of emerged landmasses in the eastern Caribbean. During the Eocene and Oligocene, tectonic uplift and shallow platforms likely formed transient land connections or island chains between northern South America and the northern Caribbean islands. These connections were later disrupted by tectonic fragmentation and subsidence as convergence dynamics evolved. Overall, this integrated framework demonstrates that deep geodynamic processes exert a first-order control on Caribbean landscape evolution and ecological connectivity, emphasizing the need for interdisciplinary approaches linking tectonics, paleogeography, and Earth surface processes.

How to cite: Philippon, M., Montheil, L., van Hinsbergen, D., Cornée, J.-J., Audemard, F., Leroy, S., and Bufferal, S.: Tectonic Reorganization and Transient Connectivity in the Northeastern Caribbean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21390, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21390, 2026.

EGU26-22363 | ECS | Orals | GD2.4

Reconstructing Caribbean Landscapes to Understand Biodiversity Patterns 

Simon Bufféral, Melody Philippon, Douwe van Hinsbergen, Dupont-Nivet Guillaume, Cornée Jean-Jacques, and Montheil Leny

Integrating dynamic paleogeographic reconstructions into biodiversity studies reveals that Caribbean patterns of diversity, endemism, and biotic assembly arose through a combination of geodynamic processes rather than solely through long-distance overwater dispersal across a stable archipelago. Present-day biodiversity reflects the cumulative imprint of long-term geodynamic processes that continuously reshaped the region’s landscapes throughout the Cenozoic. Geodynamic reconstructions that integrate plate kinematics, subduction dynamics, and intraplate deformation show that the Caribbean evolved through successive phases of uplift, subsidence, rotation, and fragmentation, producing a highly dynamic configuration, extent, and connectivity of emerged landmasses. Subduction-related uplift and arc migration periodically generated shallow platforms, emergent volcanic arcs, and island chains that temporarily reduced marine barriers between the American continents and Caribbean islands. Conversely, tectonic reorganization and subsidence fragmented these connections, isolating landmasses and reorganizing drainage systems. These alternations between connectivity and isolation are central to understanding the timing and pathways of biotic dispersal and diversification. By explicitly incorporating block rotations, vertical motions, and plate-boundary reconfigurations, geodynamic reconstructions provide physical constraints on when and where terrestrial and freshwater dispersal routes existed. These reconstructions therefore offer a critical temporal and spatial framework for interpreting phylogenetic divergence times, colonization pulses, and patterns of endemism across the Caribbean biodiversity hotspot. In particular, they help reconcile apparent mismatches between biological and geological timescales by identifying short-lived but recurrent windows of connectivity that facilitated biotic exchange. This integrated geodynamic-biogeographic perspective underscores that Caribbean biodiversity is inseparable from the region’s tectonic evolution: deep Earth processes governed the emergence and disappearance of habitats, structured ecological connectivity, and ultimately shaped the assembly of one of the world’s most diverse and endemic island systems.

How to cite: Bufféral, S., Philippon, M., van Hinsbergen, D., Guillaume, D.-N., Jean-Jacques, C., and Leny, M.: Reconstructing Caribbean Landscapes to Understand Biodiversity Patterns, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22363, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22363, 2026.

EGU26-22939 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.4

Varying fault patterns and the role of proto-thrusts in strain accommodation along the northern Cascadia subduction zone 

Wiebke Schäfer, Michael Riedel, Gareth Crutchley, and Heidrun Kopp

Large subduction earthquakes and associated tsunamis pose major hazards to coastal regions worldwide. The Cascadia subduction zone, where the Juan de Fuca plate subducts beneath North America, has historically experienced several devastating megathrust earthquakes (MW > 8.5), most recently in 1700 CE. Nowadays, the Cascadia margin is considered to be in a late stage of the interseismic period and therefore one of the regions in the world, that is most prone to a major subduction earthquake in the foreseeable future. However, despite its high seismic potential, deformation processes at the Cascadia deformation front remain incompletely understood. In this study, we focus on the northern Cascadia margin and perform a systematic analysis of structural variations and fault patterns along the margin, using 14 newly acquired high-resolution 2D multichannel seismic data oriented perpendicular to the deformation front offshore Vancouver Island. These data are complemented by legacy seismic profiles that provide improved velocity constraints as well as high-resolution bathymetric data. Our results show that the deformation front is well marked by a series of bathymetric ridges and is segmented into sections of 4–10 km length. The main frontal thrust is traceable throughout the profiles and changes vergence from mostly seaward verging in the north to a landward verging segment, before swapping back to seaward verging in the south. The high-resolution data enables us to image proto-thrust zones in northern Cascadia for the first time and reveals a link between the occurrence and geometry of these proto-thrusts and the frontal thrust vergence. Landward-verging frontal thrusts are associated with wide proto-thrust zones characterized by mixed vergence, whereas seaward-verging frontal thrusts exhibit sparse, predominantly seaward-verging proto-thrusts both landward and seaward of the main frontal thrust. Velocity analyses reveal compaction-related velocity increases seaward of the deformation front exclusively in areas with well-developed proto-thrust zones, indicating that the proto-thrusts have accommodated a significant amount of strain prior to frontal accretion and play an important role in frontal deformation processes. We will compare our findings to other subduction zones and discuss them in the context of hazard potential expected from potential future megathrust earthquakes in the area.

How to cite: Schäfer, W., Riedel, M., Crutchley, G., and Kopp, H.: Varying fault patterns and the role of proto-thrusts in strain accommodation along the northern Cascadia subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22939, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22939, 2026.

EGU26-312 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Geophysical Mapping of Seamounts and Tectonic Elements over the Extinct Aegir Ridge 

Md Abdullah Salman and Irina Filina

The Aegir Ridge was active in the northeastern Atlantic between Norway and Greenland from early Eocene (~55 Ma) until its cessation in late Oligocene (~26–24 Ma). The ridge remains understudied in the literature despite its importance in reconstructing tectonic history of the Northern Atlantic.  Although portions of the ridge axis are visible in modern bathymetric grids, much of its morphology is subdued by sedimentary cover. Numerous seamounts are evident near the former spreading axis, serving as key indicators of magmatic and tectonic processes. However, away from the ridge axis, the seamounts are buried beneath sediments and are therefore undetectable in bathymetry alone, necessitating an integrated geophysical approach to locate them.

In this study, we perform systematic mapping of seamounts across the extinct Aegir Ridge by integrating publicly available bathymetric, gravity and vintage seismic reflection datasets. While bathymetry reveals seamounts primarily near the spreading center, we utilize gravity data to identify buried or sediment-covered edifices away from the ridge. To do that, we enhance gravity data and determine the signal from known bathymetric seamounts. We then identify and map similar filtered anomaly responses as “gravity seamounts”.  To validate these features, we analyze seismic reflection profiles obtained from the GeoMap App. This allows us to confirm “seismic seamounts” where the structures rise above the basement but are covered by sediments. Due to limited seismic coverage, not all “gravity seamounts” can be validated. Therefore, we categorize seamounts into “bathymetric”, “gravity” and “seismic” ones and compare them with previously published bathymetric seamounts and igneous complexes.

We further analyze patterns in gravity and magnetic anomalies to delineate individual spreading segments of the extinct Aegir Ridge. Our analysis shows that most mapped seamounts align with the spreading center, while some display oblique orientations. These oblique seamounts correspond to offsets between ridge segments. In addition, magnetic anomalies exhibit characteristic distortions in the polarity reversals that are aligned with those oblique seamounts. These are characteristic of pseudofaults and propagator wakes, which form when two ridge segments compete with each other for magma supply. Our integrated geophysical mapping enables identification of previously unrecognized volcanic features and tectonic elements and suggests that ridge propagation occurred during the active lifespan of the Aegir Ridge.

How to cite: Salman, M. A. and Filina, I.: Geophysical Mapping of Seamounts and Tectonic Elements over the Extinct Aegir Ridge, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-312, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-312, 2026.

EGU26-393 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Accretion Dynamics of the Oblique section of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge North of the Kane Transform Fault (23°50’N-25°15’N)  

Remisha Rajeevan, Marcia Maia, Mathieu Rospabé, Ewan Pelleter, Florian Besson, Jean-Arthur Olive, Mélanie Principaud, and Anne-Sophie Alix

The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) north of the Kane Transform Fault (MARNOK) provides an 
ideal setting to investigate the interplay between magma supply, faulting, and lithospheric 
structure at a slow-spreading mid-ocean ridge (MOR). Along this section, two orthogonal 
segments and four oblique segments bounded by non-transform discontinuities show 
contrasting accretion styles. Orthogonal segments 1 and 6, located at the southern and 
northern ends of the study area, show symmetrical spreading, and progressive thinning of the 
crust with decreasing distance to the axis (from 8-9 km in ~1.12-Myr old lithosphere to 6-7 km 
on-axis).  These segments also display closely spaced, elongated normal faults, and their 
Mantle Bouguer anomaly (MBA) and Residual Mantle Bouguer anomaly (RMBA) are lower 
than that of the adjacent oblique segments. The lack of axial volcanic ridges in segments 1 
and 6 along with the decreasing crustal thickness towards the axis indicate a reduction in melt 
supply in recent geological time, and possible fluctuations of the magma supply on 
characteristic time scales of ~1.12 Myr in this part of the MAR. 
The oblique segments (Segments 2 to 5) show a mixed tectono-magmatic regime that reflects 
the structural complexity of the MARNOK region. Detachment faults at the inside corners of 
segments 2 and 5 along with thin crust indicate earlier asymmetrical, low-magma accretion 
typical of oblique MAR segments. Present-day magmatism forms discontinuous, sigmoidal, 
and locally focused axial volcanic ridges that resemble those observed on other oblique MOR 
segments such as Mohns ridge, and certain oblique areas of the Southwest Indian Ridge. 
Short, widely spaced faults and irregular volcanic constructions indicate that magma is 
currently contributing to plate separation. Even though the axial volcanic ridges are aligned 
with the strike of orthogonal segments 1 and 6, the melt budget of segments 2–5 does not 
appear sufficient to reorganize these segments into orthogonal spreading.  
Petrological observations reveal that melt–rock interaction is pronounced in tectonically 
dominated MARNOK domains. This result along with structural and gravity, observations 
indicating transient, localized melt focusing occurs within the MARNOK mantle. These 
findings support observations from other slow and ultraslow ridges showing that magmatic 
accretion is highly variable and controlled by mantle fertility, detachment-related cooling, and 
intermittent melt supply. Overall, the results indicate that crustal formation in the MARNOK 
region is shaped not simply by spreading rate, but by the combined influence of obliquity, melt 
availability, faulting, and thermal structure. This integrated tectono-magmatic framework 
provides new insight into how slow-spreading lithosphere evolves north of the Kane Transform 
Fault and highlights the rapid temporal and spatial variability that characterizes magmatic and 
tectonic processes at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

How to cite: Rajeevan, R., Maia, M., Rospabé, M., Pelleter, E., Besson, F., Olive, J.-A., Principaud, M., and Alix, A.-S.: Accretion Dynamics of the Oblique section of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge North of the Kane Transform Fault (23°50’N-25°15’N) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-393, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-393, 2026.

Oceanic transform faults (OTFs) have long been viewed exclusively as vertical, strike-slip structures offsetting mid-ocean ridges, yet their deep geometry and structural complexity remain poorly constrained. Thus, key questions persist, including whether OTFs are single-stranded and continuous, whether they maintain vertical dip angles, if they accommodate mixed-mode slip, and what factors control their geometry. Our study addresses these questions through a global statistical analysis of teleseismic earthquake focal mechanisms from 150 OTFs across diverse tectonic settings. We introduce 'stack maps', a novel method that quantifies fault dip and rake, providing a graphical representation of average focal mechanisms. Our findings reveal that while OTFs tend to conform to the classical vertical, strike-slip model, nearly half exhibit deviations, either in dip or motion, challenging the simplified view of these plate boundaries. We identify four distinct OTF categories: (1) those adhering to the standard model, (2) non-vertical faults with transtensive/transpressive components, (3) non-vertical faults accommodating strike-slip motion, and (4) vertical faults with a vertical component of motion. Tectonic regime shifts emerge as a primary driver of structural changes, with non-vertical geometries persisting even after the regime reverts to pure strike-slip motion. This structural memory suggests that fault geometry, once established, remains stable over geological timescales of several tens of Myr. By reconciling previously 'unusual' focal mechanisms with fault structure and dynamics, this work demonstrates that global seismic catalogues, when analysed statistically, offer robust insights into OTF geometry and tectonic regimes.

How to cite: Janin, A., Behn, M., and Tian, X.: Geometry, structure, and tectonic regime of oceanic transform faults revealed by teleseismic earthquake focal mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1651, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1651, 2026.

EGU26-1731 | Orals | GD2.3

Structure of volcanic centres at ultraslow spreading ridges revealed from local earthquake tomography 

Schlindwein Vera, Andrey Jakovlev, and Matthias Pilot

Melt distribution along ultraslow spreading ridges is characterized by strong focusing at widely spaced volcanic centers, rather than uniform axial accretion. This localized magmatism supports unusually frequent hydrothermal activity and high-temperature venting, posing a fundamental question: how is sufficient heat supplied and melt zones maintained within otherwise cold lithosphere? We present new local earthquake tomography results from two networks of eight ocean-bottom seismometer deployed around two confirmed hydrothermal vent fields on the Arctic Mid-Ocean Ridge—Aurora and Loki’s Castle. We inverted P- and S-phase arrival times of several thousand microearthquakes recorded over almost one year for P- and S-wave velocity structure and vp/vs ratio. Our tomography reveals heterogeneous lithospheric structures at both sites, with no clear evidence of large, sustained melt reservoirs. This contrasts with prominent low-velocity (vp/vs) anomalies at the Logachev and Segment 8 volcanic centers, which are indicative of extensive melt zones and are accompanied by seismic gaps, swarm activity, and circular magnetic anomalies.

The geophysical characteristics of Aurora and Loki’s Castle vent fields, located at ridge bends near regions of robust magmatism, differ significantly from those of Logachev and Segment 8. Despite the apparent absence of significant melt volumes, these sites exhibit long-lived hydrothermal activity. We propose that these differences may reflect distinct temporal stages in the life cycle of ultraslow spreading ridges or be related to the specific tectonic setting at ridge bends. Our findings highlight the complex interplay between magmatism, tectonics, and hydrothermal processes in ultraslow spreading environments.

How to cite: Vera, S., Jakovlev, A., and Pilot, M.: Structure of volcanic centres at ultraslow spreading ridges revealed from local earthquake tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1731, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1731, 2026.

EGU26-3813 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Discovery of high-temperature hydrothermal mineralisation at Hatiba Mons volcano in the Red Sea 

Isabel Diercks, Sven Petersen, Jörg Follmann, Nico Augustin, Froukje M. van der Zwan, and Sylvia G. Sander

Hatiba Mons is the largest axial dome-shaped volcano in the ultra-slow spreading Red Sea rift. It hosts recently discovered (2022) widespread hydrothermal activity consisting of extensive iron deposits in the form of iron mounds. Two of these vent fields were investigated in detail during an expedition in 2023, with ROV observations as well as gravity coring of metalliferous sediments, massive sulfides, and background carbonates. A multidisciplinary approach was applied to first establish a geochemical and mineralogical framework of the new system, which is then linked to microbiological and pore fluid analyses of the sediments. This was achieved through the implementation of X-ray fluorescence, instrumental neutron activation analysis, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, X-ray diffraction, petrological microscopy, electron-microprobe analysis, sulfur isotope analysis, and microthermometry. Whole-genome metagenomic sequences and morphological studies (scanning electron microscopy) are currently analyzed to elucidate the role of microbial communities in mound formation and/or degradation and mineral precipitation. The pore fluid chemistry will further enhance our understanding of the formation of the hydrothermal system at Hatiba Mons and the processes responsible for the chemical variability within the mounds.

Our study provides the first detailed description of an active Red Sea hydrothermal vent system outside the metalliferous brine-pool muds such as those of the Atlantis-II Deep. Hydrothermal precipitates at Hatiba Mons resemble MOR basalt-hosted deposits elsewhere. However, given the close proximity (<10km) of Miocene evaporites, the presence of small brine-filled depressions at the volcano summit and near-saturation salinities in fluid inclusions indicate a substantial contribution of dissolved evaporites to the hydrothermal system, influencing metal solubility, transport, and precipitation. This is reflected in some unusual high metal concentrations (e.g., Zn, Au, Ag, Cd, Sb). The mineral composition and paragenetic sequence, as well as microthermometric results suggest a waning hydrothermal system that experienced high-temperature hydrothermalism (250-300°C) in the past and current temperatures within the mounds (130-150°C) that are well above the currently measured in situ temperatures of 31°C and 51°C venting and core temperatures, respectively. Furthermore, we provide a detailed assessment of the first polymetallic massive sulfide occurrence associated with active hydrothermal venting in the Red Sea.

The deposit at Hatiba Mons formed at high temperatures, clearly showing that the fundamentals of hydrothermal activity in the Red Sea are not entirely different from other mid-ocean ridges; however, the elevated salinities may provide evidence that the geological setting allows for greater variability in the mineral deposits currently not observed in other modern seafloor hydrothermal systems, but common in the fossil rock record. The Red Sea spreading center remains an exploration target for the discovery of further sulfide occurrences and/or high-temperature vent sites. The presence of current low-temperature fluid venting and microbial mats, along with high-temperature precipitates within the mound, suggests a complex and dynamic hydrothermal activity at Hatiba Mons volcano and in the Red Sea. These findings contribute to a deeper understanding of the formation of marine mineral deposits, the evolution of hydrothermal systems, and their broader implications for deep-sea geochemistry and microbial ecology.

How to cite: Diercks, I., Petersen, S., Follmann, J., Augustin, N., van der Zwan, F. M., and Sander, S. G.: Discovery of high-temperature hydrothermal mineralisation at Hatiba Mons volcano in the Red Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3813, 2026.

EGU26-3929 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Depth, transience and eruptibility of magma-mush reservoirs modulated by varying magma supply along the Galápagos Spreading Center 

Jie Chen, Jean-Arthur Olive, and Lydéric France

The Galápagos Spreading Center (GSC) is characterized by an intermediate spreading rate, and influenced by the nearby Galápagos hotspot, resulting in a pronounced along-axis gradient in magma supply that decreases by ~40% from east to west. Between 92°W and 97°W, the axial morphology shifts from a high to a valley, as the seismic crustal thickness decreases from 7.5 to 5.6 km, and  the seismically-imaged axial melt lens (AML) deepens from 1.4 km at 92°W to 3 km at 94°W, beyond which it becomes undetectable, e.g., at 97°W (Blacic et al., 2004, doi: 10.1029/2004jb003066). However, a P-wave low-velocity anomaly persists along the GSC between 92°W and 97°W, suggesting the widespread presence of an axial crystal-rich mush zone (Canales et al., 2014, doi: 10.1002/9781118852538.ch17). These along-GSC variations provide an ideal laboratory to explore the impact of melt flux on the dynamics (e.g., depth, transience, and eruptibility) of magma (crystal-poor) – mush (crystal-rich) systems at the axis of mid-ocean ridges.

We use a 2-D numerical thermal model, multiporo-magma, which couples repeated, instantaneous melt emplacement events in the lower crust, parameterized magma convection within individual magma bodies, and hydrothermal circulation (porous flow) in the uppermost crust. Our reference model predicts that, from 92°W to 97°W, decreasing melt flux leads to a deepening of the crystal mush zone (from 1.5 to 3.5 km), and to the formation of increasingly smaller and more transient melt-rich magma bodies within the mush zone. These results highlight that higher melt fluxes (e.g., 92°W) support nearly steady-state magma bodies capable of sustaining frequent eruptions, whereas lower melt fluxes (e.g., 97°W) result in deeper, short-lived magma bodyies with reduced eruptive potential. Importantly, we show that the absence of a seismically-imaged AML at any given time can reflect increased transience in the thermal state of the axis, and does not require that the 1000ºC isotherm lies below the Moho, as previous thermal models had postulated. Our simulations further reveal how the behaviour of the crystal mush zone is modulated by the efficiency of hydrothermal cooling and the size of individual melt sills.

How to cite: Chen, J., Olive, J.-A., and France, L.: Depth, transience and eruptibility of magma-mush reservoirs modulated by varying magma supply along the Galápagos Spreading Center, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3929, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3929, 2026.

Mid-oceanic ridges are the sites of oceanic crust formation, accommodating plate divergence through a combination of tectonic extension, magmatic accretion, and hydrothermal circulation. The thickness of the oceanic crust produced at these ridges is a first-order indicator of mantle melting processes and melt supply, and is traditionally linked to spreading rate, mantle temperature, mantle composition, and the efficiency of melt extraction. Fast-spreading ridges are typically associated with relatively uniform crustal thicknesses due to a 2D sheet-like mantle upwelling, whereas slow- and ultraslow-spreading ridges exhibit greater spatial variability due to enhanced tectonic strain and heterogeneous melt focusing. Despite the well documented observations and geodynamic modeling of mantle upwelling, the role of short-lived or transient changes in ridge geometry on melt production and crustal thickness remains poorly constrained. Using high resolution seismic reflection data from the Wharton Basin in the Indian Ocean, we show that the crustal thickness decreases smoothly from a normal crustal thickness of ~ 6 km to ~ 4 km and then back to ~ 6 km over a distance of ~120 km. This distance corresponds to a time span of 1-2 Myrs for a crust formed at the super-fast Wharton spreading centre. The dramatic change in crustal thickness is associated with an anticlockwise rotation of the magnetic anomaly Chron 29 (64.4 - 65.1 Ma), which is temporally coincident with the separation of Seychelles from the Indian sub-continent and the Deccan flood basalt volcanism caused by the La Réunion mantle plume. It is likely that this major plate tectonic event in the Indian Ocean caused a temporary change in the spreading rate and spreading direction. We suggest that a rapid rotation in the spreading direction could divert the melt focusing away from the ridge axis, decreasing the melt delivery and thus decreasing the crustal thickness. Within a span of 1 - 2 Myr, the spreading ridge returned to its original geometry and the regime stabilised to a uniform upwelling directly beneath the ridge axis, giving rise to a normally thick crust of 5.5 - 6 km. Our findings show that changes in ridge orientation can significantly influence melt fluxes on relatively short geological timescales, without requiring large-scale changes in mantle temperature or composition. This underscores the sensitivity of magmatic systems at spreading ridges to evolving plate kinematics.

 

 

How to cite: Singh, S., Rohilla, S., and Carton, H.: Change in crustal thickness due to localised rotation caused by a long-distance tectonic event in the Indian Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3974, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3974, 2026.

EGU26-4430 | Orals | GD2.3 | Highlight

Pioneering Human Dives to the Gakkel Ridge in the Arctic Ocean 

Xiaoxia Huang

The Gakkel Ridge is an ultraslow-spreading mid-ocean ridge located beneath perennial Arctic sea ice at water depths exceeding 5,000 m. Its extremely low spreading rate, sparse magmatism, and permanent ice cover have long limited geophysical detection, direct observation, and sampling. Exploration is further constrained by drifting sea ice that prevents emergency surfacing, under-ice navigation and communication challenges, extreme cold, short operational windows, and the absence of nearby rescue infrastructure. As a result, large portions of the ridge have remained poorly explored for decades.

Here we report the scientific and technical achievements of a recent Chinese-led expedition to the eastern Gakkel Ridge, representing the first intensive manned geological and biological investigation of this remote polar environment. Using the deep-diving human-occupied vehicle Fendouzhe, more than 43 successful dives were conducted beneath Arctic sea ice, reaching maximum depths greater than 5,200 m. These dives enabled unprecedented in situ observations and direct sampling of seafloor geology, hydrothermal features, and associated ecosystems. We present initial geological and biological results and discuss their implications for understanding crustal accretion, hydrothermal activity, and ecosystem development at ultraslow-spreading ridges in polar settings.

Rerences:

Alexandra Witze, Nature 647, 564-565 (2025) doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-025-03679-0

How to cite: Huang, X.: Pioneering Human Dives to the Gakkel Ridge in the Arctic Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4430, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4430, 2026.

EGU26-4456 | Orals | GD2.3

A seafloor spreading event captured by in-situ seismo-geodesy 

Jean-Yves Royer, Jean-Arthur Olive, Sara Bazin, Valérie Ballu, Anne Briais, Pierre-Yves Raumer, Lise Retailleau, and Edgar Lenhof and the OHA-GEODAMS Scientific party

Over geological times, the growth of the ocean floor involves magmatic and tectonic extension at mid-ocean ridges. Because seismo-geodetic monitoring of these submarine plate boundaries remains challenging, little is known on how these systems operate on yearly timescales. Here we report the first in-situ observation of a rifting event at a mid-ocean ridge segment, that combines hydroacoustic, direct-path ranging and bottom pressure measurements, with repeated seafloor mapping.

The event started on April 26, 2024 at the axis of the Southeast Indian Ridge near 37˚S, two months after instruments had been deployed across the ridge axis and nearby Amsterdam transform fault. The event began as a rapidly migrating swarm of extensional seismicity along the axial valley. It caused 4 m of subsidence of the valley floor, and over a meter of horizontal extension across the valley. We interpret this as the deflation of a magma reservoir feeding propagating dykes and inducing aseismic slip on a valley-bounding fault. The dyke eventually led to the outpouring of ~150 million m3 of lava at the seafloor, while triggering seismic activity on the abutting transform faults.

Using 2-D elastic dislocation models, we randomly sampled 10 million combinations of sill, dyke and fault geometries to assess how well they could account for the observed displacements. Out of these, about 2200 yielded a satisfactory root mean squared (RMS) misfit (< 20 cm), which have all in common: (i) a sill at least 3500 m deep compacting by 10-20 m; (ii) a dyke rooted at the sill and extending to sub-seafloor depths of tens of meters with a metric opening; (iii) a metric slip on an axial-valley bounding fault down to a few km; and (iv) a total horizontal extension of 2 to 4 m, distributed between the dyke and the fault. Most models favour the dyke taking up more extension than the fault. The measured and modelled horizontal displacements are equivalent to 31 to 63 years of spreading at the average rate of 6.3 cm/yr inferred from space geodesy. They are considerably larger than the centimetric offsets caused by the swarm of Mw≈5 earthquakes and must therefore have accrued aseismically during the early stages of the spreading event.

This unique set of observations provides a detailed chronology of a seafloor spreading event, and, along with modelling, suggests that aseismic slip plays a major role during such events, thereby explaining the well-documented earthquake deficit on normal faults at mid-ocean ridges.

How to cite: Royer, J.-Y., Olive, J.-A., Bazin, S., Ballu, V., Briais, A., Raumer, P.-Y., Retailleau, L., and Lenhof, E. and the OHA-GEODAMS Scientific party: A seafloor spreading event captured by in-situ seismo-geodesy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4456, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4456, 2026.

EGU26-6354 | Posters on site | GD2.3

Partitioning of magmatic and tectonic extension from hours to millions of years at the Southeast Indian Ridge, 37°S  

Jean-Arthur Olive, Jean-Yves Royer, Sara Bazin, Valérie Ballu, Anne Briais, Pierre-Yves Raumer, Lise Retailleau, Edgar Lenhof, Julie Beesau, Romuald Daniel, Denis Dausse, Séverine Furst, Anatole Gros-Martial, Charline Guerin, Emilie Klein, Diane Pacaud, Charles Poitou, Jonathan Tanrin, and Laurent Testut

Ocean floor formed at intermediate spreading ridges typically consists of volcanic effusion products (80-90%) and regularly-spaced normal fault scarps (10-20%) that shape elongated abyssal hills. This fabric forms over millions of years as the divergence of two tectonic plates induces discrete events of magmatic intrusion and fault slip at the ridge axis, which can last from several seconds to several months. Little is known, however, on how the repetition of such events ultimately shapes the partitioning of tectonic and magmatic strain that is encoded in the morphology of the seafloor. To address this, we quantify the amount of fault slip and magmatically-accommodated extension during the early days of the April 2024 rifting event that took place on the Southeast Indian Ridge at 37°S, and was documented by the OHA-GEODAMS seismo-geodetic observatory (Royer et al. EGU26-GD5.1).

Using elastic dislocation modelling in a Bayesian framework, we find that the rifting event accounted for 2–4 m of horizontal extension, of which ∼85% involved the emplacement of a magmatic fracture that propagated along the axis within less than 2 hours. We attribute the remainder of the extension to dominantly aseismic slip on axial valley bounding faults. This "instantaneous" fraction of magmatic extension is strikingly similar to that revealed by bathymetric analyses (M∼90%), which quantify deformation averaged over hundreds of thousands of years. We therefore propose that the long-term "M-fraction" that characterizes intermediate-spread seafloor could be determined at the scale of individual rifting events, possibly by static stress transfers between a propagating dike and adjacent faults. At the Southeast Indian Ridge, such events likely recur every ∼50 years and are separated by periods of seismic quiescence, as mid-ocean ridge normal faults may primarily grow when triggered by magmatic activity.

How to cite: Olive, J.-A., Royer, J.-Y., Bazin, S., Ballu, V., Briais, A., Raumer, P.-Y., Retailleau, L., Lenhof, E., Beesau, J., Daniel, R., Dausse, D., Furst, S., Gros-Martial, A., Guerin, C., Klein, E., Pacaud, D., Poitou, C., Tanrin, J., and Testut, L.: Partitioning of magmatic and tectonic extension from hours to millions of years at the Southeast Indian Ridge, 37°S , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6354, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6354, 2026.

EGU26-6443 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Association of hydrothermal venting with seafloor morphology from high-resolution bathymetry at the Polaris vent site, Gakkel Ridge 

Tea Isler, Vera Schlindwein, Elmar Albers, and Christopher R. German

The Gakkel Ridge is the slowest-spreading axial ridge on Earth extending across the Arctic Ocean for ~1800 km. It was subdivided into a western and an eastern magmatically robust zone separated by a central sparsely magmatic zone, based on rock recovery during the AMORE expedition in 2001. During the same expedition, at least nine discrete hydrothermal sources were inferred from water-column plume detections. Due to the perennial ice cover limiting the deployment of underwater vehicles, only two of these plumes have ever been traced to their seafloor sources: the Aurora vent field, at the westernmost end of the Gakkel Ridge, and the Polaris vent field, in the Eastern Volcanic Zone.

In this study, we present an integrated high-resolution multibeam and optical dataset acquired onboard RV Polarstern at the axial volcanic high hosting the Polaris vent site (56°E) in 2016 using the towed camera system OFOBS. The combination of bathymetric data and photogrammetric reconstruction from optical imagery reveals pronounced morphological and geological heterogeneity across the study area. Based on these observations, we classify the seafloor into three main terrain types: (1) an axial volcanic summit dominated by pillow basalt, indicative of volcanic emplacement; (2) a faulted zone where tectonic structures focus hydrothermal activity, corresponding to the location of the Polaris vent field; and (3) a distal domain characterized by larger-scale tectonic structures with no clear evidence for recent volcanism or active hydrothermal venting.

By providing one of the few high-resolution bathymetric datasets of a hydrothermally hosted axial volcanic high, this dataset allows us to examine the relationship between hydrothermal venting and fine-scale seafloor morphology on the ultraslow-spreading Gakkel Ridge.

How to cite: Isler, T., Schlindwein, V., Albers, E., and German, C. R.: Association of hydrothermal venting with seafloor morphology from high-resolution bathymetry at the Polaris vent site, Gakkel Ridge, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6443, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6443, 2026.

EGU26-6546 | Orals | GD2.3

Near-Real-Time Geochemical Constraints on the April 2025 Mid-Ocean Ridge Eruption at the East Pacific Rise 9°N 

Mustafa Yücel, Andrew Wozniak, Sunita Shah Walter, Sasha Wagner, Sam Katz, Suna Tüzün, Nimet Alımlı, Naim Yağız Demir, Hilal Cura, Sam McNichol, and George Luther

Most of Earth’s eruptive volcanism occurs along mid-ocean ridges (MORs), yet direct observations of eruptions and their immediate hydrothermal consequences remain rare. On 29 April 2025, the science party of R/V Atlantis Expedition AT50-36 directly observed a long-anticipated eruption at the East Pacific Rise (EPR) 9°N only hours after its onset, representing the most rapidly detected and documented deep-sea MOR eruption to date. The expedition occupied the area from 10 April to 3 May 2025, allowing characterization of hydrothermal and water-column conditions from ~14 days before the eruption to ~96 hours afterward.  In this communication we present on-board fluid geochemistry measurements documenting both pre-eruption vent fluid chemistry and post-eruption water-column responses. High-temperature and diffuse-flow fluids were sampled at the Bio9, P Vent, Tica, BioVent, and YBW vent fields during DSV Alvin dives conducted in the days preceding the eruption. Post-eruption bottom waters were investigated using a CTD–rosette system equipped with an in situ electrochemical analyzer. Pre-eruption measurements of dissolved Fe (dFe), H₂S, dissolved Mn (dMn), and pH show elevated H₂S:T and H₂S:dFe ratios relative to previous years at EPR 9°N, consistent with subsurface phase separation and volatile-enriched hydrothermal fluids prior to eruption. Immediately following the eruption, high-temperature vent sources could not be accessed due to aborted Alvin dives; however, CTD profiles revealed pronounced bottom-water anomalies in at least one of pH (up to 0.8 units), H₂S (up to 70 µM), or dFe (up to 841 nM) at CTD stations conducted over Bio9, P Vent, Tica, BioVent vent fields. These geochemical anomalies were spatially widespread along the ridge axis and extended to at least 10 m above the seafloor, with pH and temperature perturbations closely coupled to elevated H₂S concentrations. Although temperature anomalies in bottom waters decayed within four days of the eruption, pH, H₂S, and dFe anomalies persisted. A CTD cast conducted four days post-eruption revealed, via the rosette-mounted electrochemical analyzer, H₂S concentrations of up to 40 µM coincident with turbidity and redox potential anomalies extending to at least 600 m above the seafloor, indicating the development of a vertically extensive hydrothermal megaplume. Such concentration ranges are typically confined to the immediate vicinity of black smoker orifices, highlighting the exceptional spatial scale of hydrothermal discharge following this eruptive event. The near-real-time observation of this MOR eruption provides new constraints on eruption-triggered hydrothermal fluxes, plume formation, and the role of episodic volcanic events in modulating ridge-axis hydrothermal systems.

How to cite: Yücel, M., Wozniak, A., Shah Walter, S., Wagner, S., Katz, S., Tüzün, S., Alımlı, N., Demir, N. Y., Cura, H., McNichol, S., and Luther, G.: Near-Real-Time Geochemical Constraints on the April 2025 Mid-Ocean Ridge Eruption at the East Pacific Rise 9°N, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6546, 2026.

EGU26-7543 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Oceanic Transform Faults as Barriers, Bridges, and Boosters: Geometric Controls on Plume Dispersion Along Segmented Mid-Ocean Ridges 

Sibiao Liu, Fan Zhang, Lars Rüpke, Yiming Luo, Ming Chen, Xubo Zhang, Lei Zhao, Yinuo Zhang, Zhanying Chen, and Jian Lin

Mantle plumes interacting with mid-ocean ridges (MORs) produce prominent geophysical and geochemical anomalies in oceanic lithosphere. However, the role of oceanic transform faults (OTFs), major discontinuities within MOR systems, in modulating along-axis plume dispersion remains poorly understood. Here, we combine a global dataset of 24 plume–ridge–transform systems with 3D geodynamic modeling to investigate the geometric and kinematic controls on plume behavior along segmented ridges.

Based on spatial relationships among plumes, ridge segments, and transforms, we define three end-member interaction modes: (1) on-ridge, (2) off-ridge, and (3) on-transform– fracture zone plumes. Systematic geodynamic models reveals that OTFs may exert one of three primary roles depending on plume location and system geometry: (i) barriers, which impede along-ridge plume dispersion when long transform offsets create lithospheric discontinuities; (ii) bridges, which permit relatively unimpeded dispersion when plumes lie near transform–ridge junctions or beneath fracture zones; and (iii) boosters, where transform-centered or inside-corner plumes enhance plume transport via strike-slip-induced mantle flow acceleration near the transform fault.

We demonstrate that transform offset length, plume–ridge and plume–transform distances, and ridge spreading rate collectively determine the efficacy of plume dispersion along ridge axes. The proposed framework offers a geometric basis for interpreting observed asymmetries in natural plume–ridge systems and highlight the complex, context-dependent nature of transform fault influence. These insights challenge the classical “transform damming” hypothesis and emphasize the necessity of considering 3D mantle flow dynamics in plume–ridge–transform interactions.

How to cite: Liu, S., Zhang, F., Rüpke, L., Luo, Y., Chen, M., Zhang, X., Zhao, L., Zhang, Y., Chen, Z., and Lin, J.: Oceanic Transform Faults as Barriers, Bridges, and Boosters: Geometric Controls on Plume Dispersion Along Segmented Mid-Ocean Ridges, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7543, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7543, 2026.

Fast slipping oceanic transform faults show a quasi-periodic occurrence of large (M>5.5) earthquakes. For example, at the Gofar transform fault in the East Pacific Ocean, slipping at a high rate of ~14 cm/yr, some segments rupture every 5-6 years in a Mw~6 earthquake while other segments remain quite in the global record. Based on the regularity of the seismic cycles, US American researchers deployed an ocean bottom seismograph (OBS) network to capture the predicted 2008 Mw 6.0 event. Indeed, the event was record on 12th September 2008, providing a unique seismological dataset of stations spaced at 10-20 km and OBS operating for 2 months to 13 months with 12 OBS out of 16 OBS covering the full observation period and recording three component data. Previous studies analysed the seismic behaviour (McGuire et al., Nature Geoscience, 2012; Gong and Fun, G-cubed, 2022), focusing solely on micro-seismicity. Here, we re-analysed the archived dataset down-loaded from the EarthScope Consortium (www.iris.edu) and (i) used a machine-learning technique developed to study large datasets of OBS data (PICK-Blue, Bornstein et al., EPS, 2024) to reveal seismicity pattern covering the interseismic phase before the earthquake, the co-seismic and post-seismic phase. In addition, (ii) we searched for similar earthquakes rupturing periodically the same patch of the rupture zone and found two classes of events: repeating at very short time intervals and hence within one day, which we call “bursts”, and events repeating within more than seven days, which we call “repeaters”. Such earthquakes are generally used to reveal seismic creep. Last, (iii) we search for time-dependent features in the continuous recordings and found evidence for spontaneous velocity-changes and gradual healing which we interpret in terms of slow slip events. We found that most bursts and repeaters occurred throughout the year at the segment eastward of the 10 km long mainshock area, while most other segments show little evidence for repeaters, except the segment to the west of the mainshock showing repeaters in April and May 2008. In addition, we observed slow slip in the mainshock area and at the two segments towards the east, while the other segments showed no evidence for prominent velocity changes within the fault zone. We conclude that the occurrences of creep on adjacent segments and slow slip loaded the later mainshock area over several months, subsequently issuing the mainshock. Most striking, the Gofar transforms shows contrasting seismogenic behaviour at adjacent segments: one accommodating plate motion by creep while the other issues large earthquakes.

How to cite: Grevemeyer, I., Ren, Y., and Lange, D.: Setting the stage for the 2008 Mw 6 earthquake at the Gofar transform fault, Pacific Ocean: slow slip, repeating earthquakes, interseismic and co-seismic activity from OBS data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7854, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7854, 2026.

EGU26-8232 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Sensitivity of hydrothermal vent temperatures to changes in crustal permeability profiles 

Kim Moutard, Jean-Arthur Olive, Thibaut Barreyre, and Milena Marjanović

Hydrothermal circulation at mid-ocean ridges is permitted by the highly permeable young oceanic lithosphere and the presence of a shallow heat source, both of which can fluctuate on different time scales in response to tectonic and magmatic activity. Seafloor observatories increasingly allow us to quantify how hydrothermal discharge responds to these changes, by continuously measuring key properties of vent fluids such as temperature, chemical composition, or flow rate. Barreyre et al. (2025, PNAS) for example showed that hydrothermal vent temperatures at the East Pacific Rise (EPR) 9º50’N steadily increase between eruptions, as the axial melt lens inflates. The models used to interpret these measurements, however, have thus far assumed a uniform permeability along the fluid upflow path, when magmatic inflation likely imparts depth-dependent changes to the permeability field.

To remedy this, we developed SAPHYR, a semi-analytical workflow to study the behavior of an axisymmetric (1-D) hydrothermal upflow zone with a depth-dependent permeability profile, subjected to lateral heat loss. SAPHYR specifically predicts the steady-state temperature and velocity of upwelling fluids, from heat source to seafloor, given a basal heat input and background permeability profile. It is benchmarked against standard models that assume both uniform and exponentially-decaying permeability profiles.

We use SAPHYR to assess how exit fluid temperatures may evolve in response to depth-dependent perturbations of the upflow zone permeability profile. At the EPR, such perturbations could stem from changes in the mean stress of the upper oceanic crust caused by an inflating axial melt lens. To test this idea, we run a large parametric study where we compare the state of the hydrothermal discharge zone before and after imposing a perturbation, and do so for a wide range of basal heat inputs, background permeability profiles, and degree of lateral heat loss. We find that an inflating melt lens can either drive an increase or a decrease in hydrothermal vent temperatures depending on the basal heat-flow and the vent location with respect to the inflating body. Our findings explain why neighboring hydrothermal vents may respond differently to the same sub-seafloor deformation process, as was documented at the EPR. They further open a path to inverting changes in sub-seafloor permeability and stress from time series of black smoker temperatures.

How to cite: Moutard, K., Olive, J.-A., Barreyre, T., and Marjanović, M.: Sensitivity of hydrothermal vent temperatures to changes in crustal permeability profiles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8232, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8232, 2026.

Oceanic transform faults offset spreading axes by tens to hundreds of kilometers and are among the most prominent tectonic features in deep ocean basins. The Gofar transform fault system (GTFS) is a major left-lateral ridge-crest discontinuity connecting segments of the fast-spreading East Pacific Rise. This highly segmented transform fault system is characterized by high-relief flanks, J-shaped structures at ridge-transform intersections, and deep troughs connecting three fault segments (G1, G2, and G3, from east to west). Over the past two decades, the western G3 segment has been extensively studied through multidisciplinary approaches including near-field observations and numerical modeling, revealing along-strike variations in seismicity patterns, slip behavior, and potential governing factors. However, the segmentation of the entire GTFS and its relationship with intra-transform spreading centers and/or pull-apart basins remain poorly understood, as seismic behavior of the eastern G1 and G2 segments has not been sufficiently well constrained by near-field observations.  

Between November 2019 and February 2022, 30 ocean bottom seismometers (OBS) were deployed to monitor seismic activity along the eastern GTFS (G1 and G2 segments). We first evaluated the performance of multiple deep-learning phase pickers on this OBS dataset, including EQTransformer, PhaseNet, and PickBlue. PickBlue, specifically trained for OBS data, demonstrated superior event detection performance compared to pickers trained on onshore datasets. We then applied the non-linear oct-tree grid-search algorithm (NonLinLoc) with source-specific station terms (SSST) to obtain precise absolute event locations. Our results reveal high seismicity density along the G1 and G2 transform segments, as well as distributed deformation within the deep trough connecting these segments, showing features resembling continental pull-apart basins. Notably, the OBS network captured a magnitude 6 earthquake in the study area, providing unique insights into fault slip behavior before and after the mainshock at oceanic transform faults.

How to cite: Ren, Y., Lange, D., and Grevemeyer, I.: Segmentation and Seismicity of the Eastern Gofar Transform Fault System Revealed by 30-Month Ocean Bottom Seismometer Deployment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8441, 2026.

Mid-ocean ridges (MORs) are extremely active volcanic systems where dike intrusions and eruptions recur on decadal time scales. Their submarine setting has long made in-situ observations of active deformation extremely challenging, hindering insight into sub-seafloor deformation sources. Recent progress in seafloor geodesy is rapidly changing this state of affairs, by providing measurements of rapid seafloor displacements throughout the MOR eruption cycle. These novel datasets therefore call for the development of new models to fully realize their potential. Importantly, MOR plumbing systems have been particularly well imaged and typically comprise shallow reservoirs termed axial melt lenses (AMLs) lying above, and embedded within a lower crustal mush zone. Leveraging this knowledge, we design 2-D (forward) finite-element models of the active seafloor deformation that should characterize a cycle of steady AML inflation followed by an instantaneous dike intrusion and AML drainage. The AML lies at the base of an elastic lithosphere, and atop a Maxwell viscoelastic mush zone, with viscosity ηM, that reaches Moho depths and is laterally confined to the axial domain. The underlying asthenosphere is viscoelastic with a viscosity of 10¹⁸ Pa.s. 

Our models treat AMLs as a tensile dislocation that opens at a specified rate, corresponding to a constant replenishment flux. AML replenishment manifests as distributed seafloor uplift. When  ηM ≥ 10¹⁸ Pa.s, our models resemble elastic half-space end-members. Lower values of ηM however exert a damping effect on seafloor uplift rates, which slow down significantly from beginning to end of a replenishment phase. When the AML suddenly drains and/or when a dike suddenly opens, low mush zone viscosities result in a transient phase of post-drainage and post-diking relaxation, manifesting as steadily vanishing seafloor uplift and seafloor subsidence, respectively. 

We use our numerical simulations to revisit estimates of AML inflation at the East Pacific Rise (9°50′N) using seafloor uplift rates (up to ~7 cm/yr) measured by Nooner et al. (2014) between 2009 and 2011, i.e., 4 to 6 years following the 2005-2005 eruption. If we assume a strong mush (ηM >10¹⁸ Pa.s), the observed uplift requires an AML replenishment rate of ~150 m³/yr per meter along the ridge axis, whereas a very weak mush (ηM <10¹⁶ Pa.s) requires rates as large as ~350 m³/yr/m. Interestingly, the observed cross-axis profile of seafloor displacements appears incompatible with our post-eruption relaxation models, implying either that such relaxation did not take place, or that it was effectively over within 4 years. If the latter is true, then the effective viscosity of the axial mush zone should be close to, or slightly less than 10¹⁶ Pa.s, consistent with micro-mechanical models of gabbroic mush flow, and large-scale thermo-mechanical models of MOR thermal structure. 

How to cite: Boulze, H. and Olive, J.-A.: Seafloor displacements across the mid-ocean ridge eruption cycle modulated by mush zone viscosity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9023, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9023, 2026.

EGU26-10683 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Magmatism controls bathymetry at global mid-ocean ridge-transform intersections 

Ming Chen, Lars Rüpke, Ingo Grevemeyer, Yu Ren, and Sibiao Liu

Ridge-transform intersections (RTIs) display distinct topographic morphologies, yet the origin remains debated. Standard thermal models treat the RTI as a juxtaposition of an old and cold plate against a young and warm spreading ridge such that this contact deepens the RTI with age offset, while another classic view attributed RTI bathymetry to spreading rate dependence of magma supply. These models explain the systematically deepening of RTI bathymetry with age offset and decreasing spreading rate, but fail to account for the highly variable RTI bathymetry with comparable age offset and spreading rate.

We analyzed multibeam bathymetric data of 101 RTIs at 65 OTFs at ultraslow- to fast-spreading ridges and conducted 3D numerical simulations of plate separation and dike injection at a ridge-transform-ridge system by using the geodynamic code LaMEM (Lithosphere and Mantle Evolution Model). We treat a dike injection to occur when differential stress that defined as the difference between magmatic overpressure and tectonic stress overcomes lithosphere pressure, which yields an effective M value that represents time-averaged fraction of plate separation accommodated by magmatic emplacement in a time scale of 10-100 yr. We show the variability in RTI depth can be related to brittle lithosphere thickness, where a thinner brittle lithosphere can generate the M value in a wider range and eventually leads to distinct topographic morphologies. This results in the systematically deepening of RTI bathymetry with age offset and its increasing variability with decreasing age offset. Furthermore, our result suggests that the systematical variations in RTI depth mainly reflects the age offset dependence of plate cooling, instead of spreading rate. More generally, it implies that the interactions between spreading ridge and the juxtaposed old plate determine time-averaged magma supply that reshapes seafloor morphology when oceanic transform faults pass mid-ocean ridges and evolve into fracture zones.

How to cite: Chen, M., Rüpke, L., Grevemeyer, I., Ren, Y., and Liu, S.: Magmatism controls bathymetry at global mid-ocean ridge-transform intersections, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10683, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10683, 2026.

EGU26-10877 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Decompaction-Driven Overpressurisation of Mid-Ocean Ridge Magma Lenses 

András Cserép, Jean-Arthur Olive, Einat Aharonov, Thibault Duretz, and Hugo Boulze

Seismic imaging of magmatically robust mid-ocean ridges (MORs) reveals the presence of sill-shaped axial melt lenses (AMLs) located a few kilometres below the seafloor, overlying and embedded within mush zones. AMLs are active features: they must undergo rapid replenishment to provide the heat that fuels high-temperature hydrothermal convection. Ocean bottom pressure sensors have shown that this replenishment causes steady uplift of the seafloor over decadal time scales, which is partially or completely reversed during MOR eruptions. Previous studies of this phenomenon have typically modelled seafloor displacements by imposing overpressurisation rates in a tensile deformation source embedded in a (visco-)elastic half-space. Very few, however, have focused on the physical mechanisms that enable overpressurisation of a magma pocket in a mush zone.

To address this gap, we test the hypothesis that AMLs represent boundary layers formed by the decompaction of partially molten rocks beneath a permeability barrier (e.g., the brittle-ductile transition). Using numerical two-phase poro-viscous flow models, we calculate the buoyant load exerted by a decompacting boundary layer on its overlying permeability barrier. By systematically varying the solid and liquid shear viscosities, bulk viscosity exponent, background porosity, and grain size, we obtain a range of overpressure buildup rates that show strong agreement with a simple scaling analysis. The bulk viscosity exponent, background porosity, and grain size exert the strongest control on the rate of overpressure buildup. We then convert our computed loading rates to seafloor uplift rates using elastic dislocation models and compare them with data from the East Pacific Rise at 9°50’N. By doing so, we demonstrate that the decompaction of magmatic mush is a viable mechanism for AML overpressurisation and seafloor inflation. Future work will aim to incorporate more realistic rheologies for the magma-mush system and assess their impact on the rates of AML inflation.

How to cite: Cserép, A., Olive, J.-A., Aharonov, E., Duretz, T., and Boulze, H.: Decompaction-Driven Overpressurisation of Mid-Ocean Ridge Magma Lenses, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10877, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10877, 2026.

EGU26-11951 | Orals | GD2.3

Rheology of mid-ocean ridge flip-flop detachment fault systems : numerical models and field observations 

Mathilde Cannat, Antoine Demont, Souradeep Mahato, and Jean Arthur Olive

Flip-flop detachment fault systems characterize magma-starved regions of ultraslow mid-ocean ridges (MOR). They involve the succession of large-offset normal faults that face alternatively to one then to the other diverging plate,accommodate most of the plate divergence and consistently expose mantle-derived serpentinized peridotites on the seafloor. Currently the best documented MOR flip-flop detachment fault system is located in the 64°E region of the Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR). Here, we report on two recent research projects focused on this region of the SWIR.

One project uses thermo-mechanical models to investigate which overall, plate boundary-scale, strength contrasts between the fault zones and the surrounding lithosphere favor the flip-flop faulting mode. It highlights how relatively modest rheological contrasts (equivalent to a 0.1-0.2 reduction in frictional strength for a cohesion loss of 20-25 MPa) between intact and deformed lithosphere enables large-offset flip-flop faulting in the thick lithosphere of magma-starved and ultraslow MOR regions. To better understand the flip-flop mode, this modelling project also develops an energy minimization analysis of a configuration with two antithetic faults, one older, and fully weakened, and the other new and not yet fully weakened, but cutting through the thinned footwall of the first fault. It shows that the rate of fault weakening in this new fault is a key parameter to determine whether or not it takes over as the new detachment.

The other project is based on studying actual rock samples and submersible dive videos from the exposed fault zone of the presently active SWIR 64°E axial detachment. It shows that deformation in the upper regions of the fault (at temperatures consistent with serpentine stability) is primarily brittle but that the most highly strained horizons are serpentinite gouges that exhibit syn-tectonic chrysotile fiber growth and dissolution-precipitation textures, indicating fluid-assisted semi-brittle deformation. While these gouges probably have extremely low frictional strength, it is their distribution at outcrop to fault zone scales, their thickness, and interconnectedness, along with the availability of hydrous fluid, that likely control the overall strength of these upper, serpentinized, regions of the fault zone. Further, several of these characteristics are likely influenced by prior distributed brittle and semi-brittle deformation in the deeper, hotter and non-serpentinized regions of the fault.

The study of natural samples therefore indicates that the strength of the axial lithosphere in the nearly amagmatic 64°E SWIR region is controlled by complex interactions between brittle failure, ductile deformation, fluid percolation and hydrous mineralogical transformations in and around fault zones and across a range of depths and temperatures. Numerical models suggest that, overall, these processes result in a moderate integrated rheological contrast between intact rocks and strain weakened fault zones. Yet it is likely that they also cause spatial and temporal variations of fault weakening rates, with consequences on whether and when new antithetic faults successfully take over.

How to cite: Cannat, M., Demont, A., Mahato, S., and Olive, J. A.: Rheology of mid-ocean ridge flip-flop detachment fault systems : numerical models and field observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11951, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11951, 2026.

EGU26-12446 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Deformation and hydrothermal alteration of gabbroic rocks in the Vema oceanic transform fault 

Sampriti Mukherjee, Cécile Prigent, and Mathilde Cannat

The oceanic lithosphere along oceanic transform faults (OTFs) forms at ridge–transform intersections (RTIs) through the interplay of magmatic, tectonic, and hydrothermal processes, and can subsequently evolve via deformation within the transform fault zone itself. We investigate these processes along the southern side of the Vema OTF, which segments the slow-spreading Mid Atlantic Ridge (MAR), thus focusing on a magmatically robust RTI that contrasts with most MAR transform faults.

Significant magmatic supply to the MAR segment south of Vema is indicated by a well-developed basaltic upper crustal section exposed in the transform wall and by abyssal ridge morphology of the adjacent seafloor. The south wall of the Vema transform, and to a lesser extent its valley, have been extensively sampled. Gabbros crop out primarily at the base of the wall. Submersible observations document a steep, transform-parallel fault contact between gabbros and foliated serpentinised peridotites further down the wall.

We studied gabbroic rocks from 25 dredges and 2 dives from the base of transform wall, with more deformed ones mainly collected from depths greater than 4000 m below sea level and towards the western part of the OTF. Twenty-one representative samples were selected for petrological, geochemical and thermobarometric analyses, allowing us to identify four successive deformation regimes.

(1) A high-temperature viscous regime characterized by mylonitic shear bands with brown amphibole (Amp), ilmenite-magnetite, plagioclase (Pl), clinopyroxene (Cpx), orthopyroxene (Opx) ± apatite. Amp-Pl thermobarometry indicates deformation at ~850-950℃. Mineral textures and Ti-rich amphibole suggest melt-assisted deformation.

(2) A high-temperature semi-brittle regime marked by shear zones, cataclastic zones and fractures containing green-Amp, secondary Pl, sphene-ilmenite and Cl-rich apatite. Amp-Pl thermobarometry leads to temperatures of ~650-750℃ and pressure of 1.5-3 kbar. Significant amount of chlorine (700-2400 ppm) together with low Ti (0.065- 0.23 a.p.f.u) in the green hornblende suggest a hydrothermal fluid origin.

(3) A medium temperature semi-brittle regime with formation of green-Amp, chlorite, and sphene within fractures Cl-rich green Amp (up to 6000 ppm) again involves hydrothermal fluids. Amp-Pl thermometry gives temperatures of around 500 ℃ consistent with greenschist facies assemblage.

 (4) A low-temperature brittle regime characterized by fracturing and brecciation, with syn/post deformational globular zeolite crystallization, reflecting interaction with seawater at ~200 ℃.

These gabbros formed at the magmatically robust east-RTI, although actual contacts have not been observed, they crop out adjacent to and structurally below a well-documented upper crustal sequence of basalt lava and dikes. This suggests crystallization, and subsequent deformation, at relatively shallow depths for these gabbros, consistent with the low pressure estimated from mineral thermobarometry. Our interpretation is that the succession of deformation regimes documents the deformation style and hydrothermal alteration at relatively shallow depths in the transform. And that the large range of temperature covered by the 4 deformation regimes corresponds mostly to progressive cooling and hydrothermal alteration of lower crustal rocks during aging and lateral transport away from the RTI, with limited contribution from tectonic exhumation within the transform fault.

How to cite: Mukherjee, S., Prigent, C., and Cannat, M.: Deformation and hydrothermal alteration of gabbroic rocks in the Vema oceanic transform fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12446, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12446, 2026.

EGU26-12584 | Posters on site | GD2.3

The Africa-Eurasia transform plate boundary – Insights from the morphostructure of the Gloria Fault, NE Atlantic 

Cristina Roque, Sónia Manzoni, João Duarte, Susana Gonçalves, Luis Batista, and Miguel Souto

The Azores-Gibraltar Plate Boundary (AGPB) materializes the present-day westernmost segment of the Africa (Nubia)-Eurasia plate boundary, and connects the Azores triple junction, at the west, to the Gibraltar orogenic arc, at the east. The Gloria Fault corresponds to its central and transform segment, trending E-W to WNW-ESE between 24° W and 14°30’W and showing dextral strike-slip motion. This feature corresponds to one of the rare examples of a ridge-transform fault-orogenic arc plate configuration worldwide. The Gloria Faults has also been the site of great-magnitude earthquakes, such as the 25 November 1941 (Mw8.4), the second-largest oceanic strike-slip event recorded worldwide. In spite of the studies carried out in this AGPB segment, the seismotectonics of the Gloria Fault is still poorly known. In this work we present a detailed morphostructural characterization of the Gloria Fault and discuss the relationship between the main morphostructures and seismicity, based on i) the geomorphological analysis of unpublished multibeam bathymetry collected in the scope of the Project of Extension of Continental Shelf; ii) correlation of the main morphostructures identified with instrumental seismicity and microseismicity records available from public catalogues (SHARE, USGS, IPMA) and published by several authors, and iii) profile gravity analysis based on SGG-UGM-2 satellite gravity data compilation.

Based on the morphostructural, seismotectonic and gravimetric analysis we propose the existence of a Gloria Fault Transform System, which includes the several morphological features relate to its transcurrent motion (e.g., central valley, transverse ridges, restraining bend, Western Gap, Eastern Ridge), and the two main seismically active structures in the area, located at north and south of the Gloria Fault. This suggests that, at present, the stress due to the motion of the Africa-Eurasia plates is accommodated by seafloor deformation along a wide E-W stripe.

This work is supported by FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020 - https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020 , UID/50019/2025, https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025, UID/PRR2/50019/2025.

How to cite: Roque, C., Manzoni, S., Duarte, J., Gonçalves, S., Batista, L., and Souto, M.: The Africa-Eurasia transform plate boundary – Insights from the morphostructure of the Gloria Fault, NE Atlantic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12584, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12584, 2026.

EGU26-13036 | Posters on site | GD2.3

Rock magnetic constraints on primary igneous features and hydrothermal alteration of MORBs along the South Atlantic ridge flanks 

Claudio Robustelli Test, Chiara Amadori, Michelle Harris, Thomas Belgrano, Mallika Jonnalagadda, Aled Evans, Lewis Grant, Elmar Albers, Rosalind Coggon, Damon Teagle, and Elena Zanella

The South Atlantic Transect (SAT) ocean drilling expeditions (IODP Expeditions 390 & 393) recovered basaltic lavas formed between ~7 and 61 Ma along the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge at 31°S. Mid-ocean-ridge basalt (MORB) recovered during the SAT preserves primary magmatic characteristics and evidence of varying extents of reaction with seawater-derived hydrothermal fluids. This transect offers a unique opportunity for studying accretion of upper oceanic crust, off-axis hydrothermal processes over time, and the influence of rock alteration on long-term variations in seafloor magnetization.

Magnetic minerals in basaltic lava flows are known to reflect primary volcanic features, such as magma composition and emplacement style, and on- and off-axis hydrothermal processes.

In this study we performed detailed rock magnetic investigations to characterize the magnetic mineral assemblages and grain-size variations among fresh and altered basalts. Across the ridge flank (i.e., with increasing age), the magnetic properties highlight a strong dependence of magnetic mineral grain-sizes and composition on the nature of the volcanic units and their evolution during hydrothermal alteration. For example, fresh MORB displays Ti-rich titano-magnetite with finer and coarser grains in pillows and massive lava flows, respectively. Fluctuations in remanent magnetization and magnetic susceptibility intensities are also strictly dependent on primary textures and emplacement style.

Magnetic mineral compositions (e.g., changes in Ti-content) and grain-sizes vary across distinct types of alteration halos, with a general decrease in magnetization. As alteration evolves, the magnetic properties demonstrate a progressive oxidation of the primary titano-magnetite into titano-maghemite coupled with magnetic mineral grain-size reduction associated with various extents of groundmass and phenocryst replacement. Strongly altered basalts reveal a paramagnetic contribution related to the formation of secondary clays associated with Fe-oxyhydroxides (i.e., goethite).

Overall, the variation of magnetic properties across the South Atlantic ridge flanks provides constraints on the complex interplay of volcanic stratigraphy and the evolution of hydrothermal alteration as the upper oceanic crust ages, linking petrology with the long-term variation of marine magnetic anomalies.

How to cite: Robustelli Test, C., Amadori, C., Harris, M., Belgrano, T., Jonnalagadda, M., Evans, A., Grant, L., Albers, E., Coggon, R., Teagle, D., and Zanella, E.: Rock magnetic constraints on primary igneous features and hydrothermal alteration of MORBs along the South Atlantic ridge flanks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13036, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13036, 2026.

EGU26-14998 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

The IMPULSE experiment: Oceanic crust formed beneath the Reykjanes Ridge at 60° N 

Nirmit Dhabaria, Tim Henstock, Stephen M Jones, and Nicky White

There are relatively few measurements of oceanic crust formed at the Reykjanes Ridge south of Iceland. During the IMPULSE experiment of 2024, we acquired two wide-angle seismic profiles using dense arrays of ocean bottom seismometers (OBSs). One profile, presented here, deployed 89 OBSs along an approximately 400 km flow line centered on the ridge axis at 60°17’ N, extending to plate ages of over 18 million years on either side. The second profile consists of 51 OBSs deployed along a 550 km axial chron line. Travel times of crustal (Pg) and mantle (Pn) refractions, and the wide-angle reflections from Moho (PmP) were picked and inverted using the TOMO2D software package to map crustal and upper mantle structure along the flow line. The results reveal an igneous crustal thickness varying between 6 and 9 km at intervals of 25-50 km from the ridge axis. Seismic velocities near the base of the thickest crust reach ~7.5 km/s away from the ridge axis, but can be as low as ~7.1 km/s for the thinnest crust on the profile. Variations of both crustal thickness and seismic velocity with distance are similar on either side of the ridge axis, suggesting that they are controlled by axial processes. At the ridge axis, the crust is approximately 9 km thick. However, lower crustal velocities within 10 km of the ridge axis are ~0.5 km/s slower than those observed at locations with similar crustal thicknesses only 50 km away. This observation suggests that the thick axial crust is anomalously hot, consistent with the diminished earthquake seismicity observed along this segment of the Reykjanes Ridge. Our results support the hypothesis that a hot transient pulse of asthenosphere lies beneath the Reykjanes Ridge at 60° N.

How to cite: Dhabaria, N., Henstock, T., M Jones, S., and White, N.: The IMPULSE experiment: Oceanic crust formed beneath the Reykjanes Ridge at 60° N, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14998, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14998, 2026.

EGU26-15639 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Effects of Serpentinization on Hydrothermal Systems: Modelling the Ultramafic-Hosted Rainbow Hydrothermal Field 

Weihao Lyu, Michele Paulatto, Carl Jacquemyn, and Matthew Jackson

Serpentinization is a common geochemical process in ultramafic-hosted hydrothermal systems, where the hydration of mantle rocks releases heat and hydrogen that can support hydrothermal circulation and chemosynthetic ecosystems. Most current understanding of serpentinization kinetics and thermodynamic limits is primarily derived from closed-system laboratory experiments. Here, we investigate how this reaction operates within dynamically circulating fluid systems in nature. A simplified model for serpentinization as a function of temperature and fluid velocity was developed and implemented via three-dimensional numerical simulations using the IC-FERST flow simulator.  Flow simulations explore how serpentinization interacts with fluid circulation and responds to variations in rock porosity and permeability. We apply this framework to a geologically realistic model of the Rainbow hydrothermal field (north Mid-Atlantic Ridge) to evaluate the combined effects of a deep magmatic heat source and reaction-driven heat generation. Results indicate that while the high vent temperatures and heat fluxes observed at Rainbow require a magmatic driver, serpentinization works synergistically with magmatic heat to temporarily elevate vent temperatures (by up to 50°C) and substantially increase seabed heat and fluid fluxes. Rather than being a uniformly progressing front, the serpentinization reaction is most effective in permeable regions surrounding the upwelling plume, where temperatures remain within an optimal thermodynamic window. Heat released by serpentinization has the unexpected effect of making upwelling plumes more stable in space and time, potentially contributing to sustaining black smoker vent fields over long periods of time (>10k years). By capturing key characteristics of the observed discharge at Rainbow, this study highlights how chemical reactions and fluid circulation jointly regulate hydrothermal activity and hydrogen production in ultramafic systems.

How to cite: Lyu, W., Paulatto, M., Jacquemyn, C., and Jackson, M.: Effects of Serpentinization on Hydrothermal Systems: Modelling the Ultramafic-Hosted Rainbow Hydrothermal Field, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15639, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15639, 2026.

EGU26-15683 | Orals | GD2.3

Temporal Crustal Structure at 100°E on the Ultraslow-Spreading Gakkel Ridge 

Xiongwei Niu, Jiabiao Li, Daniel Sauter, Weiwei Ding, Tao Zhang, Zhiteng Yu, Pingchuan Tan, and Qiuci Sun

While it is well established that ultraslow-spreading ridges exhibit both regions of unusually thick crust and exhumed mantle domains along their axes, the temporal scales governing crustal thickness variations remain poorly constrained, and the processes controlling these long-term variations remain unclear. The Gakkel Ridge, characterized by the slowest spreading rate globally, represents an ideal natural laboratory for investigating such crustal thickness variations. However, the presence of sea ice cover over the Gakkel Ridge poses a significant challenge to conducting seafloor surveys targeting crustal thickness variations perpendicular to the ridge axis, thereby limiting the ability to draw robust conclusions regarding these lateral variations. Here we use high-resolution active-source ocean-bottom refraction/reflection seismic profiling perpendicular to the ridge axis over a 50 km long section at 100°E on the Gakkel Ridge to show the crustal evolution over the past 10 Myr. This study employs 2.5-dimensional first-arrival P-wave tomography to image the evolution of the crustal structure. The results reveal an initial phase of thick oceanic crust (8.5 km) during 0–2 Myr, followed by a transition to thin oceanic crust (4 km) between 2–4 Myr. Subsequently, the period of 4–8 Myr is characterized by the exhumation of serpentinized mantle, before crustal thickening resumes from 8 to 10 Myr. These marked temporal variations in crustal thickness are interpreted as indicative of periodic fluctuations in melt supply. We propose that these variations were driven by mantle temperature perturbations of approximately 30–40°C over an 8-million-year period.

How to cite: Niu, X., Li, J., Sauter, D., Ding, W., Zhang, T., Yu, Z., Tan, P., and Sun, Q.: Temporal Crustal Structure at 100°E on the Ultraslow-Spreading Gakkel Ridge, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15683, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15683, 2026.

EGU26-16039 | Posters on site | GD2.3

Variability of volcanic constructions along the Reykjanes Ridge: Observations from downhole imaging at IODP395C/395 basement sites 

Anne Briais, David McNamara, Katharina Hochmuth, Deborah Eason, Gabriel Pasquet, Justin Dodd, Bramley Murton, Ross Parnell-Turner, Leah Levay, and Science_Party Expedition_395

 

International Ocean Discovery Program Expeditions 384, 395C and 395 investigated ocean crust formation at the Reykjanes Ridge, the variable influence of the nearby Iceland plume, the origin of V-shape ridges and troughs marking the flanks of the ocean ridge, and the alteration of basaltic crust with time. These Expeditions collected cores from a transect of five drill sites along a plate-spreading flowline spanning seafloor ages from 2.8 to 32 Ma. Combined, over 400 m of oceanic basalt core was recovered, and downhole logging collected physical property measurements in the crust, and resistivity and ultrasound images of the boreholes. These datasets provide a unique record of volcanic and tectonic characteristics of the uppermost basaltic crust, and of the progressive basalt alteration. Here we use downhole logging images along with observations from the recovered cores to characterize the lava morphology and quantify flow types in basement holes, and to investigate the fracturing and alteration of the basalts. This analysis complements the observations from the cores especially where basalt recovery was low. Data from the different sites along the flowline allows us to analyze how these physical characteristics vary with age, and to compare the flows emplaced at V-shaped ridges with those emplaced in the troughs. We estimate the fluid circulation paths from downhole images and compare with the basalt alteration observed from the cores.

 

How to cite: Briais, A., McNamara, D., Hochmuth, K., Eason, D., Pasquet, G., Dodd, J., Murton, B., Parnell-Turner, R., Levay, L., and Expedition_395, S.: Variability of volcanic constructions along the Reykjanes Ridge: Observations from downhole imaging at IODP395C/395 basement sites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16039, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16039, 2026.

EGU26-17848 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Magmatic processes recorded in the shallow plutonics of the Oman ophiolite (fast spreading oceanic centre): Implications for crustal accretion models 

Lisa Cadoux, Lydéric France, Marine Boulanger, Muriel Laubier, Jürgen Koepke, and Satish Singh

Fast-spreading oceanic ridges are characterized by magmatic systems with a lower crustal magma reservoir containing predominantly mush (i.e. a crystal-rich magma), punctuated by melt-rich lenses and overlain by a shallow Axial Magmatic Lens (AML). This mush-melt system plays a central role in oceanic crustal accretion, melt migration, and magmatic differentiation. After solidification away from the ridge axis, the lower crust shows a vertical layered structure from bottom to top consisting of layered gabbro (several km thick), foliated gabbro (1-2 km) and varitextured gabbro (tens to several hundreds of meters). Two end-member models have been suggested for the formation of the lower crust: the gabbro-glacier model, involving the subsidence of crystals from the AML, and the sheeted-sill model, requiring in situ crystallization of injected melt sills and ascending melts. The foliated gabbro unit, which remains relatively understudied, plays a key role in magma transfer and percolation between the different lower crustal units, as it is located at an intermediate stratigraphic position between the layer gabbro and varitextured gabbro. To better constrain accretionary processes, we selected key samples from the foliated gabbro unit of the Oman ophiolite (Wadi Tayin massif, and ICDP OmanDP Hole GT2) that represents one of the best natural analogues of fast-spreading oceanic ridges. In this study, we take advantage of the outcropping of entire crustal section and follow an integrated approach combining petrographical characterization of rocks textures and crystal morphologies with major and trace element chemical maps and spot measurements.

The results reveal the heterogeneity of the unit in terms of both textures and chemistry. Distinct differentiation paths can be identified in the thin sections. We identify a background mush composed of relatively evolved clinopyroxene generally displaying normal or inverse zoning. The associated plagioclases are overall homogeneous. This background mush is overprinted by less evolved melts. The zones that most clearly record these less evolved melts signatures are characterized by plagioclases recording cyclic zoning, whereas clinopyroxenes commonly display resorbed cores similar to the background one and inverse or more complex zoning patterns. These features are frequently associated with strongly poikilitic textures. In addition, we observe in some places inherited plagioclase cores with very low An (Anorthite) contents closely associated with accessory mineral phases that are typical of the greenschist facies.  In the uppermost foliated gabbro, skeletal cores are commonly observed in plagioclase, and clinopyroxenes display cyclic zoning or sector zoning.

Our results highlight that foliated gabbros record repeated episodes of recharge of magma reservoir by less evolved melts. Recharge melts then either interacted locally with previously hydrothermally altered crustal material or evolved within a mush through processes combining magma mixing and reactive porous flow. Plagioclase zoning indicates that fast-growth crystal morphologies are restricted to shallow levels and does not support the transfer of shallow crystals to deeper crustal levels. These observations provide new constraints on accretion models and support a significant role for melt percolation through the lower crust rather than crystal subsidence.

How to cite: Cadoux, L., France, L., Boulanger, M., Laubier, M., Koepke, J., and Singh, S.: Magmatic processes recorded in the shallow plutonics of the Oman ophiolite (fast spreading oceanic centre): Implications for crustal accretion models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17848, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17848, 2026.

EGU26-18924 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Geotectonic evolution of the Oceanographer Transform Fault 

Katharina A. Unger Moreno, Anouk Beniest, Lars H. Rüpke, Thor H. Hansteen, Colin W. Devey, Igor K. Nikogosian, and Ingo Grevemeyer

The Oceanographer Transform Fault is a 120 km long and E-W oriented transform fault located southwest of the Azores. We have detailed geological and morphological information of the area through high-resolution bathymetry and an extensive collection of rock samples. There we see different seafloor types (magmatic dominated volcanic seafloor, tectonic dominated smooth seafloor and core complexes) that indicate variations in the magmatic productivity. Our results show that seafloor morphology is linked to magma supply rates.

Now, we work at showing a complete geotectonic evolution of the Oceanographer Transform Fault area. The new data presented here, include radiometric age dates, which put constraints on the timing of processes, and magnetic signatures.

The magnetic anomalies were analyzed by 2D profile forward models. Weak magnetic patterns are observed above areas where mainly mantle-derived rocks occur. On the other hand, magmatic robust segments which are predominantly basaltic, are characterized by well-defined magnetic anomalies. Based on these magnetic anomaly analyses, we estimate seafloor spreading rates. Crustal accretion is asymmetric at both axes and varies in space and time.

To verify our magnetic anomaly results, we conducted U-Pb dating on zircons in five gabbroic samples collected by dredging. Obtained crystallization ages range between 3 Ma to 8 Ma. Not all results align with the seafloor ages, some geochemical ages are younger than the dates derived from the magnetic anomaly, which might be due to secondary magmatism.

How to cite: Unger Moreno, K. A., Beniest, A., Rüpke, L. H., Hansteen, T. H., Devey, C. W., Nikogosian, I. K., and Grevemeyer, I.: Geotectonic evolution of the Oceanographer Transform Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18924, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18924, 2026.

EGU26-19621 | Orals | GD2.3

Hydrothermal fluid chemistry and implications for sulfide deposit formation at the ultramafic-hosted Semenov vent field, Mid-Atlantic Ridge (13°30′N) 

Gemma Portlock, Jo Shannon, Sebastain Steigenberger, Darren Hillegonds, Bram Murton, Isobel Yeo, and Rachael H. James

Seafloor massive sulfide (SMS) deposits formed at ultramafic-hosted hydrothermal systems along slow- and ultraslow-spreading ridges are among the most metal-rich known on the seafloor, yet the processes governing metal transport and deposition in these environments remain poorly constrained. The Semenov hydrothermal field at 13°30′N on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge is one of the largest known ultramafic-hosted SMS systems, comprising multiple sulfide mounds developed on an oceanic core complex with a long-lived hydrothermal history (~124 kyr). This setting provides a valuable opportunity to link present-day hydrothermal fluid chemistry with the formation and preservation of extensive sulfide deposits.

Here we present the first detailed geochemical characterisation of hydrothermal fluids from the active Semenov-2 vent field, based on samples collected from three high-temperature vent sites (Ash Lighthouse, Phantom Urchin, and Yellow Submarine). Fluids were analysed for major elements, trace metals, volatiles, and isotopes, alongside mineralogical characterisation of associated chimney material. The chemical composition of end member vent fluids, calculated by extrapolation to zero magnesium, are similar across all three vents, consistent with a shared hydrothermal source. Relative to other ultramafic-hosted systems, Semenov fluids are characterised by elevated CO₂ concentrations but comparatively low metal and H₂S contents.

Chimney material recovered from the vent orifices were dominated by sulfate minerals (anhydrite-gypsum), with sulfide phases present only in minor amounts in the recovered chimney material. Together, the fluid and mineralogical data suggest that metal precipitation may occur predominantly beneath the seafloor, potentially driven by evolving pH-temperature conditions, redox state, and fluid-rock interaction associated with serpentinization. Alternatively, these signatures may reflect a waning or evolving hydrothermal system in which reduced or migrating heat input limits the transport of metals and reduced sulfur to the seafloor. These observations highlight the importance of subsurface processes in controlling metal fluxes and the development of SMS deposits in ultramafic-hosted hydrothermal systems.

How to cite: Portlock, G., Shannon, J., Steigenberger, S., Hillegonds, D., Murton, B., Yeo, I., and James, R. H.: Hydrothermal fluid chemistry and implications for sulfide deposit formation at the ultramafic-hosted Semenov vent field, Mid-Atlantic Ridge (13°30′N), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19621, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19621, 2026.

EGU26-21080 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Porosity-dependent physical property changes of the oceanic crust at the South Atlantic Transect (IODP X390-393) 

Chiara Amadori, Claudio Robustelli Test, Michelle Harris, Fernando Alvarez-Borges, Rosalind Coggon, and Damon Teagle

The physical properties of oceanic crust evolve significantly with age as the lithosphere cools, densifies, and subsides. At the crustal scale, the oceanic crust undergoes a progressive reduction in porosity and permeability (due to pore space and fracture infill), leading to an overall increase in seismic velocity. In particular, alteration of basaltic crust by low-temperature hydrothermal fluids produces the largest modification to the upper oceanic crust. This means that understanding the impact of porosity changes is critical for quantifying crustal physical property evolution through time.

Here, we present a new dataset of physical property measurements from the upper oceanic crust recovered during the South Atlantic Transect (IODP Expeditions X390–393), spanning basalt ages of approximately 6 to 61 Ma. The dataset includes P-wave velocity (Vp), pycnometry measurements, and X-ray micro-CT image analyses. The new dataset, integrated with existing shipboard data, provides a comprehensive view of low-temperature alteration processes.

Micro-CT analyses reveal that basalt samples exhibit a highly heterogeneous porosity structure. Primary porosity is dominated by vesicles that are variably filled with secondary minerals; many vesicles remain partially unfilled or display clay coatings, indicating incomplete calcite precipitation. Secondary porosity occurs as micro-porosity (< 10 micron) associated with volcanic glass, olivine and plagioclase alteration, as well as fracture networks. Two generations of cross-cutting fractures are identified, filled by clay and calcite, respectively, reflecting multiple stages of fluid circulation and mineral precipitation.

Variations in porosity are closely linked to volcanic emplacement style and microstructural characteristics, including groundmass grain size, phenocryst abundance, vesicle distribution, and are positively proportional to the degree of alteration.

Our findings provide new constraints on the mechanisms governing physical property evolution in ageing oceanic crust and have important implications for upscaling models of CO₂ sequestration in basaltic formations, where porosity, permeability, and fracture connectivity are critical parameters.

How to cite: Amadori, C., Robustelli Test, C., Harris, M., Alvarez-Borges, F., Coggon, R., and Teagle, D.: Porosity-dependent physical property changes of the oceanic crust at the South Atlantic Transect (IODP X390-393), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21080, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21080, 2026.

EGU26-21577 | ECS | Orals | GD2.3

Geochemical Modeling Insights into the Formation of Black Smoker Fluids 

Jasper Engelmann, Alexander Gysi, and Lars Rüpke

Hydrothermal circulation at mid-ocean ridges represents one of the largest points of exchange of energy and chemistry between Earth’s surface and interior. In basalt-hosted systems, black smoker chimneys vent metal-rich fluids at up to ~400°C that fuel unique ecosystems and produce massive sulfide deposits. Recharging seawater reacts with the surrounding basalt at increasing pressure and temperature, drastically changing fluid chemistry. Yet, the extent and shape of hydrothermal recharge pathways remain poorly constrained.

Here, we present a series of geochemical models, investigating these processes through equilibrium thermodynamics: In a system of 16 elements (Si, Ti, Al, Fe, Mg, Cu, Pb, Zn, Ca, Na, K, S, C, Cl, H, O), we test a broad range of hydrothermal recharge pathways with various pressure and temperature profiles and fluid/rock ratios. Multi-pass sequential reactor chain models are set up using xgems (https://github.com/gemshub/xgems), the Python package derived from GEMS [1], and the MINES thermodynamic database [2]. Simplified recharge pathways are varied in circulation depth (1–5 km below seafloor), peak temperature (370–430°C) and integrated fluid/rock ratio. Using fluids derived from these models, a second set of models is run, reproducing the basalt alteration patterns observed in rocks below the TAG hydrothermal field. Based on comparison to measured TAG vent fluids, these models offer three main conclusions:

  • For significant metal leaching matching black smoker fluids, peak temperatures of hydrothermal circulation need to exceed 400°C.
  • Relatively shallow circulation (< 3 km bsf), and thus shallow heat sources, favorably result in fluid compositions matching black smokers.
  • Black smoker fluids only result from rock-buffered reactions. This implies that recharge pathways must contain a significant fraction of fresh basalt throughout the lifetime of a hydrothermal system.

 

References

[1] Kulik, D. A., Wagner, T., Dmytrieva, S. V., Kosakowski, G., Hingerl, F. F., Chudnenko, K. V., & Berner, U. R. (2013). GEM-Selektor geochemical modeling package: revised algorithm and GEMS3K numerical kernel for coupled simulation codes. Computational Geosciences. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10596-012-9310-6

[2] Gysi, A. P., Hurtig, N. C., Pan, R., Miron, D. G., & Kulik, D. A. (2023). MINES thermodynamic database. New Mexico Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Version 23. https://doi.org/10.58799/mines-tdb

How to cite: Engelmann, J., Gysi, A., and Rüpke, L.: Geochemical Modeling Insights into the Formation of Black Smoker Fluids, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21577, 2026.

EGU26-21979 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.3

Global on-axis hydrothermal element fluxes at submarine plate boundaries 

Alexander Diehl and Wolfgang Bach

Estimates of on‑axis hydrothermal element fluxes commonly assume that basalt‑hosted, black smoker‑type vent fluids dominate global hydrothermal cooling of the oceanic lithosphere. However, hydrothermal vent fluids exhibit substantial compositional diversity related to different substrate types (basaltic, ultramafic, sedimented, intermediate‑felsic) and geological settings (mid-ocean ridges, back‑arc spreading centers, volcanic arcs), which has not yet been adequately incorporated into global flux estimates.

Here, we account for this diversity by analyzing the current plate boundary configuration and a global database of hydrothermal vent fluid compositions (MARHYS Database, Version 4.0). We calculate weighting factors for the relative contributions of different hydrothermal fluid types to lithospheric cooling by integrating ridge and arc strike lengths, spreading rates, and substrate distributions across plate boundary types. Using these weighting factors, we estimate the partitioning of vent fluid types and quantify global submarine on-axis hydrothermal element fluxes.

We show that element-to-energy flux ratios vary significantly among geological settings and differ markedly from characteristics of purely basalt-hosted, fast-spreading ridges. As a result, substantially different fluxes are obtained for several key elements (e.g., H₂, CH₄, Fe) associated with hydrothermal cooling across diverse plate boundaries and substrate types. Our results demonstrate that oceanic element fluxes are regionally variable and that the partitioning of plate boundary types (e.g., ultraslow versus fast‑spreading ridges; volcanic arcs and back‑arc spreading centers versus mid‑ocean ridges) plays a major role in regulating element transfer between the oceanic crust and the ocean over geological timescales.

How to cite: Diehl, A. and Bach, W.: Global on-axis hydrothermal element fluxes at submarine plate boundaries, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21979, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21979, 2026.

TS3 – Active Tectonics, Seismicity, Kinematics, and Dynamics

EGU26-441 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

A Surface-Breaking Capable Fault in the Greater Caucasus: New Evidence from the 123-km-Long Kur Fault, Azerbaijan 

Giovanni Piccio, Tomáš Pánek, Federico Pasquarè Mariotto, Michal Břežný, Valentina Alice Bracchi, Elisa Dell'Era, Laura Panzeri, Anna Galli, Gulam Babayev, and Alessandro Tibaldi

In this work, we present the results of a structural and geological investigation carried out along the 123-km-long Kur Fault, the frontal structure of the Kura Fold-and-Thrust Belt (Greater Caucasus, Azerbaijan). For the first time, field surveys and paleoseismological trenching revealed a fault plane that reaches the surface along this regional structure, exposing a clear tectonic contact where Lower Pleistocene deposits overthrust Holocene sediments. This observation is crucial, as it demonstrates that the frontal fault of the Greater Caucasus is a capable fault, despite the lack of strong historical earthquakes reported in the area.

In addition to the tectonic contact described above, the Lower Pleistocene deposits exposed in the trench are cut by numerous fault planes, allowing us to reconstruct a stress tensor indicating a purely compressive regime, characterised by reverse dip-slip motion and a horizontal σ₁ oriented NNE–SSW. The orientation of this σ₁ is parallel to both the GPS velocity vectors and the P-axes of available focal mechanisms, suggesting that a NNE–SSW compressional stress field has remained stable from the Pleistocene to the present day. This σ₁ direction is also orthogonal to the regional strike of the Kur Fault (WNW–ESE) and matches the orientation observed at the trench site.

In the same area of the trench site, we identified three distinct river terraces associated with the Kura River. The uppermost and oldest terrace is currently uplifted to 37 m above the modern river level and has been dated to 10 kyr using the OSL method; it displays a tilting of about 5°, consistent with the kinematics of the Kur Fault. The most recent and lowest terrace lies 4–6 m above the present river level, also indicating recent uplift and tilting of the palaeoterraces as a result of active tectonics along the Kur Fault.

Geological evidence from the trench site, combined with uplift data from the river terraces, indicate an average Holocene shortening rate that is greater than the value inferred from GPS measurements. Additionally, the exposed fault plane corresponds to a ~31-km-long segment of the Kur Fault which, based on empirical scaling relationships, is capable of generating an earthquake of approximately M 6.8.

The work was carried out entirely through field data collected during two dedicated campaigns within the framework of the NATO Project G5907 – Science for Peace and Security Programme, which focuses on geohazard assessment around the Shamkir Hydroelectric Power Station (https://shamkirproject.unimib.it/).

How to cite: Piccio, G., Pánek, T., Pasquarè Mariotto, F., Břežný, M., Bracchi, V. A., Dell'Era, E., Panzeri, L., Galli, A., Babayev, G., and Tibaldi, A.: A Surface-Breaking Capable Fault in the Greater Caucasus: New Evidence from the 123-km-Long Kur Fault, Azerbaijan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-441, 2026.

EGU26-753 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Integrated Seismological and Geodetic Analysis of the 2025 Balıkesir–Sındırgı Earthquakes 

Mısra Gedik, Tülay Kaya Eken, Çağkan Serhun Zoroğlu, and Haluk Özener

Western Türkiye, situated on the westward-extruding Anatolian Plate, is one of the most actively deforming regions of the Eurasian-Arabian-African tectonic system. The shear regime of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF) Zone to the north and subduction of the Hellenic Trench to the south together drive significant N–S extension across western Türkiye. This extension is accommodated by major E-W-trending graben systems, including Gediz, Simav, and Menderes, making the region an excellent natural laboratory for studying stress transfer and seismic hazard. This tectonic setting, together with elevated heat flow and locally high crustal permeability, gives rise to a highly complex seismotectonic environment with multiple active fault systems in the Balıkesir–Sındırgı region. In 2025, two earthquakes (Mw 6.1 and Mw 6.0) ruptured the Balıkesir–Sındırgı segment of the Simav Fault Zone (SFZ) in this region, initiating an intense aftershock sequence characterized by Mw 3–4 events and several Mw ≥ 5 shocks. This short, spatially clustered sequence offers an opportunity to investigate the stress transfer, seismic productivity, and coseismic deformation in this complex extensional domain. In this study, to understand these processes better, both historical and instrumental period events are compiled and analyzed to describe the spatio-temporal distribution of earthquakes before and after the 2025 events. Coseismic Coulomb stress changes (ΔCFS) are computed for each mainshock, and the results are compared with the aftershock distribution. A regional ΔCFS analysis is also performed to assess cumulative loading on neighboring fault segments. To evaluate seismic productivity and magnitude–frequency characteristics, a- and b-values are estimated using the Gutenberg–Richter relationship, and spatial variations in b-values are compared with the ΔCFS models. Furthermore, Sentinel-1 SAR images are analyzed with the Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) technique to map coseismic deformation and to define the source geometry and slip behaviour. Finally, these results are discussed in conjunction with published seismic velocity, magnetotelluric, and geothermal studies, which together indicate a relatively thin and thermally elevated crust that may facilitate shallow normal/oblique faulting and efficient stress transfer.

How to cite: Gedik, M., Kaya Eken, T., Zoroğlu, Ç. S., and Özener, H.: Integrated Seismological and Geodetic Analysis of the 2025 Balıkesir–Sındırgı Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-753, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-753, 2026.

EGU26-779 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

Reconstructing Quaternary Fault System Geometry and Kinematics in the Campania–Lucania Apennines: a comprehensive perspective 

Ambra Palmucci, Francesco Brozzetti, Assel Akimbekova, Simone Bello, Maurizio Ercoli, Cristina Pauselli, Filippo Carboni, Massimiliano Rinaldo Barchi, Giusy Lavecchia, Gabriela Fernández Viejo, Patricia Cadenas Martínez, and Daniele Cirillo

The Campania-Lucania Apennines represent one of the most structurally complex sectors of the Apennines, characterized by composite stratigraphy, recurrent seismicity, and significant tectonic activity. Historical and instrumental earthquakes, including the 1980 Irpinia event (Mw 6.9), highlight the region’s active deformation. Previous studies attribute much of this seismicity to extensional tectonics associated with Pleistocene-Holocene normal faults, dipping both eastward and westward, which have contributed to the formation of NW-SE-oriented continental basins.
This work investigates whether the extensional deformation pattern observed in the northeastern Alburni Mts – dominated by east-dipping normal faults splaying upward from a regional synthetic detachment plane – extends across the broader internal sector of the Campania-Lucania arc, from the Sele Plain to Agri Valley. To address this issue, we integrate geological and geophysical datasets to reconstruct the trajectory and kinematics of the extensional faults and the subsurface geometry of the associated syntectonic basins.
The present study relies on a multidisciplinary approach. Field surveys and reprocessed published seismic data were combined to produce a regional-scale geological–structural map covering ~9,000 km², from the southern Picentini Mts to the northwestern slopes of Mt. Pollino. These surface constraints supported the construction of four shallow geological cross-sections.
The subsurface interpretation followed a structured workflow that included calibration – throughout synthetic seismogram generation using available well sonic logs in the study area – of seismic data interpreted on twelve commercial 2D seismic lines provided by Eni S.p.A (Italian energy company) and additional seismic profiles from the ViDEPI database, incorporated after being digitized from pdf format into SEG-Y to ensure compatibility and consistent quality of interpreted grids. Seismic interpretation employed multiple techniques, including literature analysis and the digitization of vintage seismic profiles, through raster-to-SEG-Y conversion, for subsequent processing in Move® and Kingdom® platforms, enabling methodological refinement through cross-comparison for this highly complex region.
Depth conversion of the resulted seismic interpretation from two-way travel time to depth, advanced the generation of crustal-scale model. This allowed comparison of contractional and extensional structures and supported 2D restoration analyses to quantify the elongation associated to Quaternary extension, along transects. The resulting 3D model, built from depth-converted  seismic transects down to the Apulian Platform roof, reveals key structural features as: i) the geometry of extensional fault systems and the depth to detachment, ii) hierarchical relationships between normal and reverse faults, and iii) the morphology of Quaternary syntectonic basins with their sedimentary infill. These findings contribute to a comprehensive 3D representation of active extensional faults in the southern Apennines, developed within the framework of the MUSE 4D PRIN project.
This integrated approach demonstrates the value of combining geological field observations with seismic interpretation and well data to constrain fault architecture and basin evolution in highly complex tectonic settings. The results provide new insights into the structural framework of the Campania-Lucania Apennines, with implications for seismic hazard assessment and geodynamic models of the southern Apennines.

How to cite: Palmucci, A., Brozzetti, F., Akimbekova, A., Bello, S., Ercoli, M., Pauselli, C., Carboni, F., Barchi, M. R., Lavecchia, G., Fernández Viejo, G., Cadenas Martínez, P., and Cirillo, D.: Reconstructing Quaternary Fault System Geometry and Kinematics in the Campania–Lucania Apennines: a comprehensive perspective, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-779, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-779, 2026.

EGU26-1240 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

The 2025 Sındırgı Earthquake Sequence: Linking Fault Geometry, Stress Transfer and Deep Structure 

Hilal Yalcin, Akın Kürçer, Ozan Karayazı, Oğuzhan Yalvaç, and Çağatay Çal

The 10 August 2025 Mw 6.0 Sındırgı earthquake occurred in one of the most tectonically complex regions of Inner Western Anatolia, where Aegean extension interacts with the westward extrusion of the Anatolian microplate. Despite initial reports indicating a NW–SE–oriented normal-faulting mechanism, the spatial distribution of aftershocks and early field observations point to a more intricate rupture behaviour. Rapid field investigations by the General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA) on 11 August 2025 revealed no evidence of surface rupture or localized coseismic deformation along the Sındırgı, Düvertepe or Gelenbe fault zones.

Full-waveform moment tensor inversion of the mainshock and 31 aftershocks yielded robust, well-constrained focal mechanisms. The mainshock exhibits a NW–SE striking oblique-reverse faulting mechanism, with ~90% double-couple content and a centroid depth of approximately 10 km. Aftershock mechanisms display a clear spatial partitioning: reverse and strike-slip components dominate south of the Sındırgı Segment, whereas normal faulting is prevalent to the north. The aftershock sequence further demonstrates a pronounced eastward migration pattern.

Statistical analysis of 6,711 earthquakes recorded between 20 July and 1 September 2025 indicates low regional b-values (0.60–0.70), suggesting elevated differential stress. Following the mainshock, b-values increase toward the eastern portion of the aftershock zone (0.75–0.80), reflecting evolving stress conditions. The Omori p-value (~0.18) indicates an unusually slow decay of aftershocks, consistent with a prolonged period of seismic activation. Stress tensor inversion of 32 focal mechanisms reveals a strike-slip–dominated regime with NE–SW–oriented maximum compression, in agreement with the regional tectonic pattern.

Integration of regional magnetotelluric (MT) profiles shows that the 2025 Sındırgı sequence coincides with deep, low-resistivity zones interpreted as thermally weakened or partially molten lithospheric domains beneath the Simav–İzmir–Balıkesir structural corridor. These MT-based lithospheric anomalies spatially correlate with previous major earthquake sequences, including the 2011 Simav and 2020 Akhisar events, implying a persistent lithospheric control on fault kinematics, stress localization and seismogenesis.

Overall, the 2025 Sındırgı earthquake sequence highlights the combined role of structural complexity and deep lithospheric processes in determining seismic behaviour in Inner Western Anatolia. The integration of seismological, geological and geophysical datasets provides a comprehensive framework for understanding rupture dynamics in this long-lived, active deformation zone.

Keywords :Sındırgı Earthquake Sequence; Moment tensor; Stress tensor inversion; b-value; Aftershock migration; Western Anatolia; Magnetotellurics; Active tectonics.

 

How to cite: Yalcin, H., Kürçer, A., Karayazı, O., Yalvaç, O., and Çal, Ç.: The 2025 Sındırgı Earthquake Sequence: Linking Fault Geometry, Stress Transfer and Deep Structure, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1240, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1240, 2026.

EGU26-1476 | Orals | TS3.1

Tectonic Geomorphology of the Batee Fault Inferred from LiDAR: Implications for Fault Kinematics and Segment Linkage in the Great Sumatran Fault System 

Gayatri Indah Marliyani, Yann Klinger, Hurien Helmi, Wenqian Yao, Rahmat Triyono, Jimmi Nugraha, and Andi Azhar Rusdin

The Batee Fault in northern Sumatra represents one of the most enigmatic structures within the Great Sumatran Fault System (GSFS), where fault connectivity, kinematic transitions, and segment boundaries remain poorly understood. Its subdued geomorphic expression, dense vegetation, and limited previous mapping have contributed to long-standing uncertainty regarding its role in accommodating strain in the northern portion of the system. To address this gap, we present the first systematic tectonic geomorphology analysis of the Batee Fault using newly acquired high-resolution airborne LiDAR data. The LiDAR-derived bare-earth DEM (1 m resolution) reveals a continuous but internally complex right-lateral strike-slip fault trace marked by offset and deflected drainages, shutter ridges, linear valleys, pressure ridges, and localized sag depressions. These features allow us to refine the fault geometry, delineate distributed deformation zones, and distinguish between primary and secondary strands. We integrate geomorphic mapping with structural measurements and regional tectonic context to assess fault kinematics and potential linkages to adjacent GSFS segments. This study provides the most detailed surface characterization of the Batee Fault to date and highlight the value of high-resolution LiDAR in resolving fault traces in tropical, low-relief environments. The improved understanding of the Batee Fault’s geometry and kinematics contributes to refining GSFS segmentation models and enhancing seismic hazard assessments in this tectonically active region.

How to cite: Marliyani, G. I., Klinger, Y., Helmi, H., Yao, W., Triyono, R., Nugraha, J., and Rusdin, A. A.: Tectonic Geomorphology of the Batee Fault Inferred from LiDAR: Implications for Fault Kinematics and Segment Linkage in the Great Sumatran Fault System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1476, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1476, 2026.

EGU26-3241 | Posters on site | TS3.1

LiDAR-Based Geological Mapping of the Central Coastal Range, Taiwan: New Constraints on Fault Systems and Arc Deformation 

Yu-Chang Chan, Yu-Cheng Hsu, Po-Lien Chao, Ting-Yu Pai, Cheng-Wei Sun, Chih-Tung Chen, and Jyr-Ching Hu

We present a high-resolution geological reinterpretation of the central Coastal Range of Taiwan based on newly produced LiDAR-assisted geological maps integrated with targeted field verification. LiDAR-derived digital elevation models (DEMs) overcome limitations imposed by poor exposure and dense vegetation and allow systematic mapping of stratigraphic boundaries and fault geometries in this key segment of the Taiwan subduction–collision system. The new maps reveal several previously unrecognized structural features. The Tuluanshan volcanic sequence contains laterally continuous, thick shear zones expressed by aligned geomorphic lineaments and systematic topographic offsets. These shear zones demonstrate significant internal deformation of the volcanic rocks, indicating that the Tuluanshan Formation actively accommodated strain rather than behaving as a rigid volcanic block. Along the western margin of the central Coastal Range, normal faults are commonly observed and consistently occur adjacent to contractional structures. Their spatial association with a major west-verging fault suggests that extension postdated major thrusting and records post-thrust extensional deformation, potentially driven by gravitational collapse or internal reorganization of the Coastal Range wedge. LiDAR-based mapping also significantly refines the distribution of the Lichi Mélange. Mélange boundaries are sharply delineated, and exotic blocks within the Lichi Formation are systematically documented, providing new constraints on mélange formation and transport and underscoring its structural importance in the collision zone. In addition, several previously unrecognized north–south–trending thrust faults are identified, separating sedimentary basins from the Tuluanshan volcanic sequence and defining fundamental tectonic boundaries that segment deformation within the central Coastal Range. These results demonstrate the critical role of LiDAR-based geological mapping in resolving complex structural relationships and provide new constraints on deformation processes during arc–continent collision in Taiwan.

How to cite: Chan, Y.-C., Hsu, Y.-C., Chao, P.-L., Pai, T.-Y., Sun, C.-W., Chen, C.-T., and Hu, J.-C.: LiDAR-Based Geological Mapping of the Central Coastal Range, Taiwan: New Constraints on Fault Systems and Arc Deformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3241, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3241, 2026.

EGU26-3681 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

Distributed right-lateral strain at the northern boundary of the Quito-Latacunga microblock influenced by arc-volcanism? 

Nicolas Harrichhausen, Léo Marconato, Laurence Audin, Pierre Lacan, Stéphane Baize, Hervé Jomard, Alexandra Alvarado, James Hollingsworth, Pierre-Henri Blard, Patricia Ann Mothes, Frédérique Rolandoné, and Iván Dario Ortiz Martin

Remote sensing and field data indicate distributed right-lateral faulting at the northern edge of the geodetically defined Quito-Latacunga microblock where recent volcanic inflation and seismicity have also been recorded.  Off the west coast of Ecuador and Colombia, oblique subduction of the Nazca Plate beneath the South America plate induces northeastward motion of the Northern Andean Sliver relative to stable South America. Recent geodetic studies show this sliver comprises several independent microblocks, with strain accommodated at each of their boundaries. The Quito-Latacunga microblock, located in the densely populated Interandean valley, shows approximately 3 mm/yr of right-lateral strain at its northern boundary. We use available digital terrain models (DTMs), local DTMs derived from Pleiades satellite stereo-imagery, InSAR, Google Earth imagery, and field surveys to demonstrate deformation at the northern boundary is distributed across several northeast-striking right-lateral faults in Ecuador and Colombia. InSAR shows that a recent 2022 M 5.7 earthquake resulted in line-of-sight displacement of 5 cm to 13 cm along one of the east-northeast striking, right-lateral faults. Offset sediments and glacial features indicate recent earthquakes on two other faults north of and subparallel with this rupture. Displaced glacial landforms along one of these faults show slip rates between 0.8 and 6.1 mm/yr, suggesting geologic slip rates that could be higher than geodetic ones. We suggest that ongoing volcanic activity at the nearby Chile-Cerro Negro volcano, and potentially Galeras volcano to the north may influence earthquakes on these faults, enhancing slip and earthquake rates and localizing deformation.

How to cite: Harrichhausen, N., Marconato, L., Audin, L., Lacan, P., Baize, S., Jomard, H., Alvarado, A., Hollingsworth, J., Blard, P.-H., Mothes, P. A., Rolandoné, F., and Ortiz Martin, I. D.: Distributed right-lateral strain at the northern boundary of the Quito-Latacunga microblock influenced by arc-volcanism?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3681, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3681, 2026.

The ML 6.4 Dapu earthquake, which struck southwestern Taiwan on January 20, 2025, occurred in the western foothills belt, an area characterized by folds and thrust faults. The earthquake sequence exhibits intricate fault interactions, with recent observations suggesting a conjugate rupture pattern involving both east-dipping detachment faults and west-dipping basement structures. However, the detailed subsurface structure remains poorly constrained due to the lack of a high-resolution 3D velocity model in this region. To elucidate the seismogenic structure, we conducted a joint inversion of seismic arrival times and gravity data. We utilized a comprehensive dataset integrating: (1) long-term background seismicity recorded by the Central Weather Administration (CWA) from 2012 to 2020, (2) the 2025 Dapu mainshock and its aftershock sequence, and (3) dense gravity observation data in the study area. By incorporating gravity data, our model provides enhanced resolution for shallow crustal structures and density constraints that complement traditional seismic tomography. We focus on imaging the high-resolution 3D velocity and density structures to identify the specific lithological or structural boundaries governing the rupture. Furthermore, we investigate the temporal variations in seismic velocity structure before and after the mainshock to detect potential stress relaxation or fluid migration processes. In this presentation, we will demonstrate the correlation between the derived structural heterogeneity and the aftershock distribution, providing new physical constraints on the seismotectonics of the Dapu earthquake sequence.

How to cite: Kao, T.-W., Yen, H.-Y., and Lo, Y.-T.: Seismogenic Structure and Temporal Velocity Variations of the 2025 ML 6.4 Dapu Earthquake (Taiwan): Insights from Joint Inversion of Seismic and Gravity Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3754, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3754, 2026.

The Hualien area, situated at the collision boundary between the Eurasian Plate and the Philippine Sea Plate, is the most seismically active region in Taiwan. Despite numerous studies, the detailed subsurface geometry and fault distribution remain incompletely resolved due to the complex tectonic interactions between the plates. This study aims to refine the 3D velocity structure using seismic data collected by the Central Weather Administration Seismological Network (CWASN) and the Taiwan Strong Motion Instrumentation Program (TSMIP) from 2012 to 2024. To handle the massive dataset and improve catalog completeness, we employed deep-learning algorithms—using EQTransformer (Mousavi et al., 2020) for phase picking and GaMMA (Zhu et al., 2022) for phase association. Subsequently, we applied the double-difference tomography method (TomoDD; Zhang and Thurber, 2003), incorporating gravity constraints to better resolve shallow velocities. We performed a sequential inversion to obtain high-resolution P- and S-wave velocity structures with a grid spacing of 5 km. Our preliminary static inversion results demonstrate high resolution in onshore regions and reveal critical structural features within the collision zone. These structural geometries are generally consistent with previous tomographic models (e.g., Huang et al., 2014), ensuring the reliability of our static velocity baseline. Building on this reliable static baseline (derived from 2012–2020 data), we further investigate temporal velocity variations (4D tomography) by integrating subsequent data from 2021–2024. By integrating the refined velocity models with relocated seismicity, we aim to provide a more detailed characterization of the complex subsurface structures and their spatiotemporal variations in this active collision zone.

How to cite: Hsu, C.-W., Yen, H.-Y., and Lo, Y.-T.: Investigating Spatiotemporal Variations of Subsurface Velocity Structure in the Hualien Area, Taiwan: Insights from AI-Enhanced Seismic Tomography (2012–2024), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3755, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3755, 2026.

EGU26-5215 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Near-surface shear-wave velocity heterogeneity and site effects along the intraplate Hockai Fault Zone (Eastern Belgium) from ambient noise measurements 

Sonia Devi, Hans-Balder Havenith, Valmy Dorival, and Helosie Jordans

The Hockai Fault Zone (HFZ) is a ~42 km-long intraplate fault system in eastern Belgium, located within the Rhenohercynian Zone of the Variscan orogenic belt. It has produced the strongest historical earthquake in the region (Mw 6.3, 1692 Verviers). It is also associated with clusters of slow-moving and reactivated landslides. Despite this relevance, the geometry of the HFZ, its terminations and its influence on near-surface mechanical properties remain insufficiently constrained.

In this study, we present a dense ambient noise dataset and ongoing quantitative modeling aimed at resolving site-specific seismic response and shallow subsurface structure. Multiple field campaigns were conducted along and across the HFZ using broadband (Guralp 6TD) and short-period (Lennartz LE-3D/5s) sensors. Single-station horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio (HVSR) analysis was performed following established SESAME-type criteria, including time-window selection, stability tests, and frequency-dependent uncertainty assessment. The resulting HVSR curves display well-defined and spatially variable fundamental resonance frequencies, indicating strong lateral heterogeneity in near-surface conditions.

To quantitatively interpret these observations, HVSR curve inversion was initiated to derive 1D Vs models, constrained by local geological information. Preliminary results reveal pronounced impedance contrasts within the upper tens of meters, interpreted as the combined effect of weathered bedrock, sedimentary pockets, and fault-related damage zones. These velocity contrasts are expected to exert a first-order control on seismic amplification along the HFZ.

Ongoing HVSR inversions, constrained by local geology, reveal strong shear-wave velocity contrasts within the upper tens of meters, attributed to weathered bedrock, sedimentary pockets, and fault-related damage. This work demonstrates the effectiveness of passive seismic methods for site-response characterization in low-seismicity intraplate regions and provides new constraints relevant for seismic hazard and landslide assessment along the HFZ.

How to cite: Devi, S., Havenith, H.-B., Dorival, V., and Jordans, H.: Near-surface shear-wave velocity heterogeneity and site effects along the intraplate Hockai Fault Zone (Eastern Belgium) from ambient noise measurements, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5215, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5215, 2026.

The Bayan Har block, located in the central part of the Tibet Plateau, is a key region characterized by intense tectonic activity and frequent major earthquakes within the plateau. It also serves as a crucial pathway for the eastward extrusion of the Tibet Plateau and continental shortening deformation. Systematically characterizing the current deformation and strain distribution of this block holds significant scientific value for understanding the plateau's tectonic deformation mechanisms and potential seismic hazards. Utilizing Sentinel-1 satellite data from 2015-2025 and integrating GNSS data, we obtained high-resolution three-dimensional deformation and strain rate fields for the Bayan Har block. The results reveal that the east-west component of the 3D velocity field exhibits significant cross-fault velocity discontinuities and gradients near the East Kunlun Fault, Xianshuihe Fault, and some secondary faults, reflecting the dominant deformation features of the overall eastward escape of the Bayan Har block and its boundary strike-slip faults. The north-south component is relatively smooth, primarily reflecting block-scale differential motion and GNSS interpolation constraints. The vertical component is dominated by slow subsidence, with localized patchy anomalies closely related to non-tectonic signals such as permafrost, hydrology, and surface processes. Current strain in the Bayan Har block is significantly concentrated along its boundaries and several major strike-slip fault zones. High shear strain rate belts spatially coincide with large faults like the East Kunlun and Xianshuihe faults, while areal strain rates reveal a mixed tectonic environment dominated by compression around strike-slip faults, with localized extension. Given that the InSAR observation period includes postseismic recovery processes from strong earthquakes such as the 2001 Kunlun Mountains and 2021 Maduo events, the high strain rates and pronounced cross-fault gradients along the faults reflect the combined effects of transient postseismic deformation and interseismic steady-state locking.

How to cite: Qu, C. and Chen, H.: Observation and Study on High Resolution Deformation and Strain Field Characteristics of the Bayan Har Block in the Central Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5281, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5281, 2026.

EGU26-5531 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Geophysical evidence of neotectonic activity on the Aller Valley Fault system in northern Germany 

David Tanner, Christian Brandes, Ulrich Polom, Jan Igel, Jutta Winsemann, and Sumiko Tsukamoto

Northern Germany is commonly regarded as a low seismicity area, but a number of historic earthquakes with intensities of up to VII have occurred in this region during the last 1200 years. The Aller Valley fault system, with a length of about 250 km, is one of the major fault systems in northern Germany. It strikes NW-SE and extends from the Magdeburg area over Wolfsburg across Lower Saxony to the area of Bremen and Oldenburg, close to the border to the Netherlands. This fault was highly active in the Mesozoic. Reflection seismic profiles of the petroleum industry show that during the Triassic it was a normal growth fault, which was inverted during Late Cretaceous compression. In addition, a large number of earthquakes have occurred close to the Aller Valley Fault system between AD997 and 1576.

We carried out seven, high-resolution, shear(S)-wave reflection seismic profiles accompanied by georadar in an area of the Aller Valley Fault system near Lehringen in Lower Saxony. Shear waves propagate up to twelve times slower than P-waves in unconsolidated sediments, making it the ideal tool to investigate the near-surface. The geological map displays a rhomboidal outcrop of Eemian sediments in this area, which we hypothese is a pull-apart basin.

The S-wave seismic profiles image a number of Eemian and Weichselian depocentres at depths of 10-30 m that are progressively displaced north-eastwards by a series of steep to vertical faults that propagate from depth. The georadar data provide a high-resolution imaging of the upper 5 m of the Weichselian sediments and support the findings of the seismics. In some georadar profiles, fault structures in the Weichselian sediments are imaged, indicating that the faults must still have been active after sedimentation. OSL-dating of a hand drill core has substantiated the geological interpretation. We postulate that the recent fault activity is due to glacial isostatic adjustment.

How to cite: Tanner, D., Brandes, C., Polom, U., Igel, J., Winsemann, J., and Tsukamoto, S.: Geophysical evidence of neotectonic activity on the Aller Valley Fault system in northern Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5531, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5531, 2026.

EGU26-6444 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Assessing the feasibility of DInSAR for detecting coseismic deformation in small-magnitude earthquakes: the 2023 ML 4.4 Umbertide earthquake (Central Italy) 

Riccardo Gaspari, Martina Occhipinti, Claudio De Luca, Fernando Monterroso, Federica Riva, Ioannis Doukakos, Shaila Amorini, Giacomo Cenci, Massimiliano Rinaldo Barchi, and Massimiliano Porreca

Differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (DInSAR) techniques are largely used to detect coseismic deformation patterns associated with large-to-moderate magnitude earthquakes. In contrast, small earthquakes (M<5), although far more frequent and potentially crucial for understanding regional stress regimes and active faulting, generally produce weak surface deformation that is difficult to detect using remote sensing approaches.

In this work, we integrate relocated seismicity, observed DInSAR deformation, and the Okada elastic dislocation model to infer insights into the geometry and mechanics of the causative fault of the 2023 ML 4.4 Umbertide extensional earthquake in Central Italy. The seismicity was relocated using the Non-Linear Earthquake Location Algorithm in combination with the three-dimensional velocity model developed specifically for the area.

We benefited of Sentinel-1 Line Of Sight (LOS) displacement maps generated over ascending and descending orbits through the EPOSAR service of the European Plate Observing System (EPOS) Research Infrastructure. These data were exploited to derive the vertical and east-west deformation components using a recently developed open-source Python tool capable of combining multiple LOS displacement maps. The results reveal up to ~2 cm of subsidence and ~1.5 cm of eastward motion in the epicentral area, suggesting the activation of a NE-dipping normal fault, consistent with the relocated seismicity distribution.

The focal mechanism parameters of this plane were adopted for the Okada modeling. According to the maximum-likelihood solution of the ML 4.4 mainshock relocation, the source was modeled at 3.5 km of depth. The best-fitting solution between the modeled and observed deformation is a rectangular planar fault measuring 2.3 × 2.7 km (L × W), with a maximum slip of 20 cm.

Despite the earthquake’s limited magnitude and the surface deformation signal being partially affected by atmospheric disturbances, properly applied DInSAR techniques can provide a detailed estimation of surface displacement. The results demonstrate DInSAR’s ability to detect deformation induced by small-magnitude earthquakes in a seismically active region, with the potential to improve active fault mapping and seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Gaspari, R., Occhipinti, M., De Luca, C., Monterroso, F., Riva, F., Doukakos, I., Amorini, S., Cenci, G., Barchi, M. R., and Porreca, M.: Assessing the feasibility of DInSAR for detecting coseismic deformation in small-magnitude earthquakes: the 2023 ML 4.4 Umbertide earthquake (Central Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6444, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6444, 2026.

At the present stage of tectogenesis, the southern slope of the Greater Caucasus reveals itself by relatively higher seismic activity within Azerbaijan territory, where more than 80 earthquakes with M ≥ 4 took place over the past century, whereas 20 of them was with M ≥ 5. Seismic activity in this region is associated with ongoing, intense structural restructuring here with significant amplitudes of recent movements in the underthrust-thrust interaction zone of the South and North Caucasian continental blocks (microplates) within the boundaries of the collisional interaction of the Eurasian and Afro-Arabian continents. The Earth crust of the region is characterized by tectonic heterogeneity, expressed by the complex relationships between its constituent structural-formational units with different lithological-stratigraphic sections, deformation patterns, and geological development history.

With this study we analyze active tectonics of the region from the viewpoint of the mechanism of the ongoing pseudosubduction process within convergence zone of the south and north Caucasian microplates. We have also analyzed and interpreted seismological data along with GPS monitoring results in relation to geodynamic activity with determining of correlations with deep structure peculiarities. An analysis of the distribution of earthquake foci indicates the existence of structural-dynamic relationships between them and subvertical and subhorizontal contacts in the earth's crust.   During the continental stage of Alpine tectogenesis (since the end of the Miocene), intensive lateral compression process was caused by intrusion of the frontal wedge of the Arabian indenter into the buffer structures of the southern frame of Eurasia. This geodynamic phenomenon is actual also for present day time. This fact evidenced by GPS measurements on recent geodynamic activity, which demonstrates intensive (up to 20 mm/year) movement of the Southern Caucasus block toward Northern Caucasus microplate. It is suggested that this process led to observed seismic activity from historical period, where the earthquakes occurred mainly in the southern slope’s accretionary prism area and the adjacent strip of the Southern Caucasus microplate.  

Likewise, we also analyzed and correlated some range of strong (M>5.0) seismic events that occurred within study area until 2026, involving their fault plane solutions. The focal mechanisms of the earthquakes reveal various types of mechanisms, but mostly near-vertical, normal and strike-slip faulting mechanisms. As a result of our study, we have also generated a digital 3-D tectonic-geodynamic model of the geological environment along with earthquakes’ in-depth distribution, which in turn explains from geological point of view the causes of ongoing seismic activity within study area.

How to cite: Aliyev, F. and Kangarli, T.: Tectono-Geodynamic model of the earthquake’s foci zones of the southern slope of the Greater Caucasus (within Azerbaijan) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6996, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6996, 2026.

EGU26-7303 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

Seismic imaging across a rupture-limiting section boundary of the Alpine Fault, New Zealand  

Karen Lythgoe, Ben Farrar, Jack-Andrew Smith, Andrew Curtis, John Townend, Calum Chamberlain, Emily Warren-Smith, and Jennifer Jenkins

The Alpine Fault in Aotearoa New Zealand is a major plate boundary strike-slip fault, that has hosted great earthquakes in the past and is forecast to have a high chance of hosting an earthquake of magnitude 7 or greater in the next fifty years. The fault is thought to be segmented based on changes in fault geometry and kinematics, with sections rupturing both individually and in combination. We focus on an area where the fault is thought to transition between a vertical geometry to a dipping geometry, which has been a rupture boundary in past earthquakes. Specifically, surface mapping indicates that the fault changes from a near-vertical orientation in the South Westland Section, to dipping ~60-45° to the SE in the Central Section, but it is unclear how this change is accommodated in the subsurface.

 

We image the subsurface at this section boundary using both a temporary seismic array deployed along the fault and long-term seismic stations. We use teleseismic earthquakes to generate receiver functions which are sensitive to crustal structure below seismic stations. Using both velocity inversion and common conversion point stacking, we find there are distinct crustal structures on either side of the surface fault trace. Our results indicate that the southern vertical fault section may continue to the north past the segment boundary, and that both a vertical and dipping fault may co-exist beyond the segment boundary. This is consistent with microseismicity and previous tectonic studies, and has implications for fault rupture scenarios.

How to cite: Lythgoe, K., Farrar, B., Smith, J.-A., Curtis, A., Townend, J., Chamberlain, C., Warren-Smith, E., and Jenkins, J.: Seismic imaging across a rupture-limiting section boundary of the Alpine Fault, New Zealand , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7303, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7303, 2026.

EGU26-7388 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Identification of active fault traces of the Abra River fault system, northwestern Luzon, Philippines, from tectonic geomorphic features 

Chun-Chi Chen, J. Bruce H. Shyu, and Noelynna T. Ramos

The Philippine fault system is characterized by primarily sinistral fault segments and traverses the entire Philippine archipelago. On the populous Luzon Island, the northern segment of this active fault system poses significant seismic hazards, as evidenced by the 1990 MW 7.7 Luzon earthquake in central Luzon and the 2022 MW 7.0 Abra earthquake in northwestern Luzon. However, the precise location and characteristics of the fault traces along some of the fault’s segments still remain poorly understood, such as the Abra River fault system (ARFS) in the Abra Province. Therefore, this study aims to identify and characterize the active fault traces of the ARFS on the basis of tectonic geomorphic features related to strike-slip faulting using a 5-m resolution DEM, augmented by field investigations.

Based on geomorphic manifestations and results from our field investigations, we identified at least three major sinistral fault traces of the ARFS along the Abra River valley. Although our mapping results are generally consistent with the published map by the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS), the new mapping provides better constraints and information for several fault segments that were previously uncertain. Along the fault traces, numerous offset channels, offset alluvial fans, and offset bedrock ridges indicate that the ARFS exhibits primarily left-lateral motion. During field investigation, we found two fault zone outcrops aligned with offset geomorphic features with vertical fault plane and horizontal slickensides, consistent with strike-slip faulting of the ARFS. Flexural scarps and pressure ridges that deform Quaternary fluvial sediments show that these ARFS traces are active. The predominantly sinistral motion of the ARFS is not consistent with the focal mechanism of the 2022 Abra earthquake, which is characterized by reverse motion on a gently dipping fault plane. This suggests the ARFS is not the seismogenic fault of the 2022 event, and the accumulated strain along this structure may have not yet been fully released within the time period of written history. As a result, the ARFS poses a great seismic hazard for the area, and it is necessary to further understand its earthquake behavior and paleoseismic characteristics.

How to cite: Chen, C.-C., Shyu, J. B. H., and Ramos, N. T.: Identification of active fault traces of the Abra River fault system, northwestern Luzon, Philippines, from tectonic geomorphic features, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7388, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7388, 2026.

EGU26-7851 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Late Quaternary fault evolution at the Sierra de Aconquija, Argentina, characterized from 10Be and drone-based topographic data 

Alex Hughes, Taylor Schildgen, Mitch D'Arcy, Henry Crawford, Hella Wittmann, and Sascha Brune

Quantifying fault evolution in time and space is essential for characterising earthquake hazards and understanding landscape evolution. For a complete picture of Quaternary fault evolution, slip rates calculated from geomorphic strain markers bridge the gap between long-term rates from geological data and contemporary data from seismicity or geodesy. Here, we present a high-resolution record of fault slip rates from the Sierra de Aconquija (SdA), northwest Argentina, based on 10Be surface exposure dating of boulders and cm-scale topographic data derived from drone-based photogrammetry. Located at the broken foreland of the southern-central Andes, the SdA overlies a transition zone from dipping to flat-slab subduction and therefore provides an opportunity to investigate how complex slab interactions at depth manifest in upper-crustal fault slip. Coalesced alluvial fans have been deposited on the western flank of the SdA, which preserve at least seven aggraded depositional units up to ~300 ka and display scarps associated with east-dipping, range-bounding, reverse faults. We present 55 new cosmogenic 10Be surface exposure ages from boulders deposited on the fan surfaces. These ages extend an existing fan chronology of 43 ages to cover ~55 km along strike. To measure fault slip, we flew 54 drone surveys to collect photogrammetry data from which we generated 14, centimetre-scale, digital-elevation models using structure-from-motion techniques. Preliminary slip rates span 0.06–2.22 mm/yr. Our data indicate that a fault strand propagated outward from the range front around ~200 ka, which exhibits comparable average slip rates to a parallel strand at the range front. The slowest rates of ~0.06 mm/yr are from the end of this outbound strand and the fastest rates of 1.23–2.22 mm/yr are at the southern end of the Aconquija fault, where deformation is focused on a single range-front strand. Long-term slip rates decrease around a pronounced bend in the fault, suggesting rupture segmentation and ongoing fault linkage. Overall, late Quaternary deformation along the western SdA is evolving both outwards from the range front, and southwards along the range front. This pattern supports existing models of landscape evolution and drainage divide migration linked to Quaternary slip on predominantly east-dipping faults. Ongoing work aims to integrate these findings into a broader context of tectonic and landscape evolution in the Andean foreland.

How to cite: Hughes, A., Schildgen, T., D'Arcy, M., Crawford, H., Wittmann, H., and Brune, S.: Late Quaternary fault evolution at the Sierra de Aconquija, Argentina, characterized from 10Be and drone-based topographic data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7851, 2026.

EGU26-8576 | Orals | TS3.1

Seismic evidence for a Holocene Mw 6.5-7.1 earthquake along the Littoral Fault Zone, off the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area 

Yingci Feng, Jiaxian Huang, Xiaodong Yang, Jian Li, Jie Sun, and Wenhuan Zhan

The Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area (GBA) is one of the most economically developing and densely populated areas in China. It is spatially only ~20-100 km north of the central segment of the largest regional seismogenic fault-the Littoral Fault Zone. However, this segment is absent of major earthquakes with Mw =>7 in documented history (since 1600) while the west and east segments of Littoral Fault Zone have experienced several Mw=>7 events, it remains unclear whether this segment is aseismic, or has longer earthquake recurrence interval. The answer to this question matters greatly to the precise assessment of earthquake potential for the GBA. To address this issue, we used newly acquired >4000-km-long seismic reflection profiles, in combination with 1 shallow borehole data, to examine the detailed fault structures and evaluate the Holocene activity of the Littoral Fault Zone central segment. Our new results show that this central segment is approximately 157-km long with decreasing width from 25 km to 6 km westward. It comprises a NEE-trending and SE-dipping main fault with two sub-segment and a series of secondary normal faults. In the west sub-segment of the main fault, the 115-km en-echelon segmented sidewall faults consist of the 80-km segmented late Pleistocene faults and the 35-km Holocene fault, with maximum 2.7 m displacement of the Holocene activity. In its east sub-segment, the main fault is a 42-km strike-slip fault (transtensional faults) with negative flower structures and a fault bend transitioning from the NEE trend (N70°) to the SEE trend (N110°). The Holocene fault directly cuts through the Holocene strata with tips reaching 6.6 m from the seafloor, while the Late Pleistocene faults cause the overlying strata to be deformed and folded. Based on the Holocene rupture displacement and active length, we estimated that the main fault may have triggered earthquakes with magnitude up to Mw 6.6-7.1.

How to cite: Feng, Y., Huang, J., Yang, X., Li, J., Sun, J., and Zhan, W.: Seismic evidence for a Holocene Mw 6.5-7.1 earthquake along the Littoral Fault Zone, off the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8576, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8576, 2026.

Determining slip rates along the tectonic fault is essential for understanding its deformation mode and assessing the future seismic hazard. Benefited from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 series mission, we are now able to derive large-scale, high-resolution, and three-dimensional velocity fields by integrating Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) and Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR). The East Kunlun Fault is the northern border of the Bayan Har Block in the eastern Tibetan Plateau, which is approximately 1500 kilometers long and has hosted 4 M>6 earthquakes in the past century, including the 2001 Mw 7.8 Kokoxili earthquake. There are two seismic gaps on this fault, raising our concerns regarding its future earthquake hazard.

Here, we process 10 years (2014–2024) of Sentinel-1 SAR data to obtain the line-of-sight (LOS) velocity fileds covering ~0.65 million km2, using the COMET LiCSAR automated processing system. The InSAR velocities are transformed into the fixed Eurasian reference frame by fitting a planer ramp to the differences between InSAR and GNSS LOS velocities. We develop an algorithm to tie InSAR velocity frames together in regions lacking efficient GNSS observations. Using the GNSS-interpolated north velocities as prior constraints, we decompose InSAR ascending and descending velocities into east and vertical components. We observe long-wavelength tectonic signals from InSAR east velocity map, including clear slip gradient across the East Kunlun Fault, and postseismic deformation associated with the Kokoxili earthquake.

We apply four analytical models within a Bayesian inversion framework to estimate slip rates along the East Kunlun Fault: a simple screw dislocation model, an interseismic and afterslip coupling model, a shallow and deep creeping coupling model and a shear zone model. Our results indicate up to 26.4 mm/yr postseismic slip in western segment of the fault, and 1.3–2.4 mm/yr shallow creep in the eastern segment. The InSAR east velocity show a slip decrease from the west to east, with the magnitude from ~14.5 mm/yr to ~4.5 mm/yr, in agreement with some geological slip rates. Additionally, our results suggest the presence of a potential shear zone beneath the fault, with a width of up to ~100 kilometers. Further investigation is required  to determine the mechanisms of the shear zone: whether it results from postseismic deformation or reflects underlying geological processes.

How to cite: Gao, Y. and Lu, Z.: Slip variability along the East Kunlun Fault in eastern Tibet, revealed by InSAR and GNSS, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8714, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8714, 2026.

EGU26-9200 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Quaternary Faulting and Fault-Related Geomorphology along the Orogenic Retro Arc Wedge-Front Structure of the Central Andes: The Mandeyapecua Thrust System, Southeastern Bolivia 

Magda Patyniak, Ahmad Arnous, Victoria Alvarellos, Lucía Jagoe, Alana M. Williams, Jose M. Guerra Colque, Osvaldo A. Rosales Sadud, Frank Preusser, J Ramon Arrowsmith, Bodo Bookhagen, and Manfred Strecker

Actively deforming orogens are significant seismic hazard zones, especially in areas with steadily growing populations and infrastructure. An essential and yet oftentimes poorly understood attribute for a coherent hazard and risk assessment is whether the responsible tectonic fault systems are subject to permanent, creeping deformation or episodic, seismogenic rupture processes. In the southern Bolivian Subandes recent regional geodetic surface velocities measurements indicate that the décollement beneath the eastern orogen is the primary contributor to its lateral and vertical growth. Its surface manifestation is the Mandeyapecua Thrust Fault System (MTFS), which marks the active front of the Subandean fold-and-thrust belt in the Chaco foreland basin of Bolivia. Despite significant surface offsets within Quaternary landforms its geomorphic features and tectonic activity remain poorly understood. This study focuses on its longest fault segment – the ~300 km-long Mandeyapecua Fault (MF) located between 19° and 21°S. To evaluate its role in accommodating Quaternary deformation we used high-resolution DEMs, field-based mapping, and morphometric analyses, to document uplifted terraces, drainage anomalies, and fault-related landforms indicative of Quaternary tectonic activity. Electrical Resistivity Tomography surveys at two key sites reveal near-surface structures consistent with blind thrusting and folding. Where faults have reached the surface, the expressions of scarps suggest that the Mandeyapecua Fault (MF) may be segmented. Geochronological data along the front indicate fault activity during the past 12,000 years, with ruptures possibly spanning ~100 km, but the complex, distributed surface deformation indicates that the MF might not fit a standard thrust-fault model.

How to cite: Patyniak, M., Arnous, A., Alvarellos, V., Jagoe, L., Williams, A. M., Guerra Colque, J. M., Rosales Sadud, O. A., Preusser, F., Arrowsmith, J. R., Bookhagen, B., and Strecker, M.: Quaternary Faulting and Fault-Related Geomorphology along the Orogenic Retro Arc Wedge-Front Structure of the Central Andes: The Mandeyapecua Thrust System, Southeastern Bolivia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9200, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9200, 2026.

EGU26-9399 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Characterization of crustal physical properties in the Montello-Collalto area (eastern Southern Alps, Italy) 

Gemma Maria Cipressi, Claudio Madonna, Vincenzo Picotti, and Maria Adelaide Romano

The Montello–Collalto area is located along the outer front of the eastern Southern Alps (Italy), within a fold-and-thrust belt that has been active since the Middle Miocene (Picotti et al., 2022). The region is characterized by a medium-to-high seismic hazard, as demonstrated by historically significant earthquakes such as the 1695 Asolo event (Mw 6.5). Despite this, the causative fault system remains poorly constrained, mainly because most tectonic structures, including the Montello thrust system, are buried beneath recent sediments, and the overall seismicity rate is generally low

At a depth of approximately 1.5 km within the Montello anticline, an Underground Gas Storage (UGS) facility is in operation. The site is continuously monitored by the National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics (OGS) through both regional and dedicated local seismic networks (Priolo et al., 2015). By collecting the seismological data acquired over the years from these two networks and other passive seismic experiments, Cipressi et al. (2025) recently compiled a new uniform seismic catalog for the area. It includes 4802 earthquakes (-0.9 ≤ ML ≤ 3.9) that occurred between 1977 and 2023, all relocated using the same code (NonLinLoc, by Lomax et al., 2001) and velocity model (Romano et al., 2019).

To better characterize the 3D seismic velocity structure of the area, a new velocity model was developed, based directly on laboratory measurements performed on rock samples representative of the local stratigraphic sequence. Through a fieldwork conducted in the study area, a total of 22 samples were collected and subjected to VP and VS measurements at ETH Zürich using the pulse-transmission method (Birch, 1960). Overall, the measurements were performed under varying confining pressures, during both loading and unloading phases, ranging from 5 MPa to 200 MPa to simulate different depth conditions.

The laboratory-derived values were scaled for better corresponding to the lithological volumes and implemented within a dedicated 3D geological model of the study area, based on the structural interpretation by Picotti et al. (2022) and constructed using Midland Valley’s 3D Move software. This approach allows for a detailed and physically constrained characterization of seismic velocities in the upper ~10 km of the crust, which represents the depth range most relevant for the UGS monitoring.

The newly developed 3D velocity model will be tested and validated by relocating the seismic events included in the updated seismic catalog (Cipressi et al., 2025). Through the analysis of the travel time residuals we will assess whether velocity models derived from geological and laboratory data can effectively constrain seismic velocities and improve earthquake locations. Ultimately, this approach may also help refine the current geological interpretation of the area and improve understanding of the seismic behaviour of the main seismogenic structures.

How to cite: Cipressi, G. M., Madonna, C., Picotti, V., and Romano, M. A.: Characterization of crustal physical properties in the Montello-Collalto area (eastern Southern Alps, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9399, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9399, 2026.

EGU26-9518 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Active structures in the Rioni foreland basin, Georgia 

Demur Merkviladze, Anzor Giorgadze, and Nino Kvavadze

The Rioni foreland basin system lies between the Greater and Lesser Caucasus orogens and is 
located in the far-field part of the Arabia-Eurasia collision zone. Deformation of the Rioni 
double flexural foreland basin was controlled by the action of two opposing orogenic fronts, 
the Lesser Caucasus retro-wedge to the south and the Greater Caucasus pro-wedge to the 
north (e.g., Alania et al., 2022; Banks et al., 1997; Tibaldi et al., 2017).  


Recent GPS and earthquake data indicate that the Rioni foreland basin is still tectonically 
active (e.g., Sokhadze et al., 2018; Tibaldi et al., 2020). Historical and instrumental seismic 
activity is concentrated along the frontal thrusts located along the northern and southern 
borders of the Greater and Lesser Caucasus orogens, and in the core of this foreland basin. 
All the focal mechanism solutions within the study area have a reverse and thrust fault 
kinematics (Tibaldi et al., 2020; Tsereteli et al., 2016). 


Fault-related folding and wedge thrust folding theories (Shaw et al., 2005) were employed in 
the interpretation of seismic reflection profiles and the construction of regional structural 
cross-sections across the Rioni foreland basin. Seismic profiles and structural cross-sections 
show that most earthquakes in the Rioni foreland basin occur at depths of 5-10 km.  In the 
Rioni foreland basin, fault planes do not necessarily reach the surface, and some active 
structures can be regarded as blind thrust faults, fault-bend and fault-propagation folds, 
duplexes, and these structures are mainly located at the frontal part of the Lesser Caucasus 
retro-wedge and the Greater Caucasus pro-wedge. 

How to cite: Merkviladze, D., Giorgadze, A., and Kvavadze, N.: Active structures in the Rioni foreland basin, Georgia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9518, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9518, 2026.

EGU26-9533 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Seismically active thrust faults and wedge structures beneath the western Greater Caucasus orogen pro-wedge, Georgia 

Nino Kvavadze, Victor Alania, Onise Enukidze, Archil Magalashvili, Alexander Razmadze, and Demur Merkviladze

The Greater Caucasus is a typical active double wedge orogen that accommodates the crustal shortening due to far-field effects of the collision between the Arabian and Eurasian plates. Our study area is the western part of the Greater Caucasus pro-wedge, represented by the central and northern parts of the Rioni Foreland basin and the southern slope of the Greater Caucasus. Here, we present a new structural model based on interpreted seismic profiles, regional structural cross-sections, and earthquake focal mechanisms. From SSW to NNE, serial structural cross-sections reveal: (1) basement-involved thrust faults and thick-skinned fault-bend folds, and (2) thin-skinned structures expressed as duplexes and imbricate fault-propagation folds. The dominant compressional structural styles are controlled by multiple detachment horizons.

According to the presented serial structural cross-sections, the Enguri HPP dam is located on top of the triangle zone. Major basement-involved thrusts produce first-order thick-skinned fault-bend folds, which move southward, creating second-order fault-propagation folds and duplexes in the sedimentary cover. Preexisting, basement-involved extensional faults inverted during compressive deformation produced basement-cored uplifts that transferred thick-skinned shortening southward onto the thin-skinned structures detached above the basement.

The correlation of earthquake hypocenters and focal mechanisms with faults interpreted from 3D structural models enables the identification of active structures. Five potentially active thrust faults are recognized within the study area. Four of these structures are south-vergent thrusts, whereas one corresponds to an out-of-sequence thrust.

Acknowledgments. This work was funded by Shota Rustaveli National Science Foundation (SRNSF) (grant# FR-23-8896).

How to cite: Kvavadze, N., Alania, V., Enukidze, O., Magalashvili, A., Razmadze, A., and Merkviladze, D.: Seismically active thrust faults and wedge structures beneath the western Greater Caucasus orogen pro-wedge, Georgia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9533, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9533, 2026.

EGU26-9794 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Structural model of the Mtskheta 1275 (Mw=6.5) historical earthquake epicentral area using seismic profiles, Georgia 

Alexander Razmadze, Nino Kvavadze, and Tamar Shikhashvili

We have presented a new structural model of the Mtskheta 1275 (Mw=6.5) historical earthquake epicentral area. The Mtskheta historical earthquake is located in the frontal part of the Lesser Caucasus orogen pro-wedge (Alania, V., et al., 2023). The frontal part of the Lesser Caucasus orogen is characterized by moderate seismic activity (e.g., Tsereteli et al., 2016). From the determination of the deep structure of the Mtskheta 1275 (Mw=6.5) historical earthquake epicentral area, we use seismic reflection profiles. Seismic reflection profiles show north-vergent duplexes, and structural wedge at the triangle zone beneath the thrust front monocline and is represented by Cretaceous-Neogene strata. In the southern part of the Kura foreland basin, the Oligocene-Lower Miocene strata have been deformed and uplifted by passive-back thrusting at the triangle zone. Based on the new structural model, it has been suggested that the Mtskheta 1275 (Mw=6.5) historical earthquake was related to structural wedge. The results of our subsurface interpretations have important implications for how this fold-and-thrust belt formed, in addition to the effect of structural style on active tectonics in the retro-wedge of the Lesser Caucasus orogen.

Acknowledgments. This work was funded by Shota Rustaveli National Science Foundation (SRNSF) (grant# FR-23-8896).

How to cite: Razmadze, A., Kvavadze, N., and Shikhashvili, T.: Structural model of the Mtskheta 1275 (Mw=6.5) historical earthquake epicentral area using seismic profiles, Georgia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9794, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9794, 2026.

EGU26-9814 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Assessing fault-earthquake relationships for low-grade seismic sequences (ML<4.5): examples from the extensional belt of central Italy 

Federica Riva, Simone Marzorati, Diana Latorre, and Massimiliano Rinaldo Barchi

In northern Umbria (central Italy), the region between the Tiber Valley, Gubbio, and the main Apennine ridge is affected by persistent microseismicity (ML < 3.0), occurring at an average rate of ~3 events per day. A significant portion of this activity is associated with the Alto Tiberina Fault (ATF), a ~60 km-long, low-angle normal fault that has been active since the Late Pliocene–Early Pleistocene. Within this tectonic framework, we analyse seven low-magnitude seismic sequences (ML < 4.5) that occurred between 2010 and 2023 within the ATF hanging wall. These sequences are not linked to surface-exposed faults, raising questions about the nature and distribution of the seismogenic sources.

The main objectives of this study are to: (1) determine whether the observed seismicity is concentrated along discrete fault planes or instead distributed within fractured rock volumes; and (2) define the geometry and kinematics of the causative faults and assess their correspondence with structures imaged in available 2D seismic reflection profiles. Earthquakes were relocated using a high-resolution 3D velocity model and projected onto depth-converted seismic reflection sections.  Consequently, this work presents a methodological framework for analyzing low-magnitude seismic sequences by integrating active and passive seismic data.

Our results indicate that most ruptures occurred on high-angle normal faults that branch upward from the ATF detachment. The geometry of these faults is consistently constrained by both the depth distribution of relocated seismicity and the corresponding reflectors imaged in the seismic profiles, while their kinematic behaviour is compatible with that inferred for the mainshocks. The aftershock areas range from ~1 to 15 km², suggesting that the mainshocks ruptured only limited portions of larger fault segments. Additionally, the behaviour of these minor sequences, particularly in terms of rupture localization and aftershock spatial patterns, closely mirrors that observed for higher-magnitude sequences in the same region, indicating that similar seismotectonic processes operate across different magnitude scales.

How to cite: Riva, F., Marzorati, S., Latorre, D., and Barchi, M. R.: Assessing fault-earthquake relationships for low-grade seismic sequences (ML<4.5): examples from the extensional belt of central Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9814, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9814, 2026.

Resolving and characterizing the geometry and kinematics of blind thrusts is a primary challenge in active tectonic settings, notably where seismicity nucleates at depths beyond the resolution of industrial seismic reflection profiles and borehole data. In this context, the Emilian Thrust System represents a significant case study. As one of the three arcuate thrust fronts constituting the fold and thrust belt of the Northern Apennines (Italy), it exemplifies the complex interplay between deep-seated thrusting and shallower extension that drives crustal shortening in Plio–Quaternary basins. Despite this active deformation, the lack of surface constraints and the occurrence of seismicity at depths where standard geophysical imaging fails (20 – 25 km) create a critical knowledge gap.

This work aims to overcome these observational limitations by employing high-resolution microseismicity to decipher the hidden structural architecture of the arc. To address this, we performed a critical re-evaluation of the crustal velocity structure, as existing 1D and 3D regional models often provide discordant depth estimates, introducing significant uncertainties in hypocentral locations. By optimizing these models through the Velest algorithm, we were able to minimize depth location artifacts and better constrain the seismogenic volumes. Our new velocity model provided a robust basis for high-precision relocation via the NonLinLoc code. In order to isolate significant spatio–temporal clusters from the 2008–2024 background seismicity (0.4 ≤ ML ≤ 5.1), we utilized Kernel Density Estimation and β-statistics. The resulting dataset, together with the 2024 Langhirano sequence (comprising over 350 events), were relocated using the updated velocity model. In addition, to further enhance the kinematic framework, we improved the completeness of the existing dataset by computing new focal mechanism solutions for events with 2.5 ≤ ML ≤ 3.9 using the FPFIT software. Relocated hypocentral depths are primarily concentrated between 15 and 30 km, and focal mechanisms indicate kinematics ranging from compressional to strike‑slip.

Our results reveal that current seismicity is predominantly accommodated by a system of antithetic structures to the basal thrusts, spanning depths between 15 and 25 km. While the basal thrust remains largely seismically silent at these depths, the high-resolution definition of these previously unrecognized antithetic faults provides a novel perspective on the structural partitioning of the arc. Stress inversion results support this framework, indicating a prevailing compressive regime with a sub-horizontal σ1 reflecting ongoing crustal shortening. These findings suggest complex seismotectonic behavior where moderate-to-small magnitude events illuminate secondary structures, potentially acting as a release for internal deformation within the wedge. This complexity is further evidenced by the SHmax orientation, which rotates from a N–S trend to approximately NE–SW in the proximity of the intersection between the Emilia and Ferrara arcs.

This integrated approach allows for a refined 3D characterization of blind active faults while offering a critical perspective on deep crustal features. Such results contribute to a better definition of the seismotectonic potential of the region, providing fundamental insights for seismic risk assessment in this strategic industrial and residential area.

How to cite: Lelj, G., Talone, D., and Latorre, D.: Seismotectonic insights into the Emilia Arc: high-resolution earthquake relocation and 3D characterization of the 2024 Langhirano sequence, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10069, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10069, 2026.

EGU26-10680 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

Seismotectonics and the pattern of active deformation from collision to subduction in the Zagros – Makran transition zone 

Mir Ali Hassanzadeh, Esmaeil Shabanian, Shiva Arvin, Mohammadreza Jamalreyhani, and Naif Al Mamaari

The transition between the active Makran subduction and the Zagros continental collision exhibits significant differences on either side, making the Zagros-Makran Transition Zone (ZMTZ) a natural laboratory to study seismotectonic processes. This study investigates the active deformation patterns and their links to deep seismogenic structures, aiming to define the main active structures of the ZMTZ. We focus on seismicity of the Goharan area, the only cluster in the region, with its main event (Mw = 6.2) occurring on May 11, 2013. The Hypocentroidal Decomposition Algorithm used for multiple event relocation analysis. By incorporating data from 46 seismic stations belong to different seismic networks, we were able to minimize the azimuthal gap and reduce the potential biases in location. The relocation results reveal an east-west lineament in the Goharan cluster, consistent with InSAR observations. The seismicity (Ml > 4) recorded from 2006-2021 by 44 permanent broad-band seismic stations of the Iran and Oman network was used to perform the moment tensor inversion using the probabilistic inversion method. Also, a stress inversion of the focal mechanisms was performed to acquire the present-day stress regime and fault planes from nodal planes of the earthquake focal mechanisms of the region. The obtained results provided Quaternary stress tensors, revealing the active stress field and fault mechanisms in the region. High-resolution satellite imagery, combined with geological and seismological data reveal that active deformation is mainly accommodated by a series of ENE-trending sinistral faults, which are in close interaction with almost N-S dextral faults. These conjugate fault networks intersect pre-Quaternary structures and are independent of structural processes that directly affect the MZP and Makran subduction zones. ENE-trending sinistral faults are accompanied by steep structural steps in the North Makran thrust boundaries and correspond to the locations where the inner Makran zone narrows westward to its wedge despair. These observations indicate that (1) sinistral faults west of 61°E have been active since the initial formation of the Makran wedge, (2) interacting with the dextral conjugate series, these Quaternary structures accommodate part of NNE-SSW shortening due to the convergence of the Arabia–Lut block, transferring some deformation northward without major folding or thrusting, and (3) the existence of these strike-slip faults in this part of the Makran wedge define distinct seismotectonic zones capable of hosting moderate to large continental earthquakes, with a significant impact on seismic hazard. This study reveals that structural interactions in complex tectonic settings can produce deformation patterns not predicted by classical geological models for the region. The surface deformation in the ZMTZ is influenced by two main deep structures; Arabian underthrusting and the Makran subduction zone. Integrating seismological and geological results provides a new description of the ZMTZ as a triple-junction area between Makran, Zagros, and Central Iran. The outcomes of this project can contribute to a better understanding of crustal deformation in similar cases.

How to cite: Hassanzadeh, M. A., Shabanian, E., Arvin, S., Jamalreyhani, M., and Al Mamaari, N.: Seismotectonics and the pattern of active deformation from collision to subduction in the Zagros – Makran transition zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10680, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10680, 2026.

The Tanlu Fault Zone, extending approximately 2400 km in a NNE orientation, constitutes the most extensive fault system in eastern China and has undergone complex multi-stage tectonic evolution since the Mesozoic. Notwithstanding substantial geological and geophysical investigations, the shallow crustal deformation characteristics across distinct segments and their intrinsic relationship with seismicity distribution remain inadequately constrained. This study presents high-resolution three-dimensional S-wave velocity and azimuthal anisotropy models for the Suqian and Zhangbaling segments, utilizing Rayleigh wave dispersion data extracted from ambient noise recordings acquired by dense portable seismic arrays comprising 238 and 192 short-period seismometers, respectively.


Ambient noise cross-correlation techniques were employed to extract inter-station Rayleigh wave empirical Green's functions, with phase velocity dispersion curves measured across the period range of 0.5 to 8.8 seconds. The DAzimSurfTomo direct inversion method was applied to jointly determine three-dimensional isotropic shear-wave velocity structures and azimuthal anisotropy distributions within the shallow crust at depths of 0 to 8 kilometers. Checkerboard and recovery tests demonstrate that the obtained azimuthal anisotropy models possess reliable resolution capability in regions with adequate ray path coverage.


The inversion results reveal velocity structures corresponding to distinct tectonic units, with high-velocity anomalies associated with uplifted regions and low-velocity anomalies with sedimentary basins. The Suqian segment exhibits systematic depth-dependent variations in fast-wave directions: NNE orientations parallel to the fault strike at shallow depths of 1 to 3 kilometers, transitioning to NE orientations at greater depths of 4 to 8 kilometers, with anisotropic magnitude of 2% to 3%. The Zhangbaling segment displays pronounced anisotropic contrasts between tectonic units, characterized by NE fast-wave directions in the Zhangbaling uplift and NW directions in the Hefei Basin, reflecting fundamentally different deformation characteristics between the North China Plate and South China Plate. Notably, fast-wave directions at the fault-uplift interface exhibit complex depth-dependent variations, progressing from NE (1 to 3 kilometers) to NNE (3 to 6 kilometers) and reverting to NE (6 to 10 kilometers).


Pronounced spatial correlations between anisotropic structure and earthquake distribution indicate that pre-existing crustal fabric exerts primary control on contemporary rupture patterns, with seismicity concentrated at depths of 3 to 5 kilometers where anisotropic transitions occur. The two segments manifest contrasting deformation characteristics: distributed deformation in Suqian versus localized deformation along the sharp anisotropic boundary in Zhangbaling, reflecting distinct evolutionary stages and present-day tectonic regimes. These depth-dependent anisotropic patterns preserve signatures of multi-stage tectonic evolution encompassing early sinistral strike-slip motion, subsequent extensional deformation, and recent compressional tectonics, thereby providing novel constraints on deformation processes and the contemporary stress field within this significant intracontinental fault system.

How to cite: Zhang, B. and Yao, H.: Three-Dimensional Crustal Azimuthal Anisotropy Reveals Multi-Stage Deformation in the Suqian and Zhangbaling Segments of the Tanlu Fault Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10885, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10885, 2026.

EGU26-11021 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

Reconstructing the 1947 Manix Earthquake (California) using Historical Aerial Imagery and Optical Image Correlation  

Cecilia Martinelli, James Hollingsworth, and Roland Burgmann

Constraints on rupture geometry and fault slip distribution are typically lacking for historical earthquakes due to limited (or non-existent) seismic and geodetic data, potential lack of field surveys made soon after the earthquake, and the degradation of field evidence over time. However, archival aerial photography can aid in the retrospective analysis of surface deformation using Optical Image Correlation (OIC) for mid-20th century events when pre and post-earthquake imagery is available.  

We focus here on the 1947 Manix earthquake (ML 6.2), which was one of the first known surface rupturing earthquakes documented in the Mojave Desert block of California, and which originally highlighted that this region was capable of hosting large surface rupturing earthquakes. Situated midway between the San Andreas and Garlock faults, this block currently accommodates ~25% (10-14 mm/yr) of the total right-lateral shear associated with the motion between the Pacific and North American Plates. More recent large earthquakes in the region include the 1992 Landers, 1999 Hector Mine, and 2019 Ridgecrest sequences. Nevertheless, the earlier Manix event remains poorly studied, or how this event may have promoted slip on these neighboring faults through stress redistribution. While previous studies describe two shallow sub-events rupturing a conjugate strike-slip fault system (including the Manix fault; Richter, 1947; Doser, 1990), confirmation of exactly which fault ruptured, and the extent of any surface displacement remains unclear.  

Here, we use OIC techniques to quantify the co-seismic displacement field using newly scanned pre- and post-event aerial photos from a variety of surveys. This technique enables us to recover a spatially dense 3D displacement field (with sub-pixel precision), revealing signals previously overlooked by field geologists following the earthquake. We first use Ames Stereo Pipeline to build an internally consistent camera network for each survey, from which we generate a coherent high resolution digital elevation model (DEM) and ortho-mosaic. These are then correlated using COSI-Corr to retrieve the 2D displacement field, while the vertical displacements are obtained from differencing the DEMs while accounting for the horizontal displacement. We provide new quantitative constraints on the surface.

How to cite: Martinelli, C., Hollingsworth, J., and Burgmann, R.: Reconstructing the 1947 Manix Earthquake (California) using Historical Aerial Imagery and Optical Image Correlation , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11021, 2026.

A 271 m-deep borehole was drilled within the town of Avezzano, near the NW margin of the Fucino basin, in the core of the central Apennines of Italy. The basin is a post-orogenic extensional structure controlled by two, nearly orthogonal normal fault systems: one along the northern side of the basin, SSE-dipping, and one along the eastern side of the basin, SW-dipping. The SW-dipping normal fault system sourced the devastating 1915 M7.0 Fucino earthquake. This investigation, conducted as part of a seismic microzonation study, provides critical insights into the temporal evolution of post-orogenic extension and active tectonics in the central Apennines.

In W-E direction, seismic reflection data reveal a semi-graben geometry characterized by a wedge-shaped sedimentary infill thickening eastward toward the main SW-dipping normal fault. The borehole penetrated the western, thinner sector of this sedimentary wedge, reaching the pre-graben bedrock at approximately 270 m depth. The succession comprises continental deposits extending to at least 255 m depth, underlain by marine siliciclastic bedrock. From the surface to ~140 m, continuous and well-preserved lacustrine deposits were recovered. Between 140 and 186 m, core recovery was discontinuous, revealing low-energy lacustrine sediments interbedded with coarser layers. Below 186 m, predominantly coarse-grained deposits caused difficult core recovery. The bedrock, encountered at 269.5-271 m, consists of overconsolidated clays with thin sandy interbeds displaying ~45° dipping bedding planes characteristic of flysch-like rocks.

Comprehensive lithostratigraphic, tephrochronologic, paleomagnetic, and palynological analyses were conducted. Nine tephra layers were identified within the uppermost 40 m, three of which were numerically dated. Paleomagnetic and palynologic sampling was performed at high resolution (2-10 cm intervals), complemented by magnetic susceptibility measurements at 2 cm resolution.

The integrated multiproxy dataset yields a preliminary age model indicating that the lacustrine basin is at least 4.6 Ma old, providing unprecedented temporal constraints on the onset of post-orogenic extension in the central Apennines. This age significantly predates previous estimates. The chronostratigraphic model enables reconstruction of the sedimentary infill history and constrains variations in the activity of the Fucino fault systems through time, providing data for evaluating the temporal evolution and long-term behavior of post-orogenic normal faulting over a multi-Ma timeframe. Micropaleontological analyses of the bedrock core helps in bracketing the age of the transition from compressional tectonics to post-orogenic extension. The results have implications for assessing long-term activity, slip rate and slip rate variability for the active fault system, for seismic hazard applications, while offering insights into the broader late- and post-orogenic evolution of the Apennines. These data support the ICDP Fucino paleolake project proposal MEME (Giaccio and the MEME Team, EGU 2026 Session ITS5.1/CL0.6).

How to cite: Boncio, P. and the 'Avezzano drilling for MEME' Team: The multi-Ma history of the Fucino lacustrine basin (Central Apennines, Italy) inferred from the cores of the deep Avezzano borehole: implications for post-orogenic extension and active tectonics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11634, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11634, 2026.

EGU26-11802 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Faults like to hide: subsurface evidence of poorly known and possibly active normal faults at the border between central and southern Apennines (Italy) 

Marco Battistelli, Michele Matteo Cosimo Carafa, Francesco Brozzetti, and Federica Ferrarini

The Italian Apennines are among the Mediterranean areas with the highest seismic hazard. Geodetic data show that the belt is experiencing slow deformation rates (3-4 mm/yr, D’Agostino, 2014; Carafa et al., 2020), with a prevalent SW-NE extension. Tectonic activity is expressed by well-exposed normal-fault planes dissecting the carbonate ridges. To infer the activity of these faults, several investigations using morphotectonic, paleoseismological, geophysical, and field survey techniques have been applied, leading to a robust literature in which the active structures are characterized and parametrized. Also, in recent times strong earthquakes with extensional kinematics struck the belt (e.g., 2009 L’Aquila, Mw 6.1; 2016 Norcia, Mw 6.5).

This work focuses on the sector between the central and southern Apennines, the Abruzzo-Molise region boundary (AMB), bordered to NW and SE by well-known active normal fault systems with opposite dip (SW-dipping and NE-dipping, respectively). AMB is characterized by a seismic gap and a complex lithological arrangement composed of prevalent flysch-like and clayey-marls outcrops, whose thickness reaches 2.5 km, which hamper the recognition of active faults at the surface. In a recent study, taking advantage of morphotectonic and remote sensing analysis, Battistelli et al. (2025) highlighted the presence of an organized strip of slope instabilities that could represent the surface expression of unknown normal faults, possibly active from the Late Quaternary to present. The structures align with the fault systems outcropping at the AMB border and define a 10 km wide corridor marked by subtle evidence of recent tectonic activity, such as linear scarps and crest offsets (Castel di Sangro-Rionero Sannitico corridor, CaS-RS).

With this contribution, we made a step forward to constrain the aforementioned lineaments also in the subsurface by interpreting two commercial seismic reflection profiles (that cross-cut the CaS-RS) calibrated by two deep well (ViDEPI Project). Three geological cross sections were also drawn to cross-check the subsurface with the available geological and structural maps.

Seismic line interpretation and time-to-depth conversion pointed out normal faults that align well with the lineaments highlighted by Battistelli et al. (2025), and thus also the presence of minor extensional structures that do not seem to directly affect the topography. The estimated fault offsets range between 100 and 400 m, and increase moving from NW to SE. Tentatively assuming an age of 120-750 kyr for these offsets, the resulting fault slip rates range from 0.1 to 0.9 mm/yr.

In this peculiar geo-lithological context, we propose that faulting can be strongly influenced by the mechanical stratigraphy, producing, at the shallower structural levels, a wide area marked out by diffuse and partly off-fault deformation (sensu Ferrill et al., 2017). A complementary interpretation envisages the possibility that the CaS-RS corridor could represent a linkage zone, between fault systems with opposite dip, whose evolutionary stage has not yet led to well-developed normal fault structures and related basins.

 

Battistelli et al., 2025. https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17142491

Carafa et al., 2020. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JB018956

D'Agostino, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL059230  

Ferrill et al., 2017. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2016.11.010

How to cite: Battistelli, M., Carafa, M. M. C., Brozzetti, F., and Ferrarini, F.: Faults like to hide: subsurface evidence of poorly known and possibly active normal faults at the border between central and southern Apennines (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11802, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11802, 2026.

EGU26-12293 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

New paleoseismological evidence of Late Quaternary to historical activity along the outer thrust front of the eastern Southern Alps (Polcenigo, NE Italy)  

Angela Franceschet, Maria Eliana Poli, Giulia Patricelli, Andrea Marchesini, and Giovanni Paiero

New paleoseismological and geological investigations were carried out at the Pliocene-Quaternary front of the eastern Southern Alps (ESA, NE Italy) to better constraints the activity of thrust systems propagating toward the Friuli Plain. The study focused on the Polcenigo area, located at the western margin of the Carnic Prealps, in the outer sector of the ESA, a S-SE verging active thrust-and-fold belt, in evolution from the Middle Miocene to the Present (Castellarin & Cantelli, 2000). The Carnic Prealps are characterized by a system of arched SW-NE to WSW-ENE trending, S-verging thrusts that accommodate ongoing crustal shortening of about 2-3mm/yr, as estimated by geodetic data (Serpelloni et al., 2005).

The area is characterized by moderate to high seismic hazard and risk, and experienced some historical earthquakes with Mw ≥ 6, including the earthquake of Alpago of 29th June 1873 (Imax=X MCS e Mw=6.3) and the one of Cansiglio of 18th October 1936 (Imax=VIII MCS e Mw=6.1) (Rovida et al., 2022). However, the seismogenic sources responsible for these earthquakes remain debated.

Whitin the framework of the third level Caneva-Polcenigo Seismic Microzonation Project, some paleoseismological investigations were performed along the Cansiglio-Col Longone thrust system, whose Late Quaternary tectonic activity is documented by the displacement of thick pre-LGM conglomerates (Poli et al., 2015). A trench excavated at the boundary between the LGM slope deposits of the Coltura fan and the Upper Miocene-Pliocene Molasse of the Col del Cao hill, exposed a high angle tectonic contact between the sub-horizontal Lower Molasse (Cavanella Group, Lower-Middle Miocene) and the sub-vertical Upper Molasse (Conegliano Unit, Pliocene). This structure is consistent with the Col Longone fault, interpreted as the transpressive left-lateral closure of the Caneva-Cansiglio thrust-system (280/65 dipping). The fault affects not only molasse deposits but also upper trench units dated between the XVII and the XIX sec. AD, indicating that the co-seismic effect of an historical earthquake may have been recorded in the trench stratigraphy, coherently with paleoliquefaction evidences documented in the nearby lacustrine succession of the Palù di Livenza basin (Early Holocene) (Monegato et al., 2023).

These results provide new evidence for Late Quaternary to historical activity of the outer ESA thrust front and highlight the seismogenic potential of tectonic structures at the prealpine piedmont plain, with important implications for seismic hazard assessment in the Friuli Plain.

REFERENCE

Castellarin and Cantelli (2000). Neo-Alpine evolution of the Southern Eastern Alps. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0264-3707(99)00036-8

Monegato et al. (2023). LGM glacial and glaciofluvial environments in a tectonically active area (southeastern Alps). https://doi.org/10.3301/GFT.2023.07

Poli et al. (2015). Seismotectonic characterization of the western Carnic pre-alpine area between Caneva and Meduno (Ne Italy, Friuli). DPC-INGV-S1 Project.

Rovida et al. (2022). Catalogo Parametrico dei Terremoti Italiani (CPTI15), versione 4.0. Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV). https://doi.org/10.13127/CPTI/CPTI15.4

Serpelloni et al. (2005). Crustal velocity and strain-rate fields in Italy and surrounding regions: new results from the analysis of permanent and non-permanent GPS networks. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-246X.2005.02618.x

How to cite: Franceschet, A., Poli, M. E., Patricelli, G., Marchesini, A., and Paiero, G.: New paleoseismological evidence of Late Quaternary to historical activity along the outer thrust front of the eastern Southern Alps (Polcenigo, NE Italy) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12293, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12293, 2026.

Large earthquakes in slowly deforming collision zones often occur in regions where dense near-fault seismic networks are absent at the time of rupture. As a result, the most critical events for understanding deep seismogenic processes are frequently those for which observational constraints are intrinsically limited. The Mw 6.4 Durrës earthquake of 26 November 2019, at the eastern front of the Adria–Eurasia collision in Albania, is a prime example: it occurred beneath a complex foreland basin system, with a sparse and asymmetric station geometry that challenges conventional earthquake location methods.

In this study, we address the central question: how robustly can the geometry and depth of a deep seismogenic source be constrained when observational conditions cannot be improved retroactively? We relocate the full 2019–2020 Durrës sequence (foreshocks, mainshock, and aftershocks) using the hypoDD algorithm applied to catalog differential travel times. While no waveform cross-correlation data are available, the network of differential-time links is internally well-connected, allowing relative event positions to be resolved far more precisely than absolute hypocenters.

To obtain physically meaningful uncertainty estimates beyond formal inversion errors, we adopt a stepwise pre-relocation approach, including depth quality control and jackknife station weighting. A bootstrap resampling of the differential-time equations (200 realizations) is then applied to derive full spatial probability clouds for each event. This approach reveals a fundamental asymmetry in what the data can and cannot resolve: epicentral positions and along-strike geometry are highly stable, forming a compact NW–SE-oriented cluster, whereas individual event depths are less tightly constrained. Importantly, however, the bootstrap distributions are unimodal and consistently centered at ~18–23 km, demonstrating that the sequence is rooted in a deep seismogenic layer despite kilometer-scale depth uncertainty for single events. These results show that, even under unfavorable network conditions, a combination of differential-time relocation and uncertainty-aware resampling can robustly identify the depth range, orientation, and spatial coherence of an active fault system. In the case of Durrës earthquake, this supports a deep, NE-dipping blind fault associated with the collision-front architecture of Adria beneath the Periadriatic Depression.

Beyond the specific case study, our analysis provides a framework for translating limited coseismic datasets into actionable tectonic insight and for guiding the design of future seismic and geodetic monitoring strategies in regions where damaging earthquakes have long recurrence intervals but high societal impact.

How to cite: Dushi, E. and Kastelic, V.: Robust Imaging of Deep Seismogenic Fault Geometry through Earthquake Relocation: The 2019 Durrës Sequence, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12495, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12495, 2026.

EGU26-13158 | Orals | TS3.1

From depth to surface of the 2016-2017 Central Italy earthquake sequence: integrating subsurface geology, seismicity and satellite observations 

Massimiliano Porreca, Giacomo Cenci, Riccardo Gaspari, Filippo Carboni, Maurizio Ercoli, Massimiliano Rinaldo Barchi, Claudio De Luca, Riccardo Lanari, Maddalena Michele, and Lauro Chiaraluce

The 2016-2017 Central Italy earthquake sequence offers a unique opportunity to investigate the complex interplay between deep crustal structures, seismic activity, and surface deformation. A decade after the event, we attempt to synthesize all the available multidisciplinary observations describing the evolution of the mainshocks: the Mw 6.0 Amatrice earthquake in August 2016, the Mw 6.5 Norcia and Mw 5.9 Visso earthquakes in October 2016 and the Mw 5.5 Campotosto earthquake in January 2017. This cascade of shocks activated an 80-km long system of SW-dipping normal faults, breaking the entire upper crust from 12 km depth to the surface.

We integrate multidisciplinary datasets to observe the fault system from different perspectives, spanning from deep crustal processes (seismicity) and tectonic architecture (subsurface geology) to surface expressions (outcropping geology and surface ruptures), and satellite-based observations (SAR-based techniques). The data are jointly used to investigate the structural framework, fault kinematics and deformation pattern along the fault system.

High-detailed DInSAR-based deformation maps of the three largest earthquakes are reconstructed to characterize both surface ruptures associated with major fault segments and off-fault deformation. The geometry of the main seismogenic faults at depth are reconstructed using seismicity distribution and cross-section balancing, while at surface we retrieve geological constraints including coseismic ruptures. The analysis highlights distinct rupture behaviors of individual fault segments and their specific contributions to the observed ground deformation.

Post-seismic deformation is instead investigated analyzing SBAS-DInSAR time series, together with the spatial distribution of seismicity that occurred following the sequence onset, until 2025. The results show how the hanging wall of the active fault system underwent sustained subsidence during this period, characterized by spatially variable rates.

By bridging insights from the deep subsurface to satellite-based remote sensing, this study provides a comprehensive understanding of the processes driving the 2016-2017 Central Italy earthquakes and its temporal evolution in the last decade.

How to cite: Porreca, M., Cenci, G., Gaspari, R., Carboni, F., Ercoli, M., Barchi, M. R., De Luca, C., Lanari, R., Michele, M., and Chiaraluce, L.: From depth to surface of the 2016-2017 Central Italy earthquake sequence: integrating subsurface geology, seismicity and satellite observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13158, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13158, 2026.

Fault systems are inherently heterogeneous, with barriers and asperities exerting a first-order control on rupture propagation and on the spatio-temporal distribution of seismicity. The persistence of long-lived seismicity raises questions about whether earthquake activity is primarily governed by local structural complexities or by large-scale tectonic loading acting on simplified, homogeneous fault surfaces.

In this study, we report persistent mid-crustal seismicity in Eastern-Central Italy along the Adriatic Basal Thrust (ABT), a major compressional structure deepening westward from the Adriatic offshore to the Apennine Foothills. Its 3D geometric and kinematic architecture was reconstructed combining geological information and a high-resolution seismological dataset of relocated earthquakes and focal mechanisms (de Nardis et al., 2022). Specifically, the seismic catalogue was refined using recordings from the ReSIICO seismic network and a 3D velocity model (Cattaneo et al., 2019). The ABT extends ~210 km along strike and dips at ~20°, with its main internal splay corresponding to the Near Coast Thrust (NCT). Seismicity is unevenly distributed; while the northern sector hosts instrumental earthquakes mainly at upper crustal levels, the southern sector appears locked at the surface but accounts for ~75% of the total deep seismicity, dominated by low-magnitude events (ML mode ~0.8–0.9).

To extend the temporal perspective, we analyzed the Italian seismic catalogue over 40 years (1985–2024) (https://terremoti.ingv.it/). Fractal analysis and space–time clustering identify three persistent seismicity clusters: two shallow clusters likely related to anthropogenic processes (i.e., quarry blasts) and a third, dominant cluster consistently associated with the ABT. The spatio-temporal analysis reveals that within this tectonic cluster, ~76% of seismicity consists of non-triggered events representing background tectonic loading, with only a few moderate episodes of spatio-temporal clustering.

The remarkable long-term persistence of this activity prompted a deeper investigation into the underlying fault architecture through the high-resolution seismic catalogue. This analysis revealed that the seismicity highlights a complex structural duplex acting as a geometric asperity in the linkage zone between the ABT and the internal splay. This mid-crustal segment consists of two low-angle, west-dipping splays interconnected by high-angle ramps, forming a structural knot that hinders smooth slip. Overall, the spatial persistence, depth distribution, and geometric complexity of the microseismicity indicate that fault-scale heterogeneities and structural jams dominate over large-scale regional coupling. This implies that the continuous release of seismic energy within these complex structural nodes acts as a mechanical accommodation process, effectively controlling the segmentation and the maximum rupture potential of the entire fault system.

Cattaneo, M., Frapiccini, M., Ladina, C., Marzorati, S. & Monachesi, G. A mixed automatic-manual seismic catalog for Central-Eastern Italy: Analysis of homogeneity. Ann. Geophys. (2017).

de Nardis, R., Pandolfi, C., Cattaneo, M. et al. Lithospheric double shear zone unveiled by microseismicity in a region of slow deformation. Sci Rep 12, 21066 (2022).

How to cite: de Nardis, R. and Lavecchia, G.: Persistent Seismicity in Eastern-Central Italy: Evidence for a Complex Structural Asperity Dominating Mid-Crustal Deformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13568, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13568, 2026.

EGU26-13980 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Influence of Source Representation on Damage Scenarios: Comparison Between Point and Finite Sources in the Intermediate Field 

Armando Garofalo, Donato Talone, Deborah Di Naccio, Angela Stallone, and Michele Matteo Cosimo Carafa

This work aims to perform ground motion simulations using a simplified approach that allows fast yet accurate estimation of intensity measures (PGA, PGV, SA). The approach presented can be applied a few minutes after a strong earthquake, when knowledge of source parameters is still limited, or during the pre-emergency phase, contributing to more effective territorial planning. A similar goal can be achieved using physics-based models that account for source uncertainty. However, due to the limited time and data available immediately after an earthquake, physics-based models are not suitable for urgent computing (Stallone et al., 2025). The proposed method is based on two Python codes: HypoSmoothFaultSimulation (Di Naccio et al., 2025), a soon-to-be-released open-access software, which generates an ensemble of rupture scenarios starting from geometric and kinematic properties of the fault (length, strike, dip, depth, rake), and seismotectonic potential (magnitude). The second software, ProbShakemap (Stallone et al., 2025) computes ground shaking at different points of interest (POIs) by implementing one or more Ground Motion Models (GMMs), starting from the plausible hypocenters generated by HypoSmoothFaultSimulation. The latter code accounts for source parameter uncertainty by defining smoothed boxcar probability density functions (PDFs), which are subsequently sampled to generate the rupture scenarios. ProbShakemap accounts for both source-related and GMM-related uncertainties, producing multiple ground-shaking estimates for each POI. As a case study, the method was applied to the central Apennines, focusing on a representative sample of faults, by computing PGA maps on a regular grid, or at the location of RSN and RAN seismic stations. For the same sample of faults, the stochastic code EXSIM (Motazedian and Atkinson, 2005), which requires more detailed knowledge of source parameters and wave propagation effects, was also applied. These comparisons aim to highlight the differences between the proposed method and more complex physics-based models. It should be noted that the proposed method cannot provide reliable ground motion estimates in the near field, due to source-related effects such as velocity pulses, large peak accelerations and the effect of the vertical component, which strongly influence ground shaking close to the fault. However, the method is applicable in the intermediate field, which is still characterized by significant ground shaking during large earthquakes. Overall, this approach allows ground motion estimates to be obtained from a limited number of initial parameters while accounting for their associated uncertainty, enabling fast and simplified computation suitable for application before or immediately after a strong earthquake.

Bibliography

  • DI NACCIO, Deborah; STALLONE, Angela; MC CARAFA, Michele. The Mt. Morrone seismotectonic source: analysis of fault model uncertainty for Ground Motion Prediction. In: EGU General Assembly Conference Abstracts. 2025. p. EGU25-12632.
  • Motazedian, D., Atkinson, 2005. Stochastic Finite-Fault Modeling Based on a Dynamic Corner Frequency. Bull. Seismol. Soc. Am. 95, 995–1010. https://doi.org/10.1785/0120030207
  • STALLONE, Angela, et al. ProbShakemap: A Python toolbox propagating source uncertainty to ground motion prediction for urgent computing applications. Computers & Geosciences, 2025, 195: 105748.

How to cite: Garofalo, A., Talone, D., Di Naccio, D., Stallone, A., and Carafa, M. M. C.: Influence of Source Representation on Damage Scenarios: Comparison Between Point and Finite Sources in the Intermediate Field, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13980, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13980, 2026.

EGU26-14657 | ECS | Orals | TS3.1

3D geological and velocity modeling of the Northern Adriatic region for seismic hazard assessment 

Sarah Carcano, Lorenzo Lipparini, Irene Molinari, Giulia Sgattoni, and Licia Faenza

The Marche offshore, situated at the leading edge of the Northern Apennines compressional structures, is a key area for investigating seismic activity and its interplay with offshore operations. The Mw 5.5 earthquake of November 9, 2022, and the most recent Mw 4.2 of October 6, 2025, brought renewed attention to this region, highlighting the ongoing seismicity along frontal thrusts and reinforcing the need for detailed seismic hazard investigations in the area.

Within the framework of the SPIN project (Test delle buone pratiche per lo Studio della Potenziale INterazione tra attività offshore e pericolosità naturali - Best practice testing for the Study of Potential INteractions between offshore activities and natural hazards), the Italian National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) has built an unprecedented, high-resolution 3D geological and velocity model of the whole Northern Adriatic basin and its adjoining onshore domains.

The study adopts an integrated workflow that combines various data types, including publicly available data and, primarily, confidential 2D and 3D seismic surveys and well-log data granted by ENI S.p.A., as well as geological maps and technical reports.  Interval velocities for key seismic-stratigraphic units were estimated through analysis of check-shot and well-log velocity data, enabling a robust depth conversion. The resulting 3D geological model extends to depths of up to ~70 km, incorporating regional tomographic studies and crustal-scale geodynamic reconstructions

This comprehensive three-dimensional framework provides a precise reconstruction of the geometry and kinematics of the northern Apennine thrust front, allowing also the evaluation of the interaction between Mesozoic inherited structures and more recent compressional fault systems. This approach provides new insights into the segmentation of the thrust front and the spatial distribution of potentially seismogenic structures in this sector of the Adriatic domain.

Using the identified fault systems, the mapped surfaces, and the velocity model, seismic shaking scenarios were generated through standard ShakeMap simulations and advanced hybrid numerical methods for broadband wave propagation in heterogeneous 3D media.

The study demonstrates that multidisciplinary modeling at the crustal scale is essential for improving the reliability of seismic simulations and refining seismic hazard assessments in complex offshore-onshore contexts.

How to cite: Carcano, S., Lipparini, L., Molinari, I., Sgattoni, G., and Faenza, L.: 3D geological and velocity modeling of the Northern Adriatic region for seismic hazard assessment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14657, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14657, 2026.

EGU26-14678 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Seismicity-Driven Insights into the Extensional Architecture of the Northern Apennines, Italy 

Marco Di Gregorio, Alessandro Vuan, Giorgia Lelj, Donato Talone, and Diana Latorre

Understanding the spatio-temporal evolution of seismicity is essential for unveiling the seismotectonic architecture of active regions, as it links earthquake occurrence with the geometry, kinematics, and origin of seismogenic processes.

We investigate persistent microseismic and moderate seismic activity in the central–northern Apennines (Italy) using the CLASS (Italian Absolute Seismic Catalogue), which is based on a 3D velocity model, and applying a template matching technique following seismic clustering. From an initial dataset of ~230.000 events, we analyse a subset of 69.875 seismic events (0.0 < ML < 4.8) recorded between 2010 and 2023. Seismicity within the well-known 2016–2017 Amatrice–Visso–Norcia seismic sequence, the 2013–2015 Gubbio seismic activity and events classified as anthropogenic are excluded.

Seismic clusters are identified using the HDBSCAN algorithm, a hierarchical density-based clustering method that extends DBSCAN and is well suited for detecting clusters with variable density and shape in extensive spatial datasets. By introducing the temporal component, it is observed that HDBSCAN may produce clustering artefacts if applied to large datasets spanning long time intervals (14 years). To mitigate this effect, a Kernel Density Estimation is additionally applied to obtain more robust and well-defined spatio-temporal clusters. The analysis is performed by dividing the study area into six equal-area subregions and seven non-overlapping two-year time windows.

The resulting spatio-temporal clustering identifies 78 clusters, primarily classified as seismic swarms, distributed across the study area, with magnitudes up to ML 4.8. Most clusters exhibit spatial patterns and focal mechanisms consistent with known active faults documented in the QUIN database (QUaternary fault strain INdicator). Conversely, three groups of clusters occur in the upper crust and align along an ~100 km-long arcuate trend between the foothills south of Bologna and the Apennines west of Pesaro. In this sector, lithological conditions may hinder fault outcropping, suggesting the presence of blind faults whose activity is expressed mainly at depth, near fault roots. These clusters refine the complex architecture of the extensional domain and may indicate previously unrecognized southwest-dipping blind normal faults, or structural complexities (e.g., synthetic or antithetic structures) within the basal detachment.

The envelope of the seismic clusters reveals that the front of the Apenninic extensional domain, hosting the most significant historical and instrumental earthquakes, extends eastward beyond the outcropping west–southwest-dipping normal faults. This finding has important implications for seismic hazard assessment in the densely populated foothill areas of the Northern Apennines and contributes to a better understanding of the architecture of low-angle normal fault systems.

How to cite: Di Gregorio, M., Vuan, A., Lelj, G., Talone, D., and Latorre, D.: Seismicity-Driven Insights into the Extensional Architecture of the Northern Apennines, Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14678, 2026.

EGU26-14680 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Moment Tensor Inversion Using Empirical Green’s Functions: a Methodological Approach in Complex Media for Seismotectonic and Volcanic Studies 

Anna Susini, Guido Maria Adinolfi, Francisca Guinez-Rivas, Donato Talone, and Sergio Carmelo Vinciguerra

Obtaining reliable moment tensor (MT) solutions for earthquakes is particularly challenging due to their strong dependence on station geometry, accurate hypocentral locations, and a well-constrained seismic velocity model. The estimation of seismic moment and magnitude, as well as the decomposition of the source mechanism into double-couple (DC), isotropic (ISO), and compensated linear vector dipole (CLVD) components, strongly depend on the assumed velocity model, which also controls the minimum resolvable magnitude. The limited availability of detailed three-dimensional crustal models often restricts MT inversions to low-frequency data, reducing resolution and negatively affecting both source parameter accuracy and inversion stability.

Recent improvements in seismic network coverage and instrument sensitivity have increased the resolving power, leading to a growing demand for MT solutions of progressively lower-magnitude earthquakes. This evolution imposes stricter requirements on the accuracy of 3D velocity models, which must properly represent small-scale heterogeneities, attenuation, and seismic anisotropy. In this context, Empirical Green’s Functions (EGFs) provide a practical approach to reduce the impact of simplified velocity models, empirically incorporating path and site effects, and improving high-frequency waveform fits.

In this study, we propose a methodological approach for earthquake MT inversion that includes EGFs into time-domain waveform inversion using the ISOLA code (Zahradník and Sokos, 2018). The methodology is based on the concept introduced by Plicka and Zahradník (1998), which enables the estimation of spatial derivatives of the EGF tensor directly from seismic observations, without requiring an a priori similarity among the focal mechanisms of weak earthquakes. Within this conceptual framework, a selected set of well-recorded small earthquakes within the same focal volume is first inverted for MTs using a standard waveform inversion procedure. These independently obtained MT solutions are combined with the corresponding observed waveforms to retrieve empirical Green’s tensor spatial derivatives, which are subsequently used to invert other earthquakes occurring in the same source region.

Within this framework, the use of EGFs significantly reduces modeling errors associated with simplified velocity structures and unresolved small-scale heterogeneities, while preserving sufficient resolution capability to extend MT analysis toward lower-magnitude earthquakes. The ISOLA code further enables systematic exploration of source parameters, quantitative assessment of solution quality through variance reduction and stability analysis, and consistent comparison among different inversion setups, providing an additional criterion for evaluating the reliability of the obtained solutions.

The proposed methodology is applied to the 2024–2025 seismic crisis at Campi Flegrei, a volcanically active area in Southern Italy, characterized by strong lateral heterogeneity and complex wave propagation effects. This dataset provides a representative test case to evaluate and validate the robustness of this approach under challenging geological and observational conditions, where complex rupture processes may be influenced by crustal fluids.

References

Plicka, V., and J. Zahradník (1998). Inverting seismograms of weak events for empirical Green’s tensor derivatives, Geophys. J. Int. 132, 471–478.

Zahradník, J., & Sokos, E. (2018). ISOLA code for multiple-point source modeling. In Moment tensor solutions: A useful tool for seismotectonics (pp. 1-28). Cham: Springer International Publishing.

How to cite: Susini, A., Adinolfi, G. M., Guinez-Rivas, F., Talone, D., and Vinciguerra, S. C.: Moment Tensor Inversion Using Empirical Green’s Functions: a Methodological Approach in Complex Media for Seismotectonic and Volcanic Studies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14680, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14680, 2026.

EGU26-15087 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Seismic Array Study of the Tectonic of the Tianzhu Seismic Gap and the Deep Characteristics of the Laohushan and Maomaoshan fault 

Jiuhui Chen, Shuncheng Li, Biao Guo, Yifang Chen, and Xinzhong Yin

The Gulang Ms 8.0 strong earthquake that occurred in 1927 claimed the lives of more than 40,000 people in the surrounding areas. Geological studies have shown that the occurrence of the Gulang earthquake did not reduce the seismic hazard of the Laohushan, Maomaoshan and Lenglongling faults, which are the westward extensions of the Haiyuan Fault. Based on the seismic moment accumulation rate, the existence of the Tianzhu Seismic Gap has been proposed. This seismic gap is potentially at risk of producing earthquakes of magnitude 7.0 or higher. Coupled with the frequent occurrence of small earthquakes in this area in recent years, it is regarded as being of considerable seismic danger. In the junction area of the Tianzhu Seismic Gap and its surrounding faults, we observed and collected dense broadband seismic array data for a period of more than 7 years. Through long-term continuous observations, the seismicity and the crustal S-wave velocity structure of the study area was obtained. The research results show that the current seismicity in the Gulang Seismic Zone distributes along the Wuwei-Tianzhu Fault with a southwestward trending feature, and does not extend to the Lenglongling Fault. This indicates that the seismogenic fault of the Gulang Earthquake may not include the Lenglongling Fault and the Jinqianghe Fault. In the Tianzhu Seismic Gap, seismicity distributes linearly along the Laohushan-Maomaoshan Fault, exhibiting obvious strike-slip fault characteristics. In terms of depth, seismic activities around the Maomaoshan Fault are concentrated in two intervals: the shallow layer above 10 km and the deep layer below 20 km, which also delineates the strong locking feature at the depth of 10–20 km beneath the Maomaoshan Fault. Obvious weak seismicity is also observed in the western segment of the Haiyuan Fault. The velocity structure results demonstrate that at the depth of the upper and middle crust, there are significant velocity differences on both sides of the Laohushan Fault, Maomaoshan Fault and Wuwei-Tianzhu Fault, and the seismic distribution is highly consistent with the boundary zones of these velocity differences. Beneath the Maomaoshan Fault and in the middle segment of the Laohushan Fault (at the upper and middle crust depth), there exist high-velocity anomalies distributed on both sides of the faults. These anomalies are inferred to be asperities that impede fault rupture, with a length of approximately 50 km and a width exceeding 20 km along the fault plane.

How to cite: Chen, J., Li, S., Guo, B., Chen, Y., and Yin, X.: Seismic Array Study of the Tectonic of the Tianzhu Seismic Gap and the Deep Characteristics of the Laohushan and Maomaoshan fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15087, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15087, 2026.

EGU26-15139 | Orals | TS3.1

Revealing Seismic Sequence Characteristics in the South-eastern Alps and the Western Dinarides by clustering analysis and refined location 

Piero Brondi, Matteo Picozzi, Grazia De Landro, Antonio Giovanni Iaccarino, Giuliana Rossi, Anthony Lomax, Andrea Magrin, Luigi Zampa, and Maddalena Michele

The study of the seismicity distribution in space and time is a key element for assessing seismic hazard, as earthquake occurrence is controlled by variations in crustal stress and fault loading. The identification and characterization of seismic sequences therefore represent an effective approach to investigate earthquake interaction and the activation of complex fault systems.

We analyze ten years of seismicity (2015–2024) in the South-Eastern Alps and the Western Dinarides (SEAWD), a tectonically active region characterized by moderate to high seismic hazard and by the occurrence of large historical earthquakes, including the Mw 6.5 Friuli event of 1976. The study is based on the seismic catalog of the Northeastern Italy Seismometer Network, managed by the Seismological Research Center (CRS) of the National Institute of Oceanography and Experimental Geophysics – OGS.

Seismic sequences are first detected using the Zaliapin and Ben-Zion nearest-neighbor clustering technique and subsequently analyzed with the NLL-SSST Coherence algorithm, which allows a detailed reconstruction of their spatio-temporal evolution and source coherence. A total of 75 seismic sequences are identified and classified: 49 Foreshock-Mainshock-Aftershock sequences (65%), 25 Mainshock-Aftershock sequences (32%), and one swarm-type sequence. The preliminary results indicate that Mainshock-Aftershock sequences are, on average, associated with larger mainshock magnitudes compared to Foreshock-Mainshock-Aftershock sequences.

Further analyses are currently underway to refine the characterization of the detected sequences and to explore their implications for fault interaction processes.

How to cite: Brondi, P., Picozzi, M., De Landro, G., Iaccarino, A. G., Rossi, G., Lomax, A., Magrin, A., Zampa, L., and Michele, M.: Revealing Seismic Sequence Characteristics in the South-eastern Alps and the Western Dinarides by clustering analysis and refined location, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15139, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15139, 2026.

EGU26-15452 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Resolving the Deformation Style and Slip Behavior of the Castle Mountain Fault, South-Central Alaska 

Lauren Berrien, Nicolas Harrichhausen, Rob Witter, Rich Koehler, and Jens Munk

The Castle Mountain fault (CMF) is a major active fault in south-central Alaska that poses a significant seismic hazard to the Anchorage and Matanuska-Susitna Valley urban areas. Previous studies of the CMF have reached conflicting conclusions regarding its kinematics, slip behavior, and earthquake rupture history. Earlier paleoseismic, geomorphic, and geodetic studies suggested that the CMF is predominately right-lateral with slip rate values ranging from 0.07 - 3.0 mm/yr, while more recent work suggests that the CMF accommodates reverse dip-slip motion of <0.3 mm/yr (based on the long-term bedrock rate). Early studies were constrained by limited methodologies and data, such as low-resolution topographic maps. In this study, we apply modern geomorphic and geophysical methods at several sites along the CMF to reassess interpretations of its slip sense and better constrain the number and timing of past earthquake ruptures. We have completed geomorphic mapping using high-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) and collected two electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) profiles at one of two designated study sites. The well-defined CMF scarp resolved in lidar DEMs allows precise placement of ERT profiles across the fault. The two profiles spanned 80 meters across the fault scarp. ERT probes measured resistivity at 5m-spacing for a deeper profile and 2m-spacing for a more detailed profile closer to the surface. Relative fault displacements along strike of the CMF will be analyzed and measured using statistical analyses of scarp heights.  Preliminary results indicate that the ERT profiles can distinguish different geologic units and fault features such as fault planes, fracture zones, and stratigraphic offsets that have strong lateral resistivity contrasts. Based on geomorphic features observed in the DEMs, our preliminary findings suggest that past earthquakes on the CMF involved predominantly reverse slip. These features include hanging-wall-grabens, south-facing scarps, folded surfaces, and left-stepping en echelon scarps superimposed on the larger scarp. To better define the slip-rate history and geometry of the CMF, we plan to collect additional ERT profiles across the scarp where it displaces various fluvial terraces. We will also describe sediment cores and soil profiles. Samples from the cores and profiles will be collected for optically stimulated luminescence and radiocarbon dating. Our results will be compared with previous interpretations and observations in the field to help resolve long-standing discrepancies in interpretations of CMF behavior and improve regional seismic hazard assessments.



How to cite: Berrien, L., Harrichhausen, N., Witter, R., Koehler, R., and Munk, J.: Resolving the Deformation Style and Slip Behavior of the Castle Mountain Fault, South-Central Alaska, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15452, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15452, 2026.

EGU26-16931 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Kinematic modeling of crustal deformation in the Caucasus territory 

Rafig Safarov, Fakhraddin Gadirov (Kadirov), Michele Carafa, and Samir Mammadov

We present the finite element neotectonic dynamic modelling of crustal deformation for the Caucasus region based on the GPS observations, seismicity and main fault configurations. The data obtained from crustal deformation monitoring made using GPS systems in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkiye, Iran and Armenia aggregated and used to determine the dynamics of the main tectonic structures. Over 215 continuous and survey mode GPS site velocities were collected from several published papers, analyzed and after a careful filtration process were involved in modelling. The traces and parameters of main active faults in the region were obtained from different open access data bases in order to constrain more accurate and solid model for the analysis. The World Stress Map database released in 2025 used to take into account the regional seismicity and to calculate the fault slip rates, strain and stress directions associated with main seismic events. Our model shows that the high accumulation of strain is predominantly concentrated along the southeastern part of the Greater Caucasus Trust Belt, eastern part of Kur depression and Absheron peninsula. Relatively low strain accumulation is observed in Lesser Caucasus. Although, there are some indications of significant strain along other main subparallel faults in the region, the large majority of the Arabia-Eurasia convergence is accommodated by the lateral movement of the crust. Since earthquakes are known usually to occur in areas of very low strain rates, it is difficult to quantify hazards in such cases. However, with auxiliary information from paleoseismology and geomorphology will possibly help to constrain better models.

How to cite: Safarov, R., Gadirov (Kadirov), F., Carafa, M., and Mammadov, S.: Kinematic modeling of crustal deformation in the Caucasus territory, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16931, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16931, 2026.

EGU26-17262 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Structural Architectures and Distribution of Active Faults in Taiwan Strait 

Sung-Ping Chang, Chi-Jhen Fan, Ho-Han Hsu, Yi-Ping Chen, Yu-Xuan Lin, Wei-Chung Han, and Song-Chuen Chen

Taiwan lies within the active arc–continent collision between the Philippine Sea Plate and the Eurasian margin. In the Western Foothills, the foreland basin has been incorporated into the fold-and-thrust belt, with a deformation front clearly defined by onshore topography. However, the seaward extension of these structures remains poorly constrained. Neglecting faults that traverse the coastline can lead to a significant underestimation of seismic hazards. To characterize these potential seismogenic sources, we utilize high-resolution multichannel seismic reflection profiles acquired by a GI-gun system to understand the Holocene subsurface structure and quantify deformation parameters in the western offshore of Taiwan.

This study interprets key regional stratigraphic markers, including the unconformity formed during the last glacial period, to characterize fault-related folds in the offshore domain. Additionally, we developed a shallow 3-D velocity model based on semblance velocity to assess structures down to approximately 1 km depth. To provide robust evidence across the study area, we integrated offshore fault interpretations and strata offsets with onshore outcrop and borehole data. This integration allowed us to quantify fault orientation, length, dip, and vertical displacement.

Seismic interpretation shows that strata overlying thrust faults with asymmetric anticlines indicate fault-propagation folds, accompanied by noticeable uplift above the Last Glacial Maximum Unconformity. Eight major NE–SW trending thrust faults identified within the offshore deformation front likely extend more than 20 km when linked with onshore segments. Additionally, the long-term uplift rates estimated from seismic profiles are consistent with geochronological constraints from borehole data. These segment-scale fault parameters at the western offshore deformation front establish crucial parameters for offshore seismic hazard assessment and risk-informed development in northwestern Taiwan.

How to cite: Chang, S.-P., Fan, C.-J., Hsu, H.-H., Chen, Y.-P., Lin, Y.-X., Han, W.-C., and Chen, S.-C.: Structural Architectures and Distribution of Active Faults in Taiwan Strait, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17262, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17262, 2026.

EGU26-17660 | Orals | TS3.1

From long-term active tectonic model to seismic coupling: impacts of seismic hazard in the central Apennines 

Deborah Di Naccio, Cinzia Di Lorenzo, Giuseppe Falcone, Vanja Kastelic, Federica Sparacino, Leonardo Del Sole, and Michele Matteo Cosimo Carafa

Fault slip rate is a key input for long-term seismic hazard models. However, fault slip behavior can vary significantly, ranging from aseismic creep to sudden rupture events during the seismic cycle. Accurately quantifying how these different slip modes partition deformation and release seismically remains a critical challenge for improving seismic hazard assessments. Thus, a rigorous probabilistic framework is required to explore uncertainties in the active fault model, including fault geometry (e.g., length, dip, seismogenic thickness), and seismotectonic potential (e.g., long-term slip rate and tectonic moment rate). This approach must also account for uncertainties in the regional seismic model, such as a tapered Gutenberg-Richter distribution.

In this context, we focus on the central Apennines, one of the most seismically active and extensively studied regions in Italy, where the largest and most frequent earthquakes occur mainly along the axis of the mountain chain. This setting has favored neotectonic studies, synthesized into a new high-quality active tectonic model (Di Naccio et al., 2025a), while the rich cultural heritage and long historical records of the region support a consistent earthquake catalog spanning several centuries.

Our findings (Di Naccio et al., 2025b) indicate that a non-marginal component of permanent deformation contributes to the long-term tectonic moment rate, with a significant impact on seismic hazard estimates. These results underscore the importance of practitioners utilizing fault-based models to explicitly account for seismic coupling when forecasting long-term seismicity.

Hazard calculations closely align with the official national hazard model, with our most probable coupling scenario reproducing the reference values. Thus, the assumption of full coupling (c≈1) is unrealistic and may critically bias hazard estimates, reinforcing the importance of robust seismic coupling assessments.

Di Naccio, D., Di Lorenzo, C., Falcone, G. , Kastelic, V., Sparacino, F., Del Sole, L., Carafa, M.M.C. (2025a)a. Active tectonic model in the central Apennines. Zenodo https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15970471 (2025);

Di Naccio, D., Di Lorenzo, C., Falcone, G. , Kastelic, V., Sparacino, F., Del Sole, L., Carafa, M.M.C. (2025b). The impact of long-term seismic coupling on fault-based seismic hazard models: insights from the central Apennines (Italy). npj Nat. Hazards 2, 97. https://doi.org/10.1038/s44304-025-00150-y.

How to cite: Di Naccio, D., Di Lorenzo, C., Falcone, G., Kastelic, V., Sparacino, F., Del Sole, L., and Carafa, M. M. C.: From long-term active tectonic model to seismic coupling: impacts of seismic hazard in the central Apennines, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17660, 2026.

EGU26-18550 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Planktonic foraminiferal δ¹⁸O-δ¹³C anomalies reveal earthquake-triggered transient fluid flow along the active Bokkoya strike-slip fault, Alboran Sea 

Léa Vidil, Laurent Emmanuel, Elia d'Acremont, Sara Lafuerza, Sylvie Leroy, and Fabien Caroir and the ALBANEO-ALBACORE

In the Alboran Sea, oblique convergence between the African and Eurasian plates has driven the development of the active Al Idrissi-Bokkoya sinistral strike-slip fault system since ~1 Ma. Several moderate-magnitude earthquakes (Mw > 6) have been recorded along different segments of this fault system, highlighting its ongoing activity. This study investigates the dynamics of this nascent plate boundary by identifying seismic events recorded in sedimentary archives.

We focus on the Bokkoya transtensive fault system, which offsets the Small Al Idrissi Volcano and extends over ~20 km along strike. Sedimentation in this area is strongly influenced by the circulation of Deep Mediterranean Water masses, resulting in contourite deposition, and is likely punctuated by mass-movement processes triggered by seismic events.

A multidisciplinary dataset was acquired during the ALBACORE oceanographic campaign (R/V Pourquoi pas?, 2021), conducted within the framework of the ANR ALBANEO project, which aims to characterize the dynamics and seismic hazards of this emerging plate boundary. The dataset includes two 18 m-long Calypso sediment cores (ALB_CL54 and ALB_CL53) located directly above and within the subsiding basin of the main Bokkoya Fault. Analyzes include Multi-Sensor Core Logging (MSCL), X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF), Total Organic Carbon (TOC, Rock-Eval), and stable Isotope analyses (δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O), complemented by multibeam bathymetry and seismic reflection/sub-bottom profiler data.

Radiocarbon-calibrated δ¹⁸O records allow sedimentary sequences to be dated back to ~45 ka, encompassing major cold climatic intervals such as the Younger Dryas, Heinrich Stadial 1, and the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The mean sedimentation rate within the subsiding basin is approximately 35 cm.kyr-1. Comparison of sedimentary successions across different fault compartments reveals pronounced contrasts during the LGM (at ~20-21 ka), when core ALB_CL54 -penetrating the fault plane- records an exceptionally high sedimentation rate (> 200 cm.kyr-1), an absence of bioturbation within contouritic deposits, and a distinct coupled δ18O- δ13C (up to ~3 ‰) anomaly not observed in the adjacent core ALB_CL53, located in the fault zone.

The restriction of the isotopic anomaly to ALB_CL54 points to a localized, transient tectonic event involving the rapid expulsion of hot fluids along the fault zone., which temporarily served as a preferential fluid drainage pathway. The absence of a similar isotopic record in ALB_CL53 suggests limited lateral fluid dissipation, consistent with a brief, high-intensity fluid release occurring during a cold climatic period associated with low sea level. These results demonstrate that coupled δ¹⁸O and δ¹³C anomalies in planktonic foraminifera constitute a robust geochemical marker of tectonic events in marine sediments, providing a complementary tool to highlight episodes of fault activity beyond the resolution of sedimentological observations.

How to cite: Vidil, L., Emmanuel, L., d'Acremont, E., Lafuerza, S., Leroy, S., and Caroir, F. and the ALBANEO-ALBACORE: Planktonic foraminiferal δ¹⁸O-δ¹³C anomalies reveal earthquake-triggered transient fluid flow along the active Bokkoya strike-slip fault, Alboran Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18550, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18550, 2026.

EGU26-18578 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Multi-proxy evidence of activity of the Bokkoya fault system during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), Alboran sea 

Elia d Acremont, Lea Vidil, Laurent Emmanuel, Sara Lafuerza, Fabien Caroir, Sylvie Leroy, El Mehdi Latni, and Alain Rabaute and the ALBANEO-ALBACORE team

The Alboran Basin is transected from southern Spain to northern Morocco by the active left-lateral Al Idrissi Fault Zone, whose southern termination corresponds to the Bokkoya fault system. These faults accommodate the oblique convergence between the African and Eurasian plates and the extrusion of the Betic–Rif block, generating recurrent seismicity. The Bokkoya Fault Zone lies between offshore segments that ruptured during the 1994–2004 seismic crises (Mw 5.9 and 6.3) and the 2016 and 2021 events (Mw 6.4 and 5.5). The ANR-funded ALBANEO project aims to constrain the long-term behaviour of this currently low-seismicity segment by reconstructing its activity over the last ~120 ka, with implications for regional seismic hazard assessment.

This study integrates a multi-proxy dataset from the ALBACORE marine campaign (https://doi.org/10.17600/18001351), including multibeam bathymetry, seismic reflection and sub-bottom profiles, piezocone penetration tests (CPTu), and sediment cores. Data were collected along ~20 km of the Bokkoya fault segment, from the Small Al Idrissi Volcano to Al Hoceima Bay.

Deformation is distributed across localized and diffuse fault segments with both vertical and horizontal offsets. Fault architecture evolves from north to south, controlled by relay zones and step-overs, up to the Moroccan coastline where the fault system terminates. Individual segments are on average ~5 km long, with maximum cumulative horizontal offsets of ~3 km over 1 Ma and vertical offsets of up to 32 m over the last 120 ka.

Paleoseismological analysis highlights major tectonic events during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). In the Bokkoya fault system, seismic reflection data calibrated with sediment cores and CPTu measurements indicate late- to post-LGM fault sealing on some segments, as well as in-situ disrupted seismic facies dated to the LGM. This facies is interpreted as the result of seismically induced soft-sediment deformation.

Moreover, a chaotic sedimentary facies observed between 8 and 10 m depth in core ALB_CL56 correlates with increased sediment strength derived from CPTu data and is dated between 20.9 and 20.3 ka. This facies extends over ~30 km² on sub-bottom profiles and is interpreted as a mass-transport deposit (MTD), likely triggered by a coeval seismic event. The source area is identified on the eastern shelf of the Bokkoya fault system, where submerged headscarps are observed. During the LGM (~18–24 ka), sea level was approximately 120 m lower, exposing the shelf by up to ~40 m.

The MTD and the in-situ disrupted seismic facies likely represent paleoseismic archives, consistent with recent studies documenting LGM-aged seismic events on the Bokkoya fault (Vidil et al., 2025). However, disentangling climatic forcing (sea-level changes and post-LGM warming) from tectonic triggering remains challenging. The spatial distribution of seismic clusters and paleo-fault activity suggests an immature segmentation of the plate boundary, with important implications for regional seismic hazard.

How to cite: d Acremont, E., Vidil, L., Emmanuel, L., Lafuerza, S., Caroir, F., Leroy, S., Latni, E. M., and Rabaute, A. and the ALBANEO-ALBACORE team: Multi-proxy evidence of activity of the Bokkoya fault system during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), Alboran sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18578, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18578, 2026.

EGU26-18590 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Structural and kinematic controls on basement-influenced salt diapir geometries in the central Adriatic: Insights from 2D seismic profiles. 

Chahreddine Neji, Tvrtko Korbar, David Rukavina, Snjezana Markusic, Ana Kamenski, and Tiago Alves

The interpretation of deep 2D seismic profiles from the central Adriatic foreland of the External Dinarides in the area of the islands of Vis and Jabuka (Croatia), reveals a complex Mesozoic platform-to-basin architecture, and Cenozoic structural and sedimentary system developed on top of the central part of the Adriatic microplate (Adria). Tectonic subsidence and thick Paleogene to Neogene sedimentary loading in the latest Dinaric foredeep probably initially mobilized buried Middle Triassic evaporites from the proximal to distal foreland. Miocene tectonic is characterized by basement-rooted positive flower structures, pop-up blocks, and upward-diverging fault splays, diagnostic of a transpressional tectonic regime.

The crustal-scale Quaternary subvertical faults without apparent vertical throw are associated with positive and negative structures along the strike. In the overlying sedimentary cover, localized normal faulting and extensional arrays overprint transpressional structures, interpreted as gravitational collapse above pop-up blocks, roof collapse above ascending diapirs, and lateral collapse within a mechanically decoupled cover. The positive structures are associated with the Quaternary salt diapirs, some of which are still active. However, it is not clear which faults are inducing regional seismicity.

Instrumental seismicity is moderate to strong (up to M>5), shallow (≈5–15 km) and spatially clustered around the diapiric structures. Focal‑mechanism solutions predominantly indicate reverse to reverse–oblique faulting, yet the nodal planes do not clearly coincide with any single reverse fault imaged on 2D profiles, and many hypocenters project within or immediately above active salt diapirs. These observations suggest that salt diapirs act as mechanical and geometric controllers that focus stress and localize brittle failure on surrounding basement‑rooted faults, rather than being the primary source of seismic energy, which is difficult to reconcile with the seismic moment of M>5 events if salt flow alone were responsible.

Active salt structures are characterized by long stems and relatively small surface expressions that are aligned along Quaternary faults. Their geometry, disconnection with original depth of the Triassic evaporites, and limited lateral extent, indicate tectonic extrusion of deep evaporites. Variations and segmentation along strike, suggest localized strain and strong structural control on diapir rise. Overall, these observations indicate that diapir growth and surface expression are controlled by the interaction between deep shear zones, active faulting, and a mechanically decoupled overburden. Within this framework, seismicity reflects the interaction between deep shear zones, evaporite mobilization and upper‑crustal faulting, highlighting the need to re‑evaluate focal mechanisms with improved 3D velocity models and to explicitly incorporate salt‑controlled structures into seismic‑hazard assessments for the region.

“This work was supported by Croatian Science Foundation project SALTECTA (HRZZ-IP-2024-05-2957).”

Keywords: Central Adriatic Sea, 2D seismic profiles, Transpressional deformation, Salt diapirs, Active tectonics, Seismicity.

How to cite: Neji, C., Korbar, T., Rukavina, D., Markusic, S., Kamenski, A., and Alves, T.: Structural and kinematic controls on basement-influenced salt diapir geometries in the central Adriatic: Insights from 2D seismic profiles., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18590, 2026.

EGU26-18739 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Characterizing Low-to-Moderate Magnitude Earthquake Sequences and Seismic Sources Along the Africa–Eurasia Plate Boundary in Southern Italy 

Cristina Totaro, Thomas Mancuso, Simone Cesca, Francesco Grigoli, Debora Presti, and Barbara Orecchio

The Africa–Eurasia plate boundary extends along the southern Tyrrhenian Sea in the Sicilian offshore, representing a tectonically complex region mainly characterized by compressional to transpressional regime. Deformation is unevenly distributed along the margin, and seismicity is predominantly characterized by low-to-moderate magnitude earthquakes. The large offshore extent of the area, combined with locally unfavorable seismic network geometry, often limits the resolution of traditional seismological analyses and hampers robust seismic source characterization. In this study, we present an integrated analysis of recent seismicity along the southern Italy segment of the Africa–Eurasia plate boundary, aimed at improving the characterization of active seismic sources and their kinematics through advanced, multi-method seismological approaches. Our investigation includes (i) a regional-scale clustering analysis of earthquakes recorded between 2010 and 2025, and (ii) a detailed characterization of a recent offshore seismic sequence in the southeastern Tyrrhenian Sea. At the regional scale, we apply a density-based spatial clustering algorithm using a space–time distance metric to a high-resolution relocated earthquake catalog. Seismic clusters are subsequently classified as swarm-type or mainshock–aftershock sequences using statistical descriptors of the seismic moment distribution over time. This analysis allows us to identify spatial variations in seismic release patterns and to infer differences in fault segmentation, loading conditions, and stress transfer along the plate boundary. At the local scale, we focus on a Mw 4.7 offshore earthquake sequence and propose an integrated workflow specifically designed to enhance seismic source characterization in offshore environments. The methodology combines Bayesian absolute hypocenter location, machine-learning-based phase picking and event detection, distance geometry solvers for relative relocation, and probabilistic moment tensor inversion. This approach resolves source geometry, fault orientation, and slip kinematics despite non-optimal network conditions, providing robust constraints on active fault planes. Overall, our results demonstrate that advanced, integrated seismological methods significantly improve the characterization of active seismic sources along the Africa–Eurasia plate boundary, offering new insights into fault behavior and deformation processes in offshore and structurally complex regions.

How to cite: Totaro, C., Mancuso, T., Cesca, S., Grigoli, F., Presti, D., and Orecchio, B.: Characterizing Low-to-Moderate Magnitude Earthquake Sequences and Seismic Sources Along the Africa–Eurasia Plate Boundary in Southern Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18739, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18739, 2026.

EGU26-18938 | Orals | TS3.1

Progressive eastward rupture of the Main Marmara fault toward Istanbul 

Marco Bohnhoff, Patricia Martinez-Garzon, Xiang Chen, Dirk Becker, Sebastian Nunez-Jara, Recai Kartal, Elif Turker, Georg Dresen, Yehuda Ben-Zion, Jorge Jara, Fabrice Cotton, Filiz Kadirioglu, and Tugbay Kilic

The Main Marmara fault (MMF) in northwestern Türkiye poses the highest seismic risk in broader Europe. The 2025 MW 6.2 was the largest earthquake along the MMF in >60 years. We integrated observations from multiple temporal scales including the decade-long evolution of M > 5 earthquakes, their rupture dynamics and aftershock patterns. We show a series of eastward propagating M>5 events and a gradual eastward partial rupture of the MMF over the last ~15 years. The seismically active portion of the fault includes creeping and transitional segments with some of the most recent seismicity located near the presumably locked Princes Islands segment south of Istanbul that has the potential to generate a M~7 earthquake. Our analysis highlights the necessity of real-time monitoring of this part of the MMF. 

How to cite: Bohnhoff, M., Martinez-Garzon, P., Chen, X., Becker, D., Nunez-Jara, S., Kartal, R., Turker, E., Dresen, G., Ben-Zion, Y., Jara, J., Cotton, F., Kadirioglu, F., and Kilic, T.: Progressive eastward rupture of the Main Marmara fault toward Istanbul, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18938, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18938, 2026.

EGU26-19302 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Assessing Active Fault Mapping Gaps in Southern California Using Co-Seismic Surface Rupture Characteristics 

Isabelle Rocamora, James Hollingsworth, Sophie Giffard-Roisin, Léa Pousse-Beltran, and Yehuda Ben-Zion

Active fault mapping is an essential tool for predicting future surface ruptures. However, many earthquakes occur along unknown or partially mapped faults, even in “well-mapped” seismically active regions. This phenomenon is particularly evident in Southern California, as demonstrated by several surprising events, including: Ridgecrest 2019, El Mayor Cucapah 2010, Hector Mine 1999, Landers 1992, and Kern County 1952. Following these earthquakes on unmapped faults, it is often possible to find evidence suggesting pre-earthquake ruptures with paleoseismological studies. Thus, gaps in fault mapping may result from a lack of visible surface ruptures or from subtle signs that are challenging to identify. Recognizing these faults, despite weak signals in the landscape, is crucial for better predicting future shallow earthquakes and their potential impacts on human infrastructure. To understand why evidence of surface ruptures may disappear in certain fault sections, it is essential to learn how these ruptures develop following an earthquake.

The advent of very high-resolution satellite imaging, combined with image correlation techniques, presents new opportunities for characterizing the morphology of co-seismic surface ruptures. This study aims to investigate whether a systematic relationship exists between pre-earthquake fault mapping and the characteristics of observed co-seismic surface ruptures. Specifically, we search to determine whether faults mapped before a rupture exhibit statistically different co-seismic displacements or near-field deformation characteristics compared to unmapped faults, and whether ruptures lacking clear pre-event geomorphological expression display distinct signatures. We begin by analyzing the co-seismic surface rupture of the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake and comparing the rupture characteristics with pre-event fault mapping obtained from the USGS database. This analysis will then be extended to the 1992 Landers and 1999 Hector Mine earthquakes to evaluate the robustness and generality of the observed patterns across multiple large strike-slip events. For each earthquake, we construct dense datasets sampled along the surface ruptures, integrating morphological information derived from 2-meter resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) and displacement measurements obtained through 1-meter image correlation. We employ an unsupervised machine learning approach, specifically a hierarchical clustering, to group rupture segments based on their similarities across various parameters.

This methodology enables us to identify distinct classes of surface rupture behavior and evaluate how their distribution relates to pre-existing faults across different earthquakes. Our analyses reveal a strong correlation between the presence of pre-seismic geomorphic signal and lithology, as well as the intensity of co-seismic displacement. We found that more erosion-prone sediments and regions with smaller co-seismic displacement tend to show limited geomorphic expression prior to the earthquake. Additionally, some subtle pre-earthquake geomorphic signals can indeed be detected and mapped using very high-resolution satellite imagery. One initial approach to enhance fault mapping practices would be to utilize very high-resolution imagery, particularly in arid and sedimentary regions.

How to cite: Rocamora, I., Hollingsworth, J., Giffard-Roisin, S., Pousse-Beltran, L., and Ben-Zion, Y.: Assessing Active Fault Mapping Gaps in Southern California Using Co-Seismic Surface Rupture Characteristics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19302, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19302, 2026.

EGU26-19561 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

A revised seismotectonic model for the Albstadt Shear Zone, Southwest Germany 

Sarah Moser, Ritter Joachim, and Brüstle Andrea

The Swabian Jura near the town Albstadt is one of the seismically most active regions of Germany. Concerning tectonics, the region is characterized by a NW-SE striking shallow (<2-3 km) aseismic graben structure, the Hohenzollerngraben (HZG), and the seismically active Albstadt Shear Zone (ASZ), a NNE-SSW striking sinistral strike-slip fault zone at about 1-18 km depth. The ASZ has an extension of at least 50 km, but there is no evidence for surface rupture. Beside the continuous low-magnitude seismic activity, in the 20th century eight earthquakes with ML>5.0 occurred causing significant damage in the region of the Swabian Jura.

Here, we search for and then analyze very low-magnitude earthquake sequences during 2018 to 2020 in the area of the ASZ to image the seismically active faults. We apply a template matching detection routine, determine relative event locations for the identified earthquake sequences, calculate fault plane solutions based on first motion polarities and finally moment tensor solutions of earthquakes with ML greater than 3.5.

We identified six earthquake sequences and image three types of seismically active faults in the area of the town Albstadt. First, the known ASZ, with NNE-SSW striking sinistral strike-slip faulting at 5-10 km depth. Second, a so far not observed NW-SE striking dextral strike-slip fault at 11-15 km depth, beneath the HZG. A continuation with depth of the HZG surface faults is unlikely, but the co-location of the HZG and the NW-SE striking fault may indicate an inherited zone of weakness below the HZG. And finally, complex faulting in form of NNW-SSE striking sinistral strike-slip and normal faulting in 9-12 km depth indicating a heterogeneous deformation zone at the intersection of the ASZ and the newly discovered NW-SE striking fault zone.

Our results go into a revised seismotectonic model for the area of the ASZ, including two new types of seismically active faults in the area.

How to cite: Moser, S., Joachim, R., and Andrea, B.: A revised seismotectonic model for the Albstadt Shear Zone, Southwest Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19561, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19561, 2026.

EGU26-19789 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.1

Thermo-petrological constraints on seismic velocities of the Adria lower crust 

Federica Amoroso, Vanja Kastelic, Michele Matteo Cosimo Carafa, Maria Camila Lopez Suarez, Sergio Carmelo Vinciguerra, Beatrice Santarelli, and Alberto Zanetti

The Adria microplate represents the main geodynamic driver in the central Mediterranean, and its interaction with the surrounding plates controls the distribution of stress, strain and seismicity across the adjacent domains. In this context, the geometry and thermal structure of the lithosphere play a key role in partitioning the deformation across the Tyrrhenian–Apennines–Adriatic system. However, these properties remain poorly constrained by direct observations. Here, we address this problem through thermo-petrological forward modelling constrained by geophysical data aimed at quantifying lateral variations in lower-crustal seismic velocities.

The modelling was performed along a profile across the central Apennines, constructed using a structural and density model of the crust and upper mantle. The profile was sampled at multiple points to derive geothermal and lithostatic gradients from heat-flow and density data, thereby constraining pressure-temperature conditions along the section. Moho depth and its associated uncertainties were incorporated into the pressure-temperature estimates.

We adopted pyroxenite, peridotite, and metagabbro samples from well-exposed natural analogues as proxies for the lower crust and upper mantle of the Adria lithosphere. For each lithology, stable mineral assemblages, phase proportions, elastic properties and seismic velocities were computed as a function of pressure and temperature using the thermodynamic and elastic modelling code Perple_X (Connolly, 2005).

Calculations were performed using a mantle-oriented thermodynamic database and complemented by a sensitivity test based on an alternative parametrization optimized for crustal petrology, to quantify how differences in thermodynamic databases affect phase assemblages and the resulting seismic velocities.

Modelled P- and S- wave velocities were compared with independent laboratory measurements on representative rocks and with regional seismic tomography to assess the consistency between mineral assemblages, seismic velocities and independent constraints, indicating that the adopted thermo-petrological structure provides a realistic representation of the Adria lower crust and upper mantle.

References

Connolly JAD (2005). Computation of phase equilibria by linear programming: A tool for geodynamic modeling and its application to subduction zone decarbonation. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 236:524-541.

How to cite: Amoroso, F., Kastelic, V., Carafa, M. M. C., Lopez Suarez, M. C., Vinciguerra, S. C., Santarelli, B., and Zanetti, A.: Thermo-petrological constraints on seismic velocities of the Adria lower crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19789, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19789, 2026.

EGU26-20203 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Seismotectonics of the Central-Southern Apennines Junction (Italy): New Insights from High-Quality Background Seismicity Data 

Luigi Improta, Samer Bagh, Diana Latorre, Alessandro Marchetti, Pasquale De Gori, Luisa Valoroso, Francesco Pio Lucente, Gaetano Riccio, Stefania Pucillo, Rocco Cogliano, Fabio Criscuoli, Mauro Buttinelli, Francesco Maesano, Roberta Maffucci, Giuseppe Vico, Gerardo Romano, Agata Siniscalchi, Raju Khasi, and Paolo Marco De Martini

The junction between the central and southern Apennines represents a high-seismic-hazard region in the Mediterranean. Its seismotectonic setting is characterized by a complex, poorly understood interplay between SW-NE regional extension along the range axis and E-W mid-to-lower crustal shear zones in the Adria plate to the east. Although the range axis hosted several M6-7 historical earthquakes, their causative faults remain mostly debated. Monitoring by the Italian National Seismic Network (Rete Sismica Nazionale, RSN), with a station spacing of 10-30 km and a detection threshold of about ML1.2 in the region, has proved insufficient to pinpoint and fully characterize source faults for recent low-to-moderate magnitude (M < 4) sequences.

To address these limitations, we conducted the first comprehensive study of background seismicity as part of the MOSAICMO project, an inter-disciplinary initiative investigating tectonic evolution and seismogenesis of this region. This study integrates a 2-year passive seismic experiment (2023-2025) with a re-analysis of the 2016-2022 RSN seismicity. Our objectives were to improve knowledge of the active faults and relationship between seismogenesis and physical properties of the crustal rocks. The seismic experiment integrated 13 temporary stations with 20 permanent stations of the RSN over an area of 60x60 km2, reducing station spacing to 4-12 km. Initial analysis of the first nine months of the new dataset using a standard STA/LTA algorithm identified 470 events (0.2 < ML < 2.8), representing a 220% increase over the RSN catalog. For these earthquakes, P-and S-phases were manually picked. For the 2016-2022 seismicity, we revised and augmented the phase picks for 1,400 selected events and applied cross-correlation template matching to a prolonged swarm-like sequence (2016-2017; Mw 4.3) to produce a high-resolution catalog.

We utilized these phase picks to construct catalogs, through: i) absolute locations using the probabilistic location software NonLinLoc and a new optimized 1D velocity model, based on a non-linear approach ii) high-precision relative locations using the double-difference technique HypoDD; iii) absolute 3D re-locations alongside with Vp and Vp/Vs crustal models derived from Local Earthquake Tomography on a 3 × 3 × 2 km grid.

Our results show that seismicity deepens eastward, from 3–12 km beneath the inner range to 15–22 km under the outer range. While the upper crust exhibits mixed extensional and strike-slip focal mechanisms, deeper eastern events are almost exclusively strike-slip. Most seismicity occurs in small, short-lived clusters. Along the inner range, seismicity concentrates at 5-10 km depth within high-Vp (6.0-6.7 km/s), low-Vp/Vs (1.70-1.85) zones. Here, high-precision relocations reveal NW-striking, NE-dipping alignments consistent with known Quaternary normal faults. Integrating these results with a subsurface geological model based on seismic commercial profiles and exploration wells, and a 2D magnetotelluric tomography, we find that: (i) axial seismicity is mainly hosted within the high-velocity, high-resistivity Mesozoic carbonates of the Apulia Platform, (ii) the 2016–2017 swarm-like seismicity also clusters within the Apulian Platform but correlates with a low-resistivity anomaly, suggesting a fluid-driven seismogenic mechanism.

How to cite: Improta, L., Bagh, S., Latorre, D., Marchetti, A., De Gori, P., Valoroso, L., Lucente, F. P., Riccio, G., Pucillo, S., Cogliano, R., Criscuoli, F., Buttinelli, M., Maesano, F., Maffucci, R., Vico, G., Romano, G., Siniscalchi, A., Khasi, R., and De Martini, P. M.: Seismotectonics of the Central-Southern Apennines Junction (Italy): New Insights from High-Quality Background Seismicity Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20203, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20203, 2026.

EGU26-21084 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Geological Structure and Neotectonic Fabric of the Amyntaio Basin, NW Greece: The Correlation Between Fault Systems and Ground Fissures 

Haralambos Kranis, Emmanouil Skourtsos, Christos Filis, Emmanouil Andreadakis, Elina Kapourani, Christos Roumpos, Petros Kostaridis, and Georgios Louloudis

This study focuses on the investigation of the geological and neotectonic conditions of the Amyntaio Basin, with a particular emphasis on the recent geological formations that host the region’s primary aquifers. Understanding the stratigraphy and tectonic structure is considered essential, as these formations serve as the primary water source for domestic, agricultural, and industrial requirements. The basin fill consists of thick Neogene and Quaternary sediments deposited unconformably over the Mesozoic basement. Dominating these deposits is the lignite-bearing series, while the overlying Quaternary formations are distinguished into the lower coarse-grained Proastio Formation, characterized by conglomerates and sands, and the upper finer-grained Perdikka Formation, which primarily includes marls and clays. Significant importance is attributed to modern alluvial deposits, which cover most of the basin and directly influence the hydrogeodynamic system. In the central part of the basin, near Lake Chimaditida, up to six-meter-thick layers of peat and organic silt occur, while the northwestern sector is dominated by the extensive alluvial fan of Sklithro.

Structural mapping revealed a dense fault fabric compatible with the current extensional stress regime of the area, dominated by normal faults striking NE-SW to ENE-WSW. The primary structures include the Vegoritida fault zone, which terminates at the northern boundary of the Amyntaio mine, the Chimaditida fault, which is likely connected to the Vegoritida system, and the Anargyroi fault, which defines the southern margin of the sub-basin. The combination of these structures creates a second-order tectonic graben where Lake Chimaditida has developed, while the Amyntaio mine area is situated within a fault transfer zone. Within the mine itself, the tectonic fabric consists of smaller normal faults following the same primary orientation, creating a complex horst and graben system.

One of the main conclusions of this study is the systematic geographical distribution and geometry of the mapped ground fissures. The orientation of these fissures coincides with the primary direction of the regional neotectonic fabric, specifically following the trends of the Petres-Sklithro and Anargyroi fault systems. Their kinematics align with the general tectonic extensional regime, suggesting a clear genetic relationship between active faults and surface ruptures. In certain areas, such as the one west of the mine, between the settlements of Anargyroi and Valtonera, the traces of the mapped faults practically coincide with the observed fissures. Furthermore, the alignment of these outcropping structures, between Valtonera and Rodona, confirms the existence of the Valtonera Fault. This structure constitutes an integral part of the neotectonic fabric and is identified as the primary factor responsible for the magnitude of the ground deformation phenomena within the settlement.

How to cite: Kranis, H., Skourtsos, E., Filis, C., Andreadakis, E., Kapourani, E., Roumpos, C., Kostaridis, P., and Louloudis, G.: Geological Structure and Neotectonic Fabric of the Amyntaio Basin, NW Greece: The Correlation Between Fault Systems and Ground Fissures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21084, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21084, 2026.

EGU26-21328 | Posters on site | TS3.1

Re-evaluation of seismogenic faults in the southern Vienna Basin from seismogenic depth to the surface 

Maria-Theresia Apoloner, Esther Hintersberger, Bernhard Salcher, Kurt Decker, Theresa Klaus, and Stefan Weginger

The southern Vienna Basin, a Miocene pull-apart structure formed along the sinistral Vienna Basin Transfer Fault System (VBTFS) extending from the Eastern Alps to the Western Carpathians, exhibits negative flower structures with strike-slip and branching normal faults. Miocene basin subsidence and sedimentation produced up to 5 km thick sedimentary sequences overlying the pre-Neogene basement. Quaternary and recent tectonic activity, documented by instrumentally recorded and historical seismic events as well as focal mechanisms of selected earthquakes, in addition to paleoseismological data showing evidence for prehistoric earthquakes of magnitudes up to ~ 6.8, confirms ongoing sinistral motion and normal faulting.

We present here a comprehensive overview of the seismotectonics of the Vienna Basin, integrating earthquake information, such as high-precession relocation of hypocenters, focal mechanisms and historical earthquake information together with fault information from industrial seismic campaigns, geological mapping and geomorphological studies.

The seismological characteristics are presented based on the Austrian Earthquake Catalog (AEC) of GeoSphere Austria. Suitable earthquakes that occurred after 2006 were relocated using two methods. For further analysis, the most accurate available locations were combined to obtain a complete picture of earthquake distribution. Five existing focal mechanism solutions of earthquakes were recalculated and further used to determine the recent stress field. The fault information is compiled into two datasets attributed with information on fault activity, kinematics, and displacement: surface fault traces and fault traces at the base of the Vienna Basin. The faults of both datasets are sorted into fault systems in order to correlate the fault information from both datasets.

This newly compiled seismotectonic dataset allows a systematic study comparing earthquake occurring in more than 5 km depth and faults, documented either at depths of 1-3 km by industrial seismic campaigns or at the surface by geological and geomorphological mapping in order to re-evaluate the most seismically active faults in the Vienna Basin. Despite the wealth of available information, uncertainties remain in the data, as well as additional ambiguities arising from the combination of geological and seismological data.

How to cite: Apoloner, M.-T., Hintersberger, E., Salcher, B., Decker, K., Klaus, T., and Weginger, S.: Re-evaluation of seismogenic faults in the southern Vienna Basin from seismogenic depth to the surface, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21328, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21328, 2026.

Oceanic transform faults (TFs) are fundamental elements of plate tectonics and have traditionally been viewed as conservative strike-slip boundaries. Seafloor observations and numerical modeling suggest the existence of extensional stress, however how it manifest at depth remains unknown. Moreover, slow-slipping TFs are often associated with thin crust and possible exposures of serpentinised peridotite near the seafloor. Here we apply full waveform inversion (FWI) to a 12-km offset seismic dataset across the Romanche TF, the largest TF on the Earth. The TF along our profile contains 20-km-wide 6 km deep valley with inward steeply dipping bounding faults. Given the steep seafloor topography, we first enhance the refracted waves by applying source-receiver reciprocity and downward continuation to the surface streamer data to mimic an ocean bottom cable survey geometry. We then perform trace-normalized FWI to derive a high-resolution crustal model. Our results reveal low P-wave velocity in the upper 3 km, suggestive of basaltic origin, and no evidence for high velocities characteristic of serpentinised peridotite beneath the valley floor. Moreover, we image inward dipping normal faults extending down to ~4 km depth below the seafloor, forming a flower-like structure. Regional earthquake data reveal both strike-slip and normal-faulting, with strike-slip hypocenters aligning with interpreted faults. These features suggest that the Romanche TF resembles a trans-tensional regime with a deep-rooted strike-slip fault in the middle, and complex faulting in the transform valley, accommodating both plate-scale and local strain deformation.

How to cite: Guo, P. and Singh, S.: Seismic Evidence for Trans-Tensional-Regime at the Romanche Oceanic Transform Fault in the Equatorial Atlantic Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21531, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21531, 2026.

EGU26-477 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Stress interactions in seismogenic faults through the lens of physics-based earthquake cycle simulations 

Constanza Rodriguez Piceda, Zoë Mildon, Billy Andrews, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Martijn van den Ende, Yifan Yin, Claudia Sgambato, and Francesco Visini

Recurrence intervals and magnitude distributions of earthquakes are key parameters in probabilistic and time-dependent seismic hazard assessments, yet they are difficult to constrain because the time window of instrumental and paleoseismic records often capture only a smaller fraction of the earthquake cycle of large earthquakes. Physics-based seismic cycle simulators can help to overcome these limitations by generating synthetic catalogues that span thousands of years, offering valuable insights into the statistical behaviour of fault networks. Despite the increasing use of these simulators, the physical mechanisms governing earthquake timing and size distributions remain incompletely understood, in particular the role of fault interactions and spatial variations in long-term slip rates.
Here we use the boundary-element code QDYN to simulate earthquake cycles on normal fault networks of increasing geological complexity, ranging from simplified two-fault configurations to realistic fault networks derived from field data in the Central and Southern Apennines (Italy). Our results show that both fault geometry and slip-rate variability critically influence earthquake recurrence and magnitude distributions. Networks with multiple across-strike interactions produce more complex seismic sequences, irregular recurrence intervals, and broader ranges of rupture sizes and moment magnitudes (Mw) compared to simpler configurations. Similarly, spatially variable slip-rate profiles promote diverse rupture behaviours, including partial ruptures and slow-slip events, that increase variability in stress redistribution, magnitude-frequency relationships and recurrence times. In contrast, models using uniform slip-rate profiles tend to produce regular recurrence patterns and characteristic earthquake magnitudes. These findings highlight the importance of incorporating realistic fault geometries and spatially variable slip rates in physics-based earthquake simulators used to inform seismic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Rodriguez Piceda, C., Mildon, Z., Andrews, B., Ampuero, J.-P., van den Ende, M., Yin, Y., Sgambato, C., and Visini, F.: Stress interactions in seismogenic faults through the lens of physics-based earthquake cycle simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-477, 2026.

EGU26-1206 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Quantifying Off-Fault Plastic Strain in 3D Dynamic Rupture Models: Insights from the 2023 Kahramanmaraş Earthquake 

Rachel Preca Trapani, Yann Klinger, Mathilde Marchandon, Sébastien Hok, Oona Scotti, and Alice-Agnes Gabriel

The 2023 Turkey earthquake sequence generated widespread off-fault deformation. Recent 3D InSAR analyses of the doublet sequence show that ~35% of coseismic slip was accommodated by off-fault deformation extending up to 5 – 7 km from the fault (Liu et al., 2025). These observations, coined Absent Surface Displacement (ASD), may highlight the complex interplay between off-fault deformation, geometric fault complexity, and near-surface off-fault material properties. Quantifying how such deformation patterns emerge, and whether numerical earthquake models can capture their spatial organisation, remains an open question. 

In this study, we investigate the relationship between InSAR-derived ASD patterns from the MW 7.8 Kahramanmaraş rupture and synthetic off-fault plastic strain fields, which represent distributed inelastic yielding of the surrounding medium under dynamic rupture loading. This is generated in a suite of six different 3D dynamic rupture simulations with non-associative off-fault Drucker-Prager plasticity. These models extend on those presented in Gabriel et al. (2023) and incorporate varying on-fault frictional and structural complexities, such as fault roughness or fault waviness, variable fracture energy through different frictional parameters, and supershear initiation rupture speeds. We analyse fault-normal profiles along the geometrically complex rupture trace, and explore approaches for quantifying along-strike variability in inelastic yielding regions, plastic strain distribution and deformation asymmetry. Our analysis focuses on exploring whether off-fault plasticity can serve as a proxy for ASD and how geometric complexities and different dynamic rupture model ingredients influence the distribution and magnitude of off-fault deformation. This work provides an initial step toward constraining the consistency between observed and modelled near-fault deformation, and toward improving the representation of off-fault processes in physics-based earthquake rupture simulations.

How to cite: Preca Trapani, R., Klinger, Y., Marchandon, M., Hok, S., Scotti, O., and Gabriel, A.-A.: Quantifying Off-Fault Plastic Strain in 3D Dynamic Rupture Models: Insights from the 2023 Kahramanmaraş Earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1206, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1206, 2026.

EGU26-1323 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Postseismic evolution and megathrust re-coupling revealed by the spatio-temporal distribution of seismicity after the 2010 Maule earthquake 

Camila Monge, Marcos Moreno, and Valeria Becerra-Carreño

The 2010 Mw 8.8 Maule earthquake is one the largest and the best-instrumented megathrust ruptures worldwide, with extensive seismic and geodetic observations spanning its interseismic, coseismic, and postseismic phases, making it an exceptional case for understanding how a subduction interface relaxes and recouples after a great earthquake. In this study, we investigate the spatio-temporal evolution of seismicity with a focus on moderate-to-large seismic events (M ≥ 6) that occurred between 2010 and 2022 in the northern half of the Maule rupture and analyze how their deformation patterns reflect postseismic stress redistribution. While shallow aftershocks dominated the first two years following Maule, later seismicity concentrated around the margins of the main slip patch, where both afterslip and Coulomb stress changes were greatest. Only three M ≥ 6 earthquakes recorded in this interval generated measurable surface deformation: the 2012 Mw 7.1 Constitución, 2017 Mw 6.9 Valparaíso, and 2019 Mw 6.8 Pichilemu earthquakes. GNSS trajectory modeling combined with InSAR observations were used to characterize their coseismic deformation fields and invert for slip on the megathrust, revealing rupture patches consistent with independent constraints on Maule coupling and coseismic slip. The Constitución earthquake activated a deep asperity down-dip of the Maule high-slip zone, in a region that accumulated stress during early postseismic relaxation; the Valparaíso rupture occurred within a strongly coupled segment north of the Maule rupture that experienced enhanced loading and was preceded by a slow-slip episode; and the Pichilemu earthquake ruptured a shallow zone that underwent rapid afterslip before gradually re-locking. Together, these earthquakes demarcate a decade-long transition from afterslip-dominated deformation to the re-establishment of heterogeneous coupling along the megathrust, revealing that the Maule rupture continued to control regional tectonics long after the mainshock. These findings emphasize that moderate-magnitude events are key markers of ongoing stress redistribution and must be included to fully resolve the postseismic stage of the seismic cycle in one of the most active seismogenic subduction zones on Earth.

How to cite: Monge, C., Moreno, M., and Becerra-Carreño, V.: Postseismic evolution and megathrust re-coupling revealed by the spatio-temporal distribution of seismicity after the 2010 Maule earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1323, 2026.

EGU26-1374 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Limited near-trench slip of the 2025 Mw 8.7-8.8 Kamchatka earthquake from geodetic and tsunami data 

Chi-Hsien Tang, Yo Fukushima, Yutaro Okada, and Ayumu Mizutani

The Kamchatka subduction zone marks one of the most tectonically active regions in the world. Along the Kuril-Kamchatka Trench, the dense, cold Pacific plate subducts beneath the Okhotsk plate, accommodating a shortening rate of ~80 mm/yr along a direction almost perpendicular to the trench. Numerous tsunamigenic earthquakes have been documented along this subduction zone, including the 1952 Mw 8.8-9.0 megathrust earthquake that remains one of the largest events ever recorded by modern instruments. Similar megathrust events are suspected to have occurred in 1737 and 1841, although the observations from those times are scarce. On 29 July 2025, a Mw 8.7-8.8 earthquake occurred offshore Kamchatka, generating a tsunami that traveled across the Pacific. The 2025 epicenter lies less than 40 km from that of the 1952 earthquake and is accompanied by an aftershock distribution of comparable extent. The 2025 event therefore presents a rare opportunity to study the megathrust rupture on the Kamchatka plate interface using modern satellite-based geodesy.

We analyzed coseismic deformation of the 2025 Kamchatka earthquake using InSAR from multiple satellites and GNSS. InSAR images show deformation concentrated in the southern Kamchatka Peninsula, with amplitudes increasing progressively from inland areas toward the coast. The GNSS station on Paramushir Island recorded the maximum GNSS displacement, with seaward horizontal and downward vertical motions of ~1.7 m and ~0.2 m, respectively. Slip inversions suggest that the rupture propagated unilaterally from the epicenter to the southwest for ~480 km, broadly consistent with the aftershock distribution. The coseismic slip extended downdip to a depth of ~46 km, where the satellite-based geodetic data provide sufficient resolution. However, we found that inland geodetic measurements are insensitive to near-trench slip. Therefore, we generated three geodetic slip models with extreme, moderate, and zero shallow slip, and used DART tsunami observations to evaluate them. As a result, the model with zero shallow slip best reproduces the tsunami arrival times at DART stations, supporting the absence of significant near-trench rupture during the mainshock. The main rupture was confined to depths of 13-46 km, with a peak slip of ~9 m and a geodetic moment magnitude of Mw 8.7. The updip shallow portion of the 2025 rupture zone and the northern adjacent section may pose an elevated tsunami risk due to stress transfer. This work further underscores the crucial role of seafloor observations, as inland data typically offer limited insight into the shallow slip behavior of subduction interfaces.

How to cite: Tang, C.-H., Fukushima, Y., Okada, Y., and Mizutani, A.: Limited near-trench slip of the 2025 Mw 8.7-8.8 Kamchatka earthquake from geodetic and tsunami data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1374, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1374, 2026.

EGU26-1855 | Orals | TS3.2

Is long-term PSHA time-dependent? Insights from SimplETAS model 

Annamaria Pane, Francesco Visini, Simone Mancini, and Warner Marzocchi

Probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) traditionally assumes time-invariant Poisson processes over mainshocks, while removing aftershocks through non-objective declustering procedures. This may underestimate seismic hazard, as recent sequences demonstrate significant ground-shaking contributions from aftershocks. Models for cluster correction (e.g., Marzocchi and Taroni, 2014; MT14) incorporate aftershock productivity but maintain temporally constant rates. While these models improve hazard estimates, the temporal persistence of conditioning effects in long-term forecasts remains poorly quantified.

This study investigates how long-term SimplETAS-based seismic hazard is affected by forecast initialization time, considering two scenarios: (i) an unconditional PSHA, i.e. not conditioned on a specific earthquake sequence, and (ii) a conditional PSHA initialized immediately after the 2009 L’Aquila earthquake sequence. We aim to assess whether 50-year PSHA remains consistent across different initialization times, which is typically assumed sufficient for the stationarity of the hazard process.

We employ the SimplETAS algorithm to generate two sets of 100,000 synthetic catalogs spanning 50 years: one set starting in 2024 (unconditional) and one starting immediately after the 2009 L’Aquila seismic sequence (conditional). For each earthquake in the synthetic catalogs, we assign a plausible seismogenic structure and compute fault-to-site distances for ground motion prediction using the GMPEs. Hazard curves are calculated empirically as the fraction of catalogs exceeding given PGA thresholds, without relying on the Poisson distribution. We analyze four Italian cities with varying seismicity levels: L’Aquila, Reggio Calabria, Firenze, and Milano. In the unconditional scenario, we compute 50-year hazard curves for all four cities. In the conditional scenario, we compute hazard curves for the same four cities to identify a conditioning effect only on the affected site of L’Aquila. Additionally, for that site, we quantify the temporal decay of conditioning by computing hazard curves over multiple time windows (1, 5, 10, and 50 years) and comparing them with the corresponding unconditional PSHA.

Unconditional PSHA shows good agreement with the reclustered version of the official Italian seismic hazard model (MPS19_cluster) across all four cities and different return periods, corroborating the use of SimplETAS-based approach for long-term PSHA, and the suitability of the MT14's PSHA correction across different return periods. The results of the conditional analysis reveal that L’Aquila exhibits differences of about 10-20% between conditional and unconditional PSHA even over the 50-year window, while Firenze, Milano, and Reggio Calabria remain essentially unchanged. The temporal decay analysis at L’Aquila shows how conditioning effects progressively decrease over longer periods, though the average effect remains detectable in a 50 years time window.

How to cite: Pane, A., Visini, F., Mancini, S., and Marzocchi, W.: Is long-term PSHA time-dependent? Insights from SimplETAS model, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1855, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1855, 2026.

EGU26-2471 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Revisiting the early postseismic deformation of the 2003 Tokachi-oki earthquake 

Yuji Itoh, Cédric Twardzik, Mathilde Vergnolle, and Louise Maubant

A logarithmic function is the popular model of temporal evolution of afterslip, derived from the rate-and-state friction law (RSF) under the steady-state assumption (Marone+1991JGR). Relaxing this assumption, self-accelerating aseismic slip is predicted prior to subsequent decay even with velocity velocity-strengthening setting (i.e., a–b> 0; PerfettiniAmpuero2008JGR). The only natural observation example of such an accelerating stage of afterslip following large earthquakes is the case of the 2003 Tokachi-oki earthquake (M 8.0) in Japan, presented by Fukuda2009JGR (F09) with the data analysis performed by LarsonMiyazaki2008EPS (LM08). They reported that the early postseismic deformation emerged ~1 hour after the mainshock. We revisit this earthquake’s early postseismic deformation with a modern kinematic GNSS processing workflow by Gipsy-X v2.3 because many default and/or recommended settings and products have evolved from the time when these previous works were carried out. This revisit will align the Tokachi-oki case with other earthquake cases analyzed by GNSS processing strategies closer to ours than LM08’s.

Among all the parameters/settings of GNSS processing we tested, the most impactful parameter was the position random walk (RW) parameter. We tested a wide range of values from 1 to 1e-5 m/sqrt(s) for this parameter with switching to the white noise during the mainshock and the M 7.1 largest aftershock (1.3-h later). Comparing our test results with F09’s dataset, the largest mismatch was found between the mainshock and the 7.1 largest aftershock when we attempted to reproduce F09’s cumulative displacements. During this interevent window, F09’s dataset shows tiny deformation, while our solutions show significant deformation. On the other hand, our test solutions exhibit the acceleration at similar timings as F09’s, with the RW parameter same as F09’s (1e-5 m/sqrt(s)), but our cumulative displacements are much smaller than F09’s after the largest aftershock coseismic step was removed. This is because of a trade-off between early postseismic deformation and the largest aftershock step, caused by the very tight RW not allowing sites to move other than at the coseismic timing. Therefore, we recommend careful testing position RW parameter to accurately resolve early postseismic deformation, rather than taking a value introduced in other studies. With our test results, we concluded that no parameters could satisfactorily reproduce the early postseismic deformation presented in F09; in other words, the acceleration of early afterslip reported in F09 was absent in our solutions. Our results imply that the transition between the interseismic and postseismic stage of velocity strengthening faults would happen within several minutes at the longest, implying that the very beginning of afterslip is concurrent with the dynamic ruptures of the mainshock.

How to cite: Itoh, Y., Twardzik, C., Vergnolle, M., and Maubant, L.: Revisiting the early postseismic deformation of the 2003 Tokachi-oki earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2471, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2471, 2026.

Seismogenic depth is a fundamental parameter in seismic hazard assessment and is commonly inferred from kinematic approaches that rely on empirically defined thresholds. However, these observational estimates require validation and calibration against physics-based earthquake cycle models. Here we focus on the San Andreas Fault system in California, where high-quality geodetic, seismicity, and geothermal datasets are available. We construct a geodetically derived fault-coupling model for the entire fault system and systematically compare seismogenic depths inferred from fault coupling with those constrained by earthquake depth distributions. Our results show that a geodetic seismogenic depth defined by a coupling ratio of 0.45 provides the closest agreement with the depth enclosing 90% of the observed seismicity. This correspondence is quantitatively consistent with predictions from thermally constrained rate-and-state friction models, although the numerically inferred seismogenic depths are systematically shallower. Along-strike variations in seismogenic depth obtained from all approaches exhibit similar spatial patterns and correlate strongly with geothermal gradients, indicating that temperature is the primary controlling factor. These results establish a quantitative link between seismogenic depths derived from observational constraints and physics-based numerical models, thereby providing a stronger physical basis for incorporating geodetically inferred coupling models into seismic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Xu, X., Zhao, X., and Weng, H.: Discrepancies and controlling factors of rupture depths inffered from geodesy, seismicity and thermally constrained rate-and-state friction models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2700, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2700, 2026.

EGU26-3040 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Machine Learning for Liquefaction Hazard Mapping: A Case Study for New Zealand  

Denisa Tami, Roberto Gentile, Saurabh Prabhu, and Marco Carenzo

Earthquake-induced soil liquefaction poses significant risks to urban infrastructure in seismically active regions. Recent events, notably the 2011 Christchurch earthquake in New Zealand, demonstrate that liquefaction-induced damage can exceed that from ground shaking. This emphasises the need for scalable liquefaction hazard assessment tools. Traditional assessment methods that rely on cone penetration tests (CPT) and standard penetration tests are impractical for large-scale applications (e.g., regional hazard mapping or insurance portfolio analysis). This research develops a machine learning (ML) model that serves as a cost-effective proxy for traditional geotechnical testing.

Using CPT data from the New Zealand Geotechnical Database (NZGD), this study implements the state-of-practice Boulanger and Idriss (2016) methodology to calculate Liquefaction Potential Index (LPI) values for 5,879 unique locations across five Holocene geological units in New Zealand (i.e., windblown, human-made, estuary, river, and swamp deposits). ML models were trained separately for each geological unit to predict CPT-derived LPI, using three primary features: earthquake magnitude (Mw 5.0-8.0), peak ground acceleration (PGA) (0.05-1.2g), and groundwater table depth (0.5-15.0m). For each CPT location, the LPI was recomputed under sampled Mw-PGA-GWT combinations to create an expanded training set spanning plausible hazard and groundwater states. Using this training dataset, several ML methods were initially tested (i.e., gradient boosting, XGBoost, LightGBM, neural network, support vector machine), finally selecting LightGBM based on the best accuracy-training time trade-off. 

Model performance varied by geological unit: windblown deposits were captured well, achieving R2= 0.854, whereas river deposits reached only R2= 0.555, despite the latter having more training data. This finding demonstrates that depositional homogeneity, rather than data volume, can be more influential on ML performance in geotechnical applications. Feature importance analysis revealed balanced contributions to influencing predictions (i.e., magnitude: 33.7%, PGA: 34.5%, groundwater table depth: 31.8%), indicating the need to represent groundwater variability rather than treating shaking intensity as the sole dominant control. Validation against analytical LPI calculations for a synthetic scenario representing fully saturated conditions (Mw = 6.5, PGA = 0.4g, GWT = 0m) yields moderate agreement (R2= 0.491). The models tend to produce more conservative estimates for LPI < 5 and slightly underpredict for LPI > 40, likely reflecting systematic biases in the training data distribution, where extreme cases are underrepresented. Real-world application was also assessed by comparing predicted patterns with observed liquefaction manifestations during the 2011 Christchurch event from NZGD, independent of the training dataset. Comparisons observed good qualitative agreement with known high-susceptibility areas in eastern Christchurch, including zones near the Avon River and coastal margins. The proposed framework provides a scalable alternative to traditional CPT-based assessments, particularly for large-scale regional applications.

How to cite: Tami, D., Gentile, R., Prabhu, S., and Carenzo, M.: Machine Learning for Liquefaction Hazard Mapping: A Case Study for New Zealand , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3040, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3040, 2026.

Probabilistic Seismic Risk Analysis (PSRA) integrates seismic hazard with the vulnerability of exposed assets; however, the full propagation of uncertainties across this chain is still rarely examined. Although uncertainties affect hazard, vulnerability, and exposure models, most studies only partially address them, and end-to-end assessments remain limited. Epistemic uncertainty, arising from incomplete knowledge, is commonly represented through logic trees, which encode alternative modelling assumptions (e.g., recurrence models, maximum magnitudes) and define a discrete probability distribution over mutually exclusive options.

Previous studies suggest that hazard-related uncertainties often dominate seismic risk estimates, but few studies quantify this systematically, and is largely based on case studies from California. Within the TREAD project (tread-horizon.eu), we extend this understanding by applying a comprehensive framework to evaluate multiple sources of epistemic uncertainty using Italy, an earthquake-prone region, as both a national and regional case study.

We employ two alternative logic-tree structures: an area-source model with 540 branches and a combined fault-based plus smoothed-seismicity model with 243 branches. These configurations allow us to isolate the impact of choices related to slip rates, ground-motion models, scaling relations, recurrence behaviour, maximum-magnitude values, completeness methodologies, and site-specific assumptions.

Risk calculations are performed using the OpenQuake Engine, with structural economic losses adopted as the risk metric. Our results indicate that the dominant sources of epistemic uncertainty vary with the return period, implying that priorities for data acquisition and scientific investment should depend on the intended application of the risk results. Although ground-motion models often represent the largest contributor to epistemic uncertainty, our findings show that this assumption does not hold consistently across regions or return periods.

How to cite: Montejo, J., Silva, V., and Pace, B.: Influence of sources of epistemic uncertainties in hazard modeling on risk assessment: a regional assessment in Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3229, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3229, 2026.

EGU26-3242 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Scaling of Permeability Within Faults Across Nine Orders of Magnitude of Displacement  

Mohammadreza Akbariforouz, Qi Zhao, Chunmiao Zheng, and Daniel Faulkner

Faults are ubiquitous structures, ranging in length from millimeters to thousands of kilometers, with significant variations in permeability that regulate regional fluid flow, solute transport, seismicity, and hydrothermal circulation within the crust. Measurement of in situ fault permeability is challenging due to drilling difficulties and the risk of hydraulic fracturing. Moreover, existing scaling laws of laboratory permeability or fracturing intensity within faults are site-specific, highlighting the need for universal laws. Furthermore, damage zone permeabilities (kDZ) normalized to the protolith permeability (kNDZ) are typically high, while normalized fault core permeability (kNC) varies. We analyzed 752 in situ injection tests and 967 geomechanical experiments on seven faults with shear displacements (D) ranging from 1 to 5 m in the Asmari–Jahrum Formation (AJF), Iran. The AJF database was supplemented with 334 kDZ and 64 kNC datasets from the literature, covering 245 faults and spanning nine orders of magnitude in D. We quantified the hydraulic roles of fault cores as conduits (kNC>1) or barriers (kNC<1) based on porosity changes. We also developed kNC scaling laws using displacement divided by fault core thickness within a fuzzy-logic framework. A universal kNDZ law was established using distance from the fault core, damage zone thickness, and geomechanical parameters through kriging analysis. The universal material- and fault-dependent kNDZ and kNC laws indicate variations up to ten orders of magnitude in permeability. These findings enhance our understanding of fault hydrology and offer predictive tools for estimating fault permeability.

How to cite: Akbariforouz, M., Zhao, Q., Zheng, C., and Faulkner, D.: Scaling of Permeability Within Faults Across Nine Orders of Magnitude of Displacement , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3242, 2026.

EGU26-4289 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Exploring Fault Behaviour and Seismic Hazard in the Central Apennines through Earthquake Simulations 

Khatereh Saghatforoush, Bruno Pace, Alessandro Verdecchia, Francesco Visini, Octavi Gomez Novell, Olaf Zielke, and Laura Peruzza

The Central Apennines (Italy) are characterized by moderate seismicity and active fault systems capable of generating damaging earthquakes. However, the limited duration of historical and paleoseismic records restrict our understanding of long-term fault behaviour. In this study, we use the Multi-Cycle Earthquake Rupture Simulator (MCQsim) to construct a 3D model of 42 active normal faults and to generate multiple 100,000-year-long synthetic earthquake catalogues. We systematically vary key model parameters, including dynamic friction and fault strength heterogeneity, to assess their influence on earthquake occurrence rates, magnitudefrequency distributions, and rupture scaling.


The simulations reproduce the regional Gutenberg–Richter trend and show magnitude–average slip and magnitude–rupture area relationships consistent with empirical scaling laws and the available historical catalogue. Seismic productivity and rupture characteristics are most sensitive to variations in dynamic friction and fault heterogeneity. Although uncertainties arise from simplified fault geometries and assumptions about seismogenic depth, the overall agreement between synthetic and observed seismicity suggests that MCQsim effectively captures key aspects of long-term fault-system behaviour. These results indicate that physics-based synthetic earthquake catalogues can improve constraints on earthquake recurrence and rupture scenarios, providing valuable input for probabilistic seismic hazard assessment in regions characterized by moderate seismicity, complex active fault systems, and sparse observational data.

How to cite: Saghatforoush, K., Pace, B., Verdecchia, A., Visini, F., Novell, O. G., Zielke, O., and Peruzza, L.: Exploring Fault Behaviour and Seismic Hazard in the Central Apennines through Earthquake Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4289, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4289, 2026.

EGU26-6377 | Posters on site | TS3.2

10Be-Based indentification of Paleoearthquake event on the Huashan Piedmont Fault 

Jinhui Yin, Wei Xu, Wenfang Shi, Jie Chen, and Marc Caffee

Over the past few decades, reconstructing paleoseismic sequences using in situ cosmogenic 36Cl exposure ages has proven effective in numerous countries and regions, greatly enhancing our quantitative understanding of active faults (Akçar et al., 2012; Benedetti et al., 2002; Goodall et al., 2021; Mitchell et al., 2001; Mouslopoulou et al., 2014). However, in China, where normal fault bedrock exposures are typically rich in quartz, 10Be is the optimal nuclide for dating fault scarps, offering a better fit to the local geological context than 36Cl. Despite this, only a handful of  10Be studies have reconstructed earthquake slip histories for large events (M>7) using the relationship between exposure ages and height on cumulative scarps (Lunina et al., 2020; Shen et al., 2016).
This study investigates the bedrock fault scarp at Duyu, situated along the Huashan Piedmont Fault (HPF)—the source of the AD 1556 M 8½ earthquake—using 10Be concentration profiling to identify paleoearthquake events. Our analysis confirms a strong earthquake occurred prior to the 1556 event, dated to 3092 ± 383 years ago. This finding bridges a significant gap in the paleoseismic record for this interval, which was previously undetected by traditional trenching methods. The HPF exhibits a quasi-periodic recurrence pattern with an estimated interval of 2623 ± 383 years. During the late Holocene, the fault maintained a vertical slip rate of 2.0 to 2.7 mm/yr, with individual events generating coseismic vertical displacements of 6 ± 0.5 m. These results demonstrate the value of in situ10Be exposure dating as a robust method for reconstructing the seismic histories of normal faults in tectonically similar regions globally.

How to cite: Yin, J., Xu, W., Shi, W., Chen, J., and Caffee, M.: 10Be-Based indentification of Paleoearthquake event on the Huashan Piedmont Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6377, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6377, 2026.

EGU26-7786 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Direct marine geophysical constraints on the rupture of the 2012 Mw 8.6 Wharton basin earthquake 

Saksham Rohilla, Hélène Carton, Satish Singh, Muriel Laurencin, Nugroho Hananto, Mihai Roharik, Yanfang Qin, Sudipta Sarkar, Mark Noble, Mari Hamahashi, and Paul Tapponnier

Current understanding of earthquake rupture and earthquake cycles is largely derived from continental fault systems, implicitly assuming their applicability to oceanic lithosphere. Futhermore, the limited geological and geophysical constraints on large oceanic earthquakes hinder robust assessment of how deformation, fault growth, and stress accumulation takes place in the oceanic lithosphere. The 2012 Mw 8.6 Wharton Basin earthquake, the largest instrumentally recorded strike-slip event, challenged prevailing views of intraplate deformation in the Indian Ocean by rupturing a complex network of faults at high angles to one another. Seismological and geodetic analyses revealed a deep centroid depth, high stress drop, and multi-fault rupture, yet the offshore setting severely limited constraints on fault geometry and rupture propagation. Here, we bridge short- and long-term deformation processes by integrating high-resolution bathymetry, multichannel seismic reflection, and sub-bottom profiler data. We present the surface and near-surface deformation along one of the faults ruptured during the Mw 8.6 earthquake, which runs ESE-WNW and initiates near the epicenter of the Mw 8.2 aftershock. The ~100-km-long fault displays well-preserved dextral offsets accumulated since ~4 - 5 Ma and an en-echelon segmented pattern forming a positive flower structure rooted in the oceanic mantle. We estimate slip rates of ~0.4 to 0.8 mm/yr suggest long recurrence intervals for large intraplate earthquakes. Coulomb stress modelling indicates substantial coseismic stress loading on the N-S fault that subsequently ruptured during the Mw 8.2 earthquake, thus establishing a mechanical relationship between the two events. Overall, our study shows that the oceanic lithosphere can deform slowly and extensively over long time scales, accumulating strain along slow-slipping faults that can produce very large, cascade-style earthquakes. Furthermore, our study offers key inputs for earthquake cycle and dynamic rupture models in oceanic settings by providing geological constraints on fault geometry and slip rates.

How to cite: Rohilla, S., Carton, H., Singh, S., Laurencin, M., Hananto, N., Roharik, M., Qin, Y., Sarkar, S., Noble, M., Hamahashi, M., and Tapponnier, P.: Direct marine geophysical constraints on the rupture of the 2012 Mw 8.6 Wharton basin earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7786, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7786, 2026.

EGU26-8066 | Orals | TS3.2

Why closed seismic cycles matter for time-dependent seismic hazard: Lessons from global paleoearthquake records  

Vasiliki Mouslopoulou, Andy Nicol, Andy Howell, and Jon Griffin

The timing and size of the past large earthquakes that ruptured active faults are important to better understand seismic processes and time-dependent seismic hazards. A recent study highlights the rarity of ‘overdue’ earthquakes for New Zealand faults, a finding that directly contrasts observations from California, which indicate an unlikely long period of seismic quiescence. Here, we analyze paleoearthquake and historic records from 210 faults globally, including California, to test the international applicability of the findings for the New Zealand faults against a global active fault dataset. By comparing earthquake-elapsed and mean-recurrence data that derive from end-member fault systems, we explore the factors that control the shape of recurrence-interval distributions on different regions, and assess whether existing paleoearthquake and historical data can be used for estimating time-dependent seismic hazard. Our analysis: 1) demonstrates that the regions examined generally behave similarly for interevent and elapsed times, except for California which forms an outlier. This dissimilarity is important as faults in California have been commonly used to inform earthquake forecast models; 2) supports recurrence-interval distributions that are consistent with positively-skewed renewal models; and 3) proposes an improved approach for defining recurrence-interval distributions that involves the closed elapsed times constrained by historic ruptures and their penultimate events.

How to cite: Mouslopoulou, V., Nicol, A., Howell, A., and Griffin, J.: Why closed seismic cycles matter for time-dependent seismic hazard: Lessons from global paleoearthquake records , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8066, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8066, 2026.

EGU26-8422 | Orals | TS3.2

The anatomy of a strike-slip plate boundary fault in a pull-apart basin – The Motagua Fault in Guatemala 

Christoph Grützner, Tina Niemi, Omar Flores, Carlos Perez Arias, Aleigha Dollens, Jeremy Maurer, and Jonathan Obrist-Farner

Off-fault deformation in surface-rupturing earthquakes can be detected using geodetical methods, but field evidence is rare. Here we present data from the North American-Caribbean Plate boundary, documenting off-fault deformation in the geological record in great detail.

The Motagua Fault in Guatemala is part of the plate boundary between the North American and Caribbean plates. It ruptured in a M7.5 earthquake in 1976, producing a 230 km-long surface rupture with an average slip of about 1 m. At the Estanzuela site, the fault-parallel, elongated topographic depression “Laguneta Los Yajes” is about 2 m lower than its surroundings as revealed by new airborne LiDAR data. It is interpreted as a pull-apart basin, either caused by a fault stepover or by a fault bend. Since it was seasonally filled with water, the surface rupture of the 1976 Earthquake could not be mapped precisely here. We trenched the northern topographic scarp of the depression to investigate the boundary fault but did not encounter a distinct major shear zone. Instead, we found distributed deformation manifested as fractures. Two additional trenches in the center of the depression found the main fault zone and additional structures that accommodate distributed shear. We interpret the fault geometry to be a fault bend rather than a stepover, and we document the evidence for off-fault deformation over 80 m around the main strand at this site. These data shed light on the anatomy of the plate boundary and its associated off-fault deformation.

How to cite: Grützner, C., Niemi, T., Flores, O., Perez Arias, C., Dollens, A., Maurer, J., and Obrist-Farner, J.: The anatomy of a strike-slip plate boundary fault in a pull-apart basin – The Motagua Fault in Guatemala, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8422, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8422, 2026.

EGU26-8590 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Could Surface Precipitations Destabilize a Craton? 

Haibin Yang and Siyuan Zhao

The high integrated brittle strength of cratons with a cool and thick lithosphere protects cratonic interiors from tectonic deformation. High strain rates (>10-15 s-1) at plate boundaries facilitate enhanced faulting. However, cratons are not immuned from seismic activities. Intraplate earthquakes have caused more fatalities than interplate earthquakes. For example, the 1556 Huaxian earthquake (M 8.0), the deadliest earthquake in human history that killed 830,000 people, occurred in the middle of continental China. Seismic quiescent may in some stable continent relate to short instrumental histories (< ~150 years) with respect to the earthquake cycles (>104 years) and the limited resolution of geodetic surveys for fault motions in stable cratons. The extremely long earthquake cycles in stable continents make it hard to be detected due to surface erosional processes, particularly for those ‘one-off’ events. Classical seismic hazard estimation based on slip deficit calculations may not apply to earthquakes in stable continents when the last destructive earthquake occurred in history is unknown. To quantify the impact of seasonal hydrological cycles on seismicity in stable cratons, we integrate seismic catalogs with GRACE(-FO) data, borehole water levels, precipitation records, and InSAR observations from the Pilbara and Yilgarn cratons in Australia. Our analysis tests whether seismic responses to hydrological stress are consistent across cratons and assesses whether these perturbations induce temporary or permanent changes in craton stability.

How to cite: Yang, H. and Zhao, S.: Could Surface Precipitations Destabilize a Craton?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8590, 2026.

EGU26-10254 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Formation of Fault Damage Zones in Carbonates and Their Role in the Seismic Cycle 

Daniel Dreier, Mathilde Marchandon, Michele Fondriest, Alice-Agnes Gabriel, and Giulio Di Toro

Probably the most impressive geological feature of active fault zones hosted in carbonate rocks is the presence of several hundreds of meters thick damage zones, often composed of in-situ shattered rocks (ISRs, i.e. rocks fragmented into clasts < 1 cm in size). Despite their abundance, it remains unknown how ISRs form (during the propagation of seismic ruptures?), and how their presence affects (1) the propagation of individual mainshock seismic ruptures, (2) the near field wave radiation and associated strong ground motions, and (3) the evolution in space and time of aftershock seismic sequences. In this contribution, we will present preliminary results of a three-year Ph.D. project aimed at addressing these issues through an integrated field geology and numerical modelling approach.

We exploit existing and newly acquired field geology data on fault damage zone distributions in the Central Apennines (Italy), and perform dynamic rupture earthquake sequence simulations with SeisSol (https://seissol.org). The fully-dynamic individual earthquake simulations with SeisSol rely on the discontinuous Galerkin method, which allows treating complex 3D geological structures, nonlinear rheologies (including off-fault plastic yielding) and high-order accurate propagation of seismic waves (Käser et al., 2010). The earthquake modelling simulations integrate laboratory-derived frictional constitutive laws with simplified and realistic representations of fault zone geometry and surface topography. Currently, our study is focused on the 25 km long Campo Imperatore fault system in the Gran Sasso Massif area (Italian Central Apennines) where the damage zones are pronounced and well mapped (Demurtas et al., 2016; Fondriest et al., 2020).

We aim at using the dynamic rupture earthquake modelling simulations to discuss the formation and distribution of ISRs with respect to (1) the maximum magnitude (Mw 7.0) of the earthquake associated with the studied fault, (2) fault geometry (length, presence of step overs, fault bends, etc.), (3) topographic effects (valleys, etc.), and (4) lithology (limestones, dolostones, etc.) of the wall rocks. This approach is expected to identify the physical, geological, and loading conditions controlling seismic rupture propagation and the development of fault damage zones. The physically based, fully dynamic 3D simulations will also provide estimates of earthquake source parameters (e.g., fracture energy and seismic moment release rate) and synthetic seismograms (strong ground motions), which will be compared with seismological and strong-motion data from earthquakes in the Central Apennines.

 

References

 

Demurtas, M., Fondriest, M., Balsamo, F., Clemenzi, L., Storti, F., Bistacchi, A., & Di Toro, G. (2016). Structure of a normal seismogenic fault zone in carbonates: The Vado di Corno Fault, Campo Imperatore, Central Apennines (Italy). Journal of Structural Geology, 90, 185–206. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsg.2016.08.004

Fondriest, M., Balsamo, F., Bistacchi, A., Clemenzi, L., Demurtas, M., Storti, F., & Di Toro, G. (2020). Structural Complexity and Mechanics of a Shallow Crustal Seismogenic Source (Vado di Corno Fault Zone, Italy). Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 125(9), e2019JB018926. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JB018926

Käser, M., Castro, C., Hermann, V., & Pelties, C. (2010). SeisSol – A Software for Seismic Wave Propagation Simulations. In High Performance Computing in Science and Engineering, Garching/Munich 2009 (pp. 281–292). Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-13872-0_24

How to cite: Dreier, D., Marchandon, M., Fondriest, M., Gabriel, A.-A., and Di Toro, G.: Formation of Fault Damage Zones in Carbonates and Their Role in the Seismic Cycle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10254, 2026.

EGU26-10477 | Orals | TS3.2

Seismic gap breached by the 2025 Mw 7.7 Mandalay (Myanmar) earthquake 

P. Martin Mai, Sigurjón Jónsson, Bo Li, Cahli Suhendi, Jihong Liu, Duo Li, Arthur Delorme, and Yann Klinger

Seismic gaps are fault sections that have not hosted a large earthquake for a long time compared to neighbouring segments, making them likely sites for future large events. The 2025 Mw 7.7 Mandalay (Myanmar) earthquake, on the central section of the Sagaing Fault, ruptured through a known seismic gap and ~160 km beyond it, resulting in an exceptionally long rupture of ~460 km. Here we investigate the rupture process of this event and the factors that enabled it to breach the seismic gap by integrating satellite synthetic aperture radar observations, seismic waveform back-projection, Bayesian finite-fault inversion and dynamic rupture simulations. We identify a two-stage earthquake rupture comprising initial bilateral subshear propagation for ~20 s followed by unilateral supershear rupture for ~70 s. Simulation-based sensitivity tests suggest that the seismic gap boundary was not a strong mechanical barrier in terms of frictional strength, and that nucleation of the earthquake far from the gap boundary, rather than its supershear speed, allowed the rupture to outgrow the gap and propagate far beyond it. Hence, we conclude that the dimension of seismic gaps may not reflect the magnitude of future earthquakes. Instead, ruptures may cascade through multiple fault sections to generate larger and potentially more damaging events.

How to cite: Mai, P. M., Jónsson, S., Li, B., Suhendi, C., Liu, J., Li, D., Delorme, A., and Klinger, Y.: Seismic gap breached by the 2025 Mw 7.7 Mandalay (Myanmar) earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10477, 2026.

EGU26-10546 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Three-dimensional anisotropy of seismite deformation constrains seismogenic fault location 

Xiao Yang, Xuhua Shi, Haibin Yang, Yann Klinger, Hanlin Chen, Jin Ge, Feng Li, Xin Liu, Yixi Yan, and Zhuona Bai

Earthquake ground motion is inherently directional and governs deformation in near-surface sediments, yet whether this directional information is preserved in geological archives remains poorly constrained. Soft-sediment deformation structures produced by earthquakes (seismites) are widely used to reconstruct past earthquake catalogues but are generally assumed to lack information on seismic-wave direction, limiting their ability to identify seismogenic faults. Here we develop a three-dimensional physical framework integrating numerical simulations with field observations to resolve how different seismic-wave components control deformation anisotropy in water-saturated sediments. We show that horizontally polarized shear waves dominate anisotropic deformation, producing systematically stronger shear and folding on planes oriented perpendicular to wave propagation. This behaviour is quantified using a dimensionless deformation index and fold counts measured on orthogonal profiles. Applying this framework to a well-preserved three-dimensional seismite in the Pamir region, we demonstrate that contrasts in deformation intensity robustly record seismic source direction and enable identification of causative seismogenic faults, together with reconstruction of a sequence of paleo-earthquakes when integrated with chronological constraints. These results establish that near-surface geological deformation can preserve directional information on seismic-wave propagation, opening new opportunities to reconstruct seismic source direction from sedimentary cores and outcrop-scale geological records worldwide.

How to cite: Yang, X., Shi, X., Yang, H., Klinger, Y., Chen, H., Ge, J., Li, F., Liu, X., Yan, Y., and Bai, Z.: Three-dimensional anisotropy of seismite deformation constrains seismogenic fault location, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10546, 2026.

EGU26-10634 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Dating Hanging-Wall Colluvial Breccia to Reconstruct the Long-term Normal Fault Evolution in Carbonate Terrains 

Gali Shraiber, Shalev Siman-Tov, Ari Matmon, Tzahi Golan, Naomi Porat, Yael Jacobi, and Perach Nuriel

Normal fault systems within extensional domains often create steep mountain fronts and associated colluvial breccia deposits. These deposits hold an archive of long-term fault activity and landscape evolution, yet they are rarely used to quantify fault slip histories due to their complex nature and dating challenges. In this study, we investigate the Zurim Escarpment in northern Israel, focusing on the Sajur Fault, to reconstruct the long-term morphotectonic history from syn-tectonic colluvial breccia units on the hanging-wall. We integrate U-Pb dating of calcite precipitates and luminescence dating of quartz grains within the breccia matrix to constrain the timing of two breccia depositional phases. Dating results constrain the age of the older breccia phase to ~2.5 Ma, and the younger phase to at least 1.2 Ma. The presence of colluvial breccia at ~2.5 Ma indicates that relief had already developed, constraining the minimum age of escarpment formation. Through clast provenance analysis, we link breccia deposition to the progressive exhumation of the fault footwall. This yielded a long-term slip rate of 0.14±0.02 to 0.15±0.02 mm/yr over the past 2.5 million years, lower than short-term rates derived from cosmogenic dating of fault scraps (0.2–0.5 mm/yr). This discrepancy reflects the temporal dependence of fault slip rates calculations, with values decreasing and stabilizing over longer timescales as they capture the full ratio of seismically active periods to intervening quiescent periods. Our results underscore the potential of syn-tectonic colluvial breccia as a long-term archive for fault activity and landscape evolution in carbonate terrains.

How to cite: Shraiber, G., Siman-Tov, S., Matmon, A., Golan, T., Porat, N., Jacobi, Y., and Nuriel, P.: Dating Hanging-Wall Colluvial Breccia to Reconstruct the Long-term Normal Fault Evolution in Carbonate Terrains, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10634, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10634, 2026.

EGU26-10939 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Earthquake rupture in a strike slip experiment  

Louis Demange, Pauline Souloumiac, Bertrand Maillot, Salah-Eddine Hebaz, and Yann Klinger

Seismotectonic analogue models provide a valuable complement to seismological, geodetic and paleoseismological-geomorphological approaches for investigating the earthquake cycle. Physical models mainly made with elastic and frictional materials, allow the simulation of multiple seismic cycles under controlled laboratory conditions. Such physical models can reproduce interseismic, coseismic and postseismic deformation. However, all those models include a pre-existing fault, and thus do not necessarily model realistic fault geometries. As a consequence, the influence of geometric complexity—such as fault segmentation, bends, and step-overs—on rupture dynamics and seismic cycle behaviour remains poorly explored in those seismotectonic models.

Here, we present a new analogue seismotectonic model of a strike-slip fault system that allows complex fault geometries to emerge and evolve while producing multiple seismic cycle. The experimental setup consists of two juxtaposed horizontal PVC plates separated by a straight velocity discontinuity, with one plate fixed and the other moving at constant velocity, simulating a vertical basement fault. The overlying medium is composed of three granular layers:  a basal layer of rubber pellets that stores elastic strain, an intermediate rice layer that exhibits stick–slip behavior and represents the seismogenic crust, and an upper frictionally stable sand layer mimicking a non-seismogenic shallow crust.

Surface deformation is monitored with photographs acquired every 2 seconds, corresponding to 25 μm of displacement for the basal plate , and processed using image correlation and dense optical flow methods. Seismic events are detected when surface displacement exceed the imposed basal plate displacement. In addition, recordings made with a high-speed camera at 100 frames per second capture transient surface deformation during rupture propagation. A total of 23 high-speed sequences, each lasting 10 seconds, document coseismic surface deformation associated with earthquake propagation.

We explore the potential of this experimental setup to investigate how rupture characteristics—such as rupture velocity, nucleation and arrest processes— may depend on the evolution of fault geometry and associated off-fault deformation. By quantifying the spatiotemporal distribution of surface deformation and seismic events along evolving fault networks, this approach allows us to investigate how fault segments are activated, temporarily locked, or interact throughout successive stages of the seismic cycle. Moreover, we examine how interseismic deformation reflects the evolving mechanical state and geometry of the fault system, and how this state influences subsequent earthquakes.

How to cite: Demange, L., Souloumiac, P., Maillot, B., Hebaz, S.-E., and Klinger, Y.: Earthquake rupture in a strike slip experiment , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10939, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10939, 2026.

EGU26-10956 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Insights into fault evolution and rupture dynamics in a strike-slip context from 3D Discrete Element models 

Adélaïde Allemand, Yann Klinger, and Luc Scholtès

Strike-slip continental faults often show complex geometries, inherited from their past history. More particularly, they display branches, bends, and steps, also referred to as geometric asperities. Thus, far from being straight-lined, continental strike-slip faults are characterised by disconnected and misaligned sections, whose length and separating distance vary as the faults mature in time.

The presence of those discontinuities (or complexities) along the fault could affect earthquake rupture dynamics; indeed, the extensional or compressional nature of these discontinuities results in stress heterogeneities along the fault system. In addition, depending on the degree of development of the latter, the deformation at fault complexities can show various levels of localisation, balancing between fault segments well connected by fractures and fault portions dominated by damaged zones where the deformation is distributed. As a consequence, fault complexities often act as nucleation- or end-points for seismic ruptures.

In order to study the effect of fault geometry on earthquake ruptures, we developed a 3D numerical model of an evolving continental strike-slip fault, based on the Discrete Element Method (DEM).

In this model, an initially intact medium is subjected to a strike-slip tectonic regime and, thanks to the DEM capability to explicitly describe progressive failure mechanisms, it evolves through different stages of deformation that eventually lead to the emergence of a structure presenting complexities similar to that of natural faults. We are thus able to analyse the relationship between fault maturity and fault geometry. In addition, multiple local ruptures occur along the fault. Therefore, we can characterise the evolution of the earthquake cycles with geological history: on one hand, for each earthquake, we explore how the rupture is spatially affected by fault complexities; on the other hand, we look at the way successive earthquakes progressively modify the geometry of the fault system. Finally, we compare those observations with natural cases.

How to cite: Allemand, A., Klinger, Y., and Scholtès, L.: Insights into fault evolution and rupture dynamics in a strike-slip context from 3D Discrete Element models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10956, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10956, 2026.

Seismic hazard models increasingly rely on detailed active fault databases to explicitly represent earthquake sources and their complex geometries. However, transforming fault-based information into consistent and physically plausible inputs for probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) remains a non-trivial and often fragmented task. We present NEXTQUAKE, a modular MATLAB tool designed to bridge this gap by converting an active fault database into a complete, internally consistent seismic hazard input. The first core component of NEXTQUAKE generates a comprehensive catalog of earthquake ruptures starting from the geometry of an active fault system. The algorithm constructs single-fault and multi-fault ruptures while enforcing physical plausibility through a fault-to-fault and subsection-to-subsection connectivity framework. Multi-fault ruptures are generated only among geometrically and kinematically connected faults, dramatically reducing the combinatorial space and ensuring realistic rupture scenarios. Each rupture is described in terms of geometry, area, and magnitude, and is encoded through a sparse subsection–rupture incidence matrix that enables efficient downstream processing. The second component performs an inversion to estimate the expected occurrence rates of all generated ruptures. The inversion integrates geological and geophysical constraints, such as long-term slip rates, and provides a self-consistent set of rupture rates compatible with the fault database. This step allows the direct use of fault-based information within probabilistic frameworks without relying on simplified or ad hoc assumptions. Finally, the third component of NEXTQUAKE translates the rupture catalog and associated rates into fully compliant input files for OpenQuake, enabling seamless integration with state-of-the-art PSHA engines. By automating the entire workflow, NEXTQUAKE offers a transparent, reproducible, and extensible framework for fault-based seismic hazard modeling. NEXTQUAKE is particularly suited for regional-scale applications and for exploring the impact of rupture connectivity assumptions on seismic hazard results.

How to cite: Valentini, A.: NEXTQUAKE: a MATLAB tool to transform an active fault database into seismic hazard input, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11056, 2026.

EGU26-11337 | Orals | TS3.2

Viscoelastic Stress Loading Following the 1999 Earthquakes and Late-Stage Seismicity in the Marmara Sea 

Süleyman S. Nalbant, Fatih Uzunca, Murat Utkucu, and Hatice Durmuş

The 17 August 1999 İzmit (M7.4) and 12 November 1999 Düzce (M7.2) earthquakes ruptured the North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ) in northwestern Türkiye and caused catastrophic damage. The offshore extensions of the central and northern strands of the NAFZ beneath the Sea of Marmara remain seismically active, having produced several Mw≥ 5.0 earthquakes since 2005. In this study, we analyse the spatiotemporal evolution of Coulomb stress changes following the 1999 earthquake doublet and examine their relationship to subsequent moderate earthquakes, including the 2006 Gemlik (Mw5.0), 2019 Silivri (Mw5.7), 2023 Mudanya (Mw5.0), and 2025 Silivri (Mw6.2) events.

Our models indicate that for the 2006 Gemlik and 2023 Mudanya earthquakes, coseismically imposed stress shadows generated by the 1999 ruptures were progressively erased and reversed to positive values by viscoelastic postseismic relaxation in the lower crust and upper mantle. In contrast, at the locations of the 2019 and 2025 Silivri earthquakes, positive coseismic stress changes were substantially amplified by subsequent viscoelastic processes. These results demonstrate that stress perturbations associated with the 1999 mainshocks continue to modulate seismicity along offshore Marmara fault segments over decadal timescales.

In the broader context of the seismic cycle of the Main Marmara Segment, which last ruptured in 1766, the increasing occurrence of moderate-magnitude earthquakes may reflect a transition toward a late-stage, critically stressed regime. Our results suggest that long-lived viscoelastic stress transfer following the 1999 earthquakes has imposed an additional stress load on an already mature seismic cycle, potentially accelerating its progression toward failure. Accounting for such persistent, time-dependent stress interactions is therefore essential for refining time-dependent earthquake hazard assessments in this densely populated region.

How to cite: Nalbant, S. S., Uzunca, F., Utkucu, M., and Durmuş, H.: Viscoelastic Stress Loading Following the 1999 Earthquakes and Late-Stage Seismicity in the Marmara Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11337, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11337, 2026.

EGU26-11580 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Numerical Modelling of Fault-Slip-Induced Satellite Gravity Signals in a 3D Viscoelastic Earth: Application to the Japanese Subduction System 

Rajesh Parla, Isabelle Panet, Hom Nath Gharti, Roland Martin, Dominique Remy, and Bastien Plazolles

The spatio-temporal variations of the Earth’s gravity field recorded by satellites have been shown to provide unique insight into mass redistributions during and after major subduction-zone earthquakes, and to reveal anomalous signals preceeding two great ruptures, attributed to rapid aseismic deformations of subducted plates. Understanding these gravity signatures is important for studying subduction system dynamics throughout the earthquake cycle and for improving regional seismic risk assessment. Physics-based numerical simulations are therefore needed in order to model pre- to post-seismic satellite gravity signals, taking into account the 3D structure of the subducting zone, including lateral heterogeneities in the mantle rheology and lateral variations in crustal thickness. In this study, we apply a novel numerical approach to simulate gravity perturbations induced by fault dislocations in a 3D viscoelastic Earth using a Spectral-Infinite-Element (SIE) method, implemented in the SPECFEM-X numerical code. Considering examples of dislocation within a subducted slab, we examine the sensitivity of the surface gravity signals to 3D slab geometry and material structure, including the effects of low-viscosity layers, mantle wedge and cold nose. This approach enables us to investigate the sources of the pre-seismic gravity anomalies prior to the 2011 Mw 9.1 Tohoku earthquake through realistic 3D Earth models and state-of-the-art simulation setups. The findings of this study underscore the importance of numerical simulations in gravitational geodesy as well as in seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Parla, R., Panet, I., Gharti, H. N., Martin, R., Remy, D., and Plazolles, B.: Numerical Modelling of Fault-Slip-Induced Satellite Gravity Signals in a 3D Viscoelastic Earth: Application to the Japanese Subduction System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11580, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11580, 2026.

EGU26-11605 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Coseismic Surface Deformation Characteristics of the 1915 M7.0 Sangri Earthquake in Tibet 

Junxiang Qiao, Haoyue Sun, and Xin Wang

The spatial distribution and deformation characteristics of coseismic surface rupture zones are fundamental to understanding the rupture behavior of strong earthquakes. They provide critical insights for predicting the extent, scale, and degree of deformation of future events, which is of great significance for assessing the magnitude of potential seismic hazards.

The December 3, 1915, M7.0 Sangri earthquake in the Woka Graben (northern Cona-Woka Rift) is the region’s most recent major seismic event. Historical records place the epicenter near Zangga, identifying the Eastern Boundary Fault (EBF) as the primary seismogenic structure. However, its remote, high-altitude location and coarse legacy satellite imagery have left details undocumented and source parameters poorly constrained. To address this, we integrated UAV-derived centimeter-scale Digital Surface Models (DSM), orthomosaics, and field investigations. This enabled multi-scale, multi-perspective analysis of fault traces, surface rupture geometry, and coseismic deformation.

Refined mapping reveals that the seismogenic EBF manifests as a continuous, single-branch structure with a total length of approximately 60 km. The fault trace is well-defined and can be divided into northern and southern segments by the Delimuqu River. The northern segment extends ~29km in a nearly N-S direction with a westward dip, while the southern segment extends ~31 km with a NNE strike and a NW dip. A distinct coseismic surface rupture zone, ~35 km in length, developed primarily along the entire northern segment and the northern part of the southern segment of the EBF. Field measurements revealed a maximum coseismic vertical displacement of ~2.1m.

Furthermore, we utilized a MATLAB-based displacement measurement program to perform quantitative extraction of cumulative offsets and Cumulative Offset Probability Density (COPD) analysis across 225 investigation sites, yielding an average coseismic vertical displacement of ~0.79 m. Additionally, a fault scarp diffusion age modeling program was employed to constrain the extent of the coseismic surface rupture based on morphological degradation. Analysis of 362 measurement sites via COPD indicated an average diffusion age of 2.05 ± 0.88 kt for the coseismic scarps. The integration of spatial distributions for minimum mean diffusion ages and cumulative vertical displacements allowed us to quantitatively define the coseismic surface rupture length to ~32 km. This result is in excellent agreement with the ~35 km length derived from remote sensing interpretation, validating the reliability of the estimated rupture scale. Using empirical scaling relationships based on the obtained rupture length and the average/maximum vertical displacements, we re-estimated the earthquake magnitude to be Mw 6.71~6.84, highlighting the high seismic potential of the EBF. This study fills a critical gap in the detailed investigation of the coseismic surface rupture of the 1915 Sangri earthquake and underscores the significant utility of high-resolution topographic data in active tectonics research.

How to cite: Qiao, J., Sun, H., and Wang, X.: Coseismic Surface Deformation Characteristics of the 1915 M7.0 Sangri Earthquake in Tibet, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11605, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11605, 2026.

EGU26-12056 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

3-D Discrete Element Modeling of Continental Fault System Evolution Under Oblique Boundary Conditions 

Adarsh Dwivedi, Yann Klinger, and Luc Scholtès

Oblique displacement in continental tectonic setting often leads to complex fault systems that incorporate both dip-slip and strike-slip motion, with fault geometry and seismic activity developing across subsequent earthquake cycles. Understanding how boundary conditions influence fault growth, rupture dynamics, and off-fault deformation is an ongoing challenge in tectonics and earthquake physics. In this study, we are using three-dimensional discrete element models to analyze the evolution of continental fault systems under oblique boundary conditions.Specifically, we employ a numerical sandbox that represents the continental crust as a brittle layer where deformation can localize as a result of fracture nucleation, propagation and coalescence, without any a priori assumptions on its spatio-temporal evolution. Transtensional and transpressional loadings are applied through combined normal and shear components of deformation. Our simulations show cyclic stick-slip behavior, defined by periods of elastic responses followed by fault ruptures. Thanks to the model’s capability, we analyze the evolution of the emerging fault geometry, the ruptures extent, as well as slip partitioning throughout the simulated earthquake cycles. Particular emphasis is placed on the spatial distribution of damage, the development of fault-related topography on the surface, and the role of obliquity in controlling rupture propagation. Our findings show strong relationships between imposed boundary conditions, fault system configuration, and seismic rupture characteristics.

How to cite: Dwivedi, A., Klinger, Y., and Scholtès, L.: 3-D Discrete Element Modeling of Continental Fault System Evolution Under Oblique Boundary Conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12056, 2026.

EGU26-13346 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Afterslip following the 2023 Mw7.8 and Mw7.6 Kahramanmaraş earthquakes: observations and modeling 

Cyril Lacroix, Baptiste Rousset, Frédéric Masson, Paul Dérand, Romain Jolivet, Ali Özkan, and Hakan Hasan Yavaşoğlu

On February 6, 2023, two earthquakes of magnitude Mw7.8 and Mw7.6 struck in South Türkiye. The first mainshock occurred along the East Anatolian fault, at the boundary between the Anatolian and Arabian plates, and was followed 9 hours later by a second one on a secondary fault system to the North. The importance of such continental earthquakes and the relatively good data coverage of the region present an unique opportunity to investigate post-seismic deformation.

To study afterslip, corresponding to post-seismic transient aseismic slip, we use a combination of ground deformation measurements, including Sentinel-1 InSAR timeseries (6 tracks covering almost 2 years after the earthquakes) and GNSS (more than 40 permanent stations and 60 campaign sites). The cities of Hassa and Gölbaşı, located on the East Anatolian fault, are investigated in detail using 8 continuous GNSS stations installed across the fault 6 months after the earthquakes.

While the large surface imprint of the surface deformation, with significant displacements more than 200 km away from the fault, and our inability to model it with fault slip points toward the dominance of a visco-elastic processus, clear markers of shallow afterslip are visible. In the Pütürge segment, located at the tip of the first earthquake’s coseismic rupture, InSAR data reveals a cumulative surface offset 20 months after the earthquake of about 10 cm due to shallow afterslip. Other segments affected with afterslip have been identified in the eastern part of the rupture of the second earthquake, accounting for several centimeters of slip over 20 months. Our local GNSS networks in Hassa and Gölbaşı reveal the smaller scale complexity of post-seismic surface deformation near the fault. In Gölbaşı, subsidence of more than 2 cm/year is highlighted in the pull-apart basin, while horizontal GNSS displacements suggest possible shallow aseismic slip happening at the southern end of the basin.

We model afterslip on the fault by jointly inverting InSAR and GNSS data, minimizing the least squares criterion. Afterslip is concentrated around the coseismic rupture zone, accompanied by important aftershock activity. The Pütürge segment appears as a seismic barrier, having stopped both Mw6.8 2020 Elazığ earthquake to the East and Mw7.8 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake to the West, possibly because of the fault geometry and/or heterogeneous coupling. Future efforts will be directed towards the evolution of afterslip with time and its interplay with aftershocks, including visco-elastic relaxation models. These results help us better understand the relationship between the different phases of the seismic cycle.

How to cite: Lacroix, C., Rousset, B., Masson, F., Dérand, P., Jolivet, R., Özkan, A., and Yavaşoğlu, H. H.: Afterslip following the 2023 Mw7.8 and Mw7.6 Kahramanmaraş earthquakes: observations and modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13346, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13346, 2026.

EGU26-14323 | Orals | TS3.2

Burstiness and memory of large subduction earthquakes: insights from paleoseismology and analogue modelling 

Fabio Corbi, Elvira Latypova, Giacomo Mastella, Francesca Funiciello, Silvia Brizzi, and Simona Guastamacchia

Constraining the timing of large subduction earthquakes remains a fundamental yet unresolved problem in seismic hazard assessment. Although paleoseismic records from many subduction margins suggest predominantly quasi-periodic recurrence of great earthquakes, the large variability observed among different segments and regions raises the question of whether such patterns reflect intrinsic megathrust behavior or, instead, the limitations of the available records. Here we investigate the robustness and interpretability of earthquake recurrence metrics by combining global paleoseismic datasets with scaled seismotectonic models of the subduction megathrust seismic cycle.

We characterize earthquake recurrence using two complementary statistics: burstiness (B), which quantifies the degree of periodicity and clustering of inter-event times, and the memory coefficient (M), which captures temporal correlations between consecutive recurrence intervals. Mapping paleoseismic records from multiple subduction zones onto the M–B plane reveals that most segments exhibit quasi-periodic behavior (B < 0), but span a wide range of memory values, from strongly negative to strongly positive. Notably, this diversity shows no systematic dependence on subduction rate, earthquake rate, or record length, and adjacent segments along the same margin may occupy markedly different regions of the M–B plane.

To assess whether this apparent variability reflects differences in fault dynamics or observational bias, we analyze long, continuous earthquake sequences generated by scaled seismotectonic models. Despite large contrasts in asperity number, size, and along-strike strength heterogeneity, experimental sequences cluster within a relatively narrow domain of the M–B plane. Through controlled subsampling tests, we show that catalog incompleteness, limited along-strike coverage, and short observation windows can substantially shift M and, to a lesser extent, B. 

The analysis of experimental data provides useful constraints on the limits of our ability to infer long-term earthquake recurrence from paleoseismic records, with important implications for probabilistic seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Corbi, F., Latypova, E., Mastella, G., Funiciello, F., Brizzi, S., and Guastamacchia, S.: Burstiness and memory of large subduction earthquakes: insights from paleoseismology and analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14323, 2026.

EGU26-15813 | Orals | TS3.2

DEM Modelling-Based Insights into the Controlling Factors of Strike-Slip Fault Segmentation 

Liqing Jiao, Yang Jiao, and Yueqiao Zhang

Strike-slip shearing is widespread in the brittle crust and is typically expressed as segmented rupture zones with characteristic spacing. Yet, the key factors controlling this geometric pattern remain poorly understood. In this study, we use discrete element method (DEM) simulations to systematically explore the fundamental physical and tectonic controls on fault segment spacing in strike-slip systems. Our results show that spacing is influenced by both physical and tectonic factors. Physically, spacing increases with crustal thickness and strength, but decreases with density and gravitational acceleration. A near-linear relationship emerges between the ratio of spacing length to thickness and the ratio of strength to the combined effects of density, gravity, and thickness. Tectonically, spacing is reduced by increasing thrust components but enlarged by extensional components. Pre-existing weak zones strongly localize rupture, while surface topography modulates rupture propagation, with segments preferentially forming in lower-elevation areas. These results offer new insights into the mechanics of segmented strike-slip ruptures on Earth and other planetary bodies and provide a framework for better assessing natural hazard risks.

How to cite: Jiao, L., Jiao, Y., and Zhang, Y.: DEM Modelling-Based Insights into the Controlling Factors of Strike-Slip Fault Segmentation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15813, 2026.

EGU26-15880 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

High-resolution Coral Geodesy in the Solomon Islands 

Mehmet Ege Karaesmen, Luc Lavier, and Frederick Taylor

The classical earthquake cycle is commonly described as alternating between long periods (decades to centuries) of interseismic locking and brief episodes (seconds) of coseismic rupture. However, increasingly dense geodetic observations from recent megathrust earthquakes reveal a more complex spectrum of transient deformation processes that challenge this binary framework. The New Georgia Group in the Solomon Islands provides a unique natural laboratory to investigate these processes, where the Woodlark Basin subducts beneath the Solomon Arc and has generated large megathrust earthquakes, including the 1936 Mw 7.9 and 2007 Mw 8.1 events.

The close proximity of the islands to the trench allows Porites corals to serve as high-resolution recorders of vertical ground motion. While coral morphology has long been used to identify coseismic uplift, we introduce a novel approach that combines coral morphology with stable isotope analysis (δ¹³C and δ¹⁸O) to quantify relative sea-level (RSL) variations at annual resolution. We first assess the robustness of the relationship between coral water depth and δ¹³C using 141 new samples collected across a range of depths formed within the same time interval. For depths between 170 and 110 cm below sea level, δ¹³C exhibits a strong linear correlation with water depth (R² = 0.982), while shallower samples display a non-linear response.

We then apply this RSL proxy to a 692-sample coral time series spanning 1928–2012 and validate the reconstructed RSL against available tide-gauge records. The 2007 Mw 8.1 earthquake is clearly resolved, with coral morphology recording ~70 cm of coseismic uplift expressed as a pronounced die-down surface, accompanied by a δ¹³C excursion exceeding 2‰. The 1936 Mw 7.9 event is similarly captured by a distinct δ¹⁸O anomaly, with postseismic relaxation observed consistently along two independent drilling transects.

Beyond discrete coseismic signals, the record reveals multi-year to decadal periods of uplift and subsidence that we interpret as complex interseismic deformation. In particular, we identify intervals consistent with slow slip activity during 1955–1964, 1977–1986, and 1999–2002. These results demonstrate that stable isotope measurements in corals provide a powerful bridge between instrumental geodesy and paleoseismology, enabling a continuous, high-resolution view of subduction-zone deformation and stress evolution across the full earthquake cycle.

How to cite: Karaesmen, M. E., Lavier, L., and Taylor, F.: High-resolution Coral Geodesy in the Solomon Islands, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15880, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15880, 2026.

EGU26-17057 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Linking Fault Geometric Complexity and Cumulative Displacement with Seismic Behavior: Insights from the Gran Sasso Fault System (Central Apennines, Italy) 

houda delleci, Lucilla Benedetti, Magali Riesner, Giulio Di Toro, Michele Fondriest, and John Gallego Montoya

Active normal faults in the Central Apennines accommodate ongoing crustal extension and have generated significant earthquakes (up to Mw ~7) during historical and instrumental times. However, several fault systems, including the Gran Sasso fault system (GSFS), lack documented surface-rupturing earthquakes, raising questions about their structural maturity, role in accommodating the extension in this region, and their potential to generate future large-magnitude events.

Here, we investigate the relationship between fault geometry, cumulative displacement, and slip rate along the Gran Sasso fault system located 19km north of L’Aquila, a system consisting of two major normal faults with an overall length of ~46 km. These include(i) the Campo Imperatore fault, consisting of two segments measuring roughly 20 km and 8 km, and (ii) the Assergi fault, which extends about 18 km along the western flank of the Gran Sasso massif. Both faults exhibit a consistent average W-E orientation with secondary structure tending WNW-ESE. Our aim is to assess the structural maturity and seismic significance of the GSFS within the broader Apennine fault network.

Using high-resolution Pleiades satellite imagery combined with existing geological maps and field observation, we mapped in detail the active fault trace and identified displaced geomorphic markers. The analysis focuses on two main fault segments, the Campo Imperatore and Assergi segments, along which a well-preserved Holocene fault scarp is continuously expressed. Scarp height was measured accurately along strike using several complementary approaches, including field-based observations, topographic profiles extracted from high-resolution DEMs, and the automated ScarpLearn algorithm (Pousse et al., 2022), which identifies and quantifies fault scarp morphology together with associated uncertainties. Preliminary results indicate that vertical displacement varies between ~2 and 16 m, locally reaching up to ~20 m along the Campo Imperatore segment. These results are analyzed in relation to fault architecture to assess how geometric complexities, such as relay zones and step-overs, influence displacement distribution along strike

Field investigations and detailed mapping along the Campo Imperatore fault allowed the identification of three key sites where fluvial terraces and glacial moraines are displaced and can be used as geomorphic markers of fault slip. Samples were collected for ^36Cl cosmogenic exposure dating of these surfaces. When combined with measured offsets, these exposure ages provide constraints on average late Quaternary slip rates and on the long-term activity of the fault, under the assumption that the dated surfaces record cumulative displacement since their abandonment.

How to cite: delleci, H., Benedetti, L., Riesner, M., Di Toro, G., Fondriest, M., and Montoya, J. G.: Linking Fault Geometric Complexity and Cumulative Displacement with Seismic Behavior: Insights from the Gran Sasso Fault System (Central Apennines, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17057, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17057, 2026.

EGU26-17450 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Paleoseismology of the Roccapreturo Fault (Central Apennines): Insights from Antithetic Fault Trenching and Image-Enhanced Analysis 

Magali Riesner, John Gallego-Montoya, Lucilla Benedetti, Stefano Pucci, Francesca Romana Cinti, Paolo Boncio, Daniela Pantosti, Alessio Testa, Matthieu Ferry, Stephane Baize, and Bruno Pace

The Roccapreturo Fault (RF) is a 9 km-long NW-SE normal fault forming one of the major segments of the Middle Aterno Valley Fault system, located 20 km south of L’Aquila in the Central Apennines (Italy). Despite its clear seismogenic potential, no earthquakes have been documented in historical sources. Large earthquakes on such structures typically have time intervals of several millennia, making paleoseismology crucial for constraining their long-term seismic behavior. The RF exhibits 150–250 m-high triangular facets and a 10 m-high semi-vertical fault scarp that cuts the Cretaceous limestone sedimentary sequence and delineates the main fault trace. North of Roccapreturo village, Quaternary colluvial deposits and alluvial fans feed a small intermontane basin, bounded by a 25-m-high ridge most probably related to the cumulative displacement along an antithetic fault subparallel to the main fault. We excavated two paleoseismological trenches across this antithetic fault, where a refined sedimentary record enhances the preservation of coseismic deformation. An additional trench was excavated ~1 km south, at the base of the main fault scarp.

Trenches were logged using standard stratigraphic, structural, and event-identification criteria. Event ages were constrained through radiocarbon dating of 23 bulk-sediment and charcoal samples. To complement conventional trench analysis, we implemented an integrated workflow combining conventional paleoseismology with pixel-based image enhancement. This approach exploits multi-temporal orthophotography datasets acquired at different spatial resolutions and times. Photogrammetric products (orthomosaics, true- and false-color RGB composites, 3D textured point clouds, and raster derivatives) were integrated into a georeferenced multi-layer stack to support post-field interpretation and independent validation of trench observations.

In the trenches across the antithetic fault, the basal stratigraphy consists of fine-grained marsh deposits faulted and folded against fractured and brecciated limestone bedrock. These units are overlain by clast-supported colluvial sequences containing wedges that record cumulative vertical displacements of up to ~70 cm, defining multiple paleoearthquake horizons. Three to four surface-rupturing events were identified in the antithetic fault trenches, with clustered ages of 0–1.7 ka, 4–8 ka, 8–13 ka, and 15–21 ka. In contrast, the trench excavated at the base of the main scarp preserves only a single recent event within colluvial deposits, consistent with the youngest event recorded in the antithetic fault trenches.

Previous studies along the main RF focused on cosmogenic dating of the bedrock scarp, estimating Middle Pleistocene slip rates of 0.2–0.3 mm/yr, and on trenching at alluvial-fan intersections. Two Holocene surface-rupturing events (2–8 ka) were identified, indicating a recurrence of about 2 ka and magnitudes up to Mw 6.5. The earthquake events that yielded in our trenches correlate well with previous results, extending the seismic record of the RF into the Late Pleistocene. Together, these results are crucial for constraining the timing and recurrence of surface-rupturing events and for assessing the role of antithetic faults in accommodating distributed deformation within the fault system. In addition, integrating image-enhancement techniques improves the visualization of subtle deformation and stratigraphic relationships, reduces interpretative uncertainty, and provides a scalable, reproducible framework that effectively complements classical paleoseismological trenching.

How to cite: Riesner, M., Gallego-Montoya, J., Benedetti, L., Pucci, S., Cinti, F. R., Boncio, P., Pantosti, D., Testa, A., Ferry, M., Baize, S., and Pace, B.: Paleoseismology of the Roccapreturo Fault (Central Apennines): Insights from Antithetic Fault Trenching and Image-Enhanced Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17450, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17450, 2026.

EGU26-18093 | Orals | TS3.2

When subduction changes its grip: cycle-to-cycle variability in interseismic coupling and coseismic slip 

Elvira Latypova, Jonathan Bedford, Fabio Corbi, Giacomo Mastella, Francesca Funiciello, Simona Guastamacchia, and Silvio Pardo

Identifying frictionally locked regions of subduction megathrusts from geodetic observations remains a challenging task in tectonic geodesy. Natural geodetic records typically capture only a fraction of seismic cycles, restricting our ability to assess temporal variations in interseismic coupling and their relationship to frictionally locked regions on subduction interfaces, commonly referred to as asperities. Clarifying this relationship is important, because interseismic coupling is widely used as an indicator of seismic potential, but coupled regions may include both mechanically locked asperities and surrounding unlocked regions. 

Scaled seismotectonic models provide an effective framework to investigate these processes, by simulating hundreds of seismic cycles within a short time interval under controlled laboratory conditions, with predefined asperity distributions and high-resolution deformation monitoring. 

Here, we explore the spatiotemporal variability of interseismic coupling, coseismic slip and their connection to predefined asperities using Foamquake, a well-established 3D seismotectonic model, which simulates megathrust seismic cycles.

Through kinematic inversions of surface deformation, we derive cycle-by-cycle maps of interseismic coupling and coseismic slip and analyse their statistical behavior across models with different asperity configurations and applied normal stress. Our results show pronounced cycle-to-cycle variability in interseismic coupling, even within asperity regions, with highly coupled areas systematically extending beyond the asperity boundaries. Coseismic slip shows a positive but highly scattered correlation with preceding interseismic coupling, suggesting that while coupling is a necessary condition for large slip, it alone does not determine rupture magnitude.

How to cite: Latypova, E., Bedford, J., Corbi, F., Mastella, G., Funiciello, F., Guastamacchia, S., and Pardo, S.: When subduction changes its grip: cycle-to-cycle variability in interseismic coupling and coseismic slip, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18093, 2026.

EGU26-18225 | Posters on site | TS3.2

How to define the earthquake loading medium: an interdisciplinary approach 

Carolina Giorgetti and Cristiano Collettini

Since Reid formulated the elastic rebound theory in the early 20th century to describe earthquakes in brittle faulting, fault systems have been widely represented by spring–slider models, both in theoretical frameworks and laboratory experiments. From a different perspective, structural geology has long documented fault systems as geometrically complex structures, reflecting the heterogeneous physical properties of different lithologies. These systems are characterised by multiple slip surfaces and secondary fault splays and comprise large volumes of highly damaged rocks. Such damaged volumes are effectively part of the loading medium that is commonly conceptualised, in simplified models, as an elastic spring.

Over the past decades, a wealth of seismological and geodetic observations has shown that these damaged crustal volumes actively deform inelastically during the seismic cycle, rather than merely storing elastic energy. In parallel, numerical models indicate that off-fault damage can account for a significant portion of the earthquake energy budget. Together, these observations challenge the classical representation of the fault loading medium as purely elastic.

Here, we integrate observations spanning outcropping fault-zone descriptions, seismicity catalogues, and laboratory observations to explore how the earthquake loading medium could be more realistically defined and described in natural fault systems. We focus on well-studied seismogenic normal faults in Italy, namely the Gubbio and Norcia faults, where a long-standing and extensive knowledge of the involved lithologies is combined with a high-resolution fault image obtained by both high-quality outcrop exposure and enhanced seismological catalogues, and where the involved rocks have been extensively studied in the laboratory. By adopting this interdisciplinary perspective, we aim to better constrain the nature of the loading medium toward a better estimation of the forcing imbalance that is fundamental to earthquake nucleation.

How to cite: Giorgetti, C. and Collettini, C.: How to define the earthquake loading medium: an interdisciplinary approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18225, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18225, 2026.

EGU26-18883 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

FASTDASH: an implementation of 3-D earthquake cycle simulation on complex fault systems using the boundary element method accelerated by H-matrices 

Michelle Almakari, Jinhui Cheng, Harsha Bhat, Brice Lecampion, and Carlo Peruzzo

Major fault systems are inherently complex, including geometric features such as multiple interacting fault segments and variations in strike, dip, and depth. Fault geometries can be effectively reconstructed through field observations and seismic monitoring. Many studies have demonstrated that this geometric complexity plays an important role in controlling the initiation, arrest, and recurrence of both seismic and aseismic slip. In particular, 3D variations in fault geometry cannot be neglected.

However, the vast majority of slip-dynamics models are conducted on planar faults due to algorithmic limitations. To overcome this restriction, we develop a 3D quasi-dynamic slip-dynamics model capable of simulating arbitrarily complex fault geometries. In boundary-element methods, the elastic response to fault slip is computed through the multiplication of a dense matrix with a slip rate vector, which are computationally expensive. We accelerate these calculations using hierarchical matrices (H-matrices), reducing the computational complexity from O(N^2) to O(NlogN), where N is the number of elements. The H-matrix parameters provide explicit control over the trade-off between computational efficiency and accuracy.

In our framework, fault geometry is fully arbitrary and discretized using triangular elements. Fault slip is governed by rate-and-state friction laws and loaded by either stressing rates or plate rate. This approach enables efficient simulation of the spatiotemporal evolution of slip and stress on complex fault systems over multiple earthquake cycles.

We validate the model against analytical solutions for static cracks and through a numerical benchmark (SCEC SEAS BP4). Finally, we apply the method to a realistic fault system with complex geometry that was reactivated during the 2023 Kahramanmaraş–Türkiye earthquake doublet. The results highlight the model’s ability to generate complex earthquake sequences driven solely by fault geometry, without including additional complexities such as rheological, frictional, or fluid-interaction effects.

How to cite: Almakari, M., Cheng, J., Bhat, H., Lecampion, B., and Peruzzo, C.: FASTDASH: an implementation of 3-D earthquake cycle simulation on complex fault systems using the boundary element method accelerated by H-matrices, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18883, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18883, 2026.

EGU26-19222 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Quality evaluation of assimilation-based forecast of rate-and-state governed fault analog 

Bharath Shanmugasundaram, Harsha Bhat, and Romain Jolivet

During an earthquake, the frictional resistance of a fault suddenly drops to release the elastic energy that has been accumulating over decades to centuries. In addition to the steady increase of stress on faults due to tectonics, external perturbations have been shown to modulate the fault behavior over a wide range of time scales. The spring block slider model following rate-and-state friction framework with velocity-weakening behavior undergoing periodic perturbations has been known to host complex stick-slip events ranging from fast earthquakes to slow earthquakes, making it a good analog of a simple fault. Accurate characterization of system state and tidal forcing parameters is critical for understanding the triggering mechanisms and ultimately improving seismic hazard assessment. In this work, we employ ensemble-based data assimilation techniques to carry out state and joint state-parameter estimation in a tidal modulated spring slider. We perform twin experiments to estimate the tidal perturbation parameters such as period and amplitude. In this scenario, we compare the iterative ensemble Kalman smoother (I-EnKS) with ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) variants for joint state-parameter estimation. Using the smoothed estimates, we assess forecast quality by evaluating prediction accuracy over multiple recurrence intervals. To account for model uncertainties, we incorporate additive stochastic forcing to examine its effect on state-parameter estimation and forecast accuracy.

How to cite: Shanmugasundaram, B., Bhat, H., and Jolivet, R.: Quality evaluation of assimilation-based forecast of rate-and-state governed fault analog, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19222, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19222, 2026.

EGU26-19316 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Active Tectonics and Paleoseismology of an Extensional Basin: Implications from the Büyük Menderes Graben (Western Anatolia, Türkiye) 

Akın Kürçer, Çağatay Çal, Oğuzhan Yalvaç, Halil Gürsoy, and Hasan Elmacı

Western Anatolia represents one of the most active continental extensional domains within the Alpine–Himalayan orogenic system. Ongoing NNE–SSW extension has produced a system of E–W–trending grabens and half-grabens controlled by active normal faults. These basins provide natural laboratories to investigate the interaction between fault-controlled deformation, sedimentary basin evolution, and seismic hazard. A key characteristic of such extensional basins is the presence of thick, unconsolidated basin fills overlying competent basement rocks. This strong mechanical contrast promotes seismic wave trapping and amplification, leading to prolonged ground-motion duration and increased shaking intensity. Similar basin-related effects have been documented in other extensional and transtensional settings worldwide (e.g., the Basin and Range Province, Central Apennines, and the Aegean region), highlighting their importance for seismic risk in densely populated areas.

The Büyük Menderes Graben is one of the largest and most mature extensional basins in Western Anatolia and hosts several major population centers. Paleoseismological investigations carried out on the main basin-bounding normal faults reveal repeated surface-rupturing earthquakes during the Holocene. These data show that fault segmentation, fault length, and basin geometry play a primary role in controlling earthquake magnitude, rupture characteristics, and recurrence patterns. At a regional scale (~100 km), several active faults have the potential to generate moderate to large earthquakes (Mw ~6.0–7.1). The combined effects of distributed fault deformation and basin amplification imply that seismic hazard in extensional provinces cannot be assessed solely based on proximity to individual faults. Instead, an integrated approach that considers fault interaction, basin geometry, and site effects is required.

In this study, trench-based paleoseismological investigations were carried out along the İncirliova, Umurlu, and Atça segments forming the northern margin of the Büyük Menderes Graben (BMG). In trenches excavated along all three segments, strong evidence was obtained for Holocene earthquakes that produced surface faulting. Preliminary findings suggest that the 22 February 1653 Menderes Valley earthquake (Ms6.7) may have originated from the İncirliova Segment, whereas the 20 September 1899 Menderes Valley earthquake (Ms6.9) was likely generated by the Umurlu and Atça Segments.

This study synthesizes active tectonic observations, paleoseismological trench data, and basin-scale geological constraints from the Büyük Menderes Graben to highlight how extensional basins amplify seismic risk beyond simple fault-based models. The results have broader implications for seismic hazard assessment in other active continental rift and graben systems worldwide, particularly where rapidly growing urban areas are built on young sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Kürçer, A., Çal, Ç., Yalvaç, O., Gürsoy, H., and Elmacı, H.: Active Tectonics and Paleoseismology of an Extensional Basin: Implications from the Büyük Menderes Graben (Western Anatolia, Türkiye), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19316, 2026.

EGU26-19344 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Using dense 36Cl profiles to assess the seismic history of the Roccapreturo Fault (Italy)  

Maureen Llinares, Lucilla Benedetti, Ghislain Gassier, and Magali Riesner

The Roccapreturo fault, part of the Middle Aterno Valley Fault system in the central Apennines (Italy), is a key structure for understanding the region’s seismic hazard. Despite evidence of Quaternary activity, its Holocene seismic history remains poorly constrained, with no historical earthquakes directly attributed to this fault. In this study, high- and low-resolution 36Cl cosmogenic nuclide profiles from five sites along the Roccapreturo limestone fault scarp were used to reconstruct the seismic history of this fault. The seismic history was constrained using PyMDS inversion algorithm (Llinares et al., 2025), which relies on Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) approach to infer the timing and slip of past surface-rupturing earthquakes.

Our results indicate at least five major seismic events over the last ~18,000 years, with coherent clusters at ~5 ka, ~3.5 ka, ~2–3 ka, ~1 ka, and <0.5 ka BP on at least two sites. The most recent event, dated at ~300 years BP, could correspond to a previously unattributed historical earthquake. Slip Rates (SRs) over the Pleistocene, estimated from high resolution profiles, range from 0.1 to 0.4 mm/yr, which is consistent with previous studies (Falcucci et al., 2015; Tesson et al., 2020) and InSAR data (Daout et al., 2023).  SRs over the Holocene are higher (~1–2 mm/yr), suggesting temporal variability. The study also discusses methodological advances, including the value of dense sampling, the use of statistical changepoint detection, and the integration of fuzzy statistics to address uncertainties in seismic history derived from 36Cl dataset from limestone fault scarp.

These findings provide new constraints on the seismic behavior of the Roccapreturo fault, highlight the importance of multi-site and high-resolution approaches, and underscore the need for further paleoseismological and historical investigations to refine the seismic hazard assessment in the central Apennines.

How to cite: Llinares, M., Benedetti, L., Gassier, G., and Riesner, M.: Using dense 36Cl profiles to assess the seismic history of the Roccapreturo Fault (Italy) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19344, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19344, 2026.

EGU26-19393 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Velocity-Dependent Friction and Its Role in the Evolution of Surface Deformation and Topography in Strike-Slip Fault Systems 

Ernst Willingshofer, Ehsan Kosari, Lise Wassens, and Ylona van Dinther

Strike-slip faults accommodate plate motion through a coupled spectrum of abrupt seismic rupture and distributed, aseismic creep that coexist and interact within the same fault system. Yet the surface expression of these behaviours remains poorly constrained, largely because the short-term physics of frictional instability and the long-term construction of fault-zone morphology are rarely observed within a single framework. Here, we address this gap using seismotectonic analogue experiments designed to isolate how velocity-dependent (velocity-weakening and velocity-strengthening) and neutral frictional regimes govern both transient and cumulative deformation in strike-slip systems. The experiments reproduce hundreds of analogue earthquake cycles along a laboratory strike-slip fault system to build topography while simultaneously measuring shear force, acoustic emissions, and full-field surface displacements. By systematically modifying fault material properties and boundary conditions, we analyse their mechanical and geometric consequences.

We argue that the distinction between velocity-weakening, neutral, and strengthening friction is not merely a control on whether earthquakes occur but also organizes fault-zone architecture. In the velocity-weakening zone, deformation is expected to concentrate episodically into narrow, migrating shear bands that imprint discontinuous, step-like surface relief. In contrast, velocity-strengthening and velocity-neutral regimes should promote diffuse surface strain, topographic gradients, and a cumulative memory of stable slip. Investigating the interaction between these regimes provides a mechanical explanation for natural strike-slip faults that often display coexisting seismic segments and creeping sections. By linking fault frictional heterogeneity to measurable surface deformation patterns, we aim to contribute to presenting a mechanical and morphological framework for strike-slip fault evolution.

How to cite: Willingshofer, E., Kosari, E., Wassens, L., and van Dinther, Y.: Velocity-Dependent Friction and Its Role in the Evolution of Surface Deformation and Topography in Strike-Slip Fault Systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19393, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19393, 2026.

EGU26-19397 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Advancing Paleoseismology with Integrated Hyperspectral and Multi-Sensor Approaches: Enhanced Interpretation of Trenches and Active Fault Scarps in Spain and Italy 

John Jairo Gallego Montoya, María Ortuño, Lucilla Benedetti, Moritz Kirsch, Samuel Thiele, David Garcia-Sellés, Magali Riesner, Eduardo García-Meléndez, and Marc Ollé-López

Paleoseismology extends earthquake records by documenting geological evidence of past surface-rupturing events, providing constraints for seismic source characterization, and improving the understanding of fault behavior. The reliability of paleoseismological interpretations depends on observational data and analytical methods. Conventional trenching and bedrock-scarp studies face uncertainties, as surface processes can obscure subtle deformation, and chronological correlations between units are often poorly constrained. Ground-based remote and direct sensing techniques now enable centimeter-scale multi-sensor datasets that significantly enhance observation and documentation of paleoseismic evidence.

This study builds on established methodologies to explore the integration of ground-based hyperspectral imaging, LiDAR, photogrammetry, and direct field measurements for improved detection of coseismic deformation, paleoearthquake identification, and 2D–3D reconstructions of fault displacement (for slip-rate estimation). The approach is applied to two active tectonic settings in the western Mediterranean: the Alhama de Murcia Fault within the Eastern Betics (SE Spain), with dominant transpression, and the Southern Fucino Fault System, Central Apennines (Italy), with dominant extension. At first, paleoseismological trenches were studied in alluvial sediments at the Saltador site. Second, an exhumed limestone fault scarp was analyzed at the San Sebastiano site.

At the Saltador site, 13 wall trenches excavated parallel and perpendicular to the fault, together with a natural outcrop, were logged using conventional paleoseismology and combined with remote sensing to reconstruct 2D–3D fault deformation and identify displaced alluvial-channel piercing points for slip-rate estimation. At San Sebastiano, LiDAR and photogrammetric data were combined with direct field measurements (spectroradiometry and Schmidt hammer rebound values) to characterize fault-surface roughness, mineralogical variability, and rock mass properties, to detect progressive scarp exhumation, building on existing 36Cl cosmogenic constraints. Hyperspectral imagery was acquired using an AISA Fenix 1K (400–2500 nm) at the Saltador and SPECIM FX10/FX17 (400–1700 nm) at San Sebastiano. Radiometric correction, co-registration with point clouds, and illumination modeling were performed using the hylite package. Subsequent processing included dimensionality reduction (MNF, PCA) and mineral-sensitive band ratios for lithological and structural discrimination.

The integration of hyperspectral data enhanced paleoseismological interpretations in both study areas by reducing uncertainties in coseismic deformation and surface rupture detection. At the Saltador site, previously unrecognized secondary faults and surface ruptures within alluvial sediments were revealed. Spectral band ratios improved the discrimination of sedimentary facies and erosional contacts, strengthening the identification of piercing points and deformation patterns. At least three paleoearthquake events over the past ~34 ka were confirmed, enabling refined 3D reconstructions of offset deposits and an estimated horizontal slip rate of ~0.2 mm/yr for the studied fault branch.

At San Sebastiano, visible to near-infrared hyperspectral data captured spatial variability in alteration minerals (e.g., hematite–goethite and, possibly, hydrated clay minerals), delineating vertical spectral zones that correspond to 36Cl-dated exhumation clusters, suggesting a link between mineralogical variability and progressive scarp exhumation. Combined with roughness and rock-strength measurements, these results could help to refine scarp exhumation rates, surface-rupturing earthquake sequences, and spatial variability in fault-rock exposure.

Overall, hyperspectral and multi-sensor ground-based techniques can enhance the reliability, reproducibility, and robustness of paleoseismological analyses in complex tectonic settings.

How to cite: Gallego Montoya, J. J., Ortuño, M., Benedetti, L., Kirsch, M., Thiele, S., Garcia-Sellés, D., Riesner, M., García-Meléndez, E., and Ollé-López, M.: Advancing Paleoseismology with Integrated Hyperspectral and Multi-Sensor Approaches: Enhanced Interpretation of Trenches and Active Fault Scarps in Spain and Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19397, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19397, 2026.

EGU26-19444 | Orals | TS3.2

 The Dual Role of Low-Plasticity Fines in the Cyclic Behaviour of Sand–Clay Mixtures 

Vedran Jagodnik, Kamil Bekir Afacan, James Leak, and Davor Marušić

Understanding how sand–fines mixtures respond cyclically is crucial for assessing liquefaction risks and how soil stiffness decreases under seismic forces. Fines, especially low-plasticity clays, greatly influence the buildup of excess pore pressure and strain during cyclic loading. However, their mechanical role at moderate fines levels is not yet fully understood.

This study presents findings from a series of stress-controlled undrained cyclic triaxial tests performed on clean sand and sand–clay mixtures. The base material consisted of a uniformly graded sand combined with low-plasticity kaolinite clay, with fines content of 10% and 15% by dry weight. In order to accurately determine the full role of fines content on the mechanical response, grading entropy coordinates where calculated for each mixture.

Cyclic loading involved applying a sinusoidal deviator stress of constant amplitude under undrained conditions. Throughout the tests, axial strain development and excess pore pressure were continuously monitored. Liquefaction was identified using two complementary criteria: (i) initial liquefaction, indicated by the complete loss of effective stress caused by excess pore pressure, and (ii) strain-based criteria, which relied on different double-amplitude axial strain thresholds.

The results demonstrate that higher fines content slows the development of excess pore pressure and delays the onset of liquefaction compared to clean sand. Both sand–clay mixtures showed less strain accumulation during initial cyclic loading, due to changes in pore space compressibility and drainage caused by low-plasticity clay. Nevertheless, at higher strain levels, significant cyclic softening, notable stiffness loss, and increased residual pore pressures were observed.

The findings emphasise the dual role of low-plasticity fines: moderate fines levels can improve cyclic resistance, while higher fines contents may weaken the granular framework and hinder effective stress transfer. The study underscores the importance of detailed analysis of void ratio and soil structure for accurately assessing the cyclic behaviour and liquefaction potential of sand–fines mixtures.

How to cite: Jagodnik, V., Bekir Afacan, K., Leak, J., and Marušić, D.:  The Dual Role of Low-Plasticity Fines in the Cyclic Behaviour of Sand–Clay Mixtures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19444, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19444, 2026.

EGU26-19479 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Seismic imaging in the laboratory: Reframing fault stability using elastic-wave observables 

Michele De Solda, Giacomo Mastella, Michele Mauro, Giovanni Guglielmi, and Marco Maria Scuderi

A growing body of geophysical observations, numerical simulations, and theoretical studies indicates that the evolution of the internal structure of fault zones strongly influences fault slip behavior. However, the theoretical frameworks most commonly used to describe fault stability—such as rate-and-state friction—were originally formulated to represent frictional sliding at idealized laboratory interfaces, in which the fault is treated as an effectively two-dimensional boundary with implicitly prescribed contact-scale processes. As a result, these models do not explicitly account for the space–time evolution of fault-zone structure, including damage, granular reorganization, and fluid-mediated processes. Moreover, the state variables used to represent contact evolution are phenomenological and are only weakly constrained by seismological observations, limiting the ability of these formulations to be rigorously applied across spatial and temporal scales.

Here, we propose an experimentally derived theoretical framework that reformulates fault stability in terms of internal variables directly linked to elastic-wave observables. Using double direct shear experiments on gouge layers under controlled boundary conditions, we combine mechanical measurements with active ultrasonic probing. Full waveform inversion is employed to reconstruct one-dimensional profiles of shear modulus and attenuation across the entire sample during normal and shear loading, stable sliding, and stick–slip events.

Ultrasonic waves induce only a small perturbation in strain and therefore probe the linearized constitutive response of the system without modifying its internal state. In this context, effective elastic stiffness and attenuation can be treated as internal variables that encode the evolving fabric and organization of the fault zone. The inverted profiles reveal spatially localized regions within the gouge where elastic properties evolve during slip instabilities, enabling a data-driven identification of the dynamically active fault region, distinct from the mechanically inactive surrounding material.

Based on these observations, we reframe the classical stiffness competition problem that defines the criteria for slip instability entirely in terms of observable quantities. Specifically, we propose to substitute the phenomenological state variable with the retrieved effective viscoelastic properties. Because elastic wave propagation obeys the same governing equations across laboratory and geophysical scales, this framework provides a physically grounded pathway for connecting laboratory experiments, numerical models, and seismological imaging of natural faults. More broadly, it represents a step toward a theory of fault mechanics grounded in seismological observables and geologically relevant fault-zone structures.

How to cite: De Solda, M., Mastella, G., Mauro, M., Guglielmi, G., and Scuderi, M. M.: Seismic imaging in the laboratory: Reframing fault stability using elastic-wave observables, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19479, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19479, 2026.

EGU26-19796 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Multi-segmented rupture, coseismically-triggered aseismic slip, and shallow rake rotation during the 2025 Mw 7.1 Tingri, South Tibet, earthquake 

Mathilde Marchandon, Yohai Magen, James Hollingsworth, and Alice-Agnes Gabriel

On January 5, 2025, the Mw 7.0 Tingri earthquake ruptured the Dingmuco fault in the Xainza-Dinggye rift, Southern Tibet. This event was the largest normal-faulting earthquake recorded in the slowly deforming Southern Tibetan rift system and is among the largest continental normal-faulting earthquakes worldwide. Understanding the mechanics of the Tingri earthquake provides a unique opportunity to understand the regional tectonics and the rupture processes of large continental normal-faulting earthquakes in evolving rift systems. 

Here, we combine space geodetic analysis and 3D dynamic rupture simulations to investigate the earthquake. Our geodetic analysis, based on near-fault 3D optical displacement measurements and a joint optical-InSAR-SAR fault slip inversion, indicates oblique normal-left-lateral slip on a west-dipping fault that steepens toward the surface, with an average slip of 1.8 m and a shallow slip deficit of 60%. Both our fault zone width estimates and our geodetic slip model show an increase in slip-obliquity toward the surface, with left-lateral slip reaching the surface more efficiently than dip-slip, a pattern consistent with shallow rake rotation. Our geodetic analysis also reveals 0.5 m of shallow normal slip on a secondary antithetic fault located 20 km west of the main fault, which did not host aftershocks.

Next, we perform 3D dynamic rupture simulations with the open-source software SeisSol, incorporating geodetically constrained main and antithetic fault geometries, heterogeneous initial stress and fast velocity-weakening rate-and-state friction. A preferred dynamic rupture scenario that reproduces the observations suggests pulse-like, subshear rupture, with a modeled average stress drop of 6.3 MPa, higher than the observationally inferred average for normal faulting earthquakes.  A strong velocity-weakening behavior at depth, characterized by a large negative stability parameter (a − b) = −0.009, transitioning to velocity-strengthening behavior in the shallowest ~2 km is required to reproduce the observed slip distribution and moment rate release. None of our dynamic rupture scenarios dynamically triggers slip on the antithetic fault. The maximum positive dynamic and static  stress changes due to rupture on the main fault occur at shallow depths of the antithetic fault, where it is expected to be governed by velocity-strengthening friction. Together with the shallow geodetically inferred slip and the absence of aftershocks, these results indicate that slip on the antithetic fault might have occurred aseismically. However, future events across the same fault system may involve deeper coseismic slip on both faults. The high stress drop and large shallow slip deficit are characteristics of rupture on an immature fault such as the Dingmuco fault. Our study demonstrates that combining geodetic analysis with dynamic rupture simulations can shed light on  the physical processes governing seismic and aseismic slip in continental rift systems. 

How to cite: Marchandon, M., Magen, Y., Hollingsworth, J., and Gabriel, A.-A.: Multi-segmented rupture, coseismically-triggered aseismic slip, and shallow rake rotation during the 2025 Mw 7.1 Tingri, South Tibet, earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19796, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19796, 2026.

EGU26-19962 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Surface rupture characteristics and macroseismic effects of the 2025 Mw 7.7 Sagaing fault earthquake in central Myanmar 

Lin Thu Aung, Soe Min, Khaing Nyein Htay, Toe Naing Mann, Chit San Maung, Htin Aung Kyaw, Aung Kyaw, Sang-Ho Yun, and Aron J. Meltzner

The 2025 M 7.7 Myanmar earthquake affected over 30 million people across Myanmar and the broader Asian region. The earthquake caused over 5,000 fatalities, injured thousands, and left several hundred people missing. Damage extended across Myanmar, Thailand, and China, with strong shaking felt throughout Southeast Asia. The rupture propagated for over 450 km, one of the longest strike-slip earthquake ruptures worldwide, cutting through densely populated and economically important regions of central Myanmar. However, the ongoing military coup and subsequent civil conflict between the central army and People’s Defence Forces (PDFs) severely limited rescue operations and ground-based field investigations. As a result, the assessment of rupture characteristics and, slip distribution, remains limited due to gaps in ground observations.

In this study, we investigate rupture characteristics and coseismic offsets using ground-based field survey data integrated with remote-sensing observations and social media-derived felt reports and rupture information. Near the northern rupture termination, which coincides with an active conflict area, we mapped rupture patterns using newly updated Google Earth imagery, validated through reports of rupture posted by locals on social media (Facebook). Along the inferred 1839 M7+ rupture segment, details of the surface rupture were documented using unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) and tape-and-compass surveys. In the restricted regions controlled by the central army, from Nay Pyi Taw to the southern rupture termination, coseismic offsets were measured using tape-and-compass methods only.

Slip amounts measured from ground-based surveys south of Mandalay systematically underestimate offsets determined from remote sensing, suggesting a significant fraction of the deformation occurred beyond a few meters of the main fault zone. Nonetheless, our mapping indicates that the 2025 surface rupture partially or fully overlapped multiple earlier historical Sagaing fault ruptures, including those in 1839 (Mw 7+), 1956 (Mw 7.1), 1929 (Mw ~7.0), 1930 (Mw 7.3) and 2012 (Mw 6.8). The observed macroseismic effects are comparable to those inferred for the 1839 Ava earthquake, which was poorly understood due to limited historical data. These ground-based data provide critical insights into the rupture behaviour over multiple earthquake cycles of fault segments that, at least in 2025, are inferred to have produced supershear rupture.

How to cite: Aung, L. T., Min, S., Htay, K. N., Mann, T. N., Maung, C. S., Kyaw, H. A., Kyaw, A., Yun, S.-H., and Meltzner, A. J.: Surface rupture characteristics and macroseismic effects of the 2025 Mw 7.7 Sagaing fault earthquake in central Myanmar, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19962, 2026.

EGU26-20257 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Rupture Jumping Across Fault Stepovers: An Extension of Rupture-Tip Theory of Elongated Earthquakes 

Vincent van der Heiden, Huihui Weng, Jean-Paul Ampuero, and Ylona van Dinther

Stepovers between fault segments are a key structural control on rupture propagation, often determining whether ruptures terminate or cascade into large, multi-segment earthquakes. These dynamics critically influence earthquake magnitude and seismic hazard. Theoretical models, in particular the rupture-tip equation of motion for elongated ruptures (Weng & Ampuero, 2019), describe rupture growth along planar faults of finite widths. However, they do not account for the potential of rupture jumping across geometric discontinuities or frictional barriers. In this study, we use 2.5D dynamic rupture simulations with the spectral element method (SEM2DPACK software) to determine how the critical distance Hc for rupture jumping across stepovers in elongated fault systems of two parallel normal faults depends on prestress level S’ and seismogenic width W (Fig. a). We simulate dynamic rupture on a primary fault and record the resulting stress perturbations on a locked secondary fault. The critical stepover distance Hc​ is determined by computing the strength excess required for Coulomb failure on the secondary fault over a static process zone Lc. This approach is validated by complete dynamic rupture simulations in a selected set of fault stepover cases. For two co-planar faults we find a Hc/W ~ 1/S’n scaling relationship with n=2 for short Hc (near-field) and n=1/2 for large Hc (far-field) (Fig. b), consistent with dynamic nucleation thresholds with stepovers. For non-co-planar faults we find a Hc/W ~ 1/S’n scaling relationship with n=1 for near-field transitioning to n=2 for far-field (Fig. c). This transition is governed by the angular dependence of the stopping phase emitted by rupture arrest on the primary fault and the resulting dynamic trigger. These scaling relationships for co-planar and non-co-planar faults will be incorporated into the rupture-tip equation of motion, extending its applicability to segmented fault systems. The updated framework will improve assessment of rupture potential in complex fault networks, such as the 2023 Kahramanmaraş sequence (strike-slip), the 2010 Maule earthquake (subduction zone), and the 2016 Kaikōura earthquake (multifault rupture), as well as for induced earthquakes (e.g., the Groningen gas field). Particularly, extrapolating our results suggests that faults with small W need to be highly critically stressed to jump over even short distances (e.g., >94% stressed to jump over 300 m in Groningen’s 300 m wide gas reservoir). Since fault slip is expected to occur locally before reaching such high averaged stresses, this implies that rupture jumping in induced seismicity settings with small W is highly unlikely. These findings contribute to a unified theory of rupture propagation incorporating complex segmented systems.

How to cite: van der Heiden, V., Weng, H., Ampuero, J.-P., and van Dinther, Y.: Rupture Jumping Across Fault Stepovers: An Extension of Rupture-Tip Theory of Elongated Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20257, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20257, 2026.

EGU26-20817 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Assessing the longevity and stationarity of surface velocities for seismic hazard in the central Apennines (Italy) by combining InSAR and fully dynamic earthquake cycle modeling 

Erwan Pathier, Maaike Fonteijn, Alexander Koelzer, Anne Socquet, Niek van Veenhuizen, and Ylona van Dinther

The central Apennines (Italy) are characterized by active normal faulting that is largely clustered in space and time, as documented by both historical and paleoseismic records. The 2016-2017 central Italy earthquake sequence, comprising a series of Mw 5 to Mw 6.5 events within half a year, exemplifies this behavior. Over longer timescales, 36Cl dating of Holocene fault scarps reveals earthquake clustering in the Fucino basin. Although the central Apennines have dense geodetic and seismological observations, these instrumental datasets only cover a small portion of the seismic cycle. This raises fundamental questions about how representative the present-day deformation signals are of long-term tectonic loading and seismic hazard. Here, we address the following questions: How representative is the current geodetic signal over multiple earthquake cycles in an area characterized by a dense fault network? How do surface velocities evolve through the earthquake cycle, and how does the spatial and temporal distribution of earthquakes relate to this evolution?

We combine new InSAR observations with newly developed seismo-thermo-mechanical models with an invariant rate-and-state friction (STM-RSF) and a visco-elasto-plastic rheology in a geodynamic framework. This fully dynamic earthquake cycle model resolves the inter-, post- and co-seismic periods, as well as cumulative deformation over several seismic cycles. We build on previous STM modeling in the central Apennines (Fonteijn et al., in prep). Faulting is localized on pre-defined weak zones from geology and the Fault2SHA active faults database, but can also occur outside the weak zones.

We analyzed InSAR time-series to study interseismic surface deformation in the central Apennines. We detect significant short wavelength velocity variations across faults of 0.5 to 2 mm/yr, which could possibly be explained by bookshelf faulting. Additionally, we simulated an earthquake sequence of six large normal-faulting earthquakes over ~8000 years in the central Apennines. These earthquakes occur on different normal faults in sequence before faults are reactivated, with rupture on one fault transferring stresses to adjacent faults. We also find rupture of a spontaneously arising antithetic fault and accumulated vertical displacement shows block-faulting behavior. We assess the variability of interseismic surface displacements and compare with InSAR interseismic displacements. Preliminary results show significant variations in vertical velocities in both duration and intensity over 8000 years, with alternating periods of subsidence and uplift in the orogen. This new modelling approach for the first time allows for a comparison of surface displacements over multiple earthquake cycles with short-term geodetic observations. The outcome of this study will have important implications for how to use geodetic data for seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Pathier, E., Fonteijn, M., Koelzer, A., Socquet, A., van Veenhuizen, N., and van Dinther, Y.: Assessing the longevity and stationarity of surface velocities for seismic hazard in the central Apennines (Italy) by combining InSAR and fully dynamic earthquake cycle modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20817, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20817, 2026.

EGU26-20840 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.2

Improving Real-Time Earthquake Source Characterization Using Diffusion Model Based Broadband Envelope Synthetics 

Francesco Alexandr Colosimo, Dario Jozinović, and Maren Böse

Reliable real-time earthquake source characterization requires the rapid selection of solutions from competing algorithms while minimizing false alarms. To address this challenge, Jozinović et al. (2024) have proposed a ground-motion-envelope-based goodness-of-fit approach that  ranks candidate source solutions using amplitude ratios and cross-correlation between observed and predicted waveform envelopes. In its current implementation, however, this approach relies on the ground motion envelope prediction model of Cua (2005), which is limited to small-to-moderate sized  earthquakes. 

In this work, we explore the benefits and limitations of replacing this empirical model with envelopes derived from machine-learning-generated broadband (up to 50 Hz) synthetic waveforms (Palgunadi et al., 2025). These synthetics are generated using a conditional denoising diffusion model, conditioned on preliminary source parameters (magnitude, hypocentral distance, depth), and site effects. For large magnitude events, we superpose point-source synthetics to produce realistic finite-fault rupture waveforms using the  SWEET workflow (Colosimo, MSc thesis).

We find that the diffusion-based synthetics extrapolate realistically across a broader magnitude range and reproduce observed envelope characteristics as well as, or even better than, the empirical prediction model. This capability has the potential to enable  earlier and more reliable identification of correct source solutions, reduce magnitude and location bias, and improve robustness for larger events.

 

How to cite: Colosimo, F. A., Jozinović, D., and Böse, M.: Improving Real-Time Earthquake Source Characterization Using Diffusion Model Based Broadband Envelope Synthetics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20840, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20840, 2026.

EGU26-21171 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Modelling complex fault systems with the Particle Finite Element Method (P-FEM) 

Andrea Bistacchi, Matteo Ciantia, Riccardo Castellanza, Silvia Mittempergher, and Federico Agliardi

Developing numerical models of faulting in the upper crust remains a challenge due to limitations in numerical algorithms and problems in choosing realistic constitutive models. This results in strong limitations when trying to model the strain and stress fields, and elastic and plastic energy release (i.e. stress times strain), under realistic parametrization obtained from lab experiments, particularly regarding mechanical and chemical weakening that leads to localization as observed in nature.

Here we explore applications of the Geotechnical Particle Finite Element Method (P-FEM), a large-deformation numerical tool developed to capture detailed progressive failure and fracturing using a non-local formulation.

P-FEM allows modelling localized shear bands that naturally emerge independent of mesh discretization, both in thickness and orientation. Moreover, continuous remeshing in a Lagrangian framework enables modeling of large deformations, and techniques used to minimize numerical diffusion help produce realistic localized shear/fault zone patterns.

The elastoplastic constitutive models can be calibrated using multi-method lab tests (e.g. monoaxial, triaxial, Brazilian, oedometer, etc.) to include complex non-linear effects, such as strain weakening and softening, poroelasticity, strength envelopes with a cap (i.e. porosity collapse in compression), and mechano-chemical degradation. This allows for realistic simulations of geo-materials with contrasting properties, including non- or weakly-cohesive fault gouges, weak porous rocks, and stronger brittle frictional-plastic materials.

After an overview of the method, we will show how P-FEM is particularly suited for investigating deformation in the upper crust including (i) fault nucleation and growth in mechanically layered materials, (ii) the interplay between faulting and folding in thrust belts, and (iii) the development of fault damage and/or process zones in materials with heterogeneous mechanical properties.

How to cite: Bistacchi, A., Ciantia, M., Castellanza, R., Mittempergher, S., and Agliardi, F.: Modelling complex fault systems with the Particle Finite Element Method (P-FEM), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21171, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21171, 2026.

EGU26-21225 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Integrating Structural, Geomechanical, and Passive Seismic Data to Investigate Site Effects along an Active Normal Fault Zone 

Alberto Pizzi, Silvia Giallini, Maurizio Simionato, Chiara Puricelli, and Alessandro Pagliaroli

Understanding earthquake site effects in fault-controlled geological settings remains a key challenge for seismic hazard assessment, particularly in intramontane basins affected by active normal faulting. In these settings, fault-zone site effects are expected due to the abrupt contact between thick soft and/or granular sedimentary basin-fill and the carbonate bedrock, which is characterized by highly variable fracture intensity and orientation.

In this study, we present the results of a multidisciplinary investigation aimed at characterizing fault-related site effects along the Monte Morrone fault system, a major Quaternary normal fault bounding the eastern margin of the Sulmona intramontane basin (Central Apennines, Italy) and recognized as a key seismogenic structure in the region.

A passive seismic survey was conducted at three sites located along the fault zone: Eremo di Sant’Onofrio, Roccacasale North, and Roccacasale South. The two Roccacasale sites are structurally located within the fault core and damage zone of the Monte Morrone fault system, characterized by intense deformation and pervasive fracturing. Ambient noise data were acquired and processed using the Horizontal-to-Vertical Spectral Ratio (H/V) technique to investigate resonance frequencies and potential directional amplification effects. Where suitable reference conditions were identified, the data were further analyzed using the Standard Spectral Ratio (SSR) technique to provide a more robust estimate of relative amplification.

Geophysical observations were integrated with detailed structural and geomechanical field measurements. These include fault architecture mapping, fracture density and fracture orientation analysis, and in-situ rock mass characterization through Schmidt hammer rebound measurements. The combined dataset highlights significant lateral variations in seismic response between the investigated sites, which can be directly related to the features of the fault-zone structures, damage intensity, and rock mass stiffness. Directional amplification patterns observed in H/V are consistent with the dominant orientation of fault-related discontinuities, suggesting a strong structural control on local seismic response.

Our results are consistent with previous studies documenting fault-controlled site effects and directional amplification within active fault zones in the central Apennines (e.g., Pischiutta et al., 2013, Vignaroli et al., 2019), and further emphasize the role of fault-core properties and damage-zone architecture in modulating seismic ground motion. These findings support the growing evidence that structural heterogeneities within regional fault zones play a key role in controlling seismic wave propagation and site effects, even at rock sites traditionally considered mechanically homogeneous. Our results suggest that fault cores and associated damage zones should be treated as mechanically distinct domains, characterized by stiffness contrasts and velocity anisotropies capable of modifying the amplitude, frequency content, and directionality of seismic ground motion.

From an application perspective, the multidisciplinary dataset presented here provides further evidence of the importance of correctly representing fault zones in two-dimensional subsurface models for numerical simulations of local seismic response. Explicitly considering the internal architecture of faulted rock masses, rather than assuming uniform "bedrock" conditions, can significantly improve ground motion modeling and help reduce uncertainties in seismic microzonation studies in tectonically active regions.

References

Vignaroli et al., 2019 Domains of seismic noise... BEGE, doi.org/10.1007/s10064-018-1276

Pischiutta et al., 2017. Structural control on the directional.. EPSL, doi:10. 1016/j.epsl.2017.04.017

How to cite: Pizzi, A., Giallini, S., Simionato, M., Puricelli, C., and Pagliaroli, A.: Integrating Structural, Geomechanical, and Passive Seismic Data to Investigate Site Effects along an Active Normal Fault Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21225, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21225, 2026.

The Yingjing-Mabian-Yanjin tectonic blet (YMYTB) serves as a critical boundary structure between the southeastern margin of the Tibet Plateau and the Sichuan Basin. Although seismicities has been frequent since the late Quaternary, the activity of individual faults within the tectonic belt remains unclear, introducing significant uncertainty in understanding and assessing the current regional crustal deformation patterns and seismic hazards. Particularly, the southern segment of the tectonic belt near the Leibo fault has experienced the 1216 Mahu M7 earthquake and several strong earthquake swarms of magnitude 6 or above. However, research on this fault zone is limited, and there is still a lack of reliable evidence to determine its most recent activity period and its relationship with nearby major earthquakes.

To address this issue, this study conducted paleoseismic trenches on the northern, central, and southern branches of the Leibo fault, based on the interpretation of high-resolution remote sensing imagery and field geological-geomorphological investigations. The following conclusions were drawn:

(1) Based on paleoseismic event identification markers, three, three, and five paleoseismic events were revealed on the three branch faults, respectively. Dating results of radiocarbon samples constrained the occurrence times of the three paleoseismic events on the northern branch fault to 21,190–20,590 BC (EP1), 20,550–12,120 BC (EP2), and after 12,090 BC (EP3). The timings of the three strong seismic activities on the central branch fault were 7,400–6,320 BC (EY1), 5,690–2,620 BC (EY2), and 2,220 BC–170 AD (EY3). The occurrence times of the five surface-rupturing seismic events on the southern branch fault were 14,660–9,300 BC (ES1), 9,270–7,560 BC (ES2), 600–640 AD (ES3), 740–1,440 AD (ES4), and 1,650–1,900 AD (ES5). The paleoseismic results indicate that all branch faults of the Leibo fault zone are Holocene active faults.

By comparing the occurrence times of paleoseismic events on each branch fault, it is determined that the Leibo fault zone has experienced at least 10 surface-rupturing paleoseismic events since the Late Pleistocene. The corresponding age ranges are 21,190–20,590 BC (E1), 14,600–9,300 BC (E2), 12,090–11,820 BC (E3), 9,270–7,560 BC (E4), 7,400–6,320 BC (E5), 5,690–2,620 BC (E6), 2,220 BC–170 AD (E7), 600–640 AD (E8), 740–1,440 AD (E9), and 1,650–1,900 AD (E10). The paleoseismic history of the Leibo fault zone reveals that the strong seismicities of the three branch faults exhibit significant spatial independence and temporal clustering, indicating that the branch faults of the Leibo fault zone are independent seismogenic structures.

(3) Based on historical earthquake records and paleoseismic research results, this study proposes that the seismogenic structure of the 1216 Mahu M7 earthquake is the southern branch of the Leibo fault. Additionally, the Leibo fault likely participated in the rupture of the 1935–1936 Mabian M6¾ earthquake swarm.

(4) By collecting and analyzing the magnitudes of strike-slip earthquake events that generated surface ruptures in western China since 1920, it is inferred that the lower limit of the magnitudes of paleoseismic events revealed on the Leibo fault zone is 6.5. Furthermore, based on the fault length and empirical relationship, it is estimated that the Leibo fault has the capability to generate earthquakes with magnitudes of 7.0 or higher.

How to cite: Sun, H.: Late Quaternary Strong Earthquake History of the Leibo Fault on the southeastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21381, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21381, 2026.

EGU26-21777 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

Structural controls on normal fault synchronization and simultaneous earthquake clustering 

Francesco Iezzi, Sgambato Claudia, Gerald Roberts, Zoe Mildon, Jenni Robertson, Joanna Faure Walker, ioannis Papanikolaou, Alessandro Maria Michetti, Sam Mitchell, Richard Shanks, Richard Phillips, Kenneth McCaffrey, and Eutizio Vittori

Slip-rate variations over multiple seismic cycles play a fundamental role in controlling the behaviour of active fault systems, as they are linked to spatio-temporal earthquake clustering and can influence the recurrence patterns of adjacent faults. However, processes that produce slip-rate fluctuations are yet to be fully defined. Despite their importance, the physical mechanisms responsible for such slip-rate fluctuations remain only partially understood. In this study, we investigate whether interactions between neighbouring along-strike brittle faults and their underlying viscous shear zones can generate slip-rate variability associated with synchronous earthquake clustering and fault system synchronization. We focus on nine normal faults and related shear zones within the Central Apennines fault system (Italy), arranged in six along-strike fault pairs characterized by different fault spacings and strike geometries. We integrate cosmogenic 36Cl dating of tectonically exhumed fault scarps with numerical modelling of differential stress transfer between interacting fault–shear-zone pairs. The results identify a mechanism capable of producing simultaneous earthquake clusters, driven by the synchronization of high driving stresses within the viscous shear zones beneath the brittle faults. This behaviour is strongly modulated by along-strike fault spacing and strike variations. In settings with closely spaced fault pairs and limited strike variations, earthquake clusters induce positive differential stress variations on neighbouring shear-zones of sufficient magnitude to induce positive slip-rate variations on their overlying brittle faults. This produces positive feedback mechanism that sustains the occurrence of earthquake clusters that will continue to positively load the neighbouring shear zones. These findings provide new insights into fault system dynamics across multiple timescales and have important implications for seismic hazard evaluation.

How to cite: Iezzi, F., Claudia, S., Roberts, G., Mildon, Z., Robertson, J., Faure Walker, J., Papanikolaou, I., Michetti, A. M., Mitchell, S., Shanks, R., Phillips, R., McCaffrey, K., and Vittori, E.: Structural controls on normal fault synchronization and simultaneous earthquake clustering, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21777, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21777, 2026.

EGU26-22278 | ECS | Orals | TS3.2

One Big Earthquake or Many? Fault Segmentation in the Eastern Precordillera, western Argentina 

Shreya Arora, Drew Cochran, Erik Janson, Gustavo Federico Ortiz, Jeremy Rimando, Nathan Brown, Melina Villalobos, Raul Gomez, and Yann Klinger

Why do some earthquakes repeatedly rupture discrete fault segments, while others rupture entire

faults? Answering this remains fundamental to improving seismic hazard analysis and, in turn, to

hazard preparedness and mitigation efforts. Over the past two decades, several mechanisms for

rupture termination and propagation have been proposed, including variation in geometric,

structural, and geologic characteristics of faults (Aki, 1979; King and Nabelek, 1985). In this study

we investigated the Eastern Precordillera (EPC) of the Andes Mountain in Argentina which is

classified into three segments: Villicum, Las Tapias, and Zonda–Pedernal (Siame et al., 2002) to

determine whether the historical surface ruptures associated with major earthquakes crossed the

segment boundaries, or whether rupture propagation was arrested by structural asperities

indicating an asperity-controlled behavior. To address this, we conducted a new paleoseismic

investigation at this site to complement and integrated with the preexisting dataset to evaluate the

extent of past surface ruptures in relation to fault geometry and structural segmentation. We have

complied earthquake timing of six earthquakes. Preliminary results suggest that, of the six

identified events, only one earthquake appears to have ruptured across an ~18 km-long segment

gap, including a ~4 km stepover and notable lithologic variation evidence consistent with a multi-

segment rupture event.

How to cite: Arora, S., Cochran, D., Janson, E., Ortiz, G. F., Rimando, J., Brown, N., Villalobos, M., Gomez, R., and Klinger, Y.: One Big Earthquake or Many? Fault Segmentation in the Eastern Precordillera, western Argentina, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22278, 2026.

EGU26-23007 | Posters on site | TS3.2

Interseismic Slip Rates of the Sındırgı Fault Forecast Extensional Kinematics During the 2025 M6+ Earthquakes 

Sevil Cansu Yavuz, Rahmi Nurhan Çelik, and Fatih Bulut

We investigated the geometry and the kinematics of the Sındırgı fault, which was activated during the two M6+ earthquakes (10.08.2025 and 27.10.2025) and their aftershocks. We analyzed all available seismographs from KOERI (Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute) and AFAD (Disaster and Emergency Management Authority) to identify fault geometry, earthquake locations, and focal mechanisms. We analyzed P-wave initial polarities and arrival times of a total of 43 M4+ earthquakes including two mainshocks (waveforms from KOERI and AFAD). Fault plane solutions as well as the accurate hypocenter locations indicate that the majority of the mainshocks and the aftershocks activated a south dipping fault. The results indicate an average strike of 110 ± 5.6°, a dip of 61.6 ± 4.4°, and rake a rake -124.6 ± 2.3°. Additionally, we investigated inter-seismic slip rates using 2D dislocation model analyzing the GNSS velocity field. We transformed the most recent velocity field into Anatolian-fixed reference frame. We decomposed GNSS velocities into fault-parallel and fault-perpendicular components and applied 2D arctan curve fitting to simultaneously determine the slip rates and the fault locking depths. Bootstrap error analysis was performed (1σ) to assess error bounds. The lateral motion is nearly negligibly small; however, fault-perpendicular velocities indicate the extension along the Sındırgı fault at 2.34 ± 0.69 mm/y slip rate. Inter-seismic slip rates suggest a rake of -95.2°, a nearly pure normal fault, which is consistent with average mainshock-aftershock rakes. In this context, GNSS-derived interseismic slip rates are capable of forecasting the extensional kinematics of the Sındırgı fault that generated two predominantly normal-faulting M 6+ earthquakes in 2025.

How to cite: Yavuz, S. C., Çelik, R. N., and Bulut, F.: Interseismic Slip Rates of the Sındırgı Fault Forecast Extensional Kinematics During the 2025 M6+ Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-23007, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-23007, 2026.

EGU26-394 | ECS | Orals | TS3.3

Inhomogeneity of East-West Extension Interior of the Tibetan Plateau 

shiguang wang, Paul Tapponnier, Marie-Luce Chevalier, Lucilla Benedetti, and Xiwei Xu

Holocene slip rates of active faults are critical to understand the kinematics of crustal deformation interior of the Tibetan Plateau. Here, we quantitatively studied the sinistral strike-slip rate the northern Yadong-Gulu rift (YGR), the unique one that has left-lateral component among the main seven N-S treading rifts in southern Tibet. By detailed fieldwork, UAV topographic data and 10Be cosmogenic dating, we document 2.5-3.5 mm/yr (3.0±0.5 mm/yr) Holocene left-lateral slip rate along the northern YGR at two moraine sites. This rate is consistent with GPS results (4 mm/yr) of the conjugate strike-slip faults in central Tibet. Both of this fault and the northern Beng Co dextral strike-slip fault (4.2-5.4 mm/yr) probably comprise a conjugate fault system, contributing to the extension rate of Gulu rift (~6±1.8 mm/yr) and accommodating the eastward extrusion of central Tibet.  

How to cite: wang, S., Tapponnier, P., Chevalier, M.-L., Benedetti, L., and Xu, X.: Inhomogeneity of East-West Extension Interior of the Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-394, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-394, 2026.

EGU26-2143 | Posters on site | TS3.3

New Slip Rate of the Central Gulang-Zhongwei Fault determined from high resolution topography and, OSL and 14C dating 

Boming Li, Yanxiu Shao, Yunsheng Yao, Huixin Zhang, and Yu Dong

    The Gulang-Zhongwei Fault is a northeast splay of the Haiyuan fault (east of 102°E) accommodating mostly left-lateral slip and some thrusting. Its slip history and kinematics are critical for understanding the mechanisms of slip partitioning along the oblique convergence at the margin of the plateau. Up to now, a consensus on its slip rate remains elusive; previous investigations have yielded divergent estimates ranging from <1 to 6 mm/yr. The central segment of the Gulang–Zhongwei Fault has been targeted for a detailed geomorphological and paleoseismological study. We used drone-based lidar to collect aerial imagery and dense point cloud to generate a digital elevation model (DEM) with a spatial resolution of better than 6 cm. The DEM clearly reveals the fault trace with faulted geomorphic features such as offset terraces and alluvial fans along the southern piedmont of Jingtai Xiaohongshan and Guanguan Ling . We performed detailed geomorphological mapping and displacement measurements at five sites over a fault length of ~6 km. The initiation time of fault slip accumulation was constrained by sub-surface 14C and OSL dating of various terraces and fan surfaces. Systematic and repeated offsets of multiple alluvial fans and terraces, with an average displacement of 12 m, postdating their emplacement in the early Holocene (8–10 ka), imply a millennial slip rate of 0.9–1.5 mm/yr. Altogether, our results indicate that the long-term left-lateral strike-slip rate of the Gulang-Zhongwei Fault ranges from 0.9 to 1.5 mm/yr. Although it accommodates only 10 % to 15 %of the left-lateral shear between Gobi-Ala Shan to the north and northeast Tibet to the south, it has been responsible for some major earthquakes in the past (1709 and 1920). Determination of its slip rate at various time scales is paramount for understanding how northeast convergent strain is distributed along the various faults at the regional scale and is key to seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Li, B., Shao, Y., Yao, Y., Zhang, H., and Dong, Y.: New Slip Rate of the Central Gulang-Zhongwei Fault determined from high resolution topography and, OSL and 14C dating, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2143, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2143, 2026.

EGU26-2652 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Deformation mechanism transitions during the seismic cycle recorded by quartz CPO in fault-related silica layers 

Dohee Gu, Raehee Han, André Niemeijer, Daeyeong Kim, Vladimir Roddatis, and Anja Schreiber

Silica layers composed of quartz grains typically a few micrometers or smaller are texturally distinct from typical quartz veins and occur as μm- to mm-thick layers along fault slip zones. The ultrafine quartz within these layers exhibits uniform interference colors in optical microscopy. Such features are commonly interpreted as indicating crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO), a fabric typically associated with ductile deformation but developed within brittle fault zones. Despite their widespread occurrence in faults developed in various rock types, the deformation mechanisms and ultrafine quartz CPO-forming mechanisms through the seismic cycle remain poorly understood.

In this study, we analyze the microstructures of silica layers observed in three upper crustal faults in Korea developed in sedimentary rocks, granite, and rhyolite within the Cretaceous Gyeongsang Basin, where average burial depths reach ~6 km. All observed natural silica layers are composed of fine-grained quartz (<2 μm. These layers display uniform interference colors in optical microscopy, while EBSD analyses reveal clustering of quartz c-axes. However, some faults are characterized by densely packed comminuted grains with nanopores, whereas others display polygonal quartz grains together with nanopores and illite aligned parallel to the fault plane, as well as shape-preferred orientation of quartz and adjacent calcite grains. These observations suggest that ultrafine quartz within silica layers may have experienced diffusion-related processes in the presence of fluids.

To investigate whether diffusional processes active after fault slip and cataclasis affect CPO development, we conducted hydrothermal rotary shear experiments on single-crystal quartz gouge (<63 μm) under identical P-T-fluid conditions (600°C, effective normal stress of 120 MPa, pore fluid pressure of 80 MPa) using three different velocity histories: (1) fast slip alone (V=300 μm/s), (2) fast slip followed by slow slip (V=0.1 μm/s), (3) fast slip followed by hydrothermal holding without further shear (22 h). The fast slip produces intense comminution within slip localized zones without the development of CPO-like features. In contrast, both the subsequent slow slip and hydrothermal holding result in the development of CPO-like features at the optical scale within the grain-size-reduced zones, accompanied by surface indentations on larger quartz grains and linear aggregates of euhedral ultrafine quartz. However, TEM observations reveal that ultrafine quartz grains within these zones display random crystallographic orientations, with no evidence for a preferred orientation.

Integrating natural and experimental observations, we interpret silica layers to form through a two-stage process: intense grain-size reduction by comminution during seismic slip, followed by fluid-assisted, time-dependent reorientation of ultrafine quartz during post-seismic or interseismic periods. Silica layers characterized by CPO-like features at the optical scale therefore record transitions in deformation mechanisms during the seismic cycle and provide key geological constraints for understanding slip behavior, mechanical properties, and the role of fluids in upper crustal faults. Further investigation is required to clarify the relationship between these optical features and crystallographic orientations at the nanoscale.

How to cite: Gu, D., Han, R., Niemeijer, A., Kim, D., Roddatis, V., and Schreiber, A.: Deformation mechanism transitions during the seismic cycle recorded by quartz CPO in fault-related silica layers, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2652, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2652, 2026.

EGU26-3578 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Cohesion-driven fault instability 

Giuseppe Volpe, Raphael Affinito, Giacomo Pozzi, and Cristiano Collettini

Fault healing is a fundamental process in the seismic cycle, allowing faults to relock and restrengthen during the interseismic period. Numerous geophysical studies have shown that the rate of fault healing plays a key role in controlling both earthquake magnitude and recurrence interval, in laboratory experiments as well as in natural fault systems. At the laboratory timescales (1–10⁵ s), fault healing is predominantly frictional and results from the time-dependent growth of contact area due to plastic deformation of the contact asperities. In contrast, seismic cycles in nature occur over much longer timescales, allowing additional healing mechanisms, often driven by chemically assisted processes, to become dominant.

Field observations reveal that chemically cemented fault rocks, such as cataclasites, are commonly present within the cores of several exhumed faults. Despite their widespread occurrence, the interplay between chemically-driven healing processes and fault stability remains poorly constrained by laboratory studies, largely due to the limited experimental timescales.

Here we present a suite of laboratory friction experiments specifically designed to overcome these limitations. We use analogue fault gouges composed of highly reactive materials, including hydraulic cement and anhydrite, tested under both nominally dry and fluid-saturated conditions. This approach allows us to investigate the combined and competing effects of frictional and chemically driven healing on fault slip behavior.

Microstructural and geochemical analyses reveal the formation of newly precipitated mineral phases under fluid-saturated conditions, consistent with the expected reaction for both gouge materials. Compared to purely frictional healing, chemically driven healing produces larger, non-log-linear fault restrengthening and a time-dependent increase in fault cohesive strength. Moreover, faults undergoing chemically driven healing exhibit unstable fault slip, characterized by recurrent stick–slip cycles.

These results indicate that chemically-driven healing processes play a fundamental role in interseismic fault restrengthening and may critically influence fault stability over geological timescales. Our results also suggest that these chemically-driven healing processes may favor the development of favorable conditions for unstable slip even at shallow depths, with relevant implications for natural and induced seismicity.

 

How to cite: Volpe, G., Affinito, R., Pozzi, G., and Collettini, C.: Cohesion-driven fault instability, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3578, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3578, 2026.

EGU26-4687 | Posters on site | TS3.3

Internal Structure and Kinematic Evolution of the Hambaeksan Fault, Taebaeksan Basin, South Korea 

Jae Hoon Kim, Jin-Han Ree, Raehee Han, and Jusun Woo

The Hambaeksan Fault is a major structural feature in the Taebaeksan Basin, South Korea, characterized by a significant right-lateral strike separation of approximately 3–5 km. Although it truncates the Baekunsan Syncline, the precise timing and kinematic history of the fault remain poorly understood. This study investigates the internal structures, fault rock characteristics, and kinematic indicators of the Hambaeksan Fault through field observations and microstructural analysis at the Sorotgol road outcrop in Taebaek.

At the study site, the fault juxtaposes the limestone of the Duwibong Formation against the shale of the Geumcheon-Jangseong Formation. The fault zone strikes N-S with a 65°E dip, comprising a ~30 cm thick fault core and a damage zone exceeding 10 m. The fault core consists of limestone breccia, shale breccia, and mixed breccia. Linear structures within the shale breccia (N5°E, 10°) confirm a dominant strike-slip movement.

Microstructural analysis reveals a complex deformation history characterized by several distinct features. A well-defined, linear Principal Slip Zone (PSZ), approximately 300 μm thick, is developed within the shale breccia and sharply truncates earlier clasts. Within the mixed breccia, the presence of clay-rich matrices exhibiting fluidized textures and injection structures suggests the occurrence of seismic slip, possibly involving rapid fluidization. Furthermore, kinematic overprinting is evident in the shear bands adjacent to the PSZ, where sinistral shear senses are superimposed on earlier dextral shear senses. These observations indicate that the Hambaeksan Fault has experienced a multi-stage evolution, beginning with a primary dextral strike-slip movement followed by localized subsequent deformation within the mechanically weaker shale units.

These findings suggest that the Hambaeksan Fault underwent at least one episode of seismic slip along the lithological boundaries (mixed breccia) prior to the formation of the current PSZ in the shale unit. The observed kinematic overprinting indicates that after the initial juxtaposition of the formations via dextral strike-slip movement, subsequent deformations were localized within the mechanically weaker Geumcheon-Jangseong shale. This study provides critical insights into the seismic behavior and structural evolution of major crustal faults in the Korean Peninsula.

How to cite: Kim, J. H., Ree, J.-H., Han, R., and Woo, J.: Internal Structure and Kinematic Evolution of the Hambaeksan Fault, Taebaeksan Basin, South Korea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4687, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4687, 2026.

EGU26-5101 | Posters on site | TS3.3

Slip partitioning of the Altyn Tagh fault based on geomorphic indices reveals uplift pattern 

Mingxing Gao, Jerome van der Woerd, and Juntao Cai

Active strike-slip fault systems in addition to oblique slip producing vertical displacement are often linked to contemporaneous thrust faults, which together contribute to regional uplift. However, how slip is partitionned along the different faults of the strike-slip fault system and the underlying mechanisms of slip-paretionning remain poorly understood. To address this issue, we investigated the northwestern margin of the Tibetan Plateau, focusing on the Altyn Tagh fault—a complex fault system that has undergone major Cenozoic tectonic deformation due to the ongoing convergence between the Indian and Asian plates. Using drainage networks and geomorphic indices, we developed a composite index of Relative Uplift Rate (RUR) to map spatial variations in uplift rates. Our analysis reveals significant along-strike variations in tectonic uplift and identifies four major tectonic anomalies from south to north: Qiemo, Subei, Changma, and the northern Qilian Shan. By integrating these results with geological constraints on horizontal slip rates, we explore the mechanism of slip partitioning along the fault. We find that although horizontal slip rates generally decrease northeastward, the vertical relative uplift rates do not follow the same pattern. Instead, within the Qilian Shan, vertical uplift rates are the highest compared to the southwestern fault junction areas. A key finding is that areas with high uplift rates correspond spatially to zones of geometrical fault complexity, such as fault bends or branching. These anomalies are further supported by patterns of seismic activity.

How to cite: Gao, M., van der Woerd, J., and Cai, J.: Slip partitioning of the Altyn Tagh fault based on geomorphic indices reveals uplift pattern, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5101, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5101, 2026.

EGU26-5279 | ECS | Orals | TS3.3 | Highlight

The effect of frictional heterogeneities on the seismic cycle: Insights from triaxial experiments 

Corentin Noël, Pierre Dublanchet, Cédric Twardzik, and François Passelègue

Deformation within the upper crust is mainly accommodated through slip on fault systems. Slip can occur in various forms, ranging from aseismic creep (i.e., stable motion) to dynamic earthquake (i.e., unstable motion). Interestingly, a single fault is not restricted to a specific slip mode. Recent geodetic observations have shown that a fault can exhibit both stable and unstable motions. The different slip behaviours have been attributed to fault spatial heterogeneity of the frictional properties, rheological transitions, or geometric fault complexity.

To comprehensively characterise the effect of frictional heterogeneities, we deformed heterogeneous fault samples in a triaxial apparatus, at confining pressures ranging from 30 to 90 MPa. The fault planes, sawcut at a 30° angle from the sample axis, are composed of two materials: granite and marble. Experiments were conducted with both marble asperities embedded in granite and vice versa, alongside homogeneous fault samples of single lithology. The selection of granite and marble was based on their different frictional properties, with granite exhibiting seismic behaviour, while marble demonstrated aseismic behaviour under the tested conditions.

Our results show that the stress drops of seismic events are dependent on fault composition, with faults containing higher granite content exhibiting larger stress drops. In addition, local strain measurements close to the fault allow us to investigate the spatial and temporal distribution of fault slip. In the case of homogeneous faults, the seismic event nucleation is relatively straightforward, initiating in the highest stressed region and propagating uniformly. Conversely, heterogeneous faults display a shorter nucleation phase, followed by a dynamic strain drop restricted close to the granite areas. Away from the dynamic event, the fault remains locked and is subjected to an increase in strain. This strain deficit is then released by a long-lasting decay similar to post-seismic afterslip observed on natural fault systems after large earthquakes. For the heterogeneous samples exhibiting post-seismic deformation, elevated confining pressure favours longer and higher amplitude of afterslip. Further data analysis demonstrated that large afterslip observed at higher confining pressures must originate from the combination of 1) larger co-seismic stress/strain drop and 2) higher frictional stability around the area of dynamic stress/strain drop, both enhanced at larger confining pressures.

How to cite: Noël, C., Dublanchet, P., Twardzik, C., and Passelègue, F.: The effect of frictional heterogeneities on the seismic cycle: Insights from triaxial experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5279, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5279, 2026.

Unlike typical surface rupture zones that develop along the main fault of mainshocks, the January 23, 2024, Wushi earthquake in Xinjiang, despite its magnitude of Mw 7.0 and relatively shallow focal depth of 22 km, did not produce any co-seismic surface rupture along the seismogenic South Maidan Fault (SMDF). Instead, seven days later, an Mw 5.7 aftershock along a reactivated shallow back-thrust occurred approximately 3.7 km northwest of the SMDF, generating a co-seismic surface rupture about 4.7 km long. Together, these two faults form a pop-up structure with opposite vergence, triggered by the aftershock thus causing significant and localized surface uplift. This unusual case offers new insight into faulting dynamics, landscape evolution, and underscores the need to reassess the seismic hazard posed by shallow secondary faults.

On the rupture surface, a layer of red fault gouge approximately 0.5–1 cm thick has developed. Outward from this, there is a layer of light yellow fault breccia about 20–30 cm thick. A clear linear boundary exists between the two, and the entire assemblage is enclosed within a fragmented zone composed of Xiyu conglomerate. We combined rupture energy, δD, the Kübler index parameter, and multi-grain-size structural analyses with K-Ar dating of synkinematic illite separated from both the red fault gouge and surrounding fault breccia rocks.

The dating results show that the red fault gouge records a new round of strong earthquake clusters beginning at 0.34 ± 0.03 Ma. The detrital illite age was 2.04 ± 0.13 Ma, which is consistent with the sedimentary age of the Xiyu conglomerates. In contrast, the surrounding yellow-breccia rocks obtain an older clay mineral ages: the authigenic illite age is 204.0 ± 5.8 Ma and the detrital illite age is 419.4 ± 23.6 Ma. Considering that the Xiyu Conglomerate was deposited during the Late Cenozoic and exhibits relatively poor diagenetic consolidation, the terminal ages of its clay minerals likely represent two distinct periods: the initial collision and orogenic phase of the South Tianshan during the Late Silurian to Early Devonian, and a distal response to the closure of the Tethys Ocean during the Indosinian period.

Our findings confirm that the South Tianshan region has entered a new phase of tectonic activity since the Quaternary. Intense crustal shortening triggered extensive erosion, leading to widespread faulting activities and the deposition of the Xiyu conglomerates. By the Middle Pleistocene, back-thrust faults developed as stress accumulated, forming pop-up structures that controlled regional uplift and landscape evolution. These shallow, low-energy secondary faults are still capable of generating surface ruptures during seismic events, and carries important implications for seismic hazard assessment, particularly regarding surface deformation risk.

How to cite: Zheng, Y.: K-Ar dating of fault gouge from the surface rupture of the January 23, 2024 Ms7.1 Wushi Earthquake, Xinjiang, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5332, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5332, 2026.

EGU26-5564 | Posters on site | TS3.3

Reassessment of the Carboneras Fault 3D geometry based on new bathymetric and high-resolution multi-channel seismic reflection data 

Nathalia Mattos, Hector Perea, Sara Martínez-Loriente, and Ariadna Canari

The NE-SW Carboneras Fault is one of the main active structures in the Alborán Sea and, together with the Al-Idrisi Fault, forms the Trans-Alborán Shear Zone, which connects the Betic and Rif Cordilleras. The accurate representation of the offshore 3D geometry and seismogenic characteristics (e.g., slip rate or maximum magnitude) of this large left-lateral strike-slip fault system is essential for assessing the seismic potential in a slow-deforming region, such as the Alborán Sea. Here, we combine the interpretation of multibeam bathymetric and high-resolution multi-channel seismic reflection (HR-MCS) data to reassess the offshore extent of the Carboneras Fault and the adjacent morphostructural elements. Topographic attributes were applied to the bathymetric data to enhance the visualization of the fault trace at the seafloor. Our findings suggest that the offshore Carboneras Fault extends for 110.3 km, exceeding previous estimates. We identified twenty fault segments along the Carboneras Fault trace, with individual lengths up to 46 km and azimuths varying from N40º to N238º. Geomorphic features typically associated with strike-slip systems such as deflected drainage systems, shutter and pressure ridges, and horsetail splays were also identified. Structural seismic attributes applied to the HR-MCS profiles highlight major subsurface discontinuities, allowing detailed mapping of the fault geometry at depth. Seismic interpretation also accounted with the identification of seven horizons offset by the Carboneras Fault, comprising the Paleozoic-Triassic basement, the Messinian unconformity and Early Pliocene to Late Quaternary seismic units. Based on this information, we constructed fault and horizon surfaces to develop the first 3D model of the Carboneras Fault. This model provides key constraints on crustal architecture and offers new insights into fault growth mechanisms, thereby reducing uncertainties and improving the assessment of the seismogenic potential of this major offshore fault system.

How to cite: Mattos, N., Perea, H., Martínez-Loriente, S., and Canari, A.: Reassessment of the Carboneras Fault 3D geometry based on new bathymetric and high-resolution multi-channel seismic reflection data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5564, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5564, 2026.

EGU26-5619 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Coulomb-like creeping segment acts as a stress sensor in Northern Sumatra 

Sharadha Sathiakumar, Rino Salman, Rishav Mallick, Lujia Feng, Qiang Qiu, Susilo Susilo, Sidik Tri Wibowo, Emma Hill, and Sang-Ho Yun

Understanding the spatial and temporal evolution of creep along continental faults is key to identifying where stress is released aseismically and where it may accumulate, potentially leading to future seismic events. Typically, creeping segments exhibit rate-strengthening behaviour, where frictional resistance increases with sliding velocity, resulting in stable sliding. However, the northern Aceh segment of the Sumatran Fault Zone (SFZ), a right-lateral strike-slip fault, presents a notable exception. Here, we observe creep signals using satellite radar interferometry, capturing the temporal evolution of creep, which decreased by ~60% from the 2007–2010 period to the 2017–2023 period. Numerical modelling constrained by these observations identifies two distinct creep events. The first was triggered by stress transfer from Mw 9.2 2004 earthquake more than 150 km away, and a second localized re-acceleration due to nearby continental earthquakes. These results reveal that the fault behaviour is more consistent with a brittle Coulomb surface and lacking the usual self-stabilizing influence of velocity- and slip history-dependent friction. This central creeping section, sandwiched between two large locked domains, instead exhibits nearly velocity-neutral behaviour at the fault segment scale, making it highly sensitive to both local and regional stress changes. These findings provide evidence of long-range fault interactions, where both the subducting megathrust and possibly the oceanic mantle drive creep on a continental strike-slip fault. Located within a densely populated region, the velocity-neutral Aceh fault may participate in future earthquakes nucleating in surrounding locked segments, highlighting elevated seismic hazard in northern Sumatra.

How to cite: Sathiakumar, S., Salman, R., Mallick, R., Feng, L., Qiu, Q., Susilo, S., Wibowo, S. T., Hill, E., and Yun, S.-H.: Coulomb-like creeping segment acts as a stress sensor in Northern Sumatra, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5619, 2026.

EGU26-6931 | ECS | Orals | TS3.3

Seismicity driven by rapid fault cementation in tuffs under hydrothermal conditions of the Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy) 

Gianluca D'Ippolito, Telemaco Tesei, Angela Mormone, Rodrigo Gomila, Monica Piochi, and Giulio Di Toro

Volcanic calderas, including Campi Flegrei (Italy), are characterized by intense shallow seismicity (<4 km depth, magnitude <4), commonly associated with hydrothermal fluid circulation. In these settings, seismogenic volumes constitute highly reactive systems where pressurized fluids, elevated temperatures, and mineral reactions interact to modulate fault strength, wall rock and fault zone stiffness, and slip behavior (i.e., from aseismic creep to seismic slip). Despite the dense monitoring network at Campi Flegrei—one of the most active and densely populated volcanic–geothermal systems worldwide—the mechanical and chemo-textural behavior of shallow faults under hydrothermal conditions and its implications for the seismic cycle remain poorly constrained.

Here, we investigate the coupled mechanical, mineralogical, geochemical, and microstructural evolution of experimental faults composed of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, a highly reactive pyroclastic rock representative of the shallow (<1 km) intra-caldera faulted volume at Campi Flegrei. We performed fourteen hydrothermal rotary-shear experiments at constant slip velocity (10 µm s⁻¹), systematically varying temperature (T = 23–400 °C), effective normal stress (σeff = 5–30 MPa), and pore-fluid pressure (Pf = 5–30 MPa) to reproduce liquid, vapor, and supercritical water conditions expected within the upper ~2 km of the caldera. Slip stability was assessed from the occurrence of stick–slip events (laboratory earthquakes), and associated stress drops, while friction coefficients and apparent fault stiffness were retrieved from stick-slip cycles. Mechanical observations were complemented by post-mortem mineralogical, geochemical, and microstructural analyses using X-Ray Diffraction, X-Ray Fluorescence, Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy, Scanning Electron Microscopy, and Energy Dispersive System microanalysis (XRPD, XRF, FTIR, SEM–EDS).

At room temperature, deformation is dominated by stable or slow slips associated with distributed grain-size reduction and limited induration. With increasing temperature, thermally activated mineral reactions alter fault rheology (and behavior). Between 300 and 400 °C, zeolite dehydration, clay dehydroxylation, volcanic glass dissolution, and rapid secondary mineral precipitation promote pervasive cementation and pore-space sealing, producing a dense, welded fault fabric. These processes strengthen grain-to-grain contacts, increase friction coefficients (from ~0.67 at room temperature to ~0.84 at 400 °C), and significantly enhance fault stiffness (from ~2.5 GPa/m at 23 °C up to ~10 GPa/m at 400 °C), leading to strongly unstable, earthquake-like slip with laboratory stress drops of up to ~25 MPa. Increasing effective normal stress further amplifies frictional instabilities through compaction, strain localization, and strengthening of grain contact junctions. In contrast, vapor-dominated conditions at ≥300 °C inhibit cementation, resulting in smaller stress drops while maintaining unstable fault slip behavior.

Our results demonstrate that hydrothermal fluid–rock interactions can rapidly shift shallow volcanic faults across slip modes by modifying fault fabric, stiffness, and strength. Temperature-driven mineral breakdown and pore-space sealing play a fundamental but often overlooked role in the shallow seismicity at Campi Flegrei, as well as in similar tuffaceous geothermal reservoirs, with important implications for fault mechanics, seismic hazard, and volcanic dynamics across small-to-long term time scales.

How to cite: D'Ippolito, G., Tesei, T., Mormone, A., Gomila, R., Piochi, M., and Di Toro, G.: Seismicity driven by rapid fault cementation in tuffs under hydrothermal conditions of the Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6931, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6931, 2026.

EGU26-7648 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Aseismic slip along the evaporite-rich Katouna-Stamna fault in Greece 

Silvia Crosetto, Joel Szrek, Sabrina Metzger, Giorgio Gomba, Claudio Faccenna, and Romain Jolivet

The left-lateral, NW-trending Katouna–Stamna Fault (KSF) in Western Greece marks the NE-boundary of the Ionian-Akarnania block. The Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) displacement field suggest the potential presence of aseismic slip, which is corroborated by the minimal seismicity in the area. To better understand the current kinematics of the KSF, we integrate full-coverage surface displacement rates derived from 7-yr-long Interferometric Synthetic-Aperture Radar (InSAR) time-series with the GNSS rates, field observations, and structural analyses.

While previous geodetic studies suggested a strike-slip rate of ∼10 mm/yr, our distributed-slip model indicates a strike-slip rate of up to 19 ± 1 mm/yr and a dip-slip rate of up to 11 ± 7 mm/yr. In particular, sinistral slip localises in the right-stepping south-central fault segment, while the highest dip-slip value is found in the northwestern part. In the model, aseismic slip reaches the surface, but the highest slip rates are found below 5 km depth. Furthermore, only the northernmost part of the fault appears locked and accumulating elastic strain, which also corresponds to the location of an earthquake occurred in 2014, supporting our model.

Field evidence indicates complex fault kinematics with multiple deformation phases. The younger generation of NNW-trending striae shows mostly oblique motion with dominating strike-slip component, in agreement with geodetic observations. Such agreement indicates that the geological kinematic regime under which they formed may be relatively recent and possibly still in place.

Overall, our geological observations highlight several possible drivers of aseismic slip. The fault bounds a so-called ‘salt wall’, represented by an elongated evaporite – mainly gypsum – diapir intruding the carbonate bedrock. Although dry gypsum does not display aseismic behaviour on its own, the interaction between evaporites and fluids could promote pressure-solution creep in wet gypsum. Pressure-solution creep in the fault gouge has been reported for other creeping faults, namely the San Andreas Fault, the North Anatolian Fault and the Longitudinal Valley Fault.

Structural evidence of ductile shear deformation within the evaporite-bearing rock along the KSF suggests that, at least in the shallow part, slip may occur with predominantly ductile creeping. This process is facilitated by the high solubility of evaporites and by the presence of fluids, and could explain both ductile deformation and abundant veining observed on the field. Furthermore, the fact that pressure-solution is slower between identical minerals, due to healed boundaries, but faster between different minerals, notably halite and calcite, would explain why the deformation is localised along the contact between evaporites and carbonates, possibly on both sides of the salt wall.

How to cite: Crosetto, S., Szrek, J., Metzger, S., Gomba, G., Faccenna, C., and Jolivet, R.: Aseismic slip along the evaporite-rich Katouna-Stamna fault in Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7648, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7648, 2026.

EGU26-8288 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

From seismic to aseismic slip in the lower crust: Results from hydrothermal ring-shear experiments 

Lawrencia Mensah, André R. Niemeijer, Marco Herwegh, and Alfons Berger

Understanding why earthquakes nucleate unusually deep in the crust is essential for improving seismic hazard assessments. These events occur under pressures and temperatures where rocks are expected to deform ductilely, challenging standard models of rock strength and faulting. Constraining the conditions that allow frictional instabilities to persist at depth therefore has important scientific and societal implications. To investigate the transition from potentially seismic to aseismic slip in lower-crustal environments, we conducted hydrothermal friction experiments on simulated gouges derived from epidote-rich (65%) and amphibole-rich (58%) basement gneiss from the western branch of the East African Rift System. We characterized their frictional strength and stability across temperatures of 350-600 °C, 150 MPa effective normal stress, and 100 MPa pore fluid pressure. We tested three slip-velocity protocols spanning slow (0.01-1 μm/s), intermediate (0.1-10 μm/s), and fast (1-100 μm/s) rates. Both samples show frictional strengths that vary with temperature and slip velocity. Rate-and-state friction parameters (a-b) indicate that the epidote-rich gouge exhibits velocity-weakening behaviour between 350-500 °C and at 0.3-100 μm/s, whereas the amphibole-rich gouge remains velocity-weakening across the full temperature range and at 1-100 μm/s. Microstructural observations indicate that deformation is primarily accommodated within a broad slip zone, where frictional granular flow and cataclasis dominate under both high- and low-temperature conditions. At the highest temperatures (600 °C) and slow slip rates, however, additional evidence for dissolution-precipitation creep was found, indicating the operation of viscous deformation. Our results suggest that epidote and amphibole-rich gouges can host seismic slip under lower-crustal temperature conditions at elevated slip rates. Under natural lower-crustal conditions, these elevated slip rates, sufficient to trigger frictional instability, could be facilitated temporarily by stress transfer, strain localization, or transient fluid-pressure variations.

How to cite: Mensah, L., Niemeijer, A. R., Herwegh, M., and Berger, A.: From seismic to aseismic slip in the lower crust: Results from hydrothermal ring-shear experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8288, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8288, 2026.

EGU26-9011 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Dominant Control of 3D Fault Geometry on the Seismogenic Environment of the Longmenshan Fault: Insights from Multi-Source Data-Constrained 3D Numerical Modeling of the Eastern Tibetan Plateau 

Yixuan Yang, Wei Tao, Junxiang Qiao, Haoyue Sun, Xuhang Yang, Renqi Lu, Wei Wang, Xiao Sun, Fang Xu, and Xin Wang

In this study, we constructed a 3D viscoelastic finite element model of the lithosphere in the eastern Tibetan Plateau, incorporating fine-scale 3D fault geometries rigorously constrained by multi-source data. We quantitatively analyzed the seismogenic mechanisms and controlling factors of the Longmenshan Fault Zone (LMSFZ). The results indicate that: (1) Regional deformation is co-governed by the synergistic mechanism of "rigid blocking by the Sichuan Basin" and "kinematic decoupling along major strike-slip faults." (2) The 3D fault geometry serves as the primary factor controlling stress accumulation on the LMSFZ, following a physical control chain of "Geometry → Mechanical Response → Kinematic Characteristics." Vertically, the listric geometry results in a stratified feature of "deep-driving and shallow-locking"; along the strike, geometric variations dominate the mode transition from "thrust-strike-slip coupling" to "strike-slip dominance." (3) Seismic hazard assessment identifies a high-risk "unruptured asperity" near Dachuan in the southwestern segment, where the deep strain energy density is comparable to that of the Wenchuan earthquake nucleation zone. Conversely, the northeastern segment is characterized by a "low-resistance/slip-deficit" mode, indicating high long-term seismic hazard. Based on physically self-consistent heterogeneous continuum mechanical modeling, this study transcends the limitations of discrete surface observations. It achieves a transition from 2D surface projections to deep 3D continuous fields, providing a reliable physical basis for quantitatively unraveling the deep seismogenic mechanisms of faults.

How to cite: Yang, Y., Tao, W., Qiao, J., Sun, H., Yang, X., Lu, R., Wang, W., Sun, X., Xu, F., and Wang, X.: Dominant Control of 3D Fault Geometry on the Seismogenic Environment of the Longmenshan Fault: Insights from Multi-Source Data-Constrained 3D Numerical Modeling of the Eastern Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9011, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9011, 2026.

EGU26-9321 | Posters on site | TS3.3

Mixed mode of deformation and processes along the Tellaro Detachment (Northern Apennines, Italy) 

Giancarlo Molli, Luigi Berio, Mattia Pizzati, Alessio Lucca, Pensiero Cecchini, Fabrizio Balsamo, and Fabrizio Storti

In the inner Northern Apennines (Lerici and La Spezia inland) the exhumed Tellaro detachment fault system is exposed. It can be traced in an area larger than 20 Km2 and well observable in continuous kilometer-long coast exposures (Storti, 1995; Clemenzi et al., 2015). The major low-angle fault zone is marked by decameter-thick, carbonate-rich, cataclasites and gouges (“Calcare Cavernoso Fm.”) overlying a footwall of cataclastically deformed low-grade quarzites, phyllites and metaconglomerates (Ladinian-Carnian Verrucano Fm.) belonging to the Tuscan Metamorphic units (Molli et al., 2018). In the hanging wall, synthetic and antithetic splay faults affect the originally ~6 Km-thick Tuscan Nappe succession, thinned to less than 0.6 Km.

Detailed structural data collected at the meso- and microscale, combined with Raman spectroscopy, fluid-inclusion analysis, and mineralogical studies, allowed us to constraints deformation processes and fault activity in a temperature range of 260-120 °C at mid-shallow crustal depth (10-5 Km). Observable deformation structures in the footwall fault rocks provide evidence supporting mixed deformation mode and mechanisms, with intermitted cataclastic flow and unstable brittle slip (aseismic-to-seismic) during the fault activity.

How to cite: Molli, G., Berio, L., Pizzati, M., Lucca, A., Cecchini, P., Balsamo, F., and Storti, F.: Mixed mode of deformation and processes along the Tellaro Detachment (Northern Apennines, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9321, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9321, 2026.

Serpentinites are “weak" rocks common in several geodynamics settings, including mid-ocean ridges, transform faults and subduction zones. Because of this, serpentinites play a pivotal role in the nucleation and propagation of slow and regular earthquakes.

We studied serpentinites pertaining to the exhumed Monte Fico shear zone (Elba Island, Italy) that reached greenschist facies conditions during deformation. The shear zone, tens to hundreds of m thick, is made of 10-100 cm lenses of metaperidotite, mainly composed by the lizardite and chrysotile, wrapped by foliated serpentinites. Bulk deformation is accommodated by anastomosing and pervasive S/C foliations. The lenses are bounded by 1-3 cm thick brittle faults decorated by slickenfibers composed of chrysotile and polygonal serpentine.

To determine the frictional and healing properties of the serpentinite-bearing shear zones and faults under realistic ambient shallow-subduction conditions, we performed 39 slide-hold-slide experiments at σ’n=20 MPa, Pf=6 MPa, Vshear= 10 µm/s and at temperatures from 25°C to 400°C. We sheared with a rotary shear apparatus equipped with a hydrothermal vessel (ROSA-HYDROS, Dept. of Geosciences, UniPD, Italy) the powders obtained from the metaperidotite and the slickenfibers.

Regarding the frictional properties of the metaperidotite, when the water is in a liquid state, the friction coefficient increases from 0.3 at 25°C to 0.5 at 300°C; when water is in vapour and supercritical states, the friction coefficient is strain hardening (0.6-0.89 at 300°C-400°C). Stick-slip behaviour (i.e., seismic slip) is observed only at 400°C. In the case of slickenfibers, when the water is in liquid state, the friction coefficient increases from 0.23 at 25°C to 0.34 at 300°C. When water is in vapour conditions the friction coefficient is 0.47 at 300°C and 0.57 at 400°C. In conclusion, the metaperidotite can deform by aseismic creep or seismic slip and the slickenfibers deform by aseismic creep.

Regarding the frictional healing properties, it differs between metaperidotite and slickenfibers. Frictional healing of the metaperidotite is positive and increases with temperature, independently of the physical state of water. Instead, frictional healing of the slickenfibers is negative for nearly all the conditions, with a maximum positive healing between 150°C and 250°C.

Our results show that the frictional response of low-grade serpentinites sheared in the laboratory at shallow-subduction hydrothermal conditions is controlled by the mineral assemblage and temperature. As a consequence, in nature, the combination of frictional and healing behaviour is highly heterogeneous and becomes the driver for enhanced instabilities on the weak but fast-healing slickenfibers in a narrow temperature window between 150°C and 250°C.

How to cite: Salvadori, L., Di Toro, G., and Tesei, T.: Temperature-dependent frictional and healing behaviour in serpentinite shear zones: implications for subduction zone seismicity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9588, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9588, 2026.

EGU26-10168 | Posters on site | TS3.3

Strain hardening as a mechanism for slip nucleation and arrest in phyllosilicate-rich rocks 

Telemaco Tesei, Leonardo Salvadori, Giulio Di Toro, and André Niemeijer

The processes governing the nucleation and arrest of a rupture during slow slips remain speculative. The importance of understanding slip arrest mechanisms lies in the potential for slow slips to trigger destructive earthquakes and in the fact that not all slow slips lead to the nucleation of regular earthquakes.

At seismogenic depths (<30 Km, 100°-400°C), phyllosilicate-rich rocks (i.e., claystones, metasediments, serpentinites) are widespread lithologies that are also frictionally weak (µ≪0.6). The presence of these rock favors slip nucleation at weak fault patches which may or may not develop into fast unstable slip.

We performed hydrothermal friction experiments at the temperatures and pressures relevant to the seismogenic zone to understand the mechanism(s) behind slip nucleation and arrest. We tested experimental gouges of phyllite (Rio Marina Fm.) and meta-sandstone (Verrucano Fm.) from a natural shear zone exposed at the Elba Island (Italy). Experiments were performed at a shearing velocity of 10 µm/s over a wide range of effective normal stresses (20 to 150 MPa), high temperature (350 °C) conditions and to high strains (displacements up to 40 mm) using two hydrothermal Rotary shear machines hosted in Padova University (Italy) and Utrecht University (Netherlands).

            Experimental results show that the phyllite sheared at low effective normal stresses (20-50 MPa), show a low friction coefficient of µ ~ 0.3 and a strain weakening behavior. With increasing normal stress (up to 150 MPa) we observe an initial low friction (0.35) that evolves with a strain hardening trend up to µ ~ 0.7-0.9. Conversely, experiments on the meta-sandstone show generally higher friction (0.6-0.7) even at small strains at all normal stress conditions.

Frictional weakness is due to the phyllosilicates’ ability to develop efficient foliations that accommodate the deformation. At low effective normal stresses (up to 60 MPa), we observe the development of a through-going phyllosilicate network within the phyllite gouge resulting in the observed low friction and strain weakening evolution. Conversely, at high normal stress, a through-going weak phyllosilicate network cannot develop because of the presence of frictionally strong high stress asperities, from which phyllosilicates have been extruded. The observed strain hardening and high friction trend results from comminution of intervening quartz and feldspar grains that we correlate with the occurrence of ultracataclasites in the microstructures. The experimental results on the meta-sandstone confirm this hypothesis, showing a friction and a microstructure similar to the “hardened” phyllite gouges. EDS maps of chemical elements in the phyllite gouge sheared under high normal stress confirm the absence of an interconnected network of phyllosilicates. In natural shear zones, at seismogenic depth, we may observe slip nucleation in weak phyllosilicate rich rocks (µ ~ 0.3). However, the fault patch may quickly strengthen if the propagating slip is fast enough to disrupt the foliation, which would decelerate slip. Our study provides a new mechanism by which slow slip events may nucleate and spontaneously arrest, potentially halting the growth of rupture into regular earthquakes.

How to cite: Tesei, T., Salvadori, L., Di Toro, G., and Niemeijer, A.: Strain hardening as a mechanism for slip nucleation and arrest in phyllosilicate-rich rocks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10168, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10168, 2026.

EGU26-11504 | Posters on site | TS3.3

3D Structural Characterization and Analogue Modeling to Constrain the growth and evolution of the Yusuf Fault (Alborán Sea) 

Hector Perea, Nathalia Mattos, Oriol Ferrer, Oscar Gratacós, Eloi Carola, Ariadna Canari, and Sara Martíniez-Loriente

The Yusuf Fault system (YF) is one of the largest active strike-slip structures in the Alborán Sea, where it acts as a lithospheric-scale boundary accommodating part of the NW-SE convergence between the Nubian and Eurasian plates. It trends WNW-ESE, extends for ~150 km, and is characterized by a complex fault array and a prominent pull-apart basin. Accurate representation of its 3D geometry and seismogenic behavior is essential to constrain its seismic potential and understand the tectonic evolution of the region. In this study, we integrate multibeam bathymetry, high-resolution multi-channel seismic reflection (HR-MCS) data, and scaled analogue modeling to characterize the structural architecture and kinematic evolution of the YF. Bathymetric analysis using topographic attributes enabled detailed mapping of the fault trace and associated geomorphic features, while seismic data interpretation revealed subsurface discontinuities and fault offsets affecting key seismostratigraphic units from the Upper Miocene to the Quaternary. This information allowed us to construct the first 3D structural model of the YF, showing that the system consists of multiple overlapping segments forming a complex strike-slip fault architecture. To explore the processes controlling pull-apart basin development, we conducted analogue experiments simulating strike-slip fault interaction. Results suggest that basin opening is controlled by overlapped fault geometry and lateral displacement rates, providing a physical framework for interpreting the observed morphostructural patterns. This integrated approach improves constraints on fault growth and segmentation, offering critical input for seismic hazard models in the western Mediterranean.

How to cite: Perea, H., Mattos, N., Ferrer, O., Gratacós, O., Carola, E., Canari, A., and Martíniez-Loriente, S.: 3D Structural Characterization and Analogue Modeling to Constrain the growth and evolution of the Yusuf Fault (Alborán Sea), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11504, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11504, 2026.

EGU26-13810 | ECS | Orals | TS3.3

Post-earthquake Fault Zone Overstrengthening Influences Slip during Future Earthquakes 

Zachary Smith, Roland Bürgmann, Francis Waligora, Ashley Griffith, Johanna Nevitt, Kathryn Materna, Matthew Gleeson, Ruyu Yan, and Matthew Idzakovich

Changes in fault-zone properties over successive earthquake cycles drive variations in fault slip behavior and seismic hazard. Typically, fault zones are believed to evolve towards tabular damage zones surrounding a low cohesion fault core and are characterized by increased fracture density and reduced elastic stiffness. However, interseismic mineral alteration and fracture healing can either weaken or strengthen fault zones, influencing future earthquake ruptures. Here, we document post-earthquake fault-zone-strength enhancement through field and laboratory observations of fault core and damage zone rocks from subsidiary faults partially activated during the 2019 Ridgecrest earthquake sequence. Analysis of coseismic slip observed with InSAR shows that only some portions of faults in the Spangler Hills experienced slip during the Ridgecrest earthquake sequence even though Coulomb failure stress change analysis predicts the entire length of the faults would have been stressed towards failure. Field investigations have revealed the presence of pseudotachylyte along the faults which is evidence of ancient earthquakes. Mineralogical analysis of healed pulverized rock within these fault zones suggests that these early earthquakes occurred near the brittle-ductile transition prior to exhumation. We measured the tensile and uniaxial compressive strength, Young's modulus, Poisson's Ratio, cohesion, and angle of internal friction of exhumed fault zone rocks and nearby plutonic rocks using a Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar. We find that post-earthquake healing via propylitic albitic alteration within the fault zone increased damage zone tensile and compressive strength and stiffness, and fault core cohesion by ~150% in the location where no slip was observed. These observations are further supported by multispectral Landsat and ASTER analyses, which indicate that surface slip along subsidiary faults is preferentially localized within zones of pre-existing phyllic hydrothermal alteration and terminates at the boundaries of propylitic alteration zones. Together, these results demonstrate that fault-zone cohesive healing can exert long-lasting control on fault slip behavior and seismic hazards.

How to cite: Smith, Z., Bürgmann, R., Waligora, F., Griffith, A., Nevitt, J., Materna, K., Gleeson, M., Yan, R., and Idzakovich, M.: Post-earthquake Fault Zone Overstrengthening Influences Slip during Future Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13810, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13810, 2026.

EGU26-13844 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Tracing fluid sources, their influence, and mechanical consequences in the Inuyama accretionary complex, Japan 

Rebecca V M Robertson, Giovanni Toffol, Ake Fagereng, Kohtaro Ujiie, and Joaquin Julve

Vein stable isotope geochemistry and minerology provide a powerful record of fluid sources in subduction-zone fault systems, with implications for fault mechanics and seismic behaviour. We investigate fluid sources along out-of-sequence thrusts within an exceptionally well-preserved exhumed analogue of the shallow seismogenic zone: the Inuyama Sequence from the Jurassic Accretionary Complex in central Japan. The sequence comprises a coherent ocean-floor stratigraphy of siliceous claystone, ribbon chert, siliceous mudstone and clastic units, repeated by thrust imbrication.

Vein and host rock stable isotope data reveal the presence of two distinct vein sets, implying two distinct fluids, within the thrust sheets. One fluid is a cool pore water (𝛿18O = - 4 to 0 ‰), that precipitated quartz (21.2 to 25.7 ‰), calcite (20.6 to 21.1 ‰), and rhodochrosite (25.2 ‰) veins at ∼40 to100 ˚C throughout the exposed thrust sheets. This is consistent with a seawater-derived pore fluid in the shallow accretionary prism. In contrast, some quartz (2.1 ‰) and calcite (-0.4 to 6.2 ‰) vein clusters require a different and warmer fluid (𝛿18O = - 11 to - 8 ‰) possibly of meteoric origin. These isotopically lighter veins are restricted to discrete shear zones with well-developed scaly fabric and are generally focused along the margins of mechanically competent blocks. Notably, these discrete shear zones have far higher carbon contents than the host rocks, be that through pressure solution or direct carbon precipitation. The isotopically lighter calcite and quartz veins record significantly higher temperatures (∼170 to 220 ˚C), confirmed with chlorite geothermometry, and are in line with Raman and vitrinite reflectance temperature estimates for peak conditions for the area (Kameda et al., 2012; Ujiie et al., 2021).

The occurrence of isotopically light fluids at temperatures of 170-220˚C, corresponding to depths of ~ 8.5 to11 km given a relatively cool accretionary geotherm (20 ˚C/km), requires either (1) deep and lateral ingress of meteoric waters into the inner wedge as accreted sediments approached the coast, (2) late-stage vein precipitation during exhumation and fault reactivation, or (3) kinetic isotope effects associated with rapid precipitation during fault dilation that drives 𝛿18O lower than those predicted for equilibrium precipitation. Importantly, the hot and isotopically light fluids show a strong spatial relationship with highly concentrated black carbonaceous material that appears to control strain localisation at thrust sheet contacts. Consequently, these fluid-driven mechanical changes may have created carbon-rich asperities of very low frictional strength, encouraging local aseismic creep and stress build up at asperity boundaries.

How to cite: Robertson, R. V. M., Toffol, G., Fagereng, A., Ujiie, K., and Julve, J.: Tracing fluid sources, their influence, and mechanical consequences in the Inuyama accretionary complex, Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13844, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13844, 2026.

EGU26-14249 | Orals | TS3.3

Signatures of changing deformation rate dynamics in deforming rocks: Examples from the exhumed Slow Earthquake Zone of New Caledonia 

Sandra Piazolo, Manon Carpenter, Timothy Chapman, Geoffrey Clarke, Lars Hansen, and Jessica Hawthorne

Deformation on planetary bodies is characterized by processes that act at strain rates of more than 15 orders of magnitude difference. With the advent of advanced geophysical techniques with ever increasing resolution in time and space, we are now able to detect some of these intriguing dynamics. However, to improve earthquake related hazard assessments, advancing from observations of apparent dynamics of geophysically detected deformation events to in-depth understanding of the underlying physical processes is urgently needed. One “type” example of a deformation phenomenon encompassing deformation at different rates are Slow Earthquakes (SEs). In SEs, slip occurs more slowly than in regular earthquakes, but significantly faster than can be attributed to long-term plate motion. Although SEs are abundant, their geophysically observed characteristics cannot be reconciled with current understanding of how rocks deform: new evidence of slip processes need to be discovered in the geological record.
         Rock outcrops from an example of exhumed subducted crust in New Caledonia are interpreted to contain zones of former SEs. Microstructural characterization combining EBSD and EDS analyses deciphers controlling deformation processes, while phase petrology is used to evaluate stages of fluid ingress, production or egress. Based on our observations, we interpret that several deformation processes directly associated with the presence and movement of fluids governed rock behaviour. Relatively “slow” dissolution-precipitation creep is the main “background” deformation process responsible for the observed shape- and crystallographic-preferred orientations, in-grain compositional variations and grain boundary alignment. Geometric features akin to soft sediment deformation structures and water escape structures that developed at high grade conditions suggest that intermittently, local liquefaction is triggered by episodic high fluid pressures induced by mineral dehydration reactions. Based on these observations, we propose that wet granular flow at high fluid pressure may occur in subduction zone environments. This process is transient and relatively fast contrasting the slow, continuous viscous background flow. Catastrophic failure and flow by wet granular flow represents a viable candidate process for geophysically observed transient high slip rates in fluid rich subduction environments.

How to cite: Piazolo, S., Carpenter, M., Chapman, T., Clarke, G., Hansen, L., and Hawthorne, J.: Signatures of changing deformation rate dynamics in deforming rocks: Examples from the exhumed Slow Earthquake Zone of New Caledonia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14249, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14249, 2026.

EGU26-14779 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Fault contact evolution seen via total internal reflection and heard via acoustic emissions 

Charlotte Bate, Christine McCarthy, Will Steinhardt, and Seth Saltiel

Earthquakes and ice sheet collapse are significant hazards that are both governed by friction. Fault interfaces and glacier beds share many frictional behaviours: slip stability and instability, seismicity, healing, and episodic slip. Rate-and-state friction (RSF), an empirically derived framework for describing frictional strength, has been successfully utilized for the last five decades to quantitatively characterize earthquake phenomena and has more recently been employed to describe stick-slip behaviour of glaciers. While RSF has been used to extract consistent parameters in both systems, frictional behaviours are rooted in the evolution of the asperities in contact at the interface. Although RSF is powerful (and practical!), it does not reveal the micromechanisms driving the behaviour it describes, nor does it account for other behaviours, such as rupture initiation and variation in stress drop. For this reason, we take advantage of the transparency of ice, its faster deformation timescales, as well as the frictional properties ice shares with rock, to directly observe the frictional interface in situ during shear. To do this, we employ a novel adaptation to our cryogenic biaxial device. As the interface cycles between periods of holds and shears, we use 1) an optical technique, total internal reflection, to light up the interface contacts and observe their evolution, and 2) acoustic emission sensors to listen to and locate slip events. This unique combination of data will allow us to more comprehensively understand the contact-level mechanisms that control friction on deforming interfaces, and help us to better interpret the seismological data we measure on faults and ice sheets. Here, we present recent results of this work.

How to cite: Bate, C., McCarthy, C., Steinhardt, W., and Saltiel, S.: Fault contact evolution seen via total internal reflection and heard via acoustic emissions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14779, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14779, 2026.

This study presents an analysis of the tectonic evolution and structural features of west-central Taiwan, focusing on the fold-and-thrust belt developed from the Late Miocene–Holocene. Integrating surface geological mapping, borehole data, and seismic reflection profiles, we establish a refined tectonic model that emphasizes the significant influence of the preexisting normal fault on structural development. Our findings demonstrate that pronounced variations in stratigraphic thickness, notably within the early foreland basin sequence, indicate syndepositional normal faulting, creating substantial accommodation space during sedimentation. The normal fault acted as a mechanical barrier was overstepped by a thrust ramp during later compressional phases. These inherited structural features significantly influence seismicity and deformation patterns, exemplified by mechanical barriers linked to the 1999 Chi-Chi earthquake. Our structural cross sections reveal a characteristic ramp-flat-ramp geometry linked to the Changhua Thrust, the Chelungpu Thrust, and the Chusiang Fault. The resulting structural model illustrates a sequential tectonic evolution, transitioning from early extensional regimes to complex compressional environments.

How to cite: Chang, C.-W., Huang, W.-J., and Huang, T.-C.: Preexisting Normal Fault with Pliocene Syndepositional Controls on the Structural Style Transition: Implications for the Structural Evolution in Thrust Belts, West-Central Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15085, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15085, 2026.

EGU26-15670 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Possible cascading ruptures on the eastern section of the Altyn Tagh fault 

Yanxiu Shao, Jerome van der Woerd, Jing Liu-Zeng, Boming Li, and Shihao Zhang

Understanding how connected fault segments may rupture sequentially or simultaneously to produce large earthquakes is a fundamental problem in earthquake physics and seismic hazard assessment. Addressing this issue requires integrated constraints on fault geometry, slip behavior, and rupture history across interconnected fault systems. The Subei triple junction along the eastern section of the Altyn Tagh fault, which connects thrust (Danghe Nan Shan thrust) and strike-slip fault segments (Altyn Tagh and Yema-Daxue Shan faults), is an ideal site for investigating such cascading rupture processes. In this study, we excavated three new paleoseismic trenches around the Subei junction, including two across the Danghe Nan Shan thrust and one across the Altyn Tagh fault. Detailed stratigraphic logging, identification of abundant paleoseismic indicators, and dense optical stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating constrain the timing of late Quaternary surface-rupturing earthquakes. Our results indicate that three to four surface-rupturing events occurred at these sites during the Holocene, with overlapping age ranges among the different fault segments. By integrating our new paleoseismic constraints with previously studies, we identify at least one Holocene earthquake that likely involved synchronous rupture of the Altyn Tagh fault, the Yema–Daxue Shan fault, and the Danghe Nan Shan thrust. Multicycle dynamic rupture modeling incorporating fault geometry and long-term slip rates further support such cascading ruptures across the strike-slip and thrust fault network. These results provide rare field-based evidence that large earthquakes on the eastern section of Altyn Tagh fault may involve multiple fault segment ruptures. Our findings highlight the importance of considering fault interactions and cascading rupture scenarios when assessing seismic hazard in complex continental fault systems.

How to cite: Shao, Y., van der Woerd, J., Liu-Zeng, J., Li, B., and Zhang, S.: Possible cascading ruptures on the eastern section of the Altyn Tagh fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15670, 2026.

Abstract: The collision and compression between the Indian and Eurasian plates have resulted in intense crustal shortening and deformation in the Tian Shan since the Cenozoic, leading to its renewed uplift and making the Tian Shan one of the most intensely deformed intracontinental orogenic belts and seismically active regions in the world. Cenozoic deformation of the Tian Shan is characterized by north–south crustal shortening, which is mainly controlled by approximately E-W striking thrust faults, N-W striking dextral strike-slip faults, and N-E striking sinistral strike-slip faults. Concurrently, pronounced tectonic deformation occurred within the Tien Shan, forming a series of E-W trending intermontane basins, including the Turpan, Kumishi, Yanqi, and Yili basins. The Yanqi Basin, located in the southeastern Tian Shan, has experienced significant tectonic deformation due to the continuous uplift of the Tien Shan. Since the Late Quaternary, tectonic deformation has been mainly concentrated along the northern and southern margins of the basin. Two major active tectonic systems are developed along the northern margin, including the Yanqi Basin north-edge thrust fault and the piedmont thrust-fold belt. Along the southern margin, the Yanqi Basin south-edge thrust fault is developed, striking E-W and dipping southward, forming a complex thrust-fold belt. Within this fold belt on the southern margin of the basin, Quaternary geomorphic surfaces are well preserved and display fault scarps of variable heights. Multiple generations of alluvial fans are dissected along the fault scarps. In this study, high-resolution topographic data of faulted alluvial fan landforms along the southern margin thrust-fold belt were acquired using airborne LiDAR. Detailed geomorphic interpretation and quantitative analysis were conducted to identify multiple generations of landforms developed perpendicular to the fault strike. Based on comprehensive geomorphic interpretation and field investigations, deposits from different generations of alluvial fans were sampled for surface age determination. Furthermore, based on measurements of exposed strata and the construction of characteristic topographic profiles across the alluvial fans, we established the cross-sectional geometry and deformation model of the thrust fault-fold belt at the south-edge of the Yanqi Basin. By integrating the tri-shear fault-propagation fold model from fault-related fold theory, we constrain the shortening deformation characteristics of the thrust fault-fold belt.  This allows us to estimate the shortening amount and shortening rate for the belt at the southern margin of the Yanqi Basin.  Combined with analysis of surrounding fold deformation and fault slip rates, this work not only reveals the deep geometry and activity mechanism of the thrust fault at the south-edge of the Yanqi Basin but also provides constraints for understanding intracontinental deformation within the Southern Tian Shan.

How to cite: Yang, J., Zheng, W., and Zhang, D.: Quantitative constraints on shortening deformation characteristics of the fold at the south-edge thrust fault of the Yanqi Basin, Southern Tien Shan , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15676, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15676, 2026.

EGU26-16525 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Lithologic Controls on Frictional Behavior Along the Shallow Subduction Interface: Constraints From an Exhumed Accretionary Wedge (McHugh Complex, Alaska) 

Markus Rast, Whitney Behr, Claudio Madonna, and Simon Guérin-Marthe

Subduction zone megathrusts accommodate a wide range of slip modes, from earthquakes to slow slip events (SSEs) and aseismic creep. Understanding why different slip modes localize in specific regions of the shallow subduction interface remains a significant challenge. Exhumed accretionary complexes are an important natural laboratory for addressing this problem. In this study, we examine the mechanical behavior of representative lithologies and faults within the McHugh Complex in the Kenai Mountains of southern Alaska. The McHugh Complex is a Mesozoic accretionary wedge that exposes lithologies and fault zones representative of the shallow subduction interface. We integrate field observations with compositional and microstructural analyses and laboratory friction experiments to evaluate both fault failure conditions and potential slip modes. Direct shear experiments were conducted on powdered fault gouges and host rocks under dry and water-saturated conditions at normal stresses of 10–40 MPa, representative of shallow subduction zone conditions. 
Our results demonstrate that mineralogical composition exerts a first-order control on fault strength and frictional stability. Increasing proportions of phyllosilicates reduce friction coefficients (μf) and promote velocity-strengthening behavior. Argillitic fault gouges rich in organic matter exhibit the lowest frictional strength (μf = 0.33), consistent with strain localization observed in these rocks in the field. Conversely, stronger lithologies, such as pillow basalts and cherts, display higher frictional strengths (μf = 0.53) and frictional stabilities that promote seismic slip initiation. However, fault zones within basaltic units that have undergone significant alteration and chlorite enrichment evolve toward velocity-neutral behavior, suggesting the potential to nucleate SSEs rather than earthquakes. 
A cross-section through the exhumed accretionary wedge reveals that contrasts in mechanical strength often coincide with contrasts in permeability, suggesting that stress concentrations and transient fluid overpressure likely act together to trigger fault failure. Overall, our findings emphasize the role of lithologic heterogeneity in controlling both fault failure and slip mode along the shallow subduction interface. This provides a framework for linking rock composition to the spatial distribution of seismic and aseismic behavior. Future work will apply this integrated approach to additional cross-sections across the McHugh Complex.

How to cite: Rast, M., Behr, W., Madonna, C., and Guérin-Marthe, S.: Lithologic Controls on Frictional Behavior Along the Shallow Subduction Interface: Constraints From an Exhumed Accretionary Wedge (McHugh Complex, Alaska), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16525, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16525, 2026.

EGU26-16986 | Posters on site | TS3.3

The Subei triple junction: a complex strike-slip – thrust junction allowing strain transfer from the Altyn-Tagh fault to the Qilian Shan  

Jerome van der Woerd, Yanxiu Shao, Daohuang Yuan, and Jing Liu-Zeng

Slip-rate decrease along the eastern Altyn Tagh fault has long been interpreted as due to strain transfer from the strike-slip fault to the sequential thrust splays of the Qilian Shan. While the 2D kinematics of such strain transfer is now becoming well documented thanks to numerous field studies as well as an increase in geodetic and InSAR data, how the structures connect, interact during large rupturing events and evolve on the long-term is not well known. We focus on the Danghe Nan Shan thrust, a major splay of the Altyn Tagh fault (ATF), at one of these complex fault junctions. Near Subei, the western Danghe Nan Shan thrust comprises two left-stepping faults outlined by fault scarps in front of folded and uplifted alluvial fans and terraces. Age constraints of the accumulated slip of four terraces standing 7–60 m above the present stream bed yield shortening and vertical uplift rates of 0.5 ± 0.1 and 1.1 ± 0.3 mm/yr, respectively, over the last 130 ka on one of the thrust. Overall, about 1-1.4 mm/yr uplift and shortening rates are determined, in agreement with late Miocene long-term exhumation rate estimates. We emphasize the need for precise long-term slip rate determination and understanding the three-dimensional structures of fault connections to evaluate strain transfer between faults and related seismic hazard on these complex fault systems.

How to cite: van der Woerd, J., Shao, Y., Yuan, D., and Liu-Zeng, J.: The Subei triple junction: a complex strike-slip – thrust junction allowing strain transfer from the Altyn-Tagh fault to the Qilian Shan , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16986, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16986, 2026.

EGU26-17287 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.3

Accretionary complex heterogeneity controls the faulting style of upper plate thrusts 

Giovanni Toffol, Rebecca V M Robertson, Åke Fagereng, Kohtaro Ujiie, and Joaquin Julve Lillo

A relevant portion of seismic activity in subduction zones takes place along splay faults and other subsidiary structures of the subduction interface that cut across the upper plate accretionary complex. The heterogeneous lithology of accretionary complexes, reflecting the stratigraphy of the incoming ocean plate, exerts a first-order control on the seismic behaviour. Thus, investigating accretionary complexes exhumed from the seismogenic zone is relevant to understand upper plate seismicity.

The Inuyama Sequence, part of the Jurassic Accretionary Complex of central Japan, is the ideal natural laboratory to investigate the lithological control on faulting style and seismic/aseismic behaviour in the shallow, sediment-dominated portion of an accretionary prism. It consists of a coherent chert-clastic complex with ocean-floor stratigraphy (in ascending order: siliceous claystone unit, ribbon chert unit, siliceous mudstone unit, and a clastic unit composed of lower mudstone, sandstone and upper mudstone) repeated six times by out-of-sequence thrusts that delimit the thrusts sheets [1].

Here we focus on three of the out-of-sequence thrusts (T1, T2, T3 in ascending structural order) that are well exposed along the Kiso River: T1 separates siliceous mudstones of sheet 1 from black and grey cherts of sheet 2; T2 separates upper mudstones of sheet 2 from siliceous claystones and cherts of sheet 3; T3 separates upper mudstones of sheet 3 from siliceous mudstones and cherts of sheet 4 whose stratigraphic topping direction is overturned compared to the other sheets.

Fault zones are 10–50 metres in thickness and mostly accommodate strain in the weaker clay-rich lithologies (siliceous mudstones and siliceous claystones), typically localizing deformation along carbonaceous-material-rich layers. A pervasive foliation in the siliceous mudstones of T1 and 50–100 cm thick slip zones with scaly fabric in siliceous claystones and siliceous mudstone suggest predominant deformation by aseismic creep. The stiffer cherts are also involved in the fault zones. In T1, the hanging-wall derived brecciated cherts host a mm-thick pseudotachylyte fault vein recording earthquake slip [2]. In T3 a localized fault core in the hanging-wall cherts is rich in quartz clasts with pervasive 2-5 µm spaced deformation lamellae, recording high stress pulses.

Chlorite geothermometry applied on syn-kinematic chlorite and chlorite-quartz veins abundant in the fault rocks provide temperatures in the range 170–210 °C, in line with peak condition estimates for the area, confirming that the investigated structures were developed during accretion. Lower chlorite temperatures, down to 100°C, have also been measured in a scaly fabric fault zone, suggesting later reactivations of the fault at colder (shallower) conditions during exhumation.

These preliminary results highlight the importance of the heterogeneous stratigraphy of accretionary complexes in controlling faulting style: while weak mudstones accommodated most of slip by aseismic creep, the stiffer cherts hosted occasional high-stress pulses associated with seismic ruptures. Further questions to answer include how slip is partitioned and what factors promote seismic ruptures in the stiffer lithologies.

 

[1] Kimura, K., Hori, R. (1993) Journal of Structural Geology, 15(2), 145-161.

[2] Ujiie, K., et al. (2021) Earth and Planetary Science letters, 554, 11638

How to cite: Toffol, G., Robertson, R. V. M., Fagereng, Å., Ujiie, K., and Julve Lillo, J.: Accretionary complex heterogeneity controls the faulting style of upper plate thrusts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17287, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17287, 2026.

EGU26-18134 | Posters on site | TS3.3

Tectonic transition in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau: from tectonic escape to mountain building 

Mian Liu, Shunying Hong, and Yuhang Li

The northeastern Tibetan Plateau is bounded by two major left-lateral strike-slip faults: the Altyn Tagh and Haiyuan faults. Eastward crustal motion along these faults, driven by the ongoing Indo-Asian continental collision, diminishes progressively toward their eastern terminations. Here, the crustal deformation is dominated by crustal shortening, thrust faulting, and uplift, which collectively contribute to the lateral growth of the plateau. Understanding this tectonic transition is essential for interpreting the plateau’s expansion and the seismic hazard along its northeastern boundary. We integrated InSAR, GNSS, and precise-leveling data to reveal the present-day crustal deformation in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau. Our analysis indicates that eastward motion along the Altyn Tagh fault is absorbed by thrusting and uplift within the Qilian Shan. Similarly, the Haiyuan fault transitions into crustal shortening and uplift in the Liupan Shan orogen. These transitions are largely controlled by the geometry of the strike-slip faults and the presence of the rigid Alashan and Ordos blocks to the east, which impede eastward motion of the Tibetan crust. Our results of present-day crustal deformation align with late-Cenozoic geological structures in northeastern Tibet and the stress patterns inferred from earthquakes along its northeastern margins, supporting a consistent model of ongoing plateau growth through transitioning from the escaping tectonics to mountain building.

How to cite: Liu, M., Hong, S., and Li, Y.: Tectonic transition in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau: from tectonic escape to mountain building, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18134, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18134, 2026.

EGU26-19671 | ECS | Orals | TS3.3

 Seismic–Aseismic Slip Partitioning on a Frictionally Heterogeneous Fault: An Experimental Approach 

Nico Bigaroni, Julian Mecklenburgh, and Ernest Rutter

Faults in the shallow brittle crust are rarely frictionally homogeneous. Structural and mineralogical heterogeneities such as phyllosilicate-rich shear zones mixed with competent lenses generate, respectively, velocity-strengthening (VS) and velocity-weakening (VW) domains that strongly influence earthquake nucleation and rupture dynamics. Geological observations and laboratory experiments show that VW patches typically nucleate unstable stick-slip, whereas VS regions promote stable creep and can transfer stress on neighbouring VW patches. Although this heterogeneous patch framework supports models of shallow seismicity, induced seismicity, and subduction zones, direct experimental investigations with rock samples and realistic patch geometries remain limited.

Here we present a new experimental framework for testing heterogeneous fault slip in cm-scale rock samples. Using the newly developed “BeeAx” servo-controlled biaxial apparatus, we sheared 15 × 17 cm Pennant Sandstone blocks at slow displacement rates (~1 µm/s) and 2, 5 and 8 MPa of normal stress. We compare three frictional sliding configurations: (1) homogeneous sandstone–sandstone (VW-dominated), (2) homogeneous graphite-coated sandstone (VS-dominated), and (3) heterogeneous samples with four circular uncoated sandstone patches embedded within a graphite background, comprising 50% of the sliding surface. High-resolution and calibrated acoustic emission (AE) monitoring (16 sensors) allows hypocentre location and source parameter retrieval, enabling direct comparison of microseismicity and frictional stability across configurations.

The homogeneous graphite experiment produced stable sliding with very low friction (µ≈0.15), while the homogeneous sandstone samples exhibited unstable stick-slip and higher friction (µ≈0.5). The heterogeneous samples displayed hybrid behaviour: a low overall friction (µ≈0.20) comparable to graphite, yet persistent dynamic stick-slip events. AE hypocentres concentrated on the sandstone patches perimeters, revealing that aseismic creep in the weak graphite transfers shear stress onto the stronger patches, which subsequently fail seismically. Compared to homogeneous sandstone, heterogeneous samples showed larger stress drops, stronger localization of microseismicity, and reduced Gutenberg-Richter b-values. Temporal b-value evolution differed between configurations: constant and low for graphite, cyclic for sandstone (decreasing during interseismic loading and increasing post-mainshock), and intermediate but systematically lower in the heterogeneous case, consistent with enhanced stress transfer and patch interaction.

These results demonstrate that discrete weak VS regions can modulate and even enhance the seismicity of stronger VW patches by acting as creeping load reservoirs. This provides laboratory support for models invoking patchy asperities on shallow faults and in induced seismicity settings, where strong and weak rock patches coexist within a fault. More broadly, the experimental platform enables controlled studies of rupture nucleation, asperity geometry, interaction, and seismicity evolution in frictionally heterogeneous fault systems.

How to cite: Bigaroni, N., Mecklenburgh, J., and Rutter, E.:  Seismic–Aseismic Slip Partitioning on a Frictionally Heterogeneous Fault: An Experimental Approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19671, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19671, 2026.

EGU26-789 | ECS | Orals | TS3.4

Temperature insensitive viscous deformation limits megathrust seismogenesis 

Liam Moser, Camilla Cattania, and Matěj Peč

Three models have been proposed to explain the downdip limit of the subduction seismogenic zone. The first is a temperature-controlled transition in rate-and-state frictional properties between 350-510°C, which inhibits earthquake nucleation. The second places the limit at the frictional and viscous failure envelope intersection. The third combines thermal and lithological controls, where ‘warm’ subduction zones are controlled by a 350°C frictional transition and ‘cold’ subduction zones are limited by the overriding plate Moho. To evaluate these hypotheses, we integrate thermal models with seismicity catalogs from 17 subduction zones. Observed depth limits remain remarkably consistent (~50 km) across a temperature range exceeding 250°C, indicating that the temperature-controlled rate-and-state friction model cannot fully explain observed depths. While warm subduction zones can be reasonably explained as a rate-and-state stability transition, the overriding plate Moho in cold subduction zones is too shallow, challenging the combined thermal-lithological model. To test the frictional-viscous model, we analyze power law creep and low-temperature plasticity for quartz, feldspar, olivine, antigorite, and talc. We find that power law creep in any tested mineral is overly temperature sensitive. In contrast, wet olivine, antigorite, and talc low-temperature plasticity fits observed depth limits to a ~6 km misfit. However, only talc is consistent with the weak megathrust paradigm of effective friction coefficients <0.1 and shear strengths of tens of MPa. We conclude that a frictional-viscous transition with a weak and temperature-insensitive viscous mechanism, such as talc low-temperature plasticity, is most consistent with the downdip seismicity limit and constraints on megathrust strength.

How to cite: Moser, L., Cattania, C., and Peč, M.: Temperature insensitive viscous deformation limits megathrust seismogenesis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-789, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-789, 2026.

EGU26-2142 | Orals | TS3.4

Average earthquake stress-drop values delineate variations in fault strength in the Northeastern Japan Arc 

Armin Dielforder, Gian Maria Bocchini, Rebecca M. Harrington, and Elizabeth S. Cochran

Standard models of lithospheric strength indicate an increase in frictional fault strength with depth. The dependence suggests that also earthquake stress-drop (Δσ) values may increase with depth, if the stress release scales with the stress on the fault. However, the range of uncertainty in Δσ values and the lack of constraints on stress in the lithosphere make it difficult to establish how stress drop, fault strength and depth are related. Here we present the main outcomes of a recent study (Bocchini et al., 2025), in which we investigated the Δσ dependence on depth and fault strength based on 11 years of seismicity in the Northeastern Japan Arc following the 2011 M9 Tohoku-Oki megathrust earthquake. We show that Δσ values increase with depth within the seismically active upper 60 km of the lithosphere by about 0.08 MPa/km. Furthermore, a comparison of the Δσ values with quantitative fault-strength estimates from finite-element models reveals that the Δσ values systematically increase with fault strength and that earthquakes within the study region release, on average, 10-30 % of the shear stress on the fault. Our results support the hypothesis that stress drop increases with fault strength, but also show that fault strength increases significantly less with depth than in standard models. Our findings further imply that temporal variations in average Δσ values may reflect changes in fault strength. In northeastern Japan, Δσ values remained roughly constant in the decade following the Tohoku-Oki earthquake, suggesting only small changes in fault strength since the mainshock.

 

Bocchini, G.M., Dielforder, A., Kemna, K.B., Harrington, R.M., Cochran, E.S. (2025). Earthquake stress-drop values delineate spatial variations in maximum shear stress in the Japanese forearc lithosphere. Communications earth & environment 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02877-y

How to cite: Dielforder, A., Bocchini, G. M., Harrington, R. M., and Cochran, E. S.: Average earthquake stress-drop values delineate variations in fault strength in the Northeastern Japan Arc, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2142, 2026.

EGU26-5275 | Posters on site | TS3.4

Could a deep earthquake cluster under Northeast China be associated with transformational faulting in an old Pacific slab? 

František Gallovič, Hana Čížková, Jiří Zahradník, Vladimír Plicka, Junqing Liu, and Craig R. Bina

Deep‐focus earthquakes and their association with metastable olivine wedges (MOWs) remain enigmatic. Here, we perform a seismic-geodynamic analysis of the Pacific slab, which is stagnant at the 660 km deep bottom of the mantle transition zone. We investigate deep earthquakes with moment magnitudes (Mw) ranging from 5.3 to 6.9 from 2009 to 2017. They exhibit only minor (mostly implosive) isotropic components, yet they display strongly varying CLVD components. For the largest studied earthquake (Mw 6.9, 2010-02-18), we demonstrate significant stress-drop heterogeneity on a subhorizontal fault and a spatial change in radiation efficiency. We interpret the earthquakes with an evolutionary numerical subduction model with realistic mineralogy and rheology, including non‐uniform plate aging and subduction disruption due to the Izanagi–Pacific ridge sinking in the early Cenozoic. This process resulted in a present-day slab with a bent tip that agrees with tomography. The slab maintains low temperatures (900-1000 K), allowing the presence of a metastable olivine and thus potentially forming MOW with a correspondingly bent geometry. The accompanying internal deformation controls the deep seismicity in the slab tip with apparent changes in seismic radiation efficiency and rupture speed across the modeled temperature gradients. From a broader perspective, the MOW contortion may contribute to deformational anisotropy in the shallow lower mantle. Our results underscore the importance of joint interpretations of the evolutionary subduction models and seismic source inversions.

Reference:

Liu, J., Zahradník, J., Plicka, V., Gallovič, F., Bina, C. R., Čížková, H. (2025). Deep-Focus Earthquakes Under Northeast China—An Imprint of the Complex Tectonic History of Pacific Plate Subduction, J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 130, e2024JB030215. https://doi.org/10.1029/2024JB030215.

How to cite: Gallovič, F., Čížková, H., Zahradník, J., Plicka, V., Liu, J., and Bina, C. R.: Could a deep earthquake cluster under Northeast China be associated with transformational faulting in an old Pacific slab?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5275, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5275, 2026.

EGU26-6016 | ECS | Orals | TS3.4

Three-plate Dynamics of the Andean Earthquake Cycle 

Mara A. Figueroa, Demián D. Gómez, Michael G. Bevis, Robert Smalley, Jr., Andrés Folguera, Silvana Spagnotto, W. Ashley Griffith, Bennett Kellmayer, Dana Caccamise II, Eric Kendrick, and Patrick Smith

The South-Central Andes topography results from a three-plate framework, where the Andean block is compressed between the Nazca plate to the west and the South American craton to the east. Interseismic GNSS observations consistently show that basal décollements beneath the eastern fold-and-thrust belts accommodate permanent shortening through aseismic thrust creep. However, their behavior during great megathrust earthquakes has remained poorly understood.

We combine constraints from the 2010 Mw 8.8 Maule earthquake with previous evidence from the 2015 Mw 8.3 Illapel and the 1995 Mw 8.0 Antofagasta earthquakes and demonstrate that basal décollements systematically creep in a normal sense during the coseismic phase. This backsliding occurs as a mechanical response to abrupt stress changes from megathrust rupture: the direction of décollement slip during earthquakes is opposite to their interseismic motion.

By integrating these coseismic observations with independent three-plate interseismic models, we present a unified framework for Andean orogenic-wedge dynamics that reconciles forearc-to-backarc deformation. This framework provides the first comprehensive explanation for the long-observed obliqueness deficiency in Andean megathrust slip distributions. Our results demonstrate that three-plate models are essential for accurately capturing both long-term orogenesis and the complete earthquake cycle, representing a paradigm shift from conventional two-plate approaches with broad implications for other subduction boundary zones and seismic hazard assessment worldwide.

 

How to cite: Figueroa, M. A., Gómez, D. D., Bevis, M. G., Smalley, Jr., R., Folguera, A., Spagnotto, S., Griffith, W. A., Kellmayer, B., Caccamise II, D., Kendrick, E., and Smith, P.: Three-plate Dynamics of the Andean Earthquake Cycle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6016, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6016, 2026.

EGU26-6139 | ECS | Orals | TS3.4

Pore-pressure diffusion controls upper-plate aftershocks following the 2014 Mw 8.2 Iquique earthquake (northern Chile) 

Carlos Peña, Oliver Heidbach, Sabrina Metzger, Bernd Schurr, Marcos Moreno, Jonathan Bedford, Onno Oncken, and Claudio Faccenna

Upper-plate aftershocks following megathrust earthquakes can pose severe time-dependent hazard because they often occur close to densely populated regions, increasing the risk to structures already weakened by the mainshock. Although aftershock rates commonly follow Omori–Utsu temporal decay, the physical mechanisms controlling their non-linear time dependency and the diversity of faulting styles in the upper plate remain unclear. Because coseismic static stress transfer cannot explain this time dependency, transient postseismic processes — afterslip, viscoelastic relaxation, and fluid-driven pore-pressure diffusion — are potential candidates.

Here, we combine comprehensive seismological and geodetic observations with a 4D (space–time) hydro-mechanical numerical model to identify the dominant postseismic stress-change process controlling upper-plate aftershocks of the 2014 Mw 8.2 Iquique megathrust earthquake in northern Chile. We reproduce GNSS-observed postseismic deformation during the first nine months and separate the contributions from afterslip, viscoelastic relaxation, and poroelastic deformation in both horizontal and vertical components. In particular, poroelastic deformation contributes substantially to the near-field vertical signal. We then compute spatiotemporal Coulomb Failure Stress (CFS) changes for each process and compare them to the distribution of upper-plate aftershocks.

Our results show that CFS changes driven by coseismically induced pore-pressure changes best explain the observed aftershock pattern in both space and time. Furthermore, increasing pore pressure reduces effective normal stress largely independent of fault orientation, promoting failure across a broad range of faulting styles, consistent with observed focal-mechanism diversity. This implies that time-independent elastic ΔCFS calculations on optimally oriented faults may be insufficient to assess the response of upper-plate faults to megathrust earthquakes, and that transient, pore-pressure stress changes must be considered. Overall, our results link postseismic deformation, stress transfer, and pore-fluids in the upper plate, and provide a basis for physics-based, time-dependent aftershock forecasting constrained by forearc hydraulic properties.

How to cite: Peña, C., Heidbach, O., Metzger, S., Schurr, B., Moreno, M., Bedford, J., Oncken, O., and Faccenna, C.: Pore-pressure diffusion controls upper-plate aftershocks following the 2014 Mw 8.2 Iquique earthquake (northern Chile), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6139, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6139, 2026.

EGU26-7591 | ECS | Orals | TS3.4

Measuring the fine-scale segmentation of the subduction megathrust in situ 

Jannes Münchmeyer, William Frank, David Marsan, Bernd Schurr, and Anne Socquet

The subduction megathrust and its frictional properties are central to controlling the short- and long-term dynamics of subduction zones. While the frictional properties are largely controlled by the 3D structure of the megathrust interface, our understanding of this structure is limited. Exhumed outcrops provide evidence for a complex mélange of ductile and brittle materials, which is segmented in a fractal manner. However, for active subduction zones, we lack direct evidence for such fine-scale structural segmentation as well as quantitative constraints on the segmentation structure.

Here, we use two high-resolution earthquake catalogs from the South American subduction margin to characterize the fine-scale segmentation in situ. We show that two overlying processes govern the fractal distribution of earthquake hypocenters. At short time scales, aftershock clustering dominates the earthquake distribution. At long time scales, averaging over many mainshock-aftershock sequences, the underlying structure shows. However, with typical catalog durations of only a few years, it is crucial to infer structure from short-term catalogs as well. We show, both theoretically and in our observational data, that even in short-term catalogs, structural constraints can be derived by looking at near-field interactions (< 100 m).

Based on our analysis, we find a fractal segmentation of the subduction interface in Northern Chile and Southern Peru with a fractal dimension D=1.6-1.7. This is consistent with the fractal distribution of brittle inclusions in exhumed outcrops. Notably, the fractal distribution is stable down to the hypocenter uncertainty (< 10 m), suggesting self-similarlity over several orders of length. We find an increase in fractal dimension with depth, suggesting a more uniform interface in the downdip region. This work provides a method to gain direct insights into the structure of the subduction interface and systematically quantify it. This way, we aim to connect structural observations to frictional properties and large scale dynamics.

How to cite: Münchmeyer, J., Frank, W., Marsan, D., Schurr, B., and Socquet, A.: Measuring the fine-scale segmentation of the subduction megathrust in situ, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7591, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7591, 2026.

EGU26-7613 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

Unveiling Crustal Heterogeneities in the Central Andes: A High-Resolution Density Model Derived from Integrated Gravity and Seismic Modeling 

Tilman May, Judith Bott, and Magdalena Scheck-Wenderoth

Understanding the coupled multi-scale geodynamic and tectonic processes related to the subduction of the oceanic Nazca Plate beneath the South American Plate is one pre-requisite to better assess seismic hazards in the region. It is essential to identify all relevant forces and related stress-strain relationships within the subduction system, such as the negative buoyancy of the subducting slab or the degree of mechanical coupling between the Andean domain and the Pampean foreland. We approach this by investigating the present-day physical, in particular rheological state of the lithosphere-asthenosphere system, including first-order variations in pressure, temperature, and rock composition as constrained by multi-disciplinary observations.

This study integrates gravity, active and passive seismic data to construct a high-resolution lithospheric scale density model for the Central Andes, enabling detailed analysis of crustal structural differentiation. For this, a combined workflow of forwardgravity field calculation using IGMAS+ and gravity inversion for the crustal layer using SimPEG is applied. By inverting for crustal densities constrained by both gravity field observations and seismic shear wave velocity conversions for the crust and upper mantle, this work reveals lateral and vertical variations in crustal density that challenge traditional models of upper/lower crustal dichotomy.

With this contribution, we will discuss how the combined information on seismic velocity and gravity-constrained density helps inferring lithological variations within the crust. This is a pre-requisite for investigating variations in the thermal field and mechanical strength of this complex lithosphere-asthenosphere system. In addition, our results provide new insights into the distribution of seismic events in relation to crustal heterogeneity.

How to cite: May, T., Bott, J., and Scheck-Wenderoth, M.: Unveiling Crustal Heterogeneities in the Central Andes: A High-Resolution Density Model Derived from Integrated Gravity and Seismic Modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7613, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7613, 2026.

EGU26-8635 | Orals | TS3.4

 Rough or smooth plate interface? It doesn’t matter when it comes to great earthquakes 

Xiaodong Yang, Rebecca Bell, Alexander Whittaker, Haobo Xu, Xinze Han, Angela Knowlson, and Valerie Locher

Subduction zones host the largest seismogenic zones on earth and hence the largest earthquakes. However, although some subduction margins generate some of the most destructive earthquakes (e.g., Japan, Sumatra), others appear to slip less dramatically in slow slip events, by aseismic creep or in small-moderate earthquakes (e.g., north Hikurangi). Subduction interface topography (‘roughness’) has emerged as a leading parameter in controlling the seismicity at subduction zones, although there is strong debate as to whether rough patches are asperities or barriers to large rupture. This issue persists because observational studies are limited to individual margins, seafloor bathymetry used as proxy for plate interface topography is not direct measurement, and historical earthquake record is short, which together make the precise assessment of earthquake potential in a subduction margin challenging. Here we test whether geodetic interplate coupling is an indicator of earthquake potential in lieu of a longer historical records. We then use direct seismic reflection observations from 35 plate boundary faults to quantify three types of roughness at 1–10 km length scales. We find a strong and positive relationship between maximum magnitude and interplate coupling. Strikingly, no relationship is observed between any of the roughness parameters and maximum earthquake magnitudes/interplate coupling. This result challenges the long-standing paradigm that the plate interface roughness is a pivotal factor in governing seismogenic behaviour. We suggest that short-wavelength (£10 km) roughness has different effects on earthquake nucleation depending on the prevailing stage of earthquake cycle. We conclude that plate roughness alone is not a good proxy to assess a margin’s seismic potential. Instead, interplate coupling provides a better indicator of seismic potential, highlighting the need for enhanced marine geodetic observations.

How to cite: Yang, X., Bell, R., Whittaker, A., Xu, H., Han, X., Knowlson, A., and Locher, V.:  Rough or smooth plate interface? It doesn’t matter when it comes to great earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8635, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8635, 2026.

EGU26-11604 | Posters on site | TS3.4

The role of permanent upper-plate deformation in coseismic deformation and megathrust earthquakes dynamics 

Manel Prada, Cesar R. Raner, Valentí Sallarès, and Thomas Ulrich

In subduction zones, seismic imaging reveals increasing permanent active deformation toward the trench, particularly within accretionary systems. Yet, how these rock bodies deform coseismically and influence megathrust rupture behavior is elusive. Here we combine geophysical observations from seismic imaging with visco-plastic dynamic rupture simulations to investigate how realistic upper-plate rock bodies influence megathrust earthquake dynamics and off-fault deformation. Our models reproduce the elastic structure of three subduction systems that differ primarily in the width of the accretionary prism, a key parameter for comparison. These configurations, referred to as Models I, II, and III, include a narrow compliant prism of approximately 20 km, an intermediate prism of about 60 km, and a wide prism exceeding 100 km, respectively. Elastic rock properties for each upper-plate model are derived from 2D P-wave velocity models obtained from controlled-source seismic data. Upper-plate bulk cohesion and bulk friction define visco-plastic strength and are set to depend on rigidity distribution and empirical observations. Based on laboratory measurements from JFAST drilling samples, we use rate-and-state friction law with strong velocity weakening in the shallow portion of the fault.

Results show that coseismic upper-plate plastic deformation in Model I is confined to the ~20-km-wide wedge, whereas in Models II and III it extends 40–60 km landward from the trench. This is consistent with seismic reflection profiles that reveal increasing active internal deformation of the prism at similar distances from the trench in regions such as the Japan Trench, Chile, and Sumatra. Such contrasting upper-plate deformation patterns lead to distinct uplift scenarios, particularly in their high-frequency response. In particular, Model I produces shorter-wavelength uplift near the trench, likely generating a tsunami with higher-frequency content than Model II and III, where uplift exhibits a longer wavelength. Although we do not explicitly simulate independent faults within the prism, the bulk plastic strain can be considered a proxy for the amount of deformation that is accommodated by these structures. Our results suggest that permanent deformation within accretionary prisms is active during trench-breaching megathrust earthquakes, indicating that substantial prism deformation occurs coseismically. Plastic deformation leads to a reduction in slip toward the trench, implying that coseismic energy is absorbed by the overlying rock body. This effect explains the low-radiated-energy of near-trench earthquakes, including tsunami earthquakes. Depending on the plastic strength of upper-plate material and the available energy along the fault, this effect may even prevent the rupture from reaching the trench, while still producing substantial coseismic uplift and horizontal seafloor displacement. Overall, this study indicates that identifying permanently deformed, low-rigidity regions near the trench can serve as a proxy for locating areas where coseismic deformation is strongly accommodated and tsunamigenic uplift is likely amplified.

How to cite: Prada, M., R. Raner, C., Sallarès, V., and Ulrich, T.: The role of permanent upper-plate deformation in coseismic deformation and megathrust earthquakes dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11604, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11604, 2026.

EGU26-11619 | ECS | Orals | TS3.4

From Slab Dynamics to Seismicity: A Global Perspective 

Yida Li and Neil Ribe

Subduction zones host the majority of global earthquakes, spanning shallow megathrust events, outer-rise earthquakes, and deep intraplate seismicity within subducting slabs. Although earthquakes form narrow, coherent belts in map view, their three-dimensional spatial distributions exhibit complex, case-dependent patterns when depth is considered. The physical processes governing these patterns, particularly for deep earthquakes, remain incompletely understood.
In this study, we develop realistic three-dimensional spherical geodynamic models constrained by multiple geophysical datasets to investigate long-term slab dynamics across multiple subduction zones worldwide. By comparing modeled slab deformation with global earthquake distributions, we identify a coherent spatial correlation between the deformation rate predicted by the models and the observed distribution of seismicity within subducting slabs. Regions of strong long-term deformation systematically coincide with zones of concentrated deep seismicity, whereas areas of weak deformation are characterized by sparse earthquake occurrence.
These results indicate that large-scale slab dynamics exert a first-order control on the spatial distribution of deep intraplate seismicity, providing a dynamics-based framework for interpreting global earthquake patterns.

How to cite: Li, Y. and Ribe, N.: From Slab Dynamics to Seismicity: A Global Perspective, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11619, 2026.

EGU26-11813 | Orals | TS3.4

The transition from flat to steep subduction in south Peru and its impact on seismicity and deformation 

Anne Socquet, caroline chalumeau, bertrand lovery, sebastien chevrot, mohamed chlieh, mathilde radiguet, juan carlos villegas, jannes munchmeyer, marie pierre doin, hugo sanchez-reyes, edmundo norabuena, hernando tavera, vadim monteilller, and li-yu kan

South Peru subduction is marked by a transition between flat slab, where the Nazca ridge enters into subduction, to dipping slab further South. Using a dense seismo geodetic network installed in the area together with Sentinel InSAR time series, we monitor in great details the seismic structure, the seismicity and the deformation in the area.

The subduction of the Nazca ridge is associated with low interseismic locking as well as seismic swarms and repeaters on the interface likely indicative of the occurrence of shallow slow slip events. There, the overriding plate is characterized by a wide zone of deformation as shown by InSAR data and by crustal seismicity. The flat slab also exibits an intense intraslab seismicity that shows an intriguing correlation with the vertical surface deformation.

Further south, the slab is dipping steeply and exhibits much less seismicity, maybe due to long lasting post-seismic relaxation following the 2001 Mw8.4 Arequipa earthquake and to high interseismic locking on the interface. Crustal seismicity is more localised: along the volcanic arc and associated tectonic structures, and along faults systems in the forearc.

At the transition between flat to dipping slab, regular Mw~7+ earthquakes occur every ~5 years. The last one occurred in June 2024 and has been captured by our seismo-geodetic deployment. This Mw7.2 earthquake was preceded by a series of foreshocks, and followed by numerous aftershocks, both of which exhibit an intriguing extent down to 80km depth within the slab, likely guided by subducted oceanic structures along the edge of the Nazca ridge that mark the transition from flat to dipping slab.    

Our observations image the transition from flat to dipping slab in South Peru and its impact on the seismicity features, and on the upper plate deformation. We notably show that the subduction of the Nazca ridge cannot sustain the flat slab alone. Full waveform tomographic images instead show that the oceanic lithosphere is anomalously thin with asthenosphere upwelling, suggesting that it is thermally eroded by Easter hot spot, that contributes to the buoyancy of the flat segment. We also see that the flat slab has likely contributed to the delamination of the continental lithosphere that is almost absent, implying a significant viscous coupling between the slab and the overriding plate. The enhanced landward motion above the flat slab, seen by InSAR and GNSS, could be due to a viscous drag of the continental plate by the flat slab. Finally, the surface uplift imaged by InSAR can only partly be explained by a viscoelatic subduction model, including interseismic coupling on the interface and an elastic cold nose. Far inland, at about 250km from the trench, a secondary uplift zone correlates remarkably well with intraslab seismicity. We suggest that these intriguing features could be explained by the bending – unbending of the slab.

How to cite: Socquet, A., chalumeau, C., lovery, B., chevrot, S., chlieh, M., radiguet, M., villegas, J. C., munchmeyer, J., doin, M. P., sanchez-reyes, H., norabuena, E., tavera, H., monteilller, V., and kan, L.: The transition from flat to steep subduction in south Peru and its impact on seismicity and deformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11813, 2026.

EGU26-12123 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

Evidence for hydrologically-induced, short-term variations in subduction interplate coupling in Taiwan 

Peter Makus, Jannes Münchmeyer, Jens M. Turowski, Benjamin Männel, and Jui-Ming Chang

The island of Taiwan is situated in a complex tectonic setting at the top of a triple junction, where the Eurasian plate is subducting under the Philippine Sea plate and vice versa. These opposing subductions generate intense deformation, culminating in frequent megathrust earthquakes, and, at greater depths, produce seismic tremors. In addition to seismic extreme events, Taiwan experiences strong monsoon seasons during which typhoons deliver up to 1 m of precipitation locally. Here, we observe a transient reduction in megathrust slip rates following major typhoons, as evidenced by decreased geodetic velocities and reduced tremor and earthquake rates, lasting for approximately 15 days. We interpret the apparent reduction in subduction rates as a result of water-load-induced increases in normal stress on the plate interface, which, in turn, increases interplate coupling. While correlations between individual crustal fault activity and hydrological cycles have been previously reported, our study demonstrates that such effects operate at much larger scales, temporarily slowing an entire subducting slab. Our observations highlight the importance of studying the coupling between climate and tectonic dynamics.

How to cite: Makus, P., Münchmeyer, J., Turowski, J. M., Männel, B., and Chang, J.-M.: Evidence for hydrologically-induced, short-term variations in subduction interplate coupling in Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12123, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12123, 2026.

EGU26-14860 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

Towards imaging fluids in subduction zones through Backus-Gilbert inference of Vp/Vs structure: initial application to the Lesser Antilles 

Manuel Mojica Boada, Paula Koelemeijer, Stephen Hicks, Christophe Zaroli, and Emile Serra

The transport and release of fluids play a fundamental role in subduction zone settings, including for the genesis of seismicity and arc volcanism. Understanding how fluids escape from the slab and move into and through the overlying mantle wedge is key for understanding these processes. The presence and distribution of fluids within these regions has been primarily investigated through estimates of the Vp/Vs ratio, which serves as a key indicator of fluid and magma content.

Local earthquake travel-time tomography (LET) has been extensively used to image Vp/Vs structure in subduction zones, providing critical insights into the morphology of the subducted slab and the properties of the overlying mantle wedge. LET typically involves the inversion of seismic data to simultaneously determine P- and S-wave velocity models alongside hypocentre locations. Differences in data coverage and quality lead both to the need for different regularisation in the Vp and Vs inversions and to mismatched resolution between the two velocity models. Together, these effects make a simple division to compute Vp/Vs inappropriate and result in unreliable and uninterpretable estimates of the Vp/Vs ratio. Therefore, several widely used algorithms incorporate a direct inversion for the Vp/Vs ratio, but these typically assume identical ray paths for P and S waves. The requirement to have both S- and P- wave arrivals also means that valuable data are discarded. Moreover, many LET schemes provide limited information on model uncertainty and resolution, complicating the assessment of model reliability.

In this work, we address these issues by utilising the Backus-Gilbert based SOLA method (Zaroli, 2016) to obtain robust and consistent Vp/Vs models in local earthquake tomography. The SOLA method provides direct control over model resolution and has recently been applied to obtain multiple physical parameters with the same local resolution. Here, we present the methodology and preliminary work towards implementing SOLA with LET, with the goal of improving constraints on fluid distribution in subduction zones. As an initial step towards this, we use data from the Lesser Antilles subduction zone (Bie et al, 2022) to obtain Vp and Vs models within a linearised framework. We will present preliminary findings for the Vp/Vs ratio including uncertainty and resolution information.

How to cite: Mojica Boada, M., Koelemeijer, P., Hicks, S., Zaroli, C., and Serra, E.: Towards imaging fluids in subduction zones through Backus-Gilbert inference of Vp/Vs structure: initial application to the Lesser Antilles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14860, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14860, 2026.

EGU26-15591 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

Dynamics of San Andreas Fault Formation: Capture of a Microplate during the Demise of Subduction 

Wei Mao and Gurnis Michael

The capture of microplates by the Pacific Plate drives the transition from subduction to intracontinental, strike-slip motion along the San Andreas Fault (SAF). However, the underlying mechanics behind microplate capture and formation of intracontinental strike-slip faults remain unclear. Through 3D thermo-mechanical models with fluid migration, we find that northwestward Pacific Plate motion transitions from being accommodated at the Pacific-Farallon ridge to the megathrust between the Farallon slab and North America, and finally to an emergent, fluid-weakened intracontinental strike-slip fault. This transition occurs during slab detachment, triggered by decaying subduction convergence, strengthening of the megathrust with slowing water release, and eventual subduction termination. With the detached Monterey slab paleogeographically restored, forward large-scale convection models show that the paleo slab corresponds to the prominent, high-seismic velocity anomaly in the mantle transition zone below Nevada and Utah. The extension of the overriding American Plate facilitates the formation of the strike-slip fault. The computations suggest the connection between the low viscosity and high permeability subducted plate interface and the North American lower crust may lead to shearing, fluid transfer, and serpentinization and eventual SAF formation, offering insights into the spatial variations of volcanism, fault creeping, and seismicity along the SAF.

How to cite: Mao, W. and Michael, G.: Dynamics of San Andreas Fault Formation: Capture of a Microplate during the Demise of Subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15591, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15591, 2026.

EGU26-17702 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

Heterogeneous Earth structure controls on surface deformation caused by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake 

Leah Langer and Kathryn Materna

The M9.1 2011 Tohoku earthquake occurred in a region with complex heterogeneous Earth structure, including non-uniform slab geometry and strong velocity contrasts. Prior studies of the deformation caused by this earthquake have generally utilized simplified Earth structures based on homogeneous or layered models. Here, we present an analysis of the Tohoku earthquake deformation field based on a model that incorporates realistic Earth structure, including three-dimensional (3D) velocity structure, slab geometry, and topography and bathymetry. We find that the presence of 3D material structure significantly alters predicted surface displacement by producing greater uplift far from the trench and smaller near-trench uplift, and by reducing near-trench horizontal displacement. These findings demonstrate the potential for 3D structural variations in the Tohoku region to bias slip estimates for the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. Our results suggest that it may be appropriate to re-visit conclusions drawn from prior analysis of geodetic data for the Tohoku earthquake.

How to cite: Langer, L. and Materna, K.: Heterogeneous Earth structure controls on surface deformation caused by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17702, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17702, 2026.

EGU26-18475 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

The Structure of the Chilean Subduction Zone from Seismic Imaging and Tomography at 34.5°S 

Anja Boekholt, Manel Prada, Laura Gómez de la Peña, Clara E. Jiménez-Tejero, Nathan Bangs, and César R. Ranero

The south-central Chilean seismogenic zone has produced some of the largest megathrust earthquakes ever recorded, including the 2010 Mw 8.8 Maule event. To understand the rupture behaviour of this earthquake in the region of maximum coseismic slip at 34.5°S, we analyse the tectonic and elastic structure of the margin using 2D wide-angle seismic (WAS) data, and spatially coincident 2D multichannel (MCS) data acquired with a 15-km-long streamer.

To improve the seismic velocity model relative to previous results along the same WAS line, we jointly invert travel times from WAS and MCS data using a combined refraction–reflection tomographic approach and statistical uncertainty analysis. In addition, we apply downward continuation to the MCS shot gathers to increase the number of usable MCS travel times and to improve ray coverage with refracted arrivals from the shallow part of the velocity model. This approach enhances coverage and reduces tomographic velocity uncertainties, and improves constraints on the position of the interplate reflector from the megathrust.

The resulting 2D P-wave velocity (Vp) model includes the velocity structure of a 50-60 km-wide accretionary prism, and a sharp velocity transition into crystalline basement landward. We convert the velocity structure of the upper plate into density and S-wave seismic velocity to then calculate rigidity (Shear modulus), and infer dynamic rupture parameters such as slip and rupture velocity. Comparison of the expected slip distribution from our results with existing kinematic slip models shows significant discrepancies, particularly beneath the accretionary prism, where the time-migrated 127-km-long seismic profile reveals intense internal deformation and increasing thrust faulting and folding towards the trench. We discuss potential upper-plate coseismic deformation processes to explain such discrepancy.

How to cite: Boekholt, A., Prada, M., Gómez de la Peña, L., E. Jiménez-Tejero, C., Bangs, N., and R. Ranero, C.: The Structure of the Chilean Subduction Zone from Seismic Imaging and Tomography at 34.5°S, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18475, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18475, 2026.

EGU26-18752 | Posters on site | TS3.4

Earthquakes, “young” faults, and landscapes in Japan’s back-arc 

Luca C Malatesta, Shigeru Sueoka, Nina-Marie Weiss, Sumiko Tsukamoto, Boris Gailleton, Viviana Bonerath, Duhwan Keum, Naoya Takahashi, Daisuke Ishimura, Takuya Nishimura, Tetsuya Komatsu, Kyoko Kataoka, Yoshiya Iwasa, and Kevin Norton

The eastern margin of the Sea of Japan is a zone of great seismic and tsunami hazard due to multiple offshore and nearshore reverse faults. The 2024 Mw 7.5 Noto Peninsula Earthquake highlights this hazard. It resulted from the combined rupture of multiple adjacent faults. The specific hazard caused by each fault in the back-arc is however difficult to assess owing to long earthquake recurrence intervals. Diagnostic fingerprints in the landscape, onshore and offshore, can reveal clues and augment our understanding of the local earthquake cycle.

Here, we compare coseismic deformation of the 2024 Noto Peninsula Earthquake with 4,767 individual marine terraces attributed to 16 successive sea-level stages over the last Myr. This reveals that thereverse faults responsible for the quake were reactivated and started slipping between 326 and 238 ka. The emerged landscape is still adjusting to it while nearshore underwater scarps mark the active faults. Applied to nearby Sado Island, these observations reveal the likely location of an active fault that drives its fast deformation. Active faults defining the edge of uplifting land are likely found in the near shore domain, drowned by the current sea-level high stand.

New luminescence dating constraints on uplifted marine terraces further quantify the rate of deformation on Noto. These ages are in the final phase of analysis at the time of writing. Preliminary results appear to largely confirm the existing morphostratigraphic assumptions for the 120 ka terrace of Noto and a recurrence interval for 2024 Mw 7.5-type earthquake on the order of 2 kyr.

How to cite: Malatesta, L. C., Sueoka, S., Weiss, N.-M., Tsukamoto, S., Gailleton, B., Bonerath, V., Keum, D., Takahashi, N., Ishimura, D., Nishimura, T., Komatsu, T., Kataoka, K., Iwasa, Y., and Norton, K.: Earthquakes, “young” faults, and landscapes in Japan’s back-arc, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18752, 2026.

EGU26-19995 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

Kinematic boundary between Burma and Sumatra at the Nicobar Trench 

Himanshu Agrawal, Karen Lythgoe, Kyle Bradley, and Lujia Feng

The Andaman–Nicobar segment of the Sunda subduction zone hosts some of the world’s highest tsunamigenic hazards, exemplified by the 2004 Mw 9.1-9.3 Sumatra–Andaman event. Highly oblique convergence promotes slip partitioning between the megathrust and upper-plate strike-slip faults; however, the detailed fault architecture of the Andaman arc remains uncertain. To better constrain the neotectonic framework, we perform regionally comprehensive kinematic block modelling using the most up-to-date geodetic velocities and earthquake slip vector azimuths, allowing us to quantify slip rates on major crustal faults from southern Myanmar to Java and assess along-strike variations in deformation style. Our results reveal several new features of the tectonic system. 1) A distinct transition in trench behaviour occurs near the Nicobar Islands, separating independently moving Andaman (Burma plate) and Sumatran segments of the rigid forearc. This boundary coincides with pronounced changes in slip magnitude, rake and rupture velocity during the 2004 great Andaman–Sumatra earthquake, implying that the rupture spanned two kinematically distinct plate boundaries that are interseismically loaded at different rates and in different directions. This boundary is expressed by sharp changes in gravity, bathymetry, and trench obliquity gradient, analogous to those observed at the Sunda Strait, particularly marked by a negative residual Bouguer anomaly indicative of a mechanically weak zone capable of accommodating differential block motion. 2) The strike-slip Andaman-Nicobar Fault, the offshore continuation of the Sumatran Fault, has a slip rate of >30 mm/yr, about twice that of the Sumatran Fault. The lack of recorded large earthquakes along this system and abundant swarm seismicity, imply that deformation may be accommodated by a combination of fault creep and localized locked patches, and/or by distributed slip across multiple structures. Our results have important implications for seismic hazard assessment and for future tectonic and tsunami-generation models, which must account for the structural barrier and complex strain accommodation in this part of the subduction system. 

How to cite: Agrawal, H., Lythgoe, K., Bradley, K., and Feng, L.: Kinematic boundary between Burma and Sumatra at the Nicobar Trench, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19995, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19995, 2026.

EGU26-20670 | Orals | TS3.4

What drives extension and seismicity in the central Apennines (Italy)? Insights from 2D seismo-thermo-mechanical modeling 

Maaike Fonteijn, Erwan Pathier, Anne Socquet, and Ylona van Dinther

The central Apennines have experienced several destructive normal-faulting earthquakes in the last decade, but fundamental questions about the tectonic mechanisms driving extension persist. Multiple mechanisms have been proposed, including differences in gravitational potential energy (GPE), independent motion of the Adriatic plate, and large-scale uplift following slab detachment. In terms of structure, debates continue about whether the slab has detached and whether the continental Mohos overlap. However, none of these hypotheses have been tested through self-consistent geodynamic modeling. We employ 2D instantaneous seismo-thermo-mechanical models with a visco-elasto-plastic rheology and a strongly slip-rate dependent friction. We systematically explore different lithospheric structures, rheologies and forcings to test these hypotheses and identify the key driving mechanisms of surface deformation and seismicity in the central Apennines. 

Our results confirm that the slab beneath the central Apennines is detached: only a detached slab reproduces normal-faulting earthquakes in the orogen and a gradual increase of horizontal surface velocities up to 3 mm/yr. An attached slab instead produces strong compression and vertical motions inconsistent with observations. The primary driver of extension is Adriatic plate motion, which accounts for approximately two-third of the horizontal surface velocities. The secondary driver is eduction of subducted upper crust, which contributes to approximately one-third of the horizontal surface velocities and facilitates decoupling between the Adriatic and Tyrrhenian plates. On the contrary, differences in GPE arising from topography only have a minor contribution to extension and seismicity. Density differences up to the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary do play a significant role as it controls upper crust eduction. Lower- and upper crust rheology also control the occurrence and intensity of eduction, thereby affecting plate coupling and seismicity. Additionally, lower crust viscosity of the plate contact area strongly modulates the transfer of deep velocities to the surface, and thereby controls the location of highest surface velocity gradient and seismicity. Hence, our results show that deep structures, rheologies, temperatures and processes have a large control over the location and intensity of crustal seismicity. By refining the geodynamic structure and deciphering the tectonic drivers of seismicity, this study advances the understanding of Apennine geodynamics and seismicity.

How to cite: Fonteijn, M., Pathier, E., Socquet, A., and van Dinther, Y.: What drives extension and seismicity in the central Apennines (Italy)? Insights from 2D seismo-thermo-mechanical modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20670, 2026.

EGU26-22644 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.4

  Seismicity and seismotectonics of the Basque-Cantabrian Zone (northern Iberia) from six years of observations using a dense temporary network of broadband seismic stations 

Andrés Olivar Castaño, Alba Díaz-González, Francisco Javier Álvarez Pulgar, David Pedreira, Juan Manuel González-Cortina, Jorge Gallastegui, Jordi Diaz, and Josep Gallart

The safe management of subsurface-related economic activities, such as fluid extraction or storage (groundwater, hydrocarbon, H2, CO2, etc.), requires a reliable assessment of local seismicity. In intraplate regions, such assessments are difficult because earthquakes are often scattered and difficult to associate with active structures. Thus, studies of the local seismicity in intraplate settings often require detailed long-term seismic surveys. 

In this work, we present the results of more than six years of seismic monitoring in the Basque-Cantabrian Zone (BCZ), a region of great economic and geological interest in the eastern continuation of the Pyrenees along northern Iberia. Although the BCZ has long been an area of intensive subsurface use and resource exploitation, knowledge of its background seismicity and active structures remains limited. During our six-year long survey, we recorded more than 1200 earthquakes and computed 42 new focal mechanisms. 

The observed seismicity is generally dispersed and concentrates primarily to the east of the studied area, in the transition between the BCZ and the Western Pyrenees (WP). Within the BCZ, seismicity is associated with salt diapirs and blind faults that likely affect the Paleozoic basement, as well as with a major south-dipping Mesozoic normal fault. In the WP, seismicity primarily clusters along a steeply dipping fault that we interpret as the Ollín fault, reaching ~40 km depth. In the Southern Pyrenean Zone, we observed two seismic crises that appear to be related to blind faults. In the northern Iberian Range, seismicity is scattered over a wide range of depths, both all of them occurring above and below the frontal thrust (Cameros thrust). 

Finally, we analyzed the regional stress regime by inversting the newly-derived focal mechanisms. Our results indicate a predominantly extensional stress regime in the BCZ, with localized strike-slip components in several areas, including the South Pyrenean Zone. 

How to cite: Olivar Castaño, A., Díaz-González, A., Álvarez Pulgar, F. J., Pedreira, D., González-Cortina, J. M., Gallastegui, J., Diaz, J., and Gallart, J.:   Seismicity and seismotectonics of the Basque-Cantabrian Zone (northern Iberia) from six years of observations using a dense temporary network of broadband seismic stations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22644, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22644, 2026.

EGU26-22671 | Orals | TS3.4

Control of Gravitational Potential Energy and associated stress field on crustal seismicity along the Andean margin 

Andrés Tassara, Laura Giambiagi, Silvana Spagnotto, Catalina Cabello, and Rodolfo Araya

Lateral changes of lithospheric density structure and associated topography create spatial variations of Gravitational Potential Energy (GPE) that exert a primary control on the direction and magnitude of crustal stresses, the style of active faulting and, therefore, the location, spatial density and magnitude of crustal earthquakes. Zones of positive/negative GPE with respect to a stable region, should be characterized by an extensional/compressional stress regime, driving crustal deformation toward an ideal situation of spatially homogeneous GPE with no lateral gradients. Along active continental margins, these relationships can be altered by forces associated to subduction, namely the far-field tectonic forces due to plate convergence, elevated shear stresses along the interplate megathrust and basal drags driven by mantle wedge flow. Testing the role of GPE on crustal stresses and seismicity requires an adequate representation of the 3D density structure and a large dataset of stress field indicators and focal mechanism to allow a significant statistical comparison between model predictions and observations, both of which are commonly scarce.

In this contribution we will show results of a study performing this test along the Central and Southern Andean margin (5º-45ºS) that use a refined geophysically-constrained 3D density model, complemented by an analysis of Geoid anomalies, and a recently compiled dataset of several hundred stress tensors derived from Pliocene-to-Recent fault slip data and shallow earthquake focal mechanisms. These results show a strong first-order correlation between GPE anomalies and the large-scale stress field with positive/negative GPE correlating with normal/reverse faulting and near neutral GPE associated to strike-slip faulting. However, local misorientation of existing crustal faults with respect to this field causes stress rotations. First- and second-order partial derivatives of GPE are associated to the 2D stress tensor and compares well with the maximum horizontal stresses SHmax derived from the available data, confirming the main role of GPE on driving crustal deformation. This is further analyzed verifying a correlation between the spatial density of crustal seismic events and the magnitude of GPE gradients, which shed light about the level of stresses at crustal faults and the mechanism of their seismic activation. These results have important implications for understanding the forces driving crustal deformation and the controls on crustal seismicity in active orogenic systems.

How to cite: Tassara, A., Giambiagi, L., Spagnotto, S., Cabello, C., and Araya, R.: Control of Gravitational Potential Energy and associated stress field on crustal seismicity along the Andean margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22671, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22671, 2026.

EGU26-3595 | ECS | Orals | TS3.5

Understanding Chaos: Fabric-Forming Processes from the Kampos Belt "Mélange" (Syros) and Implications for Megathrust Rheology 

Jesús Munoz-Montecinos, Whitney Behr, Dominic hildebrandt, and Leif Tokle

The architecture of deep subduction zones governs the mechanical behavior and rheology of the subduction interface, influencing processes from long-term mountain building to earthquake rupture dynamics. Traditionally, mélanges have been considered chaotic assemblages resulting from high-strain tectonic mixing, yet recent studies challenge this view. The Kampos Belt on Syros Island has been regarded as a prime example of a subduction mélange, where high-viscosity eclgoties, blueschsits and metagabbros are embedded in a lower-viscosity metasomatic matrix composed of chlorite tremolite schist. However, the formation mechanisms of this structure remain debated. This has significant implications for understanding how, where and when strain is accommodated along megathrust shear zones.


In this study, we present new high-resolution field mapping, structural and petrological analyses, along with thermodynamic modeling to refine the spatial distribution of lithologies, deformation styles, and metasomatic processes that contributed to the structure of the Kampos Belt. Our findings suggest that rather than a chaotic mélange, the Kampos Belt represents a coherent stack of variably deformed metamafic slivers juxtaposed due to localized deformation along shear zones, where lithological variations largely reflect pre-subduction heterogeneities. These localized shear zones originate from different sources, including: metasedimentary slivers (mica schist), relict peridotitic lenses (antigorite schist), and metasomatic horizons associated with relict mafic lenses (chlorite-tremolite schist). Moderate- to high-strain domains are preferentially localized along metasomatic chlorite tremolite schist shear zones, which formed through fluid-assisted reactions at prograde to early-exhumation conditions. These metasomatic zones played a key role in strain localization, weakening the subduction interface and shaping the observed shear zone architecture. Our results challenge the classical interpretation of Kampos as a mélange. We suggest that the architecture of the belt is unlikely to have formed through large-scale tectonic mixing, instead we support a model where pre-existing lithological heterogeneity and fluid-assisted deformation (e.g., continued metasomatism along fractures) controlled the shear zone fabric. These findings have broad implications for subduction zone rheology, as they highlight the role of lithology dependent strain partitioning and fluid-induced weakening in deep megathrust shear zones.

How to cite: Munoz-Montecinos, J., Behr, W., hildebrandt, D., and Tokle, L.: Understanding Chaos: Fabric-Forming Processes from the Kampos Belt "Mélange" (Syros) and Implications for Megathrust Rheology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3595, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3595, 2026.

EGU26-4431 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Scale-dependent seismic velocity and permeability in subduction zones caused by mesoscale fractures 

Yuya Akamatsu, Hanaya Okuda, Manami Kitamura, and Michiyo Sawai

Numerous seismic surveys have been conducted to uncover the geophysical structure and fluid distribution in subduction zones, since seismic velocities are primarily influenced by pore fluids within rocks. To link seismic velocity and the pore fluid state, laboratory measurements of elastic wave velocity using rocks samples from subduction zone environments have been conducted, revealing the role of microscopic pores and cracks in controlling seismic velocity. However, natural geological systems are heterogeneous and contain defects of different scales at each scale of observation. Therefore, the velocities observed at in situ scales should be affected not only by microscopic pore structures but also by larger-scale defects, such as fractures and faults. Such large-scale defects should also play a role in fluid drainage system, since permeability of rocks depends strongly on the dimensions of conduits. In this study, we compare laboratory-measured ultrasonic velocity measured on core samples from the Susaki area in the Shimanto accretionary complex, SW Japan, with sonic velocity measured by borehole logging experiments. P-wave velocities were measured at a frequency of 1 MHz under dry conditions at 5 cm intervals along core sections spanning a total length of 128 m. The measured values were then converted to velocities under wet conditions using an effective medium model, enabling comparison with sonic velocities acquired under groundwater-saturated conditions. Results show that P-wave velocity decreases from the laboratory (~6 km/s) to the borehole scales (~5 km/s). This scale-variant effect can be explained by an effective medium model whereby mesoscale porosity that is undetectable at the ultrasonic wavelength is introduced into the matrix phase with microscale porosity. Assuming typical apertures for micro- and mesoscale fractures, we estimate that the effective permeability can increase to 10–12–10–11 m2 with increasing in the mesoscale porosity and decreasing P-wave velocity down to 4–5 km/s. These results indicate that seismic velocity anomalies and related seismic activity are associated with the presence of mesoscale fractures in subduction zones.

How to cite: Akamatsu, Y., Okuda, H., Kitamura, M., and Sawai, M.: Scale-dependent seismic velocity and permeability in subduction zones caused by mesoscale fractures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4431, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4431, 2026.

EGU26-6595 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Spatial extent of deep slab slicing events:  Insights from the Phyllite-Quartzite paleo-accretionary wedge (Hellenic subduction zone) 

Maïlys Bouhot, Armel Menant, Clément Ganino, Samuel Angiboust, Onno Oncken, Damien Deldicque, Laurent Jolivet, and Nikolaos Skarpelis

The transfer of material from the downgoing plate to the overriding plate at depth exerts a first-order control on the mechanical and thermal evolution of subduction zones. However, the geometry, size, and temporal organization of deep tectonic slices formed during basal accretion remain poorly constrained, due to the limited resolution of geophysical imaging and the rarity of geological analogues preserving deep accretionary architectures formed during continental subduction.

Here, we investigate the spatial extent and stacking dynamics of tectonic slices by reconstructing the architecture of the deep paleo-accretionary wedge through the study of the exhumed Phyllite-Quartzite (PQ) nappe, derived from microcontinental protoliths, which was formed by basal accretion during the Oligo-Miocene along the Hellenic subduction zone. We carried out a multidisciplinary study of this now-exhumed PQ nappe, which crops out discontinuously from Crete to the Peloponnese (Greece). Preserved in a fore-arc position and weakly overprinted by later tectonic events, this natural laboratory provides direct access to deep accretionary processes.

An integrated petro-structural study conducted across southeastern Peloponnese and Kythira combines detailed mapping, structural analysis, petrological observations, Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material, and thermobarometric modeling. This approach allows us to distinguish several tectono-metamorphic sub-units within the PQ nappe stack, each recording a distinct P-T evolution that constrains the depth of basal accretion for successive episodes. Hypotheses of lateral continuity between these sub-units provide first-order constraints on their present-day spatial extent and on the minimum size of individual accretionary slices.

In southeastern Peloponnese, two HP-LT sub-units are identified within the PQ nappe stack, while at least two equivalent sub-units are recognized on Kythira. These sub-units record a systematic increase in peak temperature from the base to the top of the HP-LT nappe stack, consistent with successive episodes of basal accretion. Reconstructed P-T conditions indicate that basal accretion occurred at depths of ~50-60 km along the subduction interface. Based on spatial correlations between structurally equivalent HP–LT sub-units exposed in neighboring regions along strike, we infer a minimum present-day lateral continuity of individual accretionary slices. On this basis, deep tectonic slices formed during basal accretion are inferred to currently extend over several tens of kilometers in the trench-perpendicular direction and up to a hundred kilometers along strike.

This study provides new quantitative constraints on the depth, lateral extent, and dynamics of tectonic underplating, with direct relevance for the Hellenic margin, where such processes may still be active, and for active subduction zones worldwide.

How to cite: Bouhot, M., Menant, A., Ganino, C., Angiboust, S., Oncken, O., Deldicque, D., Jolivet, L., and Skarpelis, N.: Spatial extent of deep slab slicing events:  Insights from the Phyllite-Quartzite paleo-accretionary wedge (Hellenic subduction zone), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6595, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6595, 2026.

EGU26-7758 | ECS | Orals | TS3.5

Linking geodynamic simulations of seamount subduction to seismic cycle modeling 

Alexis Gauthier, Dave May, Nadaya Cubas, Alice Gabriel, and Laetitia Le Pourhiet

Seamounts are ubiquitous features of oceanic plates and are commonly subducted at convergent margins, where they can significantly deform the overriding plate. Numerous studies have proposed that subducting seamounts can influence megathrust slip behavior, either by promoting aseismic creep or acting as persistent barriers to earthquake rupture propagation. However, the interplay between long-term structural evolution and short-term seismicity remains poorly understood.

To investigate this relationship, we couple the long-term geodynamic code pTatin2d with the seismic cycle code Tandem. We first perform long-term geodynamic simulations with pTatin2d, focusing on the effects of subducting multiple seamounts. These simulations allow us to track the evolution of fault geometries, stress fields, and structural complexities in the upper plate over millions of years. At selected stages of seamount subduction, we extract the geometry of faults and the associated stress distribution to initialize seismic cycle simulations with Tandem.

To elucidate the role of each extracted parameter, and thereby develop a methodology linking geodynamic simulations to seismic cycle models, we systematically and independently investigate the effects of normal stress heterogeneity, topography, basal fault geometry, and upper-plate faulting on the seismic cycle. Specifically, we observe that variations in normal stress can act both as barriers to earthquake propagation and as asperities where earthquakes can nucleate. The upper plate faults also play an important role. Our simulations show that multiple splay faults can be activated during a single megathrust event. Rupture can also nucleate on a splay fault and subsequently propagate onto the main fault.

We then consider the combined influence of all extracted parameters, allowing us to assess how inherited structural and stress conditions control earthquake recurrence, magnitude, and the spatial distribution of seismic events. Our results provide new insights into how bathymetric highs modulate seismic behavior in subduction zones, bridging long-term geodynamics and short-term seismic processes.

How to cite: Gauthier, A., May, D., Cubas, N., Gabriel, A., and Le Pourhiet, L.: Linking geodynamic simulations of seamount subduction to seismic cycle modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7758, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7758, 2026.

EGU26-8339 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Slow Slip Accommodates the Full Plate Convergence Budget at the Northern Hikurangi Subduction Zone 

McKenzie Carlson, Laura Wallace, Demian Saffer, and Charles Williams

Accurately assessing strain accumulation and release in subduction zones is contingent upon robust detection and characterization of locking and slip along the megathrust. However, the distribution of slip on shallow, offshore plate boundaries is not well-resolved with onshore GNSS networks. At the Hikurangi Subduction Zone offshore Aotearoa-New Zealand, extensive investment has been made into seafloor geodetic techniques such as seafloor pressure and GNSS-acoustic, which have significantly improved observation and characterization of offshore SSEs. Despite their utility, oceanographic noise limits the ability of these seafloor techniques to detect SSEs. Formation pore pressure changes (as a proxy for volumetric strain) detected in borehole observatories have an enhanced signal-to-noise ratio and can reliably resolve deformation at the 10s of nanostrain-level, providing an improved view of shallow crustal deformation offshore.

Here, we report on a suite of SSEs observed in two IODP borehole observatories in the northern Hikurangi Subduction Zone between 2018 and 2023 and model their slip distribution and magnitude. During this time, five SSEs were clearly recorded in the borehole pore pressure data. Four of these occurred spontaneously, and the borehole pressure changes correlate with surface displacement observed at onshore GNSS stations. In contrast, in early 2021, the Mw 7.2 East Cape earthquake triggered a near-trench SSE that was only captured by the observatories. We jointly invert changes in pore pressure with onshore GNSS displacements and seafloor pressure (when available) for slip distribution along a 2D transect for each of the events. Our inversions incorporate realistic elastic properties constrained by high-resolution seismic velocity models and logging-while-drilling data, which is crucial for accurately resolving slip distribution and magnitude. We find large differences in slip initiation and evolution characteristics during the 2021 triggered SSE compared to the spontaneous events. We also find that, in total, SSEs accommodate most (>80%) of the plate convergence budget along the shallow (<10 km) megathrust. The 2021 triggered event was particularly important for filling in a slip deficit near the trench. Our results have implications for the role of SSEs in accommodating the megathrust strain budget near the trench at subduction zones.

How to cite: Carlson, M., Wallace, L., Saffer, D., and Williams, C.: Slow Slip Accommodates the Full Plate Convergence Budget at the Northern Hikurangi Subduction Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8339, 2026.

EGU26-8678 * | Orals | TS3.5 | Highlight

Do coupled megathrusts rupture? A Global Comparison of Megathrust Coupling and Earthquake Slip 

Bar Oryan and Alice Gabriel

To assess seismic hazard along subduction zones, which host Earth’s largest earthquakes, geodesists routinely measure interseismic surface deformation rates and invert them to estimate distributions of slip deficit along the plate interface. The resulting geodetic coupling models highlight portions of the megathrust that are “locked” and accumulating strain, thus identifying  likely candidates for future rupture. However, inherent limitations in these models arise due to poor resolution of offshore observations leading to substantial uncertainty in shallow coupling estimates. Furthermore, recent geodetic records indicate that coupling can change significantly over just a few years, challenging the assumption that it remains stationary over interseismic periods, a critical caveat given that geodetic measurements typically span only a few decades. Beyond these observational challenges, studies have shown that high coupling is not necessarily a prerequisite for dynamic rupture: slip can penetrate creeping regions, and strongly coupled fault segments may act as rupture barriers.

To evaluate whether, and to what extent, geodetically inferred coupling correlates with coseismic slip, we perform a global comparison of slip deficit models and finite-fault slip distributions. We compile the first unified dataset of coupling models including twelve subduction zones and 61 finite-fault models of megathrust earthquakes that ruptured these margins, with a cumulative moment magnitude of 470. We discretize each slip model into a point cloud reflecting its slip distribution, allowing us to quantitatively link slip with coupling values to evaluate their correlation.

Our slip-coupling analysis reveals consistent global patterns: large megathrust earthquakes (Mw ≥ 7.5) preferentially rupture highly coupled regions, whereas smaller events show weaker coupling-slip correlations. Comparison with the null hypothesis in which slip-coupling correlation is completely random highlight that observed slip-coupling correlations are statistically significant. These findings highlight the complex interplay between coupling and rupture behavior, demonstrating that strong coupling alone does not unequivocally predict future earthquake slip patterns.

How to cite: Oryan, B. and Gabriel, A.: Do coupled megathrusts rupture? A Global Comparison of Megathrust Coupling and Earthquake Slip, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8678, 2026.

EGU26-9476 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Spatial Patterns of Megathrust Seismogenic Behavior Modulated by a Subducting Seamount 

Huiwen Tan, Ehsan Kosari, Matthias Rosenau, Xiang Gao, and Onno Oncken

Subducting bathymetric reliefs, such as seamounts, modify the slip behavior of megathrusts, thereby potentially dictating seismic segmentation, rupture dynamics, and the structural evolution of the subduction channel and upper plate. While geodetic data often suggest that the megathrust near subducting seamounts is weakly coupled and dominated by aseismic creep or microseismicity, several "seamount earthquakes" have been documented. The role of subducting topography in governing fault coupling, rupture dynamics, and the spatial distribution of rupture remains poorly understood.

Laboratory seismotectonic experiments provide an effective means of simulating earthquake cycles and observing fault slip behaviour with high spatiotemporal precision, thereby overcoming the limitations of sparse onshore and missing offshore geodetic networks, as well as short historical records. In our experiments, a topographic high with seamount geometry was subducted along a 15° dipping, velocity-weakening seismogenic zone accompanied by hundreds of analogue earthquake cycles. The model upper plate is a wedge composed of an elastoplastic granular material that can respond to seismic cycles and seamount-induced stresses. We constrained the interface slip distribution by combining analogue geodetic slip inversion of surface displacement with direct monitoring of the interface via side-view imaging.

The results reveal that during the early stages of seamount subduction, when the seamount has partially subducted beneath the upper plate, along-strike rupture propagation is arrested at the seamount, which acts as a barrier, producing partial ruptures. Progressively, as the main portion or the entire seamount becomes subducted, another consistent spatial pattern emerges: coseismic slip concentrates at the leading downdip edge of the seamount, while the center and updip regions remain largely aseismic, with minor shallow slip reflecting slope instabilities triggered by upper-plate extensional structures. This pattern aligns well with interseismic high-coupling patches, which can also extend to the deep flank of the seamount.

Our findings indicate that, while subducting seamounts inhibit earthquake nucleation and broadly arrest rupture propagation, they still allow slip to extend onto the seamount-bearing interface. This explains why the deeper flank of a subducting seamount or ridge remains seismically active. A series of earthquakes (1996 Mw 6.7 and Mw 6.8; 2024 Mw 7.1; 2025 Mw 6.8) systematically occurred around the downdip edge of a Kyushu-Palau Ridge. Similar rupture behavior has been documented for a series of Mw ~ 7 events in the southern Japan Trench and for the two Mw > 8 events in central Nankai. This spatial pattern is further supported by geological evidence of pseudotachylytes, which are only localized on the downdip side of the exhumed fossil seamount.

Beyond slip kinematics, our experiments demonstrate that subducting seamounts perturb the megathrust stress field, leading to heterogeneous stress accumulation along dip, consistent with previous numerical mechanical-hydrological modeling studies. This suggests that seamount-induced coupling enhances upper-plate deformation and long-term structural features, including forearc uplift, fault reactivation, and localized fracturing. The short- and long-term upper-plate deformation patterns provide a key means of identifying subducted topographic features and assessing their impact on earthquake and tsunami hazards.

How to cite: Tan, H., Kosari, E., Rosenau, M., Gao, X., and Oncken, O.: Spatial Patterns of Megathrust Seismogenic Behavior Modulated by a Subducting Seamount, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9476, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9476, 2026.

EGU26-9477 | Posters on site | TS3.5

Investigating Block-in-Matrix Formation in Accretionary Prisms  

Francesca Remitti, Andrea Festa, Armin Dielforder, Paola Vannucchi, Giuseppe Nirta, and Gianni Balestro

The block-in-matrix fabric observed in modern and ancient accretionary prisms throughout the world has been studied in recent years with respect to mixed brittle-ductile deformation processes, which in turn may be associated with slow earthquakes phenomena. Many studies focus on slow earthquakes near the downdip limit of the seismogenic zone (~350°C) and implicitly assume that most of the deformation observed in outcrops predominantly developed at metamorphic depths or during subsequent exhumation.  However, field observations indicate that the block-in-matrix fabric is not exclusively metamorphic in origin, but may also form through sedimentary or tectonic processes, already in the very frontal part of accretionary prisms and under diagenetic conditions.  We present three examples from the exhumed accretionary prisms of the Northern Apennines and Western Alps. From the shallowest to the deepest, the case examples are: (i) the Ligurian Units in the Northern Apennines, Italy (Tmax <100-150 °C), (ii) the Sestola-Vidiciatico and Subligurian tectonic units in the Northern Apennines, Italy (Tmax ~100–200 °C) , (iii) the Infrahelvetic Units in the Western Alps, Switzerland (Tmax ~170-320°C). Our comparison of these examples suggests that block-in-matrix fabrics can record a prolonged deformation history and are not necessarily indicative of distinct pressure-temperature conditions. A pervasive mixed brittle-ductile block-in-matrix fabric can form at shallow structural levels due to sediment accretion and isoclinal folding before complete lithification. The eventual lithification of accreted sediments promotes strain localization and results in a brittle-frictional overprint on the block-in-matrix fabric. Upward migration of the plate interface and out-of-sequence thrusting can cause the deep burial of frontally accreted sediments, eventually leading to metamorphism. Temperature-dependent ductile deformation processes can further overprint inherited structures and amplify the block-in-matrix fabric. Competence contrasts between blocks and matrix can evolve with changing pressure–temperature conditions, allowing either activation or “freezing” of mixed brittle–ductile deformation at different depths. The shallow formation of the block-in-matrix fabric may be related to shallow slow earthquake phenomena in the upper plate accretionary wedge but also contributing to mechanical heterogeneities that later influence deeper earthquake behaviour.

How to cite: Remitti, F., Festa, A., Dielforder, A., Vannucchi, P., Nirta, G., and Balestro, G.: Investigating Block-in-Matrix Formation in Accretionary Prisms , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9477, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9477, 2026.

EGU26-9894 | Posters on site | TS3.5

Petrological and Geochemical Evidence for a Subducted Off-Axis Seamount Chain Beneath the Japan Trench Plate Boundary Fault Zone 

Amy Gough, María-José Jurado, Tsuyoshi Ishikawa, Rina Fukuchi, Max Webb, Yasuyuki Nakamura, Asuka Yamaguchi, Marianne Conin, Uisdean Nicholson, Derya Gürer, Troy Rasbury, Patrick Fulton, Jamie Kirkpatrick, Shuichi Kodaira, Christine Regalla, Kohtaro Ujiie, Nobu Eguchi, Lena Maeda, Natsumi Okutsu, and Sean Toczko and the Expedition 405 Scientists

Understanding the structure of the incoming Pacific Plate is essential for reconstructing the tectonic evolution of the Japan Trench. International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 405, “JTRACK,” drilled through the frontal prism and plate boundary fault zone of the Japan Trench and into the underlying Pacific Plate at Site-C0019, located close to the hypocentre of the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku‑Oki earthquake. Here, we present new petrographic and geochemical results from five basaltic samples recovered from below the plate boundary fault zone (930–946 mbsf), which show the first direct geological evidence for a subducted volcanic body beneath this segment of the margin.

Core and image logs from Expedition 405 indicate that the drilled interval comprises a repeated sequence of sheeted dykes, massive basalts, and pillow lavas, with at least one interbedded sedimentary horizon separating the successions. This architecture is incompatible with simple ocean-plate stratigraphy and instead indicates a later phase of volcanic activity interacting with pre-existing crust. Of the five samples analysed, one was taken from below the intercalated sedimentary horizon and four from above it. The four samples from above the sediments are systematically more evolved than the sample below. In the samples above, plagioclase shows anorthitic cores overprinted by albitised rims, pyroxenes are Mg-rich, and ilmenite is abundant. Several samples contain K-rich clays, disseminated sulphides, and Zr-rich domains, including possible baddeleyite. These features suggest interaction with sedimentary cover and progressive evolution of magma chemistry during the later stages of emplacement, alongside post-emplacement hydrothermal alteration. Whole-rock major and trace element data show enrichment in incompatible elements (K, Pb, Cs, Rb, Ba, Th, U) relative to typical MORB. K-metasomatism discrimination diagrams indicate that these signatures are not produced by alteration, supporting a primary magmatic origin. Together, the mineralogical and chemical characteristics point to a volcanic body formed off-axis on the Pacific Plate rather than at a spreading ridge.

Integration with seismic interpretations suggests that this volcanic body, likely a seamount chain, was faulted prior to subduction and now lies partially perched on a horst, forming a structural high directly beneath the plate boundary fault zone. These results provide the first physical confirmation of a subducted, faulted seamount chain beneath the Japan Trench, offering new constraints on the structure and evolution of the incoming Pacific Plate.

How to cite: Gough, A., Jurado, M.-J., Ishikawa, T., Fukuchi, R., Webb, M., Nakamura, Y., Yamaguchi, A., Conin, M., Nicholson, U., Gürer, D., Rasbury, T., Fulton, P., Kirkpatrick, J., Kodaira, S., Regalla, C., Ujiie, K., Eguchi, N., Maeda, L., Okutsu, N., and Toczko, S. and the Expedition 405 Scientists: Petrological and Geochemical Evidence for a Subducted Off-Axis Seamount Chain Beneath the Japan Trench Plate Boundary Fault Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9894, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9894, 2026.

EGU26-11054 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

An unsupervised classification scheme for seismic facies mapping of sediment input in Nankai Trough using reflection amplitudes from 2D profiles 

Paul Caesar Flores, Gou Fujie, Kazuya Shiraishi, Yasuyuki Nakamura, Gaku Kimura, Jun Su, Ryoichiro Agata, and Shuichi Kodaira

Slip behavior on the shallowest part of the subduction zone is heavily influenced by the lithostratigraphy of the incoming plate. Coseismic slip that propagates toward the seafloor is a major tsunami hazard as seen in the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. In Nankai Trough, scientific drilling combined with seismic facies mapping has allowed scientists to characterize the lithostratigraphy of the Shikoku Basin which in turn have been linked with the geotechnical properties, structural architecture, and seismicity. Seismic reflection surveys have been conducted here for more than 25 years covering over 730 x 150 km and mapping the sediment input using the traditional visual interpretation at this scale is inefficient. Taking advantage of this large seismic dataset combined with scientific drilling to map the fault properties can help improve hazard assessments. This study presents a framework for a semi-automatic classification using 2D seismic reflection profiles acquired by different surveys. Three trench-parallel lines within the accretionary wedge acquired by three different surveys were used for the case study. The amplitudes of the western and eastern profiles were first scaled based on the seafloor reflection of the central profile. Features were extracted using a rectangular window measuring 500 m above the top of the oceanic basement with varying widths measuring 1 km, 3 km, and 5 km. A total of 121 features divided into three groups were extracted. The statistical group (13) describes the strength of reflections, the spectral group (30) describes the presence or absence of internal reflections, and textural group (78) describes the continuity of reflections. The three principal components of each group were extracted and altogether subjected to K-Means clustering with 6 clusters. The 5 km window showed the most comparable classification with visual interpretation and the consistent classification in the overlap between profiles indicate a satisfactory performance of our method. Comparing the classification with previous drilling, Cluster 0 located in the overlap between the central and eastern profile is associated with turbidites occurring in basement lows. Cluster 1 is classified as noise. Cluster 2 in the western and central profile are likely siliciclastic turbidites from the Kyushu Fan. Cluster 3 and 4 in the eastern profile appears to have no drilling analog. Cluster 5 in the central profile is associated with hemipelagic mudstones. These initial results appear promising and will be tested in larger datasets and other subduction zones in the future.

How to cite: Flores, P. C., Fujie, G., Shiraishi, K., Nakamura, Y., Kimura, G., Su, J., Agata, R., and Kodaira, S.: An unsupervised classification scheme for seismic facies mapping of sediment input in Nankai Trough using reflection amplitudes from 2D profiles, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11054, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11054, 2026.

EGU26-11699 | ECS | Orals | TS3.5

Tracking fluid sources in mantle wedge jadeitites: petro-geochemical constraints and implications for fluid venting above the subduction interface 

Clothilde Minnaert, Samuel Angiboust, Clément Herviou, Raphael Melis, Johannes Glodny, Aitor Cambeses, Tom Raimondo, and Antonio Garcia-Casco

Jadeitites are commonly found in serpentinite mélanges and form by fluid flow across the subduction interface. Petrological analysis of jadeitites from various localities (Myanmar, Guatemala, Cuba, Russia, and Iran) coupled with structural characterization enabled the identification of successive jadeite/omphacite generations with subordinate amphibole and mica. These parageneses reflect metasomatism coeval with brittle and/or ductile deformation and complex crosscutting relationships. The composition of fluid inclusions (salinity, gas, δ18O, δD) reveals a wide range of fluid species pointing to a diversity of jadeitite-forming metasomatism. In situ trace element analysis and isotopic measurements (δ11B, 87Sr/86Sr, δ18O) indicate a fluid source dominated by altered oceanic crust (AOC) with a minor sedimentary component. Despite marked changes in major element content during protracted metasomatism, trace elements evolve only moderately while isotopes are virtually homogeneous, recording only small variations of fluid composition over time. Jadeitite evolution is strongly related to the ongoing serpentinization of the mantle wedge, promoting a longer fluid time-residence at the interface associated with chemical exchange and pore-pressure build-up. This suggests that (i) First jadeite generations formed by percolation of highly channelized AOC-derived-fluids in a dry mantle wedge, while later generations record fluid interaction with sediments and the serpentinized mantle. (ii) Fluid pulses across the subduction interface and rheological behavior of the near interface mantle wedge are not controlled by drastic changes in the nature of the slab input, but rather by the cooling of the serpentinizing subduction environment. (iii) The re-use of the same fluid pathways above the slab promotes the re-equilibration of isotopic signatures. (iv) Overpressures may build up upon jadeitite formation and promote brittle deformation events. This may lead to switches in deformation style and variations in permeability, thus changing fluid flow mode along the base of the mantle wedge.

How to cite: Minnaert, C., Angiboust, S., Herviou, C., Melis, R., Glodny, J., Cambeses, A., Raimondo, T., and Garcia-Casco, A.: Tracking fluid sources in mantle wedge jadeitites: petro-geochemical constraints and implications for fluid venting above the subduction interface, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11699, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11699, 2026.

EGU26-12829 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Geostatistical characterisation of internal deformation of the Japan Trench frontal prism using seismic and logging-while-drilling data (Site C0019) 

Jonathan Ford, Yasuyuki Nakamura, Maria-Jose Jurado, Kaitlin Schaible, Uisdean Nicholson, Mai-Linh Doan, Pei Pei, Yohei Hamada, Ayumu Miyakawa, Marianne Conin, Patrick Fulton, Jamie Kirkpatrick, Shuichi Kodaira, Christine Regalla, Kohtaro Ujiie, Nobu Eguchi, Lena Maeda, Natsumi Okutsu, and Sean Toczko and the Expedition 405 Scientists

Understanding how deformation is distributed within accretionary prisms is essential to constrain their structural evolution, internal organisation and seismo-tsunamigenic potential. Researchers would typically use seismic images to characterise large-scale subsurface structure, but accretionary prisms often appear internally chaotic-to-transparent in such data, lacking coherent reflectors. This is likely due to strong lateral heterogeneity and stratal disruption around the scale of the seismic resolution, resulting from intense deformation of accreted sediments and remobilised mass transport deposits.

IODP Expedition 405 “JTRACK” (October-December 2024) drilled the frontal prism of the Japan Trench subduction zone at Site C0019, targeting the decollement that hosted extremely large slip (>50 m) to the trench during the 2011 Mw 9.1 Tohoku-Oki earthquake. The expedition involved continuous coring and logging-while-drilling (LWD) through the prism, resulting in an improved time-depth tie with regional 2-D seismic profiles. At this site the seismic images show a highly chaotic internal prism, which introduces large uncertainties in structural interpretation and inhibits the upscaling and lateral extrapolation of borehole-scale observations from Site C0019.

Here we present an approach to characterise this heterogeneous internal structure by inverting for scale-independent geostatistical parameters (vertical and lateral correlation lengths, dip) from the combined seismic image and LWD sonic velocity data. We use a Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo approach that gives spatially varying, probabilistic estimates of the geostatistical parameters. The lateral correlation length, specifically, can be used as a proxy for the degree of stratal disruption/deformation, as shorter correlation lengths reflect more intense deformation. While the aspect ratio of the correlation lengths is generally well-constrained for seismic data, the estimate of vertical correlation length from the borehole logs is necessary to resolve the other individual geostatistical parameters away from the borehole.

Initial results reveal that the degree of deformation varies significantly within the frontal prism, with the lateral correlation length varying between around 10-50 m. The degree of deformation appears to be compartmentalised by steeply dipping structures that could correspond to fault zones also observed in cores from C0019. These distinct changes in lateral correlation length correspond to lithological units interpreted from core observations. They also coincide with significant changes in vertical correlation length from the sonic log, anisotropy of seismic velocity from core samples and bedding orientation from borehole images. The results demonstrate that seismically-derived geostatistical parameters can delineate internal compartmentalisation of the frontal prism, providing a framework for tectonic and mass transport deposit interpretation and for the extrapolation of core-scale observations. Future work will extend this analysis using parallel profiles along the Japan Trench axis, allowing for mapping of frontal prism internal deformation in three dimensions away from existing drill sites.

How to cite: Ford, J., Nakamura, Y., Jurado, M.-J., Schaible, K., Nicholson, U., Doan, M.-L., Pei, P., Hamada, Y., Miyakawa, A., Conin, M., Fulton, P., Kirkpatrick, J., Kodaira, S., Regalla, C., Ujiie, K., Eguchi, N., Maeda, L., Okutsu, N., and Toczko, S. and the Expedition 405 Scientists: Geostatistical characterisation of internal deformation of the Japan Trench frontal prism using seismic and logging-while-drilling data (Site C0019), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12829, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12829, 2026.

EGU26-13387 | Posters on site | TS3.5

Cenozoic Subduction Polarity Reversal Within the Celebes Sea Inferred from Teleseismic Tomography 

Nicholas Rawlinson, Yingbo Li, Simone Pilia, Lintang Kesumastuti, Chuanchuan Lü, Sri Widiyantoro, and Tianyao Hao

Sulawesi and Borneo are tectonically complex islands in South East Asia that were assembled from numerous crustal fragments throughout the Cenozoic. Past P wave tomography studies of this region have used land stations and hence image seismic velocity structure primarily beneath the two islands. By adding data from Ocean Bottom Seismometers deployed between 2019 and 2020 in the Makassar Strait, which lies between Sulawesi and Borneo, and incorporating core-going converted P phases with steeper ray paths (PKP and PKIKP), we illuminate the mantle beneath this offshore region to depths of around 800 km. The new tomographic velocity model robustly images a high-velocity north-west dipping tabular anomaly at depths between ~300 and ~660 km beneath the strait, which is interpreted as an aseismic ancient slab. By combining a slab age-depth relationship with a plate tectonic reconstruction, we uncover the palaeosubduction boundary responsible for this slab, thereby providing conclusive evidence for the previously hypothesised north-westward subduction of the Celebes Sea beneath Northern Borneo around ~15 Ma (plus/minus a few million years). Following slab break-off and northward plate migration of Sulawesi, sinking of this northwest Celebes Sea slab may have contributed to the initiation of subduction of the Celebes Sea southwards beneath Northern Sulawesi, which today is confidently imaged by a Benioff zone in addition to seismic tomography.

How to cite: Rawlinson, N., Li, Y., Pilia, S., Kesumastuti, L., Lü, C., Widiyantoro, S., and Hao, T.: Cenozoic Subduction Polarity Reversal Within the Celebes Sea Inferred from Teleseismic Tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13387, 2026.

EGU26-13415 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Lithology-related hydraulic properties of subduction zone sediments at Japan Trench, IODP Exp.405 Site C0026 

Pei Pei and Mai-Linh Doan and the Expedition 405 Scientists

Making a link between hydraulic properties and lithology is important for understanding fluid flow and pore pressure evolution in subduction zone sediments. However, it's a difficult challenge to get the in-situ downhole hydraulic responses due to the complex lithological variations and strong vertical heterogeneity.  IODP Expedition 405 - JTRACK, drilled Site C0026 in the Japan Trench, penetrating a thick sedimentary sequence by hemipelagic mud, pelagic clay, chert and basalt intervals. Continuous logging-while-drilling (LWD) and coring operations provide a unique opportunity to examine lithology-related hydraulic properties in the sedimentary structures.

In this study, we integrate the interpretated downhole annular pressure (DHAP) from LWD time series dataset and other physical properties, including gamma ray, resistivity, sonic velocity, and caliper logs, together with interpretated lithogical logging units. Comparing forward-modelled DHAP with measured DHAP data, the results indicates that the in-situ fluid pressure evolution is highly correlated with lithological variability. In the hemipelagic mud at shallow depth, apparent inflow is largely influenced by borehole enlargement, where caliper increases strongly affect flow modelling and make it difficult to identify the real formation inflow. In the pelagic clay interval, little to no fluid inflow or loss is observed, indicating the absence of significant overpressure or under pressure. Localized fluid loss is identified within chert layers, consistent with their brittle behaviour and increased caliper values, suggesting fracture-controlled fluid escape. In contrast, a clear and active inflow is observed in the basalt interval, where fractures identified from borehole image logs provide efficient pathways for fluid flow to the borehole.

These observations indicate that hydraulic properties at Site C0026 are strongly controlled by lithological contrasts, leading to vertically variations fluid flow behavior. This study highlights the importance of integrating with borehole logs lithological information to constrain fluid transport processes in subduction zone sedimentary sequences.

How to cite: Pei, P. and Doan, M.-L. and the Expedition 405 Scientists: Lithology-related hydraulic properties of subduction zone sediments at Japan Trench, IODP Exp.405 Site C0026, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13415, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13415, 2026.

EGU26-14028 | Posters on site | TS3.5

The effect of pressure-temperature dependent material properties on thermal evolution of the slab 

Andrea Piccolo, Timothy J. Craig, Iris Van Zelst, and Cedric Thieulot

The rheological and compositional evolution of a subducting plate critically depends on its thermal structure. The temperature evolution of the subducting plate depends on its history prior to subduction, on its interaction with the overriding plate, and on how it interacts with the ambient mantle. Many processes that are associated with subduction such as deep seismicity and fluid release, which are responsible for arc-volcanism, can be understood through the temperature evolution of the slab. Studying the temperature evolution of the subducting slab, however, is not straightforward because of the lack of direct observations and a complete subduction record. Thus, to assist the interpretation of the available data it is necessary to use forward geodynamic modelling (FWG).

FWG can either study a full dynamic system or study the evolution of the slab using a kinematic model, in which the slab geometry and velocity are fully prescribed as boundary conditions. Kinematic models are more suitable to study specific subduction zones, as the dynamic models would require high computational cost to fit the available data. However, kinematic models suffer from several assumptions that oversimplify the complexity of the subduction process. For example, kinematic models are frequently performed with constant convergence velocity, age of subducting plate, and thermal properties. 

In this contribution, we aim to test whether the pressure- and temperature-dependent thermal properties improve our ability to interpret the natural data, and if the improvements are worth the additional complexity.  

How to cite: Piccolo, A., Craig, T. J., Van Zelst, I., and Thieulot, C.: The effect of pressure-temperature dependent material properties on thermal evolution of the slab, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14028, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14028, 2026.

EGU26-14561 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Deformation and alteration during seamount subduction: Insights from an exhumed intra-oceanic accretionary complex 

Elisha Jane Maglalang, Ake Fagereng, David Buchs, and Giovanni Toffol

Current studies on seamount subduction propose contrasting effects on megathrust behavior. Some suggest that subducting seamounts increase normal stress and promote large earthquakes, while others argue that seamounts fracture the upper plate, enhancing microseismicity and aseismic creep that may inhibit major ruptures. Field- and microscale observations from the Azuero Accretionary Complex, an exhumed intra-oceanic accretionary complex in Panama, provide new constraints on the deformation processes associated with seamount subduction.

Coastal exposures on the Azuero Peninsula expose the contact between the autochthonous Azuero Plateau and the allochthonous Azuero Accretionary Complex. The Azuero Plateau forms part of the Caribbean Large Igneous Province and consists mainly of massive to pillowed oceanic plateau basalts with minor Upper Cretaceous chert. In contrast, the accretionary complex comprises massive to pillowed basalts and volcanic breccias with ocean island affinity, locally interbedded with Paleogene carbonates. A ~3 km wide deformation zone, the Azuero Mélange, separates these units, and is inferred to be a deformed portion of the plateau based on new field observations and geochemical data.

The accreted seamount lithologies show pervasive faulting, cataclasites, abundant zeolite veins, and a chlorite-rich shear zone located ~60 m below the mélange. These rocks lack evidence for large displacement through-going faults. In contrast, plateau-derived rocks record both brittle faulting and ductile deformation. Ductile strain localized within the Azuero Mélange, where clay-rich cataclasites accommodated deformation through cataclastic flow and dissolution–precipitation creep. At the structural base of the mélange, a ~10 m thick shear zone composed of foliated cataclasites with basalt and limestone clasts within a clay-rich matrix is observed, interpreted to be sheared seamount lithologies.  

Fluids and alteration played a crucial role in localizing strain within the upper plate and the décollement, enhancing mechanical weakening and diffusive mass transfer. Cataclasis increased permeability, enabling fluid infiltration and the formation of mechanically weak phases such as clays and chlorite. These processes promoted strain localization and facilitated deformation by cataclastic flow and dissolution-precipitation creep. The interplay between these alteration and deformation processes likely favored aseismic creep during seamount subduction.

How to cite: Maglalang, E. J., Fagereng, A., Buchs, D., and Toffol, G.: Deformation and alteration during seamount subduction: Insights from an exhumed intra-oceanic accretionary complex, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14561, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14561, 2026.

EGU26-15285 | Orals | TS3.5

Sustained Cabled Seafloor Observations of the Cascadia Subduction Zone off Central Oregon 

William Wilcock, Michael Harrington, David Schmidt, Deborah Kelley, Harold Tobin, Marine Denolle, Mika Thompson, Dana Manalang, Geoff Cram, Chuck McGuire, James Tilley, Mark Zumberge, Glenn Sasagawa, Matthew Cook, Bradley Lipovsky, Zoe Krauss, Renate Hartog, and Paul Bodin

Long-term submarine observations are critical for understanding subduction zones because the slip of great earthquakes occurs offshore.  Geophysical observations suggest that the Cascadia megathrust is locked from the coastline to the deformation front in many places, but off central Oregon they are consistent with a narrowly locked megathrust near the deformation front and creeping behavior beneath the shelf where there are two clusters of earthquakes near the plate boundary, including repeating and very low frequency earthquakes.  In this region, scientific objectives include understanding how megathrust locking transitions between the deformation front and the coastline, determining whether there is transient slip behavior, improving constraints on how shallow offshore earthquake clusters are linked to the megathrust, and characterizing the baseline deformation rate and fault slip behavior of the accretionary prism. This summer, the Cascadia Offshore Subduction Zone Observatory (COSZO), an infrastructure project funded by the US National Science Foundation, will add seismic and geodetic instruments to the Ocean Observatories Initiative (OOI) Regional Cabled Array (RCA) off Newport, Oregon. New seafloor science junction boxes, with updates to the RCA design, will be connected to three primary nodes on the continental slope and shelf that currently do not support seafloor geophysical observations. At each new junction box and a fourth site on the shelf where there is an existing science junction box but no geophysical instruments, COSZO will install a Nanometrics Atlantis Cabled Observatory ocean bottom seismic package comprising a buried broadband seismometer, a strong-motion accelerometer, a low-frequency hydrophone, and a differential pressure gauge. The project incorporates two types of calibrated absolute pressure gauges that utilize Paroscientific resonant quartz crystal sensors. The Geodetic and Seismic Sensor Module combines a triaxial accelerometer with two pressure gauges that are periodically calibrated against the internal pressure of the housing measured by a barometer. The Self-Calibrating Pressure Recorder also includes two pressure gauges but performs calibrations with a reference pressure close to ambient generated by a piston gauge. COSZO will also install uncalibrated absolute pressure gauges and Nortek Vector 3-component ocean current meters. Together with sensors already on the OOI RCA at the Slope Base and Hydrate Ridge sites and autonomous long-term geodetic observations, the COSZO infrastructure will form a critical mass observatory on the Cascadia Subduction Zone to support scientific studies and efforts to prototype offshore earthquake and tsunami early warning. COSZO will stream data into EarthScope Data Services and a workshop is planned for spring 2027 to engage early career scientists.  Looking forward, each science junction box includes open ports and any unspent COSZO funds and independent PI-driven proposals can add to the suite of cabled instruments. The OOI RCA has also hosted three short fiber sensing experiments, demonstrating the potential for single- and multi-span distributed acoustic sensing concurrent with observatory operations. Implementing permanent fiber sensing on the OOI RCA would complement COSZO by adding additional observations over an expanded footprint.

How to cite: Wilcock, W., Harrington, M., Schmidt, D., Kelley, D., Tobin, H., Denolle, M., Thompson, M., Manalang, D., Cram, G., McGuire, C., Tilley, J., Zumberge, M., Sasagawa, G., Cook, M., Lipovsky, B., Krauss, Z., Hartog, R., and Bodin, P.: Sustained Cabled Seafloor Observations of the Cascadia Subduction Zone off Central Oregon, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15285, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15285, 2026.

EGU26-16928 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

Timescales of metasomatism in a hot subduction channel: a microstructural and (radio-)isotopic study of Sierra del Convento jade 

Taylor Ducharme, Samuel Angiboust, Aitor Cambeses, Veronica Peverelli, Tom Raimondo, Kenya Núñez-Cambra, Idael Francisco Blanco-Quintero, Juan Cárdenas-Párraga, and Antonio Garcia-Casco

The Sierra del Convento mélange in southeastern Cuba is one of a limited number of jadeite jade occurrences worldwide. This exhumed, pervasively serpentinized fossil subduction interface hosts tectonic blocks up to several tens of meters in scale that were reworked during intense metasomatism. The flat-lying mélange spans a 300 m thick vertical exposure, progressing from a block-rich lower portion toward a block free, serpentinite-dominated upper region. We conducted structurally-controlled sampling of blocks and matrix to produce a spatially-resolved geochemical and microstructural profile through the thickness of the Convento mélange. Pale green, nearly pure jadeitite constitutes the dominant block population in the southern part of this mélange, and may contain up to 30% epidote and/or white mica by volume. Minor metasedimentary and metamafic block populations, recording variable degrees of HP metamorphism, coexist alongside the jade blocks. We report a newly identified metre-scale zoning within the jadeitite bodies, consistent with that documented in other jade localities. Green jadeitite locally occurs surrounding an older core of zoisitite containing relict jadeite crystals rimmed by omphacite. Green jade is cross-cut by fractures infilled by dark-colored brecciated jade, which is in turn rimmed by a late, pyroxene-free rind composed mainly of weakly foliated phengite + albite ± epidote. The latter facies occupies a similar position to chloritite blackwalls previously described from the Convento jade occurrence. All jade varieties except for these latest phengite-albite rinds and chloritite blackwalls are cross-cut by fractures infilled by jadeite and omphacite. Parts of the main jade bodies exhibit prismatic radial and comb jadeite microstructures, consistent with descriptions of P-type jade, which precipitate directly into open fractures from hydrothermal fluids. However, Convento jade contains paragonite with up to 2 wt.% K2O and jadeite-omphacite exsolution domains brecciated into jigsaw-like fragments recemented by jadeite and/or omphacite. These observations are consistent with at least part of the jade in the Sierra del Convento mélange representing near-total high-temperature metasomatic replacement of high-pressure anatectic trondhjemite protoliths, which originated as partial melts of garnet amphibolite at ~15 kbar, resembling an R-type (replacement) jade paragenesis. To overcome the considerable ambiguity inherent to geochronology datasets from HP igneous and metasomatic rocks from this locality (105 to 115 Ma, U-Pb zircon), we are conducting detailed multi-mineral and multi-system geochronology, including further U-Pb on zircon, titanite, and apatite, Ar/Ar on white mica, and Rb-Sr on white mica. This multi-chronometric approach will establish relative and numerical chronology for the diverse jade facies of the Convento occurrence, resolving timescales of the multiple associated fluidization events within the subduction channel.

How to cite: Ducharme, T., Angiboust, S., Cambeses, A., Peverelli, V., Raimondo, T., Núñez-Cambra, K., Blanco-Quintero, I. F., Cárdenas-Párraga, J., and Garcia-Casco, A.: Timescales of metasomatism in a hot subduction channel: a microstructural and (radio-)isotopic study of Sierra del Convento jade, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16928, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16928, 2026.

EGU26-18257 | Orals | TS3.5

Tectonic shortening in the subduction trench and outer wedge, southern Hikurangi margin, New Zealand 

Gareth Crutchley, Dirk Klaeschen, Brook Tozer, Laura Wallace, and Demian Saffer

Subduction zones generate the largest and most devastating earthquakes and tsunamis on Earth as a result of seismic slip on the megathrust fault. In addition to being capable of generating magnitude 8+ earthquakes, megathrusts also accommodate plate convergence via aseismic creep processes including episodic slow slip events. Above the megathrust, a portion of the overall plate convergence is accommodated as finite permanent strain (shortening) via slip along upper plate faults, tectonic folding, and reduction of sediment porosity (compaction). The most seaward expression of tectonic shortening in a subduction zone is focused within the outer accretionary wedge, but can also extend seaward of the main frontal thrust into sediments of the trench. Quantifying the strain budget among these different processes is essential for a better understanding of the partitioning between permanent inelastic strain and elastic strain accumulation as part of the seismic cycle – and thus ultimately toward an improved picture of subduction zone behavior and tsunami hazard. In this study, we use exceptionally detailed seismic reflection depth imaging and P-wave velocities to characterize sediment compaction within the outer wedge and trench along a profile of the southern Hikurangi subduction margin. Complementing these data with new constraints on stratigraphy, lithology and sediment physical properties, we provide the first quantifications of tectonic shortening attributable to sediment compaction on the Hikurangi margin. Our results demonstrate a broad region of compaction that extends more than 15 km seaward of the outermost faults. Future work beyond this study will explore relationships between pore scale compaction, proto-thrust development and active creep near the trench, in an attempt to provide a holistic understanding of strain accumulation in the outer wedge and trench.

How to cite: Crutchley, G., Klaeschen, D., Tozer, B., Wallace, L., and Saffer, D.: Tectonic shortening in the subduction trench and outer wedge, southern Hikurangi margin, New Zealand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18257, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18257, 2026.

EGU26-18355 | Orals | TS3.5

Maximum Decoupling Depths in Subduction Zones From the Rock Record 

Simon Wallis, Hikaru Hoshi, and Taisuke Ito

The maximum depth of decoupling or MDD is the depth at which subducting oceanic plates—or slabs—become fully viscously coupled with the overlying mantle wedge and has a strong influence on the thermal structure of subduction zones. In many models, this depth is assumed to be around 80 km, based on comparisons between model results and measured surface heat flow data. However, very few convergent margins have a dense enough network of heat flow measurements to provide reliable constraints on this depth. As a result, the range of possible MDD for different regions and different times remains poorly constrained and the suitability of using a fixed value for Dc in thermal models of subduction in unclear.

We propose an alternative method for estimating MDD based on the rock record of subduction-type metamorphic belts. As rocks move along the subduction interface and pass through this depth, they transition from a cold domain—where the thermal structure is dominated by the advection of cool lithosphere—to a much hotter domain, where induced inflow of hot mantle towards the subduction interface leads to significant warming. This transition should result in a sharp increase in temperature over a relatively small increase in depth. If this thermal bend can be recognized in subduction-type metamorphic belts, its depth can serve as a valuable MDD indicator in ancient subduction zones. An important caveat to our proposed approach is that high thermal gradients can also result from shear heating at shallower depths, and these must be distinguished to make a reliable estimate.

We have identified several examples of thermal bends from ancient subduction zone settings. These all suggest that MDD occurs at depths 70–90 km. Our results support the idea that MDD varies little between different subduction zones or over geological time.

How to cite: Wallis, S., Hoshi, H., and Ito, T.: Maximum Decoupling Depths in Subduction Zones From the Rock Record, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18355, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18355, 2026.

EGU26-19871 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.5

The Impact of Viscoelastic Earthquake Cycles and Elastic Heterogeneity on Interseismic Coupling 

Elizabeth Sherrill and Kaj Johnson

Some of the most commonly used tools for estimating the size and spatial distribution of future megathrust earthquakes are interseismic coupling models. These models estimate the degree to which a fault is interseismically coupled (i.e., not slipping at the full plate convergence rate between earthquakes) and thus accumulating strain to be released in future earthquakes. The accuracy of interseismic coupling models depends heavily on the coverage of the interseismic surface deformation data utilized and on the quality of the Earth model used to relate slip on the fault to surface deformation. For the latter, most interseismic coupling inversions assume a homogeneous elastic half-space model, despite the fact that it has been understood for decades that viscous mantle relaxation contributes significantly to surface deformation in the years and decades following subduction megathrust earthquakes.

We present here updates to previous homogeneous elastic probabilistic interseismic coupling models for Cascadia and Nankai subduction zones. Using a Green’s function approach and the spectral element code, visco3d [Pollitz, 2025], we integrate elastic heterogeneity and viscoelastic earthquake cycles into our boundary inversion framework. The earthquake cycle model consists of imposed period earthquakes on a steady backslip history and the heterogeneous elastic models are based on regional seismic velocity models. Additionally, because postseismic studies suggest that vertical velocities are more sensitive to the contribution of viscous mantle flow than horizontal velocities, we incorporate vertical surface deformation data for both subduction zones.

We find that the spatial coverage and quality of the surface deformation data is the most critical factor in constraining interseismic coupling, as evidenced by the limited change in coupling distribution at the highly instrumented Nankai subduction zone. We also find that viscosity has a first-order effect on modeled surface velocities and coupling estimates, while geometric variations in plate thicknesses, cold wedge depth, and cold wedge angle are secondary. When compared to a homogeneous elastic model, incorporating elastic heterogeneity shifts interseismic coupling landward and reduces overall moment accumulation rates, while incorporating a simple viscoelastic earthquake cycle model has the opposite effect at both subduction zones. Therefore, combining both elastic heterogeneity and viscoelastic earthquake cycles results in coupling and moment accumulation rate estimates not too dissimilar to homogeneous models. Further testing is required to determine if these results hold with higher resolution elastic heterogeneity models and more complex viscosity models.

How to cite: Sherrill, E. and Johnson, K.: The Impact of Viscoelastic Earthquake Cycles and Elastic Heterogeneity on Interseismic Coupling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19871, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19871, 2026.

EGU26-21059 | Orals | TS3.5

On the Secondary Zone of Interseismic Subsidence and the Mechanics of Subduction 

Ylona van Dinther, Ehsan Kosari, Alexander Koelzer, Christian Sippl, and Dominika Godová

Vertical deformation is the most discriminating observable of the seismic cycle in subduction zones, but its complex measurement and contamination by multiple controlling processes have limited its exploitation. While horizontal displacements primarily reflect interplate coupling, vertical signals encode the competition among elastic megathrust loading, plate tectonic forcing, mantle flow and relaxation, and long-wavelength mass redistribution within the upper plate and forearc. Advances in satellite geodesy now allow vertical deformation rates to be resolved with sufficient precision and spatial coherence to provide new constraints on long-standing conceptual models of interseismic deformation. Recent observations reveal the existence of a secondary zone of interseismic subsidence (SZIS) in Cascadia, Nankai, Japan Trench, and Southern Chile. We use new data and models to assess the persistence of a SZIS and quantify and unravel its physical controls.

Using multi-track InSAR rate maps in northern Chile, we identify an inter-seismic secondary zone of subsidence landward of the primary coastal uplift belt. The presence of this SZIS supports the existence of a persistent secondary zone of interseismic subsidence. However, within the classical backslip framework, the elastic half-space predicts a slow monotonic transition from coastal uplift to inland subsidence. We show that it cannot reproduce the observed secondary trough without invoking unphysical coupling distributions or implausible fault geometries. The discrepancy is therefore not parametric, but conceptual. Interestingly, the existence of a SZIS was first predicted by our numerical seismotectonic models (van Dinther et al., PAGEO, 2019). We use these cross-scale visco-elasto-plastic models to demonstrate the critical role of a visco-elastic lower crust, which allows for an elastic upper crust that is thin enough to bulge under compression transferred across a coupled megathrust. We find that this mechanism is important, but it is not the only relevant mechanism. To quantify and detangle the physical mechanisms in more detail, we build a data-driven model of Northern Chile and aim to explain lateral variations along our observed segment. We integrate high-resolution earthquake catalogue, seismic tomography, and gravity anomaly observations to constrain slab geometry, forearc rheology, density structure, and seismogenic zone dimensions. Our fully dynamic visco-elasto-plastic earthquake cycle model with invariant rate-and-state friction resolves sequences of quasi-periodic earthquakes and can build topography over them. Through that, we aim to explain the presence of a SZIS also in our early geomorphic and geological interpretations of upper-plate deformation. Those multi-scale observations support that vertical surface displacements are not only governed by elastic rebound of megathrust faulting but also include a long-term long-wavelength deformation signal possibly related to position-dependent buckling of the upper plate.

We argue that, together with the existence of a persistent secondary zone of coseismic uplift of the largest earthquakes, such a secondary zone of deformation is a persistent and characteristic feature of seismic cycle deformation in subduction zones. This primary diagnostic will allow for a reinterpretation of the mechanics of subduction through an extension of the canonical backslip surface-deformation model.

How to cite: van Dinther, Y., Kosari, E., Koelzer, A., Sippl, C., and Godová, D.: On the Secondary Zone of Interseismic Subsidence and the Mechanics of Subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21059, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21059, 2026.

EGU26-22560 | Orals | TS3.5

Thermal evolution of the subduction interface: Coupled petrologic and geodynamic study of high-pressure rocks of the Rio San Juan Complex, Dominican Republic 

Sarah Penniston-Dorland, Ikuko Wada, Kayleigh Harvey, Emma Bullock, Besim Dragovic, and Peter van Keken
Pressure-temperature (P-T) estimates from subduction-related metamorphic rocks such as eclogites and blueschists are often used to constrain the thermal conditions of fossil subduction zone plate interfaces. However, the metamorphic rock record indicates peak temperatures 100-300°C warmer on average than those predicted by geodynamic models for modern subduction zones.. To shed light on the difference in the fossil and modern subduction zone thermal structures, we compare newly acquired P-T estimates using quartz-in-garnet and zircon-in-garnet elastic thermobarometry combined with Zr-in-rutile thermometry to newly constructed geodynamic models for the thermal evolution of the Rio San Juan Complex, Dominican Republic. The geodynamic models are 2-D coupled kinematic-dynamic models that use the fossil subduction parameters, such as time-dependent convergence velocity and plate age. Global plate reconstruction models provide constraints on these parameters. Data from regional geological and petrological studies constrain the duration of subduction and the thermal history of the subducting plate. New analyses on an eclogite sample reveal a counter-clockwise pressure-temperature (P-T) path, with peak conditions at ~1.7 GPa and ~650ºC. Previous thermobarometric studies on the same sample indicate similar temperatures but significantly higher peak pressures, up to ~2.3 GPa, during the early stage of subduction around 110–104 Ma. In contrast, lower-grade blocks indicate isobaric cooling to ~400ºC and clockwise P-T paths during a later stage (80–62 Ma). Our thermal modeling results indicate that subduction initiation between two relatively young tectonic plates (< 30 Ma) can explain the relatively low-P, high-T data from both new and previous analyses. However, the highest pressures derived by the previous study require a rapid deepening of the maximum depth of slab-mantle decoupling during the early stages of subduction. Such deepening can be explained by a plate velocity increase around 110 Ma. Our modeling results further indicate the subduction rate increase results in significant cooling of the interface at a given depth, consistent with the isobaric cooling observed in the rock record. Migration of the spreading center across the study area may explain the change from counter-clockwise to clockwise paths, and higher temperature gradients of some of the blocks.  

How to cite: Penniston-Dorland, S., Wada, I., Harvey, K., Bullock, E., Dragovic, B., and van Keken, P.: Thermal evolution of the subduction interface: Coupled petrologic and geodynamic study of high-pressure rocks of the Rio San Juan Complex, Dominican Republic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22560, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22560, 2026.

On February 6, 2023, two significant earthquakes (MW 7.8 and MW 7.6) impacted the Kahramanmaras region, rupturing 340 km of the East Anatolian Fault (EAF) and 150 km of the Cardak Fault (CF). To investigate the relationship between pre-event fault coupling and coseismic slip, a three-dimensional kinematic model comprising 38 blocks was developed, incorporating mesh-based representations of the EAF and CF. The model utilizes approximately 50,000 InSAR velocities and represents slip rates using distance-weighted eigenmodes. Coupling is estimated through bounded quadratic programming. Pearson and Procrustes analyses are employed to compare pre-event coupling with observed coseismic slip. Along the western, approximately 75% of the EAF rupture, correlation is higher than in the easternmost 25% (east of the Surgu fault at 38.2 degrees longitude). Alignment tests indicate that the offsets required to maximize correlation vary along the fault, suggesting imperfect alignment of kinematic model patterns. Consequently, the actual correlation between coseismic slip and interseismic coupling remains equivocal.

How to cite: Carrero Mustelier, E. and Meade, B.: Spatial relations between pre-event interseismic fault coupling and coseismic fault slip associated with the 2023 Turkey-Syria Earthquake sequence., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-220, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-220, 2026.

A major open question in earthquake science is how crustal deformation is partitioned between elastic strain accumulation on known faults and distributed deformation in the surrounding crust throughout the earthquake cycle. This distinction is critical for seismic hazard assessment but remains difficult to resolve because surface deformation reflects contributions from both sources. Here, we implement a framework that jointly estimates slip deficit rates on three dimensional faults and distributed moment rate sources in the crust, providing internally consistent estimates of their relative contributions and posterior uncertainties. Applying this approach across the western United States, eastern Mediterranean, Tibet, and New Zealand reveals a systematic dependence of deformation partitioning on fault system complexity. Mature, localized fault systems, including the Main Himalayan Thrust, San Andreas, North Anatolian, and Alpine faults, accommodate 70 to 90 percent of deformation between earthquakes on faults. In contrast, immature or diffuse systems, such as the Basin and Range, Tibetan Plateau, Intermountain Seismic Belt, western Anatolia, and northern New Zealand, accommodate only 30 to 60 percent on faults, with the remainder distributed off-fault. These results demonstrate that off-fault deformation is a fundamental component of geodetic strain rates, with its relative contribution governed by fault system complexity. Moreover, in light of recent evidence that cumulative fault-length distributions follow a power law with an exponent near -2 (Zou and Fialko, 2024), our results suggest that a significant fraction of off-fault deformation may be accommodated aseismically throughout the earthquake cycle.

How to cite: Castro-Perdomo, N. and Johnson, K.: Global evidence that fault complexity controls on-fault and off-fault deformation partitioning throughout the earthquake cycle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-259, 2026.

EGU26-759 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

Rheological Segmentation and Distributed Strain Partitioning in the Korean Peninsula Revealed by Fusion of InSAR–GNSS Velocity Fields 

Raj Sunil Kandregula, Sang-Yeol Bae, Jun-Yeop Kim, and Young-Seog Kim

The Korean Peninsula provides a unique natural setting to investigate intraplate deformation driven by far-field Pacific and Philippine Sea plate forces. Despite its location along the nominally stable interior of the Eurasian Plate, the region hosts frequent seismicity and historical Mw ≥ 5.5 earthquakes, yet the spatial distribution and mechanisms of strain accumulation remain insufficiently constrained. Here we fuse multi-frame Sentinel-1 InSAR time series with dense GNSS observations (2017–2024) to produce a peninsula-scale, three-component surface deformation field. After rigorous frame corrections, GPS filtering, and removal of the Eurasia-fixed plate motion, the resulting velocity field reveals a sharp rheological and kinematic segmentation across the peninsula.

The fused horizontal field identifies a rigid western domain—the Gyeonggi Massif and western Okcheon Belt—with negligible residual motion, contrasted by a kinematically mobile southeastern domain (Yeongnam Massif and Gyeongsang Basin) showing coherent SW–WSW residual flow up to 3.5 mm/yr. Independent InSAR-derived vertical and E–W velocity components exhibit strong lateral gradients that correspond with mapped active faults and clusters of seismicity. Strain-tensor inversion indicates peninsula-wide ENE–WSW shortening, locally partitioned into dextral transpression along the Yangsan Fault System and distributed shear throughout the southeastern crust.

Integrating these geodetic observations with published crustal seismic-velocity models, we propose a rheology-driven strain-partitioning mechanism. The western peninsula is underlain by strong, felsic, low-Vp/Vs crust and acts as a continental backstop, whereas the southeastern block comprises weaker, mafic and magmatically modified crust that responds more readily to far-field compression. This lithospheric contrast explains the concentration of deformation, shear localization, and seismic strain accumulation within the southeastern block.

Our findings demonstrate that inherited crustal rheology—not block rotation alone—controls present-day intraplate deformation in Korea, offering a unified framework for understanding its seismicity distribution and improving seismic hazard assessment in slowly deforming continental interiors.

How to cite: Kandregula, R. S., Bae, S.-Y., Kim, J.-Y., and Kim, Y.-S.: Rheological Segmentation and Distributed Strain Partitioning in the Korean Peninsula Revealed by Fusion of InSAR–GNSS Velocity Fields, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-759, 2026.

EGU26-2883 | Orals | TS3.6

Seafloor deformation in Taiwan revealed by GNSS-acoustic measurements  

Ya-Ju Hsu, Hsin Tung, Chi-Hsien Tang, Horng-Yue Chen, Ryoya Ikuta, and Motoyuki Kido

Taiwan sits at the junction of the Ryukyu and Manila subduction zones, where a rapid convergence rate of ~90 mm/yr drives intense seismic and tsunami hazards. However, land-based geodetic networks provide insufficient resolution for monitoring offshore deformation. To address this, we have developed and deployed GNSS-Acoustic (GNSS-A) systems to monitor seafloor deformation. A total of six GNSS-A sites were established along the southern Ryukyu subduction zone near Taiwan, with three additional sites located near the northern tip of the Manila Trench. GNSS-A data in the southernmost Ryukyu margin reveal an eastward increase in convergence rate, from 92 mm/yr offshore Hualien to 123 mm/yr near the Gagua Ridge, indicating the potential to generate Mw 7.5–8.4 earthquakes. The 2024 Mw 7.3 Hualien earthquake ruptured a deep 70° east-dipping Longitudinal Valley fault and a 35° west-dipping offshore fault. At seafloor site ORY2, ~ 40 km east of the epicenter, we recorded coseismic displacements of 9.1±12.1 cm eastward and 12.3±11.4 cm southward motions, along with 52.9±13.5 cm uplift. These observations are consistent with coseismic dislocation modeling results. Additionally, multiple slow slip events on fault systems in eastern Taiwan appear to have preceded the 2024 Mw 7.3 Hualien earthquake.

Offshore southern Taiwan, geodetic data reveal N–S-oriented extension in the Tainan Basin and NE–SW extension between the northern Manila Trench and the North Luzon Trough. These strain axes align with the focal mechanisms of the 1994 M 6.5 and 2006 Mw 7.0 earthquakes. Notably, deformation and seismicity patterns shift distinctly across the Eurasian Plate–South China Sea continent–ocean boundary near 20°N. Together, these integrated observations provide new insights into fault segmentation, strain accumulation, and regional seismic and tsunami hazards.

How to cite: Hsu, Y.-J., Tung, H., Tang, C.-H., Chen, H.-Y., Ikuta, R., and Kido, M.: Seafloor deformation in Taiwan revealed by GNSS-acoustic measurements , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2883, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2883, 2026.

EGU26-3318 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

High-Definition Strain-Rate Mapping of Japan from a Public–Private GNSS Network  

Miku Ohtate, Yusaku Ohta, Mako Ohzono, and Hiroaki Takahashi

The interseismic crustal strain-rate distribution in Japan has traditionally been estimated from coordinate time series derived from GEONET, the nationwide GNSS network operated by the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI). Beginning with Sagiya et al. (2000) and subsequent studies, these analyses have revealed the existence and broad extent of inland strain-concentration zones. However, because the average spacing of GEONET stations is ~20 km, its ability to resolve highly localized deformation, such as strain accumulation associated with individual active faults, has remained limited.

In contrast, SoftBank Corp. (hereafter SoftBank), a Japanese telecommunications company, has operated an independent nationwide GNSS network of more than 3,300 stations since late 2019, nearly three times the number of GEONET stations. The suitability of SoftBank stations for crustal deformation monitoring was demonstrated by Ohta and Ohzono (2022).

By integrating GNSS data from GEONET and SoftBank, we constructed an unprecedentedly dense observation network and estimated interseismic crustal strain-rate fields at substantially higher spatial resolution. The integrated network achieves an effective station spacing of <10 km, enabling us to resolve localized strain features that are not captured by GEONET-only solutions. For example, our results suggest that the Niigata–Kobe Tectonic Zone, previously interpreted as a continuous belt, may instead comprise a series of smaller, spatially localized strain-concentration zones.

Moreover, the improved resolution enables a more direct comparison between the strain-rate field and the spatial distribution of earthquake epicenters. We find that seismicity tends to be more active along the margins of strain-concentration zones rather than directly above their cores. This pattern is consistent with the interpretation of Hasegawa et al. (2004), which proposes that stress preferentially accumulates at boundaries between regions undergoing rapid inelastic deformation and surrounding regions deforming more slowly, thereby promoting earthquake occurrence along the edges of strain-concentration zones. 

Acknowledgments: The SoftBank's GNSS observation data used in this study was provided by SoftBank Corp. and ALES Corp. through the framework of the "Consortium to utilize the SoftBank original reference sites for Earth and Space Science".

How to cite: Ohtate, M., Ohta, Y., Ohzono, M., and Takahashi, H.: High-Definition Strain-Rate Mapping of Japan from a Public–Private GNSS Network , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3318, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3318, 2026.

EGU26-3716 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6 | Highlight

Hydrologically induced crustal stress changes and their impact on seismicity in Greece 

Batakrushna Senapati and Konstantinos Konstantinou

The response of seismic activity to external stress perturbations provides important insights into the physical processes governing earthquake triggering, nucleation, and rupture. Among various perturbations, annual hydrological loading is ubiquitous and offers an opportunity for investigating earthquake triggering processes. However, the physical mechanisms governing seismic responses to such periodic stress variations are not yet fully understood. Here, we explore the hydrologically induced crustal stress changes and their impact on seismicity in Greece by integrating a ~14-year earthquake catalog, GNSS time series, and GRACE-derived hydrological loading. We find that a significant variation in the rate of seismicity in Mainland Greece at annual time scale coincide with hydrological loading. The surface displacements predicted from GRACE-based loading models show good agreement with observed GNSS displacements, confirming that hydrological mass redistribution produces geodetically detectable crustal deformation. Our results demonstrate that hydrological loading produces geodetically observable surface deformation and induces stress perturbations that, although small in amplitude, modulate seismicity rates in Mainland Greece. We further find that historical earthquakes from 424 BC to 1903 (Mw > 5) exhibit a seasonal pattern, with peak seismicity occurring during the May–June period, consistent with the present-day seismicity modulation. The observed correlation among surface deformation, hydrological loading, and seismicity rates indicates that elastic stresses induced by hydrological loading play a key role in modulating seismic activity in Mainland Greece.

How to cite: Senapati, B. and Konstantinou, K.: Hydrologically induced crustal stress changes and their impact on seismicity in Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3716, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3716, 2026.

The 2025 MW 7.0 Dingri earthquake in southern Tibet provides a unique opportunity to investigate normal-faulting mechanisms within an active rift zone. By integrating geodetic (GNSS and InSAR) and field observations, we investigate the event’s interseismic and coseismic deformation and quantify the impact of the 2015 MW 7.8 Gorkha earthquake. Our principal findings are: (1) The epicentral extensional strain rate is (1.5 ± 0.2) × 10-8/yr, notably lower than in the northern aftershock zone, indicating strain partitioning. (2) The coseismic slip model reveals a graben structure formed by two near N-S striking normal faults, with a maximum slip of 4.1 m and a seismic moment of 4.2×1019 N·m. (3) Field measurements confirm a segmented surface rupture, where the central segment’s vertical slip (2.1–2.2 m) aligns precisely with the InSAR-derived Line-of-Sight deformation maximum (2.04 m), validating the geodetic model. (4) Critically, deformation analysis demonstrates that the 2015 Gorkha earthquake significantly promoted the rupture of the Dingri earthquake, potentially accelerating its seismic cycle by ~20 years. This event exemplifies rift propagation along the Shenzha-Dingjie system and offers crucial insights into post-seismic stress transfer, rift evolution, and deep crustal processes in southern Tibet.

How to cite: Guo, N.: Deformation Process and Mechanism of the 2025 Ms 6.8 Dingri Earthquake in Southern Tibet constrained by GNSS and InSAR, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4673, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4673, 2026.

EGU26-4678 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

Evidence of strong plate coupling in the Uttarakhand Himalayas: Constraints from GNSS and ALOS-2 InSAR observations 

Dibyashakti Panda, Mridul Yadav, Eric O. Lindsey, and G Srinivasa Rao

Long-term convergence across the Himalayan megathrust continues to pose a significant seismic threat to the adjoining Indo-Gangetic plains, one of the world’s most densely populated regions. Parts of the megathrust have not ruptured in the last 200 years and have been identified as seismic gaps. The Uttarakhand Himalayas are considered part of the central Himalayan seismic gap, and differing opinions exist on the strength of interseismic plate coupling along the Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT). This has led to varying assessments of the associated seismic hazards. The present study focuses on the kinematic status of the MHT in the Uttarakhand Himalaya using Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) data, along with Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) satellite imagery, to estimate the elastic strain accumulation. GNSS-derived horizontal displacements indicate a slip deficit of ~18 mm/year, with an MHT that is locked up to a width of ~115 km. ALOS-2 InSAR imagery shows interseismic vertical deformation with a peak uplift of 4–6 mm/year. Consideration of an Elastic Subducting Plate Model (ESPM) predicts well both horizontal and vertical displacement without introducing any artifacts. Both the GNSS and InSAR measurements indicate that the megathrust across the Uttarakhand Himalaya is highly coupled, and the accumulated strain energy is equivalent to one Mw 8.1 megathrust earthquake every 100 years.

How to cite: Panda, D., Yadav, M., Lindsey, E. O., and Rao, G. S.: Evidence of strong plate coupling in the Uttarakhand Himalayas: Constraints from GNSS and ALOS-2 InSAR observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4678, 2026.

EGU26-5297 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

Influence of temperature-controlled non-linear viscoelastic rheology on interseismic surface deformation signals in subduction zones. 

Lucas Crisosto, Carlos Peña, Oliver Heidbach, David Schmidt, Andrés Tassara, and Fabrice Cotton

The earthquake seismic cycle consists of the gradual accumulation of elastic energy at plate boundaries during the interseismic period, followed by its release mainly during the coseismic and postseismic stages. Therefore, for the evaluation of the seismic moment accumulate rate along the plate boundary, we need to quantify the processes and rheologies that control the interseismic surface deformation that is observed by GNSS stations. 

Recent studies have shown that during the late interseismic phase, the GNSS-observed surface velocities can be explained by a combination of aseismic fault slip and viscoelastic deformation in the upper mantle. These works also demonstrate that the vertical GNSS component is particularly crucial for distinguishing between different rheological processes acting at depth. However, most of these deformation studies neglect the thermal structure of the lithosphere-asthenosphere system and its impact on the viscoelastic deformation processes in the upper mantle, and especially within the lower continental crust.

To explore the impact of the temperature field, we investigate four subduction zones with contrasting incoming plate geometries, ages, dips, and convergence rates. We use 2D interseismic deformation models  based on the Finite Element Method (FEM) with temperature-controlled viscoelastic power-law rheology that represent the Nankai, Japan, Cascadia, and northern Chile subduction systems.  We systematically compare linear and nonlinear rheological formulations across distinct thermal and tectonic environments to assess their impact on the interseismic deformation process. Our preliminary results indicate that thermally-controlled nonlinear viscoelasticity can alter both the magnitude and spatial distribution of vertical interseismic deformation. In regions with higher temperatures in the continental mantle (e.g., Nankai, Japan, and northern Chile) the nonlinear rheology can produce uplift and subsidence patterns that diverge from those predicted by linear viscoelastic models. This highlights the sensitivity of vertical deformation to the chosen rheological formulation and suggests that models with linear viscoelastic rheology may not always be sufficient to represent the details of the processes controlling the interseismic deformation signal. However, when the interseismic deformation signal is small (e.g. Cascadia), the difference between linear and non-linear rheology is too little to be resolved within the GNSS data uncertainty. 

Furthermore, our models predict differences in vertical surface deformation of ~20% near the trench and exceeding 100% in the far-field back-arc region between linear and nonlinear viscoelastic models, regions where GNSS data are generally absent or where there is poor coverage. Here seafloor geodetic observations from acoustic-GNSS and pressure gauges are especially valuable, as they provide direct constraints on near-trench deformation that cannot be resolved from land-based networks alone.

In this context, our models can help in identifying regions where nonlinear rheological effects are most likely to be observable and therefore offer guidance for the strategic deployment of offshore geodetic instrumentation to better resolve interseismic deformation processes in subduction zones.

How to cite: Crisosto, L., Peña, C., Heidbach, O., Schmidt, D., Tassara, A., and Cotton, F.: Influence of temperature-controlled non-linear viscoelastic rheology on interseismic surface deformation signals in subduction zones., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5297, 2026.

The lack of dense geodetic data near the trench of most subduction zones has made it challenging to accurately infer the pattern of interseismic deformation and, consequently, seismic and tsunami hazard estimates. Most kinematic coupling models ignore the effects of realistic boundary conditions and material properties. Here, we develop a 2D finite element model that incorporates realistic slab thickness and variable shear modulus values to quantify potential biases in these models.

We show that models that do not incorporate a finite slab thickness and variable material properties potentially under-estimate uncertainty about shallow creep rates compared to a more realistic model, while exhibiting a bias toward shallower locking, especially on megathrusts that lack offshore geodetic data. This observation potentially explains a reported gap between the inferred down-dip edge of kinematic locking and the location of episodic tremor and slip in Cascadia. These results highlight the importance of using realistic material properties when estimating the pattern of locking on megathrusts.

How to cite: Chong, J. H. and Lindsey, E.: Improving geodetic constraints on subduction zone coupling using accurate physics-based models with variable elastic properties , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5733, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5733, 2026.

EGU26-6624 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

Stress regimes analysis in Northeast India, Indo-Burma Ranges: Stress field implications based on Moment Tensor solution data 

Ravi Ranjan, Mohd Shahabuddin, and William Kumar Mohanty

The Northeast India plate boundary is a globally significant convergence zone where the Indian, Eurasian, and Burmese plates interact. This area comprises two tectonic regions: the Himalayan collision zone in the north and the Indo-Burma Ranges to the east. Numerous major earthquakes have struck this region, such as the 1897 Shillong event (Mw ≥ 8.1) and 1950 Assam-Tibet earthquake (Mw ≥ 8.6). Despite its high seismicity, a comprehensive depth resolved stress analysis, across the area remains poorly defined. This research fills the gap by performing seismotectonic stress analysis using 377 focal mechanism solutions (Mw ≥ 4.0) between 1950 and 2025 gathered from global earthquake catalogues and major published sources. To identify lateral and vertical variations in the stress field, the study region (85°E-98°E, 13°N-31°N) was spatially subdivided into 21 seismotectonic zones based on seismicity clustering, focal depth distribution, slab geometry, and structural boundaries. The Hardebeck-Michael method is applied for linear stress tensor inversion, resolving fault plane uncertainty by rotational optimization and Mohr-Coulomb instability criteria. Iterative inversion was performed with Shape ratio (R)=0-1 and Friction coefficient (μ)=0.2-0.8, retaining only solutions where misfit angles are less than 45°, ensuring accurate determination of principal stress axes and Maximum horizontal compressive stress (SHmax) directions. The results indicate a N-S compressional stress regime extending from the Eastern Himalayas to the Bengal Basin aligning with the India-Eurasia convergence. This stress state is associated with major tectonic structures including the Main Central Thrust (MCT), the Main Boundary Thrust (MBT), the Dauki Fault, and Brahmaputra Fault. However, the Indo-Burma Ranges show strong depth-dependent stress heterogeneity. Shallow to intermediate depth earthquakes exhibit arc-perpendicular extension (ENE-WSW to ESE-WNW), interpreted as a response to slab pull and upward convex bending of the subducting Indian lithosphere. Deep focus events (>70 km) indicate slab parallel N-S compression, which shows lithospheric shortening within the descending plate rather than solely due to India-Eurasia collision. A separate NE-SW compressional regime appears in the northern Indo-Burma arc and Sagaing Fault region, indicating stress-strain partitioning between Indian, Burmese, and Sunda plates. The clockwise rotation of SHmax along the arc from NNE-SSW in the inner segment to ENE-WSW in the outer foreland supports a transition from dextral strike slip motion to arc-perpendicular shortening. In the Shillong Plateau and Assam Valley, the coexistence of N-S and E-W compression indicates eastward extrusion of a crustal block, consistent with geodetic measurements and borehole breakout results. The results indicate that the stress regime is influenced not only by India-Eurasia convergence, but also by slab geometry, crust-mantle interaction, and block extrusion processes. These insights will be helpful for seismic hazard assessment and tectonic modelling in one of the most seismically active complex convergent plate boundary zones.

How to cite: Ranjan, R., Shahabuddin, M., and Kumar Mohanty, W.: Stress regimes analysis in Northeast India, Indo-Burma Ranges: Stress field implications based on Moment Tensor solution data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6624, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6624, 2026.

EGU26-8420 | Orals | TS3.6

Seeing Japan's Crust in Finer Detail with Ultra-Dense GNSS Networks 

Yusaku Ohta and Miku Ohtate

Monitoring Earth’s surface deformation is fundamental to many areas of geoscience. To support such monitoring, GNSS networks have been deployed worldwide at national and regional scales. In Japan, the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan operates the GNSS Earth Observation Network System (GEONET), a continuous nationwide array that has underpinned a wide range of Earth-science advances. However, the typical spacing of GEONET stations can limit our ability to resolve deformation signals with short spatial wavelengths.

Over the last decade, Japanese mobile network operators have also constructed their own GNSS reference-site networks, primarily to improve positioning services. Ohta and Ohzono (Earth, Planets and Space, 2022) evaluated the SoftBank Corp. network from the perspective of crustal deformation monitoring. With more than 3,300 sites, about 2.5 times as many as GEONET, the network offers an exceptionally dense sampling of the Japanese islands. Their study showed that, with appropriate quality control, private-sector GNSS data can provide robust information for geodetic applications.

Building on these efforts, the Graduate School of Science at Tohoku University, together with SoftBank Corp. and ALES Corporation, launched an academic–industry consortium, “the Consortium to Utilize the SoftBank Original Reference Sites for Earth and Space Science”, to facilitate geoscientific use of SoftBank GNSS observations. Results obtained through this framework demonstrate the value of ultra-dense GNSS coverage for capturing diverse deformation processes, including aseismic deformation in the Noto Peninsula (Nishimura et al., Sci. Rep., 2023), coseismic slip associated with the 2024 Noto Peninsula earthquake (Yamada et al., EPS, 2025), and afterslip off western Sado Island (Ohtate et al., EPS, 2025). The same dense coverage is also enabling unusually detailed characterization of interseismic strain accumulation across Japan (Ohtate et al., in revision). In addition, a comprehensive assessment of the accuracy of the underlying coordinate time series has been conducted, demonstrating that the quality of the daily coordinates from GEONET and the SoftBank network is nearly equivalent (Ohta and Ohtate, EPS, 2026).

In this presentation, we summarize these recent outcomes and discuss how ultra-dense GNSS networks can expand the scope and resolution of crustal deformation research.

Acknowledgments: The SoftBank's GNSS observation data used in this study was provided by SoftBank Corp. and ALES Corp. through the framework of the "Consortium to utilize the SoftBank original reference sites for Earth and Space Science".

How to cite: Ohta, Y. and Ohtate, M.: Seeing Japan's Crust in Finer Detail with Ultra-Dense GNSS Networks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8420, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8420, 2026.

EGU26-8897 | Posters on site | TS3.6

Assessing small-scale Surface Deformation zones in Europe 

Benjamin Männel and Cornelis Kreemer

Dense GNSS station networks and derived highly accurate 3D velocities offer the potential to image small-scale surface deformation fields. The robustness and sensitivity of the applied algorithm are crucial for the reliable detection of local and potentially small horizontal or vertical deformation zones. Based on a multivariate median estimation of strain rate and plate rotation, the imaging approach R3DI (Robust 3D Imaging) enables robust estimation, with the achieved spatial resolution dependent solely on the density of the station network and the local strain rate.

In this contribution we will discuss the impact of significance tests applied to the second invariant of the strain rate tensor and to the dilatational rate. The achievable spatial resolutions will be tested using synthetic deformation patterns (checkerboard tests) and real GNSS velocity fields in Europe. In a second step, the optimal grid spacing as trade-off between surface deformation recovery, density of the GNSS station network, and computational costs will be investigated.

How to cite: Männel, B. and Kreemer, C.: Assessing small-scale Surface Deformation zones in Europe, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8897, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8897, 2026.

EGU26-11881 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

Tectonic stress estimates for Europe through Bayesian inversion of GNSS velocities 

Renato Gutierrez Escobar and Rob Govers

Natural stress magnitudes are a basis for informed decisions on the safety of underground activities, but they are incompletely constrained. As natural stresses are the consequence of tectonic processes, a physically consistent force model of the entire Eurasian lithosphere is used to constrain the intraplate stress field based on observed GNSS velocities.

We consider forces due to lateral gradients in gravitational potential energy, tractions by bounding plates, and mantle convective tractions. Our thin sheet model includes variable lithosphere thickness, major fault zones and viscoelastic geological provinces. We use a Metropolis-Hastings algorithm to sample fault resistive shear tractions, slip rates, viscosities and magnitudes of driving and resistive tractions.

Our median model fits observed velocities well in many regions. Trench suction along the Ryukyu and Hellenic forearcs in conjunction with resistive shear tractions on the Makran, Himalayan, Sumatra, Philippine and Nankai megathrust reproduce the complex observed velocities in these regions. However, significant misfit remains in other regions. Fault slip rakes and rates agree with observations along most fault zones. The satisfactory fit in Western Europe can be attributed to plate boundary tractions from Nubia convergence.

Some model parameters are well constrained. Low resistive shear traction rates (<3 MPa/m) are obtained for faults involved in the clockwise velocity rotation of the East Himalayan Syntaxis (Xianshuihe, Kunlun and Sagain). Higher resistive shear traction rates (>8 MPa/m) are estimated for faults that accommodate the India-Eurasia convergence (Karakorum, Main Pamir, and Altyn Tagh).

The median model matches maximum horizontal compressive directions from the World Stress Map fairly well. It shows high maximum shear stresses (50 MPa) in the Pannonian-Aegean-Anatolian region and Fennoscandian shield. Contrasting lithospheric thicknesses between the East European Craton and western Europe result in a stress contrast. Low maximum shear stresses (10 MPa) are estimated in the Pyrenees region, Ligurian-Provençal basin, Northern Apennines, Armoriscan massif, and the Massif central.

How to cite: Gutierrez Escobar, R. and Govers, R.: Tectonic stress estimates for Europe through Bayesian inversion of GNSS velocities, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11881, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11881, 2026.

EGU26-12465 | ECS | Orals | TS3.6

Bayesian inference of interseismic coupling along the East Anatolian Fault using geodetic data 

Emile Denise, Romain Jolivet, Volkan Özbey, Paul Dérand, and Angélique Marck

Historically, the East Anatolian Fault Zone (EAFZ) has regularly produced MW ~ 7 earthquakes, but has also occasionally ruptured in MW ~ 8 events. After a century without any significant earthquake, the MW 6.8 Elazığ (24 Jan. 2020), MW 7.8 and MW 7.6 Kahramanmaraş (6 Feb. 2023) events occured in a new sequence of major earthquakes. Understanding the recurrence pattern of earthquakes in this complex fault network, as well as assessing seismic hazard and strain accumulation in the region, requires careful estimation of the spatial distribution of interseismic coupling (defined as the degree of locking of a fault between earthquakes) along the EAFZ. Previous attempts focus on restricted segments of the fault system or did not include all available geodetic data.

We use GNSS and InSAR interseismic velocity fields to derive a map of interseismic coupling along the EAFZ applying the linear elastic block modelling framework. The GNSS velocity field is a combination of previous compilations (Ergintav et al., 2023; Özbey et al., 2024). We obtained InSAR velocities by postprocessing time series computed by the FLATSIM initiative (Thollard et al., 2021), to remove coseismic signals and seasonal oscillations. We use a Bayesian approach to invert for interseismic coupling to carefully quantify associated uncertainties and assess the minimum complexity required for the block model.

We find that eastern Anatolia mostly behaves as a unique block with slip rates standing out of uncertainties for a limited number of identified active faults. The portions of the EAFZ that ruptured during the Elazığ and Kahramanmaraş earthquakes are strongly locked during the interseismic period, as expected. The inferred locked asperities are also consistent with evidence for large historical earthquakes. To the north, the EAFZ is mostly weakly coupled and exhibits shallow creeping segments that delimit the northern boundaries of the 2020 and 2023 ruptures. As creeping segments may be related to the initiation and termination of seismic ruptures, it is crucial to estimate these sections precisely to fully assess the earthquake potential of a fault.

How to cite: Denise, E., Jolivet, R., Özbey, V., Dérand, P., and Marck, A.: Bayesian inference of interseismic coupling along the East Anatolian Fault using geodetic data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12465, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12465, 2026.

EGU26-13054 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.6

Block Kinematics and Interseismic Coupling of Major Subduction Systems in the Central Mediterranean 

Riccardo Nucci, Enrico Serpelloni, and Alberto Armigliato

The Mediterranean is a broad continental deformation zone at the junction between the African and Eurasian plates, where plate convergence is accommodated by distributed faulting, subduction, and transform systems associated with significant seismic and tsunami hazard. Despite the rapid densification of GNSS networks, how plate motion is partitioned into elastic strain accumulation versus aseismic deformation across this region remains unresolved or largely debated, particularly along offshore subduction interfaces, such as the Hellenic and Calabrian subduction zones, and the Dinarides-Albanides thrust front. We present a new regional kinematic block model constrained by an integrated horizontal GNSS velocity field obtained by merging multiple solutions to achieve dense, homogeneous spatial coverage. We implement three-dimensional geometries of the subduction interfaces and thrust systems within a unified block-model framework, allowing surface velocities to be jointly inverted for rigid block rotations, fault slip rates, volcanic deformation, and interseismic coupling (IC), enabling a regional-scale assessment of where elastic strain accumulates along major plate-boundary structures. The model is more detailed in the southern Adriatic and Ionian domains and across the Calabrian and Aegean arcs, including the Albanides–Dinarides margin. We present a first attempt toward a synoptic mapping of interseismic coupling for the Central Mediterranean, providing new insights into strain buildup and associated seismogenic potential of the involved structures. Low but non-zero coupling is inferred along the Hellenic subduction zone beneath Crete, while higher coupling patches are identified along the Cephalonia Transform Fault, and locally along the Albanian and Montenegrin coasts. These regions represent zones of enhanced elastic strain accumulation with implications for future earthquake and tsunami potential. IC along the Calabrian subduction zone is also investigated; however, its spatial distribution remains weakly constrained due to the lack of offshore geodetic observations. Our results highlight the critical role of the poorly defined Nubia–Apulia plate boundary in controlling block kinematics, strain partitioning, and coupling patterns in the Calabrian subduction zone.

How to cite: Nucci, R., Serpelloni, E., and Armigliato, A.: Block Kinematics and Interseismic Coupling of Major Subduction Systems in the Central Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13054, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13054, 2026.

EGU26-13446 | ECS | Orals | TS3.6

Extension of Tian Shan along a nascent shear zone 

Qi Ou, John Elliott, Yasser Maghsoudi, Chris Rollins, Milan Lazecky, and Tim Wright

Our understanding of the dynamics of mountain belt growth is hampered by the lack of high-resolution kinematic observations spanning entire orogenic belts. This is particularly the case for the structurally complex and nascent Tian Shan plateau. Here we use 8 years of Sentinel-1 data across 2 million square kilometres of the Tian Shan to show that the mountain range is extending along its strike, predominantly by shearing along a newly identified northeast-trending distributed shear zone. This zone is conjugate to the range strike but aligned with fast axes of shear-wave splitting measurements and a band of strike-slip earthquakes. We interpret this broad zone of shear be resulting from the rotation of the indenting Tarim Basin, facilitated by the conjugate strike-slip components on numerous basin-bounding faults with favourable strikes. The present-day vertical deformation of Tian Shan results from a mix of tectonic, climatic, and anthropogenic forcings, with uplift of the highest peak facilitated by thrust along a south-dipping Nalati fault that could be promoted by deglaciation.

How to cite: Ou, Q., Elliott, J., Maghsoudi, Y., Rollins, C., Lazecky, M., and Wright, T.: Extension of Tian Shan along a nascent shear zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13446, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13446, 2026.

The Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT) is a strongly coupled continental megathrust that accommodates India-Eurasia convergence and drives the largest seismic hazard across the Himalayan arc. Existing geodetic coupling models broadly agree that the shallow MHT is highly locked, but they make conflicting inferences about (i) the downdip extent and sharpness of the locking-creep transition and (ii) along-strike segmentation, differences that largely reflect assumed block kinematics, inversion regularization, and the frequent neglect of time-dependent lower-crustal and mantle deformation. Given these divergent inferences, key questions remain about which portions of the fault interface are truly locked and whether viscous flow beneath the Himalaya-southern Tibet systematically biases geodetic coupling estimates. We re-evaluate MHT interseismic coupling by inverting GNSS baseline length-change rates for the depths of the upper and lower locked boundaries, using a physically constrained, boundary-based inversion that permits non-stationary locking by gradual erosion of locked areas through creep-front propagation, represented by negative stressing rates (Johnson & Sherrill, 2026 in prep.). Using interseismic GNSS velocities from Lindsey et al. (2018) and a viscoelastic earthquake-cycle model, we invert for the locked-zone boundaries, spatially variable interseismic creep, and creep-front-driven stress-drop rates along the locked-zone edges. We couple this physics-regularized kinematic locking model to a viscoelastic earthquake-cycle framework to capture interseismic stress redistribution by Maxwell relaxation in the lower crust and upper mantle. Uncertainties and epistemic tradeoffs are quantified with Bayesian MCMC and a 20-model ensemble spanning published block-kinematic configurations and viscosity structures (10¹⁹-10²¹ Pa·s). Across the ensemble, coupling is consistently concentrated above mid-crustal ramp-flat transitions, with robust locking to ~15–20 km depth, most strongly between ~77° and 86°E, and limited evidence for significant locking below ~20 km. Lower viscosities favor shallower, narrower locked zones, whereas higher viscosities permit deeper and wider locking. The non-stationary creep-front models better reproduce observed baseline rates than a stationary locking model (reduced χ² ≈ 1.17 vs. 1.58) and predict peak creep rates near the downdip edge of locked asperities, where seismicity is concentrated. These results present a physically grounded interseismic coupling model with quantified uncertainties that refines Himalayan seismic moment budgets. The inferred locked zone accumulates moment at ~ 5-15*1019 N·m/yr, consistent with the long-term potential for an Mw>9 earthquake on a 1000-year recurrence interval, and delineates persistently locked segments, particularly in western Nepal, capable of hosting future great megathrust ruptures.

How to cite: Acharya, D., Johnson, K., and Sherrill, E.: Non-Stationary Locked-Boundary Inversions for the Main Himalayan Thrust: Creep-Front Propagation and Viscoelastic Stress Redistribution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13954, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13954, 2026.

EGU26-14372 | Posters on site | TS3.6

Non-stationary Creep Modeling on the Northern California Fault Systems  

Kaj Johnson and Durga Acharya

Fault creep along Northern California strike-slip faults is widespread but strongly variable in space and time. This heterogeneity complicates seismic-hazard models that assume steady interseismic coupling derived from kinematically smoothed slip inversions. Commonly used steady-state, stress-controlled creep formulations (e.g., Johnson et al., 2022) assume stressing rate is either zero or positive and tend to favor gradual spatial creep rate variations and therefore do not easily represent abrupt locking-creep transitions. This is a problem for capturing abrupt changes in creep rate due to creep fronts intruding into the locked zone, generating locally negative stress-rate changes. Independent observations and physical arguments suggest that transitions from locked to creeping behavior can be sharp, for example, through progressive asperity erosion. Here, we apply the asperity-erosion, non-stationary asperity inversion framework of Johnson and Sherrill (2026) to jointly estimate interseismic creep rates and distributions of locked asperities on the central San Andreas, Hayward, and Maacama faults. We integrate GNSS velocities and surface creep rates from InSAR, creepmeter records, and alignment array measurements, following the observational dataset used by Johnson et al. (2022). Fault geometry is represented with triangulated dislocation surfaces in an elastic half-space and evaluated using a backslip formulation. Physics-regularized constraints on locking-stress evolution allow for creep fronts to erode locked regions through time. The models reproduce the observed along-strike variability in surface creep rates and fit the GNSS-derived velocities with residuals generally below 3 mm/yr. Compared with steady-state approaches, the non-stationary inversion resolves larger locked areas and quantifies their uncertainties, consistent with recent applications of similar physics-regularized frameworks in subduction and continental collision environments (Acharya et al., 2026, in prep.; Johnson & Sherrill, 2026, in prep.). Interseismic creep varies widely with depth along strike, reaching more than 30 mm/yr on actively creeping sections of the Central San Andreas faults. At the same time, we resolve discrete embedded eroding asperities that persist at depths of roughly 10-20 km on the Hayward and Central San Andreas faults. These asperities show high locking probabilities (>0.8) and host localized slip-deficit accumulation that is low across most creeping reaches but increases to about 20-30 mm/yr within locked patches and near segment transitions. On the Hayward Fault, our results indicate a persistent central low-slip patch accompanied by enhanced shallow creep to the north, consistent with mixed locked-creeping behavior. By explicitly mapping where and how slip deficit concentrates within dominantly creeping fault systems, this approach refines moment-deficit estimates relative to steady-state creep models. 

How to cite: Johnson, K. and Acharya, D.: Non-stationary Creep Modeling on the Northern California Fault Systems , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14372, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14372, 2026.

EGU26-14539 | ECS | Orals | TS3.6

Quantifying plate interface coupling in the Mexican subduction zone from InSAR and GNSS using Bayesian inversion methods 

Islam Touzout, Mathilde Radiguet, Erwan Pathier, Thea Ragon, Vladimir Kostoglodov, and Ekaterina Kazachkina

The Mexican subduction zone, characterized by intense tectonic activity, constitutes a natural laboratory for investigating the mechanisms controlling seismic-cycle dynamics. This margin has experienced both large, devastating earthquakes (e.g., Michoacán 1985 ; Tehuantepec 2017) and frequent episodes of slow slip. Quantifying interseismic coupling along the subduction interface is therefore essential to better understand the interaction between seismic and aseismic processes and to refine seismic hazard assessment models.

In this study, we establish an interseismic coupling map over nearly 1000 km of the Mexican subduction margin using six years of geodetic observations (2015–2022). Our analysis relies on the joint integration of GNSS velocities from 72 carefully selected stations and ten Sentinel-1 tracks (descending andascending) covering the subduction zone from Jalisco to Oaxaca. Velocity maps derived from FLATSIM (ForM@Ter LArge-scale multi-Temporal Sentinel-1 InterferoMetry) processing were corrected for coseismic offsets, cleaned of non-tectonic signals, and referenced to GNSS interseismic velocities. To reduce noise and computational cost while preserving essential information, the InSAR data were spatially downsampled.

The resulting interseismic velocities were then used as input for a joint coupling inversion.The inversion is performed within a Bayesian framework (AlTar/CATMIP) and relies on a forward model of dislocations in a homogeneous elastic medium, with a 3D subduction interface discretized into triangular elements. Data uncertainties are incorporated through the covariance matrix, enhancing the robustness of the results. This probabilistic approach, applied for the first time to this study area, allows exploration of the model space and estimation of both the most probable coupling distribution and its posterior uncertainties.

The results reveal strong and well-constrained coupling in the Jalisco and Michoacán regions, indicating high seismogenic potential. In contrast, coupling in the Guerrero and Oaxaca regions is more heterogeneous and locally appears negative over the observation period, due to the presence of recurrent slow-slip events and post-seismic deformation, whose transient contributions may exceed the plate-convergence rate.

How to cite: Touzout, I., Radiguet, M., Pathier, E., Ragon, T., Kostoglodov, V., and Kazachkina, E.: Quantifying plate interface coupling in the Mexican subduction zone from InSAR and GNSS using Bayesian inversion methods, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14539, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14539, 2026.

It is well established that we can estimate the spatially continuous 3D velocity field of the Earth’s surface by combining InSAR and GNSS. One notable example is the VELMAP1 approach which solves for the surface 3D motions in addition to reference frame alignment parameters and topography-correlated atmospheric noise. With this 3D surface velocity model, it is then a trivial step to convert to a strain map containing the spatial details of tectonic processes. One key challenge for our community is to extend such strain analysis as a function of time. This is because we know that tectonic velocities change significantly over human observable timescales, especially after moderate to large earthquakes and sometimes during interseismic periods.

In this EGU 2026 contribution, I will be showing the progress made in characterizing continental surface strain as a function of time by applying trajectory models2 and a variation of the VELMAP approach to time series of InSAR displacements and GNSS coordinates. InSAR displacements come from the multi-interferogram time series processing of the European Ground Motion Service3, while the GNSS coordinates come from the European Plate Observing System GNSS community (EPOS-GNSS4).

 

References:

[1] Wang, H. and Wright, T.J., 2012. Satellite geodetic imaging reveals internal deformation of western Tibet. Geophysical Research Letters, 39(7).

[2] Bedford, J. and Bevis, M., 2018. Greedy automatic signal decomposition and its application to daily GPS time series. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 123(8), pp.6992-7003.  [https://github.com/TectonicGeodesy-RUB/Gratsid]

[3] European Ground Motion Service: Basic 2019-2023 (vector), Europe, yearly. European Union's Copernicus Land Monitoring Service information, https://land.copernicus.eu/en/products/european-ground-motion-service/egms-basic (Accessed on 15.01.2026). DOI: doi 10.2909/7eb207d6-0a62-4280-b1ca-f4ad1d9f91c3

[4] Fernandes, R., Bruyninx, C., Crocker, P., Menut, J.L., Socquet, A., Vergnolle, M., Avallone, A., Bos, M., Bruni, S., Cardoso, R. and Carvalho, L., 2022. A new European service to share GNSS Data and Products. Annals of Geophysics, 65(3), p.DM317.

How to cite: Bedford, J.: Tracking tectonic strain changes over time using InSAR, GNSS, and trajectory models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15224, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15224, 2026.

EGU26-18409 | Posters on site | TS3.6

Loading rate changes following megathrust earthquakes explored with viscoelastic models 

Mathilde Radiguet, Juliette Cresseaux, Bertrand Lovery, Marcos Moreno, and Anne Socquet

Viscoelastic relaxation following large subduction earthquakes is known to last from years to decades, and affect the interseismic loading rate up to hundreds of kilometers in the trench perpendicular direction. Post seismic relaxation also generates a rotation pattern close to the edges of the ruptured asperity. Recently, several observations reported an accelerated loading rate coeval with megathrust ruptures, at along-trench distances from the epicenter of hundreds of kilometers.

Proposed models involved so far viscoelastic relaxation in the mantle wedge and the oceanic mantle, as well as a weak oceanic LAB layer. However those models often fail to explain simultaneously the amplitude and the spatio-temporal patterns of the observations.

Here, we perform 3D viscoelastic models of post seismic relaxation and explore a range of structural and rheological settings to investigate the mechanisms responsible for the complex loading variations observed. The tested scenarios include a Burgers rheology, viscosity contrasts between the continental and oceanic mantles, a weak LAB, and a low-viscosity layer overlying the subducting slab.

The relevance of these different models is evaluated by comparing their predictions with geodetic observations following several large earthquakes along the Chile–Peru subduction zone, allowing us to assess to assess the relative importance of the proposed mechanisms.

How to cite: Radiguet, M., Cresseaux, J., Lovery, B., Moreno, M., and Socquet, A.: Loading rate changes following megathrust earthquakes explored with viscoelastic models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18409, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18409, 2026.

EGU26-21446 | Posters on site | TS3.6

Exploring tectonic strain accumulation and release patterns in the Pamir region using Sentinel-1 InSAR data 

Robert Zinke, Sabrina Metzger, Claudio Faccenna, Giorgio Gomba, and Lisa Mollinnier

The Pamir Range in Central Asia accommodates a significant portion of deformation resulting from the ongoing collision of India with Eurasia. The region hosts active faults that are fast-slipping and geomorphically well-expressed, and that have witnessed large- and moderate-magnitude earthquakes during the instrumental period. For example, the Vakhsh and Darvaz faults that bound the Pamir to the north and west, respectively, are characterized by some of the fastest slip rates in continental Asia (> 10 mm/year during Holocene time). Several large-magnitude earthquakes have been recorded within the Pamir, including the 1911 M 7.7 Sarez Lake and 2015 M 7.2 Sarez/Murghab earthquakes. These features and events present a natural laboratory in which to test fundamental questions regarding the nature of strain accumulation and release at collisional plate boundaries. Yet the region remains under-explored from both ground-based and remote sensing perspectives due to its relative inaccessibility, steep terrain, and seasonal changes in snow cover. In this study, we use 7 years of Copernicus Sentinel-1 satellite radar interferometry (InSAR) data processed using a combined permanent scatterer (PS) and distributed scatterer (DS) approach. This approach is more robust in the Pamir ranges where areas of low coherence (e.g., due to snow) can lead to errors in the timeseries displacement measurements.

We use the ground surface velocity maps (averaged over the 7-year observation period) computed from the InSAR data to explore tectonic strain accumulation and release patterns. Spatial patterns of deformation will better constrain the kinematics and relative activity of different faults in the region. Comparison of the geodetic data to paleoseismic earthquake records and offset geomorphic features will provide insights into the temporal behavior the fault network. These combined datasets will address questions including: What portion of the India-Eurasia strain budget is accommodated on mapped, throughgoing tectonic structures such as the Vakhsh and Darvaz faults? What effects have recent, large-magnitude earthquakes (e.g., along the Sarez-Karakul fault system) had on the interseismic strain accumulation rates of surrounding faults? Have the faults experienced significant changes in strain accumulation and release rates over time, as indicated by discrepancies between geodetic and geologic slip rates?

How to cite: Zinke, R., Metzger, S., Faccenna, C., Gomba, G., and Mollinnier, L.: Exploring tectonic strain accumulation and release patterns in the Pamir region using Sentinel-1 InSAR data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21446, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21446, 2026.

EGU26-22101 | ECS | Orals | TS3.6

Consistency between a Strain Rate Model and the ESHM20Earthquake Rate Forecast in Europe: insights for seismic hazard 

Bénédicte Donniol Jouve, Anne Socquet, Céline Beauval, Jesus Piña Valdès, and Laurentiu Danciu

Most national and international seismic regulations require quantifying seismic hazard based on probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA) methods. The probabilities of exceeding ground-motion levels at sites of interest over a future time window are determined by combining a source model and a ground-motion model. Earthquake catalogs, merging instrumental and historical data, are usually used to establish earthquake recurrence models. Although these catalogs extend over several centuries, the observation time windows are often short with respect to the recurrence times of moderate-to-large events and in some regions the recurrence models can be weakly constrained.

In the present work, we take advantage of two new studies conducted at the scale of Europe: the latest release of the probabilistic seismic hazard model for Europe (ESHM20, Danciu et al. 2021); and the strain rate maps computed by Piña-Valdés et al. (2022). Our objective is to test the compatibility between the ESHM20 model and the geodetic dataset from a moment comparison perspective, examining how geodetically-observed deformation relates to seismic strain release.

We computed the seismic and geodetic moment distributions, as well as the overlap between them in polygons, called source zones, defined in ESHM20. We assume that an overlap higher than 35% indicates compatibility between the two models.

Our results show that in areas characterized by high activity, such as the Betics, the Apennines, the Dinarides, and the eastern Mediterranean, the moment rates derived by both methods are generally compatible. In these regions, the different spatial scales between geodesy and seismicity can trigger local incompatibility, but this effect can be neglected with the use of wider zones.

However, areas characterized by low to moderate activity show different behavior. In the Fennoscandia source zones affected by GIA, the two models are not compatible. In the rest of intracontinental Europe, the compatibility between the two models depends on whether they are well-constrained or not.

These findings contribute to understanding what portion of tectonic deformation results in earthquakes across different tectonic contexts, and how spatial scale and data constraints affect this assessment.

 

How to cite: Donniol Jouve, B., Socquet, A., Beauval, C., Piña Valdès, J., and Danciu, L.: Consistency between a Strain Rate Model and the ESHM20Earthquake Rate Forecast in Europe: insights for seismic hazard, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22101, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22101, 2026.

The Büyük Menderes Graben (BMG) is a major E-W-oriented extensional basin in Western Anatolia, which exhibits along-strike variability. Yet, the factors controlling its internal asymmetry and the dominant boundary fault remain unresolved, mostly because previous studies of the BMG lack a three-dimensional perspective. This study integrates 2D seismic reflection data, well-log information, and 3D structural modeling between Aydın and Kuyucak to reassess the kinematic evolution of the graben.

Seismic reflection data reveal a distinctly asymmetric basin infill geometry, where early syn-rift deposits form clear wedge geometries and onlap patterns directed toward the southern graben-bounding fault, indicating that accommodation was primarily created along the southern margin. Overlying units show draping, subtle rollover structures, and thickening toward the south, further supporting continuous activity on the southern boundary fault throughout basin development, resembling a rift-climax system tracts described in the literature for half-grabens. The stratigraphic architecture and fault-sediment relationships observed on the N-S seismic sections are consistent with sandbox experiments and conceptual models depicting how major listric faults control the evolution of extensional basins.

A key outcome of this study is the recognition of a second control on basin asymmetry: a series of transverse, consistently east-dipping normal faults with dominant fault polarity is imaged on E-W seismic lines across the BMG. These structures generate localized depocenters, divergent reflection patterns, and westward-increasing thickness trends associated with progradational sediment input. When combined with GPS and InSAR results, both of which indicate a westward increase in extension rates across the BMG, the transverse faults are interpreted as the structural response to spatially variable extension, accompanied by a delta progradation throughout basin evolution.

The apparent symmetry observed on 2D seismic sections is primarily the result of the activation of high-angle normal faults along the northern margin during the Quaternary, which locally produced a more symmetrical basin infill geometry. The 3D structural model, on the other hand, further demonstrates that the basin deepens toward the southern boundary fault, whereas the northern fault retains its irregular geometry and limited subsidence. Geodetic slip-rate modeling also favors a north-dipping, active structure, aligning with the southern boundary fault. These observations suggest that the low-angle normal fault on the northern margin, commonly referred to as the Büyük Menderes Detachment Fault, is a relic structure of an earlier extensional phase, predating the formation of the current basin.

Overall, stratigraphic geometries, structural characteristics, and geodetic data converge on a coherent conclusion: the BMG evolved through multi-phase extension, dominated by the southern boundary fault, while transverse east-dipping faults and delta progradation enhanced internal basin asymmetry. These results refine the current understanding of rift evolution and faulting history in Western Anatolia and emphasize the role of spatially variable extension in shaping extensional basins.

Keywords: Eastern Mediterranean tectonics, Büyük Menderes Graben, extensional basin evolution, seismic reflection data, normal fault kinematics, active deformation.

How to cite: Oğuz, R., Kaymakcı, N., and Uzel, B.: Asymmetric Basin Evolution and Fault Kinematics in the Büyük Menderes Graben (Western Anatolia): Insights from 2D Seismic Reflection Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-602, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-602, 2026.

EGU26-1084 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Multistage back-arc extension, basin tectonics and normal faulting in the eastern Mediterranean 

Onur Şencer, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Ömer Bodur, and Özge Dinç Göğüş

Geodynamic models have been used to explore the controlling factors for rift and supradetachment basin formations. For the latter, a large (kms) scale (detachment) low angle normal shear zone accommodate the extension and an array of normal faults grow in various geometries and scales. Within the exception of few studies, extension velocities imposed on the lithospheric margins are considered to be constant throughout the model evolution.  Nevertheless, this parameter can vary  based on regional geodynamic factors, for example, during the lifetime of back-arc basins. Here we explore,  how different speed functions can describe the extension rate and influence the tectonic deformation patterns within the lithosphere. ASPECT mantle convection models are used with varying speed functions, such as Vx = constant, linear, logarithmic, and parabolic. Namely,  2D approach provides a simple and focused way to study extension without adding extra complexity where models predict varying speed functions can change stress, the amount of lithosphere thinning, ductile-brittle high strain regions, and the overall deformation patterns. For example, the asymmetric nature of basin architecture can be transformed into symmetric style where both basin margins are controlled by rotating normal faults along horizontal axis. This condition is more favorable with logarithmic change in speed function.  This study offers a simple first step toward understanding characterics of extension and basin tectonics in the eastern Mediterranean where trench retreat in the Aegean has accelerated from 1.7 cm/yr to 3.2 cm/yr during the last approximately 20 Ma.

How to cite: Şencer, O., Göğüş, O. H., Bodur, Ö., and Göğüş, Ö. D.: Multistage back-arc extension, basin tectonics and normal faulting in the eastern Mediterranean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1084, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1084, 2026.

EGU26-1446 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

New Magnetotelluric Study of the East Anatolian Fault Zone and Malatya Fault in Türkiye 

Xiangyu Sun, Lingqiang Zhao, Binali Bilal Beytut, Peng Su, Taylan Sançar, Zhanyu Wei, Cengiz Zabcı, Feng Shi, and Yuxin Bao

The East Anatolian Fault Zone and Malatya Fault are located in eastern Türkiye and are among the most seismically hazardous faults in the region. After the 2023 M7.8  Kahramanmaraş/Pazarcik earthquake, the seismic risk in this area has further increased. We conducted magnetotelluric surveys in this region and obtained a profile containing 33 magnetotelluric measurement points. The apparent resistivity in this region is generally low, with an average apparent resistivity of several tens of Ωm, and shows little variation with depth. We used phase tensor technology to obtain two-dimensional deviation and phase tensor rotation invariants along the profile, and the conclusion is that the structure shows strong two-dimensionality in most areas along the profile, with only local areas showing strong three-dimensionality. We used the ModEM ADORA (Liu et al., 2024) magnetotelluric three-dimensional inversion system with arbitrary data rotation angles to invert the data, where the data maintained the acquisition direction and the grid was rotated 60°. This method can reduce the number of grid divisions, which not only saves computational time but also reduces the underdetermination of inversion. After calculations using different parameters and different grid divisions, we selected the result with better fitting degree and ultimately obtained the electrical structure profile across the Malatya Fault and East Anatolian Fault. The electrical structure reveals that the East Anatolian Fault is underlain by a boundary between high and low resistivity bodies. The formation of the Malatya Fault zone may be related to low-resistivity structures from deep sources that may be associated with fluids or high-temperature materials.

How to cite: Sun, X., Zhao, L., Beytut, B. B., Su, P., Sançar, T., Wei, Z., Zabcı, C., Shi, F., and Bao, Y.: New Magnetotelluric Study of the East Anatolian Fault Zone and Malatya Fault in Türkiye, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1446, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1446, 2026.

EGU26-2322 | Orals | TS3.7

Geophysics Based Ideas on Structural Setting of 2023 Seismic Sequence SW South Carpathians, Romania 

Lucian Besutiu, Luminita Zlăgnean, and Anca Isac

RATIONALE

Following the 2023 February 6 disastrous earthquakes (Mw7.8 & Mw 7.7) that struck southern & central Türkiye, and northern & western Syria, an intense crust seismic sequence was triggered southwestern South Carpathians, Romania.

Hosted by Gorj County, north Târgu Jiu city, its capital, the sequence started with twin unusual high magnitude earthquake (ML5.2 on February 13, and ML5.7 on February 14) and continued for months with more than 4000 seismic events.

The area was known for quasi-continuous seismic activity, but surprising was the unusual intensity of earthquakes triggered and time extent of the sequence, which had a strong societal impact by scarring the population and provoking economic loss.

The paper brings some geophysics inferred ideas about tectonic circumstances for triggering and maintaining the long-lasting seismic sequence.

 

METHOD

Objective of the undertaken research was twofold: (i) to outline the overall tectonic setting of the area were the seismic sequence occurred, and (ii) to unveil more detailed structural circumstances of the largest magnitude earthquakes.

The approach was mainly based on gravity data mining and interpretation. In a first step, various filters were applied to the complete Bouguer anomaly, like low pass filtering and upward continuation for separating regional and local effects, horizontal and vertical gradients, for emphasising the faults track, etc.

In a second step, more advanced data processing, including inversion and forward modelling was conducted especially in areas of interest.

For better interpreting/understanding the obtained results, data provided by other geophysical investigations, like e.g., geomagnetism, seismology, or seismic tomography were also employed.

 

RESULTS

Among the main results it is worth mentioning: (i) overall location of seismicity along the northern flank of the westernmost segment of Getic Depression; (ii) earthquakes triggering mainly along faults striking WSW – ENE, as crustal echoes of the lithospheric contact between Moesian microplate (MoP) and Intra-alpine microplate (IaP); (iii) some earthquakes were also triggered along sub meridional faults.

The most active area appears as a highly fractured zone, overlaying an underground mass excess with high magnetisation, echoed by a gravity high associated with a geomagnetic anomaly. The basalt dykes cropping out in the area suggest the in-depth presence of mafic/ultramafic intrusive. The assumption is supported by the existence of a hidden high velocity body unveiled by seismic tomography.

 

FINAL REMARKS

To conclude, the unusual intense earthquakes of the Gorj sequence were likely triggered by a sudden increase of tectonic stress in the area due to an acceleration of the Black Sea microplate acting upon MoP. The NW push was WSW redirected along the transform contact between MoP and IaP. Among the others, the strain activated a seismic prone structure generated by the magmatic “diapirism” of an in-depth hidden mafic intrusive, likely belonging to Severine Nappe. The uplift of the mafic dome, had intensively fractured its crustal roof, creating a complex fault system along which earthquakes were triggered.

How to cite: Besutiu, L., Zlăgnean, L., and Isac, A.: Geophysics Based Ideas on Structural Setting of 2023 Seismic Sequence SW South Carpathians, Romania, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2322, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2322, 2026.

Basins along continental strike-slip plate-boundary fault systems, such as the N-trending Dead Sea Fault (DSF), are key sites of strain partitioning, where regional motion is accommodated by a variable combination of along-strike slip, across-fault shortening or extension, and vertical movements. The Sea of Galilee (Kinneret) basin developed along the DSF in three main tectonic stages: it was first hijacked from the predecessor NW-trending Irbid rift during the Early Miocene, then deepened and reorganized as a pull-apart basin during the Late Miocene–Pliocene while being filled by local sedimentation, marine incursions and extensive basaltic infill, and since the Early Pleistocene it has evolved into a breached basin, expressed today as a narrow, asymmetric E–W-trending syncline bounded by the Eastern Marginal Fault and the Kinneret Diagonal Fault within a generally transpressive DSF regime.

​Our new seismological analysis focuses on the mechanical behavior of the Kinneret Western Border Fault and its role in internal basin deformation. Using a high-resolution, relocated earthquake catalogue for 2018–2024 and Principal Component Analysis of hypocentral clusters, the study resolves active fault geometries and slip tendencies at unprecedented detail. Long-term seismicity aligns with the regional N–S tectonic grain (mean strike 187.5°, dip 59.2°), consistent with the broader DSF strike-slip kinematics, whereas the 2018 Sea of Galilee swarm activated a localized, rotated, low-angle bypass structure (strike 221.3°, dip 33.8°) that departs markedly from the conventional steep fault-plane models for the diagonal system. Existing tectonic models that infer a single, steeply dipping (~70°E) diagonal fault capture only part of the active structure; a nearly constant seismogenic thickness of ~150 m in both the long-term and swarm datasets indicates that the KWBF–diagonal system is better described as a volumetric damage zone rather than a discrete surface. These results demonstrate a structural decoupling between steady-state plate-boundary deformation and transient swarm dynamics and provide a new seismological framework for how evolving internal architectures of a breached pull-apart basin facilitate strain partitioning and ongoing development along the Dead Sea Fault.

How to cite: Nelaev, A., Lellouch, A., and Schattner, U.: Evolving architecture of a breached pull-apart basin: seismological constraints on the Kinneret Western Border Fault along the Dead Sea Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3192, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3192, 2026.

Two very strong earthquakes and many aftershocks spread havoc in southeast Turkey in February 2023, and indeed southeast Anatolia is an intricate geological region where two tectonic processes coincide, creating a complicated setting of the motion of the crustal blocks of the Levant and Anatolia and generating strong seismic activity. GPS measurements show clearly that not only does Anatolia move westwards, but that the velocity of that displacement increases westwards from ca. 20 mm/year to more than 30 mm/year. Furthermore, in the Aegean domain the offset changes its direction to southwest and its velocity continues to increase. It seems that the tectonic cause of Anatolia's westwards migration is the rollback of the Hellenic subduction front, which exerts a significant on the entire Anatolian crustal block. Geological and geophysical evidence for that pull is abundant throughout the Aegean domain. The Anatolian migration is accommodated along its large boundary faults, the North and East Anatolian Faults, which are very active seismically and converge in eastern Anatolia near Karliova.

The tectonics of the Levant is dominated by the Levant (Dead Sea) Rift and its mountainous flanks and oblique extension, where the left-lateral displacement along it is ca. 5 mm/yr. The tectonic regime there is dominated by the northwards propagation of the edge of the Red Sea incipient ocean, which changes its direction of advancement from northwestwards to northwards south of Sinai Peninsula. It seems that the Levant Rift ends its northwards propagation in north Lebanon, where its orientation shifts to the NE and the large fault is split into at least five secondary faults, and ends with the north edge of the Lebanese Baqa'a and its double mountain chains.

The tectonics of the terrain between the Lebanese mountainous domain and the East Anatolian Fault is controversial. Many researchers propose linkage of the Levant Rift and the East Anatolian Fault, which are both sinistral fault systems, by connecting the Yammouneh Fault, one of the Lebanese faults splay, with Masyaf Fault, a southwards extension of the East Anatolian Fault, and the eastern boundary of El-Ghab Rift.

Overall, it seems that the complex structural geology of the domain of eastern Anatolia and northern Levant reflects the complicated tectonics of the closure of NeoTethys Seaway, where the convergence of the Arabian segment of the African and the Eurasian tectonic plates take place. The eastern branch of the Seaway evolved into a collision zone between Arabia and the Bitlis-Zagros mountain belt, whereas subduction still prevails along the western NeoTethys between Africa and Europe. While the old ocean approaches its terminal stages, a new ocean is emerging in the Red Sea. The tectonic displacements indicate that the concept of "escape tectonics" seems poorly supported.

How to cite: Mart, Y.: The Hellenic subduction and the tectonics of the 2023 earthquakes of SE Anatolia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3543, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3543, 2026.

EGU26-3752 | Orals | TS3.7

Stress field and megathrust strength in the Western Hellenic subduction system: insights from the 2024 Mw 5.9 Strofades earthquake sequence, Greece. 

Gian Maria Bocchini, David Essing, Ioanna Nikolopoulou, Armin Dielforder, Marco P. Roth, Anna Serpetsidaki, Efthimios Sokos, Christos P. Evangelidis, and Rebecca M. Harrington

An offshore M5.9 earthquake occurred on 29 March 2024 in the western Hellenic subduction system near the Strofades Islands. The mainshock and the related sequence occurred during a period of unusually dense onshore broadband seismic station coverage across the Peloponnese, including a temporary station deployment operated by the Ruhr University Bochum, Adria Array temporary stations, and permanent stations from the Hellenic Unified Seismological Network. Here we present a study of the seismotectonic context of the M5.9 sequence that capitalizes on the dense coverage and its fortuitous location to investigate subduction dynamics in the region, including interactions between the upper and lower plates and the strength of the megathrust. We compute high-resolution hypocentral locations and focal mechanism solutions that point to an association of the earthquake sequence with the lower plate. The absence of triggered upper-plate seismicity, together with contrasting stress orientations between the overriding and subducting plates, are consistent with a decoupled stress field between the two plates and suggest a weak megathrust interface.
Our analysis of the distribution of high-precision hypocenter locations and focal mechanism solutions is coupled with an interpretation in the context of local stress field and previously mapped intraslab faults. High-precision hypocenter locations and focal mechanisms indicate rupture on a NNE–SSW striking, left-lateral strike-slip fault within the slab. P- and T-axis focal mechanism orientations differ from those of nearby interplate and upper-plate earthquakes, consistent with the intraslab nature of the sequence and indicative of a distinct stress regime. The stress pattern of the M5.9 earthquake sequence lies approximately orthogonal to the NE–SW shortening direction of the upper plate and reflects arc-parallel shortening within the lower plate, similar to that observed for intermediate-depth earthquakes in the Aegean. The orientation of the intraslab stress field relative to the plate margin suggests that slab rollback controls the intraslab stress regime by reducing horizontal compressional stress normal to the margin. Our results suggest that previously mapped intraslab faults, if present, play a limited role in controlling the intraslab stress field, and that a weak megathrust limits interaction and stress transfer between the lower and upper plates in the shallow portion of the subduction zone.

How to cite: Bocchini, G. M., Essing, D., Nikolopoulou, I., Dielforder, A., Roth, M. P., Serpetsidaki, A., Sokos, E., Evangelidis, C. P., and Harrington, R. M.: Stress field and megathrust strength in the Western Hellenic subduction system: insights from the 2024 Mw 5.9 Strofades earthquake sequence, Greece., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3752, 2026.

EGU26-3828 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Monitoring of Crustal Movements in the Eastern Gulf of Gokova with GNSS Measurements 

Muhammed Turgut, Uğur Doğan, Seda Özarpacı, Alpay Özdemir, Efe Turan Ayruk, İlay Farımaz Ayruk, Binali Bilal Beytut, and Aynur Dikbaş

As a result of the interaction between the Anatolian Plate and the African Plate to the south, and the Aegean microplate to the west, a complex extensional regime has developed across Western Anatolia. This dynamic tectonic framework causes significant crustal deformation and temporal strain accumulation, particularly along the active Fethiye–Burdur and Gökova fault zones. The Aegean region is considered one of the most seismically active areas worldwide. The Mw 6.7 earthquake that occurred within the Gulf of Gökova on 21 July 2017 represents one of the most recent destructive earthquakes in the region. Despite the pronounced seismic activity in this area, no active fault zones are mapped in this section of the Turkish Active Fault Map. The absence of mapped active structures has highlighted the necessity of detailed investigations into the region’s present-day tectonic deformation characteristics. Within the scope of this study, the aim is to determine crustal deformation and temporal strain accumulation based on Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) observations. For this purpose, the region has been monitored since 2021 through campaign-based GNSS measurements and data obtained from continuously operating GNSS stations.

In the study, GNSS data has been collected from 6 CORS-TR (Turkey National Permanent GNSS Network- Active) stations, 7 Turkey National Fundamental GNSS Network (TNFGN) sites, and 16 campaign GNSS sites. Four GNSS campaign measurements were carried out between 2021 and 2024 .The GNSS data were processed to generate coordinate time series and estimate station velocities using with Bernese GNSS Software version 5.4. Based on these results, a statistically significant velocity field was identified across the region, with horizontal southwest-directed velocities ranging from a maximum of 41.67 ± 1.76 mm/yr to a minimum of 22.05 ± 2.95 mm/yr. Also, temporal strain accumulation in the region was computed using a finite element method . The results indicate that the eastern and western parts of the region are characterized by different strain fields, and that the amount of strain has increased and expanded spatially over the observations.

This work is supported by TUBITAK CAYDAG Project Number 121Y300

How to cite: Turgut, M., Doğan, U., Özarpacı, S., Özdemir, A., Ayruk, E. T., Farımaz Ayruk, İ., Beytut, B. B., and Dikbaş, A.: Monitoring of Crustal Movements in the Eastern Gulf of Gokova with GNSS Measurements, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3828, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3828, 2026.

EGU26-4896 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Ground Penetrating Radar Survey Revealing Pre-Event Earthquakes on the 6 February 2023 Mw 7.5 Elbistan Earthquake Surface Rupture, Türkiye 

Peng Su, Cengiz Zabcı, Taylan Sançar, Xiangyu Sun, Honglin He, Yunfan Zhang, and Yunying Zhang

Earthquakes occasionally rupture faults that were not previously recognised, raising the question of whether such structures represent newly formed faults or previously unidentified active faults with a history of repeated rupture. This debate is particularly relevant for the NE-striking eastern section of the 6 February 2023 Mw 7.5 Elbistan Earthquake rupture, referred to as the Yeşilyurt Fault. Unlike the better-known Çardak Fault to the west, the Yeşilyurt Fault was not mapped in the official Active Fault Map of Türkiye and lacks data regarding its paleoseismicity and morphotectonic evolution.

In this study, we introduce a novel, high-resolution, non-invasive, and relatively time- and cost-effective approach to investigate the rupture history at a surface-rupture site of the Elbistan earthquake. The method integrates unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)–based topographic surveying with ground-penetrating radar (GPR) profiling across an earthquake surface rupture site. UAV surveys yielded high-resolution topography that reveals multiple surface-rupture strands. Some strands coincide with pre-existing topographic scarps, whereas others cut across bedrock highs. We then acquired three GPR profiles near the scarped area: two profiles crossing two parallel surface-rupture strands, and one profile oriented parallel to and between them (Figure 1). The GPR data image multiple pre-event offsets and deformation within late Quaternary sediments, indicating that the Yeşilyurt Fault at the study site has hosted multiple large earthquakes prior to the 2023 Elbistan event. Together, the UAV and GPR results suggest that the Yeşilyurt Fault at this location is a previously unidentified active fault segment rather than a newly generated fault. This study demonstrates the utility of combining UAV-based topography and GPR imaging for evaluating the activity and rupture history of “hidden” faults that emerge during large earthquakes.

Figure 1.  (a) Surface ruptures of the 2023 Mw 7.6 Elbistan earthquake superposed on the UAV DSM-based topographic map. Surface ruptures are constrained based on our field investigation and the UAV-derived DSM and orthoimage. The black rectangle shows the location of the study site (b and c). (b) The topographic map shows the study site and the locations of the GPR lines. Arrows show the GPR survey directions. (c) Geological interpretation of (b). 

How to cite: Su, P., Zabcı, C., Sançar, T., Sun, X., He, H., Zhang, Y., and Zhang, Y.: Ground Penetrating Radar Survey Revealing Pre-Event Earthquakes on the 6 February 2023 Mw 7.5 Elbistan Earthquake Surface Rupture, Türkiye, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4896, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4896, 2026.

EGU26-4914 | Orals | TS3.7

The Hellenic Subduction System: A revised view of its structure and kinematics 

Vasiliki Mouslopoulou, John Begg, Alina Polonia, Andy Nicol, Tim Reston, Simone Cesca, and Luca Gasperini

The Hellenic forearc is one of the least understood forearc systems globally due to limited availability of high-resolution imagery of its deep structure, especially landward of the Mediterranean Ridge. This has resulted to ambiguity about the origin of its key structural and morphotectonic features, the location of the active subduction trench, the relationship between different fault types within its forearc and to whether this system is capable of generating large (M>8) subduction earthquakes and associated tsunamis. Here, we combine widely spaced high-resolution multichannel seismic-reflection profiles with seafloor morpho-bathymetric analysis and earthquake moment-tensors to investigate the structure and post-Messinian (0–5.9 Ma) fault kinematics in the Hellenic forearc. Our work provides, for the first time, strong evidence for the presence of active thrust faults along the inner forearc, from the backstop of the Mediterranean Ridge to the Hellenic Trough. Many thrusts are imaged to splay from the subduction plate-interface, at depths of 6–8 s (TWT), while normal and strike-slip faults commonly form in the upper-crust landward of the 20 km slab-isodepth, and abut against thrust hanging-walls. Observed fault patterns are supported by seabed fault-scarp analysis and are consistent with the distribution and kinematics of earthquake moment-tensors. Analysis of fault-intersections at depth suggests that forearc kinematics are characterized by a fault hierarchy, in which normal and strike-slip faults commonly form as secondary structures above active thrusts, accommodating oblique plate-convergence. Our analysis also highlights a structural division of the forearc into landward- and seaward-verging thrusts, similar to that recorded along the Cascadia and Sumatra margin, with the Hellenic troughs accommodating their geometric transition. Thrust vergence variability likely results from the northward steepening of the underlying plate-interface and marks the across-forearc transition from aseismic to seismic-slip. These significant revisions in understanding of the Hellenic Subduction System and its upper-plate structures are expected to flow into future geodynamic, hydrocarbon-exploration and earthquake hazard models.

How to cite: Mouslopoulou, V., Begg, J., Polonia, A., Nicol, A., Reston, T., Cesca, S., and Gasperini, L.: The Hellenic Subduction System: A revised view of its structure and kinematics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4914, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4914, 2026.

Coseismic displacement and deformation patterns near seismic rupture zones are crucial for understanding earthquake rupture processes, fault behaviors, and the relationship between active faults and topographic features. Recent advances in sub-meter accuracy digital terrain data derived from high-resolution optical satellite stereo imagery have provided new geodetic approaches for differential topography studies, including three-dimensional coseismic surface displacement field acquisition. This study generated pre- and post-earthquake topographic point cloud data (average point density: 1.2 points/m²) using GF-7 satellite stereo imagery, and obtained a 25-meter spatial resolution three-dimensional coseismic surface displacement field in the near-fault area of the 2025 Dingri, Tibet Mw7.1 earthquake through a window-based (50-meter window size) Iterative Closest Point (ICP) algorithm. The results reveal that the surface rupture of the Dingri earthquake was dominated by vertical displacement with insignificant horizontal motion, consistent with the focal mechanism solutions and field investigations of the rupture zone. The vertical displacement distribution extracted from ICP displacement field exhibits a "high central section with decreasing values northward and southward" pattern, reaching a maximum vertical displacement of ~2.5 m near the central Nixiacuo area, decaying to ~1.2 m northward and ~0.5 m southward. Compared with field measurements, ICP-derived vertical displacements generally exceed field observations, indicating that surface dislocation markers only reflect the minimum coseismic displacement along the rupture zone. The ICP method quantifies cumulative displacement across hundreds of meters on both sides of the rupture, providing critical constraints for studying shallow slip deficit mechanisms and facilitating future investigations of fault slip transfer processes from deep to shallow levels. This study demonstrates the unique advantages of new high-resolution optical satellites in long-term pre-seismic data accumulation, rapid post-seismic data acquisition, and comprehensive coverage of surface deformation zones. These capabilities enable timely construction of near-field 3D coseismic displacement fields, allowing differential topography techniques to measure 3D coseismic deformation in areas inaccessible for LiDAR surveys. This approach effectively compensates for limitations of conventional InSAR and sub-pixel correlation techniques near surface ruptures, where large deformation gradients or insensitivity to vertical displacements often cause measurement failures.

How to cite: Wei, Z., Ma, C., and Deng, Y.: Coseismic Surface Displacements Derived From High-Resolution GF-7 Stereogrammetric Terrain Differencing: The 2025 Tibet Dingri Mw7.1 Earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6289, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6289, 2026.

EGU26-6526 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Host-Rock Rheology Controls Seismicity Segmentation along the Red River Fault 

zekang Yang, lei Zhang, Sylvain Barbot, and qingbao Duan

The Red River Fault (RRF) presents a significant seismological paradox: its northern segment hosts frequent large earthquakes, whereas its southern segment remains largely quiescent despite similar tectonic loading. To investigate how fault-zone structure and frictional properties govern this seismicity contrast, we sampled outcrops where mylonitic shear zones host multiple layers of cataclasite within the fault core. In the northern segment, the mylonites are dominated by quartz and feldspar, by contrast, the mylonite is hornblende rich in the southern segment. Hydrothermal friction experiments are then conducted on the sampled mylonite and cataclasite fault rocks at 100–500 °C, fluid pressures of 50–100 MPa, and confining pressures of 150–200 MPa, approximating upper-midcrustal earthquake nucleation conditions.

Our experimental results reveal a critical rheological contrast between the two segments. In the aseismic southern segment, the fault core cataclasites exhibit a transition to velocity weakening at intermediate temperatures; however, the surrounding mylonitic host rocks display stable velocity strengthening behavior across nearly the entire temperature range. Conversely, mylonitic host rocks from the seismically active northern segment exhibit unstable velocity weakening behavior over a wide temperature range of 150–500°C. Based on the architecture of the fault and numerical modeling, we propose that the frictional stability of the surrounding mylonitic rock acts as a rheological gate for earthquake propagation. In the south, although nucleation may initiate within the relatively weak and velocity-weakening cataclasite (μ=0.53-0.62), the contrasting stable response of the surrounding mylonite acts as a damper, arresting rupture and suppressing large events. In the north, the unstable velocity-weakening nature of the host rock promotes a "runaway" rupture process, amplifying nucleation events into large earthquakes. These results challenge models focused only on single fault rock properties, highlighting how host-rock rheology modulates seismic hazard along major continental faults.

How to cite: Yang, Z., Zhang, L., Barbot, S., and Duan, Q.: Host-Rock Rheology Controls Seismicity Segmentation along the Red River Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6526, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6526, 2026.

EGU26-7442 | Posters on site | TS3.7

Sea-Land correlation of the main seismogenic faults shaping the central Ionian Islands, Greece 

Manon Puisne, Maria Filomena Loreto, Cesar R. Ranero, Athanassios Ganas, Valentina Ferrante, and Paraskevi Nomikou

The central Ionian Islands exhibit the highest seismogenic potential in the central Mediterranean and have therefore been extensively studied to mitigate the seismic risk. Despite numerous investigations over recent decades, the actual seismic hazard affecting the islands remains incompletely constrained.

The work was carried out within the framework of the internship project “Hazard assessment combining geological, geophysical and seismological data offshore Ionian Islands, Greece”, and aims to investigate the location and geometry of the main faults in the offshore area between Zakynthos and Cephalonia and to correlate offshore faults segments identified in the marine domain with their onshore counterparts. Particular attention is given to the Ionian Thrust and to the fault that was responsible for the destructive August 1953 earthquake that devastated Cephalonia Island.

We analyzed a comprehensive geophysical dataset acquired during two marine geophysical surveys: IONIANS 2022 (CNR project) and POSEIDON 2023 (Eurofleet+ project). The dataset includes three high-resolution and two high-penetration multichannel seismic profiles, several kilometers of TOPAS sub-bottom profiles and high-resolution swath bathymetry. Seismic interpretation allowed us to map the Ionian Thrust from south of Zakynthos to Cephalonia and its intersection with the main trace of the Cephalonia strike-slip fault. In the offshore domain, the Ionian Thrust is expressed as west-verging anticline with local transcurrent component. Moreover, in the narrow marine passage between Cephalonia and Zakynthos, we identified a west-verging anticline with transcurrent component which aligns well with the hypothesized epicenter of the 1953 earthquake.

Our interpretations were integrated and compared with existing geological and geophysical models from the literature, enabling the identification of the offshore continuations of fault systems responsible for several historical and instrumental seismic events. By further integrating offshore data with the onshore geology of both islands, we achieved a robust land–sea correlation of the dominant tectonic structure in the area, namely the Ionian Thrust.

Finally, the combined analysis of newly-identified tectonic structures and regional seismicity, allowed us to draw the position and trend of the seismogenic fault source of the 1953 earthquake as well as the active segments of the Ionian Thrust. These new findings strongly improve our understanding of the tectonic framework of the marine area surrounding the central Ionian Islands and provide crucial input for future seismic hazard modeling and risk assessment in this area of the western Hellenic Arc.

How to cite: Puisne, M., Loreto, M. F., Ranero, C. R., Ganas, A., Ferrante, V., and Nomikou, P.: Sea-Land correlation of the main seismogenic faults shaping the central Ionian Islands, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7442, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7442, 2026.

EGU26-7615 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Lithospheric Density Structure of the Aegean Region Constrained by 3D Gravity Modelling 

Zsuzsanna Vatai, Magdalena Scheck-Wenderoth, Judith Bott, Mauro Cacace, and Ritske S. Huismans

The region of the Aegean Sea, shaped by the subduction of the African plate beneath the Eurasian plate with the intervening Aegean microplate, is one of the most actively deforming areas in the Mediterranean. This system is characterized by strong lateral variations in its tectonic style, where extension in the back arc region has created rifts like the Rifts of Corinth and Evia; volcanic activity in the Southern Aegean Active Volcanic Arc is associated with active subduction along the Hellenic trench; the lateral ocean–continent transition along the Western Hellenic subduction lead to strain partitioning and the formation of Kefalonia strike slip zone, and major strike-slip deformation accommodated by the North Anatolian transform fault associated with west ward motion of Anatolia. Past and ongoing tectonics resulted in a highly heterogeneous lithospheric configuration, which controls the degree of deformation and its localization as reflected by variations in physical properties of the lithosphere.

We present an updated 3D geological model of the Aegean Sea and Hellenic subduction system, which we use to map first-order rheological contrasts in the lithosphere, being constrained by available seismic and seismological observations and by 3D gravity modelling. The model integrates several datasets, including the EPcrust crustal model, available seismic sections, mantle and crustal tomographies, and observed gravity anomalies. The S- and P- wave velocities of the tomographic datasets were converted to densities in order to consistently map 3D density variations in the lithospheric mantle and the crust.

Preliminary gravity modelling results show a good match with observed gravity, fitting regional trends in gravity anomalies across the study area. In a second stage, we carried out a sensitivity analysis to investigate in more details the effect of lithospheric density variations. Specifically, we focused on the transitional domain between the Moho and the upper mantle, where uncertainties in converting seismic velocities to density remain significant.

The model provides new constraints on density variations in the lithosphere, which, especially with the derived strength and temperature contrasts, help to better understand how deformation localizes in the Aegean region.

How to cite: Vatai, Z., Scheck-Wenderoth, M., Bott, J., Cacace, M., and Huismans, R. S.: Lithospheric Density Structure of the Aegean Region Constrained by 3D Gravity Modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7615, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7615, 2026.

The marine area between Chios, Ikaria and Samos islands occupies a key position within the Central Aegean extensional domain, encompassing the offshore segments of several active fault systems, including those responsible for the 30 October 2020 Mw 7.0 Samos earthquake. Despite the significant seismic and tsunami hazards, the subsurface stratigraphic architecture and three-dimensional geometry of active faults in this region are remain poorly constrained. The aim of this study is to present preliminary results of an integrated seismic stratigraphic and structural interpretation based on five multichannel seismic reflection profiles (total length ~364 km) obtained by MTA and reprocessed into SEG-Y format. The study also includes previously published seismic profiles reinterpreted within a tectonostratigraphic framework, as well as high-resolution bathymetric data compiled from SHOD and international sources.

The seismic profiles indicate the presence of a prominent acoustic basement, overlain by a thick Neogene-Quaternary sedimentary succession, characterised by laterally continuous to locally progradational reflector packages. The basement surface exhibits significant relief, featuring a complex network of high-angle normal faults that form a system of asymmetric basins and structural highs. Above the basement, the sedimentary architecture displays a variety of reflector geometries, including parallel, divergent and clinoform patterns. These patterns are indicative of deltaic or slope-related depositional architectures, particularly in the western part of the study area.

Both newly processed and literature seismic sections demonstrate a predominant orientation of NW-SE and NE-SW-striking faults, which is consistent with the present-day Aegean extensional regime. Several of these faults clearly intersect with the shallowest reflectors, thereby indicating Quaternary to potentially present-day activity. The North Ikaria Basin, in particular, exhibits notable fault-controlled subsidence, expressed by thickened sedimentary packages and cumulative vertical displacements. These observations suggest the presence of long-lived tectonic control on basin development.

The three-dimensional correlation of fault planes and key stratigraphic reflectors enables the characterization of the geometry of the basin-bounding structures, and the evaluation of their possible kinematic linkage with the onshore fault systems of western Anatolia and the eastern Aegean islands. The integrated interpretation highlights the role of segmented normal fault systems in controlling basin architecture, sediment distribution patterns and accommodation space during the Neogene-Quaternary evolution of the Central Aegean back-arc domain.

These results provide a first-order seismic stratigraphic and structural framework for the offshore region between Chios, Ikaria and Samos. This framework is the result of the combination of newly reprocessed and legacy seismic datasets, which have been evaluated within a consistent tectonic context. The ongoing analysis will form the basis for detailed fault mapping, thickness distribution and kinematic reconstructions, and will contribute to a better understanding of the relationship between active crustal deformation and seismic hazard in the eastern Aegean region.

How to cite: Elitez, İ.: Active Tectonic Framework and Seismic Stratigraphy of the Central Aegean: The Chios-Ikaria-Samos Marine Area, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8235, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8235, 2026.

Modeling crustal deformation induced by fault slip is a fundamental problem in structural geology and seismology. However, the challenges of data sparsity and spatial discontinuity impose significant limitations on conventional forward and inverse methods, often resulting in low computational efficiency and limited accuracy. Although AI-based approaches such as Physics-Informed Neural Networks (PINNs) and Physics-Encoded Finite Element Networks (PEFEN) offer new solutions for sparse-data problems governed by physical laws, their underlying assumption of spatial continuity conflicts with the inherent displacement discontinuities of fault-slip fields. To address this limitation, we propose a novel method—the Split-Node Physics-Encoded Finite Element Network (SN-PEFEN)—which integrates the node-splitting mechanism into the PEFEN framework. By explicitly encoding spatial discontinuities into the nodal topology during mesh preprocessing, SN-PEFEN not only overcomes the theoretical limitations of existing PEFEN models in handling discontinuous fields but also maintains the physical consistency. We apply SN-PEFEN to perform forward and inverse modeling of deformation fields induced by complex fault slip in both 2D and 3D heterogeneous media. For a model with over one million degrees of freedom, the forward simulation achieves over 40× speedup compared to traditional FEM (~1,800s vs. 42s), while maintaining comparable accuracy. In inverse modeling, the solution converges within only 100 iterations, with a total runtime of approximately 2,000 s, demonstrating high computational efficiency. This method establishes a new high-efficiency paradigm for analyzing complex discontinuous deformation in geomechanics, offering promising applications in multi-fault system analysis and fault-slip inversion. Furthermore, SN-PEFEN facilitates rapid, physics-based assessments for emergency seismic response and disaster management, while laying the groundwork for next-generation data-driven regional earthquake early warning systems.

How to cite: Tao, W. and Yang, X.: Split-Node Physics-Encoded Finite-Element Network for Forward and Inverse Modeling of Fault-Slip-Induced Discontinuous Deformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8731, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8731, 2026.

The Xiadian Fault is a major active fault along the northern margin of the North China Plain and is widely considered to be closely associated with the 1679 Sanhe–Pinggu M8.0 earthquake. Compared with its central and southern segments, the northern segment of the Xiadian Fault—particularly within the Pinggu area—remains poorly constrained in terms of its spatial distribution, strike variations, and geometric characteristics, which hampers a comprehensive understanding of its tectonic role and seismic hazard implications. In this region, thick Quaternary deposits extensively cover the surface, and the fault is predominantly concealed, resulting in a lack of clear and continuous surface expressions and increased uncertainty in fault identification and precise location.

In this study, the northern segment of the Xiadian Fault is investigated based on a systematic analysis of regional geological and tectonic settings, combined with multiple shallow seismic reflection profiles oriented in different directions. The seismic responses of the fault within Quaternary strata are analyzed to constrain its planar location, strike changes, and spatial continuity in the Pinggu area. The geometric features and possible segmentation of the fault are further examined, and the tectonic mechanisms responsible for observed strike deflections are discussed in the context of the regional stress field and inherited basement structures. The results provide new geophysical constraints on the detailed geometry of the northern segment of the Xiadian Fault and contribute to an improved understanding of seismotectonics and seismic hazard assessment along the northern margin of the North China Plain.

How to cite: Sun, J.: Spatial Distribution and Geometric Characteristics of the Northern Segment of the Xiadian Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9590, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9590, 2026.

EGU26-10261 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Slip asymmetry of the Yedisu Segment of the North Anatolian Fault from GPS velocity fields 

Oguzhan Tecel, Huseyin Duman, Bekir Poyraz, Fatih Poyraz, Kemal Ozgur Hastaoglu, Fikret Kocbulut, Yavuz Gul, and Abdullah Kapicioglu

The Yedisu Segment is one of the most significant seismic gaps of the North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ), following the segments located near Istanbul. This segment is approximately 80 km long and has remained seismically quiet for about 242 years. It has the potential to generate an earthquake magnitude of greater than Mw 7. The Tercan and Nazımiye dextral faults are located in the vicinity of the Yedisu Segment and exhibit similar strikes of approximately N70–75°W. In this study, slip rates and locking depths of the Yedisu Segment and its neighboring Tercan and Nazımiye faults are estimated by inverting GNSS-derived Eurasia-fixed velocity fields using elastic half-space dislocation models. Velocities from Turkish Real-Time Kinematic GNSS Network (CORS-TR, including a few older stations), Turkish National Fundamental GPS Network (TNFGN), and previously published regional GNSS networks are used, and the inversions are performed using fault-parallel velocity components while accounting for differences in fault strike. Two different forms of elastic half-space dislocation model are tested for the Yedisu Segment: (i) symmetric and (ii) asymmetric fault-slip behavior. The symmetric model yields a Yedisu slip rate of approximately 18.7 mm/yr, while the Nazımiye and Tercan faults contribute only minor deformation to the regional velocity field. The asymmetric model conversely discloses a difference between the south- and north-side of the Yedisu Segment, with slip rates of about 6.5 and 11.9 mm/yr, respectively. The fault slip rate asymmetry correspondes to a ratio of 1.83. The asymmetric model explicits a significantly better fit to the GNSS velocity field than the symmetric approach. Assuming a long-term average slip rate of 18.4 mm/yr, the Yedisu Segment has accumulated approximately 4.45 m of slip deficit over the past 242 years, consistent with the potential for a large, destructive earthquake. These results indicate that the Yedisu seismic gap is highlighting its critical importance for seismic hazard assessment in eastern Türkiye. This research is supported by the TÜBİTAK project No. 124Y204.

Keywords: North Anatolian Fault, Yedisu Segment, GNSS, Fault slip asymmetry, Seismic gap

How to cite: Tecel, O., Duman, H., Poyraz, B., Poyraz, F., Hastaoglu, K. O., Kocbulut, F., Gul, Y., and Kapicioglu, A.: Slip asymmetry of the Yedisu Segment of the North Anatolian Fault from GPS velocity fields, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10261, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10261, 2026.

EGU26-10612 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Neighboring but Different: Linking Ground Motions to Source Properties of the November 2025 Cyprus Doublet 

Savvas Marcou, Taka'aki Taira, Iordanis Dimitriadis, Nikolas Papadimitriou, and Sylvana Pilidou

Tectonically complex areas can give rise to large heterogeneity in source properties, which have a direct impact on observed ground motion. On November 12, 2025, the Eastern Mediterranean island of Cyprus experienced two M5+ earthquakes just 5 hours apart. Initial locations by the Cyprus Geological Survey Department put the two epicenters within 2 km of each other, but 10 km apart in depth.  Moment tensor inversions from long-period waveform data show the first event had a magnitude around Mw5.1, with the second event measured at Mw5.4. However, observed peak ground velocity and acceleration amplitudes were almost indistinguishable between the two events. In this work, we revisit these observations and try to reconcile them using joint analyses of earthquake relocations, moment tensors, observed ground motions, and finite fault modeling. We relocate the events using a non-linear, probabilistic location algorithm and model point source moment tensors, showing the events occurred close in space and at a very similar depth. We derive relative moment rate functions (MRFs) for the two events via empirical Green’s function deconvolution. We find the Mw5.1 shows simple, sub-second duration MRFs. On the other hand, the Mw5.4 exhibits multi-peaked, complex MRFs with pulse durations up to 4 times longer than those of the Mw5.1. This suggests a simple, fast rupture in the first event contrasting with a likely slow, sluggish, and complex rupture in the second. We run finite fault modeling to reconcile observed ground shaking with source properties. Finally, we interpret the ruptures in the context of the highly complex tectonics of the Cyprus arc.

How to cite: Marcou, S., Taira, T., Dimitriadis, I., Papadimitriou, N., and Pilidou, S.: Neighboring but Different: Linking Ground Motions to Source Properties of the November 2025 Cyprus Doublet, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10612, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10612, 2026.

EGU26-11248 | ECS | Orals | TS3.7

Far-field postseismic deformation of the 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake doublet 

Volkan Özbey, Henry Pierre, Romain Jolivet, Sylvain Barbot, Paul Derand, Mehmet Sinan Özeren, Sylvain Michel, Konstantinos Chousinatis, and Semih Ergintav

On 6 February 2023, a major earthquake doublet (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.6) ruptured the Anatolian plate boundary system. The first event occurred on the East Anatolian Fault (EAF), the principal plate-boundary zone between the Arabian and Eurasian plates, and the second ruptured the Çardak fault north of the western termination of the EAF. Continuous GNSS observations acquired in the months following the sequence indicate that deformation is not confined to the near-fault region: GNSS time series reveal substantial changes relative to pre-event interseismic velocities over distances of several hundred kilometers. These deviations extend northward across the North Anatolian Fault toward the Black Sea coast and westward across the Central Anatolian Plateau. Furthermore, seismicity rates appear to have been perturbed at locations far from the rupture area, and early postseismic investigations have suggested a measurable far-field signal, particularly to the west of the main rupture zones. Given the magnitude of the sequence and the dense regional geodetic coverage, this earthquake doublet provides an exceptional opportunity to investigate earthquake-cycle processes and to constrain spatial variations in rheological properties of fault zones and the surrounding lithosphere within an actively deforming tectonic setting.

We characterize the postseismic deformation of the far-field domain spanning from eastern Anatolia to the western Hellenic trench using regional GNSS networks. For each station, we isolate the transient component by removing the secular (interseismic) contribution using interseismic velocity fields estimated from long-duration pre-earthquake time series. We then extract coherent postseismic signals from the GNSS residuals using Independent Component Analysis (ICA) implemented in a variational Bayesian framework. To interpret the recovered far-field transients, we perform forward viscoelastic modeling to evaluate contrasts in crustal and lithospheric structure and rheology, and we test sensitivity to alternative coseismic rupture models derived primarily from space-geodetic constraints employing different strategies. We further examine the role of major far-field tectonic structures, particularly the Hellenic trench to the southwest and the Cyprus arc to the southeast, on the observed deformation patterns. Finally, we assess the relationship between postseismic deformation and seismicity by comparing far-field seismic activity with postseismic strain-rate fields inferred from the GNSS displacements, using the VDoHS (Vertical Derivatives of Horizontal Stress rates) approach.

How to cite: Özbey, V., Pierre, H., Jolivet, R., Barbot, S., Derand, P., Özeren, M. S., Michel, S., Chousinatis, K., and Ergintav, S.: Far-field postseismic deformation of the 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake doublet, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11248, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11248, 2026.

EGU26-11444 | Orals | TS3.7

On the potential seasonality of seismicity along the North Anatolian Fault, Marmara region 

Jorge Jara, Patricia Martínez-Garzón, Muharren Hilmi Erkoç, and Ugur Dogan

Seasonal modulation of seismicity has been reported in several regions worldwide, suggesting that earthquake occurrence may be sensitive to small, time-dependent stress perturbations. Such observations point to a range of hydro-meteorological processes that can generate seasonal stress changes, including variations in groundwater storage, rainfall, snow accumulation and melt, and sea-level fluctuations. Although the associated stress amplitudes are typically small, often of the order of a few kilopascals, they may influence the temporal distribution of seismicity. The mechanical response of faults to such forcings may involve different processes, including elastic loading and unloading, as well as poro-elastic and thermo-elastic effects.

Recently, seismicity associated with an active hydro-thermal system in the eastern Marmara Sea has been shown to respond to temporal variations in sea level. In this setting, sea-level changes induce small vertical loading variations that generate stress perturbations of a few kilopascals, sufficient to modulate seismicity timing in a critically stressed, fluid-rich crust. Here, we extend the study area to examine whether seasonal variations in the Marmara Sea level are associated with seismicity variations across the entire Marmara region, with a particular focus on seismic activity along the North Anatolian Fault Zone.

We analyze seismicity using an earthquake catalog covering the Marmara region for the period 2006–2024. The catalog is declustered using an adaptable Random Forest–based approach to isolate background seismicity and reduce the influence of aftershock sequences. Temporal variations in background seismicity are then examined using Multichannel Singular Spectrum Analysis (MSSA) and Multi-Seasonal Trend decomposition using Loess (MSTL), enabling the identification of independent seasonal components in seismicity rates. The resulting seasonal signals are compared with independent observations of surface loading, including GRACE-derived mass variations and Marmara Sea level changes derived from satellite altimetry and local tide-gauge records. We use these comparisons to assess the mechanisms controlling the seasonal variability observed in the seismicity catalog.






How to cite: Jara, J., Martínez-Garzón, P., Erkoç, M. H., and Dogan, U.: On the potential seasonality of seismicity along the North Anatolian Fault, Marmara region, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11444, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11444, 2026.

The double earthquakes (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.5) that occurred in eastern Turkey on February 6, 2023, caused heavy casualties and economic losses, and significantly altered the regional tectonic stress environment. The Malatya Fault, as a key active structure in the area, has experienced a 2,500-year gap without surface-rupturing large earthquakes, raising concerns about its potential seismic hazard. This study, based on high-precision relocated aftershock data from the Turkish double earthquakes and multi-source geological and geophysical data, precisely constructed the three-dimensional geometric structure of the Malatya Fault and the fault that generated the earthquakes. On this basis, combined with geodetic data constraints, a three-dimensional viscoelastic finite element model of the eastern Turkey region was established. This study aims to quantitatively calculate the coseismic and postseismic viscoelastic relaxation effects of the double earthquakes on the Coulomb stress loading characteristics of the Malatya Fault through numerical simulation methods, and analyze the spatiotemporal distribution patterns of stress along the fault strike and at depth. By integrating the fault's own seismogenic background and tectonic loading environment, a comprehensive assessment of the current seismic hazard of the Malatya Fault is conducted, providing a scientific basis for understanding the stress interaction between faults and regional earthquake prevention and disaster reduction.

How to cite: Li, H.: Numerical Simulation Study on Seismic Hazard of the Malatya Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11516, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11516, 2026.

EGU26-13575 | Posters on site | TS3.7

High-Resolution Seismic Analysis of the Marmara Sea: Microseismic Activity from OBS Data and Nearly-Repeating Earthquakes 

Nilay Basarir Basturk, Hayrullah Karabulut, and Nurcan Meral Özel

The Main Marmara Fault beneath the Marmara Sea constitutes a major seismic gap capable of generating a large earthquake, posing a serious hazard to the region and its surroundings. Consequently, detailed characterization of seismicity and its relationship to fault-zone deformation is essential. One of the primary objectives of this study is to compile a seismicity database for the Marmara Sea covering the period 2014–2016, based primarily on data recorded by ocean-bottom seismometers.

The detected and relocated seismicity reveals distinct spatial and depth-dependent patterns among the Marmara basins. The Tekirdağ Basin is characterized by diffuse seismicity at depths of approximately 7–18 km. In contrast, the Central Basin exhibits a high rate of microearthquake activity between 3 and 15 km depth. The Kumburgaz Basin and the western part of the Çınarcık Basin, show sparse seismicity within depth ranges of 5–19 km and 3–18 km, respectively.

Previously identified repeating earthquakes were searched  using a template-matching approach applied to continuous seismic waveforms spanning a larger time frame of 2008–2021. Clusters of highly correlated earthquakes that occur closely in time or partially overlap are classified as near-repeating events. The Central Basin displays clear signatures of seismic creep, marked by both elevated seismicity rates and the presence of nine near-repeating earthquake clusters. Focal mechanisms of these clusters indicate dominantly strike-slip motion, consistent with the kinematics  of the Main Marmara Fault. Two distinct recurrence patterns are observed among the near-repeaters, representing short-term and long-term repeating behaviors. Slip-rate estimates derived from these clusters vary spatially but are broadly comparable to geodetic slip rates. 

How to cite: Basarir Basturk, N., Karabulut, H., and Meral Özel, N.: High-Resolution Seismic Analysis of the Marmara Sea: Microseismic Activity from OBS Data and Nearly-Repeating Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13575, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13575, 2026.

Natural processes such as tectonic movements, subsidence, erosion, and hydrological variability continuously modify the coastline and basin morphology. Understanding these changes is essential for interpreting the dynamics of coastal and lacustrine systems and their responses to both gradual and sudden events. In this study, basin-scale deformation and environmental dynamics of Lake Golbasi (Adiyaman, Türkiye) were investigated within the East Anatolian Fault Zone (EAFZ), where one of the main fault branches passes directly through the Golbasi district. The Mw 7.8 Kahramanmaras earthquake that occurred on February 6, 2023, caused significant surface deformation, coastline reconfiguration, and localized subsidence, highlighting the strong coupling between tectonic activity and surface processes in the region. Time-dependent ground deformation was monitored using InSAR time-series analysis based on Sentinel-1 C-band SAR data acquired in both ascending and descending geometries and processed through the LiCSBAS framework and the ASF HyP3 cloud-based processing system, covering the period from 2021 to 2025. This temporal coverage allows the investigation of pre- and post-earthquake deformation and coastline changes, as well as their spatial and temporal relationship with the active fault system in the Golbasi Basin. The tectonic interpretation of the observed deformation features was further supported through an evaluation of the orientation and spatial position of the identified surface deformation patterns relative to mapped fault traces, post-earthquake surface ruptures, and the distribution of seismic activity. The Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI) was applied to optical Sentinel-2 imagery to better characterize the basin’s dynamic environmental conditions and to support the interpretation of the observed deformation signals. Seasonal NDWI variations between dry and wet periods were examined to assess changes in water extent and shoreline position. This information was essential for distinguishing surface variability related to hydrological processes from deformation driven by tectonic activity. The integrated analysis reveals a complex interaction between tectonic deformation, seasonal water-level fluctuations, and basin-scale environmental dynamics. These findings improve our understanding of post-earthquake changes in the Golbasi Basin and offer explanations for how fault-controlled lakes and wetlands evolve and gradually stabilize following major seismic events.

How to cite: Uçar, A. and Ergintav, S.: InSAR Time-Series Analysis of Basin-Scale Deformation and Environmental Dynamics in the Golbasi Basin (Adiyaman, Türkiye), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17323, 2026.

Co-seismic deformation in fault damage zones manifests as a combination of localized slip and distributed deformation. Accurately quantifying the ratio between these two components is essential for understanding displacement partitioning and assessing near-fault seismic damage. Focusing on the widespread ruptures caused by the 2023 Turkey-Syria earthquake doublet (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.6), this study utilizes optical satellite geodesy to dissect the deformation characteristics of the East Anatolian Fault Zone. We integrated high-resolution GaoFen-7 orthophotos (0.8 m) and Sentinel-2 imagery to distinguish between on-fault and off-fault deformation. Localized slip was measured by tracing displaced linear markers (e.g., roads, ridges), while the total horizontal displacement field was reconstructed using optical displacement tracking. By comparing total displacement across dense profiles against localized slip, we isolated the distributed component. Results show that for the Mw 7.8 event, 80% of displacement was localized, with 20% distributed across a 203-meter-wide zone. Similarly, the Mw 7.6 event exhibited 17% distributed deformation within a 141-meter-wide zone. Notably, we observe that the spatial heterogeneity of deformation is strongly controlled by the pre-existing geometric complexity of the fault system. These findings provide critical constraints for fault displacement hazard models.

How to cite: xi, X., li, C., li, T., and wei, Z.: Characteristics of Distributed Deformation in the 2023 Turkey Earthquake Doublet Fault Zone Revealed by Optical Geodesy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17537, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17537, 2026.

EGU26-18830 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

Highlights of current activity along EAF-Palu, NAF-Yedisu segments and Karlıova Triple Junction:Following the 2020 (Mw 6.8 Sivrice) and 2023 (Mw 7.8-7.6 Kahramanmaras) earthquakes 

Figen Eskikoy, Semih Ergintav, Taylan Sancar, Alpay Ozdemir, Ziyadin Cakir, Onur Tan, Rahsan Cakmak, Efe Turan Ayruk, Muhammed Turgut, Binali Bilal Beytut, and Ugur Dogan

Recent studies have shown that large earthquakes can induce deformation at distances significantly greater than those predicted by simple elastic half-space models. This observation indicates that regional-scale effects must be considered when assessing post-earthquake deformation and seismic hazard. Several studies have demonstrated that the 6 February 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake doublet (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.6) affected distant regions in addition to the immediately ruptured faults.

Within the scope of our project, supported by TÜBİTAK 1001 (Project No. 123Y350), we investigate the current fault activity and seismic hazard of fault segments located north of the 2020 Mw 6.8 Sivrice earthquake and the 2023 Mw 7.8–7.6 Kahramanmaraş earthquakes. Our approach integrates multidisciplinary datasets, including seismology, geodesy (GNSS, InSAR, and creepmeters), and geology (morphometric analyses). The study area comprises the East Anatolian Fault (EAF)–Palu segment, the North Anatolian Fault (NAF)–Yedisu segment, and the Karlıova Triple Junction (KTJ).

Following the 2020 Mw 6.8 Sivrice earthquake, seismicity increased along several sections of the EAF. Initially, aftershocks were concentrated within the rupture zone and subsequently migrated southwestward, while no significant increase in seismicity was observed along the Palu segment to the north. Approximately three years later, the Kahramanmaraş earthquake sequence (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.6) occurred on 6 February 2023, after which seismic activity expanded over a broad region along the EAF. Compared to the ruptured areas and their immediate surroundings, seismicity remained relatively sparse along the northern sections of the EAF, where our study area is located.

The Palu segment lies adjacent to the NE the Sivrice earthquake rupture zone and forms part of the EAF, whereas the Yedisu segment, located on the NAF, is characterized by a long-term slip deficit and is considered a seismic gap. The Karlıova Triple Junction represents the intersection of the North and East Anatolian faults and exhibits a complex faulting system resulting from active continental collision. Each of these fault segments displays distinct kinematic characteristics and has been affected by the 2020 and 2023 earthquakes to varying degrees.

The current seismicity distribution within the study area (Palu, Yedisu, and KTJ) indicates that earthquake clusters observed prior to these large events remain active, with no anomalous seismic behavior identified to date. Despite the relatively low level of seismicity along the Palu segment compared to the main rupture zones, geodetic observations suggest that its well-known creep velocity has accelerated following the 2020 and 2023 earthquakes. In addition, we investigate the relationship between long-term and present-day geodetic deformation rates, morphological indicators, and slip deficits along active fault branches using continuous and campaign GNSS measurements together with InSAR data. These multidisciplinary datasets, currently under preparation, will be integrated intofault interaction modeling and seismic hazard assessments for the region at the conclusion of the project.

How to cite: Eskikoy, F., Ergintav, S., Sancar, T., Ozdemir, A., Cakir, Z., Tan, O., Cakmak, R., Ayruk, E. T., Turgut, M., Beytut, B. B., and Dogan, U.: Highlights of current activity along EAF-Palu, NAF-Yedisu segments and Karlıova Triple Junction:Following the 2020 (Mw 6.8 Sivrice) and 2023 (Mw 7.8-7.6 Kahramanmaras) earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18830, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18830, 2026.

EGU26-19632 | Orals | TS3.7

Potential interactions between seismicity, fluid behaviours and aseismic deformation in the Western Sea of Marmara 

Jean-Baptiste Tary, Louis Géli, Chastity Aiken, Clement Rayer, Yojiro Yamamoto, Dogan Kalafat, Ali Pinar, and Nurcan Meral Özel

The northern strand of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF) in the Sea of Marmara show a high seismic activity, including the recent Mw 6.2 earthquake of April 23, 2025, situated southwest of Istanbul. This fault zone is also characterized by different mechanical behaviours (i.e., locked vs creeping) and often associated with fluid evidences. In this study, we focus on the western part of the NAF in the Sea of Marmara, where aseismic deformation has often been reported to be at work. We use recordings from two piezometers, three ocean bottom seismometers (OBSs) from INGV, and three OBSs from KOERI, deployed around the Western High and the Tekirdağ Basin, to analyse the seismic activity between October 2013 and August 2014, and study potential links with pore pressure variations, a slow-slip event (SSE) that could have occurred during this period, and a Mw 4.6 earthquake that took place on November 27, 2013.This seismic network is completed by 11 land seismological stations to improve the microseismicity location accuracy.

In total, 2079 events were detected during the recording period, of which 409 events remained after double-difference relocation. We here identify a sequence of 21 highly-similar foreshocks during the week preceding the Mw 4.6 mainshock, aligned along sidewall faults in the Central Basin. This sequence coincides with the possible existence of a several months-long SSE propagating westwards, based on the interpretation of onshore geodetic data and offshore surface sediment pore pressure data. The foreshock occurrence, as well as the timing of the pore pressure variations measured within the fault valley, are compatible with the hypothesis that the modelled SSE impacted first the foreshock-mainshock sequence, and then fluid conditions within the NAF valley at the piezometer locations. Our results demonstrate that the combination of seafloor piezometry and seismology may prove very useful to study interactions between fluids and fault zone deformation, including preparatory phases of earthquakes.

How to cite: Tary, J.-B., Géli, L., Aiken, C., Rayer, C., Yamamoto, Y., Kalafat, D., Pinar, A., and Meral Özel, N.: Potential interactions between seismicity, fluid behaviours and aseismic deformation in the Western Sea of Marmara, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19632, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19632, 2026.

EGU26-20058 | ECS | Posters on site | TS3.7

The Crucial Link Between Sedimentation and the Activity of the Pull - Apart Basins Revealed by Models and Observations Over Aegean-Anatolia 

Ali Koçak, Oğuz Hakan Göğüş, Ömer Bodur, and Can Aslan
Large scale strike slip (transform or transfer) faults are associated with releasing bends that evolve into deep, asymmetric pull-apart basins/rhomb grabens. While kinematics and the geometric characteristics of these basins are well-understood in the context of regional stress field, within the exception of few studies, geological and geophysical constraints are not often compared and contrasted against geodynamic models. Here we investigate the tectonic controls on the formation of several pull apart basins in the Aegean-Anatolia region through integrating high resolution geodynamic models into a large number of geological (structural) data. Specifically, we investigate the evolution of transtensional basins using high-resolution 3D geodynamic models (ASPECT) coupled with a landscape evolution code (FastScape). Model results show that the  development of the transtentional basins over million years are function of several primary factors, including the interaction between pace of sedimentation, and the faulting (shear zone formation). In some cases, especially in the Kocaçay basin of the western Anatolia extended terrane, shallow dipping detachment faults control the supra detachment basin formation where continuous sedimentation of the Miocene deposits (1300 m thick) possibly kept the basin active. Overall, the sediment loading amplifies crustal thinning and this explains the evolution of pull-aparts of the North Anatolian fault, for example Erzincan basin in the east where thick alluvial and lacustrine sedimentary cover is not a passive feature rather control the driver of the basin’s structural persistence.
 

How to cite: Koçak, A., Göğüş, O. H., Bodur, Ö., and Aslan, C.: The Crucial Link Between Sedimentation and the Activity of the Pull - Apart Basins Revealed by Models and Observations Over Aegean-Anatolia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20058, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20058, 2026.

EGU26-20258 | Orals | TS3.7

The 2025 Balıkesir Sındırgı (Türkiye) Mw 6.1 Doublet:  Insights from InSAR and Seismology 

Ahmet M. Akoğlu, Ahmet Ökeler, Mehmet Ergin, Ekrem Zor, M. Cengiz Tapırdamaz, Fatih Sevim, Cem Açıkgöz, Mustafa Koşma, and Adil Tarancıoğlu

The recent 2025 sequence that occurred near Sındırgı, a town in Balıkesir (western Türkiye) started with a Mw 6.1 earthquake on August 10th (Sunday, 19:53 local time) on the westernmost part of the Simav graben. The normal faulting event was initially reported to be on the Sındırgı fault since the epicentre was located along its surface trace. As per the Turkish Active Faults Database, the fault is considered as one of the seven active segments of the Simav Fault Zone. Initial coseismic models calculated using the Sentinel-1 radar images acquired 24 hours after the earthquake revealed that the event could not have occurred on the proposed Sındırgı fault but on an unknown fault either to its south or its north. However, it also became evident that fault plane ambiguity could not be resolved using InSAR alone.

To aid in resolving this ambiguity and to monitor the distribution of the aftershocks TÜBİTAK Marmara Research Center’s Earth Sciences Research Group installed a temporary 16-station seismic network in the area. Using artificial intelligence techniques the spatiotemporal evolution of the seismic activity was determined using >30.000 relocated aftershocks. The seismic data favors the north dipping fault plane which intersects the surface about 7 km south of the Sındırgı fault.

A second Mw 6.1 event took place about two months later on October 27th (Monday, 22:48 local time).  Both InSAR and the aftershocks distribution clearly exhibit that the event had occurred this time on a portion of a known fault to the east of the first mainshock. The coseismic models validate the strike slip dominant nature of the faulting that took place again within a depth range of 5 to 12 km on a ~60° south dipping fault.

The two earthquakes are the biggest to occur along the Simav Fault Zone since the 1970 M7.1 Gediz earthquake. In this study, the spatiotemporal evolution of the sequence will be discussed using both InSAR time series and seismic data as well as the elevated seismic hazard in the region where the activity was still continuing as of January 2026.

 

How to cite: Akoğlu, A. M., Ökeler, A., Ergin, M., Zor, E., Tapırdamaz, M. C., Sevim, F., Açıkgöz, C., Koşma, M., and Tarancıoğlu, A.: The 2025 Balıkesir Sındırgı (Türkiye) Mw 6.1 Doublet:  Insights from InSAR and Seismology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20258, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20258, 2026.

EGU26-20721 | Posters on site | TS3.7

The Active Fault Database of Türkiye: Framework, Methodology, and Ongoing Revisions by the General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA 

Hasan Elmacı, Akın Kürçer, Gözde Altuntaş, Hakan Aydoğan, Ali Atalay Yüce, Hasret Ozan Avcı, Ozan Karayazı, Ahmet Bayrak, Ahmet Rasimcan Öztürker, Çağatay Çal, Oğuzhan Yalvaç, Can Güven, and Selim Özalp

Active fault mapping and fault databases are fundamental components of seismic hazard assessment, land-use planning, and disaster risk reduction in tectonically active regions. The effectiveness of such databases critically depends on their ability to integrate paleoseismological evidence, surface rupture observations, and consistent fault characterization across multiple spatial scales. Türkiye, located within the actively deforming Alpine–Himalayan orogenic belt, provides an important natural laboratory for evaluating how national-scale active fault databases can be systematically updated and improved.
The General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA), the national geological survey of Türkiye, has conducted active fault and paleoseismological investigations since the 1970s. These efforts led to the publication of successive editions of the Active Fault Map of Türkiye, first at a scale of 1:1.000,000 in 1992 and later updated to 1:1.250.000 in 2013 following the 1999 Gölcük (Mw 7.4) and Düzce (Mw 7.2) earthquakes. The 2013 map has since served as the primary reference for seismic hazard studies in Türkiye.
Within the framework of nationwide paleoseismology and crustal research projects, trench-based investigations had been completed by the end of 2025 on approximately 250 faults or fault segments included in the 2013 database. These studies resulted in revised fault activity classifications, updated segmentation models, and the identification of nearly 100 previously unmapped active faults. In addition, major surface-rupturing earthquakes, including the 2020 Sivrice (Mw 6.8) event and the catastrophic 2023 Kahramanmaraş doublet earthquakes (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.6), produced more than 600 km of surface ruptures that were systematically documented and mapped by MTA.
In order to incorporate these new datasets, MTA conducted the “Revision and Improvement of the Active Fault Map of Türkiye Project” between 2022 and 2025. This project integrated paleoseismological data, detailed surface rupture mapping, and 1:25.000-scale active fault maps into a unified digital Active Fault Database. The resulting 1:1,000,000-scale Active Fault Map of Türkiye was generated through the digitization and integration of high-resolution fault data.
This contribution presents the methodological framework, data structure, and revision strategy of the Active Fault Database of Türkiye, emphasizing approaches that are applicable to other tectonically active regions worldwide. The results demonstrate how integrating paleoseismology, earthquake surface ruptures, and multi-scale fault mapping significantly enhances the reliability of active fault databases, with direct implications for seismic hazard assessment, urban resilience, and disaster risk mitigation in regions affected by distributed deformation.

How to cite: Elmacı, H., Kürçer, A., Altuntaş, G., Aydoğan, H., Yüce, A. A., Avcı, H. O., Karayazı, O., Bayrak, A., Öztürker, A. R., Çal, Ç., Yalvaç, O., Güven, C., and Özalp, S.: The Active Fault Database of Türkiye: Framework, Methodology, and Ongoing Revisions by the General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20721, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20721, 2026.

EGU26-2406 | ECS | Orals | SM4.3

Does the Tidal Sensitivity of Tectonic Tremors Constrain Local Stress Orientation? 

Ruyu Yan, Satoshi Ide, Xiaodong Chen, and Heping Sun

The activity of tectonic tremor, which is high-frequency endmember of slow earthquakes, is useful for gaining insights into the physical processes that govern slow slips and geodynamic activities along the plate boundary. While the focal mechanism of tremors is estimated from seismic waveforms, the stress states that trigger tremors are largely unknown in most areas. An exponential relationship exists between tremor rate and tidal shear stress, and the solution for a tidal sensitivity parameter can be determined using the maximum likelihood method. The likelihood function includes stress orientation, which can also be optimized. Therefore, the optimized stress orientation may have relation to their focal mechanism. In this study, we initially present a method for obtaining the optimal stress orientation with a double-couple constraint and illustrate its effectiveness by applying it to tectonic tremors in western Japan from 2004 to 2009. Our results show that, without any geometric constraints, the stress orientations derived from tidal sensitivity do not match those suggested by focal mechanisms. When we limit the analysis to a plane aligned with the local plate interface, however, some of the preferred orientations become consistent with the focal-mechanism solutions. This indicates that tidal sensitivity on its own cannot reliably determine the slip or stress orientations of slow deformation, because fault slip is guided by pre-existing weak planes rather than being free to occur in any direction. This approach introduces a novel perspective for investigating geodynamic processes occurring within active plate boundaries.

How to cite: Yan, R., Ide, S., Chen, X., and Sun, H.: Does the Tidal Sensitivity of Tectonic Tremors Constrain Local Stress Orientation?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2406, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2406, 2026.

Short-term slow slip events (S-SSEs) occur at depths greater than ~30 km along the Nankai subduction zone in southwest Japan. Previous studies have successfully detected these events using GNSS data and characterized their spatial distribution along the subduction interface. However, fundamental questions remain regarding their role in the slip budget: what fraction of accumulated interseismic strain do S-SSEs release, and does their behavior remain stationary over time? Addressing these questions requires resolving the temporal evolution of S-SSE slip patterns — an aspect that has remained largely unexplored.

Here, we analyze nearly two decades of GNSS data to quantify the slip contribution of S-SSEs and to investigate their temporal evolution. To resolve these small-amplitude, short-lived signals, we leverage the exceptional density of the GNSS network (>700 stations) by stacking time series from triplets of nearby stations, enhancing the signal-to-noise ratio. Using tremor and LFE timing to synchronize the detection, we measure offsets before and after each episode and infer local slip rates. By applying this approach across multiple successive time windows, which has not been done in Nankai or other subduction zones, we track how slip patterns evolve through time.

We find that S-SSEs release a significant fraction of accumulated slip within the tremor/LFEs zone (between 40 and 30%, which is consistent with the long-term coupling of 60%). Still, this contribution and the associated spatial slip pattern vary across different time periods. Our results reveal that S-SSE behavior is not stationary: the along-strike slip distribution and slip rates show systematic changes over multi-year timescales. We also observe that S-SSE slip occasionally extends to shallower depths, approaching the base of the seismogenic zone.

These spatio-temporal variations in slow slip provide new constraints on the evolution of interplate coupling and on how stress accumulation in the seismogenic zone may be modulated by deeper slow slip processes.

How to cite: Maubant, L., Itoh, Y., and Kato, A.:  Tracking short-term slow slip along Nankai with GNSS: temporal evolution of slip rate and interaction with the seismogenic zone , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3646, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3646, 2026.

EGU26-4076 | Posters on site | SM4.3

Improvements to Cross-Station Analysis of Tectonic Tremor  

Michael Bostock, Charles Sammis, and Nicolas Perez Estay

Cross-station analysis of tectonic tremor, as introduced by John Armbruster for long (150 s) windows and extended by Allan Rubin to short (4 s) windows, has afforded the highest precision mapping of tremor locations achieved to date. Cross-station locations have been used to a) reveal tremor epicentral distributions over broad (to ~104 km2) areas that are significantly sparser than those portrayed by more commonly used envelope-correlation methods; b) document a variety of tremor (and by inference slow-slip) propagation modes, and c) place tremor in a structural context leading to insights into its generation and that of slow slip more generally. In particular, our work on c) suggests that tremor occurs within the upper layer of oceanic metabasalt as the expression of disaggregation and comminution associated with underplating. The success of cross-station analysis in tremor characterization to date warrants further investigation and development of the methodology. In this presentation, we detail two improvements.  The first, applicable to both long and short windows, concerns the judicious analysis of traveltime circuits and binomial coefficients ("n choose 3") corresponding to triples of waveforms formed from many (n ≥ 4) stations. This leads to effective quality-control measures for balancing location precision versus accuracy and the leveraging of cross-event information. The second improvement concerns short windows and relies on low frequency earthquake template waveforms that characterize propagation characteristics between a localized tremor source region and surface stations. Past efforts at cross-station tremor detection have relied upon the similarity of tremor waveforms across stations. This condition can be relaxed through the use of phase normalization afforded by template waveforms thereby enabling inclusion of larger station complements and resulting in increased number and quality of detections. We demonstrate these improvements on deep tremor recordings from southern Vancouver Island between 2003-2006 and 2022-2025.

How to cite: Bostock, M., Sammis, C., and Perez Estay, N.: Improvements to Cross-Station Analysis of Tectonic Tremor , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4076, 2026.

EGU26-4734 | Posters on site | SM4.3

Spatiotemporal Characteristics of Tectonic Tremor in California 

Satoshi Ide and Weifan Lu

California, as a transform plate boundary, provides a distinctive tectonic setting and an ideal natural laboratory for investigating tectonic tremor and the slow deformation associated with plate motion. By analyzing continuous seismic records across multiple stations with the envelope correlation method, we identified ∼66,000 tremor events from 2000 to 2024. These events exhibit waveform characteristics consistent with tectonic tremors observed elsewhere. Beyond the previously documented central section of the San Andreas fault, we identify several new tremor clusters, primarily concentrated near the Mendocino Triple Junction and within the Big Bend segment. Our results suggest that tremor events near the Mendocino Triple Junction may mark the southern edge of the Cascadia subduction zone, while tremor events in the Big Bend region, located within the rupture zone of the 1857 M7.9 Fort Tejon earthquake, could have implications for regional seismic hazard.

How to cite: Ide, S. and Lu, W.: Spatiotemporal Characteristics of Tectonic Tremor in California, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4734, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4734, 2026.

EGU26-6825 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.3

Probing the mechanism of slow slip events along the central North Anatolian Fault Zone 

Andrea Perez-Silva, Patricia Martínez-Garzón, and So Ozawa

Along the central section of North Anatolian Fault Zone, which marks the boundary between the Eurasian and Anatolian plates, subsurface creep has been detected since the 1970s. This creep localizes within a ~60-70 km-long segment along-strike, known as the Ismetpasa segment. Measurements from creepmeters, GNSS and InSAR, show that aseismic slip occurs as episodic events, or slow slip events (SSEs), that last a few weeks, occur approx. every 2.5 years, and extend to a depth of 5 – 6 km. Notably, the location of these SSEs coincides with a region of shallow locking depth.  Several mechanisms have proposed to explain their occurrence, including elevated pore-fluid pressure, variation in fault-zone composition, and changes in stressing rates associated with the shallower locking depth. To understand the mechanisms that govern these events, we carry out 3D numerical simulations using rate and state friction. In our model, we explore the effect of effective normal stress, long-term slip rate distribution and friction parameters on the resulting slip behavior. We consider a range of model setups and identify scenarios that reproduce the first-order characteristics of Ismetpasa SSEs. Our results provide insights into the conditions that promote shallow and deep slow-slip on continental strike-slip faults.

 

How to cite: Perez-Silva, A., Martínez-Garzón, P., and Ozawa, S.: Probing the mechanism of slow slip events along the central North Anatolian Fault Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6825, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6825, 2026.

EGU26-9824 | Orals | SM4.3

Theoretical Constraints on Tidal Triggering of Slow Earthquakes 

Harsha Bhat, Yishuo Zhuo, Ankit Gupta, Hideo Aochi, Alexandre Schubnel, and Satoshi Ide

Tidal stress is a periodic stress acting globally on the Earth, driven primarily by
the gravitational forcing of the Moon and the Sun. Understanding how tidal
stress can trigger seismic events is essential for constraining tectonic
environments that are sensitive to small, periodic stress perturbations.
Here we investigate tidal triggering on stable sliding, velocity-weakening (VW)
rate-and-state frictional (RSF) faults using a spring-block framework. We first
apply idealized step-like and boxcar normal stress perturbations to
demonstrate a resonance-like amplification of slip rate when the perturbation
duration approaches the intrinsic RSF time scale. Building on this observation,
we perform non-dimensional analyses and numerical simulations with
sinusoidal tidal-like perturbations to identify the key parameters controlling
tidal triggering and their admissible ranges. We further characterize the
triggered events through observable quantities, including radiation efficiency
and tidal phase. Our results show that resonance effects allow tidal stress to trigger both
regular periodic and complex temporal slip events on otherwise stable sliding
VW faults. The triggering behavior is primarily controlled by two non-
dimensional parameters: the normalized perturbation period and the
normalized perturbation amplitude. Increasing the normalized period shifts
event timing from peak tidal stress toward the maximum stress rate, whereas
increasing the normalized amplitude promotes a transition from slow to fast
slip events. The parameter space permitting tidally triggered slip events
suggests that the RSF parameter,$a\sigma$, which characterizes the
instantaneous frictional strength of an interface, should not exceed tens to
hundreds of kilopascals, and that the characteristic slip distance for frictional
weakening is likely on the order of micrometers.

How to cite: Bhat, H., Zhuo, Y., Gupta, A., Aochi, H., Schubnel, A., and Ide, S.: Theoretical Constraints on Tidal Triggering of Slow Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9824, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9824, 2026.

EGU26-10077 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.3

Constraining mechanisms for dynamically triggered Sudden Displacement Events (SDEs) in the northern Chilean Subduction Forearc using collocated creepmeter and broadband seismic data 

Ricarda M. Wache, Gian Maria Bocchini, Rebecca M. Harrington, Pia Victor, Yajing Liu, and Meng "Matt" Wei

The Atacama Fault System is located in the northern Chilean subduction forearc region and hosts a complex system of trench-parallel faults with mapped surface ruptures. Previous work based on continuous monitoring of aseismic fault slip by the IPOC Creepmeter Array over the last ~15 years has shown that the Chomache, Cerro Fortuna, Salar del Carmen, and Mejillones Faults host Sudden Displacement Events (SDEs) that are often triggered by passing seismic waves, showing a clear temporal correlation between SDE signals and local, as well as teleseismic, earthquakes. Here we present a new study using data from two creepmeter sites that are instrumented with two collocated broadband seismometers to investigate the correlation between SDEs, the ground motions of preceding earthquakes, and the consistency of transient stress changes with observed deformation inferred from the creepmeter time series.

Our analysis reveals two primary observations. First, we identify a seasonal trend in the polarity of SDEs, suggesting modulation of the system response over the annual cycle. Second, we observe a dependency between the peak ground velocity (PGV) of the preceding earthquakes recorded by the collocated seismometers and SDE occurrence. We observe an absence of SDEs below a PGV threshold of approximately 0.07–0.15 cm/s that suggests that the triggering mechanism is at least partly amplitude-controlled.

Based on the apparent seasonal polarity changes and dependence on ground shaking, we will present results that test whether SDEs reflect tectonic fault slip processes or a non-tectonic, seasonally modulated response of near-surface sediments to dynamic triggering. We will test the hypothesis using the back azimuth of triggering seismic waves to resolve the dynamic stresses imposed on the well-constrained geometry of the monitored fault planes in comparison to the volumetric changes in the surrounding fault zone. This study will contribute to a deeper understanding of dynamic triggering and the underlying processes that control fault behavior in forearc settings.

How to cite: Wache, R. M., Bocchini, G. M., Harrington, R. M., Victor, P., Liu, Y., and Wei, M. ".: Constraining mechanisms for dynamically triggered Sudden Displacement Events (SDEs) in the northern Chilean Subduction Forearc using collocated creepmeter and broadband seismic data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10077, 2026.

EGU26-10951 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.3

First look at seafloor geodetical pressure data acquired during a large 2024 Slow-Slip-Event at the Hikurangi Margin offshore New Zealand 

Johannes Gehrig, Ahyoung Ku, Laura Wallace, Spahr Webb, D. Randolph Watts, Ryota Hino, Yoshihiro Ito, Matt Wei, Neville Palmer, and Katie Jacobs

Over the last two decades, the importance of Slow Slip Events (SSEs) in the deformation and seismic cycle of subduction zones has become more widely recognized. Knowledge of the evolution and slip distribution during SSEs can provide key insights into processes that influence SSE occurrence and their relationship to seismic slip. However, the offshore nature of many SSEs makes them difficult to observe with onshore geodetic methods alone, necessitating the deployment of seafloor-geodetic instruments to detect seabed deformation.

The Hikurangi subduction zone offshore New Zealand is characterized by frequent, large SSEs, and previous experiments have shown that such events regularly produce up to a few centimetres of seabed uplift that is detectable using seafloor pressure data. We are presenting a first look on ocean bottom pressure data recovered from the most recent GONDOR deployment across the northern Hikurangi subduction zone. The 2022-2025 GONDOR project is the largest seafloor geodetic experiment to date at Hikurangi, with over 50 seafloor instruments deployed in a dense array with several kilometres spacing, of which 39 were fitted with Absolute Pressure Gauges (APG) to detect vertical displacement of the seabed. 13 of these instruments have self-calibrating A-0-A sensors, enabling mitigation of instrument drift from the pressure record. The deployment is collocated with an IODP CORK observatory, allowing for future ground truthing of the pressure data and includes two arrays of Direct-Path-Acoustic sensors, giving horizontal deformation information of SSEs. During the 2024/2025 period, at least three large SSEs have occurred beneath the array, one beneath the centre and one each beneath the northern and southern subarrays.

I will present preliminary results from our analysis of seafloor pressure data, using depth-matched reference sites to mitigate oceanographic noise. I will also outline a processing workflow for pressure data analysis, including improved drift-removal techniques that do not depend on prolonged periods of oceanographic calm and are robust to sensor vertical displacement during the initial deployment phase when drift is most rapid. Further, I will explore the advantages of interspersing A-0-A instruments with conventional APGs for more robust drift mitigation to enable resolution of SSE vertical displacement during the early deployment phase.

How to cite: Gehrig, J., Ku, A., Wallace, L., Webb, S., Watts, D. R., Hino, R., Ito, Y., Wei, M., Palmer, N., and Jacobs, K.: First look at seafloor geodetical pressure data acquired during a large 2024 Slow-Slip-Event at the Hikurangi Margin offshore New Zealand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10951, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10951, 2026.

EGU26-11003 | ECS | Orals | SM4.3

Automatic detection of slow slip events using InSAR data: Application to the North Anatolian Fault 

Estelle Neyrinck, Baptiste Rousset, Cécile Doubre, Luis Rivera, Cécile Lasserre, Marie-Pierre Doin, Philippe Durand, and Flatsim Team

A better understanding of aseismic slip dynamics throughout the seismic cycle is essential to refine seismic hazard estimates. Analysis of the Interferometry Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) time series in the last decades has proved its efficiency to detect and characterize slow slip events (SSE), especially on strike-slip segments. However, the implementation of automatic SSE detection methods is needed to overcome the large incoming flow of data. Here, we adapted the geodetic matched filter approach developed for GNSS time series by Rousset et al. (2017) to InSAR time series. The method is computing physics-based dislocation slip models corresponding to synthetic reconstructions of SSEs, that are correlated with InSAR time series, taking advantage of the high spatial density of InSAR observations. By comparing true and false detections on synthetic tests including InSAR realistic noise, we derive probabilistic estimates of the true detections as a function of SSE magnitudes and depths. We show that this method enables the detection with ≥ 90 % confidence of shallow SSEs with magnitudes larger than 4.5 using horizontal east-west InSAR time series. And it can detect events with magnitude larger than 4.25 with ≥ 45 % confidence. We applied this method along both creeping segments of the North Anatolian Fault - Izmit and Ismetpasa, by using the InSAR time series from 2016 to 2021 automatically processed in the framework of the FLATSIM project between CNES and FormaTerre by using Sentinel-1 SAR images and based on the NSBAS processing chain (Doin et al., 2011; Thollard et al., 2021). It detected without any prior knowledge three transient events already reported by previous studies along the Izmit segment (Aslan et al., 2019; Neyrinck et al., 2024), and two transient events also already reported by previous studies along the Ismetpasa one (Jolivet et al., 2023; Özdemir et al., 2025). Based on a weighted stacked time series associated with the detections, we estimate a magnitude for these events ranging from 4.0 to 5.0, also compatible with previous estimates. Applying this method on worldwide strike-slip fault segments may allow a rapid detection and a first order characterization of transient slip events.

How to cite: Neyrinck, E., Rousset, B., Doubre, C., Rivera, L., Lasserre, C., Doin, M.-P., Durand, P., and Team, F.: Automatic detection of slow slip events using InSAR data: Application to the North Anatolian Fault, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11003, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11003, 2026.

EGU26-11523 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.3

Role of Subducted Seamounts in Earthquake Rupture and Aseismic Slip: Insights from Multi-Cycle Simulations 

Yue Liu, Duo Li, Hongfeng Yang, Charles Williams, and Zhigang Shao

Shallow slow slip events (SSEs) within seismogenic zones have been increasingly reported to be related to subducted seamounts (Wang and Bilek, 2014; Vallée et al., 2013; Wallace et al., 2016; Yokota and Ishikawa, 2016). However, the underlying mechanisms of this phenomenon is unclear. Slow slip events are commonly inferred to occur under high pore-pressure conditions, based on analyses of low-frequency seismic spectra and numerical simulations (Rogers and Dragert, 2003; Shelly et al., 2006; Liu and Rice, 2009; Li and Liu, 2016). Investigating the role of seamounts in alternating shallow SSEs and coseismic rupture propagation will provide important insights into long-term fault slip budgets. Here we conduct numerical simulations in the framework of rate-and-state dependent friction with the “aging” evolution law, in which a curved interface representing the subducted seamount is set in a velocity weakening zone on a two-dimensional subducted fault model. Our preliminary results suggest: 1) Slow slip events and slow aseismic creep can appear in the seamount leading area, where coseismic slip is suppressed; 2) the seamount can play a crucial role in stopping large rupture propagation when it is located at intermediate depths within the velocity-weakening zone; 3) irregular geometry will introduce diversity in long-term slip partitioning on the subduction fault regardless of constant velocity-weakening friction and consistently effective normal stress. This study will provide invaluable insights on understanding the interactions between large earthquakes and aseismic slip, as well as the influence of fault geometry such as a subducted seamount.

Reference:

  • Li, D., and Y. Liu (2016), Spatiotemporal evolution of slow slip events in a nonplanar fault model for northern Cascadia subduction zone, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 121, 6828–6845.
  • Liu, Y., and J. R. Rice (2009), Slow slip predictions based on granite and gabbro friction data compared to GPS measurements in northern Cascadia, Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 114(B9).
  • Rogers, G., and H. Dragert (2003), Episodic Tremor and Slip on the Cascadia Subduction Zone: The Chatter of Silent Slip. Science, 300, 1942-1943.
  • Shelly, D., Beroza, G., Ide, S., et al. (2006), Low-frequency earthquakes in Shikoku, Japan, and their relationship to episodic tremor and slip. Nature, 442, 188–191.
  • Vallée, M., Nocquet, J. M., Battaglia, J., et al. (2013), Intense interface seismicity triggered by a shallow slow slip event in the Central Ecuador subduction zone. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 118(6), 2965-2981.
  • Wallace, L. M., Webb, S. C., Ito, Y., et al. (2016), Slow slip near the trench at the Hikurangi subduction zone, New Zealand. Science, 352(6286), 701-704.
  • Wang, K., and S. L. Bilek (2014), Invited review paper: Fault creep caused by subduction of rough seafloor relief. Tectonophysics, 610, 1-24.
  • Yokota, Y., and T. Ishikawa (2020), Shallow slow slip events along the Nankai Trough detected by GNSS-A. Science Advance, 6 (3): eaay5786.

 

 

How to cite: Liu, Y., Li, D., Yang, H., Williams, C., and Shao, Z.: Role of Subducted Seamounts in Earthquake Rupture and Aseismic Slip: Insights from Multi-Cycle Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11523, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11523, 2026.

EGU26-15280 | Orals | SM4.3

Recent Advances in Tectonic Tremor Research  

Satoshi Ide

Since its discovery about 25 years ago, tectonic tremor has been identified in many subduction zones and transform plate boundaries worldwide, greatly advancing our understanding of regional tectonics and earthquake generation processes. Tremor detection and catalog construction continue to progress in many regions. In this presentation, I review recent advances made by our group over the past several years.

Regarding tremor detection methods, although the use of AI has become increasingly common, the envelope-based approach remains highly effective. The code developed by Mizuno and Ide (2019, EPS) is openly available on GitHub (https://github.com/not522/MizunoIde2019), and has facilitated new tremor detections in various regions. Using newly released continuous seismic data from Taiwan, Ide and Chen (2024, GRL) revealed extensive tremor activity beneath the Central Range. Azúa et al. (2025, GRL) demonstrated that tremor near the Chile Triple Junction occurs close to a slab window. Lu and Ide (2026, EGU) detected previously unrecognized tremor in California through a comprehensive analysis of statewide continuous seismic data, particularly near the Mendocino Triple Junction and the Big Bend of the San Andreas Fault. Although distinguishing tremor from regular earthquakes has long been difficult, Yano and Ide (2024, GRL) developed a clustering-based approach that discriminates tremor from ordinary earthquakes using waveform and hypocentral features.

Estimating source mechanisms is essential for assessing the tectonic roles of tremor. Since Ide and Yabe (2014), stacked tremor signals have been used to extract very low-frequency components and perform moment tensor analyses in several regions. This method becomes increasingly stable as more data accumulate. Utilizing a new Taiwan tremor catalog, Hua et al. (2026, Tectonophysics) showed that tremor beneath the Central Range exhibits reverse-faulting mechanisms consistent with active mountain building. Mechanism estimates near the Mendocino Triple Junction also suggest tremor occurring along the lateral surface of the subducting slab.

Probabilistic modeling of tremor occurrence is another important research direction. Ide and Nomura (2022, EPS) applied renewal processes to model tremor as a time series at a given location, but capturing the characteristic spatiotemporal migration of tremor required more complex models. Yano et al. (2026, JGR) developed a stochastic process model incorporating spatial interactions and demonstrated that it outperforms renewal-based models. Such standardized models provide a basis for relating tremor behavior to tectonic processes and for detecting anomalies in otherwise steady tremor activity.

 

How to cite: Ide, S.: Recent Advances in Tectonic Tremor Research , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15280, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15280, 2026.

EGU26-16342 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.3

Modelling the shallow crustal structure of the Guerrero seismic gap from gravity data 

Abraham Diaz de leon, Isaias Bañales, and Yoshihiro Ito

The subduction zone in the Mexican Pacific comprises a complex tectonic environment of interacting convergent active margin plates. Along the Middle American Trench (MAT), the Cocos and Rivera plates subduct beneath the North American and Caribbean plates, generating an irregular distribution of seismicity due to variations in the subduction angle of the slab. The Guerrero Seismic Gap (GGap) is a ~140 km segment at the Cocos-North America plate boundary. Since 1911 there has been no record of a large subduction thrust earthquake in the NW portion of the GGap, and taking into account the seismic evolution and subduction dynamics, specialists see a possible scenario of a Mw ~8.2 earthquake in the area. Therefore, understanding the nature of the rupture process in the crust is a fundamental question of this study.

Gravity techniques are accurate methods to investigate the crustal configuration and define the structure in the subducting slab. In this project, data from the global satellite model of Sandwell et al., 2014, we intend to generate a model of the density distribution in the shallow crust in the GGap area. The shallow crust is of particular interest because lateral heterogeneity in the slab zone modifies subduction dynamics. These heterogeneities comprise seafloor structures (e.g., seamounts) and may be key to studying the seismogenic zone of the Mexican subduction and better assessing its risk. Some studies show how the bathymetric relief on the seafloor, when it enters subduction, modifies the mechanical properties at the interface between the subducting plate and the overriding plate. This arrangement can be an important factor because it can affect the distribution of large earthquakes.

Gravimetric inversion methods can solve subsurface mapping problems by determining the density and/or depth of the layers that comprise it. Here, we will use statistical methods of gravity inversion to relate the parameters (density) to the observed data. To do this, we will use a Bayesian approach, defining our likelihood functions, evaluating the forward map, and our prior function, smoothed using Markov Random Fields, which restricts the field values to their neighboring dependencies.

The objective of this work is to conduct a detailed analysis of the surface crust, its configuration, and its relationship with seismicity in the area, in order to improve understanding of subduction dynamics and seismic risk assessment.

How to cite: Diaz de leon, A., Bañales, I., and Ito, Y.: Modelling the shallow crustal structure of the Guerrero seismic gap from gravity data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16342, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16342, 2026.

EGU26-16699 | Posters on site | SM4.3

A Continuum of Laboratory Fault Slip Reveals Distinct Seismic Energy Partitioning from Slow to Fast Slip 

Marco Maria Scuderi, Federico Pignalberi, Giacomo Mastella, Carolina Giorgetti, and Chris Marone

Understanding the physical controls on the transition between slow and fast earthquakes remains a fundamental challenge in earthquake physics. Here we show, through laboratory experiments on granular quartz gouge simulating natural fault zones, that both slow and fast slip can emerge on the same fault under identical stress conditions. The transition between slip modes is governed by the elastodynamic interaction between the fault and its surroundings. By systematically varying system stiffness at constant normal stress, we observe a continuous spectrum of slip behavior from stable sliding to slow events and ultimately fast rupture. Continuous acoustic monitoring reveals distinct seismic signatures: slow slip produces swarms of small events, while fast slip generates high-amplitude energy bursts. Continuous scaling of breakdown work with seismic moment supports a unified physical mechanism. Moment-duration scaling highlights a key transition in energy partitioning: in slow events, acoustic energy accounts for a minor portion of slip duration, whereas in fast events it contributes a much larger portion, indicating a shift in how seismic energy is radiated across slip modes. These findings suggest that slow and fast earthquakes are not distinct phenomena but reflect end-members of a fault slip continuum.

How to cite: Scuderi, M. M., Pignalberi, F., Mastella, G., Giorgetti, C., and Marone, C.: A Continuum of Laboratory Fault Slip Reveals Distinct Seismic Energy Partitioning from Slow to Fast Slip, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16699, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16699, 2026.

EGU26-16716 | ECS | Orals | SM4.3

Slow-slip and low-frequency earthquakes within the shallow, intraplate, Palghar seismic swarm in Western India 

Ratna Bhagat, Kattumadam M. Sreejith, Pathikrit Bhattacharya, Harsha S. Bhat, Claudio Satriano, and Vineet K. Gahalaut

At plate boundaries, the coexistence of classical earthquakes, low-frequency seismicity, and slow slip events is commonly attributed to depth-dependent frictional heterogeneity. Recent numerical studies demonstrate that similar complexity can also emerge from fault–fault interactions even in the absence of frictional heterogeneities. Here we show that this entire spectrum of plate-boundary-style slip processes occurs within an intraplate setting, confined to the upper ~8 km of the crust, during the Palghar earthquake swarm in western India.

Since late 2018, sustained seismicity has persisted within a spatially confined intraplate fault zone traditionally considered tectonically stable. By integrating data from two independent seismic networks (NGRI and NCS), we construct a unified, high-resolution earthquake catalog. Automated detection and precise relocations of 8,629 events with eight or more observations delineate two closely spaced, steeply dipping N–S–striking faults at depths of 6–8 km that host most of the seismicity. The same two fault structures are independently identified through the modeling of surface deformation data within the swarm duration from InSAR. The swarm exhibits broadband rupture behavior, showing both low-frequency events and classical earthquakes, and is characterized by a wide range of stress drops. Moment tensor solutions indicate predominantly normal faulting, consistent with the rake of geodetically inferred slip. InSAR observations further show that cumulative geodetic moment release exceeds the seismic moment by nearly two orders of magnitude, demonstrating that aseismic slip dominates the total strain budget. Both seismicity and slow slip initiate on the western fault and evolve coherently before migrating to the eastern structure. The high-resolution relocated seismicity aligns closely with the advancing front of aseismic slip on both faults, revealing a clear coevolution and coupled migration of seismicity and aseismic deformation. 

Together, these observations show that intraplate fault systems can host the same range of slip behaviors observed at plate boundaries, from classical earthquakes to slow slip, driven by migrating aseismic deformation and fault–fault interactions. Intraplate earthquake swarms, therefore, offer natural laboratories for understanding slip processes and fault interactions beyond plate boundaries.

How to cite: Bhagat, R., Sreejith, K. M., Bhattacharya, P., Bhat, H. S., Satriano, C., and Gahalaut, V. K.: Slow-slip and low-frequency earthquakes within the shallow, intraplate, Palghar seismic swarm in Western India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16716, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16716, 2026.

EGU26-17731 | Orals | SM4.3

The gradual evolution of friction following a normal stress step reflects changes in contact strength, not contact area 

Pathikrit Bhattacharya, Terry E. Tullis, Allan M. Rubin, Nicholas M. Beeler, and Nir Z. Badt

The rate-state friction equations represent the most widely used framework to describe friction evolution in rocks and in models of earthquakes. Despite their popularity, the notion of ‘state’ evolution of the frictional interface within this framework has been relatively poorly understood for fifty years. Empirically, the state of a frictional interface has been found to evolve with slip and/or time, and in response to abrupt changes in normal stress, but the microprocesses responsible for this evolution are unclear. Under physical conditions relevant to most shallow crustal earthquakes, frictional interfaces are in contact only at numerous smaller regions called asperities, and the real contact area is expected to be a rather modest fraction of the nominal contact area. Frictional resistance results from the shear strength of only these contacting asperities. It is commonly presumed that changes in state are due primarily to changes in this real contact area under the low temperature plasticity regime assumed to operate around these highly stressed contact points. An alternative explanation is that changes in state are due to changes in some measure of the strength of the real contact area, for example due to changes in chemical bond strength or their area-averaged density. In this study, using data from 5% to ~100% normal stress step experiments, we show that the transient evolution of frictional strength with slip following medium-to-large normal stress steps cannot be understood in terms of changes in real contact area alone. Instead, changes in area-averaged contact strength play a more important role in this evolution. We formulate a framework of evolution equations for contact area, area-averaged contact strength and state that encodes contrasts in area-averaged strength between old and new regions of interfacial contact as a rate-state parameter and show that slip rate reductions of Westerly granite samples following these normal stress steps can be used to estimate this strength contrast consistently across all step sizes. For our experiments, the new contact area created rapidly by the abrupt increase in normal stress is found to be only 10-20% of the strength of the old contacts at the pre-step steady state and eventually evolves back to its pre-step steady-state strength value with slip. These experiments might lay the foundation for replacing our empirical descriptions of state evolution with an understanding of operative microprocesses that explicitly parametrizes the effect of changes in contact strength as well as contact area on frictional ‘state’ evolution.

How to cite: Bhattacharya, P., Tullis, T. E., Rubin, A. M., Beeler, N. M., and Badt, N. Z.: The gradual evolution of friction following a normal stress step reflects changes in contact strength, not contact area, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17731, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17731, 2026.

EGU26-18493 | ECS | Orals | SM4.3

Experimental studies on slow slip, fast failure, and episodic slip modulated by fluid pressure: implications for landslides and earthquakes 

Shaoyan Zhang, Wenping Gong, Yoshihiro Ito, Gonghui Wang, and Huiming Tang

Landslides and faults would slip in various slip patterns with an extensive velocity spectrum. The slow-moving landslides, catastrophic fast landslides, and intermittent-moving landslides share much similarity with some of the earthquake phenomena, such as the slow fault slip, fast earthquake, episodic slip. Moreover, both landslides and faults would be strongly controlled by their hydrogeology system and fluid pressure conditions. Herein, we conducted stress path- and fluid pressure-controlled triaxial shear experiments and ring-shear experiments on granular geomaterials. We reproduced diverse slip behaviors, including the slow slip, fast failure, episodic slip, under monotonic fluid overpressure and episodic fluid pressure within drained or undrained conditions. Our experiments suggest that the slip velocity might be controlled by stress drop and vice versa. The role of contraction/dilatation tendency, drained/undrained conditions, velocity-strengthening/weakening properties in determining slip pattern is systematically studied. And we adopted both active and passive seismic methods, such as seismic wave velocity and acoustic emission signal monitoring, to explore the failure precursors. Our studies could be valuable for understanding the slow to fast earthquake phenomena and providing an integrative view for multiple geohazards through linking landslides and earthquakes.

How to cite: Zhang, S., Gong, W., Ito, Y., Wang, G., and Tang, H.: Experimental studies on slow slip, fast failure, and episodic slip modulated by fluid pressure: implications for landslides and earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18493, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18493, 2026.

Very low frequency earthquakes (VLFEs) are generally absent from the standard seismicity catalogs because of their depleted seismic radiation at frequencies around and above 1Hz. With the aim of improving their detection, we have developed an approach where the continuous three-component records of a station pair are first template-matched with the corresponding surface-wave time windows of previously known regular earthquakes. As a time delay is allowed for one of the stations of the pair, detected events may be not collocated with their templates, and their epicenters can be determined as soon as a second pair is considered. In a second stage, based on their high-frequency radiation, we determine whether the detected events are standard earthquakes absent from the template catalog or VLFEs. This two-stage method, referred as VLFE_DRL (VLFE Detection and Relative Location), is applied to the southern Ryukyu subduction zone where VLFEs were already known to occur. Between 2004 and 2024, VLFE_DRL detects and locates there more than 160 VLFEs with moment magnitude (Mw) greater than 4, occurring in areas distinct from the standard interplate seismicity. Compared with existing VLFE catalogs of the area, VLFE_DRL detects more large magnitude events, and the VLFEs locations are more clustered in space.

How to cite: Vallée, M. and Delaporte, T.: Tracking Very Low Frequency Earthquakes into long continuous records : application to the Southern Ryukyu subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20207, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20207, 2026.

EGU26-21784 | Posters on site | SM4.3

First direct geodetic evidence of precursory shallow slow-slip associated with seismic swarms on oceanic transform faults 

Xiaoge Liu, Passarelli Luigi, Barreto Alejandra, Benedikt Ófeigsson, Qiang Xu, and Sigurjón Jónsson*

Oceanic transform faults (OTFs) accommodate a significant portion of global plate motions, yet the physical mechanisms governing their characteristically low seismic coupling and the initiation of earthquake swarms remain poorly understood. Here, we provide the first direct geodetic evidence of shallow slow slip events (SSEs) on an OTF. By leveraging the increase of seismic activity during earthquake swarms as temporal constraints on high-resolution, land-based continuous GNSS data from near the just-offshore Húsavík-Flatey Fault (HFF) in North Iceland, we utilized a signal-stacking strategy to isolate ultra-slow transients from stochastic noise. This approach detected SSEs that are several weeks in duration and with an average moment magnitude of Mw 5.34, systematically preceding the seismic swarms. The marked spatial complementarity between SSEs and swarms, combined with their temporal synchronicity, seem to indicate that the aseismic transients act as a mechanical trigger for the swarm-like activity along the western portion of HFF. The pronounced contrast between the weakly coupled western segment of the HFF—characterized by concurrent SSEs and earthquake swarms—and the strongly coupled eastern segment, which lacks moderate to large earthquake clusters, reveals a fundamental along-strike heterogeneity in fault behavior. The evidence of systematic aseismic slip release along the HFF accompanying swarm activity indicates that the seismic moment deficit of OTFs can be reconciled by aseismic slip transients. Our results corroborate that OTFs are complex faults where rheological and geometrical segmentation result in a complex interplay of slow and fast slip release.

Acknowledgements: We gratefully acknowledge Baptiste Rousset and Estelle Neyrinck for generously sharing their geodetic matched filter code for this analysis.

How to cite: Liu, X., Luigi, P., Alejandra, B., Ófeigsson, B., Xu, Q., and Jónsson*, S.: First direct geodetic evidence of precursory shallow slow-slip associated with seismic swarms on oceanic transform faults, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21784, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21784, 2026.

EGU26-1217 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

Seismological and Geodetic Insights on the North Anatolian Fault Zone through Coda Calibration and InSAR Techniques 

Gülşen Tekiroğlu, Tülay Kaya Eken, Kevin Mayeda, Jorge Roman-Nieves, and Tuna Eken

The North Anatolian Fault Zone (NAFZ) is a region of high seismic risk and significant tectonic complexity. In such regions, different magnitude scales provide complementary insights into the physical properties of seismic wave propagation. However, achieving reliable seismic hazard assessment remains challenging due to non-homogeneous magnitude reporting and the potential bias introduced by linking short-period magnitudes (ML​) to moment magnitude (Mw). To address these inconsistencies and improve source characterization, this study presents an integrated seismological and geodetic framework. Our primary objective is to develop a robust, homogeneous Mw​ catalog focusing on events ranging from Mw​ 3.5 to 6.0. To achieve this, we employ the Coda Calibration Tool (CCT), applying the empirical envelope-based method developed by Mayeda et al. (2003). Unlike traditional direct wave analysis, this method utilizes the stable, scattered energy of coda waves to effectively mitigate path and site effects caused by lateral heterogeneity in the crust across diverse tectonic settings. By constraining the calibration with independently derived Mw​ from moment tensor inversion for low frequencies and apparent stress (σA​) for high frequencies, we successfully lower the threshold for reliable Mw​ and radiated energy estimation. Moreover, we validate this seismological approach by conducting geodetic modeling for two significant events: the 23 November 2022 Mw​ 6.0 Düzce and the 18 April 2024 Mw​ 5.6 Tokat earthquakes. We perform Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) analysis using pre- and post-earthquake ascending and descending Sentinel-1 images to create a coseismic deformation map, invert using Okada elastic dislocation modeling to obtain source parameters such as fault slip distribution, and then calculate Mw. The results demonstrate remarkable consistency between Mw values derived from CCT and InSAR. Furthermore, our analysis reveals evidence for non-self-similar source scaling in the NAFZ. We observe that σA​ increases with seismic moment (M0​), suggesting that larger earthquakes radiate energy more efficiently. Additionally, the apparent stress estimates are systematically lower than in other active tectonic regions, indicating a potentially low-seismic-efficiency environment. This multi-physics framework thus produces a homogeneous catalog for refining seismic hazard assessments and provides fundamental new insights into the rupture physics of the NAFZ.

How to cite: Tekiroğlu, G., Kaya Eken, T., Mayeda, K., Roman-Nieves, J., and Eken, T.: Seismological and Geodetic Insights on the North Anatolian Fault Zone through Coda Calibration and InSAR Techniques, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1217, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1217, 2026.

EGU26-2193 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

Comparison and reliability of declustering methods evaluated using an ETAS framework 

Omkar Omkar, Shikha Sharma, Shyam Nandan, and Utsav Mannu

Declustering of earthquake catalogs is a fundamental preprocessing step in seismicity analysis and probabilistic seismic hazard assessment (PSHA), as it aims to separate background, approximately Poissonian seismicity from dependent events such as foreshocks and aftershocks. The choice of declustering method can significantly influence estimated seismicity rates, b-values, spatial source models, and ultimately seismic hazard results. Despite its widespread use, there is no consensus on the most reliable declustering approach, and different algorithms often produce substantially different background catalogs for the same dataset. This study presents a systematic comparison of commonly used declustering techniques, including the window-based methods of Gardner and Knopoff, Uhrhammer, and Grünthal; the interaction-based Reasenberg algorithm; the nearest-neighbor clustering method of Zaliapin; and Epidemic-Type Aftershock Sequence (ETAS) based stochastic declustering. All methods are applied to the same regional earthquake catalog with consistent magnitude completeness and spatial coverage to ensure a fair comparison. The resulting declustered catalogs are evaluated in terms of the fraction of events classified as background, their temporal and spatial distributions, and their impact on magnitude-frequency relationships. To assess the reliability of each declustering approach, we use the ETAS model as a reference framework. The comparison reveals pronounced method-dependent variability, particularly at short inter-event times and distances, with window-based methods generally removing a larger proportion of clustered events and interaction-based methods showing sensitivity to user-defined parameters. The Zaliapin method offers a data-driven alternative but may be influenced by spatial heterogeneity, while ETAS-based stochastic declustering provides a probabilistic and internally consistent representation of seismicity at the cost of higher computational and data-quality requirements. The results highlight the need for careful method selection and uncertainty-aware declustering in seismic hazard applications and demonstrate the value of ETAS-based diagnostics as an objective benchmark for evaluating declustering performance.

How to cite: Omkar, O., Sharma, S., Nandan, S., and Mannu, U.: Comparison and reliability of declustering methods evaluated using an ETAS framework, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2193, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2193, 2026.

EGU26-10544 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

Controls of fault-system complexity and friction on seismicity in the El Salvador Fault Zone: results from physics-based earthquake cycle simulations 

Paula Herrero-Barbero, Jose A. Álvarez-Gómez, Olaf Zielke, José J. Martínez-Díaz, Jorge Alonso-Henar, Octavi Gómez-Novell, and Marta Béjar-Pizarro

Paleoseismological evidence along the El Salvador Fault Zone (ESFZ) suggests the potential occurrence of earthquakes exceeding Mw7, raising critical questions about the seismic hazard of this complex strike-slip fault system in Central America. Here, we present the first application of physics-based earthquake cycle modelling to this region, aiming to assess whether such large events are physically plausible and to explore how fault-system complexity and frictional properties control seismicity patterns.

We perform long-term earthquake simulations using the MCQsim code (Zielke and Mai, 2023) on three alternative 3D fault models of the ESFZ, characterized by increasing structural complexity. Fault geometries, slip rates, and rakes are constrained using published geodetic, geological, and geomorphological data. A systematic sensitivity analysis explores the role of the critical slip distance (Dc) and the dynamic friction coefficient (μd) into the simulated seismicity statistics. Synthetic seismic catalogues are analysed, globally and segment-by-segment, in terms of maximum magnitude, interevent times, and frequency-magnitude distributions. 

Preliminary results, illustrated here for the simplest fault model and based on 10,000-year-long simulations for a systematic sensitivity analysis, indicate that maximum earthquake magnitudes strongly depend on frictional properties, while the critical slip distance mainly controls seismicity rates. Earthquakes exceeding Mw 7 are obtained only for low dynamic friction, associated with larger stress drops and more energetic ruptures. Increasing Dc reduces the number of small and moderate events, leading to longer interevent times and frequency–magnitude distributions that tend toward a characteristic earthquake behaviour. 

Ongoing work focuses on validating preferred synthetic catalogues for the different fault system complexity against instrumental seismicity and paleoseismological constraints in the ESFZ, including frequency-magnitude relations, recurrence intervals, magnitude-slip scaling, and rupture characteristics of the 2001 Mw6.6 earthquake. Overall, this study provides new insights into fault segment interaction, rupture jumping, and stress transfer along the ESFZ, contributing to improved seismic hazard assessment and supporting emergency management strategies in El Salvador and the broader Central American region.

How to cite: Herrero-Barbero, P., Álvarez-Gómez, J. A., Zielke, O., Martínez-Díaz, J. J., Alonso-Henar, J., Gómez-Novell, O., and Béjar-Pizarro, M.: Controls of fault-system complexity and friction on seismicity in the El Salvador Fault Zone: results from physics-based earthquake cycle simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10544, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10544, 2026.

EGU26-11946 | Posters on site | SM8.1

Study on Co-seismic Response and Variation Mechanism of Water Level in the Myanmar Earthquake 

Lei Tian, Zhihua Zhou, Wei Yan, and Yawei Ma

Study on Co-seismic Response and Variation Mechanism of Water Level in the Myanmar Earthquake

Underground fluid is a kind of medium with fast flow, wide distribution and sensitive reaction stress change, which is also one of the main observation method of earthquake precursor. There are many anomalies in underground flow during earthquake pridiction. At the same time, the occurrence of earthquake also have a great impact on the observation of underground fluid. In particular, the larger the magnitude of the earthquake, the greater impact on the underground fluid.

Underground fluid observations near the epicenter, including observation wells, hot springs, and fault gas, show different changes after the major  earthquake. Some of these changes can recover to the normal observation values within minutes to days after the earthquake. However, other observation wells will show completely different changes from the previous observation value.

The MW7.8 magnitude earthquake that occurred in Myanmar on March 28, 2025, led to co-seismic response changes in water levels and temperatures in multiple observation wells in the Yunnan province of China. According to statistics, a total of 127 water level and 66 water temperature observation wells in the Chinese mainland showed different forms of co-seismic responses. Among the 127 water level co-seismic response changes, 92 showed fluctuations, 11 showed step decreases, and 24 showed step increases; among the 66 water temperature co-seismic responses, 33 showed fluctuations, 11 showed step decreases, and 22 showed step increases. Among these 68 step increase or step decrease changes, 21 had not returned to their original change patterns even one month after the earthquake.

These co-seismic response changes were mainly distributed in the southwestern region of China, the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, and the Tan-Lu Fault Zone. These three regions all have the characteristics of enough observation wells and complex tectonics. Particularly in the Yunnan province, a concentrated distribution of co-seismic response step changes was observed in the area of Baoshan-Dali-Chuxiong, indicating a relatively significant change in the underground tectonic stress state environment. This can also serve as an important basis for predicting the location of future moderate to strong earthquakes. The 5.0 magnitude earthquake that occurred in Eryuan, Yunnan on June 5, 2025, happened within the concentrated area of co-seismic responses caused by the Myanmar earthquake, which confirmed this inference.

How to cite: Tian, L., Zhou, Z., Yan, W., and Ma, Y.: Study on Co-seismic Response and Variation Mechanism of Water Level in the Myanmar Earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11946, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11946, 2026.

EGU26-16763 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

Multi-rupture Fault-based Seismic Hazard Assessment for the Dauki Fault System, Northeastern India 

Abhishek Kumar Pandey, Rukmini Venkitanarayanan, and Mukat Lal Sharma

The east-west-trending, north-dipping Dauki Fault System (DFS) is among the well-identified active fault systems in the North-Eastern part of India, and it marks the southern geological boundary of the Shillong Plateau, separating it from the Bengal alluvium basin and Sylhet trough. With a length of about 350 km stretching from about 89.9° E to 93° E, DFS is reverse in nature and can be divided into 4 segments, namely, Western, Central, Eastern and Easternmost with variable dip and strike values. Mitra et al. (2018) has indicated that this fault can produce an Mw ∼8 earthquake.
Fault segmentation, fault connectivity, and multi-segment rupture scenarios have been explicitly incorporated into a fault-system-based probabilistic seismic hazard framework for the Dauki Fault System. The SHERIFS (Seismic Hazard and Earthquake Rates In Fault Systems) methodology has been employed to enforce a global magnitude–frequency distribution while converting geological and geodetic slip rates into earthquake rates at the system scale. To account for geometric complexities such as bends and step-overs, a range of rupture hypotheses has been explored, including single-segment ruptures, partial multi-segment ruptures, and through-going system-wide ruptures. Epistemic uncertainties associated with maximum magnitude, rupture connectivity, slip-rate variability, and off-fault seismicity have been quantified using a logic-tree approach.
The resulting earthquake rupture forecasts are tested against available seismicity data of the region. The findings underscore the critical role of fault interactions in determining the seismic hazard along the DFS and indicate the need for system-level modelling to provide a reliable assessment of seismic hazard.
This study is the first to offer a seismic hazard framework based on the multi-rupture scenario for the Dauki Fault System and it also contributes to the improvement of seismic risk assessment for northeastern India and the Indo–Burman–Shillong tectonic domain.

How to cite: Pandey, A. K., Venkitanarayanan, R., and Sharma, M. L.: Multi-rupture Fault-based Seismic Hazard Assessment for the Dauki Fault System, Northeastern India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16763, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16763, 2026.

EGU26-18486 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

3D full-waveform geoelectrical imaging of the Pantano di San Gregorio Magno basin (Irpinia region, Italy): constraining fault geometry for surface-rupture seismic hazard assessment 

Nunzia Lucci, Miller Zambrano, Pier Paolo Bruno, Tiziano Volatili, Humberto Arellano, Josè Eriza, Pietro Marincioni, Manuel Matarozzi, Yoan Mateus, Selenia Ramos, and Giuseppe Ferrara

The identification and characterization of active and capable faults are essential for subsurface modelling and seismic hazard assessment. In tectonically active areas such as the Southern Apennines, where large historical earthquakes have occurred (Mw ≥ 6.0), detailed fault investigations are critical.  Surface ruptures linked to the Monte Marzano Fault System were observed during the most significant earthquakes of the last century in this region, including the 1980 Ms 6.9 Irpinia earthquake. This study presents a geophysical investigation aimed at detecting fault segments crosscutting the Quaternary sediments that fill the Pantano di San Gregorio Magno (PSGM) intramountain basin, in the Irpinia region.

The geophysical survey targeted a depth range of 25–150 m to image the basin fill and underlying bedrock. The survey was conducted using the FullWaver System (IRIS® Instruments), marking the first time that a 3D FullWaver-based resistivity and induced-polarization survey has fully covered the PSGM basin. The equipment included wireless dual-channel digital receivers and a 5-kW time-domain induced-polarization transmitter, providing flexibility for data acquisition across rugged terrain and minimizing logistical constraints.

After an extensive statistical quality check, considering acquisition conditions and lithological responses, the data were filtered and a robust inversion was executed using ViewLab software. These processes produced a detailed 3D resistivity model of the basin, integrated with a geological model to deliver an accurate view of its architecture. The results enabled the detection of fault segments concealed beneath Quaternary deposits, in agreement with available reflection seismic data. Moreover, induced-polarization data confirmed earlier evidence of degasification anomalies along the surface rupture associated with the 1980 earthquake.

Our findings highlight the effectiveness of deep resistivity tomography performed with wireless acquisition systems as an effective approach for imaging intramountain basins. Beyond methodological advances, these results provide critical constraints for fault-based seismic hazard models, improving the characterization of fault geometry and potential rupture zones in carbonate-dominated settings.

How to cite: Lucci, N., Zambrano, M., Bruno, P. P., Volatili, T., Arellano, H., Eriza, J., Marincioni, P., Matarozzi, M., Mateus, Y., Ramos, S., and Ferrara, G.: 3D full-waveform geoelectrical imaging of the Pantano di San Gregorio Magno basin (Irpinia region, Italy): constraining fault geometry for surface-rupture seismic hazard assessment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18486, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18486, 2026.

EGU26-18759 | Posters on site | SM8.1

When Earthquakes Cross the Gap: Physics-based Dynamic Modeling of Step-Over Jumps in Normal Faults. 

Sébastien Hok, Hugo Sanchez-Reyes, Oona Scotti, and Alice-Agnes Gabriel

Earthquake rupture propagation across step-overs plays a critical role in controlling the extent of multi-fault ruptures and the final earthquake magnitude. For normal-fault systems, however, the key factors governing rupture-jump potential remain far less investigated than for strike-slip or thrust faults. Assessing rupture behavior in normal fault systems is critical, particularly in tectonically  active regions such as Nevada (USA) (Wernicke et al., 1988), the Corinth Rift (Greece) (Bell et al., 2009), the East African Rift System (Ebinger and Sleep, 1998), and the Italian Apennines (Ghisetti and Vezzani, 2002; Faure Walker et al., 2021). These regions are characterized by damaging seismic activity involving multi-segment normal fault ruptures.

 

In segmented fault systems, rupture may initiate on one fault segment (the emitter) and potentially propagate onto a neighboring segment (the receiver) through dynamically evolving stress perturbations. Using a suite of three-dimensional dynamic rupture simulations performed with SeisSol (Gabriel et al., 2025), this study systematically explores the physical conditions that enable rupture jumps across normal-fault step-overs. We examine the influence of pre-stress level, fault spacing, relative fault positioning, and regional stress orientation. Our results show that rupture jumps across gaps of up to 5 km remain dynamically feasible, and that triggered secondary ruptures can evolve into sustained run-away events when fault segments overlap, even at low pre-stress levels. For such cases, the relative positioning between fault segments is fundamental. In contrast, non-overlapping fault configurations restrict successful rupture jumps to distances of less than 3 km. Fault overlap and proximity, however, introduce strong stress-shadowing effects that decrease slip and limit final earthquake magnitudes, revealing a fundamental trade-off between rupture-jump potential and energy release. Fault geometry exerts a first-order control: configurations in which the receiver fault lies within the hanging wall of the emitter fault consistently exhibit higher rupture-jump potential, more frequent sustained secondary ruptures, and larger magnitudes. Comparisons with static Coulomb stress-change predictions demonstrate that static criteria systematically overestimate rupture connectivity, as they fail to capture transient wave interactions, rapid stress reversals, depth-dependent sensitivity, and stopping-phase effects that govern dynamic triggering. These findings highlight the limitations of static stress-based approaches in seismic hazard assessment and underscore the necessity of dynamic modeling to realistically evaluate multi-fault rupture potential in normal-fault systems.

 

These results are partly motivated by the 2016 Amatrice-Norcia earthquake sequence in Central Italy. Our simplified fault configuration is inspired by the geometry of the Monte Vettore and Laga faults, which ruptured in two major events rather than as a single through-going rupture. In this configuration, the presence of a small gap (3-5 km between faults) and the absence of along-strike overlap between segments tend to inhibit rupture jumps, according to our simulations. As a result, dynamically triggered secondary ruptures occur only under favorable conditions and generally leads to self-arrested secondary ruptures. This provides a plausible dynamic explanation for why rupture did not propagate across the entire fault system in a single event, but instead occurred as a sequence of distinct earthquakes.

How to cite: Hok, S., Sanchez-Reyes, H., Scotti, O., and Gabriel, A.-A.: When Earthquakes Cross the Gap: Physics-based Dynamic Modeling of Step-Over Jumps in Normal Faults., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18759, 2026.

Taiwan is situated in a highly active tectonic zone where dense active faults pose significant risks of permanent ground deformation to critical infrastructure, particularly reservoirs and dams located in the near-fault domain. While Probabilistic Seismic Hazard Analysis (PSHA) regarding ground motion is well-established in Taiwan, a systematic framework for Probabilistic Fault Displacement Hazard Analysis (PFDHA) remains to be developed. This study aims to establish a PFDHA framework tailored to Taiwan's geological setting by evaluating the applicability of existing international empirical models against local observation data and generating the first Fault Displacement Hazard Map for the region.

To select the most appropriate prediction models for Taiwan, we analyzed high-resolution surface rupture data from two significant recent events: the 2018 Mw 6.4 Hualien earthquake and the 2022 Mw 6.9 Chihshang (Taitung) earthquake. We compared these observations against a suite of international empirical prediction equations, ranging from established models (e.g., Petersen et al., 2011) to the most recent developments (e.g., Lavrentiadis et al., 2023; Kuehn et al., 2024; Visini et al., 2025; Chiou et al., 2025). Through statistical analysis, we evaluated the goodness-of-fit of these models across different fault types and magnitudes to identify those that best capture the rupture characteristics of Taiwan's complex fault systems.

Based on the model comparison results, we utilized the OpenQuake engine to compute a preliminary island-wide Fault Displacement Hazard Map for Taiwan. Furthermore, we conducted a site-specific PFDHA for a reservoir located adjacent to an active fault, deriving displacement hazard curves for engineering applications. This study highlights the comparative performance of cutting-edge international models in the Taiwan region and provides a crucial empirical foundation for future infrastructure design and risk mitigation in areas prone to fault displacement.

How to cite: Gao, J.-C., Chou, M.-L., and Chen, Y.-S.: Development of a PFDHA Framework for Taiwan: Comparative Assessment of Models using Recent Surface Ruptures and Hazard Mapping, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20126, 2026.

EGU26-20524 * | Posters on site | SM8.1 | Highlight

Towards a Unified PFDHA Platform: OpenQuake Engine Implementation 

Yen-Shin Chen, Marco Pagani, Laura Peruzza, and Hugo Fernandez

Surface fault displacement poses significant risks to critical infrastructure, including dams, pipelines, and nuclear facilities. Despite advances in probabilistic fault displacement hazard assessment (PFDHA) methodologies over the past two decades, the lack of unified, open-source computational platforms has hindered standardized application and reproducibility. This study presents a comprehensive PFDHA framework integrated within the OpenQuake Engine, providing a standardized platform for fault displacement hazard calculations.

The framework follows the earthquake approach proposed by Youngs et al. (2003), implementing four interchangeable computational modules: (1) primary surface rupture probability, (2) primary fault displacement, (3) secondary surface rupture probability, and (4) secondary fault displacement. This modular architecture enables flexible model selection and facilitates sensitivity analyses across different modeling assumptions.

The implementation integrates state-of-the-art models from diverse sources: models developed through the Fault Displacement Hazard Initiative (FDHI), global empirical regressions derived from updated worldwide databases, region-specific models calibrated for Japan, Australia, and the Western United States, and physics-based numerical approaches. The comprehensive model library comprises 25 models across four categories, validated against International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) benchmarking studies and applicable to normal, reverse, and strike-slip faulting mechanisms.

The framework produces hazard curves expressing annual frequency of exceedance versus displacement amplitude, and hazard maps depicting spatial distribution of displacement at specified return periods. Application to the Calabria region of Italy, including critical dam sites, demonstrates the platform's capability to assess both principal and distributed displacement hazards for infrastructure. Results highlight the dominant contribution of principal faulting near fault traces and the sensitivity of hazard estimates to model selection.

This work represents a significant step toward establishing a standardized, transparent, and reproducible platform for PFDHA, addressing the current lack of unified computational tools in the seismic hazard community.

How to cite: Chen, Y.-S., Pagani, M., Peruzza, L., and Fernandez, H.: Towards a Unified PFDHA Platform: OpenQuake Engine Implementation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20524, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20524, 2026.

EGU26-21248 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

Probabilistic Fault Displacement Hazard Analysis study in northern Calabria (Italy) 

Hugo Fernandez, Yen-Shin Chen, Alessio Testa, Bruno Pace, Paolo Boncio, and Laura Peruzza

Northern Calabria (Italy) is an area with significant historical seismicity (Pollino / Sila Massif). While seismic hazard is now commonly assessed at both local and regional scales, fault displacement hazard also represents an important concern, particularly for critical infrastructure such as dams, bridges and nuclear facilities. In recent years, many efforts have focused on developing PFDHA (FDH initiative; IAEA benchmarks, etc.), leading to the development of several new prediction models.

In this study, we present a regional-scale assessment of fault displacement hazard, using an updated seismotectonic model derived from national fault databases (DISS, ITHACA) and published literature. We identify 11 potential seismogenic sources, of which 10 show normal kinematics and 1 is strike-slip. From these 11 potential sources, we explore 4 alternative source configurations, to account for uncertainty in fault activity. 

For the hazard calculations, we test various prediction models for surface rupture and surface displacement, for both ‘principal’ and ‘distributed' faulting. These models use different displacement metrics (AD/MD) and faulting definitions (principal, distributed, sum-of-principal, aggregated), making a direct inter-model comparison difficult. In addition to the regional-scale analysis and to overcome faulting definitions inconsistencies, we also investigate specific potentially critical sites (dams and bridges), enabling a more comprehensive comparison among models.

Results indicate that the fault displacement hazard is generally low, with return periods for significant displacement values (>10 cm) largely exceeding 10 kyr. The hazard is the highest along the surface fault traces (principal faulting) and decreases rapidly with distance from them (distributed faulting), emphasising the importance of having a reliable knowledge of surface traces of active and capable faults. We also highlight the high model variability, demonstrating the importance of using a logic-tree approach.

How to cite: Fernandez, H., Chen, Y.-S., Testa, A., Pace, B., Boncio, P., and Peruzza, L.: Probabilistic Fault Displacement Hazard Analysis study in northern Calabria (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21248, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21248, 2026.

EGU26-22133 | ECS | Posters on site | SM8.1

Multi-approach study for buried fault and its seismic risk assessment, Misis fault, Adana Türkiye 

Büşra Bihter Kurt, Şule Gürboğa, Şahin Doğan, Alper Kıyak, Serkan Köksal, Sevda Demir, Aydın Ayrancı, M. Levent Bakar, Yasin Yılmaz, Burak Kürkçüoğlu, Ömer Hacısalihoğlu, Gökhan Eren Karakulak, Berkan Öztürk, Erdi Apatay, Zeycan Akyol, Esra Ak, Erdener Izladı, Sonel Kaplan, Sinejan Şırayder Şirin, Elif Erol, Simay Can Turan, and Ferhat Emre Çetin

The inadequate characterization of buried faults may lead to unexpected damage resulting from the earthquakes they are capable of generating. Therefore, multi-disciplinary approaches that incorporate buried faults into seismic hazard and risk assessments have gained increasing attention both in national and international literature.  Post-earthquake investigations following the Van Earthquake and the 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquakes in Türkiye indicate the necessity of characterization of tectonic structures.

This study aims to evaluate the potential buried continuation of the Misis Fault, one of the major elements influencing the structural evolution of the Adana Basin, based on geological and geophysical datasets. The investigation was carried out within the framework of the project entitled “Identification of Buried Faults Using Geophysical Methods”, conducted by the General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration (MTA) of Türkiye. The geometry and spatial spatial extent of the fault were examined using multiple geophysical methods.

During the investigation process, surface observations related to the fault were evaluated to interpret its kinematic characteristics and possible activity from the geological point of view. Drone-borne magnetic surveys, high-resolution UAV-derived orthophotos and 2D seismic reflection data were combined together in the segments where surface morphology are limited. As a result of the integrated evaluation of field studies and geophysical data, outcomes suggesting the presence of structural discontinuities responsible for deformation within the Quaternary basin fill that are not directly observable at the surface. These discontinuities indicate a northward continuation of the Misis Fault beneath the Adana Basin. Furthermore, a previously unrecognized structure striking approximately N20ºW was identified within the basin based on the seismic profiles and orthophoto analyses. This structure, named the Tumlu Segment, is interpreted as a newly segment of the Misis Fault System.

In summary, the combined geological and geophysical results provide new insights into the buried continuation of the Misis Fault within the Adana basin. This finding should contribute to regional-scale seismic hazard and risk assessments.

Keywords: Buried faults, 2D seismic reflection, Drone-borne magnetic survey, orthophoto, Adana Basin, Misis Fault, Tumlu Segment

How to cite: Kurt, B. B., Gürboğa, Ş., Doğan, Ş., Kıyak, A., Köksal, S., Demir, S., Ayrancı, A., Bakar, M. L., Yılmaz, Y., Kürkçüoğlu, B., Hacısalihoğlu, Ö., Karakulak, G. E., Öztürk, B., Apatay, E., Akyol, Z., Ak, E., Izladı, E., Kaplan, S., Şırayder Şirin, S., Erol, E., Can Turan, S., and Çetin, F. E.: Multi-approach study for buried fault and its seismic risk assessment, Misis fault, Adana Türkiye, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22133, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22133, 2026.

TS4 – Tectonics and its Interaction with Surface Processes and the Biosphere

EGU26-373 | Orals | TS4.1

Tectono-Climatic Controls on Uplift Transients of the Nahuelbuta Forearc Range, Northern Patagonian Andes 

Ambrosio Vega-Ruiz, Vicente Delgado, Simone Racano, Romano Clementucci, Violeta Véliz-Borel, Mauricio Espinoza, Alfonso Encinas, Daniel Melnick, Carlos Asenjo, Patricio Zambrano, and Roberto Larregla

The landscape evolution of forearc ranges along accretionary convergent margins, such as the southern Chilean Coastal Cordillera, is strongly influenced by deep-seated accretion dynamics, enhancing reactivation of inherited upper-plate structures. The Nahuelbuta Range is the fastest uplifting and exhuming sector of the southern Chilean subduction margin. Stratigraphic markers and uplifted marine terraces indicate dome-shaped uplift across a ~100-km-wide zone since ~2 Ma. However, uplift mechanisms remain debated, and rates are resolved only for the last ~0.3 Myr. Furthermore, dense vegetation and weathering have hindered fault mapping, limiting the understanding of the Nahuelbuta Range deformational history.

We combined new surface geomorphic mapping, morphometric drainage analysis, and river inversion modeling to explore the tectonic and climatic influences on the Nahuelbuta Range landscape evolution. We identify a regional low-relief relic surface atop the Nahuelbuta Range, now warped and dissected by fluvial incision and faults. Drainage morphometric anomalies and microseismicity align with WSW- and ENE-trending faults, indicating ongoing trench-parallel shortening. River inversion analysis shows uplift and topographic rejuvenation between 3 and 2.5 Ma approximately, followed by two later discrete uplift episodes. Uplift transients correlate with Late Pliocene to Pleistocene Patagonian glacial expansion periods, suggesting that glacially intensified sediment flux to the trench enhanced basal accretion of sedimentary material. The location and wavelength of surface uplift events match depth and scale expected for slices of basal acreeted material. Seismic imaging of the sediment-rich subduction channel and microseismicity patterns supports this interpretation. We propose glacially driven tectonic underplating drives the oscillatory uplift history of the Nahuelbuta Range, while ongoing trench-parallel shortening enhance trench-parallel shortening and fault reactivation.

How to cite: Vega-Ruiz, A., Delgado, V., Racano, S., Clementucci, R., Véliz-Borel, V., Espinoza, M., Encinas, A., Melnick, D., Asenjo, C., Zambrano, P., and Larregla, R.: Tectono-Climatic Controls on Uplift Transients of the Nahuelbuta Forearc Range, Northern Patagonian Andes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-373, 2026.

EGU26-1155 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Lithospheric weakness and episodic reactivation of the Altyn Tagh Fault since the Early Cretaceous: Insights into stress transfer and Tibetan Plateau growth 

Zhaotong Sun, Giulio Viola, Jing Liu-Zeng, Yong Zheng, Leonardo Del Sole, Yanxiu Shao, Wenxin Wang, Fengzhen Cui, and Xuwen Shen

The mechanisms of stress transfer across continental plate interiors during continent-continent collision, as well as the timing and the style of far-field fault system responses, remain poorly constrained. The collision between the Indian subcontinent and what is now Tibet began in the Eocene and has involved still on-going north-south convergence throughout southern Tibet and the Himalayas, providing an exceptional natural laboratory for studying continental collision processes.

The Altyn Tagh Fault (ATF), a >1600-km-long lithospheric-scale strike-slip fault marking the northern boundary of the Tibetan Plateau, is a key structure for investigating how deformation propagated following the India-Asia collision. However, the timing of its (sinistral?) initiation remains uncertain, with proposed ages ranging from the Mesozoic to the Miocene. These uncertainties largely reflect the involved structural complexities and the difficulty of directly dating the fault's protracted brittle activity. To address this long-standing problem and to better understand the ATF’s evolution and its role in the Plateau build-up, we conducted detailed structural investigations of two significant outcrops in the Old Aksay region (Gansu province). These exposures preserve a complex fault internal architecture containing numerous Brittle Structural Facies (BSFs), that is, distinct rock domains defined by characteristic fault rocks, mineralogy, textures, and kinematics. Repeated faulting at those outcrops localized deformation into weaker zones, creating thick foliated gouge layers, and along discrete slip surfaces, while lithons from earlier slip events were locally preserved. Their juxtaposition records the temporal and spatial evolution of the ATF, including its deformation mechanisms, physical conditions during initial faulting and subsequent reactivations. We combined multiscalar structural analysis with multi-grain-size K-Ar dating of synkinematic illite separated from BSFs at both outcrops.

The results reveal a protracted, episodic faulting history from the Early Cretaceous (~115 Ma) to the Quaternary (~0.6 Ma), documenting at least five reactivation events. The earliest record at ~115 Ma suggests the ATF existed from before collision as a lithospheric weakness inherited from Mesozoic intracontinental deformation. Crucially, we identify an Early Eocene event (~56 Ma) that provides the first direct geochronological evidence for brittle deformation nearly synchronous with the initial India-Asia collision farther south, supporting models of rapid stress transfer to the northernmost plateau margin. A Late Oligocene reactivation at ~26 Ma coincides with rapid, widespread Miocene exhumation and sedimentation across northeastern Tibet. Late Pliocene (~3 Ma) and Middle Pleistocene (~0.6 Ma) events record continuing slip and deformation localization during progressive Plateau expansion.

This intricate >100 Myr archive demonstrates that long-lived lithospheric weaknesses can preserve deformation spanning multiple tectonic regimes. Beyond providing a robust temporal framework for the tectonic evolution of the northern Tibetan Plateau, our results highlight the efficiency of far-field stress transfer through rigid lithosphere even over very large distances, and establish a powerful methodological protocol for integrating geochronological records and structural investigations in intracontinental orogens worldwide.

How to cite: Sun, Z., Viola, G., Liu-Zeng, J., Zheng, Y., Del Sole, L., Shao, Y., Wang, W., Cui, F., and Shen, X.: Lithospheric weakness and episodic reactivation of the Altyn Tagh Fault since the Early Cretaceous: Insights into stress transfer and Tibetan Plateau growth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1155, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1155, 2026.

EGU26-3563 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

Dynamics of Orogenic Collapse Controlled by Coupled Brittle–Ductile Deformation  

Rawi Dawood, Jean-Arthur Olive, and Einat Aharonov

The life cycle of orogenic belts is governed by the competition between compressional tectonic forces that build topography and gravitational forces that destroy it through extension. In mature orogens, extension is commonly thought to involve viscous flow within a weak crustal channel (WCC), driven by topographic gradients between mountain belts and their margins. This process is expressed in the upper crust as normal faulting atop high mountain belts, such as the Tibetan Plateau and the Apennines. However, the mechanical link by which flow within the WCC drives extension in the brittle upper crust remains poorly understood. In previous work (Dawood et al., 2025 EGU), we designed an analytical model predicting the instantaneous, characteristic rate of brittle extension enabled by WCC flow. Here, we extend and test this framework by coupling it with two-dimensional numerical simulations to investigate the time-dependent dynamics of orogenic collapse. While the analytical model captures the static force balance and provides a snapshot estimate of extension rates for a given orogenic state, the numerical approach resolves the temporal evolution of topography, crustal-channel flow, and fault activity. Our simulations show that topographic gradients drive viscous flow within the WCC, which generates basal shear tractions that promote extension along upper-crustal normal faults. We find that sustained orogenic extension requires both a sufficiently weak WCC (ηwcc  ≤ 1021 Pa.s) and an orogenic elevation exceeding a critical threshold height, hmin. This threshold is controlled by the frictional strength of the brittle crust and the magnitude of basal shear stress transmitted from the WCC. Extension rates scale systematically with fault strength, orogenic height, and WCC viscosity and thickness: high extension rates occur for weak faults and high topography (h >>hmin), especially in the presence of a thick, low-viscosity WCC. In contrast, stronger faults, lower elevations, or thinner and more viscous channels suppress extension. Together, these results validate our analytical scaling laws, indicating that while a static force-balance description predicts the instantaneous extensional behavior, numerical models capture the longer-term, time-dependent, self-limiting evolution of collapsing orogens.

How to cite: Dawood, R., Olive, J.-A., and Aharonov, E.: Dynamics of Orogenic Collapse Controlled by Coupled Brittle–Ductile Deformation , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3563, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3563, 2026.

EGU26-3918 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Long- and Short-term Landscape Evolution of the Carpathian Bend Zone – Linking Low-Temperature Thermochronology with Geomorphometric Analyses 

Lea Schönleber, Jan-Christoph Otto, Thomas Pollhammer, Bjarne Friedrichs, Bianca Heberer, Fabian Dremel, Nicolas Villamizar-Escalante, and Christoph von Hagke

The Carpathian Bend Zone is an orocline in the Southeastern Carpathians that links different segments of the Carpathian arc and represents a structurally unique sector of the mountain range. The region experienced Cretaceous to Miocene thick- and thin-skinned nappe stacking as well as post-collisional shortening and out-of-sequence thrusting. Unlike in many other places, these nappe stacks were not overprinted by subsequent back arc extension. In addition to this tectonic inheritance, the bend zone hosts the most seismically active region in Europe, characterized by persistent deep seismicity referred as “seismic nest”. This reflects deep-seated processes that are only partially expressed in the upper crust and are partially manifested through surface uplift and landscape reorganization rather than upper crust faulting.

 These factors lead to preserved nappe stacks and ongoing landscape evolution driven by recent uplift. Previous studies aiming to quantify exhumation and uplift rates have so far been limited to regions north and south of the Bend Zone, leaving this key segment poorly constrained. This study aims at closing this knowledge gap by investigating if long-term and short-term uplift rates are comparable. Furthermore, it collates these data with preexisting rates from other segments along the orogen to reveal local differences in exhumation patterns.

To investigate long-term exhumation, six sandstone samples were analyzed using apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology. Additionally, geomorphometric analyses such as river longitudinal profiles, knickpoints, and χ-maps were used to study topographic evidence of recent uplift and assess drainage divide migration and equilibrium conditions. Furthermore, river terraces were mapped and their relative elevations above the modern riverbed were used to estimate since the Early Pleistocene. By correlating terrace elevations with known dated levels from nearby regions, constraints were placed on the timing of Quaternary incision and rock uplift.

The Apatite (U-Th)/He dates show a variable amount of thermal overprint. Two samples yield (U-Th)/He dates younger than their stratigraphic ages while four samples show dispersed dates older as well as younger than the corresponding Miocene stratigraphic ages. This indicates partial resetting, an inherited thermal history from the grains’ sources, and limited post-Miocene burial. Therefore, assuming a geothermal gradient of 30 °C/km, a maximum amount of approximately 2.7 km of burial since the Middle Miocene can be presumed. The geomorphic signals consistently indicate active uplift within the Bend Zone, particularly in areas where structural controls induce sharp knickpoints and asymmetry in watershed geometry. The average rock uplift rate indicated by river terraces is 1.1 mm/yr since the Middle Pleistocene. In combination with estimated exhumation rates derived from the thermochronological data, a overall stable landscape surface within the Bend Zone is proposed for the last 2.5 Ma. Overall, our results indicate that the Bend Zone has been characterized by low long-term exhumation rates since the mid Miocene and higher uplift rates during the Quaternary.

How to cite: Schönleber, L., Otto, J.-C., Pollhammer, T., Friedrichs, B., Heberer, B., Dremel, F., Villamizar-Escalante, N., and von Hagke, C.: Long- and Short-term Landscape Evolution of the Carpathian Bend Zone – Linking Low-Temperature Thermochronology with Geomorphometric Analyses, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3918, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3918, 2026.

When aseismic ridges carried by the subducting oceanic plate enter a subduction zone, the trench depth and hence the margin relief is reduced, which increases the compression of the upper plate. The increase in compression may be relevant for understanding surface uplift and mountain building in response to ridge-subduction, but detailed effects remain to be explored. Here we use analytical and two-dimensional finite-element force-balance models to investigate the effects of relief changes and other parameters that may change during ridge subduction, including the initial trench depth, the megathrust dip angle, the slab curvature, the submarine surface slope angle, the density structure of the upper plate, the initial mountain height and the surface topography of the upper plate.

Our modeling results indicate that the increase in upper-plate compression mainly depends on the total relief change, the trench depth prior to ridge subduction and the submarine surface slope angle during ridge subduction. Secondarily, the increase in compression also depends on the average dip angle and curvature of the plate interface, as well as on the density structure of the upper plate and the mountain height prior to subduction. The enhanced upper-plate compression due to ridge subduction promotes mountain building in the upper plate until the increase in elevation leads to stress conditions comparable to those before the entrance of the ridge. We investigate this aspect for the subduction of the Cocos Ridge, based on additional finite element models that approximate the setting along the Central American margin near Costa Rica before and after the entrance of the ridge. The models indicate that the mere decrease in trench depth of ~3.3 km due to ridge subduction promoted an increase in mountain height of ~0.6 km. This corresponds to one-third of the maximum uplift inferred for Costa Rica. We further find that the remaining elevation increase of up to 1.4 km cannot be explained by changes in the slab dip angle or upper-plate density structure but may indicate an increase in shear stress along the plate interface. Taken together, our analysis shows that the decrease in trench depth during ridge subduction increases the compression of the upper plate, which promotes surface uplift and mountain building even at greater distances to the ridge.

How to cite: Leng, Y., Dielforder, A., and Hampel, A.: Impact of decreasing trench depth during aseismic ridge subduction on the forearc stress state: Insights from analytical and finite-element force-balance models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5077, 2026.

EGU26-5387 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Tectono-thermal evolution of the Northern Apennines-Alpine knot: a case study from the Bobbio Tectonic Window 

Francesca Stendardi, Daniel Barrera Acosta, Barbara Carrapa, Giovanni Toscani, Irene Albino, and Andrea Di Giulio

The structural and tectonic interactions between the S-verging Southern Alps and the NE-verging Northern Apennines fold-and-thrust belt, and their shared Po Plain foreland basin, represents a classic and long-debated issue in Alpine–Apennine geodynamics. We here investigate a cross section from the Bobbio Tectonic Window (BTW) in the Emilian Northern Apennines, to the central Po Plain subsurface, which records these important relationships. Previous studies focused on fault slip-rate measurements of the buried Northern Apennine thrust fronts, but a comprehensive tectono-thermal study of the Lower Miocene turbiditic sequence outcropping in the BTW is still lacking. In this work, we investigate the relationship between BTW development and the interaction of the Northern Apennines and Southern Alps thrust fronts buried below Pliocene-Pleistocene sediments in the central Po Plain. We analysed the cooling/exhumation history of rocks exposed at the core of the BTW by means of low-T thermochronology (apatite fission-track and U-Th/He) on samples from the Lower Miocene (Burdigalian) Bobbio Fm. and compared them with the slip-rate history of the Northern Apennines buried thrust front along the Emilian Arc. Our thermochronological results from the BTW show a maximum temperature of ca. 85-90°C (apatite fission-tracks partial annealing zone) reached soon after depositional age, followed first by a relatively slow cooling in the Early Miocene- Early Pliocene time window (17-6 Ma), and then by a fast cooling starting between ca. 6 and 4 Ma.  By comparing these results with the slip-rate trend of the buried Apennines thrust front, we interpret them as the signal of an out-of-sequence thrusting reactivation within the inner Northern Apennine fold-and-thrust belt due to the interaction between the Northern Apennines outermost fronts and the Southern Alps.  This study shows how far-field geological structures can influence the general kinematics of the thrust-fold belt, promoting out-of-sequence reactivation of internal tectonic structures and the exposure of deep tectonic units within the BTW.

How to cite: Stendardi, F., Barrera Acosta, D., Carrapa, B., Toscani, G., Albino, I., and Di Giulio, A.: Tectono-thermal evolution of the Northern Apennines-Alpine knot: a case study from the Bobbio Tectonic Window, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5387, 2026.

EGU26-5782 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

How interface weakening and continental structure promote flat slab subduction 

Antoniette Greta Grima and Thorsten Becker

The shallowing of subducting slabs within the upper ~200 km of the mantle, commonly referred to as flat slab subduction is associated with extensive petrological and structural modification of the continental lithosphere. Anomalously buoyant oceanic lithosphere, upper-plate overthrusting, and interactions with cratonic keels have all been proposed as mechanisms promoting shallow slab geometries, yet the dynamics governing the initiation and duration of flat slab subduction remain to be fully understood. Here, we investigate self-consistent flat-slab subduction dynamics using the finite element code ASPECT with adaptive mesh refinement and a free surface boundary condition. We explore the influence of the overriding plate structure, including the presence of continental keels, as well as the role of heterogenous subduction interface strength on shallow slab dynamics. Our results show that flat slab geometries develop when a weak, sediment-rich subduction interface is combined with a positively buoyant overriding continental lithosphere. Substantiating previous studies, we further find that the presence of a strong cratonic keel near the continental plate margin enhances shallow slab underthrusting and encourages flat slab configurations. Importantly, we show that the timing of interface weakening, such as due to influx of sediments, exerts a first-order control on the onset and the longevity of slab flattening. As the slab flattens, pronounced subsidence, extension and transient marine inundation develop within the foreland region of the upper plate, superimposed on broader, large-scale subsidence of the continental interior. Regional uplift and subsidence are thus not solely linked to flat slab emplacement and removal, but also reflect evolving slab dynamics within the shallow upper mantle. Our results provide new constraints on the geodynamic controls of flat slab evolution and their role in driving continent-scale deformation and sediment redistribution.

How to cite: Grima, A. G. and Becker, T.: How interface weakening and continental structure promote flat slab subduction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5782, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5782, 2026.

EGU26-6495 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

Onset of mountain building in the Qinling Mountains: Evidence from bedrock and detrital low-temperature thermochronology 

Ma Yuxiong, Yang Zhao, Shi Xiaohui, You Jiali, and Ju Dali

Abstract: Hinterland mountains serve as the pivotal link that spatially and temporally couples deep lithospheric processes with surface responses in orogenic systems. The Qinling Mountains, situated in the continental interior of East Asia, form a significant natural boundary that separates China into distinct north-south climatic and geographical zones. A key unresolved issue is the origin of the Qinling Mountains-specifically, the timing and mechanisms of their initial uplift and exhumation. The basin-range structure of the East Qinling provides a natural archive for elucidating this problem, as its formation records the onset of mountain building. This study employs multiple thermochronological techniques, including apatite and zircon fission-track and (U-Th)/He analyses of both basin sediments and bedrock samples across basin-bounding faults. Through analyses of lag-time, elevation profiles, and thermal history modeling, the exhumation history of East Qinling is reconstructed. Results elucidate an early-phase cooling event during ~120-100 Ma, with a rate of 5.9-3.4 °C/Ma. Following a prolonged thermal stagnation until ~80 Ma, a renewed phase of accelerated cooling occurred between 80 and 60 Ma, with cooling rates ranging from 5.3 to 1.0 °C/Ma. Integrating these new results with existing geological evidence, we propose that the Qinling Mountains underwent multi-stage uplift and orogenic processes, driven by far-field tectonic stresses associated with the convergence of surrounding plates. The early Cretaceous rapid cooling and exhumation are correlated with intracontinental deformation stage in the eastern China during the Yanshanian period. However, prolonged erosion and planation resulted in low-relief topography in the Qinling Mountains before the late Cretaceous (~80 Ma). During the late Cretaceous-early Cenozoic, under the far-field influence of Pacific Plate subduction, the East Qinling region experienced intense hinterland extension. This process broke up the pre-existing planation surface and formed a series of alternating basins and ranges, signifying the onset of the mountain building in Qinling mountains. Furthermore, the Qinling Mountains exhibit a spatio-temporal pattern of progressive mountain growth from south to north. This study provides a typical case study for understanding the uplift and tectonic evolution of hinterland mountains.

How to cite: Yuxiong, M., Zhao, Y., Xiaohui, S., Jiali, Y., and Dali, J.: Onset of mountain building in the Qinling Mountains: Evidence from bedrock and detrital low-temperature thermochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6495, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6495, 2026.

EGU26-8121 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Unraveling the tectonic signatures of thin and thick oroclines through a global catalogue 

Andreia A. Hamid, Philip J. Heron, and Stephen T. Johnston

Oroclines are orogenic belts that have been subjected to bending and are a common feature of mountain ranges worldwide. Despite their widespread occurrence, there is ongoing debate surrounding the geodynamic processes responsible for their development. Specifically, there is uncertainty as to whether these orogens involve upper-crustal (i.e, thin-skinned) or large-scale lithospheric (i.e., thick-skinned) deformation, as well as whether their curvature evolves contemporaneously with mountain growth (i.e., progressive orocline) or post-orogenesis (secondary orocline). Such spatial and temporal deformation means that unraveling the tectonic signature of oroclines may significantly enhance our understanding of orocline formation and provide broader insight into the evolution of mountain systems and convergent plate boundaries worldwide. 

Given the widespread occurrence of oroclines, identifying their tectonic signatures requires analyzing their attributes and geodynamic framework within a global context. However, oroclines have primarily been studied individually - which presents a challenge for their comparison. To address this, we present a global catalogue of oroclines and their tectonic signatures based on map-view characteristics, structural deformation style (e.g., thin- or thick-skinned), and kinematic classification (e.g., primary arc, progressive or secondary orocline).  

Our catalogue is generated by analyzing published literature and newly derived data on orocline attributes, collating 30+ oroclines from around the world. Within our dataset, we observe a wide range of tectonic characteristics, including curve lengths, width-to-length ratios, and interlimb angles. However, we also find a specific signature for oroclines that are classified as thin-skinned or thick-skinned – allowing for a clear identification of such geodynamic processes within our catalogue. In our study, we provide an orocline classification system based on the tectonic signatures highlighted in our dataset. This classification system and identified signatures may have several implications for our understanding of lesser-studied oroclines and the evolution of mountain systems worldwide. 

How to cite: Hamid, A. A., Heron, P. J., and Johnston, S. T.: Unraveling the tectonic signatures of thin and thick oroclines through a global catalogue, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8121, 2026.

This study presents a new regional-scale 3D reconstruction of the major Plio–Pleistocene tectonostratigraphic surfaces of the Po Plain Basin (Italy), providing new constraints on the deformation history of this key Mediterranean foreland basin. The model was constructed by interpreting several thousand 2D pre-stack time-migrated (PSTM) seismic profiles, calibrated with an extensive wellbore database. This approach enables a robust regional mapping of structural elements and defined Plio-Pleistocene unconformities.
The results show that the Plio-Pleistocene architecture of the Po Plain is controlled by the interaction of two different geodynamic systems, resulting in a complex source-to-sink system.  Since the Plio-Pleistocene, the advancing Northern Apennines (NA) thrust belt has mostly generated accommodation space, whereas most of the sediment supply came from the Southern Alps (SA). 
Isobath maps provide new temporal constraints on the timing and style of deformation, particularly in the central sector of the Po Plain, where the outermost buried fronts of the NA, belonging to the Emilian Arc fold system, are nearly in direct contact with the outermost fronts of the SA. Our reconstruction demonstrates that the evolution of the NA thrust front was strongly influenced by the presence of the buried SA to the north. Where the NA collided with the SA, out-of-sequence thrusting was triggered within the internal sector of the NA from the middle to late Pliocene, locally persisting until the late Pleistocene. In contrast, where this interaction did not occur, the NA thrust front evolved following a classical in-sequence style, highlighting significant along-strike variability in the structural evolution of the Northern Apennines.
The detailed 3D reconstruction of the entire Po Plain subsurface further allows a robust analysis of the progressive reorganization of basin depocenters through time via the calculation of isochore maps. Beyond providing a three-dimensional depiction of this evolution, these maps enable quantification of sediment volumes deposited between successive unconformities and, subsequently, the calculation of sedimentation rates across the basin.
Decompacted volume analysis reveals a marked increase in sediment accumulation during the Pleistocene, from approximately 31,041 km³ for the entire Pliocene, with a rate of 10.594 km³/Ma to about 60,646 km³ for the Pleistocene, with a rate of 25.269 km³/Ma, based on a 50% sand–50% shale decompaction model. This increase occurred despite an overall reduction in tectonic activity during the Pleistocene within the Alps, the primary sediment source region. This apparent paradox is interpreted as the result of strong climatic forcing associated with progressive climate deterioration and the onset of major Alpine glaciations, which dramatically enhanced erosion in the surrounding orogenic belts. The resulting increase in sediment flux, together with a major marine regression, drove rapid basin infilling and large-scale eastward progradation of the Po Basin system. These findings highlight the fundamental role of climate–tectonic coupling in controlling the evolution of the Po Plain over the last 5 Myr.

How to cite: Barrera, D., Toscani, G., and Di Giulio, A.: How Two Orogens Shaped and Filled a Foreland Basin: Plio-Pleistocene Tectonic and Climatic Controls on the Po Plain Basin (Italy) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8275, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8275, 2026.

EGU26-8585 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Tracing the evolution of the Transantarctic Basin (southern Gondwana) through sandstone petrography 

Luca Zurli, Marco Fioraso, Matteo Perotti, Andrea Di Giulio, Valerio Olivetti, Samuele Pezzoli, Valentina Corti, Francesca Stendardi, and Gianluca Cornamusini

The analysis of clastic sequences is fundamental for understanding plate dynamics, as it record variations in depositional environments and source-to-sink systems. Since the late Paleozoic, contemporaneous with the convergence between the paleo-Pacific plate and Gondwana, sedimentary basins developed in both forearc and retroarc positions of the Gondwanide orogenic system. The Beacon Supergroup in Antarctica and the Parmeener Supergroup in Tasmania represent the sedimentary infill of the Transantarctic Basin, located in a retroarc setting. These successions are mainly composed of fluvial sandy and muddy deposits, which are poorly deformed and currently unconformably overlie older units. Deposition began in the Devonian and ended in the Early Jurassic, spanning more than 200 Myr and encompassing  key events in the history of the Earth, such as the Late Paleozoic Ice Age, the subsequent transition from icehouse to greenhouse conditions, and the Permian-Triassic mass extinction. The composition of sandstones within the Beacon and Parmeener supergroups varies through time and space, correlating with major tectonic processes driven by subduction dynamics, which ultimately controlled the source-to-sink systems feeding these clastic units. Variability in sandstone composition is documented through a quantitative analysis of all available published data, integrated with new datasets from the Transantarctic Mountains and Tasmania. The results reveal a shift from quartz-feldspar-dominated sandstones, indicating derivation from crystalline basement, to volcanic lithic fragment rich sandstones, reflecting a provenance from coeval volcanic arc rocks. This provenance shift occurred diachronously along the basin, whit volcanic component appearing in the central Transantarctic Mountains during the Permian and in Victoria Land and Tasmania during the Triassic. Sandstone composition further indicates that the Victoria Land region evolved from an intracratonic basin in back-bulge position to a foredeep basin setting.

How to cite: Zurli, L., Fioraso, M., Perotti, M., Di Giulio, A., Olivetti, V., Pezzoli, S., Corti, V., Stendardi, F., and Cornamusini, G.: Tracing the evolution of the Transantarctic Basin (southern Gondwana) through sandstone petrography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8585, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8585, 2026.

The contact between the northern edge of the Higher Himalayan Crystalline (HHC) and the overlying Tethyan Sedimentary Sequence (TSS) has long been debated as either a thrust or a normal fault. Initially thought to be a thrust contact, it was later recognized as a zone of crustal-scale normal faults dipping to the north, known as the South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS). This suggests that the overlying TSS has moved northward along the contact relative to the HHC footwall. The cause of the initiation of such a crustal-scale normal-fault system in a convergent setting remains poorly understood, which motivates the present study to re-examine the structure of the HHC-TSS contact in the Dhauliganga valley of the Garhwal Himalaya. Nevertheless, we identified a series of normal faults cutting across the regional foliation of the HHC-TSS rocks during our field investigation, characterized by intense brecciation and gouging, consistent with upper-crustal brittle deformation. Our field observations suggest that these faults primarily formed during the waning phase of Himalayan growth and are unrelated to the northward slip of the TSS over HHC, as these normal faults cut across all dominant structural elements, including the migmatitic layering of HHC at high angles.  In addition, we found a spectacular ductile shear zone within the Milam Formation of the TSS, located directly above the HHC. This zone provides strong evidence of south-vergent thrusting along the contact, as indicated by fold asymmetry, C-S structures, and low-angle Riedel shears, consistent with the Himalayan deformation. Microstructural studies of shear-zone samples reveal that quartz grains are predominantly stretched as we expect in a ductile shear zone, forming lenticular ribbons with high aspect ratios and undulose extinction, whereas the occurrence of smaller, unstrained grains along the edges of larger grains is indicative of subgrain rotation recrystallisation typical of high temperatures (~400°-500°C). XRD analysis further confirmed the presence of graphite in the mylonitized samples, and the alignment of graphite along shear fabrics suggests the influence of shear heating during their formation. Our new findings of deformation structures along the HHC-TSS contact recognize the importance of reevaluating and expanding our understanding of the structural evolution in this area, particularly in the context of the India-Eurasia collision. Based on field and microstructural observations, we suggest that the collision between India and Eurasia caused the TSS to thrust over the HHC, while steeply dipping normal faults that have affected all previous structural features in the HHC and TSS are a later phenomenon that helped the Himalayan mountain belt attain stability of the Himalayan wedge from a supercritical stage.

How to cite: Das, A. and Bose, S.: Deformation at the contact between the Higher Himalayan Crystalline and the Tethyan Sedimentary Sequence: Thrusting versus normal faulting conundrum, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9016, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9016, 2026.

EGU26-9943 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Sedimentary architecture of Late Cretaceous to Early Eocene flysch sequences in the Swiss Alps 

Sophia Johanna Swaton, Guilherme Bozetti, Chantal Laeticia Schmidt, Balthasar Lukas Epprecht, Gabriel Lukas Graf, Jörg Hermann, and Fritz Schlunegger

The Campanian/Maastrichian to Lutetian Alpine flysch sequences of the Schlieren- and Gurnigel nappes record deposition in an ocean-continent subduction setting related to Alpine orogenesis. Despite extensive studies of these flysch deposits, the existence of a source-to-sink relationship between the two units remains debated. Here, we logged 50-70 m-thick successions of the Gurnigel and Schlieren deposits at two sites, respectively, at a scale of 1:20. The ages of the analysed sediments range from the Thanetian to the Lutetian. We measured the paleoflow directions using sole marks and cross-bedding, and conducted drone surveys to document the large-scale depositional architecture. Our aim was to reconstruct a potential proximal-to-distal relationship between the two sequences.

In the Schlieren nappe, the analysed sediments are dominated by coarse-grained (grain size up to 2 mm) sandstone beds <5 m thick, characterised by a matrix-supported fabric and sole marks at their bases. The finer-grained sandstone beds (grain size up to c. 0.6 mm) are <50 cm thick. They display a massive, grain-supported fabric with normal grading at the base, followed by parallel lamination and occasionally ripple marks at the top. Mudstone beds (clay and silt fraction) are up to 30 cm thick. They are massive to parallel-laminated and locally show bioturbation. Mudstone beds contribute to <10% to the entire suite. Paleoflow directions scatter between the NE and SE. Drone surveys disclose the presence of troughs up to 7 m deep and ten meters wide. They are cut into sandstone beds and backfilled with coarse-grained, massive to laminated sandstones.

By contrast, the Gurnigel sequences are dominated by a succession of sandstone beds with mudstone interbeds. Sandstone beds are <1.5 m thick. They have a planar base, are medium- to fine-grained (grain size ranging from c. 0.1 to 0.6 mm) and show a fining-up trend. Individual beds display a succession of sedimentary structures occasionally starting with a massive fabric. It is followed by mm-scale plane lamination, ripple marks with convolute bedding and sub-mm laminations towards the top. Mudstone interbeds, up to 30 cm thick, are massive to parallel laminated and strongly bioturbated, comprising up to 40% of the surveyed outcrop. Drone imagery shows that laterally continuous, horizontally layered beds dominate the overall architecture. However, lenticular sandstone beds with scours up to 50 cm deep occur locally. Sole marks and cross bedding indicate paleoflow toward the S and W.

The sedimentary structures indicate that the Schlieren sediments were deposited predominantly by (hyper)concentrated, friction-controlled flows and concentrated currents where grain-grain interactions dominate. In contrast, the Gurnigel sediments most likely accumulated from surge-like turbidity flows driven by dynamic pressure. Although the inferred surges recorded in the Gurnigel sediments could, in principle, have resulted from flow separation – with coarse-grained material accumulating in the more proximal Schlieren area and finer-grained fractions being deposited in a more distal setting such as the Gurnigel realm – we discard this interpretation. This conclusion is supported by the opposite paleoflow directions, which indicate that no source-to-sink relationship existed between the two depositional systems.

How to cite: Swaton, S. J., Bozetti, G., Schmidt, C. L., Epprecht, B. L., Graf, G. L., Hermann, J., and Schlunegger, F.: Sedimentary architecture of Late Cretaceous to Early Eocene flysch sequences in the Swiss Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9943, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9943, 2026.

EGU26-11098 | ECS | Orals | TS4.1

Dynamic Mantle Support Beneath the Eastern Anatolian Plateau Since ~13 Ma Inferred from Zircon Hf Isotopes 

Adar Glazer, Dov Avigad, and Navot Morag

The Eastern Anatolian Plateau is a broad, high-elevation (~2 km), low-relief collisional plateau in eastern Turkey that developed following the Arabia-Eurasia collision and the transition to a post-collisional tectonic setting. It occupies a central position between the Bitlis-Zagros suture to the south and the Eastern Pontides-Lesser Caucasus mountain ranges to the north and is associated with widespread Neogene volcanism. Since the Early-Middle Miocene, uplifted regions along the Bitlis segment of the Arabia-Eurasia convergence zone, including parts of the Eastern Anatolian Plateau, were drained toward the northern Eastern Mediterranean, delivering large volumes of sediment to the deep sea and forming thick flysch successions. These deposits archive the crustal inventory exposed at the time and provide a valuable record of the tectono-magmatic evolution of the convergence zone. Here, we present detrital zircon U-Pb-Hf data from Late Miocene sediments recovered from DSDP Sites 375/376 and ODP Site 968 in the northern Eastern Mediterranean to constrain the sequence of tectono-magmatic events associated with Arabia-Eurasia convergence, with particular emphasis on the timing of the establishment of a post-collisional regime. Detrital zircon U-Pb-Hf data record Upper Cretaceous and Eocene magmatic flare-ups related to Neotethys subduction, as well as a prominent Miocene magmatic flare-up with distinct age modes at ~17, ~11, and ~6 Ma associated with the transition to a post-collisional regime. Hf isotope compositions of Miocene detrital zircons reveal a systematic shift from highly variable, evolved signatures before ~13 Ma to predominantly juvenile signatures thereafter. This shift indicates an increasing contribution of mantle-derived sources to magmatism since the mid-Miocene, relative to earlier evolved or mixed mantle-crustal sources. We interpret this transition to indicate that Neotethys slab break-off or lithospheric mantle delamination beneath Eastern Anatolia had largely progressed toward completion by ~13 Ma, signaling the establishment of post-collisional tectonic conditions. Notably, this transition slightly predates the inferred onset of plateau uplift at ~11 Ma, suggesting that mantle reorganization beneath Eastern Anatolia preceded, and was not synchronous with, the surface expression of uplift.

How to cite: Glazer, A., Avigad, D., and Morag, N.: Dynamic Mantle Support Beneath the Eastern Anatolian Plateau Since ~13 Ma Inferred from Zircon Hf Isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11098, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11098, 2026.

EGU26-11459 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Inferring uplift histories from landscapes using hypsometric curves 

Fergus McNab, Peter van der Beek, Taylor Schildgen, and Jens Turowski

One of the main ways in which deep seated tectonic or geodynamic processes influence the Earth's surface is by driving rock uplift. Variations in rock uplift through space and time combine with surface processes, such as erosion in rivers and on hillslopes, to shape the surface landscape. These relationships imply that, if we can adequately parameterise surface processes, we may be able to infer rock uplift histories from observations of present day topography. Efforts to do so formally using inverse modelling have mostly focused on the shapes of river profiles. Such approaches can reproduce well observed profiles, and yield uplift histories broadly consistent with independent constraints. However, they generally assume a fixed drainage planform, and neglect any information stored in the rest of landscape (i.e., in hillslope topography). Landscape evolution models, which include descriptions of hillslope processes and allow drainage planforms to evolve, may address these issues, but come with their own challenges. In particular, a strong dependence of modelled drainage planforms on the initial condition, which is generally poorly constrained, complicates direct comparison of observed and modelled topography.

Here, we explore the utility of hypsometric curves – cumulative distribution functions of elevation within a domain – in inverse landscape evolution modelling (we also include equivalent functions for slope and curvature). These curves' integrative nature should make them relatively insensitive to the precise positions of individual valleys and ridgelines. By comparing hypsometric curves from many simulations, with and without added noise, we assess their sensitivity to initial conditions, erosional parameters and uplift histories. We confirm that hypsometric curves are insensitive to initial conditions, particularly when normalised by the mean – rather than, as is traditional, the maximum – value in the domain. For landscapes in a dynamic equilibrium with the imposed uplift rate, the main control on the normalised hypsometric curve is the relative importance of fluvial and hillslope processes. Multiple erosional parameters influence this balance, introducing trade-offs to the misfit space. Nevertheless, individual parameters do have subtle secondary effects that allow them to be determined independently, at least for relatively low noise levels. In transient landscapes, features of simple uplift histories – such as timings and amplitudes of step changes in uplift rate – also appear to be recoverable. We conclude that hypsometric curves can form useful bases for inverse landscape evolution modelling, which could in turn provide novel insights into the tectonic and geodynamic processes that drive rock uplift.

How to cite: McNab, F., van der Beek, P., Schildgen, T., and Turowski, J.: Inferring uplift histories from landscapes using hypsometric curves, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11459, 2026.

EGU26-12076 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Indentation tectonics in the Swiss Préalpes Romandes caused by the uplift of the Aar Massif: insights from high-resolution 3D structural modelling 

Sebastian Drvoderić, Marco Herwegh, Alfons Berger, Fritz Schlunegger, Matteo Furlan, Eva Kurmann, Stephan Dall’Agnolo, Philippos Garefalakis, Riccardo Monti, and Ferdinando Musso Piantelli

The Prealps represent a complex nappe system consisting of Mesozoic to early–middle Cenozoic sediments deposited in the Penninic domains, detached from its substratum during the Alpine orogeny. During subsequent phases of subduction and collision, these nappes were transported along the active plate interface between Adria and Europe far to the north. Today, they lay above the transition between the Helvetic Nappes and the Subalpine Molasse. As a result of long-term displacement and successive deformation, the Prealps exhibit a complex structural architecture that records the cumulative tectonic evolution. We developed a 3D model to yield a high-resolution visualization of the structural architecture and its spatial changes within the Préalpes Romandes. These observations allow us to correlate nappe internal deformation with movements of underlying nappes, which is the goal of this work.

The Préalpes Romandes are crosscut by predominantly north–south–oriented sinistral strike-slip faults. These structures range from large-scale faults that transect the entire Prealps nappe stack and accommodate offsets of several kilometers, to minor faults with displacements of only a few meters to tens of meters. Smaller faults are commonly linked by lateral offsets to form continuous step-over fault systems and typically terminate within the detachment horizon. In contrast, larger strike-slip faults must breach the basal detachment of the Prealps to maintain a kinematic balance and are therefore rooted in deeper structural units. Despite a regional change in stratigraphic orientation of approximately 30° from east to west, the orientation of sinistral strike-slip faults remains largely unchanged. An increasing number of NW–SE–oriented dextral strike-slip faults in the eastern Préalpes Romandes indicate a change in the regional kinematic regime.

Based on our results, we interpret that the Préalpes Romandes experienced a young (Miocene) phase of deformation following early stages of subduction related nappe transport. We relate this Miocene phase of deformation to the uplift of the Aar Massif. This caused differential motion beneath the Prealps, which is expressed by strike-slip deformation, rotation and back-thrusting within the Préalpes Romandes. We additionally invoke this motion to have controlled the differential migration within the nappe stack, resulting in ~30° counter-clockwise rotation and a general northwestward displacement of the eastern Préalpes Romandes. In addition, the presence of a northern backstop subsequently promoted the occurrence of a lateral escape along local dextral strike-slip faults. A correlation of our 3D model with seismically active zones at greater depth discloses the occurrence of structures that were offset in response to the uplift of the Aar massif during Miocene times. These observations document a complex multistage deformation sequence associated with late-stage collision and uplift tectonics in the subsurface, where the initial sinistral movement has been disrupted and partially reoriented by the latest tectonic evolution. It also highlights the role of strike-slip structures as key elements for understanding the long-term tectonic evolution of the region.

High-resolution 3D modelling therefore provides a powerful framework to unravel internal structural relationships, integrate them with surrounding geology, and develop coherent palaeogeographic reconstructions through space and time.

How to cite: Drvoderić, S., Herwegh, M., Berger, A., Schlunegger, F., Furlan, M., Kurmann, E., Dall’Agnolo, S., Garefalakis, P., Monti, R., and Musso Piantelli, F.: Indentation tectonics in the Swiss Préalpes Romandes caused by the uplift of the Aar Massif: insights from high-resolution 3D structural modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12076, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12076, 2026.

EGU26-13259 | Orals | TS4.1

Thermochronological record of slab flattening and roll-back in the eastern part of the Colorado Plateau 

Audrey Margirier, Jessica R. Stanley, Stuart Thomson, Pierre G. Valla, Konstanze Stübner, Kimberly Huppert, and Georgina E. King

The influence of deep-seated processes on tectonics and magmatism has been documented at large scale in different orogens, such as the American Cordilleras. Understanding how these processes shape orogens through time is essential to disentangle their interactions with climatically-driven surface processes. The Colorado Plateau experienced a complex Cenozoic uplift and exhumation history, yet the drivers, magnitude and timing of the successive exhumation phases, as well as their role in conditioning late-stage canyon incision, remain strongly debated. In particular, the legacy of Farallon slab subduction, through slab flattening, subsequent rollback, and associated uplift from combined tectonics, magmatism, and dynamic topography, may have fundamentally structured the plateau prior to more recent canyon incision.

We combine apatite (U–Th–Sm)/He dating with apatite fission-track analysis from bedrock samples collected along an elevation profile in the Black Canyon of the Gunnison (eastern Colorado Plateau). By integrating these thermochronological data with the timing of regional erosional unconformities, we provide new constraints on the Cenozoic thermal evolution of basement rocks in this area. Our results reveal an early cooling phase between ca. 70 and 60 Ma. This phase is followed by reheating between ca. 35 and 30 Ma, corresponding to a temperature increase of ~40 °C, and by a subsequent cooling phase from 30 to 25 Ma of similar magnitude. A final cooling phase occurring after ~5 Ma is required to reach present-day surface temperatures. We interpret the early cooling phase as exhumation related to Laramide deformation associated with Farallon slab flattening. The reheating phase is contemporaneous with a widespread mid-Cenozoic magmatic flare-up interpreted to reflect slab rollback processes. The reheating may be specifically associated with a regional increase in the geothermal gradient or burial beneath volcanic sequences, or a combination of both. The final cooling phase is attributed to Plio-Quaternary incision of the Black Canyon, which generated ~800 m of relief.

Together, these results highlight how the sequence of slab flattening and subsequent rollback exerted a first-order control on Colorado Plateau surface uplift, exhumation and magmatism, thereby preconditioning the landscape on which Plio-Quaternary canyon incision developed. These thermochronological data will be integrated with existing thermochronological datasets to assess at larger scale the spatio-temporal variability of exhumation and reheating in response to changes in the geometry of the downgoing slab.

How to cite: Margirier, A., Stanley, J. R., Thomson, S., Valla, P. G., Stübner, K., Huppert, K., and King, G. E.: Thermochronological record of slab flattening and roll-back in the eastern part of the Colorado Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13259, 2026.

EGU26-13851 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Kinematic Decoupling and Orogenic Trend Variations in Arcuate Fold-and-Thrust Belts: Exploring Possible Deep Controls 

Inmaculada Expósito, Manuel Díaz-Azpiroz, Alejandro Jiménez-Bonilla, and Juan Carlos Balanyá

First-order orogenic arcs are often divided into second-order curves, termed salients and recesses (convex and concave to the transport direction, respectively). Although several studies have analysed the supracrustal factors controlling this festooned geometry, the potential role of deep-seated mechanisms has received little attention.

In the northern branch of the Gibraltar Arc, the orogenic grain of the central and western Betics external fold and trust belt (FTB) draws two secondary arcs, connected by a salient-recces transition segment, whose southernmost limit is the Torcal shear zone (TSZ). The central FTB salient consists of WSW-ENE to W-E thin-skinned shortening structures involving post-Burdigalian, syn-orogenic sequences in its deformation front. Thrust surfaces are dominantly SE to S-ward dipping and slickenlines suggest NNW-SSE to N-S transport directions. At the SW end of this salient, just east of the TSZ, the shortening structures trend becomes N-S. The westernmost FTB salient, within the Gibraltar Arc hinge, is defined by NW to W-ward verging, shortening structures with radial transport direction. Arc-parallel extension occurred coeval with arc-orthogonal shortening. Both salients are connected by the aforementioned transitional domain, an E-W to ENE-WSE transpressive band, dominated by dextral strike-slip deformation. This transpressive zone is significantly segmented into scattered topographic highs due to  orogen-paralell extension, mainly  accommodated by NW-SE  normal and dextral faults.

These three tectonic domains seem to have been differentiating since the upper Miocene to Holocene suggesting a decoupling between the W-ward migrating hinge of the Gibraltar Arc and the rest of the arcuate chain. Such decoupling would fit well with the existence of a W-E trending STEP fault, whose easternmost tip were located under the transition between the central and western Betics. Thus, the dominantly dextral, significantly stretched TSZ, located just north of the betic FTB/hinterland boundary, would be the expression in the FTB of such deep STEP fault. In this context, the recent FTB deformation in the central Betics would respond mainly to the current NW-SE shortening undergone by the Iberian Peninsula, whereas the kinematic features of both the transitional transpressive band and the westernmost FTB are consistent with a WNW-ESE directed far field vector associated with the arc westward migration. Interestingly, the recent intraplate deformation in the Betics foreland has produced greater relative uplifts in front of the central Betics, mostly accommodated in overall WSW-ENE faults, than in westernmost sectors. Additionally, the kinematics of reactivated structures in the westernmost sector of the foreland is compatible with a WNW-ENE convergence. Assuming some amount of mechanical plates coupling along the northern branch of the Betics, these foreland deformation features would agree with the proposed difference in the convergence angle along the central and western Betics FTB.

This work is supported by projects PID2024-159481NB-I00 and by ERDF/EU.

How to cite: Expósito, I., Díaz-Azpiroz, M., Jiménez-Bonilla, A., and Balanyá, J. C.: Kinematic Decoupling and Orogenic Trend Variations in Arcuate Fold-and-Thrust Belts: Exploring Possible Deep Controls, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13851, 2026.

EGU26-14604 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Andean Cross Section at 30ºS: A Window Onto the Tectonic Evolution of a Non-Collisional Orogen 

William Munday, Pablo Santolaria, and Josep Anton Muñoz

At 30º South, the western Central Andes are comprised by the Coastal Cordillera, a seemingly little-deformed zone containing Mesozoic volcanic arc and back arc-related rocks . To the east, the Vicuña fault separates the Coastal Cordillera from the Principal Cordillera and the Frontal Cordillera. Those two units  display relatively small areas of Mesozoic sedimentary cover that have been preserved despite the uplift which exposes mainly Carboniferous to Triassic plutonics. Further east in the Precordillera, deformation involves increasingly recent Cenozoic sedimentary units.

Based on 2025 campaign field data acquisition and the revision of previous geological maps, we present a structural cross section along a 30ºS, E-W transect and its restoration . During the Mesozoic, extension in the Coastal Cordillera was mainly accommodated by the west-dipping Vicuña fault from the Jurassic to Late Cretaceous. Constraints from pluton emplacement depths and stratigraphic relationships suggest that significant uplift and topographic growth might have interrupted this extension in the Early Late Cretaceous in the Coastal Cordillera. Uppermost Cretaceous syn-orogenic deposits mark the onset of contraction. Upon shortening, the Vicuña fault was folded and reactivated as a west-vergent thrust during the uplift of the Principal Cordillera. This shortening episode also created the present-day relief in the Coastal Cordillera although the timing of this uplift is not well constrained. Subsequently, shortening propagated eastwards into the foreland of the orogen, forming the folds and thrusts of the Precordillera.

Our cross section suggests successive phases of extension and compression which can alternate at variable timescales and operate in different locations. This tectonic evolution raises numerous questions: Which geodynamic factors drive the occurrence of contraction or extension? What is the relationship between surface and deep crustal structures? In a non collisional context, what controls the localization of deformation?...

 

How to cite: Munday, W., Santolaria, P., and Muñoz, J. A.: Andean Cross Section at 30ºS: A Window Onto the Tectonic Evolution of a Non-Collisional Orogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14604, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14604, 2026.

The northeastern margin of the Arabian Plate, now represented by the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt, records the tectonic evolution of the region from Paleozoic rifting and the opening of the Neo-Tethys Ocean to Mesozoic convergence and Cenozoic continental collision. Furthermore, under oblique collision, late Cenozoic deformation is partitioned between right-lateral strike-slip motion along the Main Recent Fault in the northeast (NE) and a shortening component across the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt. In this study, we examined the brittle structures that developed during deformation in the northwestern segment of the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt, within the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Our goal was to reconstruct the deformation history and spatial variations in stress. We collected approximately 250 fault-slip measurements at 28 localities along a transect crossing the belt, from the Zagros Suture Zone in the northeast to the Foothill Zone in the southwest. We applied paleostress inversion techniques to the dataset, enabling identification of distinct stress regimes in the region. Our initial results indicate temporal changes in the paleostress regime, which could be linked to a slight anticlockwise rotation associated with oblique collision. These paleostress analyses have implications for reconstructing convergence direction, kinematics, and the temporal evolution of the orogen.

How to cite: Zebari, M., Navabpour, P., and Ustaszewski, K.: Paleostress Reconstruction in the Zagros Fold–Thrust Belt, Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Implications for the Arabia–Eurasia Convergence and Oblique Collision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14813, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14813, 2026.

EGU26-15999 | Posters on site | TS4.1

 Insight on recent tectonic deformation in the Himalayas of central Nepal provided by fluvial terrace geometries  

Madison Preece, Daniel Stockli, Ryan Thigpen, and Sean Gallen

Topography is a direct manifestation of the coupling of tectonic and surface processes and this connection between rapid erosion and high uplift rates is most readily evident in the frontal High Himalayas– an area that provides an excellent opportunity to study the progressive evolution geomorphic features in response to the interplay of these processes. An abrupt topographic break between the low-relief Lesser Himalaya and the high-relief Greater Himalaya has received significant attention, but the processes that govern its evolution remains debated. While it is commonly accepted that active tectonics are required to produce the topographic break, it remains debated whether it is driver by a blind mid-crustal ramp or discrete thrust faulting that daylights at the mountain front. Evidence for out-of-sequence thrusting has been documented along the orogen at similar elevations as the topographic break, suggesting active surface faulting could play a major role in generating and sustaining this marked topographic break. In central Nepal, where the topographic break is most pronounced, thermobarometric data indicate pronounced differences in maximum pressure temperature estimates (>300°C, >4 kbar) experienced by juxtaposed Greater Himalayan units. Consequentially, this structure likely plays a major role in accommodating shortening within the orogen, which is expected to build significant topography. In the Annapurna region, this boundary lacks a thick mylonitic shear zone, suggesting that it may have experienced recent brittle activity. This study investigates neotectonic offsetting and warping of fluvial terraces that record recent thrust activity within the past tens of thousands of years. Newly available two-meter resolution digital elevation data coupled with field observations, provide an unprecedented opportunity for identifying neotectonic deformation of fluvial terrace geometries across the topographic break. We present terrace tread data from the Seti river drainage in central Nepal. An important limitation, however, is that these digital elevation data allow for detailed imaging of terrace tread deposits, rather than bedrock strath terraces, and thus are also influenced by sedimentation processes. We present preliminary interpretations based on first-order changes in terrace tread geometries over kilometers distance, ensuring that evidence is recorded across multiple terrace levels, and in some cases supported by additional bedrock data. Seti River terrace tread profiles suggest divergence upstream of the topographic break, which can be caused by differential uplift or changes in sediment flux. Multiple terrace levels also appear folded near the structural position of the Chamrong thrust, mapped in the neighboring Modi Khola drainage. At this location, we also report evidence of pervasive brittle bedrock deformation. The combination of these features suggests possible tectonic deformation at multiple locations along the Seti River that are consistent with active brittle out-of-sequence thrusting along the mountain front. We plan to combine these data with UAV models of strath terrace geometries to clarify these preliminary interpretations.

How to cite: Preece, M., Stockli, D., Thigpen, R., and Gallen, S.:  Insight on recent tectonic deformation in the Himalayas of central Nepal provided by fluvial terrace geometries , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15999, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15999, 2026.

EGU26-16211 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.1

Reconstructing the Cenozoic uplift history of the Korean Peninsula using fission-track thermochronology: implications for East Asian tectonics 

Yong-Un Chae, Sujin Ha, Yong Il Lee, Taejin Choi, Sung-Wook Jeen, Hyoun Soo Lim, and Seungwon Shin

The Korean Peninsula is located along the eastern margin of the Eurasian Plate and is characterized by a pronounced east-high, west-low topography, commonly attributed to Cenozoic tectonic processes associated with the evolution of the East Sea (Sea of Japan). The East Sea is a back-arc basin that opened from the Early Oligocene (ca. 32 Ma) to the late Middle Miocene (ca. 12 Ma) and has been subjected to an E–W compressional stress regime since the Early Pliocene (ca. 4 Ma). Quaternary marine terraces indicate rapid uplift along the east coast (200–300 m/Myr), whereas the western coast shows relative stability or subsidence, suggesting strong spatial heterogeneity in recent crustal deformation. However, low-temperature thermochronological data generally indicate more moderate long-term Cenozoic exhumation rates, implying that the rapid Quaternary uplift reflects late-stage acceleration rather than long-term average behavior.

To investigate the long-term cooling and exhumation history of the Korean Peninsula, we conducted zircon and apatite fission-track (FT) dating on 21 samples from 12 plutonic bodies. Zircon FT ages range from ca. 173 to 51 Ma, and apatite FT ages range from ca. 46 to 12 Ma, with mean track lengths of 12.94–14.61 μm, indicating no significant post-cooling thermal disturbance. Apatite FT ages are generally older in inland regions (av. ~37.5 Ma) than along the east coast (av. ~25.0 Ma), suggesting long-term differences in cooling and exhumation histories. Assuming a geothermal gradient of ~30 °C/km, average exhumation rates are estimated to be ~90 m/Myr for inland regions and ~150 m/Myr for the east coast. However, fission-track data alone cannot uniquely constrain the timing of possible uplift acceleration. To better resolve late Cenozoic exhumation and assess the role of Quaternary tectonics, apatite (U–Th)/He dating is currently being conducted on selected samples.

 

How to cite: Chae, Y.-U., Ha, S., Lee, Y. I., Choi, T., Jeen, S.-W., Lim, H. S., and Shin, S.: Reconstructing the Cenozoic uplift history of the Korean Peninsula using fission-track thermochronology: implications for East Asian tectonics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16211, 2026.

EGU26-20678 | Orals | TS4.1

Linking Surface Geomorphology to Deep Lithospheric Processes beneath the Betic Cordillera (SE Spain) 

Marc Viaplana-Muzas, Jaume Vergés, Ivone Jiménez‐Munt, Montserrat Torne, Lucia Struth, David Cruset, Mahdi Najafi, and Daniel García‐Castellanos

The Betic Cordillera of southeastern Spain experienced kilometer-scale surface uplift since the late Miocene, leading to widespread emergence of marine sedimentary units and contributing to the isolation of the Mediterranean Sea from the Atlantic Ocean at the end of the Miocene. Previous geophysical studies have linked this uplift to deep lithospheric processes, particularly the evolution and detachment of a subducted slab beneath the region. However, the geomorphic imprint of these processes across the Betic Cordillera has not been comprehensively characterized.

Here, we investigate the landscape response to late Cenozoic uplift using quantitative geomorphic analysis. We combine high-resolution topography with river longitudinal profile analysis, knickpoint mapping, and river network metrics such as normalized channel steepness (ksn) and χ-values. This approach allows us to assess spatial patterns of landscape disequilibrium and to infer the evolution of surface uplift.

Our results reveal a clear obliquity between the trend of maximum topography and the main tectonic structures of the Betics, a relationship that differs from other Mediterranean orogens. This anomalous elevation pattern spatially coincides with the region of lithospheric slab detachment previously identified by seismic tomography, suggesting a strong coupling between mantle dynamics and surface deformation. River profile metrics show strong contrasts in ksn and χ-values across the main drainage divide, indicating a transient, orogen-scale landscape and asymmetric erosion. These contrasts imply active migration of the principal drainage divide toward the Atlantic-facing basins, supported by the presence of wind gaps and river capture features.

Knickpoint distributions further indicate increasing landscape disequilibrium toward the southwestern Betics, consistent with a laterally propagating uplift signal. Together, these geomorphic observations provide independent evidence for epeirogenic uplift driven by slab tearing beneath the Betic Cordillera, with westward propagation rates estimated at approximately 100–160 km per million years.

This work is funded by GEOADRIA (PID2022-139943NB-I00) and MAPA (PIE-CSIC-202430E005) from the Spanish Government and the Generalitat de Catalunya Grant (AGAUR 2021 SGR 00410).

How to cite: Viaplana-Muzas, M., Vergés, J., Jiménez‐Munt, I., Torne, M., Struth, L., Cruset, D., Najafi, M., and García‐Castellanos, D.: Linking Surface Geomorphology to Deep Lithospheric Processes beneath the Betic Cordillera (SE Spain), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20678, 2026.

EGU26-21961 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Evolution of the northern Andean Flat Slab Segment 

Andreas Kammer, Gerold Zeilinger, Camilo Ernesto Quintero, and Wilson Daniel Cifuentes

In the northern Andean block the subducting Nazca plate contains a flat slab segment that notably influences the structural styles of the mountain belts of the Southamerican plate. A seismotectonic break at approximately 4°N is often referred to as the Caldas Tear. In contrast to the obvious aseismic ridges associated with the southern edges of the Peruvian and Chilean flat slab segments, there is no distinct single oceanic feature that limits the size of the North Andean flat slab segment. Instead, a ridge-transform system can be extrapolated into the inboard domain of the trench. This explains the presence of the Istmina Transverse Range along a transform-parallel sector, as well as the Miocene Combia volcanic province where this transform-parallel sector turns into the ridge-parallel discontinuity of the Caldas Tear. Folding of the forearc basins and the Eastern Cordillera of the retroarc domain provides evidence of a margin-wide, NW-SE contractional regime, which has been independently documented by regional paleostress determinations. Further structural evidence for oblique convergence comes from a clear collisional feature formed by a sweeping linear transform fault, which is now situated beneath the Istmina Transverse Range. This feature resulted in a triangular re-entrant of the Western Cordillera, causing it to bend around the Transverse Range. On the retroarc side, the southward propagation of the flat slab segment is evident in fold terminations within the Eastern Cordillera, as well as in the relay pattern of frontal thrust faults at its foothills. The southern morphotectonic break of the Caldas Tear juxtaposes the intramontane Bogotá basin, which belongs to the flat-slab segment, with a folded flank of an E-vergent anticlinorium that marks the deformational style related to the steeply dipping Nazca plate. In our contribution, we depict representative, but less evolved transverse lineaments of the Eastern Cordillera and characterize their deformation style. We also observe the local presence of salt nappes and compare the retarded vs. accelerated intrusive ascent of magmatic manifestations, discussing their relevance with respect to possible plate configurations that suggest lithospheric tearing or bending. The guiding question that informs our research is whether these surface processes provide insight into time slices of the evolving flat slab segment.

How to cite: Kammer, A., Zeilinger, G., Quintero, C. E., and Cifuentes, W. D.: Evolution of the northern Andean Flat Slab Segment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21961, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21961, 2026.

EGU26-22451 | Posters on site | TS4.1

Thrust tectonics in the External Hellenides: from a salt-bearing rifted margin to convergence in a retreating subduction zone  

Marco Snidero, Pablo Martinez Granado, Pablo Santolaria, and Josep Anton Muñoz

The Hellenides constitute a long-lived convergent system resulting from oceanic–continental subduction and subsequent continental collision between Apulia and Eurasia. Their external domain developed above inherited sectors of a hyperextended Mesozoic passive margin, composed of alternating thick carbonate platforms including the Apulian (and Pre-Apulian) and Gavrovo units, and thin basinal domains such as the Ionian. Such inherited structural and stratigraphic architecture exerted a first-order control on thrust localization, wedge geometry, and foreland basin evolution. Since the Late Cretaceous, convergence was accompanied by significant slab retreat, producing a strongly asymmetric orogen with outward thrust propagation in the prowedge and coeval extension in the Aegean region.

We present three E-W, regionally balanced cross sections across the External Hellenides, sequentially restored to constrain the pre-contractional configuration of the sedimentary cover, the kinematic evolution of the thrust belt, and its relationship with inherited rift-related domains and salt-related deformation. The cross sections run through the western Hellenides and are roughly parallel to the main transport direction. The northernmost section crosses the Corfu area, whereas the southernmost profile is located south of the Kefalonia Fault, where the tectonic regime transitions from continental collision to active oceanic–continental subduction.

The sections are based on detailed field surveys along the Ionian structural unit, integrated with published seismic profiles and exploration wells. In the eastern Ionian zone, synclines affecting Jurassic to Oligocene–Miocene flysch are generally broad, whereas toward the west, folding becomes tight to isoclinal, locally forming box-type folds with overturned limbs. Anticlines are tight, variably elongated, doubly plunging, and locally associated with breakthrough thrusts. This structural contrast reflects variations in pre-orogenic stratigraphic thickness and mechanical behaviour: tight folds involve a thin sedimentary cover detached on Triassic salt, while broader synclines record deformation of thicker, locally welded successions. The pre-contractional Ionian basin consisted of a salt-influenced deeper-water carbonate system with salt pillows and plateaus, and subsident areas receiving episodic carbonate debrites from adjacent shallow-water domains. The absence of halokinetic sequences in the pre-orogenic succession suggests that diapirism in the study area was exclusively syn- to post-shortening and controlled by shortening-related uplift and erosion.

During contraction, all the Ionian structural units show regionally consistent allochthonous behaviour, detached along Triassic evaporites and overthrusting the autochthonous structural units together with Aquitanian deposits, as documented by tectonic windows. Progressive Miocene deformation involved thicker sub-thrust units, producing broader structures that subsequently controlled deformation of the overlying thinner Ionian units.

Sequential restoration from the Oligocene to the present reveals forward-propagating thrusting consistent with a prowedge-dominated orogen above a retreating slab. This supports an evolution in which thin-skinned deformation above Triassic evaporites and subsequent reactivation of sub-thrust structural units was driven by underplating of Adriatic crust beneath the External Hellenides. Our balanced cross sections provide quantitative constraints on the relative proportions of accreted versus subducted continental crust of the former hyperextended margin, and allow prosing a tentative location for the transition between the Pre-Apulian ramp and the Ionian basinal domain, which acted as precursor for thrust nucleation.

How to cite: Snidero, M., Martinez Granado, P., Santolaria, P., and Muñoz, J. A.: Thrust tectonics in the External Hellenides: from a salt-bearing rifted margin to convergence in a retreating subduction zone , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22451, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22451, 2026.

Salt rich margins are characterised by complex structural and thermal regimes due to the high thermal conductivity of evaporites (~6.5 Wm-1K-1) and their interaction with the insulating sedimentary cover (~2.0 Wm-1K-1). Observational evidence and well data demonstrate the existence of thermal anomalies in proximity to salt structures in salt-bearing basins. Furthermore, these rocks exhibit extremely low viscosity and an absence of shear strength, thus allowing for the occurrence of highly non-linear salt tectonics, otherwise referred to as halokinesis. While the structural mechanics of halokinesis are well-documented, the dynamic feedback between sedimentation rates, salt geometry, and the basin's thermal evolution remains under-explored in geodynamic models.

In this work, we investigate this interplay using a 2D thermo-mechanical numerical code (Mandyoc). A rifted margin was modelled under three post-salt sedimentation rates, with realistic salt thermal properties being compared against control scenarios where salt is thermally equivalent to the crust. Our models replicate the expected behaviour of the salt tectonics, with depocentre migration, diapirism, nappes and welds. The structures in the sediments are marked by extension in the proximal domain, and compression in the distal domain. The results obtained demonstrate that the thermal field is strongly affected by the sedimentation rate, since it is the primary cause of halokinesis. 

In low sedimentation regimes, the effect of the salt high conductivity dominates. Diapirism and allochthonous nappes efficiently conduct heat to the surface, cooling the sub-salt section and depressing isotherms, potentially retarding source rock maturation. In the moderate sedimentation rate scenario, the salt movement creates more complex structures and the isotherms are modified depending on the structure thickness and range. In a high-sedimentation regime, the rapid progradation suppresses vertical salt tectonics and creates a thick, low-conductivity clastic wedge. In this instance, the sedimentary blanketing effect is more significant than the salt cooling effect, which results in heat trapping and accelerated thermal maturation in the pre-salt layers.

Our findings point that the salt layer acts not only as a structural seal or a detachment layer but as a dynamic thermal modulator. The effectiveness of the salt as a "radiator" is strictly controlled by the competition between the halokinesis and progradation rate. Disregarding this coupling in basin modelling may lead to significant misinterpretations of the oil maturation window and the thermomechanical evolution of the distal margin.

This work has been by Petrobras Project 2022/00157-6 and has been financially supported by the Human Resources Program of the Brazilian National Agency for Petroleum, Natural Gas, and Biofuels – PRH/ANP43 (2025/21407-9). We also would like to express our fully gratitude to Leonardo M. Pichel and the Bergen Research Group because of its extensive collaboration with us.

How to cite: Bueno, J., Almeida, R. P., and Sacek, V.: How post-salt sedimentation rates control the thermal evolution of salt-bearing margins: The interplay between thermal blanketing and salt effects, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2795, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2795, 2026.

EGU26-3093 | Posters on site | TS4.2

Simulation of the Permian Source-to-Sink System in the Junggar Basin 

Xu Chen and Jian Wang

To overcome the long-standing limitations of source-to-sink (S2S) studies of the Permian in the Junggar Basin—namely an overemphasis on static characterization and a lack of constraints from numerical sedimentary modeling—this study aims to develop an integrated, basin–mountain coupled forward-modeling workflow for the S2S system of the Lower Permian Wuerhe Formation. The goal is to achieve a dynamic, quantitative reconstruction of source-area surface processes, sediment supply, and basin depositional responses, and to predict sandbody distribution. The research includes: (1) within a unified spatial framework, characterizing accommodation-space evolution controlled by source-area tectonic evolution, rainfall and erosion-driven sediment supply, as well as depositional-area subsidence and lake-level variations; (2) deriving key surface-process and paleogeomorphic parameters, including paleoflow directions, time-varying runoff and sediment fluxes, and background geomorphic attributes (paleoslope, paleo-elevation, and paleowater depth); and (3) simulating sediment transport and deposition within the lacustrine basin to establish spatiotemporal evolution of geologically interpretable products—lithology, water depth, facies belts, sandbody distribution, depositional thickness, and stratigraphic architecture and sequence-filling styles—and constraining these results with geological observations.

Methodologically, we first prescribe initial topography and uplift rates in the source area, the spatiotemporal distribution of rainfall intensity, erosion rates of the source rocks, and a lake-level curve, while assigning a basement subsidence rate in the depositional area to jointly constrain the temporal evolution of accommodation space. We then run Badlands to obtain key outputs from topographic evolution and drainage/flow-routing calculations, and use these outputs as boundary conditions for Sedsim to perform depositional forward modeling and generate sedimentary results directly comparable to geological interpretation. Finally, the forward-model outputs are calibrated against well, seismic, and outcrop data; sensitivity analyses and iterative updates are conducted for critical parameters (uplift, erosion, rainfall, lake level, and subsidence) to obtain an optimal parameter set that is both process-consistent and consistent with observations.

The results indicate that the coupled Badlands–Sedsim forward-modeling workflow effectively transfers quantitative signals of source-area surface processes into basin-scale depositional responses, enabling a shift in S2S studies from “static description” to “process-based dynamic constraint.” Through data calibration and sensitivity-driven iteration, the workflow significantly improves the geological consistency and interpretability of the simulation results, providing a reproducible quantitative approach for understanding sedimentary evolution, sequence-filling mechanisms, and predicting favorable sandbody fairways in the Permian Junggar Basin, particularly for the Lower Permian Wuerhe Formation.

How to cite: Chen, X. and Wang, J.: Simulation of the Permian Source-to-Sink System in the Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3093, 2026.

The paleoenvironmental and provenance evolution of the Campanian Gosau Group sediments at Grünbach-Neue Welt in the Eastern Alps of Austria was investigated across a continuous transition from terrestrial to marine settings during the depositional period, coinciding with the boundary between the Lower and Upper Gosau subgroups. This transition was primarily driven by tectonic subsidence triggered by the northward subduction of the Penninic Ocean along the northern margin of the Austroalpine microplate. The sedimentary successions record depositional and environmental changes associated with subsidence. Integrated lithological, petrographic, paleontological, mineralogical, and geochemical analyses were performed to reconstruct the paleoenvironmental conditions and trace the sedimentary provenance. Paleoenvironmental analysis implied that the Grünbach Formation (upper Santonian to lower Campanian) represents a terrestrial-dominated setting with episodic marine incursions while the overlying lower Piesting Formation (upper Campanian) is dominantly shallow-marine setting with terrestrial input. The shift toward less weathered, coarser detritus sediments across the two formations suggests changes in sediment transport pathways and sources, likely influenced by subsidence, marine transgression, and source areas’ uplift. This study provides valuable insights into the Campanian paleoenvironment and provenance shifts of the Gosau Group, highlighting the complex interplay between subsidence, sea-level fluctuations, and sediment supply. Furthermore, it advances our understanding of how coupled environmental and tectonic processes influenced basin evolution.

How to cite: Xiang, X., Lee, E. Y., and Wagreich, M.: Paleoenvironmental Evolution and Provenance Shifts in Campanian Marginal Gosau Basins: Evidence from Sedimentary and Geochemical Records, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3851, 2026.

EGU26-4164 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Surface Forcing of Moho Topography in an Intra-Plateau Deep Basin 

Honghao Xiong, Haibin Yang, and Lei Wu

Unlike the wedge-shaped geometry typical of foreland basins, the interior of the Tibetan Plateau contains a series of large, closed basins. These basins are defined by thick sedimentary fills, a dish-shaped structural geometry, and a distinctly flattened to downward-convex morphology of the sub-basin Moho interface. However, the mechanisms governing their evolution remain debated. To address this, we employed numerical models that couple surface processes with lithospheric rheology to simulate the Cenozoic evolution of the Qaidam Basin, the largest sedimentary basin within the Tibetan Plateau, which has continuously accommodated substantial sediments derived from the surrounding mountain ranges throughout the Cenozoic. By systematically varying parameters from high to low erosion rates and from normal to strong mantle rheology, we compared model outcomes and successfully reproduced the observed geometry, topography, sedimentary sequence, and sub-basin Moho morphology of the Qaidam Basin. Our models reveal that dish-shaped basin evolution is controlled by three key factors: substantial sediment loading, a low crustal convergence rate, and a persistent centripetal sediment routing system. The sediment loading suppresses crustal deformation within the basin and drives downward deflection of the sub-basin Moho. Concurrently, a stronger mantle lithosphere localizes the deformation, resulting in a shorter-wavelength basin geometry. Our findings provide a new perspective for understanding deep intra-plateau basins by highlighting the governing role of coupled surface processes and lithospheric rheology. This mechanism not only explains basins within the Tibetan Plateau but also accounts for analogous settings, such as the Altiplano Basin in the Altiplano-Puna Plateau. Furthermore, the model is applicable to other dish-shaped basins formed under similar coupling conditions, exemplified by the Junggar Basin. Another key finding is that active surface processes can drive subsurface exhumation even under stable tectonic conditions. This suggests that accelerated cooling signals recorded by low-temperature thermochronology may not solely represent tectonic uplift acceleration, thereby implying that such data require careful reinterpretation.

How to cite: Xiong, H., Yang, H., and Wu, L.: Surface Forcing of Moho Topography in an Intra-Plateau Deep Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4164, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4164, 2026.

The microscopic pore systems in clastic reservoirs the margins of foreland basins are complex and heterogeneous, primarily controlled by the superimposition of burial diagenesis and tectonic diagenesis. These reservoirs have experienced not only vertical burial compaction but also intense lateral tectonic compression, accompanied by varying degrees of microfracture development and multiphase alteration by diverse diagenetic fluids. This study focuses on the Cretaceous Bashijiqike Formation in the Kushen area of the Kuqa Depression, Tarim Basin, which mainly consists of low-porosity and low-permeability to tight sandstone reservoirs deposited in a braided river delta environment. By systematically comparing burial depth, maximum paleo-stress, diagenesis, and microscopic pore characteristics across different tectonic positions, the study reveals how different reservoir-controlling factors combine to create different reservoir characteristics.

North to the Kelasu Fault, the reservoirs experienced relatively shallow burial (<4000 m) under strong tectonic stress. Diagenetic processes include compaction, calcite cementation, and meteoric water dissolution. Reservoir pores are dominated by primary pores with minor dissolution pores, accompanied by abundant microfractures. Between the Kelasu and Keshen Faults, reservoirs underwent deeper burial (6500-7000 m) under moderate tectonic stress. Diagenesis includes compaction, multi-type cementation (dolomite > quartz > albite > calcite > anhydrite), and multi-phase dissolution. Reservoir pores consist of mixed primary and dissolution pores, with dissolution pores exceeding primary pores in abundance, and local microfracture development. Between the Keshen and Baicheng Faults, reservoirs are characterized by ultra-deep burial (~7500 m) and low tectonic stress. Diagenesis includes compaction, multi-type cementation (dolomite > calcite > anhydrite > albite > quartz), and multi-phase dissolution. Reservoir pores are mainly primary pores with subordinate dissolution pores, and microfractures are rarely developed.

From north (foreland basin margin) to south (basin interior), increasing burial depth enhances vertical compaction, while decreasing tectonic stress reduces tectonic compaction and microfracture development. Concurrently, diagenetic fluids evolve from dominantly meteoric water in the north to multi-phase complex fluids including meteoric water, lagoon water, and organic acids in the south. These factors collectively control the diagenetic evolution and heterogeneity of microscopic reservoir pores in the study area.

Keywords: Tectonic stress; Diagenesis; Microscopic pore; Bashijiqike Formation; Kuqa Depression

How to cite: Zheng, X. and Sun, X.: Microscopic reservoir pores heterogeneity and its controlling factors of the Bashijiqike Formation in the Kuqa Depression, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4210, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4210, 2026.

The western Baiyun area in the northern South China Sea, particularly within the central Pearl River Mouth Basin (Zhu‐II Depression), hosts a complex detachment system. This study elucidates the tectonic control of a detachment-convergent transfer zone on the spatiotemporal evolution of the sedimentary basin system during the Eocene rifting. Integration of borehole and high-resolution 3D seismic data reveals that magmatic activity and reactivated pre-existing faults governed initial basin subsidence and the early development of high-angle normal faults in the upper crust. A fundamental shift occurred around ∼43 Ma (late Wenchang stage), when deformation transitioned to lower-crustal ductile thinning. This drove the formation of ductile‐crust domes, the rotation of faults into low-angle detachments, and ultimately, the establishment of the detachment-convergent transfer zone. This structural reorganization directly controlled basin geometry, transforming it from isolated, narrow, and deep lacustrine depocenters into a unified, wide, and shallow basin. Consequently, the sedimentary system evolved from fan delta‐braided river delta assemblages to braided river
delta‐beach bar systems. Constraining this tectonically dictated basin-fill architecture provides critical insights for predicting potential reservoirs in deep-water continental margins.

How to cite: Jia, Y., Xu, S., and Liu, Q.: Tectonic Control on Basin-Fill Architecture in a Detachment-Convergent Transfer Zone: The Pearl River Mouth Basin Example, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4660, 2026.

EGU26-5339 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

How normal faults control delta deposition: Insights from analogue modelling 

Nemanja Krstekanic, Duco H. van der Woude, Ernst Willingshofer, Maarten Kleinhans, and Liviu Matenco

In many natural systems, normal faults induce sedimentation in basins by creating depositional space that is gradually filled by incoming sedimentary infill. In this study, we investigated the response of deltaic systems to normal faulting through a novel analogue modelling approach integrating fluvial and tectonic processes. The models were built in a flume where the engine-driven extension was coeval with a river system controlled by water discharge and sediment feed. The river feeds the tectonically controlled basin where the deltaic lobes form. In the models, we varied engine velocity (i.e., extension/subsidence rate), while keeping the sediment influx and water discharge constant. Faulting of the model sand layers, representing the uppermost crust, is implemented in the flume by a mobile basal sheet, which is pulled from underneath a fixed block at constant velocity. The basin side (i.e., hanging wall) of the main normal fault is filled with water, while a predefined channel guides sediment-rich water towards the basin during early river incision. The river system scaling was done by discharge for the channel dimensions and by sediment mobility number for the sediment transport rate, while the fault slip rates were scaled based on natural fault-controlled basins such as the Roer Valley Graben or the Gulf of Corinth. The difference between natural temporal and spatial scales at which surface and tectonic processes operate was bridged by calculating the ratio between the creation of the accommodation space due to normal fault slip and the average sedimentation rate in the basin. This ratio is calculated for the entire basin and for a single lobe, and is ultimately the key parameter controlling the delta evolution.

The modelling results showed that the active faulting led to progradation and retrogradation of the delta. When the subsidence rate exceeds the sedimentation rate, the delta retrogrades early, and the branching of the delta lobes occurs later. In the model with similar subsidence and sedimentation rates over a lobe, the delta mainly experiences aggradation with several moderate prograding and retrograding cycles. In this situation, there is a minor lateral migration of the delta lobes without branching and significant avulsion. With low subsidence rates, the number of progradation-retrogradation cycles is increasing, the delta progrades farther into the basin, and can cross the conjugate basin-bounding fault(s). Such progradation-retrogradation cycles are often accompanied by local hiatuses, river avulsion, delta lobe branching and lateral migration, which are controlled by an interplay of external forcing and internal delta dynamics.

These findings facilitate understanding of the relationship between tectonics and delta dynamics in natural systems. For instance, due to the slow subsidence and a high sediment supply, the Roer Valley Graben is being overfilled in the early stages, with deltaic formations reaching the other side of the basin before shifting to a late-stage basin-parallel progradation. Contrastingly, the fast subsiding Gulf of Corinth, accompanied by a low sediment supply, has multiple small individual coeval delta lobes, which, presently, do not reach far into the graben and are unable to fill the created accommodation space.

How to cite: Krstekanic, N., van der Woude, D. H., Willingshofer, E., Kleinhans, M., and Matenco, L.: How normal faults control delta deposition: Insights from analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5339, 2026.

Back-arc extension is commonly assumed to be a steady, long-term process. However, geological records from the Japan Sea reveal a short-lived phase of rapid opening during the early–middle Miocene, followed by abrupt cessation. The geodynamic origin of this transient behaviour remains debated. This study employs three-dimensional geodynamic numerical models to investigate how oblique subduction geometry influences slab dynamics, mantle flow, and back-arc extension.

Our results show that a sufficiently high trench obliquity promotes slab breakoff at shallow upper mantle depths, forming a slab window and triggering a short-lived episode of strong lateral (toroidal) mantle flow. This flow dramatically accelerates back-arc extension and generates pronounced along-strike variations in spreading rates. As the slab window sinks into the mantle transition zone, the associated lateral mantle flow rapidly weakens, leading to a sharp decrease and eventual termination of back-arc spreading.

In contrast, models with lower subduction obliquity exhibit no slab breakoff, lack significant lateral mantle flow, and fail to reproduce rapid back-arc extension. These results suggest that slab breakoff induced by oblique subduction provides an efficient yet transient mechanism for focusing back-arc extension. Our findings offer a unified geodynamic explanation for the timing, spatial pattern, and abrupt end of Japan Sea opening. The proposed mechanism may also help explain slab window formation and episodic back-arc activity in other obliquely convergent margins.

How to cite: Luo, P. and Li, Z.-H.: Transient Acceleration and Termination of Japan Sea Opening Controlled by Oblique-Subduction-Induced Slab Window, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6108, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6108, 2026.

The Panalesis model consists of global maps created every 10 million years or so from the Neoproterozoic to the present. These maps rely on a maximum of data from multiple sources (paleomagnetism, fossils, lithofacies, geochemistry, etc.) and comply with the rules of plate tectonics, following our Dual Control Approach methodology.

Once the global plate tectonics model has been defined, it is possible to derive many other types of maps. The first type of maps to be derived are palæogeographic maps. We supplement them however by maps of the age of the sea-floor, maps of accretion / subduction rates, maps of volume of subducted lithosphere, maps of hydrothermal alteration at mid-oceanic ridges, maps of crustal and lithospheric thickness, etc., which constitute the Panalesis Atlas. Associated with climate models, we show here an example of maps depicting the evolution of the drainage system at global scale through time and estimates of sediment fluxes over the Phanerozoic.

How to cite: Vérard, C. and Franziskakis, F.: The Panalesis model and its derivative maps: Implications for global long-term interaction between geodynamics and surface processes , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7294, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7294, 2026.

EGU26-8291 | Orals | TS4.2

Deformational Corridors along the San Andreas Plate Boundary: Evidence from Lithospheric Depths to the Surface 

Kevin P. Furlong, Kirsty A. McKenzie, and Matthew Herman

With the systematics migration of the Mendocino Triple Junction (MTJ), the San Andreas plate boundary forms within lithosphere transitioning from a convergent (subduction) to translation tectonic regime.  How that transition occurs, and what crustal/lithospheric deformation is associated with the fundamental plate boundary change has not been well understood. Through the combined analysis of a detailed 3-D lithospheric structure in the vicinity of the MTJ (from seismic tomography) in conjunction with geodetic data, seismicity, regional thermochronology, surficial geomorphic characteristics, and observed heat flow we are able to delineate two distinct deformational corridors defining the tectonics of plate boundary transition. A well recognized consequence of MTJ migration is the development of a slab window in its wake. Our seismic tomographic imagery helps us define the extent of that slab window - in particular ion western boundary. We are also able to image a fragment of former Farallon plate (which we term the Pioneer fragment), now accreted to the Pacific plate,  that has migrated with the MTJ, that also has served as the western boundary of the slab window. Geodetic data indicates the primary lithospheric-scale plate boundary structure forms along that Pioneer - slab window transition. The result is two distinctive corridors with quite discordant tectonic histories that lie on either side of the nascent plate boundary.

The Pioneer Corridor, which bounds the San Andreas Plate boundary on the west has experienced a coupled burial/erosion sequence as the MTJ migrates. This involves rapid rates of burial (Eel River Basin) followed by a short lived, but extremely rapid unroofing (~ 10 mm/yr) followed by subsequent, but slow exhumation. This results in major changes in observed surface heat flow, a complex pattern of low-T thermochronolgy ages, and a relatively subdued landscape (except in the region of rapid exhumation).

The Mendocino Crustal Conveyor (MCC) Corridor overlies the slab window, bounding the San Andreas boundary on the east. It has a distinctly different tectonic history involving a sequence of crustal thickening (uplift) followed by crustal thinning, with a complex lower bounding thermal evolution . The result is a quite different thermal-chronologic history, a variation in heat flow consistent with the crustal evolution, and a much more rugged landscape reflecting the long-lived uplift/exhumation history driven by slab-window processes.

Although the development of the San Andreas in the wake of the MTJ is oftentimes thought to be a tectonically simple process. This analysis indicates a very discordant history recorded in the thermal and surficial data of the two corridors bounding the nascent plate boundary.

How to cite: Furlong, K. P., McKenzie, K. A., and Herman, M.: Deformational Corridors along the San Andreas Plate Boundary: Evidence from Lithospheric Depths to the Surface, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8291, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8291, 2026.

EGU26-9873 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Tectonic and Climatic Controls on Himalayan Topographic Evolution: Numerical modelling of tectonics-erosion-precipitation interactions 

Samantak Kundu, Sascha Brune, Dirk Scherler, Derek Neuharth, Xiaoping Yuan, and Sanjay Kumar Mandal

Topography and erosion in active convergent mountain belts arise from coupled feedbacks between
tectonics, climate, and surface processes. Tectonic deformation generates topography through crustal
shortening and thickening, which modifies precipitation via orographic effects. Enhanced precipitation
drives river incision, mass wasting, and sediment transport that erode the landscape, feeding back into
topography and precipitation patterns over geological timescales.
In the Himalaya, crustal shortening produces an orogenic wedge above the Main Himalayan Thrust, the
basal décollement with a flat-ramp-flat geometry where sub-horizontal flats at different crustal levels are
connected by inclined mid-crustal ramps. Wedge growth occurs primarily through basal accretion, whereby
material from the subducting Indian plate is scraped off and emplaced beneath the wedge as thrust-bounded
rock slices (horses) between a floor thrust and roof thrust, forming a mid-crustal duplex. As convergence
continues, this process operates episodically: new horses are sequentially accreted through footwall
imbrication, punctuated by phases when breakthrough ramps form to transfer slip between décollement
levels. This temporal cyclicity in basal accretion creates alternating phases of duplex thickening and ramp
activation. However, how this cyclic process modulates climate-tectonic feedbacks—specifically, how
episodic duplex growth and ramp activation influence topographic evolution, precipitation distribution, and
erosion rates across the wedge—remains poorly constrained over tens of millions of years.

To investigate these feedbacks, we employ a 2D coupled lithosphere-scale numerical framework that
captures the physics of climate–tectonic–surface interactions, building on the coupled modelling approach
developed by Yuan et al. (2024). This framework integrates a thermomechanical geodynamic model
(ASPECT) to account for tectonic deformation and uplift, a landscape evolution model (FastScape) to
simulate surface processes and an orographic precipitation model (LFPM) to evaluate climate–topography
feedbacks. We reproduce first-order geometries of the India-Eurasia collision zone by introducing crustal
décollements as pre-defined horizontal weaknesses in the Indian pate.
Preliminary results indicate that variations in basal décollement strength modulate tectonic style and ramp
cyclicity, controlling mountain-belt width and, in turn, precipitation patterns and surface erosion across
different ramp phases. A stronger basal décollement relative to an intermediate décollement leads to the
development of distinct inner and outer wedges. The outer wedge thereby grows laterally by frontal
accretion while uplift of the inner wedge occurs via duplex formation. Uplift of the inner wedge produces a
highly elevated, low-relief landscape, suggesting a transient geomorphic response to ongoing duplex uplift,
as observed in parts of the Himalaya. In these zones, two distinct rainfall maxima are observed, associated
with the inner and outer wedges, along with corresponding dual bands of high relief and enhanced channel
steepness. We find that variations in erosional parameters, together with crustal rheology, can substantially
influence the geometry of the Himalayan wedge, thereby modulating crustal deformation, topography
changes and the climate.


Reference: Yuan, X., Li, Y., Brune, S. et al. Coordination between deformation, precipitation, and erosion
during orogenic growth. Nat Commun 15, 10362 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54690-4

How to cite: Kundu, S., Brune, S., Scherler, D., Neuharth, D., Yuan, X., and Mandal, S. K.: Tectonic and Climatic Controls on Himalayan Topographic Evolution: Numerical modelling of tectonics-erosion-precipitation interactions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9873, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9873, 2026.

The evolution of orogens and sedimentary basins, together with associated vertical motions and thermal fields, is controlled by crustal and lithospheric thickness variations, linked to plate kinematics and rheological properties. All these factors are tightly coupled to surface processes such as erosion and sedimentation, and they are linked to climatic variations. However, understanding the distinct effects and complex interplay between tectonic and surface processes requires new, coupled approaches.

Here we present results from three-dimensional numerical models based on the thermo-mechanical code I3ELVIS, which uses finite differences and marker-in-cell methods and incorporates elasto-visco-plastic rheologies of compressible and thermally expanding/contracting rocks and parametrized partial melting, coupled to a newly developed erosion–sedimentation module. Mass is conserved between eroded and deposited material at each time step. Surface evolution is governed by advection, onshore hillslope diffusion, fluvial incision following a stream-power law, sediment diffusion from river mouths into the sea and pelagic sedimentation, and is described by

∂h/∂t + uHH h = uV + ∇H(κ ∇H h) - K Qm Sn + D

where h is the elevation, t is time, u is the velocity, H and V denotes horizontal and vertical quantities or operators, respectively, κ is diffusivity, K, m and n are stream power parameters, Q is water discharge, S is the local slope and D is a pelagic sediment source term. A node-based drainage network is built by steepest-descent flow routing, with discharge accumulated from laterally variable rainfall. Sediment delivered at river mouths is transported into the marine domain by a two-stage diffusive process, using a low diffusivity in proximal shelf environments and a higher diffusivity offshore to represent more efficient gravity-driven and pelagic redistribution.

Using this fully coupled framework, we investigate the effects of climate variability and mantle potential temperature during rifting and subsequent tectonic inversion. The models allow us to analyze strain localization, fault longevity, degrees of partial melting, and the spatial and temporal distribution of syn-tectonic sedimentary successions.

How to cite: Balázs, A., May, D., and Gerya, T.: Tectonics - erosion - sedimentation interactions during structural inversion: insights from fully coupled 3D numerical models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11962, 2026.

The structural style of foreland fold-and-thrust belts (FTBs) is highly sensitive to variations in pre-existing structures, three-dimensional décollement distribution, and syn-tectonic sedimentation. However, the relative importance of these factors and their influence on 2D and 3D structural variability remain poorly constrained. The pronounced along-strike variability of the Andean foreland FTB makes this region an ideal natural laboratory to investigate these interactions. We use the thermo-mechanically coupled tectonic model FANTOM 2D to produce high-resolution, fold-and-thrust belt–scale simulations that explore the interaction between internal properties of the wedge and surface processes. We systematically vary the strength of the two décollement horizons, combined with syn-tectonic sedimentation, and explore how this controls variability in structural styles of FTB formation. Our results show that a strong basal décollement combined with a weaker upper décollement leads to a steeper wedge taper and the development of an antiformal stack in the internal part of the fold-and-thrust belt and, in the foreland, all thrusts detach on the upper décollement, involving only the upper layer. In contrast, models with a weak basal and stronger upper décollement produce a lower-taper wedge, with thrust sheets detached solely on the basal décollement, propagating toward the foreland in a piggyback sequence. Structural complexity and kinematic variability increase when both décollements have similar low to intermediate strengths and interact with syn-tectonic sedimentation. Thrusts originate simultaneously in both décollements, involving the lower and upper layer in an alternating sequence, leading to a complex interaction between thrust propagation in the two layers. The onset of each structure—commonly pop-ups and triangular zones—and their subsequent diverse evolution can serve as diagnostic indicators of the relative strength between décollements. These modeled structures are comparable to the along-strike structural variability observed in the Bolivian fold-and-thrust belt. While syn-tectonic sedimentation primarily controls the number and length of thrusts, our results emphasize the first-order role of décollement rheology in shaping foreland fold-and-thrust belt architecture and its kinematic evolution.

How to cite: Saiz, F., S. Huismans, R., and G. Wolf, S.: 2D models exploring factors controlling N-S variation of external foreland fold and thrust belt of the Andes (Southern Bolivia -Northwest Argentina), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12043, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12043, 2026.

The existence of weak and shallow intra-crustal (salt) layers, syn-tectonic sedimentation as well as extensional inheritance have been shown to play a major role on deformational style and structural geometry of mountain belts on Earth. The Pyrenean orogen provides a well-constrained natural example of an inversion orogen strongly influenced by salt-detached foreland-fold-thrust belts. This study investigates the influence of pre-contractional salt and of syn-contractional salt deposition, together with inherited extensional structures, on crustal-scale mountain-building and associated foreland fold and thrust belt formation. To this end we use high-resolution thermo-mechanical numerical simulations based on the finite-element code FANTOM 2D, and explore the influence of salt viscosity, crustal flexural rigidity, extensional inheritance, crustal strength, and syntectonic sedimentation. By systematically varying those parameters, we can assess the impact of syn-tectonic salt deposition on the localization of deformation, thrust system evolution (both thick- and thin-skinned), and overall orogenic geometry. Comparison with the Pyrenees and other similar orogenic settings emphasizes the importance of extensional inheritance, syn-tectonic sedimentation and salt-tectonics during mountain building. Our models provide new insights into the mechanical role of evaporites in fold-and-thrust belt development.

How to cite: Gibellini, A., Huismans, R. S., and Wolf, S. G.: Effect of rift inheritance and salt layers on mountain building – a numerical modelling study motivated by the southern Pyrenean foreland fold-and-thrust belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12231, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12231, 2026.

Based on the latest drilling, logging, and seismic data, and using key tectonic interfaces as markers, this study divides tectonic strata in combination with regional tectonic movements, establishes a vertical stratigraphic framework, and reconstructs erosion amounts. It clarifies the present-day preservation, post-depositional erosion, original distribution characteristics, and their spatiotemporal variations for each stratum, systematically revealing how their development features respond to the basin's tectonic evolution. The results indicate that the Mesozoic tectonic layer in the Jiyang Depression can be subdivided into three sublayers: Early-Middle Triassic, Early-Middle Jurassic, and Early Cretaceous. The Cenozoic tectonic layer can be subdivided into five sublayers: Kongdian–Lower Es4, Upper Es4–Lower Es2, Upper Es2–Dongying, Guantao–Minghuazhen, and Pingyuan Formations. The distribution of preserved strata from bottom to top is uneven, with significant variations among different tectonic units and layers, reflecting the combined effects of original deposition and subsequent erosion. The Early-Middle Triassic period inherited the tectonic framework and sedimentary characteristics since the Late Hercynian, forming a large-scale inland depositional system. The Early-Middle Jurassic represented a transitional period from the Paleo-Asian tectonic domain to the circum-Pacific tectonic domain, characterized by early-stage filling and late-stage draping. The Early Cretaceous exhibited reverse fault depression, trending northwest, with greater depositional thickness near the Zhangjiakou–Penglai fault zone. The Cenozoic was marked by mantle upwelling and lithospheric thinning, with the Paleogene characterized by multi-episodic extensional fault depression and the Neogene–Quaternary by regional sag depression. The Jiyang Depression underwent multiple phases of complex tectonic evolution during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic, leading to widespread erosion at the tops of the Late Triassic, Late Jurassic, Late Cretaceous, Lower Es4, and other tectonic sublayers.

How to cite: Jia-xin, L.: Development Characteristics of Mesozoic-Cenozoic Tectonic Strata in the Jiyang Depression and Their Response to Tectonic Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13391, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13391, 2026.

EGU26-14294 | Posters on site | TS4.2

The Southern Apennine front: evidences of recent activity at the Gulf of Taranto (Italy). 

Bruno Massa, Agostino Meo, Sabatino Ciarcia, and Maria Rosaria Senatore

The Southern Apennines collisional belt is connected to the Calabrian Arc subduction system across the Gulf of Taranto area (Southern Italy).  The role of active deformation during the late Pleistocene-Holocene time is a matter of debate. Our research focused on the feeding area of the Taranto Canyon, the main morphological feature of the continental slope in the study area. The headwall canyon incises the continental margin from the shelf break, at about 30 m b.s.l., down to 450 m depth,  covering an area of  about 50 km². A novel, high-resolution multibeam bathymetry was acquired using a Multibeam Echo-Sounder system. A total of approximately 1600 km² of high-resolution bathymetric data were collected, with a final gridded resolution of 10 × 10 m, referenced to Mean Sea Level. Bathymetry was used to generate a Digital Elevation Model (DEM), allowing  reliable morpho-structural and hydrographic analysis. In addition, a total of 650 km of seismic lines were collected across the outer continental shelf and slope in the north-eastern sector of the Gulf of Taranto, using the GeoResources Geo Spark 200 Sparker system, operating at 1 kJ. The adopted configuration allowed a dominant frequency range between 500 and 2000 Hz, a pulse length of ~0.5 ms, allowing imaging depths between 200 and 400 ms, two-way travel time. These acquisition parameters ensured a high-resolution imaging of buried sedimentary units, stratigraphy and tectonics. The interpretation of seismic sparker profiles, along with the high-resolution bathymetry, reveal deformations and small-scale thickness variations within Pleistocene–Holocene units. The integration of morphostructural and geophysical data suggests that present-day deformation exerts a primary control on canyon evolution and slope dynamics of the north-eastern Gulf of Taranto. These results provide new insights into the recent geodynamic evolution of the Southern Apennine front and highlight its implications for potential geohazard assessment.

How to cite: Massa, B., Meo, A., Ciarcia, S., and Senatore, M. R.: The Southern Apennine front: evidences of recent activity at the Gulf of Taranto (Italy)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14294, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14294, 2026.

Exhumation strongly influences the structural, pressure and temperature evolution of sedimentary basins, and thus the formation and distribution of mineral and energy resources. It is commonly quantified using compaction-based methods that rely on sonic, porosity and thermal data to reconstruct uplift from maximum burial depths, typically via empirical relationships. However, these relationships are often calibrated for specific geological settings and then transferred elsewhere, and even region-specific models use parameters that vary within measurable ranges but are usually treated as exact. Data errors and unquantified parameter uncertainties can therefore propagate through the calculations, significantly compromising the reliability of exhumation estimates.

We previously developed a probabilistic compaction model for the Northern Carnarvon Basin (NCB) in the Australian North West Shelf (NWS) using sonic data from normally compacted, unexhumed intervals. Research shows that the dynamic evolution of the NWS basins has been shaped by multiple rifting and extensional phases and magmatic activities associated with Gondwana dispersal, and by later regional tilting linked to subduction along the northern margin. These complex histories imply significant basin-scale variability in subsidence and exhumation patterns, suggesting that NCB compaction behaviour may differ substantially from that in neighbouring basins such as Browse, Roebuck and Bonaparte. Here we extend probabilistic compaction analysis across these basins, deriving basin-specific shale compaction trends and comparing them to identify key similarities, differences and their geological controls. In doing so, we explicitly test whether a single “regional” compaction model is sufficient for exhumation analysis on the NWS, or whether basin-scale models are required.

Model robustness is evaluated using Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) sampling, and uncertainty propagation is used to quantify the effect of parameter uncertainty on exhumation estimates. The NCB model shows strong similarity to Roebuck Basin trends but diverges from those of the Vulcan Sub-basin in the Bonaparte Basin. We attribute these differences to contrasting tectono-thermal histories, particularly the stronger influence of proximal subduction on the Bonaparte Basin. Our results indicate that while the NCB model may be cautiously transferable to the nearby Roebuck and parts of the Browse Basin, applying it to the distal Bonaparte Basin introduces substantial uncertainty. We demonstrate that, wherever data permit, basin-specific probabilistic compaction models are preferable to regional or global models for reliable exhumation analysis on complex passive margins such as the NWS.

How to cite: Makuluni, P., Hauser, J., and Clark, S.: Basin-specific versus regional compaction models: quantifying uncertainty in exhumation estimates on the Australian North West Shelf, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16214, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16214, 2026.

The Cascadia forearc is unique among global subduction zones because of the accretion of a large igneous province (Siletzia) and continuous clockwise rotation of the margin due to oblique subduction of the Juan de Fuca plate. We reconstruct the stratigraphic architecture and sediment accumulation history in the forearc by investigating multiple, along-strike forearc basins. Integrating potential-field models, 2D seismic reflections, and deep borehole data, our 3D mapping allows us to track basin depocenters through space and time, revealing a fundamental structural shift in the Miocene that significantly reshaped the forearc.

During the Paleogene, the Cascadia forearc was a broad, marine basin characterized by high sediment accumulation rates and unrestricted accommodation space. Our results show that during the Miocene in the central forearc (Portland-Tualatin Basin), what was once a single continuous basin was subdivided as transpressional stress structurally inverted older Paleogene normal faults. Similarly, in the Chehalis Basin to the north, clockwise rotation reoriented fault systems relative to the regional stress field, pushing the basin depocenter northward as deformation shifted from northwest-striking to west-striking faults. This structural transition occurred as the outer-arc high (Coast Range) emerged, causing depositional environments to shift from marine to terrestrial. It is also coincided with a steep drop in sediment accumulation rates: a 7-fold decrease in the Chehalis Basin (196 to 27 m/Myr) and a 10-fold decrease in the Portland-Tualatin basins (305 to 29 m/Myr) to the south.

We propose that along-strike variations in subduction geometry also impact basin evolution. In the southern and central forearc, a relatively steep subduction angle and clockwise rotation pushed the outer-arc high close to the magmatic arc, leaving minimal accommodation space. In contrast, shallower subduction to the north near the Seattle Basin maintained a wider separation, allowing high sediment accumulation rates to persist through the Neogene (211 m/Myr).

By integrating basin analysis with regional tectonics, we constrain along-strike variation in Cascadia forearc geometry through the Cenozoic. We find that sustained rotation and the influence of Siletzia basement, not just sedimentary accretion, have controlled the evolution of fault systems and Cascadia forearc deposition. Accordingly, this work provides a framework for understanding the evolution of forearc basins where long-term rotation and strain-partitioning dominate.

How to cite: Bershaw, J., Moe, R., and Scanlon, D.: Cascadia’s Mid-Life Crisis: Miocene Changes in the Forearc due to Rotation and Subduction Dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17015, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17015, 2026.

EGU26-17238 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Contrasting Tectonic and Hydrodynamic Controls on the Infill of the Toukoshan Formation: A Seismic Stratigraphic Study Offshore Central Taiwan 

Ming-Yen Tsai, Ho-Han Hsu, Tzu-Ting Chen, Char-Shine Liu, Liang-Fu Lin, and Arif Mirza

Understanding the origin of high-frequency stratigraphic heterogeneity in active orogenic basins is essential for distinguishing the relative contributions of regional tectonics and local environmental forcings. In the offshore areas of central Taiwan, the Early Pleistocene to present Toukoshan Formation exhibits complex architectural variations that challenge singular tectonic interpretations. This study utilizes multichannel seismic reflection profiles and borehole data to dissect the evolutionary mechanisms driving these stratigraphic shifts. While the underlying Late Miocene to Early Pleistocene sequences exhibit architectural stability as well-stratified reflections, the Toukoshan Formation marks a transition to highly discontinuous geometries, reflecting a switch in dominant drivers toward localized hydrodynamic forcing. The lower Toukoshan Formation features co-existing parallel and progradational clinoform geometries, indicating significant lateral variations. These progradational structures are vertically overlain by continuous, sub-parallel reflections, recording a low-to-high-to-low energy transition. While tectonic subsidence typically produces laterally continuous stratigraphic geometries, the observed progradational sets in this study exhibit marked vertical and lateral discontinuities. This suggests that localized stratigraphic architecture is decoupled from the gradual tectonic trend, reflecting a switch in dominant drivers toward rapid hydrodynamic forcing. Such features likely record wave-driven sediment redistribution and the development of localized barrier complexes under high-energy conditions during relative sea-level fluctuations, rather than being a direct response to tectonic loading. Correlation of key time horizons across multiple seismic profiles reveals a southward migration of the depocenter within the Toukoshan Formation. This spatial pattern is consistent with the southward propagation of the orogenic belt and the resulting higher subsidence rates in the south as noted in previous studies, indicating that such regional-scale sediment redistribution is primarily governed by foreland basin subsidence. Our findings reveal a decoupling of stratigraphic drivers: while isopach maps confirm sustained tectonic control over regional accommodation, the internal architecture of the Toukoshan Formation marks a switch to localized hydrodynamic forcing. Wave-driven sediment supply and reworking overrides the tectonic signal, creating high-frequency heterogeneity and proving that even under active tectonics, environmental energy can be the primary sculptor of the depositional landscape.

How to cite: Tsai, M.-Y., Hsu, H.-H., Chen, T.-T., Liu, C.-S., Lin, L.-F., and Mirza, A.: Contrasting Tectonic and Hydrodynamic Controls on the Infill of the Toukoshan Formation: A Seismic Stratigraphic Study Offshore Central Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17238, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17238, 2026.

EGU26-17421 | Orals | TS4.2

Crustal deformation of Gondwana during the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age 

Yiorgos Galanis and David Bridgland

It is widely documented in the fluvial terrace and the sedimentary archive that Late Cenozoic landscapes have experienced an increase in non-steady-state uplift. With stepwise increase in uplift with climate transitions, this naturally led research to link uplift and climate. Further documented was the influence of crustal domain in controlling rates, where younger crust appears to react with greater intensity than its older, Archaean and Proterozoic counterparts. We began this project questioning that if Late Cenozoic crustal deformation is related in some way to increasing climate deterioration, then we should expect similar patterns during analogous periods. The selected period was the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age. Both exhibit similar low modelled CO2, high δ18O, high-frequency and high-magnitude oscillations in sea level, direct evidence of glaciation and, in comparison to earlier glacial episodes, biological complexity. Thermochronology data was compiled from terranes across Gondwana to provide a regional perspective of the nature of exhumation. The results are as follows. A pattern was evident of higher exhumation rates from Gondwanan-aged crustal domains in contrast to earlier Proterozoic and Archaean domains. Although expected and fitting with theory of how the crust deforms, this pattern is most curious. Linking the timing of exhumation with stages of climate deterioration proved difficult due to the resolution at which thermochronology describes exhumation. The presentation will explore the validity of assumptions and limitations of methodology and preservation of evidence, with discussion of avenues for further research on the topic.

How to cite: Galanis, Y. and Bridgland, D.: Crustal deformation of Gondwana during the Late Palaeozoic Ice Age, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17421, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17421, 2026.

EGU26-17804 | Orals | TS4.2

Neotectonic vertical motions based on syn-volcanic palaeosurfaces and geochronological data: inferences for crustal and mantle processes (Pannonian Basin, Central Europe) 

László Fodor, Gábor Csillag, Károly Németh, Zsófia Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Krisztina Sebe, Tamás Telbisz, Gábor Kovács, and Sierd Cloetingh

Rate and timing of neotectonic vertical motions represent an ongoing research topic in inverted sedimentary basins. This presentation offers new data concerning the uplift history of the western part of the Miocene Pannonian Basin system, (Central Europe) which is bordering the Alpine orogenic belt. After the syn-rift phase of ~21–15Ma, the area underwent the post-rift phase which involved differential subsidence reaching several kilometres in basin centres. Parallel to post-rift subsidence process, the basin inversion started during the Late Miocene and resulted in differential uplift, fluvial and aeolian denudation, and river incision.

The late post-rift and the early neotectonic phases were accompanied by extensive basalt volcanism, resulting in the activity of two distinct phreatomagmatic monogenetic volcanic fields, the Bakony-Balaton Highland and Little Hungarian Plain Volcanic Fields (BBHVF and LHPVF) through the Late Miocene to earliest Quaternary (7.96–2.61 Ma). The volcanic fields comprise diverse volcanic landforms, including shield volcanoes, maar diatremes, volcanic plugs and erosional remnants of scoria and spatter cones.

Detailed analysis of volcanic facies was used to reconstruct the topographic position of the syn-volcanic palaeosurface upon which the volcanoes developed. Using the previously published ages of the volcanic rocks and the palaeo-elevations of the volcanic surfaces, averaged uplift rates were derived for all observation points. In addition, previously published exposure age data and geomorphological data were used to constrain the uplift rates.

The reconstructed palaeosurfaces and the calculated rock uplift rates show spatial and temporal variations from ~20 to ~100 m/Ma. Before ~3.5 Ma the two volcanic fields showed opposite differential vertical motions having been positive in the eastern basin margin (Transdanubian Range) and negative in the neighbouring basin centre (Kisalföld/Danube Basin); variations were due to differential post-rift subsidence and the onset of minor neotectonic uplift. After ~3.5 Ma all the studied areas underwent uplift, but the south-western part of the volcanic fields exhibits larger uplift values than the north-eastern one triggering a regional drainage pattern reorganisation. Moving west from the volcanic areas, toward the foothills of the Alps, the uplift rates increased even more and approximating values obtained in the Alpine orogenic belt.

This variable differential vertical motion history points to the interplay of complex governing processes. These could involve the intraplate compressional stress related to neotectonic basin inversion, lower-crustal flow of the weakened crust, and more importantly, mantle processes at depth. This latter could involve lithospheric folding, mantle convection-induced development of a dynamic topography, and the eventual effect of secondary plumes. In addition, uplift could be coupled with surface processes like variable unloading by denudation and loading by sedimentation in the axial and marginal parts of the area, respectively.

The research was supported by the Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office, project 134873 and the HUN-REN Research Grant Hungary project RGH531001.

How to cite: Fodor, L., Csillag, G., Németh, K., Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Z., Sebe, K., Telbisz, T., Kovács, G., and Cloetingh, S.: Neotectonic vertical motions based on syn-volcanic palaeosurfaces and geochronological data: inferences for crustal and mantle processes (Pannonian Basin, Central Europe), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17804, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17804, 2026.

EGU26-17815 | Posters on site | TS4.2

Integrated Geological and Geophysical Investigation of Al-Shout Valley, Saudi Arabia 

Saad AlHumidan and Suhail Alhejji

This study of the subsurface conditions within a fluvial system impacted by the Red Sea rift tectonics offers an integration of geological and geophysical observations from Al-Shout Valley in western Saudi Arabia. Two primary fracture orientations are revealed by structural measurements, suggesting regional tectonic control. While Vertical Electrical Sounding (VES) data define the transition from unconsolidated sediments to gravel layers and underlying bedrock, high-resolution Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) profiles show varying sediment thickness and shallow subsurface heterogeneity. The significant sediment variability and a strong tectonic influence on the valley evolution are shown by the combined dataset. These findings will advance our knowledge of near-surface architecture and fluvial stratigraphy in environments associated with arid rifts.

How to cite: AlHumidan, S. and Alhejji, S.: Integrated Geological and Geophysical Investigation of Al-Shout Valley, Saudi Arabia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17815, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17815, 2026.

EGU26-18447 | Posters on site | TS4.2

Thermomechanical models of Taiwan’s orogeny with along-strike variability 

Ming Jun Zheng, Yuan-Hsi Lee, and Eh Tan

Taiwan is situated within an active arc–continent collision zone and represents one of the most rapidly exhuming orogens on Earth, characterized by complex structural architecture. In our previous work, we developed a comprehensive thermomechanical model that incorporates the depth-dependent transition from brittle to ductile deformation, lithology-controlled erosion, and observed geometries of the basal decollement and backstop. The model successfully reproduces the key structural features of the northern Taiwan orogen and is consistent with metamorphic temperature profiles, thermochronological constraints, spatial patterns of strain, and the observed rates of exhumation and cooling. The results further demonstrate the critical roles of ductile deformation and ramp structures in the formation of the Hsuehshan Range and the Western fold-and-thrust belt.

Structural styles, however, vary systematically from north to south across the Taiwan orogen. Notably, the Hsuehshan Range is absent in southern Taiwan, and total crustal shortening decreases significantly toward the southern tip of the island.

Here, we apply the same thermomechanical framework under varying boundary conditions to reconstruct the along-strike evolution of mountain building across Taiwan.

Our results indicate that the timing of orogenic onset is comparable along strike, whereas the rate of shortening decreases progressively from north to south. The basal decollement extends to approximately 20 km depth and exhibits variable ramp–flat geometries, leading to distinct structural styles along the orogen. The model successfully captures the development of the Pingtung Basin and the structural evolution of the Hengchun Peninsula, providing a unified framework for understanding the along-strike variability of Taiwan’s orogeny.

How to cite: Zheng, M. J., Lee, Y.-H., and Tan, E.: Thermomechanical models of Taiwan’s orogeny with along-strike variability, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18447, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18447, 2026.

EGU26-20363 | ECS | Posters on site | TS4.2

Eocene – Miocene geologic evolution of the Alps-Apennines junction wedge top basin in northwest Italy 

Maria Isabel Vidal Reyes, Mattia Marini, Chiara Amadori, Simone Reguzzi, Matteo Maino, Niccolo Menegoni, Fadi H. Nader, and Magdala Tesauro

The sedimentary fill of foreland wedge-top basins is characterized by an intricated depositional architecture, resulting from superposition of tectonics and sedimentation. This study explores the relationship between tectonics and basin evolution through the analysis of the Eocene-Miocene depositional systems formed in the Alps-Apennines junction wedge-top basin (northwest Italy). We implemented a 3D geologic model, providing thickness and lateral facies variations, as well as the architecture of these systems. To this aim, we analysed subsurface and surface data, including seismic reflection profiles, field observations, and facies analysis of the outcropping successions. Five major units were identified within the basin, which are representative of key stages in its tectonic evolution. An initial phase of basin subsidence (Eocene-Oligocene) culminated in the establishment of a widespread deep-water environment, characterized by high efficiency turbidite systems (Burdigalian). Afterwards, the progression of Apennine deformation led first to basin tilting and then basin inversion and progressive shallowing (Middle to Late Miocene). The 3D model is the basis for a quantitative characterization of the relationship between tectonic subsidence and sediment accumulation, useful to understand the complex evolution of this and analogue sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Vidal Reyes, M. I., Marini, M., Amadori, C., Reguzzi, S., Maino, M., Menegoni, N., Nader, F. H., and Tesauro, M.: Eocene – Miocene geologic evolution of the Alps-Apennines junction wedge top basin in northwest Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20363, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20363, 2026.

The Yaziluo Aulacogen, developed on the northern margin of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean, has become a strategic breakthrough area for shale gas exploration in southern China's complex tectonic regions due to the discovery of Carboniferous industrial gas flow. However, prior to this study, the region had been poorly studied, with limited thermal indicator data, well-developed carbonate strata, and was affected by the superimposed effects of multi-phase tectonic movements. A single type of thermal indicator could not accurately reconstruct its thermal history, leading to uncertainties in hydrocarbon source rock maturity evolution and hydrocarbon generation phases, thus hindering the evaluation of shale gas potential. To address the challenge of accurately reconstructing thermal history in complex tectonic regions, this study focused on the Yaziluo Aulacogen, which preserves abundant stratigraphic records. We reconstructed the thermal history of the aulacogen since the Late Paleozoic using a multi-method coupling approach, including the combination of carbonate clumped isotope with U-Pb dating, low-temperature thermochronology, and organic thermal indicators. This work established a thermal history reconstruction technique for complex tectonic regions and quantitatively analyzed the spatio-temporal superimposition effects of multi-phase tectono-thermal events. Furthermore, we identified the controlling factors influencing the maturity evolution of the Lower Carboniferous source rocks and clarified the relationship between regional tectono-thermal evolution and critical hydrocarbon generation periods. The results have provided geothermal constraints for geodynamic studies of passive continental margin rift basins along the northern Paleo-Tethys margin and offered key technical support for hydrocarbon resource assessment in similar complex tectonic regions across the Paleo-Tethyan domain.

How to cite: Gao, P.: Thermal History Reconstruction of the Yaziluo Aulacogen, Paleo-Tethyan Complex Tectonic Domain: Coupled Constraints from Multitype Thermal Indicators, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20539, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20539, 2026.

The interplay between tectonic shortening and surface erosion critically influences mountain building, yet their combined effects on vertical orogenic growth remain unclear. Here we present a suite of tectonic-geomorphology analogue experiments that combine brittle deformation with controlled rainfall-driven erosion. Under a certain shortening rate, we find that wedge height does not monotonically decrease with increasing erosion. Instead, the maximum orogenic wedge height occurs at a moderate rainfall/erosion rate, rather than under no or low erosion. To quantify this relationship, we introduce a dimensionless parameter, the rainfall-to-shortening ratio (R2S), and show that wedge height peaks at R2S ≈ 1. Compilation of data from 28 natural orogenic belts shows a similar bell-shaped trend, with maximum average elevations occurring at R2S ≈ 100, supporting the experimental results. The R2S difference between modeled and natural results likely represents the scaling difference of rainfall rate relative to shortening rate. We suggest that moderate erosion promotes vertical growth by reducing internal wedge strength and allowing the development of steeper critical surface slopes. These findings underscore the dynamic coupling between tectonics and surface processes and offer a scalable, physically grounded framework for understanding and predicting variations in mountain height across both experimental and natural systems.

How to cite: Wu, L. and Yang, B.: Moderate Erosion relative to Shortening Maximizes Mountain Heights in Active Orogenic Belts: Insight from tectonic-geomorphology analogue modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21847, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21847, 2026.

The north-eastern Himalaya display an early stage of tectonism since the disintegration of Gondwanaland. The Kameng watershed, situated in the westernmost part of the Arunachal Himalayas, represents a critical zone of active tectonic deformation. Its significance arises from its position at the triple junction of three major seismo-tectonic domains: the Eastern Himalayan Collision Zone (EHCZ) to the north, the Plate Boundary Zone of the Shillong Plateau Assam Valley Bengal Basin (PBZSPAVBB) to the southwest, and the Assam Gap (AG) to the southeast. Additionaly the region is traversed by four major fault and detachment systems: Main Frontal Thrust (MFT), Main Boundary Thrust (MBT), Main Central Thrust (MCT), and South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS) from south to north. Such geodynamic settings are expected to leave imprints on the spatial variability of tectonic activity across the region, making this an important aspect to investigate in understanding the differential tectonic response of the Kameng watershed. Concentrated earthquake events in the northwestern part of the watershed and a sudden debris flow in the recent past in Wapra-bung, a tributary located in the vicinity of the same region, drew significant attention and led to the hypothesis of a potential link among the ongoing stress accommodation along the older thrust and detachment systems (MCT and STDS) in the hinterland, the debris flow in the northwestern segment, and the concentrated distribution of seismic events in the northwest region of the Kameng watershed. Relative and Total Slope-extension Index (RDEs/RDEt), the Stream Length Gradient–Hotspot and Cluster Analysis (SL-HCA) using the Getis-Ord Gi statistic, Relative Tectonic Uplift (Ut) of the sub-watersheds, along with seismological analysis using the Gutenberg–Richter relationship, were conducted on seventeen sub-watersheds of the Kameng watershed to evaluate tectonic deformation within the region. Findings suggest that the heightened tectonic activity in the northwestern region is not coincidental but is likely linked to the Radial Expansion and the Oblique Convergence Model, with ongoing stress accommodation along the STDS and MCT in the hinterland. In contrast, the eastern side of the Kameng watershed exhibits lower seismic activity and reduced tectonic instability, possibly associated with the Assam Gap, where the stress release rate is relatively low compared to the Eastern Himalayan Collision Zone to the north and the Shillong Plateau to the southwest. In Arunachal Himalaya, approximately 6 mm/yr of total ~15 mm/yr plate convergence is being absorbed between Bomdila and Tezpur in the Lesser/Outer Himalaya; this fact could be the explanation of the heightened tectonic activities. In comparison, about 10 mm/yr is taken up between Bomdila and Tawang in the Greater/Tethyan Himalaya. Field evidence, including a 39°C hot water spring near Dirang along the Bichom River, further supports the inference of active deformation within the north-western side of the watershed.

How to cite: Das, S. and Biswas, M.: Active Tectonic Deformation of the Kameng watershed: Evidence from Geomorphic Indices and Seismological Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-725, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-725, 2026.

EGU26-818 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Multi-isotopic (δ34SSO4, δ13CDIC) evidence for enhanced sulfide oxidation in the central Himalayas: A Spatio-temporal study 

Satyabrata Das, Rakesh Kumar Rout, Kruttika Mohapatra, Gyana Ranjan Tripathy, Abhayanand Singh Maurya, and Santosh Kumar Rai

Sulfuric acid-mediated carbonate weathering in mountainous regions serves as a dominant CO2 source, counterbalancing the carbon sequestration via silicate weathering. In this study, we investigated the intensity and controlling factors for sulfide oxidation for a major Himalayan River (the Yamuna River) draining the central Himalaya, using dissolved major ions, and δ34SSO4 and δ13CDIC data. The water samples examined in this study include spatial collections from the mainstream and its tributaries during monsoon (2022), and biweekly samples collected at the mountain front (at Paonta Sahib, India) of the Yamuna River for a duration of one year (2022-23). The spatial δ13CDIC data vary between -7.4‰ and 4.3‰, which are intermediate between carbonic acid-mediated silicate weathering (-24‰ ± 2‰) and sulfuric acid-mediated carbonate weathering (0‰ ± 2‰).At the spatial scale, the average SO42- concentration (~300 µM) is about six times higher than that of the Ganga (~58 µm) and Brahmaputra (~78 µM) outflows, and about three times higher than the global rivers (~88 µM). The corresponding δ34SSO4 data vary between 2.3‰ and 25.5‰, with an average value of 13.0 ‰. The δ34SSO4 values for the mountainous samples are more depleted than those from the floodplains, hinting at intense sulfuric acid-mediated weathering in the mountainous region. The δ34SSO4 values also exhibit strong seasonal variations, with more depleted δ34SSO4 signatures (14.1‰ ± 1.0‰) during the monsoon compared to those for the non-monsoon (17.0‰ ± 1.3‰) period. The observed seasonal difference (~3‰) suggests water level and oxygen availability influence the oxidation reactions at subsurface level. Our preliminary observation indicates intense sulfide oxidation in this mountainous catchment, possibly triggered by basin lithology and oxygen availability.   

How to cite: Das, S., Rout, R. K., Mohapatra, K., Tripathy, G. R., Maurya, A. S., and Rai, S. K.: Multi-isotopic (δ34SSO4, δ13CDIC) evidence for enhanced sulfide oxidation in the central Himalayas: A Spatio-temporal study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-818, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-818, 2026.

EGU26-982 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Pyrite oxidation in the Brahmaputra river basin: A δ34SSO4-δ18OSO4 study 

Kruttika Mohapatra, Rakesh Kumar Rout, Gyana Ranjan Tripathy, Satyabrata Das, and Santosh K. Rai

Dissolved δ34SSO4 and δ18OSO4 data for the Brahmaputra mainstream were investigated for monsoon (September-October, 2022) and non-monsoon (February-March, 2022) periods. These data were used to evaluate the effect of sulfide oxidation­­, a dominant source of atmospheric CO2, in this large Himalayan river basin on the global carbon cycle. Sulfate concentrations of the mainstream exhibit strong spatial variations, with relative higher values observed near the Eastern Syntaxis (326 ± 41 μM) compared to the lower reaches (184 ± 46 μM). Average SO4 concentrations for the monsoon (227 ± 103 μM) and non-monsoon (244 ± 55 μM) periods do not show significant seasonal variations. However, the δ34SSO4 of the monsoon samples (2.1 - 5.3 ‰) are systematically lower than those for the non-monsoon samples (4.3 - 7.1 ‰), indicating enhanced sulfide oxidation during the high flow stages. Similarly, the δ18OSO4 of the monsoon samples (-3.0 - -9.8 ‰) are more depleted than those of the non-monsoon samples (0.1 - 5.9 ‰). Enriched δ18OSO4 values for lean-flow period may reflect seasonal changes in δ18O values of the reactive fluids, and/or relative contribution of (i) oxygen to the sulfate, and (ii) sulfate supplied through pyrite and gypsum dissolution. Source-apportionment modeling confirms that the river cations at the Guwahati supplied mainly by carbonates (~62% in monsoon; ~55% in non-monsoon) and silicates (~34% in monsoon; ~36% in non-monsoon). A Monte-Carlo modeling of the δ18OSO4 isotopic balance equations indicates that sulfide-derived sulfate at Guwahati for monsoon (fpy ~60%) is about twice that during the non-monsoon (fpy ~30%) periods. Higher sulfide oxidation during the monsoon is likely linked to greater oxygen availability at the subsurface pyrite weathering front and increased interaction with reactive fluids. Additionally, monsoon samples were influenced by a flood event, which may have further enhanced oxidation rates in the basin.

How to cite: Mohapatra, K., Rout, R. K., Tripathy, G. R., Das, S., and Rai, S. K.: Pyrite oxidation in the Brahmaputra river basin: A δ34SSO4-δ18OSO4 study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-982, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-982, 2026.

EGU26-994 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Evidence of Forebulge Uplift in Late Quaternary Stratigraphy of the Southern Ganga Plains: Insights from the Chambal Basin, India 

Parv Kasana, Vimal Singh, Sampat K Tandon, Rohit Kumar, and Rahul Devrani

Forebulge uplift plays a significant role in foreland-basin evolution; however, uplift history and stratigraphic expression are often difficult to resolve within continental interiors, where deformation is subtle and typically modelled over million-year timescales. A key question that remains unresolved is how slow forebulge uplift manifests itself in sedimentary facies architecture and geomorphic response at shorter (kiloyear) timescales.

Chambal River Basin, the largest cratonic tributary of the Ganga River and forming the western extent of the Southern Ganga Plains (SGP) in the Himalayan Foreland is characterized by extensive badland development that has resulted in exceptional sedimentary sections that preserve signatures of coupled forebulge dynamics and climatic fluctuations.

Through integrated sedimentary facies analysis and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating, we identify a basin-wide stratigraphic framework comprising a laterally extensive paleosol/interfluve unit (~113 ka), overlain by channel deposits (60–40 ka), and capped by Holocene floodplain sediments (~7 ka). The spatial extent and age equivalence of the basal paleosols correlated with regional records from Kalpi (~119 ka), Dahelkhand (~120 ka), and Ganga–Yamuna interfluve boreholes indicate a region-wide phase of landscape stability during MIS-5. While younger incision–aggradation cycles are linked to late Quaternary climatic fluctuations, the lateral continuity, maturity, and thickness of the MIS-5 paleosols point to prolonged landscape stability and fluvial incision, which we interpret as the geomorphic response to Central Indian Forebulge (CIF) uplift.

Our results demonstrate that even low-magnitude forebulge movements can manifest in sediment routing, modulate base levels, and generate regionally consistent pedogenic surfaces over shorter timescales. These findings highlight the sensitivity of craton-draining rivers to subtle flexural forcing.

How to cite: Kasana, P., Singh, V., Tandon, S. K., Kumar, R., and Devrani, R.: Evidence of Forebulge Uplift in Late Quaternary Stratigraphy of the Southern Ganga Plains: Insights from the Chambal Basin, India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-994, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-994, 2026.

EGU26-1546 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Global Influence of Tectonic Rock Damage on Erosional Efficiency 

Boontigan Kuhasubpasin, Seulgi Moon, and Carolina Lithgow-Bertelloni

Active fault influence landscape through both tectonic deformation and surface erosion. Although their role in generating rock uplift is well established, the global impact of fault-related rock damage on erosional efficiency remains poorly constrained. Using a compilation of 1,744 cosmogenic 10Be–derived erosion rates, we demonstrate that erosional efficiency is systematically enhanced within approximately 15 km of mapped fault traces and declines with increasing distance, following an inverse sigmoidal trend extending to roughly 100 km. The strongest responses are associated with reverse faults and faults exceeding 140 km in length. The observed decay length scale implies that tectonic damage extends well beyond fault-core pulverization, potentially reflecting grain-scale weakening, increased fracture density from seismic shaking, and distributed deformation within complex fault networks. Machine-learning analyses identify proximity to faults as a primary control on erosional efficiency, surpassing the influence of precipitation and lithology, with model performance further improved by incorporating metrics of seismic shaking. Together, these results indicate that active tectonics modulate erosion not only through uplift but also by enhancing erosional efficiency via widespread rock damage.

How to cite: Kuhasubpasin, B., Moon, S., and Lithgow-Bertelloni, C.: Global Influence of Tectonic Rock Damage on Erosional Efficiency, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1546, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1546, 2026.

EGU26-3495 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Tectonics from topography: Embracing noise and uncertainty in inverse modelling of landscapes 

Matthew Morris, Gareth Roberts, Fred Richards, and Alex Lipp
Disentangling the roles of climatic or lithologic processes from tectonic ones in shaping landscapes remains an important goal within the geosciences. However, this endeavour is complicated by the existence of ‘geomorphic noise’---the shaping of topography by surface processes operating on shorter timescales than large scale tectonic uplift.  We present a probabilistic inverse modelling framework that can recover histories of uplift from noisy topography. It is shown that noise added to landscape simulations generates variability in their resultant geomorphic properties, but that ensemble-based approaches to landscape evolution modelling are well-suited to quantifying this uncertainty. Unlike Euclidean approaches (e.g., root mean square), optimal transport-based techniques for comparing observed and theoretical topographies are able to ‘see through’ local complexity. Crucially, this precludes the need for precise knowledge about initial conditions, reproducing facsimiles of observed topography, and assumptions of topographic steady state, all of which are likely to be unrealistic expectations in recovering tectonics from topography. We show that recovering spatially- and temporally variable uplift histories with this modelling framework is applicable to large portions of Earth’s surface and may have valuable implications for identifying mineral resources.
 

How to cite: Morris, M., Roberts, G., Richards, F., and Lipp, A.: Tectonics from topography: Embracing noise and uncertainty in inverse modelling of landscapes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3495, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3495, 2026.

EGU26-3920 | Posters on site | GM7.1

Seven steps towards a terrace model of the Middle Rhine Valley 

Johannes Preuß, Prof. i.R., Dr.

Climate, tectonic and fluvial processes are the forces and river-terraces the product. Between Bingen and Bonn, the Rhine crosses the uplifted Rhenish slate mountains and is supported by Graben-building processes. We could find 28 separate sediment-bodies of the Rhine with bedrock surfaces by drilling. We were using the palaeomagnetic dating of sediments by Scheidt et al. (2015) of two drillings in the Rhine-Graben to force an entry into the palaeomagnetic time-model.

From 2006 to 2013 a geomorphological project between Bad Kreuznach and Bingen was revived, that was started in the 1980-ies by Görg and Preuß. It was enlarged to Boppard (Preuß et al. 2015, 2019; Preuß 2017).

From the data a Downstream Correlation Diagram (see Fig. 1) for more than 60 river-kilometers was created, in which 726 drillings are summarized. It was used to construct a composite sequence (Collected Sequence) of the recorded 28 sediment bodies resting on bedrock surfaces (see Fig. 1 & 2). The Collected Sequence was inserted in the Quaternary temperature curve derived from pollen by Zagwijn (1985, 1998), into the cold intervals with temperatures of the warmest month below 10°C. The ages of the intervals with maximum cooling were taken from the MIS (Cohen & Gibbard, 2011). This is the Chrono-Sequence (1) with MIS time-model. The Chrono-Sequence (1), in their chronological order, was transferred by mathematical calculation into two paleomagnetically dated drill cores from Heidelberg (307 m) and Viernheim (221 m). (For the cores: Gabriel, Ellwanger, Hoselmann & Weidenfeller, (2008), for paleomagnetic dating: Scheidt, Hambach & Rolf (2015). In the underlying and overlying stratum of the transferred points, the lower boundary (coarse sediments) and upper boundary (fine sediments, organic material, paleosols) were identified in photographs of the cores. Their ages were calculated using the paleomagnetic depth-functions of the respective cores and subsequently combined into mean values of both cores (red column in Fig. 2). This is Chrono-Sequence (2) with a palaeomagnetic time-model. In Fig. 3, Chrono-Sequence (1) was plotted on the x-axis (time) and the elevation of bedrock-surfaces on the y-axis. Linear equations were calculated (see Fig 3). The gradients amount to 52 m/Ma (upper) and 66 m/Ma (lower). The lower curve segment corresponds to the uplift rate (= rate of incision). In the upper curve segment, the uplift rate was reduced by subsidence of about 14 m/Ma. According to its assumed age, the bedrock surface of the oldest terrace (tRh1.1) would have been lowered from 311 m a. s. l. by 37 m to its present level at 274 m a. s. l. To the initial elevation of 311 m a. s. l., the present-day thalweg of the Rhine was inserted into the model as a third-order polynomial line (see Fig. 6 (=5/2). The terrace model was evaluated using two independent datasets from the Lower Middle Rhine Valley (Bibus (1980); Hoselmann (1994)) (see Fig. 7). The latest (“paper”-)model fits well with the real situations of the rock-bases.

How to cite: Preuß, Prof. i.R., Dr., J.: Seven steps towards a terrace model of the Middle Rhine Valley, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3920, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3920, 2026.

EGU26-5394 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Modeling the ups and downs of continental rifting: Feedbacks between normal faulting, flexural isostasy and erosion 

Fabian Dremel, Jörg Robl, and Stefan Hergarten

Understanding the development of intraplate mountain ranges is essential for linking lithospheric deformation to uplift/subsidence, long-term exhumation, and hence the distribution of topography. One key process driving the formation of elevated relief in these settings is continental rifting, where tectonic extension, normal faulting, and flexural isostasy interact to generate central graben structures and elevated rift flanks. These flanks are marked by asymmetric erosion which in turn leads to drainage network reorganization, drainage divide mobility, and rift flank retreat. However, the relative contribution of normal faulting and flexural isostasy to drainage network reorganization remains poorly understood, as does the role of river captures and migrating drainage divides in controlling the spatial distribution of erosion and exhumation.

In this study, we employ the 2D landscape evolution model OpenLEM to investigate the interplay between normal faulting and flexural isostasy during rift flank uplift. Rather than imposing a uniform regional uplift, we use flexural compensation to let uplift emerge dynamically in response to fault-controlled subsidence, tectonic unroofing, and erosion. To ensure realistic drainage organization and sediment routing, a central river is integrated along the graben axis, providing an effective base level and sediment sink throughout model evolution.

First model results show a subsiding central graben structure and uplifting rift flanks, with alluvial fans forming along the boundary. Flexural unloading along the bounding faults induces up to ~600 m of rift flank uplift, generating pronounced topographic asymmetry. This, in turn, leads to asymmetric slopes which promote retrogressive erosion of rivers draining toward the graben, resulting in a lateral migration of the rift flank and the drainage divides. Drainage reorganization occurs through river capture and flow reversals, increasing the contributing area of graben-directed rivers at the expense of outward-draining catchments. Although horizontal fault motion drives lateral graben widening, high erosion rates along the rift flanks dominate, causing progressive flank retreat and a gradual reduction in flank elevation with increasing distance from the graben center.

How to cite: Dremel, F., Robl, J., and Hergarten, S.: Modeling the ups and downs of continental rifting: Feedbacks between normal faulting, flexural isostasy and erosion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5394, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5394, 2026.

EGU26-5453 | Posters on site | GM7.1

Stress State Evolution in Glacially Imprinted Landscapes 

Jörg Robl, Viktor Haunsperger, Stefan Hergarten, and Andreas Schröder

The morphological evolution of alpine landscapes during the Quaternary climate cycles is tightly linked to the redistribution of gravitational stresses and the (in)stability of the rock mass. In this study, we investigate the evolving stress states of mountain massifs as they transition from fluvial to glacial topography and through subsequent rapid deglaciation. Using a three-dimensional numerical model based on the fictitious domain method, we compute stress distributions across complex, glaciated, and glacially imprinted landscapes. Time series of these stress calculations identify  when and where shear stress concentrations emerge within the mountain massif throughout its geomorphic evolution.

Our preliminary results quantify the contribution of two primary drivers of stress redistribution on mountain massif scale: 1) The transition from V-shaped fluvial valleys to U-shaped glacial troughs operates on time scales of 105-106 years and causes valley widening and deepening. This process steepens valley flanks and sharpens ridgelines, thereby concentrating gravitational loads and consequently increasing shear stresses. 2) Ice unloading due to climate warming and deglaciation (time scales of 103 years) causes a rapid loss of lateral confinement previously provided by ice. This process increases shear stresses in valley flanks.

Both the transition from fluvial to glacial topography and the subsequent removal of ice act in combination to increase shear stress on valley flanks. When these shear stresses exceed the strength of the rock mass, failure occurs as a trigger of landsliding in paraglacial environments. By integrating topographic evolution, shear stress redistribution, and rock mass strength, this approach provides new insights into the long-term morphological evolution of mid-latitude mountains while serving as a predictive tool for identifying regions approaching critical rock failure.

How to cite: Robl, J., Haunsperger, V., Hergarten, S., and Schröder, A.: Stress State Evolution in Glacially Imprinted Landscapes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5453, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5453, 2026.

EGU26-5585 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Towards a stress-based stability criterion for rock slopes from 3D stress modeling of entire mountain massifs 

Viktor Haunsperger, Jörg Robl, Stefan Hergarten, Anne-Laure Argentin, Henri Wilks-Stebbings, and Andreas Schröder

Steep mountain landscapes are subject to gravitational stresses generated by elastic compression of the rock mass under its own topographic load, commonly referred to as dead-load stresses. This load induces shear stresses that promote rock failure. In turn, dead-load stresses also contain normal stresses acting perpendicular to internal rock surfaces, which increase frictional resistance and thereby contribute to the overall mechanical stability of the rock mass. However, the stresses are distributed unevenly because topographic load varies strongly with relief. Predicting the stresses from topography and rock properties is not trivial, which makes the prediction of failure difficult.

Despite this mechanical link, the role of the full three-dimensional stress state within mountain massifs remains difficult to quantify and is rarely incorporated into slope-stability concepts. In previous work, we used high-resolution three-dimensional linear elastic stress simulations to examine how stress fields reorganize during progressive topographic decay. Building on this approach, we explore the potential of stress-based stability metrics derived from full three-dimensional stress tensors to assess rock-slope stability across entire mountain massifs.

We compute the stress field beneath digital elevation models using the Finite Cell Method, a fictitious-domain approach that enables efficient and accurate linear elastic stress calculations for complex alpine topographies without the need for boundary-fitted meshes. This framework allows simulations at the scale of whole mountain ranges while retaining detailed resolution of near-surface stress variations. Based on the resulting stress fields, we introduce a simple Mohr-Coulomb-based formulation to estimate the minimum rock-mass cohesion required for stability under the local stress state, assuming a prescribed internal friction angle. This metric provides a spatially explicit measure of how close different parts of the landscape are to plausible rock-strength limits.

Our analysis focuses on spatial patterns of stress-limited stability and their relation to relief and slope geometry in steep alpine terrain. We examine how the estimated minimum cohesion varies across the landscape and whether regions of elevated cohesion demand coincide with known landslide source areas or zones identified as unstable by independent landslide models. The results demonstrate how three-dimensional stress information can complement purely geometric descriptors of slope stability and provide a physically motivated basis for evaluating rock-slope stability at the scale of mountain massifs.

How to cite: Haunsperger, V., Robl, J., Hergarten, S., Argentin, A.-L., Wilks-Stebbings, H., and Schröder, A.: Towards a stress-based stability criterion for rock slopes from 3D stress modeling of entire mountain massifs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5585, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5585, 2026.

In response to the Indo-Asian collision, the eastward growth of Tibetan Plateau results into an extensive low-relief surface in the Yunnan-Guizhou area, i.e., the Yungui Plateau. Of which the paradoxical presence of extensive low-relief surface perched above deep valleys in the southeast Tibet Plateau is a long-standing challenge. Here, we apply 36 samples detrital zircon and apatite thermochronometry along the Yangtze and Nanpanjiang rivers, to provide the reginal-scale proxy for the unroofing and uplift history of the Yungui Plateau. The detrital zircon fission track data range in age from Permian to Cretaceous, with major peak-ages at 200 Ma, 160 Ma, 140 Ma, and 120 Ma along different rivers, indicating of a single phase of westwards unroofing along the Yungui Plateau occurred in ca. 160-120 Ma. Furthermore, detrital apatite fission track data shows major peak-ages at 60 Ma, 40 Ma and 20 Ma, with ages of various from 100~10 Ma. In particular, detrital apatite (U-Th)/He data shows major peak-ages around 10 Ma along the Xianshuihe-Xiaojiang area, with regional erosion more than 1500 m. The results confirm overall southwards unroofing process occurred in Late Cenozoic, from southeast margin of the Tibetan Plateau to the Yungui Plateau interiors. Thus, the Yungui Plateau surface uplift and incision result from two processes, expanding the Eastern Tibetan Plateau into its low-relief high-elevation surface along the Yungui Plateau. 

How to cite: Deng, B., Ye, Y., Zhang, Y., Zhao, G., and Liu, S.: Unroofing and uplift history of the Yungui Plateau at SE Tibetan Plateau, evidence from detrital zircon and apatite thermochronometry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6059, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6059, 2026.

EGU26-6081 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Long-Wavelength Quaternary Forearc Deformation Recorded by Marine Terraces in the Calabrian Arc 

Ana Perez-Hincapie and Sean Gallen

Constraints on vertical motions in subduction forearcs can improve understanding of the complex processes that govern the development and evolution of these subduction zones, particularly deep-earth processes that are difficult to directly observe. The Calabria region provides an exceptional natural laboratory for investigating the interplay between mantle dynamics, slab break-off, and forearc rock uplift. Previous geophysical studies show slab tears to the north and south of the ~200 km wide subducting Ionian slab, and the Calabrian forearc archives a history of rock uplift in well-preserved marine terraces. However, despite numerous studies on extensive sequences of deformed marine terraces across the region, the temporal and spatial variability of uplift rates, and their relationship to slab geometry, remain poorly constrained. Complications in using Calabrian terraces to understand the surface response to slab tearing and other subduction processes arise from (1) cross-cutting faults and augment the deeper earth signal of rock uplift, (2) preservation issues due to denudation of terrace sequences, and (3) sparse geochronology. Here, we overcome these challenges using detailed mapping, stratigraphic descriptions, and dating of marine terrace sequences along Calabria’s Ionian Coast, where few active surface-breaking events affect marine terraces, making it the location to image hypothesized signals of rock uplift due to slab tearing and mantle geodynamics. By targeting this tectonic setting, we aim to better resolve spatial variations in uplift rates across the entire plate boundary from slab edge to slab edge and beyond, across a transect extending >300 km. Within this area, 12 samples were collected: one for detrital sanidine 40Ar/39Ar dating and 11 for luminescence dating. Preliminary age control and correlations to a sea level curve indicate long-wavelength (100s of km) deformation of marine terraces. Marine terrace-derived rock uplift rates increase southward toward the Strait of Messina, reaching ~1.3 mm/yr near the Strait of Messina above the southern slab tear, decline to ~0.8 mm/yr above the subducting slab, and increase to ~2 mm/yr above the northern tear north of the Sila Massif. We are currently analyzing temporal changes in rock uplift rates over the past 200-500 kyr, as afforded by the terrace record, to assess changes in slab tear and subduction dynamics during the mid-to-late Quaternary. These results suggest the fingerprint of slab tearing is imprinted on the coastal geomorphology of the Calabria forearc and highlight the critical importance of geomorphology in aiding in studies of subduction zone geodynamics.

How to cite: Perez-Hincapie, A. and Gallen, S.: Long-Wavelength Quaternary Forearc Deformation Recorded by Marine Terraces in the Calabrian Arc, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6081, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6081, 2026.

EGU26-6105 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Topographic signatures of kinematic segmentation and fault geometry along the Palu-Koro and Matano Faults, Indonesia 

Donny Wahyudi, Mikaël Attal, Simon Mudd, Ekbal Hussain, and Qi Ou

The Palu-Koro and Matano faults are among the fastest-slipping and most seismically active fault systems in eastern Indonesia, yet their kinematics and influence on landscape evolution remain debated. While topographic metrics are widely used to infer vertical displacement in extensional or compressional settings, their application in strike-slip systems, where deformation is predominantly horizontal, is less established. Here, we quantify topographic metrics including relief, channel steepness index (ksn), mean slope (S), and hilltop curvature (CHT) along both faults to characterise landscape response and identify interactions between fault segments. Using a quantile-based statistical approach, we classify topographic signals indicative of tectonic activity. Along the Matano fault, elevated metrics coincide with lithological contrasts and changes in fault geometry, whereas most of the fault exhibits subtle strike-slip-dominated topography. Along the Palu-Koro fault, segments of pure strike-slip motion show subdued metrics, while areas of complex geometry and transtension display elevated values. Subdued topographic segments also spatially correspond to zones of seismic quiescence. Preliminary InSAR observations suggest creeping behaviour in the western Matano fault and the aseismic portion of the Palu-Koro fault. These findings indicate that, although topographic metrics may not directly diagnose frictional slip modes, they effectively map kinematic segmentation and structural complexity that control vertical deformation in strike-slip systems. Integrating topographic metrics with geodetic data provides a powerful approach to identify and understand fault segmentation and interaction in complex strike-slip environments.

How to cite: Wahyudi, D., Attal, M., Mudd, S., Hussain, E., and Ou, Q.: Topographic signatures of kinematic segmentation and fault geometry along the Palu-Koro and Matano Faults, Indonesia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6105, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6105, 2026.

EGU26-6509 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Defining the timing and controls of alluvial fan aggradation in an extreme continental-interior setting in the Basin of Great Lakes, western Mongolia 

Dennis Wolf, Frank Lehmkuhl, Karl Wegmann, Paula Marques Figueiredo, Neda Rahimzadeh, Georg Stauch, and Lewis Owen

Quaternary geomorphic processes in western Mongolia's Basin of Great Lakes (BGL), one of the most continental regions on Earth, are predominantly controlled by a neogene tectonic setting and climate cyclicity. Here, Lake Khyargas presents the terminal water and sediment sink of a cascading lake system draining the adjacent Altai and Khangai mountains. Well-preserved sequences of shorelines and associated landforms provide evidence of multiple pronounced lake level highstands since the mid-Pleistocene in response to orbitally-driven climate cyclicity and widespread glacier melt in the broader catchment following the local last glacial maximum (Wolf et al., 2025,  https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109373).        
The Khankhukhii Range, reaching peak elevations of 2,928 m asl, separates the endorheic catchments of Lakes Khyargas and Uvs along the westernmost expression of the geomorphic prominent active Bulnay fault system. There is no evidence of former glaciations in the Khankhukhii Range, however, widespread periglacial impact is evident. The southern slopes of the Khankhukhii Range are inclined towards Lake Khyargas, where mesoscale alluvial fans form the interface between the mountain system and the terminal lake basin. Analyzing the timing of alluvial fan formation will promote the understanding of the coupling between climate cylicity and geomorphic processes in this highly continental region. The timing of alluvial fan aggradation and incision phases is determined using morphostratigraphic mapping of fan surfaces and their relationship with previously dated shoreline features. We combined surface-exposure dating using 10Be depth profiles, and sediment age pIRIR luminescence dating. Our approach reveals two preserved aggradational fan-surface generations corresponding to the transitions from MIS 6 to MIS 5 (~130 ka) and from MIS 4 to MIS 3 (minimum pIRIR age of 47 ka), and ongoing incision since the Pleistocene to Holocene transition. We discuss the suitability of investigating sedimentary archives of alluvial fan response to climate cyclicity in this setting that is modified by (1) tectonic uplift and (2) autogenic adjustments of the drainage network across the catchment, as well as (3) significant Late Pleistocene to Holocene hydrostatic changes in base level and accommodation space.

How to cite: Wolf, D., Lehmkuhl, F., Wegmann, K., Marques Figueiredo, P., Rahimzadeh, N., Stauch, G., and Owen, L.: Defining the timing and controls of alluvial fan aggradation in an extreme continental-interior setting in the Basin of Great Lakes, western Mongolia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6509, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6509, 2026.

EGU26-7063 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Valley Network Evolution in Sandstone Terrains: Tectonic Controls and Surface–Subsurface Process Interactions Revealed by Geomorphometric Analyses and Field Surveys 

Wioleta Porębna, Filip Duszyński, Marek Kasprzak, Filip Hartvich, Petr Tábořík, Piotr Migoń, Wojciech Bartz, Kacper Jancewicz, and Milena Różycka

Valley networks in sandstone terrains are commonly interpreted as products of structurally-controlled fluvial incision, coupled with hillslope and denudational processes. However, the role of tectonic and subsurface controls in shaping valley morphology and drainage organisation remains insufficiently explored. This study addresses the interplay between surface and subsurface processes in a sandstone tableland, with particular emphasis on tectonic controls, lithological variability, and their influence on valley network geometry and morphological diversity of valleys.

The sandstone-dominated area of the Intra-Sudetic Trough (NE Bohemian Massif) was examined using geomorphometric methods applied to high-resolution airborne LiDAR-derived digital elevation models. A set of primary and secondary topographic indices was calculated to characterize drainage organisation, valley incision, and spatial patterns of erosional dissection. These indices were subsequently integrated using two types of cluster analysis to delineate areas with an enhanced erosional signal.

To complement the geomorphometric analysis, field investigations were conducted, including detailed landform mapping and geophysical surveys employing Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT). These data, supplemented by analyses of sandstone composition and petrographic characteristics, provided insights into the links between surface, near-surface, and subsurface processes and geological controls, enabling for the development of a conceptual framework for valley network evolution.

The results demonstrate that valley morphology in sandstone terrains reflects a complex interaction between tectonic structures, lithology, and surface–subsurface process coupling. Pre-existing fault systems and joint networks exert a strong influence on drainage orientation, valley spacing, and incision patterns, often preconditioning zones of enhanced erosion. These structural controls, combined with differential weathering and subsurface erosion, promote the development of a wide spectrum of valley forms, including narrow canyons, gorges, V-shaped valleys, broad troughs, and flat-bottomed valleys, occurring in varied morphological positions within the sandstone-dominated landscape.

The observed morphological diversity cannot be explained solely by rock control on surface fluvial processes. Instead, the study highlights the importance of subsurface processes such as dilation-driven rock mass disintegration, chemical weathering, and fracture-guided underground erosion. The integration of geomorphometric techniques with field-based and geophysical data provides a quantitative and process-oriented perspective on valley network evolution.

How to cite: Porębna, W., Duszyński, F., Kasprzak, M., Hartvich, F., Tábořík, P., Migoń, P., Bartz, W., Jancewicz, K., and Różycka, M.: Valley Network Evolution in Sandstone Terrains: Tectonic Controls and Surface–Subsurface Process Interactions Revealed by Geomorphometric Analyses and Field Surveys, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7063, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7063, 2026.

EGU26-8346 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Late Cenozoic eastward growth of the Tibetan Plateau: evidence from geomorphic indices and river-profile inversion around the Hanzhong Basin 

Dali Ju, Zhao Yang, Xiaohui Shi, Eduardo Garzanti, Jiali You, Yuxiong Ma, Huihui Ai, and Yunpeng Dong

During the late Cenozoic, the outward growth of the Tibetan Plateau significantly influenced the tectonic, climatic, and geomorphic evolution of surrounding regions. The Qinling Mountains, at the eastern front of the Tibetan Plateau, have been involved in plateau expansion since the late Cenozoic, and the Hanzhong Basin, its unique late Cenozoic intermontane basin, preserves rich information on plateau growth. In this study, geomorphic indices, apatite fission track dating, and river-profile inversion were conducted on catchments around the Hanzhong Basin. Results reveal that drainages north of the Hanzhong Basin generally exhibit high steepness indices, especially those in the west, but southern drainages show greater variation. River-profile inversion documents two phases of accelerated relative rock-uplift at 15-10 Ma and 5-2 Ma on northern drainages. We interpret that high steepness indices and uplift rates in the west reflect tectonic forcing, expressed as pronounced relative rock uplift and enhanced subsidence of the western basin, whereas the heterogeneous steepness in the south indicates the differential uplift. Integrating tectonic and sedimentary evidence, we propose a new surface deformation model in which the outward expansion of the Tibetan Plateau since ~15 Ma has forced the rigid Bikou Terrane to wedge eastward, thus reactivating the Mianlue Fault and inducing extensional faulting within the Qinling Mountains and subsidence of the Hanzhong Basin. Synchronously, a series of transpressive faults formed in the Micang Shan and governed the landscape. 

How to cite: Ju, D., Yang, Z., Shi, X., Garzanti, E., You, J., Ma, Y., Ai, H., and Dong, Y.: Late Cenozoic eastward growth of the Tibetan Plateau: evidence from geomorphic indices and river-profile inversion around the Hanzhong Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8346, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8346, 2026.

Previous studies have suggested that during the Miocene, Asia transitioned from a planetary wind system to a monsoon system (Guo et al., 2008). This shift is considered to be primarily related to the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau. Between the Late Oligocene and Early Miocene, the Taihang Mountains underwent a critical phase of rapid uplift. This tectonic event closely coincides with the major transition in Asia's climate from dominance by the planetary wind system to dominance by the monsoon system. During this period, the region inland of Asia, with the Taihang Mountains-Qinling Mountains as a boundary, developed a continental arid climate.

This study, based on detailed research of climatic proxy indicators and paleomagnetic data from Cenozoic strata in the Jiyuan Basin, eastern Taihang Mountains, proposes that during the Middle to Late Oligocene (approximately 24–28 Ma), the climate of the Jiyuan Basin shifted from warm and humid conditions in the early stage to cool-temperate and dry conditions in the late stage. A distinct humidification process occurred between 24 and 21 Ma, which is associated with the global Early Miocene climatic warming and increased humidity. The uplift of the Taihang Mountains enhanced the orographic lifting effect encountered by the East Asian summer monsoon as it penetrated inland, potentially leading to increased precipitation on its eastern windward slopes. Concurrently, the rain shadow effect on its western leeward slopes was also intensified, thereby amplifying the east-west spatial differentiation of aridity and humidity across North China. This process is regarded as one of the important mechanisms that drove the reorganization of Asia's climate in the early Miocene and helped shape the prototype of modern monsoon precipitation patterns.

How to cite: Cui, J. and Li, Z.: Impact of the Taihang Mountains Uplift on the Formation of Asian Monsoon Climate during the Miocene: Constraints from Sedimentary Environment in the Jiyuan Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8593, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8593, 2026.

EGU26-9845 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Discerning the relative importance of Tectonic vs Climatic Controls on Topography from River Profile Analysis 

Adam G G Smith, Martin D. Hurst, and Todd A. Ehlers

The competing influence of climate and tectonics drive landscape change. However, separating the relative importance of tectonics and climatic control on the morphology and evolution of Earth’s present-day topography is challenging; climate and tectonics covary, their spatiotemporal scales differ, and geomorphic observations can be inconclusive. Longitudinal river profile analysis has long been used in geomorphology to evidence the influence of tectonics or climate on topography. However, such analysis often requires making limiting assumptions about the spatiotemporal variations in tectonic, climatic and geological conditions experienced by a river network. Here we present a novel river profile network analysis that is less dependent on limiting assumptions, and leverages different measures of river profile concavity. River profile concavity is the rate at which a river network’s slope decreases downstream. We acknowledge an apparent concavity, which reflects the present-day observed geometry, and an inherent concavity, which is the expected concavity of a river network under idealized conditions (all other forcing being equal). Results from numerical modelling show that the differences between the inherent and apparent concavity can be used to extract information about the relative importance of climate and tectonics in shaping river profiles. Applying these results to Taiwan, we demonstrate that the regional pattern of rock uplift, not precipitation, exerts the most significant influence on present-day river profiles. Taken together, these results overcome previous challenges in river profile analysis for deciphering climate vs. tectonic controls on landscape morphology and evolution.

How to cite: Smith, A. G. G., Hurst, M. D., and Ehlers, T. A.: Discerning the relative importance of Tectonic vs Climatic Controls on Topography from River Profile Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9845, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9845, 2026.

How tectonic stress influences topographic evolution remains a central question in regions of active mountain building. The Diancang Mountains, located at the southeastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau, are characterized by steep topography, active fault systems, and highly dynamic river networks, making them an ideal natural laboratory for studying the coupling between tectonic activity and landscape evolution.We specifically investigate how major strike-slip faults locally perturb the regional stress field to govern uplift distribution, which, in concert with fluvial erosion, drives the topographic evolution of the Diancang Mountains.

To address this, we integrate three-dimensional near-surface stress modeling with standard topographic metrics derived from DEM-based terrain analysis. Using Abaqus, we simulate near-surface stress fields by applying boundary conditions consistent with regional tectonic stress field, explicitly accounting for major fault geometries and surface topography.

Preliminary results reveal a strong spatial correlation between zones of elevated differential stress and enhanced river incision. Specifically, we observe persistently high channel steepness (ksn) along river segments associated with major fault zones and localized stress concentrations. Furthermore, c-mapping identifies pronounced asymmetric drainage divides (interpreted as across divide gradients in erosion rate) in regions of high stress gradients. The orientations of principal stress axes derived from our numerical models align with the preferred directions of divide migration inferred from c analysis.

These results demonstrate that the present-day fluvial morphology of the Diancang Mountains primarily reflects the influence of the shallow crustal stress field that is locally perturbed by major strike slip faulting. Our approach combining finite element stress modeling with quantitative morphometry provides a viable methodological framework for linking tectonic stress patterns to landscape evolution in active mountain ranges.

How to cite: Fan, J., Cao, S., and Robl, J.: Tectonic Stress Control on River Incision and Drainage Divide Migration in the Diancang Mountains, SE Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9972, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9972, 2026.

The arcuate tectonic belt at the northeastern margin of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is located at the farthest northern and eastern extension of the plateau, situated at the junction of the Qinghai-Tibet Block, the North China Craton, and the Alxa Block. This arcuate tectonic belt consists of four arcuate faults—the Haiyuan–Liupanshan Fault, the Xiangshan–Tianjingshan Fault, the Yantongsan Fault, and the Luoshan–Niushou Mountain Fault—along with the Cenozoic sedimentary basins sandwiched between them. While significant progress has been made in studies of its tectonic analysis and thermochronology, debates persist regarding the uplift and extension processes during the Paleogene to Neogene. This study focuses on three key sections: the Longde Section west of the Haiyuan Fault in the rear of the arcuate belt, the Sikouzi Section east of the Haiyuan Fault, and the Daruoshan West borehole section at the front of the arcuate belt. These sections, particularly the Sikouzi Section, exhibit well-preserved Cenozoic strata, making them critical for studying late Cenozoic sedimentary-tectonic evolution. Based on field surveys of geological sections, sedimentary structure observations, and stratigraphic division, this research employs experimental methods such as heavy and light mineral composition analysis, detrital zircon U-Pb geochronology, and carbon-oxygen isotope analysis to conduct systematic source-to-sink system studies. By examining sedimentary records in response to the tectonic evolution of adjacent orogenic belts, the study systematically reconstructs the late Cenozoic uplift and extension processes of the arcuate tectonic belt in the northeastern Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, delineates the initiation, development, and termination timelines of intense uplift and extension, and explores the uplift-extension model and its extent. Key findings include: During the deposition of the Sikouzi Formation (Paleogene), the northeastern uplift and extension of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau only affected areas west of Liupanshan; by the end of the Qingshuiying Formation deposition (~17.8 Ma), the northward and eastward thrusting of the plateau began influencing areas east of Liupanshan; at the onset of the Ganhegou Formation deposition (~8 Ma), the northeastern margin of the plateau entered a phase of rapid uplift and extension; during the middle phase of Ganhegou Formation deposition (~5.0 Ma), the arcuate tectonic belt experienced intense uplift; and by the end of the Ganhegou Formation deposition (~2.5 Ma), the arcuate tectonic belt reached its peak uplift stage.

How to cite: Kou, L.: The late Cenozoic uplift of arcuate tectonic belt, northeastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau, based on the sedimentary restriction of the important geological section, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9979, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9979, 2026.

EGU26-11053 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Reading landscapes from Afar: Field-based geomorphic constraints on fault evolution in the Dobi Graben, Ethiopia 

Reha Chandresh, Alexander Whittaker, Derek Keir, Rebecca Bell, Giacomo Corti, Federico Sani, and Hindeya Gebru

Resolving fault evolution in time and space for magma-rich rifts remains a challenge, particularly at the scale of individual fault systems where fault growth, volcanism and surface processes interact. Central Afar, Ethiopia, is widely recognised as a key natural laboratory for investigating active continental break-up and the interactions between surface processes and fault activity. This is particularly true within the structurally complex rift linkage zone between the Dabbahu-Manda Harraro and Asal magmatic segments of the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden rift systems, respectively. Previous studies and numerical models based on geodetic data, strain-rate analyses and paleomagnetism have provided important conceptual insights into the wider tectonic architecture and mechanisms of strain transfer across this zone. However, direct structural constraints and quantitative field-based measurements of fault initiation ages are limited, and fault evolution histories based on systematic observational data are unresolved.

In this study, we characterise the chronology of graben development within the rift linkage zone by integrating quantitative geomorphic analyses with new field datasets from the Dobi Graben. Our initial DEM-based regional-scale geomorphic analysis of river long profiles and swath profiles indicate that the Dobi Graben is among the youngest and most tectonically active structures in the linkage zone, characterised by its high throw rates of ca. 1 mm/yr. Building on this, we focus on two river catchments that cross the main Dobi Graben bounding fault to better resolve its temporal evolution history and fault kinematics. We combine new field measurements from these catchments, including geomorphic and hydraulic parameters, Schmidt hammer measurements of bedrock strength, and grain size estimates, with high-resolution topographic analyses to trace the growth and evolution of the main Dobi Graben through time, and to quantify transient river response to active faulting.

These data place refined, field-based constraints on bedrock strength and erodibility allowing lithological and surface process controls on landscape dynamics to be explicitly accounted for, in addition to the tectonic forcing. Relationships between knickpoint migration, channel steepness and catchment morphology are used to better constrain river incision rates and fault growth patterns, enabling a clear reconstruction of the Dobi Graben fault evolution history. In doing so, our study provides clear and detailed insights into the role of the Dobi Graben in accommodating extension within the Central Afar rift linkage zone in the last 1 My and advances our understanding of major fault kinematics and rift linkage dynamics in an active continental rift.

How to cite: Chandresh, R., Whittaker, A., Keir, D., Bell, R., Corti, G., Sani, F., and Gebru, H.: Reading landscapes from Afar: Field-based geomorphic constraints on fault evolution in the Dobi Graben, Ethiopia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11053, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11053, 2026.

EGU26-11899 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Fill terrace formation and preservation histories along the Middle Kali Gandaki from digital and field investigations 

Eliot Weir, Fiona Clubb, Alex Densmore, Ashok Sigdel, and Subash Acharya

Current debate exists on whether the depositional processes forming valley fill deposits in the Lesser Himalaya can be linked across multiple Himalayan river systems. Some studies have attributed the deposition of 100s of metres of sediment fill in the Lesser Himalaya to short-lived, catastrophic filling events. These events are thought to originate from large rock-slope failures and glacial lake outburst floods. Other studies have suggested that the deposition of fill on such large scales is a long-term process caused by fluctuations in the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM), resulting in the oversupply of alluvial sediment into a transport-limited system. Cross-catchment patterns of terrace formation that might help to distinguish between these end-member driving mechanisms are limited by an incomplete record of fill terraces in the Lesser Himalaya, with multiple reaches having not yet seen detailed sedimentological study. Here, we address this gap by investigating a flight of fill terraces along the Middle Kali Gandaki River upstream of the town of Kushma, central Nepal. Terraces along this reach are preserved up to 400 m above the modern river channel. We build on previous studies of these terraces by identifying the stratigraphy of the terrace fill deposits and by recording clast lithology and morphology of the sediment preserved beneath each terrace level. We find the terraces to be predominantly composed of a coarse debris fill, with little to no visible stratigraphy, apart from occasional inverse grading from gravel to coarse boulder conglomerate. We identify five terrace levels and find differences in clast morphologies between T1, T2, T3, and T5, and a difference in clast lithology between T2 and T3. We therefore suggest that there have been at least four major filling and re-incision events along this reach, with the possibility of a fifth undocumented filling event forming T4. We also recreate approximate palaeo-valley floors for each terrace level to measure palaeo-valley widths. We interpret that multiple periods of extensive sediment aggradation and incision which led to the formation of five major terrace levels along the Middle Kali Gandaki River were driven by intensified monsoons leading to significant periods of sediment oversupply, contrasting the interpretations of catastrophic debris fill made along other rivers in the catchment. We attribute a decrease in valley width over time to high denudation rates near the MCT. We investigate terrace preservation along the study reach by calculating the percentage of preserved terrace area compared to the approximate area of the abandoned valley floor for each terrace level. We find that terrace levels T3 and T4 are poorly preserved compared to T1 and T2. We suggest post-depositional cementation to be a primary control, with indurated older terrace deposits acting as bedrock, rapidly reducing valley width so that the river can erode the entire floodplain more easily and thus limiting terrace preservation.

How to cite: Weir, E., Clubb, F., Densmore, A., Sigdel, A., and Acharya, S.: Fill terrace formation and preservation histories along the Middle Kali Gandaki from digital and field investigations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11899, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11899, 2026.

EGU26-12643 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Transient Quaternary fault activity in Central Nepal 

Chloé Bouscary, Jean Braun, Djordje Grujic, Jérôme Lavé, György Hetényi, Frédéric Herman, Georgina E. King, Sumiko Tsukamoto, and Ananta P. Gajurel

Central Nepal is a key natural laboratory for investigating crustal kinematics, exhumation, and thermochronometric records within a critically tapered orogenic wedge. In the High Himalayas, thermochronologic data record remarkably young cooling ages and rapid late Cenozoic exhumation rates, yet the kinematics driving these patterns remain actively debated. Most models aiming to explain the physiographic transition across the Himalayan range propose either predominantly in-sequence deformation focussed on the Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT), with underplating and the growth of a Lesser Himalayan duplex, or significant out-of-sequence (OOS) faulting in the Main Central Thrust (MCT) zone. Existing thermochronometric datasets allow for both end-member interpretations, highlighting the non-uniqueness of steady-state kinematic models based on traditional thermochronometers alone.

We address this issue by adding trapped-charge thermochronometers (luminescence and ESR thermochronometry), which, owing to their extremely low effective closure temperatures, are uniquely sensitive to <1–2 Myr transients in near‑surface thermal histories. These data provide unprecedented sensitivity to short-lived Quaternary pulses of exhumation, potentially associated with OOS fault reactivation. We present new luminescence and ESR thermochronometry data from bedrock samples collected across the four major valleys of the Narayani basin in central Nepal (from west to east: Kali Gandaki, Marsyangdi, Buri Gandaki, and Trisuli), spanning the MCT zone and the High Himalayan range.

Using the thermo-kinematic code PECUBE, we invert this multi-system thermochronometer dataset (including both traditional and trapped-charge thermochronometers) through neighbourhood-algorithm exploration of fault slip rates and activity timing. We test three kinematic scenarios: (i) purely steady-state, ramp-focused uplift along the MHT; (ii) stepwise acceleration linked to mid-crustal duplex initiation at ~10 Ma; and (iii) short-lived Quaternary pulses of exhumation associated with transient MCT reactivation superimposed on long-term MHT-driven uplift.

Our inversion results show that trapped-charge thermochronometers require transient Quaternary uplift pulses in the High Himalayas to reproduce the observed cooling patterns. We quantify the timing, magnitude, and spatial distribution of OOS slip, revealing lateral variations in reactivation activity among the four valleys and testing their correlation with variations in MHT coupling and orographic precipitation patterns. Overall, our results provide quantitative bounds on the timing, magnitude, and spatial variability of Quaternary uplift transients in the High Himalayas, and demonstrate that transient MCT reactivation is required to reconcile thermochronologic data with topography and structural constraints, refining the late Cenozoic kinematic evolution of the MHT–MCT system.

How to cite: Bouscary, C., Braun, J., Grujic, D., Lavé, J., Hetényi, G., Herman, F., King, G. E., Tsukamoto, S., and Gajurel, A. P.: Transient Quaternary fault activity in Central Nepal, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12643, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12643, 2026.

EGU26-12771 | Posters on site | GM7.1

Combining landscape evolution and thermo-kinematic modeling to investigate the post-rifting evolution of the Great Escarpment, SE Australia 

Lingxiao Gong, Wenbo Zhan, Magdalena Ellis Curry, Marissa M. Tremblay, and Malcolm McMillan

The Great Escarpment of SE Australia is a major geomorphic feature that separates a low-relief, high-elevation plateau from a near-sea-level coastal plain. Understanding the long-term evolution of this transition has been a long-standing challenge in geoscience. In particular, it remains unclear whether the escarpment reached its current position far from the rifted margin through continuous retreat at a relatively constant rate, or whether rapid retreat occurred shortly after rifting followed by stagnation, potentially linked to pre-existing structures. 

Recent developments in low-temperature thermochronology and modeling techniques provide new opportunities to address this question. Here, we integrate landscape evolution with thermo-kinematic modeling to evaluate thermochronology data, including apatite fission track, apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He, and newly acquired 4He/3He data. The coupled modeling approach directly links surface processes and drainage evolution to subsurface thermal histories, allowing for a more robust and physically consistent interpretation of thermochronological constraints on escarpment dynamics. This enables us to place quantitative constraints on the spatial and temporal scales of escarpment retreat and associated exhumation. Ultimately, we aim to assess whether the topographic evolution of the Great Escarpment is better explained by (1) a plateau degradation scenario, in which a pre-existing drainage divide facilitates rapid degradation of the coastal plain to its current position, or (2) an escarpment retreat scenario characterized by continuous inland erosional migration.

How to cite: Gong, L., Zhan, W., Curry, M. E., Tremblay, M. M., and McMillan, M.: Combining landscape evolution and thermo-kinematic modeling to investigate the post-rifting evolution of the Great Escarpment, SE Australia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12771, 2026.

Quantitative analyses of tectonic processes and geomorphic development can provide insights into the formation and growth of boundary faults and associated geomorphic features. This study focuses on the Wulashan area, which is situated in the northern Ordos Block in North China. By integrating fluvial geomorphic indices with cumulative displacement along the Wulashan Piedmont Fault, we evaluate the fault’s influence on geomorphic development along the margin of the active block. The spatial patterns of geomorphic metrics suggest that the Wulashan area is currently in a mature landform evolution stage. Watershed morphometric analysis has revealed marked drainage asymmetry and an overall eastward tilt, accompanied by a nonequilibrium drainage divide, indicating that the region’s landscape continues to be modified by ongoing tectonic deformation. Using airborne LiDAR data, 240 displacements were obtained along the fault. The long-term cumulative offsets display a segmented, asymmetric, arcuate distribution pattern that closely mirrors the regional topography. In contrast, the ≤ 12 m cumulative offsets are higher and more consistent in the central fault segment, gradually decreasing toward both ends. The integration of fault displacement, topographic profiles, and geomorphic indices across watersheds, and consistent spatial relationships highlight the significant influence of the segmentation, kinematics, and displacement magnitude of a normal fault on the formation and evolution of the Wulashan Fault.

How to cite: Sun, X., Zheng, W., and Li, Y.: Geomorphic evolution in response to active normal faults along the front of Wulashan, North China: Evidence from fluvial geomorphology and fault displacements, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12936, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12936, 2026.

EGU26-14735 | Orals | GM7.1 | Highlight

Geological inheritance controls reef–mangrove responses to Holocene sea-level change 

Gino de Gelder, Tubagus Solihuddin, Dwi Amanda Utami, Frida Sidik, Rima Rachmayani, Marfasran Hendrizan, Sri Yudawati Cahyarini, Meggi Rhomadona Purnama, Dilruba Erkan, Yannick Boucharat, Millary Widiawaty, Mary Elliot, and Laurent Husson

Coral reef–mangrove systems record the coupled effects of relative sea-level change, sediment supply, and coastal surface processes, yet their long-term interactions remain poorly constrained. Here, we reconstruct the Holocene evolution of a reef–mangrove system on Belitung Island (Indonesia) by integrating sedimentary archives, geochronology, paleo–sea-level indicators, and numerical modeling. We document regressive coastal stratigraphy exposed in a drained tin mine and analyze a suite of ~3 m sediment cores collected along a nearshore-to-onshore transect. Radiocarbon dating of corals indicates nearshore reef initiation at ~2 m below present mean sea level between ~6.1 and 5.7 ka BP, followed by vertical reef accretion until ~4.3–3.8 ka BP. Fossil oysters provide independent paleo–sea-level constraints, recording a prolonged mid-Holocene relative sea-level highstand (~6.5–4 ka) at ~3 m elevation, followed by a relatively abrupt ~2 m fall and subsequent smaller-amplitude fluctuations. Optical stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating shows that mangrove colonization and terrestrial sedimentation initiated during Late Holocene shoreline progradation. We combine the coral radiocarbon and mangrove OSL ages within a Bayesian inversion framework coupled to a reef-growth model to reconstruct system evolution. We use model results to compare fluctuating mid-to-late Holocene relative sea-level scenarios with single-peaked highstand, and their respective effects on reef/mangrove architecture. These findings highlight how geological inheritance and non-monotonic boundary conditions govern sedimentary and ecological responses in tropical coastal systems, with implications for anticipating future landscape responses to sea-level change on the regional scale.

How to cite: de Gelder, G., Solihuddin, T., Utami, D. A., Sidik, F., Rachmayani, R., Hendrizan, M., Cahyarini, S. Y., Purnama, M. R., Erkan, D., Boucharat, Y., Widiawaty, M., Elliot, M., and Husson, L.: Geological inheritance controls reef–mangrove responses to Holocene sea-level change, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14735, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14735, 2026.

EGU26-15586 | ECS | Orals | GM7.1

Post-glacial and litho-structural controls on the fluvial erosion of Southern Canadian Rocky Mountains 

Himani Yadav, Lindsay Schoenbohm, Naki Akçar, Christof Vockenhuber, Mauricio Haag, Shivansh Verma, Joshua Wolpert, and Milagros Siea

The songs of the majestic landscapes are composed by the symphony of tectonic, climatic, and lithologic processes. For tectonically quiescent landscapes, landscape dynamics can be complicated by the tension between fluvial and glacial erosion and composite lithologic erodibility contrasts. We investigate these complications by focusing our study on the Southern Canadian Rocky Mountains, a late-stage tectonic fold and thrust belt with spatially uniform climate. These ranges comprise deformed carbonate and mixed carbonate-siliciclastic rock sequences. They have also experienced extensive glacial sculpting evidenced by steepened river valley walls and U-shaped channels. To address these complications, we produce the first basin average erosion rates, derived from 36Cl-cosmogenic isotopes, for 22 catchments across the Rockies. We then compare these erosion rates with climate, topographic, and litho-structural factors using bivariate and multivariate Bayesian regression modelling to infer the dominant controls of the landscape evolution of the Rockies. We begin our analysis with the common factors used in landscape evolution studies such as mean annual temperature (MAT), mean annual precipitation (MAP), normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI) for climate, relief, gradient, channel steepness index (ksn) for topography, extracting summary statistics (minimum, 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th, maximum, 90th –10th, 75th –25th, mean, and median) for each catchment. Because of the stepped nature of the topography in the Rockies resulting from lithologic strength contrasts and glacial modifications, we also compute standard deviation in ksn and terrain ruggedness index (TRI). Finally, constraining lithologic erodibility is especially challenged by the high variability in the depositional architecture of mixed carbonate-siliciclastic rocks and facies structure of carbonate rocks in passive margins. Therefore, we measure and employ direct intact rock strength measurements using a Schmidt hammer and fine-scale geologic mapping for all the geologic units in each catchment. We partially account for the impact of fault-related damage zones on lithologic erodibility by calculating fault density derived from mapped structures. Additionally, we develop a new method that accounts for landscape stability based on the TOBIA index that accounts for the relationship between the bedding orientation (primary plane of weakness) and hillslope angle. Our findings reveal that the standard deviation of ksn is a much more important regressor for topography of transitional landscapes than ksn. Interestingly, we find that climatic factors have significant influence despite their limited variability in the region. Although fully accounting for lithologic erodibility remains beyond the scope of our field, our TOBIA index-based method is a significant step in constraining litho-structural controls on landscape evolution. 

How to cite: Yadav, H., Schoenbohm, L., Akçar, N., Vockenhuber, C., Haag, M., Verma, S., Wolpert, J., and Siea, M.: Post-glacial and litho-structural controls on the fluvial erosion of Southern Canadian Rocky Mountains, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15586, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15586, 2026.

EGU26-16170 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Network-Scale Patterns of Valley Confinement and Widening in the Oregon Coast Range 

Arthur Koehl and Gregory Pasternack

Valley floor morphology in mountain landscapes reflects an integrated history of fluvial incision, lateral erosion, and aggradation in uplifting terrain. Valley floor width is often modeled as a power-law with catchment area. Yet these models often report high variance across the entire domain and low R-squared values. Valley floor width commonly varies even within individual mountain catchments, with multiple transitions between confined segments and wider alluvial reaches. Characterizing this spatial variability enables better understanding of valley widening processes and helps identify reaches with floodplain restoration potential. In this project we develop a network-scale method to quantify valley floor morphology and apply it to the river networks of the Oregon Coast Range. The approach automates mapping of valley floor extents and measures widths at increasing inundation levels scaled from bankfull depth. We examine how these widths vary along networks and test whether there are differences in patterns of confinement and widening based on lithology, geomorphic history, and network position. Our results represent a step forward in interpreting the types and sources of variability in valley floor geometry beyond drainage-area scaling.

How to cite: Koehl, A. and Pasternack, G.: Network-Scale Patterns of Valley Confinement and Widening in the Oregon Coast Range, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16170, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16170, 2026.

Glacier-induced damming of major Tibetan rivers has been hypothesized to reduce fluvial incision rates and modulate erosion processes, thereby influencing geomorphic stability along the margins of the Tibetan Plateau. The Yigong River, located in the Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis, serves as a critical test site for evaluating this hypothesis due to its documented history of episodic damming. We identify fve paleo-dam events from the last glacial period, focusing on one event at the confluence of the Xiaqu and Yigong Rivers through employing feld investigations, optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating, and geophysical surveys. Dam formation is dated to between 12.68 ± 1.17 ka and 10.48 ± 1.02 ka, linked to glacial moraine deposits from the Xiaqu River obstructing the Yigong River channel. Hydrodynamic modeling using HEC-RAS with a 30-m grid resolution and a Manning’s n of 0.045 indicates a maximum flow depth of approximately 60 m through the Tsangpo Gorge. Model results estimate a peak discharge of 4.36 × 104 m3/s following the dam breach, well below previously suggested high-magnitude flood thresholds (~106 m3/s). These fndings imply that the reconstructed paleoflood likely did not cause the extensive erosion noted in earlier geomorphic studies. However, similar paleoflood events likely played a signifcant role in downsteam transport of fne sediment through the Tsangpo Gorge.

How to cite: Liu, F.:  Hydrodynamics of late Quaternary outburst floods along the Yigong River,Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16362, 2026.

EGU26-16401 | Posters on site | GM7.1

Tectonic setting and mountains uplift corresponding to climate changes in China since 25 Myr 

Yu Wang, Junyi Sun, and Jiawei Cui

Concurrently, loess deposition, oceanic water systems, and the arid high-plateau environment have undergone significant transformations across different regions, particularly in western and eastern China, which are divided by two north-south-trending gravity gradient belts. What type of tectonic processes have primarily contributed to these fundamental environmental and climatic changes in the China continent over the past 25 million years, or even across the entire Asian continent? During this period, the subduction of the West Pacific Plate facilitated the development of the trough-arc island-basin system in eastern Asia, while the Indo-Asian collision led to the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau and the formation of various tectonic belts, mountain ranges, and rift basins between 25 and 20 Ma. The formation of east-west-, north-south-, and northeast-trending mountain belts and basins, whether in western or eastern China, corresponds to tectonic transformations and geodynamic events along the continental margin that were associated with the Indo-Asian collision and the westward subduction of the Pacific Plate. The emergence of the Asian monsoon during this time interval could be interpreted as a consequence of these tectonic transformations, rather than the direct cause of loess deposition or the complete uplift of the Tibetan Plateau. Furthermore, even in the past 10,000 years, seismic activity and volcanic eruptions have continued to correspond to tectonic processes along the continental margin. Regional and local environmental changes have been directly constrained by tectonic activity in these respective areas.

How to cite: Wang, Y., Sun, J., and Cui, J.: Tectonic setting and mountains uplift corresponding to climate changes in China since 25 Myr, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16401, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16401, 2026.

EGU26-16543 | Posters on site | GM7.1

Subaqueous delta Sequence Stratigraphy in the western Taiwan: Insights from High-Resolution Seismic Reflection Data 

Bo-Hao Shih, Sung-Ping Chang, Cheng-Hsun Huang, Ho-Han Hsu, Yi-Ping Chen, and Arif Mirza

The Zhuoshui River is one of Taiwan’s largest sediment suppliers, and thick subaqueous deposits archive past geological events. To understand variability in the paleoclimate and active fault-slip cycles in the drainage area, subtle stratigraphic signals within these deposits may reveal recent processes relevant to human society. Here we utilize high-resolution sparker seismic data to investigate the subaqueous delta accumulated off Changhua since the Holocene maximum flooding surface (MFS), to establish millennial- and centennial-scale sequence stratigraphy, and to decipher delta evolution and potential controlling factors.

We acquired single-channel sparker data with a dominant frequency of 500 Hz and an initial vertical resolution of ~50 cm, penetrating to a depth of ~100-150 meters below seafloor. After deconvolution, the vertical resolution is improved to ~30 cm, enabling identification of subtle stratigraphic signals. Based on terminations, including toplap and downlap, we integrate (1) subdividing underwater deltaic sediments into several depositional periods, (2) estimating progradation directions and Wheeler diagrams, and (3) demonstrating trajectories of clinoform rollover points to examine spatiotemporal changes in sediment distribution.

The delta deposits can be subdivided into five stratigraphic units bounded by toplap/downlap, and northwestward progradation directions are broadly subparallel to the modern Zhuoshui and Wu River trends, supporting a wave-reworked, river-fed subaqueous delta model. We interpret systematic alongshore shifts of the depocenter as reflecting avulsion-related course changes of the palaeo-Zhuoshui and palaeo-Wu rivers, which caused north–south migration of sediment delivery points. Wheeler-diagram patterns and rollover-point trajectories suggest sequence-scale changes approximately ~2 kyr and ~centennial timescales in average integrated onshore radiocarbon chronologies, potentially linked to climate variability and episodic onshore fault activity. These findings provide new evidence linking land–sea sediment-routing systems and offer a framework for disentangling the complex couplings between tectonics, climate, and surface processes in high-sediment-yield margins.

 

keywords

subaqueous delta; sequence stratigraphy; high-resolution seismic reflection; Taiwan Strait

How to cite: Shih, B.-H., Chang, S.-P., Huang, C.-H., Hsu, H.-H., Chen, Y.-P., and Mirza, A.: Subaqueous delta Sequence Stratigraphy in the western Taiwan: Insights from High-Resolution Seismic Reflection Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16543, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16543, 2026.

EGU26-16999 | Orals | GM7.1

Exhumation of the Cordillera Blanca Batholith (Perú). New insights from thermo-kinematic modeling. 

Victor Hugo Garcia, Marisol Medina Córdova, Isabel Wapenhans, and Peter van der Beek

The Cordillera Blanca Batholith (CBB) is a >160 km long, NW-oriented granodioritic body intruded along the western half of the Marañón fold-and-thrust belt (MFTB) in the Central Andes of northern Perú. This segment of the Andean orogen is characterized by a flat-slab, highly coupled, subduction zone controlled by the collision of the Nazca ridge since mid-Miocene times. The available U-Pb and Ar-Ar crystallization ages, in zircon and hornblende/biotite, respectively, indicate that the emplacement of the CBB took place between 4-8 Ma. Moreover, paleo-barometric studies in amphibole samples indicate emplacement depths ranging from 3.5 to 7 km, below the paleosurface of the MFTB. A major west-dipping, high-angle fault scarp that bounds the western side of the CBB has been used to support the interpretation of normal faulting (e.g., core-complex style) as the main tectonic driver for the 1.75-2.5 mm/a exhumation rates calculated from low-temperature (FT and U-Th/He in zircon and apatite) thermochronological modeling.

Recent field campaigns have demonstrated that normal faulting is confined to the boundary between the CBB and the Santa river valley, with no evidence of widespread associated extensional features throughout the region. Furthermore, the uppermost stratum of the CBB systematically corresponds to the regional décollement level of the MFTB (hornfelsed Jurassic mudstones), suggesting that the emplacement occurred at the interface between the MFTB and the regional basement. Furthermore, detailed kinematic analyses of the mylonitized contact of the granodioritic body reveal low-angle and normal sense of shearing towards SW and NE along the western and eastern margins of the CBB, respectively. New U-Th/He thermochronological dating in zircon (ZHe) of samples retrieved from complementary sectors of the CBB, but focusing on its less studied eastern sector, have been obtained showing cooling ages roughly ranging between 3-5 Ma. Remarkably, cooling of both sides of the CBB occurred almost synchronously, being just 1-1.5 Ma older on the eastern side.

Several thermo-kinematic scenarios for a segment in the central part of the CBB have been modeled with Pecube by combining the obtained ages with twelve available AFT ages from the literature. While the simplest, low-angle, normal faulting model fits better the obtained ages, it fails to explain the field observations and implies fault displacement of more than 12 km that would necessarily require development of widespread extensional features. A series of alternative models implying contractional tectonics (e.g., deep-seated, blind thrusting of the basement) aiming to explain both structural data and cooling ages are presented for discussion in this contribution.

How to cite: Garcia, V. H., Medina Córdova, M., Wapenhans, I., and van der Beek, P.: Exhumation of the Cordillera Blanca Batholith (Perú). New insights from thermo-kinematic modeling., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16999, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16999, 2026.

EGU26-18941 | Orals | GM7.1

Tracing the sedimentary provenance of the Congo River: A source-to-sink approach using double zircon dating ((U-Th)/He & U-Pb) 

Julien Charreau, Alexis Derycke, Raphaël Pik, Massimo Dall’Asta, and Eduardo Garzanti

The Congo River system, located in Central Africa, drains a basin exceeding 3.5 million km² and with a course up to 4,000 km, ranking it among the world’s largest rivers. It spans from the western edge of the East African Rift to its offshore deep-sea fan which associated with oil and gas resources. This vast system is characterized by a high sediment load, positioning the Congo as the second-largest contributor to modern continent-to-ocean sediment flux, after the Amazon River. These observations raise several interconnected questions: i) what are the origin of this sediment? ii) does this high sediment load reflect a high erosion rate? (iii) how has this flux evolved throughout the Congo River’s history?

Moreover, the Congo River sediments– have recorded the vertical dynamics of the corresponding area (i.e. Central African Plate) which remain poorly constrained, except along the rift margins. These sedimentary archives have also recorded how Central Africa’s erosional dynamics have evolved over the past, and whether it has been impacted by climatic or tectonic changes. 

Applying a source-to-sink approach to the Congo River sediments may therefore provide critical information and data to better understand the dynamics and history of one of the world largest sedimentary systems of the world and help to better understand the uplift and erosional evolution of this vast region.

Recent studies have employed conventional source-to-sink methods (e.g., heavy mineral analysis and U-Pb zircon dating) on modern Congo sediments (Garzanti et al., 2021, 2019). However, these approaches faced challenges due to the homogeneity of source signals, particularly in the Cuvette Centrale and surrounding basement outcrops, which exhibit similar geochronological signatures. To overcome this limitation, we apply a recent method: double dating of zircons ((U-Th)/He and U-Pb) combine with REE determination. Applied to both modern and ancient sediments (up to 50 Ma), this technique enables more precise source reconstruction. We will present the newly generated results and discuss their implications for the Congo River’s sedimentary history and the broader understanding of Central Africa’s geological evolution.

 

Garzanti, E., Bayon, G., Dennielou, B., Barbarano, M., Limonta, M., Vezzoli, G., 2021. The Congo deep-sea fan: Mineralogical, REE, and Nd-isotope variability in quartzose passive-margin sand. Journal of Sedimentary Research 91, 433–450. https://doi.org/10.2110/jsr.2020.100

Garzanti, E., Vermeesch, P., Vezzoli, G., Andò, S., Botti, E., Limonta, M., Dinis, P., Hahn, A., Baudet, D., De Grave, J., Yaya, N.K., 2019. Congo River sand and the equatorial quartz factory. Earth-Science Reviews 197, 102918. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2019.102918

How to cite: Charreau, J., Derycke, A., Pik, R., Dall’Asta, M., and Garzanti, E.: Tracing the sedimentary provenance of the Congo River: A source-to-sink approach using double zircon dating ((U-Th)/He & U-Pb), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18941, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18941, 2026.

EGU26-20582 | Posters on site | GM7.1

Geomorphologic evolution of the Danube at the Iron Gates (Carpathian Mts, Romania) 

Ioana Persoiu, Maria Radoane, Nicolae Cruceru, Alfred Vespremeani-Stroe, György Sipos, and Zsófia Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger

The Iron Gates gorge, where the Danube River cuts through the Carpathian Mountains, represents a key corridor for understanding fluvial dynamics in Central and Southeast Europe. This study presents new insights into the formation and Quaternary evolution of the Lower Danube Gorge through high-resolution morphometric analyses and relative and absolute dating of terrace sequences within the gorge and the downstream alluvial plain.

The earliest fluvial terraces, located at elevations between 270 and 320 m, mark the initial phase of river incision. Terraces T8 to T5 formed during this period and are correlated with mid–late Pliocene fine alluvial deposits and late Pliocene–early Quaternary coarser alluvial fan sediments downstream. The transition from upper (T8–T5) to lower terraces (T4–T1) in the gorge mirrors a comparable sequence in the Danube lowlands, where 7–8 alluvial terraces are identified, representing the shift from upper deltaic and alluvial fan deposits to the lower Danube plain.

This longitudinal correlation highlights a regional change from lateral fluvial erosion and downstream vertical aggradation to dominant fluvial incision and terrace formation during the Middle–Late Quaternary, influenced by ongoing tectonic uplift and glacial–interglacial climate cycles. Fossil assemblages support a Late Pliocene–Early Quaternary age for the upper terraces, while newly obtained OSL dates for the younger terraces at the gorge exit (T3–T1) correspond to Marine Isotope Stages 3–1.

The results reinforce the antecedent drainage model for the Danube at the Iron Gates, suggesting episodic incision superimposed on an actively uplifting landscape.

Acknowledgments: This research was funded by the ChronoCarp project (Contract no. 760055/23.05.2023, project code CF 253/29.11.2022, PNRR-III-C9 2022-I8).

How to cite: Persoiu, I., Radoane, M., Cruceru, N., Vespremeani-Stroe, A., Sipos, G., and Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Z.: Geomorphologic evolution of the Danube at the Iron Gates (Carpathian Mts, Romania), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20582, 2026.

EGU26-21497 | Orals | GM7.1

Impact of Climate and a large Landslide in the Tien Shan: Shaping the Naryn Alluvial Valley, Kyrgyzstan 

Andreas Ruby, Taylor Schildgen, Fergus McNab, Apolline Mariotti, Hella Wittmann, Bolot Moldobekov, Thomas Kolb, and Markus Fuchs

Fluvial terraces are key archives of alluvial rivers responding through aggradation and incision to environmental signals. As a result, terraces are commonly attributed to regional climate, tectonic activity, base-level fall, or site-specific geomorphic events. However, if the effects of the different environmental drivers overlap spatially and/or temporally in the catchment, disentangling their impacts on terrace formation remains a significant challenge. Applicable to a variety of catchments, the same challenge applies to the semi-arid Naryn catchment in the Tien Shan, Central Asia: based on moraine, loess and speleothem records the high-elevation landscape reacts sensitively to global climate impacting very probably sediment and water supply to the channel. Additionally, the probably largest known landslide in Central Asia, the Beshkiol landslide, occurred 25 ky ago in the central Naryn valley, damming a lake that persisted for ~17 ky. Rapid drainage of this lake likely triggered a fluvial aggradation and incision response. Numerous fluvial terraces occur along the main stem and several tributaries. These features provide an excellent location to assess the relative, spatial contributions of regional Pleistocene climate and the Beshkiol landslide to terrace formation and to the long‑profile evolution of the Naryn River and its tributaries.

We first ran numerical models of long-profile river evolution to understand better terrace formation patterns in endmember (climate-only, landslide-dam only) and combined scenarios. Secondly, we combineed a set of 38 cosmogenic nuclide exposure samples (10Be) with 10 optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) samples to constrain fluvial aggradation and incision phases. Finally, we map terrace profiles along ~250 km of the main stem and its tributaries.

Our geochronology identifies aggradation and terrace abandonment phases matching (1) late‑Pleistocene cold phases and (2) the inverval between 20 and 15 ka (post‑LGM), during which the Beshkiol landslide‑dammed lake formed.

 The numerical models generate two contrasting terrace patterns: (1) limited downstream terrace extent associated with lake‑drainage incision, and (2) a basin‑wide suite of terraces produced by climate‑driven changes in sediment‑to‑water ratio. Fluvial terrace mapping reveals widespread terraces even in the tributaries. Terrace slopes are generally sub-parallel; only in the vicinity of the landslide, the main trunk and the tributaries show concave-up profiles.

We conclude that both the landslide‑dammed lake and regional Pleistocene climate influenced terrace formation. Lake drainage primarily affected the lowermost main stem and adjacent tributaries, whereas regional climate was the dominant driver of alluvial terrace formation throughout the catchment. Our study demonstrates that a multi‑method approach—combining numerical modeling, cosmogenic‑nuclide dating, OSL, and detailed terrace mapping—greatly improves the interpretation of alluvial river archives in complex settings. It also provides a framework for quantifying the relative contributions of competing landscape‑evolution drivers.

How to cite: Ruby, A., Schildgen, T., McNab, F., Mariotti, A., Wittmann, H., Moldobekov, B., Kolb, T., and Fuchs, M.: Impact of Climate and a large Landslide in the Tien Shan: Shaping the Naryn Alluvial Valley, Kyrgyzstan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21497, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21497, 2026.

EGU26-21686 | Orals | GM7.1

Erosional history and topographic evolution of Madagascar rifted margins 

Romano Clementucci, Egor Uchusov, Sean Willett, Negar Haghipour, Louis Herve Randriamananjara, and Datian Wu

Topographies along passive continental margins are shaped by escarpment erosion and dissection of ancient plateau surfaces. Thermochronology and cosmogenic nuclide studies from these settings indicate a near steady process of denudation and inland escarpment propagation since break-up. Yet, a discrepancy exists between measured erosion rates and the scale of observed topographic features, often implying a more complex denudation history. The Madagascar landscape preserves the imprint of two major rifting events, expressed in a remnant escarpment in the west, a deeply dissected central plateau, and a coherent steep escarpment on the east. While steady inland retreat explains the kinematics and position of the great eastern escarpment, the western margin records a more complex morphology, inconsistent with the model of stable retreat of a coastal escarpment. Here, we reconstruct Madagascar’s Cenozoic denudation history and landscape dynamics by combining topographic analysis, 10Be cosmogenic nuclide concentrations in sediment and numerical modelling of landscape evolution. Catchments draining the plateau–escarpment reveal escarpment retreat rates of several hundred to over a thousand m/Myr on the wet eastern margin, and a few hundred m/Myr along the smaller, drier remnants on the western margin. Retreat rates scale with plateau extent and divide position, which control stream power at the escarpment, while low-erodibility lithologies (granites, basalts) locally inhibit retreat and preserve inland relicts. Numerical models constrained by erosion rates and bedrock erodibilities from Madagascar reproduce observed patterns and demonstrate that eastward migration of the main divide after ~90 Ma triggered large-scale drainage reorganization and pulses of rapid retreat, up to 4 km/Myr, across the western margin. Our findings highlight the inherently dynamic nature of passive margin landscapes, where divide migration and spatial variations in fluvial erosional efficiency govern the long-term evolution of passive margins, with fundamental implications for hydrology, landscape transience, and biodiversity.

How to cite: Clementucci, R., Uchusov, E., Willett, S., Haghipour, N., Randriamananjara, L. H., and Wu, D.: Erosional history and topographic evolution of Madagascar rifted margins, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21686, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21686, 2026.

EGU26-21726 | Orals | GM7.1

Quantifying Erosional vs. Tectonic Controls on Divide Asymmetry 

Dirk Scherler, Samantak Kundu, and Sanjay Kumar Mandal

Mountain ranges commonly exhibit asymmetric topography, with main drainage divides offset from the range center. These asymmetries are often attributed to differential rock uplift, but divide positions also respond to bedrock erodibility contrasts and base-level differences between opposing flanks. How these controls interact to determine divide position and whether base-level differences can rival tectonic forcing remain poorly constrained. Resolving these questions is fundamental to interpreting topographic asymmetry in active orogens and extracting reliable tectonic information from landscape morphology. Building on previous work, we present an analytical framework based on the stream power model that quantifies how uplift, erodibility, and base-level elevation jointly control divide positions. We derive dimensionless divide asymmetry numbers that quantify the tectonic-to-erosional forcing ratio controlling divide position, where values <1, ≈1, and >1 indicate tectonic dominance, comparable forcing, and erosional dominance, respectively.

Numerical landscape evolution experiments test our analytical predictions, demonstrating that base-level differences can influence divide position as strongly as differential uplift. The experiments test our analytical framework across a wide range of boundary conditions, confirming that the dimensionless parameters successfully capture divide behavior under diverse tectonic and erosional settings. Applying this framework to the Sub-Himalayan Mohand Range, we find that the observed divide position can be reproduced only when base-level differences between the Himalayan hinterland and Indo-Gangetic foreland are explicitly incorporated. Application to three additional Sub-Himalayan anticlines reveals dramatic variations in divide position across structurally similar fault-related folds, with divide asymmetry numbers ranging from 0.15 to 2.0. These variations correspond to base-level differences of 0-150 m between opposing flanks, demonstrating that base-level offsets of this magnitude control divide asymmetry more strongly than differential uplift in these actively deforming structures.

Our results demonstrate that base-level configuration can exert comparable or even stronger influence than differential uplift on divide position in certain settings. While the potential importance of base-level differences has been recognized, our dimensionless framework provides the first quantitative approach for systematically partitioning these competing controls. This advance enables more robust interpretation of divide asymmetry in active orogens, particularly in settings where topographic gradients naturally generate base-level contrasts between opposing drainage networks. The framework offers a valuable complement to existing approaches for extracting tectonic signals from mountain range morphology.

How to cite: Scherler, D., Kundu, S., and Mandal, S. K.: Quantifying Erosional vs. Tectonic Controls on Divide Asymmetry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21726, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21726, 2026.

EGU26-21738 | ECS | Posters on site | GM7.1

Creating a Reliability-Weighted Vertical Motion Dataset of the Sunda Shelf, Towards a Harmonized Workflow Using Local Datapoints. 

Nina de Munck, Kenneth Rijsdijk, Johannes De Groeve, and Max Webb

Sea level cycles influenced land bridge formation and island connectivity throughout the Pleistocene, including the Sunda Shelf in SE Asia. Shelf-wide paleogeographic models are often based on few local observations and assumptions of tectonic uniformity. This study, using the Sunda Shelf as innovative example, compiles all published local vertical motion (VM) rates, assigns a reproducible reliability index – that accounts for methodological rigor, temporal precision, spatial accuracy, and source credibility – to each individual datapoint, and produces a harmonized VM raster. Our database synthesizes 93 VM datapoints, from 13 published sources of petrochemical exploration wells, fossil coral reef analysis, and seismostratigraphic proxies of varying spatial and temporal scales. Major tectonic boundaries, sedimentary basins, and structural zones were incorporated as barriers, while support points were added to steer interpolation in data poor areas. The created VM raster is a ready-to-use input for paleogeographic relative sea-level models, such as tabs (De Groeve et al., 2025). This study highlights the possibility and importance of a harmonized VM workflow to allow for intercomparison of paleogeographic studies and unlock the continental coastlines of Earth’s past.

How to cite: de Munck, N., Rijsdijk, K., De Groeve, J., and Webb, M.: Creating a Reliability-Weighted Vertical Motion Dataset of the Sunda Shelf, Towards a Harmonized Workflow Using Local Datapoints., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21738, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21738, 2026.

TS6 – Intraplate Tectonics and Deformation

EGU26-487 | ECS | Posters on site | TS6.1

Characterisation of the active tectonics in the outer Arunachal Himalaya, India: Insights from tectono-geomorphic analysis  

Girindra Bora, Bashab Nandan Mahanta, and Tapos Kumar Goswami

The Himalayan fold-thrust belt, formed due to the collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates, during ~50 Ma, shows the long-term convergence with crustal shortening, duplex development, out-of-sequence thrusting and deformations of the foreland basins. The outer Arunachal Himalaya, in the southern part of the Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis, is one of the most tectonically active areas in the Himalayan arc. Frequent earthquakes of several magnitudes, accompanied by associated ground failures, liquefactions, and subsidence in the foreland basins, as well as significant changes in river courses, indicate prominent surface manifestations that reveal ongoing deformations. Documentation of uplifted and truncated terraces, unpaired terraces, soft-sediment deformation structures, warped and tilted Quaternary layers, strath terraces and fault scarps collectively suggest active deformation along the frontal fold-thrust belt. This study integrates morphometric analysis, river terrace mapping and characterisation of paleoseismic evidences to assess active tectonics in the area. Key morphometric indices derived from remotely sensed datasets, including mountain-front sinuosity (Smf), drainage basin asymmetry (Af), transverse topographic symmetry factor (T), valley floor width-to-height ratio (Vf), stream length-gradient (SL), hypsometric integral (HI), and elongation ratio (El), consistently shows strong tectonic influence in the area. The narrow, V-shaped valleys and steep channel gradients further support ongoing upliftment in the region. Lineament mapping reveals structural trends parallel to the Himalayan Frontal Thrust (HFT) that align with the regional stress field. It is worth mentioning that the upliftment along the HFT is not uniform, leading to the development of unpaired terraces. Additionally, NW-SE and NE-SW transverse faults have segmented the mountain front, that triggered channel offsets and changes in the river widths, and also contributed to the formation of minor pull-apart basins. These transverse structures, along with the south-verging thrust system, are crucial for distribution of strain across the frontal Arunachal Himalayas. Documentation of active scarps, deformed terraces, and related landscape features are crucial for understanding the relation between surface deformation, fault activity, and seismic risk in this highly active part of the orogenic belt.

Keywords: Active tectonics, HFT, Geomorphic evidences, Frontal Arunachal Himalaya.

How to cite: Bora, G., Mahanta, B. N., and Goswami, T. K.: Characterisation of the active tectonics in the outer Arunachal Himalaya, India: Insights from tectono-geomorphic analysis , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-487, 2026.

EGU26-913 | ECS | Orals | TS6.1

Assessing Quaternary shortening through trishear kinematic models at the Andean Orogenic Front, Southern Precordillera, Argentina 

Victoria Alvarellos, Carlos Costa, Lucia Sagripanti, Lucia Jagoe, Andres Richard, and Andres Folguera

The active orogenic front of Southern Central Andes, at the latitude of ~32°-33°S, is located in the foothills of the Southern Precordillera. This region lies within a flat-slab subduction setting, which defines an area of very high seismic hazard characterized by Quaternary deformation and intense shallow-crustal seismicity. The active deformation in this area is focused on the easternmost thrusts of the Southern Precordillera, particularly along the Las Peñas-Las Higueras range (32°10’-32°45’S). The Las Peñas Thrust System (LPTS) bounds the range to the east and propagates towards the piedmont through both surface-reaching and blind thrusts. Numerous fault and fold scarps, characterized by a N-S strike and eastward vergence, have been active since Pliocene-Pleistocene times, with the most recent expressions located at the easternmost piedmont.

Toward the southern end of the Las Higueras-Las Peñas range, the thrust front corresponds to a transposed east-verging anticline, which becomes blind in the study area of Baños Colorados Creek. Before its geomorphic signature is fully lost towards the south, the morphotectonic expression of the LPTS in this creek shows discontinuous remnants of deformed quaternary alluvial deposits lying unconformably over neogene units. These deposits define fold-limb scarps ~300 m long and with scarp heights ranging from 20 to 45 m. Such exposures provide a unique opportunity to estimate shortening in neotectonic blind thrusts that exhume the bedrock. They also allow quantification of deformation in the hanging wall, where geological markers are commonly removed by erosion. This setting provides an exceptional opportunity to estimate deformation by considering the contribution of adjacent blocks (off-fault analysis), offering key insights into how quaternary deformation is distributed along the SCLP. Moreover, until now, the activity of this thrust system had been evaluated exclusively through indicators obtained directly at the fault zone and its immediate surroundings (on-fault), so this analysis represents a complementary and significant contribution.

We calculated quaternary shortening applying fault-propagation fold models based on the trishear concept using both the reconstructed topography of alluvial surfaces and stratigraphic layers as deformation markers, surveyed with high-resolution techniques (UAV and DGNSS). Shortening rates of 0.17-0.50 mm/yr were obtained for 13-16 ka surfaces, while minimum shortening of 15.6-36.76 m was estimated for an older surface (>13-16 ka and likely <200 ka).

Although estimating shortening rates on blind thrusts involves significant uncertainties, our results refine the characterization of the seismogenic sources affecting the surroundings of Mendoza city, one of the most populated in Argentina, where hazard assessments remain outdated and do not adequately incorporate blind-fault activity.

How to cite: Alvarellos, V., Costa, C., Sagripanti, L., Jagoe, L., Richard, A., and Folguera, A.: Assessing Quaternary shortening through trishear kinematic models at the Andean Orogenic Front, Southern Precordillera, Argentina, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-913, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-913, 2026.

EGU26-1639 | ECS | Orals | TS6.1

First Paleoseismological Trench in Northwestern France: A Multidisciplinary Study along the South Armorican Shear Zone. 

Mina Vazifehdar, Clément Perrin, Jean-François Ritz, Mickaël Bonnin, Romain Le Roux-Mallouf, Éric Beucler, Stéphane Mazzotti, Guillaume Guérin, Hugues Malservet, Laurent Lenta, Stéphane Pochat, Damien Fligiel, and Susan Conway

The South Armorican Southern Shear Zone (SASSZ), located in the northwestern France within the Armorican Massif, represents a major structural feature inherited from the Variscan orogeny. Although this region is now far from active plate boundaries and characterized by very low strain rates (i.e. 10-9 yr-1), it’s characterized by a moderate and diffuse seismicity associated with a few large events (up to M~5), suggesting possible fault reactivations.

This study integrates high-resolution mapping, geophysical investigations, and paleoseismic trenching to decipher the SASSZ structure and its possible quaternary activity. Based on high-resolution DEMs (LiDAR, RGEALTI from IGN), the analysis of morphological scarps along the SASSZ shows a wide range of surface trace complexities (bends, secondary splays, step-overs, gaps) associated with initial ductile and more recent brittle deformation. The width of the deformation zone around the SASSZ can reach up to 4 km, alternating between a localized and a distributed shear zone from the Pointe du Raz to Nantes. These measurements are in agreement with slope measurements performed along the SASSZ: the wider the deformation zone (> 0.3 km), the lower the maximum and mean slopes associated with the scarps.

Three geophysical surveys were conducted at sites of interest, along the SASSZ, in order to connect observed scarps at the surface with variations in crustal physical properties. They reveal distinct resistivity contrasts consistent with surface scarp locations. At the Moulin Quilly site, two paleoseismic trenches were excavated across two sub-parallel scarps. Trench 1 across the main surface scarp is not associated with a clear lithological contrast. However, the foliated granitoids are affected by several families of fractures oriented from N50°E to N120°E. The main structure is located at the base of the scarp and is made of sub-horizontal goethite deposits filling a N120°E trending open fracture of 10 cm wide, in the same direction as the SASSZ. Trench 2 crosses a secondary scarp and is divided in to three main structural units: (1) a slightly weathered granite unit preserving subvertical foliation and affected by cryogenic processes dated between 20 and 30 ka (from Optically Stimulated Luminescence dates on sand deposits); (2) a narrow transition unit, associated with a high-strain zone showing sub-vertical fabrics filled by sands; and (3) a fine-grained, strongly altered ultramylonite unit dipping 15°–25° northeast. All units are covered by an undeformed modern soil. From the subvertical fabrics in the transition unit, oriented samples were collected for microstructural analysis. Thin sections in the altered fabric show well-oriented minerals, alteration veins, and kinematic indicators that document higher deformation and alteration processes than in the granite. Further analyses will be conducted to quantify the strain distribution, in close comparison with the dating results.

Our study highlights a brittle deformation phase of the SASSZ, either linked to a recent tectonic activity, or associated with the Mesozoic regional extension, but the latter raises questions about the preservation of surface morphology through geological times. Future dating results of goethite deposits will help clarify whether the brittle fractures and their subsequent infilling reflect quaternary activity or an older phase of deformation.

How to cite: Vazifehdar, M., Perrin, C., Ritz, J.-F., Bonnin, M., Le Roux-Mallouf, R., Beucler, É., Mazzotti, S., Guérin, G., Malservet, H., Lenta, L., Pochat, S., Fligiel, D., and Conway, S.: First Paleoseismological Trench in Northwestern France: A Multidisciplinary Study along the South Armorican Shear Zone., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1639, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1639, 2026.

EGU26-2839 | Posters on site | TS6.1

The geomorphic erosive record of past earthquakes: Examples from the Palomares Fault (Almería-Murcia, SE Spain). 

Pablo G. Silva Barroso, Javier Elez, Teresa Bardaí, Raúl Pérez-López, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez-Pascua, Jorge L. Giner, and Elvira Roquero

The Palomares fault (PLF) in SE Spain is the first tectonic structure with recognized quaternary activity within the Iberian Peninsula in the early 1970 decade. Together with the well-known Lorca-Alhama de Murcia fault (LAF) delineates the so-called Eastern Betic Shear Zone, a large (>180 km length) crustal scale left-lateral strike-slip fault zone crossing-cut across the Betic Cordillera in a SSW-NNE orientation and subject to present low strain and convergence rates (< 4 mm/yr). Whilst the LAF displays clear evidence of Holocene tectonics and historical to recent seismic activity (i.e., 5.1 Mw 2011 Lorca Earthquake), the PLF present scarce to null instrumental seismic records. However, the PLF shows relevant geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence of past Middle to Late Pleistocene seismic activity and scarce historical seismic records. Only the strong EMS X 1518 AD Vera Earthquake in Almería (6.7 Mw) can be theoretically related to this fault, but present seismic records are nearly null.

The present contribution provides support for the recurrent paleoseismic activity of the PLF during the Middle-late Pleistocene with clear morpho-stratigraphic records between the vicinity of the village of Palomares to the south (Almería) to northern localities, such Purias (Murcia). This means about 60 km of Quaternary tectonics nicely preserved in a fault segment, which has been recently considered no-faulted by theoretical approaches based on geophysical-gravity data. Whatever the case, the present contribution indicates that quaternary faulting occurs along the entire fault length, but the degree of fault activity (in timing and slip) largely decreases from south to north.  Fault kinematics also varies from nearly pure left-lateral strike-slip to a dominant reverse component south to north according to the progressive westerly bending of the PLF trace. Is in the northern segment where older deformations are present and erosional processes (i.e. gullying) nicely interplayed with fault activity generating deep furrows along the fault zone later refilled by renewed alluvial sediments and subsequently deformed by repeated paleoseismic activity. In other words, the PLF shows unique examples of the erosive record of past earthquakes, illustrating the potentially rich variety of geomorphic evidence for past seismic activity in low strain regions, even in absence of the typical tecto-sedimentary fault records, common in southern locations of this fault.

Acknowledgements: This contribution is supported by the Spanish Research Project I+D+i PID2021-123510OB-I00 (QTECIBERIA-USAL) funded by the MICIN AEI/10.13039/501100011033/.

How to cite: Silva Barroso, P. G., Elez, J., Bardaí, T., Pérez-López, R., Rodríguez-Pascua, M. Á., Giner, J. L., and Roquero, E.: The geomorphic erosive record of past earthquakes: Examples from the Palomares Fault (Almería-Murcia, SE Spain)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2839, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2839, 2026.

Modern global warming causes enhanced melting of ice bodies and desiccation of lakes worldwide. The surface mass changes that occurred over the past decades were sufficiently large to cause discernible crustal deformation and alterations of seismicity patterns in the respective regions. As these climatically induced mass changes will continue to affect continental interiors in the future, assessing their impact on crustal deformation is crucial for future seismic hazard estimates. Here, we use numerical modelling to explore how such climate-induced unloading of Earth's crust may affect the earthquake cycle of thrust faults in continental interiors. In different 2D experiments, we vary the magnitude and width of the load, the duration of unloading, the length of the interseismic phase, the viscosity of the lower crust and the shortening rate to capture low-strain and tectonically active settings. All experiments show that the fault responds to unloading with increased coseismic slip. When unloading phases are equal to or shorter than the interseismic phase, the largest amount of slip occurs toward the end of the unloading period. Even if the load is removed during a single interseismic phase, enhanced coseismic slip may also occur up to thousands of years after unloading. Generally, the increase in coseismic slip is most pronounced for large and narrow loads, long recurrence intervals, low shortening rates and low viscosities of the lower crust. Our findings imply that climate-induced unloading has the potential to increase earthquake magnitudes, to shorten earthquake recurrence intervals, and to increase the earthquake hazard especially in low-strain regions.
Compared to earlier studies, our results provide first insights into the impact that is to be expected from the ongoing deglaciation of glaciers and ice sheets worldwide on the coseismic slip of faults and hence, on approximate earthquake magnitudes. With respect to modern climate change, our results indicate that climate-induced mass changes on Earth's surface have the potential to increase the seismic hazard in various geological settings.

How to cite: Brauns, A.-C. and Hampel, A.:  Impact of climatically induced surface mass changes on the earthquake cycle of intra-plate thrust faults: Insights from numerical modelling , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3061, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3061, 2026.

The Tarim Basin is a multi-stage and multi-cycle superimposed basin developed on a stable craton basement. The Lunnan area is located in the central and eastern part of the Tabei uplift in the northern Tarim Basin. It has developed some fault systems with different strikes, properties, evolution stages. Based on the tectonic interpretation of 3D seismic data, we investigated the geometry ang kinematics of faults in Lunnan area.The formation and evolution of faults in Lunnan area occurred with the help of the pre-existing faults and were influenced by the regional compression/extensional direction transformation.

In the Neoproterozoic, the Tarim Basin was in an extensional tectonic background as a whole. The Lunnan area developed two rifts in the EW and NE directions, and the boundary normal faults were used as pre-existing structures. In the early Caledonian, the near NS direction Cambrian platform margin belt in the eastern part of Lunnan area is developed as the pre-existing weak belt.In the middle of the Caledonian, with a nearly NS-trending extrusion, the near EW-trending Lunnan fault grew and developed upward on the basis of the upper high-angle pre-existing fault surface of the early rift boundary normal fault, and the high-angle thrust fault was developed. Under the pure shear deformation mechanism, an X-type conjugate strike-slip fault system composed of two groups of NNE-and NNW-trending faults was developed.In the late Caledonian-early Hercynian, with a nearly NS-trending extrusion, the rapid uplift in the central and western parts of Lunnan area leads to a large amount of erosion of Ordovician strata to form a NEE-trending lithologic weak zone. Under the action of oblique compression, the pre-existing weak zone was activated by strike-slip and formed a series of NEE-trending strike-slip faults. At the boundary of the nearly NS-trending Cambrian platform margin zone in the eastern part of the Lunnan area, a nearly NS-trending fault was formed by the activation of the pre-existing weak zone under oblique compression.In the late Hercynian, under the NWW-trending extrusion, the near EW-trending Lunnan fault, NEE-trending and near NS-trending strike-slip faults continued to active.The NE-trending Lungu 7 fault inherits the high-angle fracture surface in the upper part of the NE-trending pre-existing rift normal fault, and develops a high-angle thrust fault. The pre-existing structure is not developed in the deep layer of the near EW-trending Sangtamu fault, and a thrust fault with a gentle dip angle conforming to the Anderson model is formed under the forward extrusion.With the change of regional compressive stress direction and the transformation from carbonate strata to clastic strata, the conjugate X-type strike-slip fault gradually disappeared.In the early Indosinian period, the Tarim Basin still showed a near NS-trending compressive stress background. In the middle and late stages, it was transformed into a NW-trending extensional background. The early stage of the fault still inherited the compressional nature, and the late stage superimposed extension-strike slip activity.In the Yanshanian-Early Himalayan period, the NW-trending extensional tectonic background induces the formation of tenso-shear echelon faults in the shallow layer.

How to cite: Cao, M., Li, W., and Zhuo, W.: The development regularity and genetic mechanism of intracratonic faults under the control of regional tectonic background and pre-existing structures--A case study of Lunnan area in northern Tarim Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4159, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4159, 2026.

The Issyk-Ata fault is a key active structure in northern Kyrgyzstan and represents the principal seismogenic source affecting the densely populated Chui basin, including Bishkek, the capital city of the Kyrgyz Republic. In 2025, a sequence of moderate earthquakes with magnitudes exceeding Mw 4 occurred along the fault, providing clear evidence of ongoing deformation and renewed seismic activity. Owing to its proximity to major population centers, the Issyk-Ata fault has been consistently identified as the dominant contributor to regional seismic hazard. The northern Tien Shan is an actively deforming intracontinental region characterized by distributed crustal shortening associated with far-field convergence. Long-term geodetic measurements indicate north–south shortening rates of up to ~20 mm/yr, resulting in recurrent strong earthquakes along the northern Tien Shan margin. The Issyk-Ata fault extends approximately 120 km in an east–west direction and forms the northern boundary of a young and actively growing anticline separating the Kyrgyz Range foothills from the Chui basin. As the youngest major fault system in the region, it transects the southern part of Bishkek, where extensive urban development has largely obscured its surface geomorphic expression. To better constrain the seismic behavior of the Issyk-Ata fault, we integrate high-resolution remote sensing, detailed geomorphological and structural field investigations, and paleoseismological trenching, with a particular focus on the Dzhal area of the Kyrgyz Range. These combined datasets allow systematic mapping of surface ruptures, measurement of cumulative vertical displacements, and identification of fault segmentation. Chronological constraints derived from optically stimulated luminescence and radiocarbon dating reveal at least two surface-rupturing earthquakes during the Holocene. Empirical scaling relationships suggest that these paleoearthquakes reached moment magnitudes of approximately Mw 6.6–7.1. Geological and geomorphological analyses in the Dzhal area indicate a long-term fault slip rate of ~1.15 mm/yr, reflecting sustained Quaternary deformation. The fault exhibits pronounced along-strike variability in rupture style and displacement, with individual segments recording distinct seismic histories and patterns of activity.

These results demonstrate that the Issyk-Ata fault accommodates deformation through segmented rupture behavior typical of low-strain intraplate settings. The occurrence of large Holocene earthquakes, together with recent moderate seismicity in 2025 and the fault’s direct interaction with the urban area of Bishkek, underscores the need for refined, segment-based seismic hazard models. Improved understanding of seismogenic sources and Quaternary deformation along the Issyk-Ata fault is essential for advancing seismic hazard assessment and risk mitigation strategies in the northern Tien Shan.

How to cite: Ha, S. and Cholponbek, O.: Holocene Paleoearthquake Records of the Issyk-Ata Fault near the Densely Populated Chui Basin: Evidence from the Dzhal Area, Kyrgyz Range, Tien Shan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4708, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4708, 2026.

EGU26-4863 | ECS | Orals | TS6.1

Unraveling the Mechanisms of Giant Intraplate Strike-Slip Earthquakes in Mongolia: The Roles of Slow Plate Rates 

Eyüp Sopacı, Yann Klinger, and Luca Dal Zilio

The largest strike-slip earthquakes ever recorded (M > 8) occurred in Mongolia in the 20th century, far from any plate boundaries. Rupture length-magnitude data indicate that the magnitude of these intraplate Mongolian events is, on average, ~0.5 magnitude larger than that of typical interplate earthquakes. The physical mechanisms that allow for such extra-large events remain mostly unresolved, largely due to the long return time of such events, hence the limited observational data. To address this, we employed a dual approach—numerical simulations with the PyQuake3D boundary element code (Tang et al., 2025) and theoretical analyses using the Rate and State Friction (Aging) Law on the spring slider—focusing on the role of slow plate rates. Our findings show that lower plate rates result in higher slip and greater stress drop, driven by enhanced fault restrengthening (healing). This healing, quantified by the state parameter, increases linearly with the inverse plate rate, in agreement with both analytical spring-slider models and 3D simulations. Critically, however, the observed GNSS plate rates of 1–3 mm/yr are insufficient to account for the ~0.5-unit magnitude excess relative to typical interplate earthquakes. We rigorously examine two scientific hypotheses: First, plate rates may be at residual levels (<1 mm/yr), perhaps reflecting far-field tectonic stresses or gravitational potential energy contrasts in Central/East Asia. Such extremely low driving rates could enable extended interseismic healing and thus unusually large stress drops and magnitudes. Second, the rupture width and depth of these intraplate earthquakes exceed those of typical interplate events. Our argument for this second scenario is strengthened by simulations of thermal pressurization: at high slip rates, rapid heating of pore fluids increases pore pressure and reduces the effective normal stress, thereby facilitating enhanced fault weakening and deeper rupture penetration. Our integrated numerical and theoretical approaches provide a robust basis for these hypotheses, advancing our understanding of the generation of remarkably large intraplate earthquakes and highlighting the importance of tectonic plate rate controlling earthquake magnitude.

Tang, R., Gan, L., Li, F., & Dal Zilio, L. (2025). PyQuake3D: A Python tool for 3-D earthquake sequence simulations of seismic and aseismic slip. Journal of Geophysical Research: Machine Learning and Computation, 2(4), e2025JH000871.

How to cite: Sopacı, E., Klinger, Y., and Dal Zilio, L.: Unraveling the Mechanisms of Giant Intraplate Strike-Slip Earthquakes in Mongolia: The Roles of Slow Plate Rates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4863, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4863, 2026.

EGU26-5409 | ECS | Posters on site | TS6.1

The influence of fluvial incision on the lithospheric stress field: a numerical approach 

Felipe Baiadori da Silva and Victor Sacek

Fluvial denudation along large valleys moves important sedimentary volumes across continents over time, inducing isostasy-related stresses due to unloading of the crust. This work reports numerical experiments with a visco-plastic lithosphere aimed at understanding the patterns and evolution of stresses and uplift associated with differential erosion in wide, tectonically quiescent valleys over 30 million years (Myr). We simulate valleys 30 to 150 km wide and a few hundred meters deep, and observe horizontal deviatoric stresses with maximum magnitudes larger than 10 MPa, the distribution of which is largely controlled by the degree of mechanical coupling between upper crust and lithospheric mantle, associated with the viscosity of the lower crust. The upper crust in simulations with a weakly-coupled lithosphere is strongly compression-dominated beneath the valley. In contrast, scenarios with higher lithospheric coupling are characterized by similar amounts of compression and extension over crustal depths. Moreover, our simulations suggest that a significant part of these stresses persists for tens of Myr after erosion rates have diminished, gradually focusing around the central valley due to progressive viscous relaxation in the lower crust and lithospheric mantle. The adequacy of an elastic plate model in reproducing modeled surface uplift and subsurface stresses in response to fluvial incision is discussed in terms of lithospheric rigidity for each scenario, revealing important departures between stresses predicted from flexural theory and those resulting from our simulations. We conclude that large rivers are an important factor to consider when studying stress fields in stable continental regions, especially if the valley is being actively excavated, and that these might contribute to moderate seismic activity in intraplate settings.

How to cite: Baiadori da Silva, F. and Sacek, V.: The influence of fluvial incision on the lithospheric stress field: a numerical approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5409, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5409, 2026.

EGU26-5677 | Posters on site | TS6.1

New insights on large past earthquakes on the Raša Fault in NW Dinarides (Slovenia) revealed from multi-trench paleoseismic study 

Petra Jamšek Rupnik, Eva Mencin Gale, Lovro Rupar, Jernej Jež, Frank Preusser, Ana Novak, Aleša Uršič Arko, Andrej Anžel, Josipa Maslač Soldo, and Jure Atanackov

The Raša Fault is a major right-lateral strike-slip structure in the northwestern Dinarides, representing a key active fault in a low- to moderate-strain region. Despite its prominent geomorphic expression and recognized hazard, its seismic history remains poorly constrained. To address this gap, we conducted a multi-trench paleoseismological investigation, including radiocarbon and luminescence dating, to characterize past surface-rupturing earthquakes and assess recurrence intervals of large-magnitude events previously unknown in the region. Our results reveal repeated strong earthquakes during the Late Pleistocene and Holocene, which based on worldwide empirical data likely exceeded magnitudes 6 or even 6.5. Although some age determinations are still in progress, preliminary results from four trenches indicate that at least five surface-rupturing events occurred in the last ~20,000 years, with several clustered in the past 6,000 years. Recurrence intervals vary widely, from a few hundred years to several millennia, reflecting both temporal clustering as well as locally incomplete stratigraphic records due to dynamic environment. These findings highlight the importance of multiple trench sites and extensive dating to resolve complex paleoseismic histories on faults in low- to moderate-strain regions. Our results also underscore the seismogenic potential of the Raša Fault and emphasize its relevance for regional seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Jamšek Rupnik, P., Mencin Gale, E., Rupar, L., Jež, J., Preusser, F., Novak, A., Uršič Arko, A., Anžel, A., Maslač Soldo, J., and Atanackov, J.: New insights on large past earthquakes on the Raša Fault in NW Dinarides (Slovenia) revealed from multi-trench paleoseismic study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5677, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5677, 2026.

EGU26-5810 | Posters on site | TS6.1

Archeoseismological study of the AD 1621 “Panamá La Vieja” Earthquake: insight on the seismic source (Panamá, Central America)  

Pablo G. Silva Barroso, Javier Elez, Elvira Roquero, Juan Gómez Barreiro, and Puy Ayarza

As part of the revision of the seismic hazard investigations for the Panamá Canal Expansion Project in the Pacific new set of locks, we completed a detailed archeoseismological investigation on the existing ruins of the ancient Panamá La Vieja, which was affected by an earthquake of intensity ≥VIII in AD 1621 (6.9 Mw). Additionally, geomorphic, paleoseismic research together with the analysis of the historical and instrumental seismicity in central Panama allowed to develop different macroseismic scenarios (ShakeMaps) to check the suitability of the different proposed seismic sources in this zone of the isthmus where convergence rates are low (c. 0.7 – 0.8 mm/yr).

The archaeological site of Panamá La Vieja is the only place in which that event is truly documented by the historical report of the vicar Requejo Salcedo (earthquake witness), but also for the different earthquake archaeological effects (EAEs) preserved in the buildings of the present ruins. There were only eight stone buildings and about seventeen masonry buildings (convents, city jail, hospital, etc.) in the year 1621. The old cathedral was under construction then and the rest of the houses were wooden structures. At present, the convents of San Francisco, Sto. Domingo, La Compañia de Jesús, La Concepción and the old Hospital, display severe earthquake damage, the last three buildings practically collapsed. The measured EAEs are (a) penetrative and conjugate fractures in masonry walls; (b) tilted walls; (c) rotated and displaced masonry blocks; and (d) a large amount of dipping broken corners in stone blocks. The structural measures of the EAEs indicate a N10-20E regular orientation for ground movement, consistent with the offshore current seismic activity in the Pacific south of the city. There the NNW-SSE left-lateral Las Perlas Fault (LPF), responsible for two c. 5.0 Mw instrumental events (years 1971 and 2017), that struck the Panama City (c. 15 -20 km far away) with intensity VI MM. This scenario it is not consistent with other proposed seismic sources, such as the right-lateral Pedro Miguel Fault (PMF), cutting across the new set of locks of the Panamá Canal onshore. ShakeMaps (USGS methodology) elaborated to check the PMF and LPF seismic sources strongly suggests that the PMF 6.9 Mw earthquake solution do not explain the oriented damage recorded in the archaeological site. On the contrary, the offshore LPF solution only will need of a lower 6.0 – 6.5 Mw event to explain the destruction at the archaeological site with PGA values c. 0.4g (VIII MM). In addition, the LPF solution can account for the small tsunami flooding the littoral sector of the old city soon after the event described in the historical chronicle of Requejo Salcedo during the evening of 2 May1621. Recent research denies the Holocene and historical and activity of the PMF and our analyses strongly suggest that offshore faults (i.e. PLF) in the Gulf of Panama can be more suitable and realistic candidates than the PMF as the source of the 1621 earthquake.

Contribution supported by the Spanish Research Project I+D+i PID2021-123510OB-I00 (QTECIBERIA-USAL) funded by the MICINAEI/10.13039/501100011033/

 

 

How to cite: Silva Barroso, P. G., Elez, J., Roquero, E., Gómez Barreiro, J., and Ayarza, P.: Archeoseismological study of the AD 1621 “Panamá La Vieja” Earthquake: insight on the seismic source (Panamá, Central America) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5810, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5810, 2026.

EGU26-6382 | ECS | Orals | TS6.1

Simulating seismic liquefaction: A laboratory approach to identifying new paleoseismic markers 

Szymon Świątek, Karolina Lewińska, Małgorzata Pisarska-Jamroży, and Christina Günter

Identifying reliable indicators of past seismic activity in sedimentary archives is crucial for advancing paleoseismology and understanding earthquake-driven sediment deformation. However, micro-scale mineralogical features have remained underexplored. In this study, we present the results of a 12-month-long experimental program simulating earthquake-induced liquefaction using fine-grained siliciclastic sediments and varying chemical conditions.

A total of 108 samples were incubated under reducing conditions in plexiglass cylinders with either Fe(II) sulfate or FeO(OH) additions. Seismic shaking simulations were conducted at intervals using a controlled vibration table calibrated to reproduce magnitude 3.5 equivalents. Micromorphological and mineralogical analyses (SEM, EDS, and Raman spectroscopy) revealed the consistent formation of core–rim structures (CRS) across all experimental variants, regardless of water chemistry or iron source. These features were absent in control samples not subjected to shaking, as well as in naturally deformed sediments of non-seismic origin (e.g., storm-induced structures).

These results suggest that seismic energy may facilitate fluid redistribution, mineral precipitation, and the formation of distinctive microscale deformation features. To ground experimental findings, we compared them to field samples where CRS and sideritic textures were also documented within known SSDS. In contrast, similar structures were absent in sediment samples with storm events and rapid loading genesis.

This integrated field–experimental approach offers a novel framework for identifying microseismic indicators in the sedimentary record. While more research across diverse environments is needed, CRS may represent a promising addition to the paleoseismological toolbox, particularly for low-magnitude or poorly preserved events.

How to cite: Świątek, S., Lewińska, K., Pisarska-Jamroży, M., and Günter, C.: Simulating seismic liquefaction: A laboratory approach to identifying new paleoseismic markers, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6382, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6382, 2026.

EGU26-7175 | Posters on site | TS6.1

Subtle structural testimony of Active faults: examples from Peninsular India 

Biju John and Yogendra Singh

Studies of damaging earthquakes that occurred in Peninsular India over 50 years suggest that they occur along favourably oriented pre-existing weaker planes/faults in the ongoing compressional tectonic regime. Many of these pre-existing structural weaknesses developed until the collision between India and Eurasia reversed the style of movement post-Miocene, from a general normal sense of movement to either reverse or strike-slip. However, identifying neotectonic signatures from the plate interior, especially in tropical climatic regions, is very challenging since erosional agents can nullify the signature of tectonic movement. The present article focused on identifying active faults from the zones of two major NW-SE trending structures, separated by about 1600 km, that are being widely deliberated for the reconstruction of the Gondwana assembly, viz., the Mahanadi Shear Zone and the Achankovil Shear Zone.

The NW-SE trending Neoproterozoic Mahanadi Shear Zone opened up as rift basins around 300 to 100 million years ago for the deposition of Gondwana sediments. Our studies at two locations, ~140 km apart along the strike direction, indicate that the litho-contact between crystalline and sedimentary can be easily made out through geomorphic expressions, drainage patterns, and nature of vegetation. The study identified badland topography and structurally controlled meandering of drainages in the area, which are associated with neotectonic adjustments. The brittle faulting, with a reverse sense of movement, identified in crystalline rocks shows wide damage zones with gouge injecting into fractures and also onto the surface, where the soil cover is negligible. The extrusion of gouge is preserved as a conical heap above the surface level. The study also identified the gouge injection into Quaternary sediments at several locations. The reverse faulting is also reflected in the laterite cap that developed over younger sediments deposited over the Gondwana formation.

The NW-SE trending Achankovil shear zone is a major Pan-African structure located close to the southern end of peninsular India, cutting through the Western Ghats. Earlier studies identified two major faults at the southern end of this shear system, viz., the Thenmala and Thenmala South faults, for which there exists a sharp geomorphic expression in the Western Ghats. However, its expression in the plain area east of the mountain terrain is very weak. The present study identified badland topography, abandoned river paths, and anomalous natural depressions associated with these faults as results of neotectonic adjustments in this area. Perturbation of land into the sea along the strike continuity of both faults in the southern side and the drainage divide between them are the other significant effects of neotectonism associated with these faults. Field investigations identified surface ruptures along the faults, preserved in hard laterite that was observed above crystalline rocks. Studies based on the trapped aeolian deposits within hard laterite suggest at least two faulting events within the last 4400 years.   

The present series of studies identified a host of geomorphic and structural evidences that can be used to identify active faults. These clues can be touchstones for future studies in the field of active fault evaluation in such terrains.

How to cite: John, B. and Singh, Y.: Subtle structural testimony of Active faults: examples from Peninsular India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7175, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7175, 2026.

EGU26-7627 | Orals | TS6.1

Seasonal modulation of seismicity in an intraplate setting, the case of southeastern Australia 

Farzaneh Mohammadi, Romain Jolivet, and Eric Beaucé

While most earthquakes occur at plate boundaries, significant seismic events also occur within stable continental regions (SCRs), despite their low strain rates. These intraplate earthquakes, including rare but damaging events, raise fundamental questions about how elastic strain cumulates, is stored, and released in slowly deforming crust.

We develop a high-resolution seismicity catalog for southeastern Australia, a tectonically stable intraplate region, spanning 2005-2025. The catalog was constructed using the BPMF workflow which integrates backprojection-based detection, deep learning phase picking, nonlinear probabilistic relocation, and matched filtering. Relative to the Geoscience Australia catalog, our approach increases the number of detected events by approximately a factor of six and achieves a magnitude of completeness of Mc = 2.1, enabling robust statistical analyses over two decades. This enhanced resolution enables the exploration of seismicity statistics, clustering behavior, and temporal variability in a low-seismicity environment. 

Using this catalog, we identify a statistically significant seasonal modulation of seismicity, with earthquake rates peaking during winter–spring and reaching a minimum during summer–autumn. The seasonal signal persists after declustering and is observed across a range of magnitude thresholds above completeness, indicating modulation of background seismicity rather than dominance by individual earthquake sequences. 


Further analysis of GNSS displacement, GRACE-derived hydrological loading, and seismicity using multichannel singular spectrum decomposition identifies coherent temporal modes shared across all datasets. This correspondence suggests that hydrological loading drives elastic stress perturbations that are temporally linked to variations in earthquake occurrence. Together, these results imply that even modest seasonal and environmental stresses can modulate seismicity in stable continental regions, providing new insights into fault stability in intraplate settings.

How to cite: Mohammadi, F., Jolivet, R., and Beaucé, E.: Seasonal modulation of seismicity in an intraplate setting, the case of southeastern Australia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7627, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7627, 2026.

EGU26-10000 * | Orals | TS6.1 | Highlight

Earthquake cycle far from plate boundaries: Learning from Mongolia earthquakes  

Yann Klinger, Nicolas Pinzon Matapi, Laure Manceau, Yacine Benjelloun, Laurent Bollinger, and Jin-Hyuck Choi

Earthquake cycle is a well-accepted concept when dealing with active faults bounding tectonic plates or large lithospheric blocks. Usually, along those faults the slip-rate is large enough, in the range of few cm/yr to few mm/yr, to produce earthquakes often enough at the geological timescale, thus allowing to discuss earthquake cycle.

Away from active plate boundaries, fault systems are less structured, slip-rate can be only few tenths of mm/yr, and earthquake return-time gets longer. Thus, discussing earthquake cycle becomes more difficult. In fact, even the possibility that successive earthquakes occur along the same fault becomes arguable.

Mongolia, at the northern limit of the India-Eurasia collision zone, far from plate boundaries, presents a unique opportunity to examine the relevance of the concept of earthquake cycle in intra-plate context.

The 1967 M7.1 Mogod earthquake occurred in central Mongolia. No unambiguous evidence of past earthquakes could be identified for certain in the morphology, suggesting that this event occurred as an isolated event on some remanent older geological structure. However, paleoseismological investigation shows that at least a previous event occurred along the same fault about 25 kyr BP.

In the NorthWest of Mongolia, in 1905, two M8 earthquakes occurred 14 days apart along respectively the Tsetserleg and the Bulnai faults. The rupture traces associated with each of those two events are only few kilometers apart. Slip-rate along the Bulnai fault was estimated to be about 3 mm/yr. Here we have determined that the slip-rate along the Tsetserleg fault is one order of magnitude lower, about 0.3 mm/yr. Accordingly, paleoseismological trenches along the Tsetserleg fault have revealed that the average earthquake return-time along that fault is about 6 ky, two to three times longer than along Bulnai. Our recent investigation along the Bulnai fault, using lacustrine paleoseismology, shows that such doublet as in 1905 is not unique in the history of this fault system and that, in fact, the fault system shows a pattern resembling a super cycle, similar to what has been document along more active fault systems. When integrating the Bulnai-Tsetserleg fault system together with other documented faults in western Mongolia, it appears that such earthquake super cycle might in fact affect the entire regional fault system, and not only Bulnai-Tsetserleg. The reason why those two faults, which are almost touching each others, did not rupture during the same earthquake remains unclear to date. Our recent monitoring of the microseismicity in the area where those two large faults intersect shows that the current regime of microseismicity is very different between Bulnai and Tsetserleg. Using this microseismicity, we might be able to better constrain the geometry of the Tsetserleg fault at depth, as well as the general fault structure in the intersection area. It might be the key to understand the 2 weeks time-delay between those two events and, overall, how stress build-up in this complex fault system to produce earthquake super cycles.

How to cite: Klinger, Y., Pinzon Matapi, N., Manceau, L., Benjelloun, Y., Bollinger, L., and Choi, J.-H.: Earthquake cycle far from plate boundaries: Learning from Mongolia earthquakes , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10000, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10000, 2026.

EGU26-10012 | ECS | Posters on site | TS6.1

The Past, Present and Future of Multi-Trace Reverse Faults in New Zealand 

Alexandra Travers, Mark Stirling, Tim Stahl, Jonathan Griffin, Dan Clark, Giles Ostermeijer, Lucy O'Neill, and Andrew Gorman

Intracontinental reverse faults in Otago and South Canterbury, Aotearoa-New Zealand, have complex surface morphologies. The Dunstan Fault and Fox Peak Fault are expressed at the surface by multiple parallel to sub-parallel fault traces. These traces can be hundreds of meters apart from each other and span a deformation zone up to 2-3km in width. We ask the following questions: Do all traces rupture together in each ground rupturing earthquake, or do they rupture independently? If traces rupture independently, is it random which trace ruptures in a given event, or is there a spatio-temporal pattern? What is the likelihood of a new trace rupturing in the next large earthquake? We use paleoseismic techniques to constrain the timings of past earthquakes on each trace. The results are compared to see if the same earthquake ruptured multiple traces. If we can tease out any spatio-temporal patterns, we may be able to answer the question: In a future ground rupturing earthquake, which trace/traces will rupture? The results have implications for fault zonation and fault displacement hazard analysis of intracontinental reverse faults in Aotearoa-New Zealand and beyond.

How to cite: Travers, A., Stirling, M., Stahl, T., Griffin, J., Clark, D., Ostermeijer, G., O'Neill, L., and Gorman, A.: The Past, Present and Future of Multi-Trace Reverse Faults in New Zealand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10012, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10012, 2026.

EGU26-10571 | ECS | Posters on site | TS6.1

Quaternary neotectonic activity of the Sudetic Marginal Fault in Pieszyce area, Góry Sowie Massif (NE Bohemian Massif, SW Poland)  

Bartłomiej Grochmal, Artur Sobczyk, Piotr Słomski, Szymon Belzyt, Aleksander Kowalski, Janusz Badura, Mariusz Fiałkiewicz, and Marcin Dąbrowski

The Sudetic Marginal Fault (SMF) is a prominent tectonic structure, clearly expressed in the morphology of the NE part of the Bohemian Massif in SW Poland. The outcrop of the SMF core zone was recently exposed within the Góry Sowie Massif in the Pieszyce area (Poland) during earthworks carried out in 2022 and 2024. In this unique exposure, a distinct displacement of the contact between the underlying Sowie Góry gneisses and the overlying Quaternary sediments was recognized. The main fault zone steeply dips at 70°to the ENE. In the southern fault block, no sedimentary cover was observed, whereas Quaternary sediments attain a thickness of up to 4.5 m close to the main fault on the northern side.

Tectonically altered gneisses occur within the main fault zone, while the highly weathered crystalline basement beneath the sedimentary cover in the northern block is cut by numerous secondary tectonic zones filled with grayish fault gouge. Within these zones, we documented vertical veins of (up to 15 cm) filled with overlying deposits, including isolated gravel-sized clasts. Some of the observed veins penetrated bedrock to the depth of at least 1 m. Bedrock and fault-zone materials were systematically analyzed using XRF and XRD methods. Elevated concentrations of mercury and arsenic were observed in the fault zones. Micromorphological analysis of two oriented thin sections collected directly from the fault gouge, together with mineral phase identification based on XRD analyses of fault-gouge samples, reveals pervasive grain-size mixing and syn-deformational clay mineral realignment, indicating repeated brittle deformation under near-surface conditions.

Sedimentological studies, including facies and granulometric analyses, allowed to classify the sediments overlying the northern block as preglacial(?), fluvioglacial, and glacial origin. Petrographic analysis of clasts >10 mm revealed a dominance of locally derived material, with a minor contribution of Scandinavian clasts in the upper part of the profile. Clast imbrication measurements in preglacial sediments indicate transport in the WNW-ESE and NE-SW directions, interpreted as progradation of a locally sourced alluvial fan from the Sowie Góry Block. Measurements of cross-bedding and erosional channel axes within the fluvioglacial sediments indicate transport mainly towards the SSE, consistent with meltwater flow from the Scandinavian Ice Sheet margin and mixing with locally supplied Sudetic material derived from the crystalline basement. OSL dating of selected samples confirmed the Middle Quaternary deposition age of the fluvioglacial sediments in the Pieszyce area and provides direct evidence for Quaternary activity of the Sudetic Marginal Fault.

Keywords: Sudetic Marginal Fault, Sudetes, neotectonics, Quaternary sediments, OSL dating

How to cite: Grochmal, B., Sobczyk, A., Słomski, P., Belzyt, S., Kowalski, A., Badura, J., Fiałkiewicz, M., and Dąbrowski, M.: Quaternary neotectonic activity of the Sudetic Marginal Fault in Pieszyce area, Góry Sowie Massif (NE Bohemian Massif, SW Poland) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10571, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10571, 2026.

EGU26-12300 | ECS | Orals | TS6.1

 Active Faults and Surface Ruptures in the Low-Strain Ubaye–Mercantour Region (Western Alps)  

Camille Thomasset, Riccardo Vassallo, Hervé Jomard, Christophe Larroque, Christian Sue, Joseph Martinod, Laurent Metral, and Anne-Clotilde Legal

The Western Alps have been the focus of detailed seismological investigations based on instrumental records, revealing diffuse seismicity predominantly expressed as earthquake swarms (M < 3.5), mainly concentrated along major inherited shear zones. Geological evidence indicates that these structures are compatible with a main cumulated strike-slip motion, whereas GPS data and instrumental seismicity suggest predominantly vertical deformation. Historical archives further document several moderate earthquakes (M > 5), particularly in the Ubaye–Mercantour region. The Durance–Sérenne–Bersezio fault system is identified as the main active structure in this area and is therefore the focus of a multidisciplinary study aimed at detecting and characterizing co-seismic surface ruptures.

At the Lombarde Pass (Mercantour), a 2 km-long fault scarp displays geomorphological markers indicative of right-lateral strike-slip motion along the Bersezio fault. Several ERT profiles across the fault highlight a very localized low-resistivity zone in the bedrock beneath the morphological scarp. Paleoseismological trenches excavated across the fault scarp reveal a clear, single co-seismic rupture, with a maximum vertical apparent offset of ~1 m at the bedrock–Quaternary deposits interface. Radiocarbon dating (¹⁴C) of bulk sediment samples from three trenches constrains this event to 7–6 ka cal BP, consistent with post–Younger Dryas deglaciation.

These results suggest the occurrence of large-magnitude earthquakes (M > 6) in a region currently dominated by swarm seismicity and provide new constraints on fault kinematics and deformation localization at the boundary between the internal and external Alpine domains.

This study sheds new light on discussions held during the PATA Days 2022 field trip, where this unusual tectonic structure in the Western Alps raised passionate questions about its Holocene activity and seismic potential.

How to cite: Thomasset, C., Vassallo, R., Jomard, H., Larroque, C., Sue, C., Martinod, J., Metral, L., and Legal, A.-C.:  Active Faults and Surface Ruptures in the Low-Strain Ubaye–Mercantour Region (Western Alps) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12300, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12300, 2026.

EGU26-13834 | Posters on site | TS6.1

Modeling Present-Day Strain Accumulation and Fault Activity in The Northeastern Arabian Plate, Oman: A GPS Geodetic Analysis 

Zaid AL-Habsi, Anke M. Friedrich, and Amir Abolghasem

ABSTRACT

Oman occupies a uniquely complex tectonic setting at the northeastern edge of the Arabian Plate, where all major plate boundary types converge. However, present-day intraplate deformation in the region remains poorly quantified. To address this, we processed GPS data from 57 continuous stations, mostly spanning from 2014 to 2023, to construct a high-resolution crustal strain map. We derived interseismic velocities within a stable Oman reference frame and used an elastic dislocation model to estimate fault coupling and slip rates on major structures. Velocity gradients were then interpolated to calculate continuous 2D strain rates. Our results reveal the highest tectonic activity along the northern Hawasina Thrust and the Masirah ophiolite front (Batain complex), where the crust undergoes WNW–ESE to NW–SE directed extension at rates up to 50 nanostrain/yr. In contrast, the central and southwestern parts of Oman experience crustal shortening (~20 nanostrain/yr) in NNW–SSE and NE–SW orientations. Significant shear strain (up to 20 nanostrain/yr) localizes along the northern segment of the Hawasina thrust sheet, which our modeling indicates is a normal fault with a ~11 km locking depth and a slip rate of ~4.5 mm/yr. This geodetically derived strain pattern correlates spatially with major structural traces, confirming that these faults currently accommodate regional tectonic loading. This study provides the first geodetic evidence for present-day strain localization on major faults within the northeastern Arabian Plate. The results establish a measurable basis for reassessing seismic hazard in a region often considered tectonically quiescent and demonstrate the value of dense GPS networks for modeling strain in slowly deforming continental interiors.

How to cite: AL-Habsi, Z., Friedrich, A. M., and Abolghasem, A.: Modeling Present-Day Strain Accumulation and Fault Activity in The Northeastern Arabian Plate, Oman: A GPS Geodetic Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13834, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13834, 2026.

EGU26-14836 | Posters on site | TS6.1

Subtle evidence of Quaternary fault reactivation in Southwest Iberia, Portugal  

Paula Marques Figueiredo, Ricardo Ressurreição, Susana Custódio, Marta Neres, and Sumiko Tsukamoto

Southwest Portugal is the most seismically active region in Portugal mainland. Historical and instrumental seismicity, transpressive deformation accommodated by brittle structures (from which NNE-trending reverse left-lateral faults are the prominent ones), and uplifted marine landforms attest for the ongoing Quaternary crustal deformation. Geophysics highlights a positive gravimetric anomaly, consistent with the uplifted area. Simultaneously, geodesy suggests this region to be limited northward by a likely continuous right-lateral NW-trending structure, inferred to be 90 km long. However, this inferred structure is poorly understood, and southward partially overlaps a known active fault (São Marcos Quarteira) for ~50 km. The northward remaining length of 40 km lacks recognition of Quaternary deformation, despite a noticeable 50-100 m height scarp in the landscape along a ~10 km segment. This geomorphic feature has not been interpreted as an active fault, but as an inherent Variscan structure, possibly reactivated during the Miocene and since, evolved as a scarp retreated due to differential erosion promoted by the presence of Paleozoic quartzites, which are more resistant to erosion.

We present a preliminary analysis based on recently available 50 cm high-resolution lidar and revisited Plio-Quaternary data, together indicating evidence of likely subtle geomorphic deformation, which is expressed by small linear features NW-trending, some associated with changes of topography across a ~2km wide area. We propose these features to possibly correspond to subtle evidence of a cryptic fault system, likely to correspond to an inherited fabric, that has been reactivated. The newly discovered features will be investigated through combining geology, geophysics, and geochronology methods. Fault reactivation will be investigated through a detailed analysis of the damage zone and fault gouge, applying trapped-charges dating methods, namely OSL (Optically Stimulated Luminescence) and ESR (Electron Spin Resonance).

This work is supported by FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020-https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020, UID/50019/2025, https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025 ,UID/PRR2/50019/2025 and by Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions, European Union (project SEISMO-REACT, GA101211167).

Keywords: Quaternary activity, seismogenic sources, low strain deformation, cryptic structures, SW Iberia

How to cite: Marques Figueiredo, P., Ressurreição, R., Custódio, S., Neres, M., and Tsukamoto, S.: Subtle evidence of Quaternary fault reactivation in Southwest Iberia, Portugal , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14836, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14836, 2026.

EGU26-16483 | Orals | TS6.1

Does Singapore have active faults? Geomorphic and sedimentological investigations in an urbanized tropical city–state   

Aron J. Meltzner, Liam L. Newman, Wanxin Huang, Matthew Xiang Hua Foo, and Mason K. Perry

Singapore, a highly urbanized city–state of 6 million on a ~730 km2 island, is commonly believed to be “safe” from local earthquakes, with only distant Sumatran earthquakes thought to affect it. This view likely arises from the scarcity of recorded local events since Singapore’s founding in 1824, yet it overlooks two M ≥ 5 earthquakes within ~120 km to the north and northwest in 1922, and a 1948 event — reported only from the island’s southern–central area — that produced EMS intensity IV–V at multiple closely spaced sites, suggesting M ≈ 4 with a local source. Recent mapping has revealed numerous bedrock faults in Singapore, but their capability remains unstudied.

The Downtown Core of Singapore, in the southern–central part of the island, is built atop the low-lying Kallang Basin and adjacent reclaimed land. Sediments, likely MIS 5e (120 ka) and younger, fill the basin to 40 m depth in the west but thin eastward; immediately to the west, Cretaceous to Pliocene bedrock rises up to 50 m above sea level. The steep, unconformable contact between bedrock and overlying layers has been interpreted as either a sea cliff or an inactive fault. We hypothesize instead that it may be an active fault — part of a transtensional stepover in a longer dextral fault system.

Using five decades of legacy borehole data, we are mapping the subsurface architecture of Kallang Basin and drainages to the west. The thalwegs of at least two east-flowing buried paleochannels abruptly drop more than 10 m eastward near the topographic step, and they both appear to shift several hundred meters southward, though resolution is limited by available borehole data. Could this be explained by channel meanders and knickpoint migration, or does it implicate right-lateral transtensional displacement after the two paleochannels were incised? We are extending the investigation to nearby paleochannels to address this question.

How to cite: Meltzner, A. J., Newman, L. L., Huang, W., Foo, M. X. H., and Perry, M. K.: Does Singapore have active faults? Geomorphic and sedimentological investigations in an urbanized tropical city–state  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16483, 2026.

EGU26-17331 | ECS | Posters on site | TS6.1

The puzzling Hälsingland intraplate earthquake cluster in central Sweden 

Gunnar Eggertsson, Björn Lund, Ólafur Guðmundsson, and Michael Roth

The Hälsingland earthquake cluster, on the east coast of central Sweden, represents a puzzling case of intraplate seismicity in a tectonically stable continental region. The cluster measures approximately 100 km in length and extends in a near-linear trend from inland in the southwest into the Baltic Sea in the northeast, oriented approximately 35 degrees to the coastline. Unlike many of the earthquake clusters that occur in Sweden, the cause of the Hälsingland seismicity is not well understood, as it has not been possible to associate the cluster with any distinct geological feature, such as old deformation zones or a younger glacially triggered fault. Between September 2021 and September 2025, a temporary network consisting of thirteen broadband seismic stations was deployed in the Hälsingland region in an effort to establish better understanding of the drivers behind the Hälsingland seismicity. During this period, 873 earthquakes were detected and manually analyzed in the region, with local magnitudes ranging from -1.0 to 2.3. Using travel-time data from local quarry blasting, we derived a new, regional seismic velocity model and relocated all the earthquakes in the new model. The earthquake depths range from near-surface down to 39 km, with approximately 80% occurring at depths between 5 and 20 km. As part of this project, a previously unknown glacially triggered fault (GTF) system, the Mörtsjö fault system, was identified in the Hälsingland region, approximately 25 km north of the Bollnäs fault, the southernmost confirmed GTF in Sweden. Both the Mörtsjö and Bollnäs GTFs are small and located outside the most seismically active part of the Hälsingland region. However, relative earthquake relocations reveal multiple events which may be generated by movement on the faults. Waveform cross-correlation analysis shows moderate correlation between most earthquake pairs in the Hälsingland cluster but also identifies multiple families of closely spaced, highly correlating earthquakes, including a single family consisting of more than 30 events. The spread of the earthquake focal mechanisms does not clearly indicate a dominant fault orientation. While strike-slip motion dominates, multiple examples of both reverse and normal motion also occur, often in close proximity to each other. Inverting the focal mechanisms for the earthquake-generating stress field indicates a strike-slip stress state with a NW-SE direction of maximum horizontal stress. The inversion also suggests mostly E-W striking fault planes, suggesting that the faults rupturing in the Hälsingland earthquakes are not oriented in agreement with the general lineament of the cluster. We find that most of the Hälsingland seismicity does not occur on a well defined fault but rather in an active zone which extends to large depth but is only vaguely associated with changes in large scale geological features such as magnetic properties and Moho thickness.

How to cite: Eggertsson, G., Lund, B., Guðmundsson, Ó., and Roth, M.: The puzzling Hälsingland intraplate earthquake cluster in central Sweden, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17331, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17331, 2026.

EGU26-20166 | ECS | Posters on site | TS6.1

Exploring patterns and mechanisms of seismicity in the absence of tectonic loading 

Gaspard Farge, Farzaneh Mohammadi, Éric Beaucé, and Romain Jolivet

Within stable continental interiors such as the Australian, South African or North American cratons, seismicity occurs in the absence of measurable tectonic loading. This seismic activity has surprising characteristics. Relative to plate-boundary seismicity, it is more sensitive to seasonal load variations and it seems to develop aftershock sequences sustained for a much longer duration. Both observations are unexpected evidence that the crust in regions with no active tectonics has still found a way to reach a critical stress state, allowing it to be modulated by small variations of stress and to sustain long, efficient cascades of seismicity. Different mechanisms may be considered to explain how the crust reaches failure in the (supposed) absence of loading, that is either by reducing strength or by increasing stress by other means than tectonics. Among others, we propose (i) a progressive weakening of the crust through a brittle-creep-like mechanism, slowly driving cracks to near-critical conditions, (ii) the slow development of a deviatoric load due to erosive exhumation. Understanding which mechanism may dominate the activity, the activity timescales associated and which observables can be used to constrain them is key to make an assessment of the seismic risk in stable continental interiors.


In this work, we explore patterns of activity in high-resolution catalogs of seismicity in Eastern Australia,  the Northeastern USA and Northwestern France, as well as in acoustic emissions catalogs from brittle-creep of natural rocks in laboratory experiments. Using aftershock and triggering patterns in time and space, we attempt to constrain elements of the stress-to-failure distribution in the crust and how it evolves in time. These observations are then compared to the order-of-magnitude predictions from both (i) brittle-creep and (ii) erosive theories on how the crust fails in the absence of tectonic loading.

How to cite: Farge, G., Mohammadi, F., Beaucé, É., and Jolivet, R.: Exploring patterns and mechanisms of seismicity in the absence of tectonic loading, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20166, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20166, 2026.

TS7 – Global and Planetary Tectonics and the Evolution of the Earth

EGU26-715 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

The Nature of Precambrian Basement of South Gobi Microcontinent in Central Asian Orogenic Belt 

Zhenyi Wang, Jin Zhang, Junfeng Qu, Beihang Zhang, Heng Zhao, Jianfeng Liu, Chunjiao Wu, Yingfu Chen, Yiping Zhang, Mudong Qiao, Yaqi Yang, and Yukun Tian

Precambrian rocks preserved within the orogenic belt are interpreted as the Precambrian basement of their respective tectonic units. Their rock assemblages, formation ages, detrital zircon age spectra, and zircon Lu-Hf isotopic composition are commonly used to explore tectonic affinities with potential provenances. This issue is critically important, as it is integral to understanding the architecture and evolution of orogenic belt, as well as the amalgamation and fragmentation of supercontinents.

The tectonic affinities of ancient blocks and microcontinents within the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB) have aroused many controversies in recent years, hindering a comprehensive understanding of the tectonics of the CAOB. The South Gobi microcontinent (SGM), a significant component of the middle segment of the southern CAOB, has long been controversial because many questions remain regarding its existence and nature. This study focuses on the Chinese part of the SGM—the Zhusileng-Hangwula tectonic zone (ZHTZ) in northwestern China—to investigate the nature of its Precambrian basement. Systematic field-based zircon U-Pb-Hf isotopic and whole-rock elemental analyses were conducted on  plutonic and metasedimentary rocks.

The intrusions previously thought to be from Paleozoic time are now known to contain crystallization ages of 1462 Ma, 1365 Ma, and 884 Ma; a large number of ca. 1.4 Ga xenocrystal zircons; and numerous metamorphic zircons with ages of 939 Ma. Additionally, a two-mica quartz schist from the Beishan Group constrains the maximum depositional age to 1130 Ma. When integrated with previous studies, these data indicate that the Precambrian basement of the SGM, represented by the basement of the ZHTZ, underwent tectonothermal events at ca. 1.4 Ga and ca. 0.9 Ga, and deposited extensive late Mesoproterozoic–early Neoproterozoic siliciclastic-rich successions.

Based on these features, the SGM basement likely originated from northeastern Laurentia, possibly as a part of the Valhalla orogen. Furthermore, the weak tectonic affinity between the southern CAOB and adjacent ancient blocks or cratons suggests that some parts of the southern CAOB might not have been derived from the accretionary evolution of the flanking cratons, but rather from the accretion of microcontinents that originated from Laurentia.

How to cite: Wang, Z., Zhang, J., Qu, J., Zhang, B., Zhao, H., Liu, J., Wu, C., Chen, Y., Zhang, Y., Qiao, M., Yang, Y., and Tian, Y.: The Nature of Precambrian Basement of South Gobi Microcontinent in Central Asian Orogenic Belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-715, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-715, 2026.

EGU26-803 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

The South Tibetan Detachment System: A Cambro–Ordovician terrane boundary reactivated during Cenozoic Himalayan collision in the NW Himalaya 

Gargi Deshmukh, Arvind Kumar Jain, Pulok Kumar Mukherjee, and Rahul Dixit

The South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS) represents a major extensional shear zone separating the Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS) from the Tethyan Himalayan Sequence (THS), yet its long-term tectonomagmatic evolution remains poorly understood. The Dhauliganga Valley (Uttarakhand, NW Himalaya) is one of the few transects where the STDS is excellently exposed from Malari to Goting for ~10 km along its strike, remarkably showing cross-cutting relationship of the Paleozoic orthogneisses and Neoproterozoic mylonites and migmatite, which are further intruded by at least two generations of Mio–Oligocene leucogranites. Zircon U–Pb geochronology integrated with major, trace and rare-earth element geochemistry of representative granites and leucogranites constrain the timing and source characteristics of the magmatic events associated with the STDS and are crucial to develop a tectonic model that explains the role of the STDS as a fundamental Cambro–Ordovician terrane boundary that was subsequently reactivated during Cenozoic orogeny.

Field observations and microstructural analyses in the STDS zone document a polyphase deformational history characterized by multi-phase shearing, syn-tectonic melt emplacement and overprinting brittle deformation. Structural and microstructural fabrics capture an evolution from D2 top-to-SW thrusting to D3 top-to-NE brittle–ductile extension with oblique-slip and transtensional components, producing a high-angle shear geometry unique to this transect.

Detrital zircon populations from folded psammitic gneiss in the footwall preserve Neoproterozoic inheritance (~1075–860 Ma), overprinted by the Cambro–Ordovician granitoids with crystallization ages of 498.92 ± 5.5 Ma and 486.54 ± 2.3 Ma. It is hypothesized that STDS facilitated the emplacement of an extensive ~200km Cambro–Ordovician granite belt from Sutlej to Dhauliganga Valleys in NW Himalaya during the Kurgiakh/Bhimphedian Orogeny. In the post-orogenic phase, the STDS acted as a proto-tectonic marginal extensional boundary that facilitated the denudation of these granites and gneisses into the Tethyan basin resulting in a >10 km-thick THS.

Leucogranites within the uppermost GHS yield ages from Late Eocene to Early Oligocene (35–23 Ma) indicating magmatism associated with SW-directed contraction and crustal thickening (35.3 ± 1.8 Ma, 33.99 ± 1.07 Ma). These leucogranites exhibit tight isoclinal folds with NE-dipping axial surfaces. Syn-tectonic emplacement occurred in the Late Oligocene–Early Miocene (25.03 ± 0.54 Ma 23.68 ± 0.94 Ma), followed by extension-induced exhumation. Magmatic activity abruptly ceased along the STDS in this transect by 13.30 ± 0.30 Ma, after a protracted melt generation and emplacement for nearly 10.0 Ma.

Whole-rock geochemistry indicates that both Paleozoic granitoids and Miocene leucogranites represent syn-collisional, peraluminous crustal melts generated via fluid-absent muscovite-dehydration melting under high-pressure conditions.

This study proposes a tectonomagmatic evolutionary framework for the STDS in the Dhauliganga Valley, a Paleozoic terrane boundary and a reactivated Cenozoic extensional structure mediating melt emplacement, strain localization and exhumation. The persistence of a complex thermal history suggests a foundation for future isotopic and thermochronological investigations into the architecture and rheology of the Himalayan orogen.

How to cite: Deshmukh, G., Jain, A. K., Mukherjee, P. K., and Dixit, R.: The South Tibetan Detachment System: A Cambro–Ordovician terrane boundary reactivated during Cenozoic Himalayan collision in the NW Himalaya, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-803, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-803, 2026.

EGU26-2041 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

Diverse genesis of early Earth’s continental crust hints the geodynamic transition at about 3.0 Gyrs ago 

Hairuo Wang, Keda Cai, Min Sun, Wei-ran Li, Ming Chen, and Xiao-ping Xia

As the dominant component of Earth's early continental crust, tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suites offer critical insights into the crust-mantle dynamic systems and geodynamic regime for the early Earth (>2.5 Ga). Although TTGs are generally accepted to have originated from partial melting of hydrated metabasalt, specific conditions and mechanisms remain enigmatic, which has sparked intense debate over the geodynamic settings of the early Earth. Here, we conduct thermodynamic-geochemical modellings to systematically compare the roles that pressure, bulk H2O content, and source rock composition play in shaping TTG magmas. We find that pressure is the first-order factor controlling the formation and compositional diversity of TTG. Our modellings also predict the optimal melting conditions for different types of TTGs, which are further validated by the ranges of magmatic H2O contents recorded by apatite and zircon from global TTG samples. We propose an apatite-based melt hygrometer and apply it to Archean TTGs for the first time. Combined with the results from the zircon hygrometer, our data show that high-pressure TTGs have the highest H2O contents (7 – 12 wt.%), whereas the low-pressure TTGs have the lowest (4 – 7 wt.%), matching our prediction of the optimal H2O contents for TTG melts. We show that high-pressure TTG is likely derived from fluid-fluxed melting at subcrustal depths (14 – 16 kbar), a process readily explained by subduction rather than intraplate crustal formation models. Furthermore, the temporal and spatial distribution of both high-pressure TTGs and arc-like basalts points to subduction that likely started as a localized phenomenon and transitioned to a global-scale process at about 3.0 Ga.

How to cite: Wang, H., Cai, K., Sun, M., Li, W., Chen, M., and Xia, X.: Diverse genesis of early Earth’s continental crust hints the geodynamic transition at about 3.0 Gyrs ago, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2041, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2041, 2026.

EGU26-2135 | Posters on site | TS7.1

Maximum continental freeboard and topographic relief during Gondwana assembly likely triggered the Cambrian explosion 

Jinlong Yao, Peter Cawood, Xing Cui, Guochun Zhao, Yigui Han, Qian Liu, Donghai Zhang, Pengyuan Cui, Hang Yang, and Xijun Zhao

Plate tectonics and supercontinent cycles are the first-order drivers of Earth’s environmental evolution, helping to establish and maintain a habitable surface. The middle Neoproterozoic to Cambrian period recorded dramatic transitions towards Earth’s present-day environment, including the Neoproterozoic Oxidation Event (NOE) and the Cambrian explosion. Key tectonic factors that contributed to changes in Earth’s surface systems during this period, however, are largely confined to conceptual models. We provide deep time quantitative constraints on these changes through documenting the scale of global orogens and modeling continental freeboard conditions using whole-rock geochemical data. The results indicate that the Gondwana assembly formed a 9000 km long orogenic system with a global mean crustal thickness of over 55 km, comparable to a mean elevation of approximately 3 km above sea-level, comparable to that of the modern Alpine-Himalayan system. This resulted from establishment of the Earth’s contemporary plate tectonic regime and associated thermal state that allowed whole plate continental deep-subduction. Modeled continental exposure peaked during Gondwana assembly at 31 % of Earth’s surface area, exceeding that for both preceding and subsequent time frames. This indicates maximum continental freeboard and resultant subaerial exposure. The combination of significant lateral extent, high topographic relief and extensive low-latitude distribution of the Gondwana’s collisional orogenic belts resulted in maximum weathering and erosion intensity, supplying an exceptionally high-level sediment flux to the ocean and corresponding with high seawater Sr isotope and phosphorous (P) input. This profoundly changed seawater compositions and enhanced marine productivity, likely triggering NOE and providing environmental conditions conducive for the Cambrian explosion. This research is funded by the NSFC grants (42322208), the National Key R&D Program of China (grants 2022YFF0802700 and 2023YFF0803604).

Keywords: topography, crustal thickness, mountain elevation, subaerial continental crust, Gondwana assembly, the Cambrian explosion

References:

Cawood, P. A., Chowdhury, P., Mulder, J. A., et al., 2022. Secular Evolution of Continents and the Earth System. Reviews of Geophysics, 60: e2022RG000789.

Chowdhury, P., Cawood, P.A., Mulder, J. A., 2025. Subaerial Emergence of Continents on Archean Earth. Annu Rev Earth Planet Sci. 53: 443–478.

Yao, J. L., Cawood, P. A., Zhao, G. C., et al., 2021. Mariana type ophiolites constrain establishment of modern plate tectonic regime during Gondwana assembly. Nature Communications, 12: 1489.

Zhao, G.C., Han, YG., LI, J.H., Yao, J.L., Liu, Q., Zhang, D.H., Wang, C., Tang, Q., Zhang, J., Yin, C.Q., Zhang, G.W., 2022. Environmental effects of assembly and breakup of supercontinents. Acta Geologica Sinica, 96(9): 3120-3127.

How to cite: Yao, J., Cawood, P., Cui, X., Zhao, G., Han, Y., Liu, Q., Zhang, D., Cui, P., Yang, H., and Zhao, X.: Maximum continental freeboard and topographic relief during Gondwana assembly likely triggered the Cambrian explosion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2135, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2135, 2026.

EGU26-2736 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

~790 Ma OIB-type mafic dykes in the North Altyn Block, southeastern Tarim: insights into the reconstruction and geodynamics of Rodinia breakup   

Xijun Zhao, Jinlong Yao, Guochun Zhao, Yigui Han, Qian Liu, Donghai Zhang, and Long Chen

Deciphering the extensive magmatic records of the Rodinia supercontinent preserved within the Tarim Craton provides valuable insights into the geodynamics of supercontinent evolution. Here, we report ~790 Ma OIB-type mafic dykes from the North Altyn Tagh belt in the southeastern margin of the Tarim Craton. Zircon U-Pb dating and geochemical analyses reveal that these dykes are typical continental flood basalts, which display light rare earth elements (LREE) enriched patterns with Eu depletion, along with slight enrichment of Nb and Ta and depletion of Sr. Chemical and thermodynamic modelling suggest that these mafic dykes were originated from a garnet-spinel mantle source modified by subduction-related fluids, with an estimated partial melting degree of ~10%. This was followed by fractional crystallization of Ol-Cpx-Pl during subsequent magma evolution process. Therefore, the OIB dykes identified here indicate that the Tarim Craton had already rifted from Rodinia, likely around ~790 Ma. This, together with review of overall Neoproterozoic magmatic records across the Tarim Craton, along with detrital zircon ages and Hf isotopic data, demonstrates that the craton preserves complete record of the transition from Rodinia convergence to rifting. Moreover, the Tarim Craton, Central Altyn, Qilian-Qaidam-East Kunlun, Yangtze Block and Cathaysia Block were located along the periphery of Rodinia and all recorded the super-mantle plume that broke the Rodinia supercontinent at 850–740 Ma. The plume activity partially overlapped with circum-Rodinia subduction. Overall, the contribution of subduction fluid to Rodinia OIB type plume magmatism and the spatial-temporal correlation of super mantle plume and circum-Rodinia subduction suggest that the Rodinia breakup mantle plume was likely induced by circum-Rodinia subduction. These findings therefore argue for the "top-down" model for supercontinent breakup dynamics, emphasizing the critical role of subduction-induced mantle plume that broke up the Rodinia supercontinent. This study demonstrates that subduction drives supercontinent fragmentation, clarifying how subduction zones and mantle plumes interact within Earth's supercontinent cycles.This research is funded by the NSFC Grants (42322208), National Key R&D Program of China (2023YFF0803604), the Natural Science Foundation of Shaanxi Province (2023JCXJ‐20 and 2021JCW‐18), the Project (JLFS/P-702/24) of Hong Kong RGC Co-funding Mechanism on Joint Laboratories with the Chinese Academy of Science, and the State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics (201212000174).

How to cite: Zhao, X., Yao, J., Zhao, G., Han, Y., Liu, Q., Zhang, D., and Chen, L.: ~790 Ma OIB-type mafic dykes in the North Altyn Block, southeastern Tarim: insights into the reconstruction and geodynamics of Rodinia breakup  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2736, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2736, 2026.

EGU26-3146 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Evaluating the fidelity of detrital thermochronology as a recorder of catchment-scale exhumation 

Shida Song and Zhiyuan He

Detrital low-temperature thermochronology has become a widely used tool to infer source-area exhumation histories and catchment-averaged erosion rates. However, a fundamental question remains insufficiently explored: to what extent do detrital thermochronological age distributions faithfully record the full spectrum of bedrock exhumation events within a drainage basin? In particular, it is unclear which exhumation phases are robustly captured, which are selectively amplified, and which may be systematically filtered by geomorphic and fluvial processes. Here we address this problem using the Lhasa river catchment in southern Tibet as a natural laboratory, where abundant bedrock low-temperature thermochronological data coexist with multiple detrital samples from tributaries and the trunk stream. Our approach treats detrital signals as the outcome of a transfer process from bedrock exhumation to river sediments, rather than as a direct proxy. We first compile and statistically characterize bedrock-derived exhumation phases using age-elevation relationships and cooling-path constraints, which serve as physically grounded prior information. Detrital age distributions are then binned consistently with these bedrock exhumation phases, allowing a direct comparison of their relative importance. To quantify potential biases, we develop a bedrock-detrital transfer framework that compares the expected contribution of each exhumation phase, parameterized by its spatial extent and inferred exhumation rate, with its observed detrital fraction. This enables us to identify amplified versus suppressed exhumation signals. We further evaluate the role of geomorphic filtering by integrating catchment-scale metrics, including channel steepness index, hypsometric integrals, and relief, as proxies for erosion and sediment transport efficiency. Finally, we apply a Bayesian forward-inverse framework to estimate catchment-averaged exhumation rates from detrital thermochronological data, partially calibrated by bedrock constraints, and assess under which geomorphic conditions these estimates converge with bedrock-derived exhumation rates. Our results aim to provide a quantitative framework for interpreting detrital thermochronology and for assessing when, and why, detrital records succeed, or fail to capture source-area exhumation histories.

How to cite: Song, S. and He, Z.: Evaluating the fidelity of detrital thermochronology as a recorder of catchment-scale exhumation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3146, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3146, 2026.

EGU26-3735 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

Subsidence Amidst Uplift: Lithosphere Delamination During Plume-Lithosphere Interaction 

Ya-Nan Shi, Jason Morgan, Ling Chen, Zengqian Hou, Liang Zhao, Zhong-Hai Li, Mario Araujo, and Michael Gurnis

Mantle plumes are commonly believed to generate uplift of their overlying lithosphere, while also impacting climate and life. However, sedimentary deposits show a component of subsidence during plume-lithosphere interaction, challenging traditional uplift-only models of plume-lithosphere interaction. We investigate whether plume-induced delamination can induce subsidence as well as uplift through computations of plume-lithosphere interaction. When a denser lithospheric keel delaminates, initial plume ascent will induce ~2 km of uplift, followed by a more rapid ~2 km of subsidence over a few millions of years as the dense lithospheric keel delaminates. Delamination, distinct from back-arc extension and slab-induced flow, may explain observed subsidence patterns during continental flood basalt activity, such as those seen in the Paraná Flood Basalt, Columbia River Flood Basalt, Deccan Traps and Congo Basin regions.

How to cite: Shi, Y.-N., Morgan, J., Chen, L., Hou, Z., Zhao, L., Li, Z.-H., Araujo, M., and Gurnis, M.: Subsidence Amidst Uplift: Lithosphere Delamination During Plume-Lithosphere Interaction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3735, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3735, 2026.

Continental lithospheric thinning can accelerate upper-crustal exhumation by reducing lithospheric strength and reorganizing topography, yet the magnitude, spatial attenuation, and time lag of this coupling are rarely quantified in a way that is directly comparable between regions. We integrate new apatite fission-track (AFT) and zircon (U–Th)/He (ZHe) data with regional thermochronology compilations and time-dependent crustal-thickness reconstructions for the eastern North China Craton, and apply the same standardized workflow to the Lhasa terrane (southern Tibet) and the western North American Cordillera—three regions that record rollback-related thinning by extension and/or gravitational removal of dense lower lithosphere (delamination or foundering). Using a multi-thermochronometer age-pair method, we calculate exhumation-rate time series and spatially resolved exhumation-rate maps, and we evaluate their correspondence to coeval crustal thickness variations through time. In North China, exhumation rates during the main thinning episode are highest near thinning centers and decrease toward the continental interior, defining a proximal-to-distal attenuation pattern. Across all studied regions, thinner crust systematically corresponds to higher mean exhumation rates, indicating a robust, negative association between crustal thickness and exhumation intensity during thinning. Cross-correlation between crustal thickness T(t) and exhumation rate E(t) is most negative (Pearson R = −0.8 to −0.9) when exhumation lags thinning by ~5–10 Myr, implying a multi-million-year delay between crustal thinning and the regional exhumation response. Together, these results provide quantitative constraints on the timescales and spatial footprint of deep–surface coupling during continental lithospheric thinning.

How to cite: Liang, Y., He, Z., and De Grave, J.: Lagged and spatially attenuated negative coupling between crustal thickness and exhumation during lithospheric thinning, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3970, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3970, 2026.

EGU26-4248 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

Late Neoarchean to early Paleoproterozoic magmatism and its tectonic setting in Eastern Hebei, North China Craton 

Jiahao Jing, Qian Liu, Yigui Han, Jinlong Yao, Donghai Zhang, Chenyang Sun, Jiakang Zheng, and Guochun Zhao

The late Neoarchean to early Paleoproterozoic era represents a key period for the formation and evolution of the Earth’s early continental crust. It is characterized by a transition from intense global magmatism and significant crustal growth to dramatically reduced magmatism with increasing crustal reworking. The tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) and dioritic rocks constitute the dominant component of the early continental crust, and their petrogenesis and tectonic setting provide critical insights into the formation mechanism of the continental crust. In this contribution, we present a systematic geochronological, geochemical, and zircon Hf-O isotopic study for the late Neoarchean and early Paleoproterozoic TTG and dioritic gneiss in Eastern Hebei, North China Craton.

Zircon U-Pb dating shows that the late Neoarchean TTG and dioritic gneiss rocks have protolith crystallization ages of 2.55–2.52 Ga and metamorphic ages of 2.51–2.47 Ga and ~2.45 Ga. The early Paleoproterozoic trondhjemitic gneiss yields protolith crystallization ages of 2.45 Ga and inherited zircon ages of 2.55 Ga. Accordingly, a prolonged tectonothermal events (2.55–2.45 Ga) occurred in Eastern Hebei.

The late Neoarchean TTG gneiss samples shows geochemical affinities akin to adakitic rocks, characterized by high concentrations of SiO2, Al2O3, and Sr, low concentrations of MgO, Y and Yb, as well as high Sr/Y and (La/Yb)N ratios. They can be divided into two groups. The first group has low MgO, Cr, and Ni contents, coupled with the positive zircon εHf(t) (3.0 to 7.3) and δ18O values of 5.36–6.59 ‰, indicating that it was derived from partial melting of juvenile thickened lower crust. The second group contains high MgO, Cr, and Ni contents, which are more consistent with the TTG rocks derived from partial melting of subducted oceanic crust. A majority of positive zircon εHf(t) values (0.2–5.2) and lower δ18O values (5.58–6.54 ‰) suggest its magmatic source of juvenile crust. Notably, some zircons display negative εHf(t) values (-2.6 to -0.2) and higher δ18O values (7.19–7.47 ‰), indicating the involvement of ancient crust materials. The dioritic gneiss has moderate SiO2 con­tent, high CaO, MgO, Cr, Ni, Sr, and Ba contents, as well as high K2O/Na2O and (La/Yb)N ratios, akin to the Archean sanukitoids. They are enriched in large-ion lithophile elements (LILEs) and depleted in high field strength elements (HFSEs), combined with their positive zircon ɛHf(t) values (4.0–6.4) and slightly higher δ18O values (5.99–6.42 ‰), suggesting a metasomatized mantle source. In addition, they show large variations in (Hf/Sm)N, high Nb/Ta and Zr/Hf ratios, and low Nb/Zr ratios, implying that both subducted fluids and slab-derived melts are metasomatic agents. The 2.45 Ga trondjemitic gneiss shows similar geochemical and zircon Hf-O isotopic characteristics to the above mentioned first group TTG gneiss, further supporting that it was a continuation of the late Neoarchean magmatism.

Based on the diverse sources of the studied 2.55–2.45 Ga granitoid gneisses and regional geological data, we propose that the vertical mantle plume coexisted with the horizontal slab subduction in Eastern Hebei in the late Neoarchean to early Paleoproterozoic.

The research was funded by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2024YFF0808000).

How to cite: Jing, J., Liu, Q., Han, Y., Yao, J., Zhang, D., Sun, C., Zheng, J., and Zhao, G.: Late Neoarchean to early Paleoproterozoic magmatism and its tectonic setting in Eastern Hebei, North China Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4248, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4248, 2026.

EGU26-4483 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

Endogenic mantle-driven orogenesis of retreating accretionary orogens: implications for the continental growth and stabilization 

Xing Cui, Liangliang Wang, Ian Cawood, Peter Cawood, Liming Dai, Jinlong Yao, Di Wang, Min Sun, and Guochun Zhao

Retreating accretionary orogens exhibit a paradoxical capacity to sustain crustal shortening and growth contemporaneous with dominant upper plate extension. Deciphering the dynamic coupling between mantle flow and crustal evolution is critical in understanding orogenic mechanisms within such retreating systems, with profound implications for subduction zone dynamics and continental growth processes. Here we integrate high-resolution 2D numerical simulations, with quantitative geological boundary conditions from the Paleozoic Altaides archetype, to establish an endogenic orogenic mechanism driven by slab rollback-induced mantle circulation during retreating subduction. Our models demonstrate that spontaneous mantle upwelling and convections could systematically govern (1) progressive trench-directed arc migration, (2) self-organized forearc-arc-backarc-intraplate tectonic zoning, (3) crustal thickening-extension cycles and diachronous coexistence, (4) crustal growth and stabilization through intense bimodal magmatism with juvenile isotopic signatures, all of which characterize the Altaides and other archetypal retreating accretionary orogens. This intrinsic interplay between slab rollback, mantle upwelling, and upper plate response offers a unified framework to interpret accretionary orogens via deep Earth-surface interactions. This work was financially supported by Project (JLFS/P-702/24) of Hong Kong RGC Co-funding Mechanism on Joint Laboratories with the Chinese Academy of Science, National Science Foundation of China (Grants 424B2048, 42176064), and Australian Research Council (FL160100168).

How to cite: Cui, X., Wang, L., Cawood, I., Cawood, P., Dai, L., Yao, J., Wang, D., Sun, M., and Zhao, G.: Endogenic mantle-driven orogenesis of retreating accretionary orogens: implications for the continental growth and stabilization, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4483, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4483, 2026.

The South China Block (SCB) experienced multi-stage tectono-magmatic events during the Mesozoic, forming a broad and episodic intracontinental orogenic belt. It is controversial whether the driving force of the Mesozoic intracontinental orogeny in the SCB is related to the far-field effects of plate convergence. To better understand the driving mechanism of intracontinental orogeny, we conducted a detailed structural investigation of the Xingguo area in southern Jiangxi Province, located in the central part of the SCB. Two regional-scale buckling superposed folds were identified as the Chayuan arcuate syncline of the fold axis protruding to the north (Type 2a interference pattern) and the Xiefang syncline of the fold axis extending NW–SE (Type 1d interference pattern). Although there are differences in fold interference patterns, the Chayuan arcuate syncline and Xiefang syncline were formed by the superimposition of the Middle–Late Triassic NE–SW shortening and the Middle–Late Jurassic nearly E–W shortening. This phenomenon of the differential fold interference patterns in the same tectonic setting is determined by the difference in geometric characteristics of their initial folds. Combined with the variation of the Mesozoic paleostress field, it is considered that the Mesozoic intracontinental orogeny in the SCB is mainly controlled by the far-field stress propagation generated by plate interactions. Based on the analysis of tectonic architecture, we propose that the Mesozoic tectonic evolution of the SCB experienced a transformation from multi-plate convergence in the Triassic to Andean-type subduction in the Jurassic. This tectonic transformation finally resulted in the reactivation of the Precambrian multi-terrane collage of the SCB.

How to cite: Li, C. and Wang, Z.: Differential fold interference patterns in an intracontinental orogen: Insights from superposed buckle folding in southern Jiangxi Province,South China Block, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4628, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4628, 2026.

Peraluminous granites are widely regarded as products of crustal reworking in continental interiors and are genetically linked to Sn–W–rare metal mineralization (e.g., Li, Be, Nb, Ta, Cs, Rb). However, the mechanisms of heat transfer responsible for generating peraluminous magmas, as well as the role of the mantle in these processes, remain debated. To address these questions, we investigated the origin of the Xingluokeng granite—a peraluminous granite in the Wuyi terrain of the Cathaysia Block that hosts large-scale tungsten mineralization—through zircon U–Pb and Hf isotopic analysis and numerical modeling of heat transfer. The modeling incorporates geologically plausible ranges of ancient crustal thickness and crustal heat production.

Autocrystic zircons from the granite (~150 Ma) exhibit strongly negative εHf(t) values (–25.72 to –7.01), which fall within the range of inherited zircons (600–1000 Ma) and the highest-density values of Neoproterozoic detrital zircons in the Cathaysia Block. This suggests no detectable mantle-derived mass contribution. The Mesozoic upper crust in the Wuyi terrain and other regions in the Block, represented by fine-grained clastic sediments, has an average heat production of ~2.9 μW m⁻³, while amphibolite- to granulite-facies rocks, representing the middle–lower crust, range from ~0.6 to 4 μW m⁻³. These values exceed present-day global averages for continental crust (upper crust: ~1.68 μW m⁻³; middle–lower crust: ~0.19–1 μW m⁻³). When combined with moderate crustal thickening (~50 km) and a normal mantle heat flux, such elevated crustal heat production can drive partial melting of metasedimentary rocks in the middle–lower crust over a thermal relaxation period of ~30–50 Ma.

Crustal radiogenic heating also warms the upper mantle, facilitating partial melting of mafic rocks and giving rise to volumetrically minor mafic dykes coeval with peraluminous granites in the same region. Consequently, the presence of such dykes does not necessarily imply that the mantle supplied significant heat or material for the associated peraluminous magmas. High crustal heat production coupled with crustal thickening appears to be a common feature in other parts of the Cathaysia Block, suggesting that the above conclusions may also apply to other Mesozoic peraluminous granites in South China.

How to cite: Liu, X.-C.: Thermal links between crustal radiogenic heating and peraluminous granites: a case study in Wuyi terrain, southeastern China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4641, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4641, 2026.

EGU26-4752 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Neoproterozoic Granitic Gneiss from the South Altyn Tagh, NW China: Constraints on Rodinia Assembly and Gondwana Formation 

Mengyao Yang, Qian Liu, Yigui Han, Jinlong Yao, Donghai Zhang, and Guochun Zhao

The assembly and breakup of the Rodinia supercontinent and the subsequent formation of the Gondwana megacontinent represent a pivotal stage in Earth’s history, involving the transition of plate tectonic regime and the evolution of Earth’s habitability. Located to the southeast of the Tarim Craton, the South Altyn Tagh hosts extensive Neoproterozoic granitic gneiss. Previous studies on these rocks proposed multiple interpretations regarding their petrogenesis and tectonic setting, leading to a significant debate about the paleogeographic position of the South Altyn Tagh within the Rodinia supercontinent. In addition, the correlation between the early Paleozoic metamorphic ages recorded in the Neoproterozoic granitic gneiss and the amalgamation of the Gondwana remains underexplored.

This study focuses on the Xiaoluke (Xgn), Yuemaqige (Ygn), and Wengulu (Wgn) Neoproterozoic granitic gneiss in the Bashiwake area of the South Altyn Tagh. To constrain the crystallization and metamorphic ages, petrogenesis, and tectonic setting of these rocks, a petrological, geochronological, and geochemical data is presented. Zircon U-Pb dating yields the protolith crystallization ages of 924±8 Ma and 924±9 Ma for the Wgn and Ygn granitic gneiss, respectively, and 902±6 Ma for the Xgn samples. Combined zircon and titanite U-Pb dating constrained the metamorphic ages of the Xgn granitic gneiss to 554-459 Ma. The granitic gneiss rocks in this study are composed primarily of granodioritic and monzogranitic gneiss. They are characterized by high SiO₂ contents (68.2-76.1 wt.%), FeOT/MgO ratios (1.5-6.2), and K₂O/Na₂O ratios (0.98-3.4), classified as ferroan and high-K calc-alkaline to shoshonitic granitoids. Furthermore, they mostly display enrichments in light rare earth elements (LREEs) relative to heavy rare earth elements (HREEs), accompanied by distinctly negative Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu*=0.3-0.7). Specifically, the ca. 924 Ma granitic gneiss exhibits Al2O3/(CaO+Na2O+K2O) (A/CNK) ratios of 1.01-1.22, relatively low Zr + Nb + Ce + Y values (181-341 ppm), and negative zircon εHf(t) values (-13.4 to 0.2), akin to peraluminous S-type granites derived from ancient crust related to collision. Comparatively, the ca. 902-895 Ma samples display variable A/CNK ratios (0.91-1.07), higher Zr + Nb + Ce + Y values (377-1083 ppm), and positive zircon εHf(t) values (3.3 to 6.7), similar to A-type granites originating from juvenile materials in a post-collisional setting.

Therefore, we propose that the South Altyn Tagh experienced a transition from a syn-collisional setting at ca. 924 Ma to a post-collisional setting at ca. 902-895 Ma, in response to the final amalgamation of the Rodinia supercontinent. The subsequent metamorphic events occurring between 554 Ma and 460 Ma were probably related to the formation of the Gondwana megacontinent.

This study was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant 42272249).

How to cite: Yang, M., Liu, Q., Han, Y., Yao, J., Zhang, D., and Zhao, G.: Neoproterozoic Granitic Gneiss from the South Altyn Tagh, NW China: Constraints on Rodinia Assembly and Gondwana Formation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4752, 2026.

Knowing the size of Greater India is essential to constrain the geodynamic processes of India-Asia collision and Tibetan Plateau uplift, which, however, remains highly controversial, with existing estimates ranging from several hundreds (~400-950) to thousands (~1800-3000) of kilometers. Here, we report new paleocurrent measurements of the Upper Triassic turbidites (Langjiexue Group) from northern Tethyan Himalaya, supplemented with compiled provenance analyses, to help decipher the extent of Greater India. Well-preserved flute casts indicate mostly westward paleocurrents, suggesting a primary source located to the east (present coordinates) of the depositional area. In addition, compiled detrital zircon data reveal a similar east-west distribution, with samples exhibiting Australian-affinities (i.e., dominated by ~1170-1075 and ~575-530 Ma age populations) mostly found to the east of 91E°, whereas samples showing Indian-affinities (i.e., dominated by ~980-860 and ~565-505 Ma age populations) are generally limited to the west of 92E°. Importantly, the Langjiexue Group is characterized by a dominant age population of ~280-220 Ma (peak at ~238 Ma) with bimodal zircon εHf(t) values (peaks at ~–1.2 and +6.8), matching well with those of coeval magmatic/sedimentary records in West Antarctica, but differing from those in eastern Australia, the Bird’s Head region, and the Lhasa terrane. Considering similar age patterns found in the Exmouth Plateau (NW Australia), we infer a large-scale transcontinental sediment transport pathway for the Langjiexue Group, which originated from West Antarctica, passed through West and NW Australia, and ultimately deposited offshore along northern (Greater) India in the Late Triassic. Therefore, the eastern margin of Greater India most probably reached to the Exmouth Plateau, implying an extent of ~1950 ± 260 km in the Late Triassic. This consideration is consistent with the recent estimate of ~1950 ± 970 km based on Early Cretaceous paleomagnetic data from eastern Tethyan Himalaya.

How to cite: Xue, S. and Zhang, X.: Defining the expanse of Greater India: Insights from the Upper Triassic Langjiexue Group of northern Tethyan Himalaya, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5036, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5036, 2026.

The subduction and closure of the Proto-Tethys Ocean dominated a significant global tectonic event in the Phanerozoic, which established the foundational tectonic framework for East Asia. Particularly, the North Altyn ophiolitic mélange belt recorded the subduction-collision history of the North Altyn segment of the Proto-Tethys Ocean, but the spatial-temporal distribution of related convergent margin successions is poorly constrained. The late Cambrian to late Ordovician Elantage Formation and Lapeiquan Group in the northern Altyn belt are coeval with the North Altyn ophiolite and therefore preserve key records of the evolution of the North Altyn Ocean. Detailed petrography, detrital zircon age patterns, isotopes, and geochemical characteristics indicate that these stratigraphic sequences were deposited in retro-arc and fore-arc basins at ca. 520-440 Ma, respectively. εHf(t) values suggest that arc magmatic rocks from the northern margin of the Central Altyn Block are the main provenances for the Elantage Formation, whereas the provenance of Lapeiquan Group is dominated by arc magmatic rocks within the North Altyn ophiolitic mélange belt. A ca. 520-440 Ma trench-continental arc and retro-arc basin system in the northern Altyn further suggest a Silurian closure time for the North Altyn segment of the Proto-Tethys Ocean. In addition, together with a review of age and spatial patterns of the ophiolites, trench-arc systems, metamorphism, and magmatic rocks across the other East Asian continental blocks, we argue for a diachronous closure of the Proto-Tethys Ocean from the Ordovician to the Late Silurian. This research was funded by the National Key R&D Program of China (grant 2023YFF0803604), National Natural Science Foundation of China (grants 42322208).

How to cite: Chen, L. and Yao, J.: Delineating convergent continental margin basin systems in the North Altyn belt: implications for diachronous closure of the Proto-Tethys Ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5413, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5413, 2026.

EGU26-5756 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

Thrust Wedge Dominated Multilayered Propagation Using Finite Strain Sandbox Modeling: Growth of the Western Xuefeng Fold-Thrust Belt, South China Block 

Fei Kong, Danping Yan, Liang Qiu, Zhicheng Zhou, Zhanhui Hao, and Xiaohan Lin

Foreland fold–thrust belts act as key engines of continental growth and reworking by accommodating crustal shortening and internal deformation during long-term continental evolution. Within these systems, the formation and propagation of thrust wedges represent the primary mechanisms by which shortening is accommodated and translated into the horizontal growth of orogenic belts. However, current understanding of thrust wedge evolution in foreland systems remains largely based on static structural interpretations, providing limited quantitative and time-resolved constraints on kinematics, strain partitioning, and wedge propagation mechanisms.

Here we investigate thrust wedge formation and propagation in a multilayered continental crust using analogue sandbox experiments inspired by the Western Xuefeng fold–thrust belt of South China, a representative intracontinental orogenic system. Two sets of experiments were designed to simulate different detachment configurations and lateral variations in rheology. Anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) and particle image velocimetry were integrated to quantitatively constrain strain distribution, kinematic evolution, as well as velocity and vorticity fields within thrust wedges.

By reproducing multilayered deformation in foreland fold–thrust belts, the sandbox experiments provide a quantitative framework to link thrust wedge propagation with the redistribution of strain and the horizontal growth of orogenic belts. The experiments reveal that the cover sequence deforms as three distinct tectonic levels, each characterized by specific thrust wedge geometries: stacked thrusts forming an active roof duplex at the bottom level, box-shaped anticlines at the middle level, and imbricate systems with chevron-shaped folds at the upper level. In Model 2, a lithological transition from shale to siltstone across the Lower Cambrian Qiyueshan Fault led to mechanical coupling between the middle and bottom levels in the west, producing thrust wedges with chevron anticlines above a single shallow detachment. In contrast, the southeast region, controlled by three detachments and surface erosion, developed box-shaped anticlines. These observations indicate that abrupt lateral changes in lithology strongly influence thrust wedge styles and transitions. Furthermore, AMS measurements capture the magnitude and orientation of strain within the wedges, highlighting how lithofacies variations modulate deformation mechanisms and strain partitioning.

Based on quantitative analyses of wedge kinematics and strain, we propose a new thrust wedge dominated multilayered propagation model in the Western Xuefeng fold–thrust belt. This framework connects local wedge dynamics to continental-scale crustal evolution, providing a basis for understanding fold–thrust dynamics in intracontinental orogens worldwide.

How to cite: Kong, F., Yan, D., Qiu, L., Zhou, Z., Hao, Z., and Lin, X.: Thrust Wedge Dominated Multilayered Propagation Using Finite Strain Sandbox Modeling: Growth of the Western Xuefeng Fold-Thrust Belt, South China Block, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5756, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5756, 2026.

EGU26-6093 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Caution in linking localized metamorphic P–T paths to tectonic settings 

Wenbin Ning, Lu Wang, and Timothy Kusky

Metamorphic pressure-temperature-time (P-T-t) paths are critical records of crustal thermomechanical evolution, yet the growing documentation of both clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW) paths within single high-grade terranes complicates straightforward correlations with specific tectonic settings. The Eastern Hebei Complex in the eastern North China Craton, which preserves coexisting Neoarchean CW and CCW P–T paths, offers an ideal natural laboratory to investigate such seemingly contradictory metamorphic features and to reconcile the ongoing debate over its tectonic setting.

In the eastern part of the complex (Eastern Tectonic Domain, ETD), Neoarchean mafic and felsic granulites from the Taipingzhai, Qianan, and Caozhuang areas record 2.52–2.48 Ga CCW P–T paths with peak ultra-high temperature (UHT) conditions (>900°C), interpreted as evidence for a sagduction setting. In contrast, the western part (Western Tectonic Domain, WTD) contains identified Neoarchean ophiolitic mélanges. Geochemical data from ultramafic-mafic blocks in the Zunhua and Shangying areas indicate that these mélanges incorporate both Neoarchean forearc oceanic lithosphere fragments and exhumed subducted slab materials. Metamorphic blocks within the mélange (mafic granulite, garnet amphibolite) and the surrounding pelitic granulite matrix record different peak P–T conditions, defining CW P–T paths ranging from 715–850°C and 9.4–13.6 kbar at 2.48–2.46 Ga. Furthermore, Neoarchean UHP peridotite and eclogite-facies garnet clinopyroxenite have been documented in this belt. These metamorphic features are analogous to those recorded in tectonic mélanges of well-established Phanerozoic orogens. The coexistence of petrogenetically diverse blocks, derived from varying depths, indicates their entrainment, mixing, and exhumation within a subduction channel during plate convergence, followed by tectonic juxtaposition with the gneissic matrix.

Thermodynamic modeling indicates that these blocks experienced near-isothermal decompression, interpreted as rapid exhumation from varying depths within a subduction channel. The coeval CCW paths documented elsewhere in the complex are interpreted to result from the downward advection of isotherms during incipient subduction. The full spectrum of metamorphic P–T conditions and paths (CW and CCW) documented in the complex closely resembles patterns in post-Archean orogens, revealing the spatiotemporal evolution of thermal structure and perturbations during subduction-accretion. Our findings demonstrate that the lithological assemblages and diverse metamorphic records can be reconciled within a unified plate tectonic model, without invoking sagduction. The study emphasizes the necessity of integrating litho-tectonic unit classification and regional structural-metamorphic analyses over reliance on isolated P–T path before making tectonic interpretations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

How to cite: Ning, W., Wang, L., and Kusky, T.: Caution in linking localized metamorphic P–T paths to tectonic settings, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6093, 2026.

EGU26-6687 | Orals | TS7.1

Decoupled Upper-Crustal Deformation and Foreland Growth in Intracontinental Orogens: A Thermo-Kinematic Perspective from the South Tianshan, Central Asia 

Chang Zhong, Paul Eizenhöfer, Cristina Persano, James Gilgannon, and Zhiyuan He

Fold-and-thrust belts commonly exhibit along-strike variability in shortening, rock uplift, and exhumation. It often remains unclear how strongly these reflect lower lithospheric processes. The South Tianshan is an active intracontinental orogen and characterised by southward propagation of deformation into the northern Tarim foreland. Along the South Tianshan–Tarim Basin interface, foreland deformation, cooling histories, and drainage (re-)organization vary strongly along-strike and geophysical constraints indicate the underthrusting of Tarim block northward beneath the Tianshan. This suggests weak lithospheric coupling. To validate this prediction, we examine four transects along the northern margin of the Tarim Basin, by using forward thermo-kinematic modelling of sequentially restored and balanced cross-sections.

Our models quantify the timing, geometry, and magnitude of fault-driven rock uplift across the four transects and we use this to evaluate the role of crustal deformation in driving foreland exhumation, surface uplift and subsequent drainage organization. Existing low-temperature thermochronological datasets, including apatite fission-track (AFT) and apatite (U–Th)/He (AHe) ages, are used to validate model predictions of regional cooling histories.

Best-fit models reproduce the thermochronological data across four transects, demonstrating that fault-driven deformation exerts first-order control on exhumation. At Kuqa, young, reset AHe cooling ages (~25–5 Ma) in the foreland are linked to rock uplift along structural ramps at ~10 km depth as part of subsurface blind duplex formation. The delayed activation (~5–0 Ma) of shallower ramps at 3–7 km depth generated the rock uplift required for the formation of frontal anticlines (Qiulitage at Kuqa and Atushi–Kashi at Kashi) that partially reset the AFT system. Such foreland deformation is largely accommodated above décollements at multiple depths, and the slip is partitioned along thick (~2–4 km) Paleogene (Kuqa) and Miocene (Kashi) evaporites at a minimum of 8–10 km depth. At Keping, motion along a shallower décollement at ~5 km depth, and an additional ~12 km of out-of-sequence thrusting on the Kekebukesansha Fault at ~10 Ma is required to fit observed ages (~11.5 Ma). Replicating older cooling ages preserved in the hinterland (~30 Ma Kashi and ~40 Ma Kuqa) is achieved by ~7–10 km of displacement along the South Tianshan Thrust System (STS) at shortening rates of ~0.5–1.2 mm/yr. This reflects a diachronous initiation of the STS at ~25 Ma and ~36 Ma. The shortening rate at Keping is consistently higher (~4 mm/yr), Kuqa and Kashi exhibit ~0.5mm/yr that increases to ~1.5–2.5 mm/yr. This acceleration is associated with growth of the foreland anticlines at Kuqa and thrusting of the Keketamu structure at Kashi during ~15–10 Ma.

Our results suggest that the along-strike variability in thermochronological signals along the South Tianshan is primarily linked to crustal deformation, without invoking lower lithospheric involvement. Our modelled surface uplift scenarios, furthermore, provide a tectonic framework to explain the transition from transverse to longitudinal drainage patterns, highlighting how fold–and–thrust belt evolution drives drainage reorganization. These findings are consistent with a flat-lying Moho beneath the Tarim, seismicity largely within ~30 km depth, and a stiff lithosphere rheology. Together, these observations support a largely decoupled upper and lower lithosphere along the South Tianshan-Tarim Basin interface.

How to cite: Zhong, C., Eizenhöfer, P., Persano, C., Gilgannon, J., and He, Z.: Decoupled Upper-Crustal Deformation and Foreland Growth in Intracontinental Orogens: A Thermo-Kinematic Perspective from the South Tianshan, Central Asia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6687, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6687, 2026.

EGU26-7082 | Posters on site | TS7.1

Paleoarchean continental emergence in the North China Craton indicated by low δ18O granites 

Chao Wang, Hang Chu, Shuguang Song, Guochun Zhao, Mark B. Allen, and Bin Fu

Emergent continental crust with subaerial exposure is important for the evolution of Earth’s surface system and the development of habitability, and it is evident that early Archean local emergence of continental crust occurred in several Archean cratons. However, it remains unresolved if the North China Craton, which preserves ancient (4.1–4.0 Ga) crustal remnants, had emergent continental crust during the early Archean. Here we report geochronological and geochemical data on Paleo–Mesoarchean potassic granites in Eastern Hebei, within the North China Craton, to trace whether or not there was any early Archean exposed landmass in this craton. We constrain that the studied potassic granites formed at ca. 3.2 Ga, and their bulk-rock and zircon Hf isotopic geochemistry reveals that they were produced by anatexis of Paleoarchean tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) crust. Their low zircon δ18O values should have been inherited from their Paleoarchean TTG source, and 18O-depletion of this Paleoarchean TTG source was achieved through high-temperature hydrothermal alteration with and the infiltration of isotopically-light meteoric water into the shallow crust, prior to the ca. 3.2 Ga anatexis. The identification of Paleoarchean TTG crust altered by meteoric water in Eastern Hebei indicates the emergence of continental crust in the North China Craton during the early Archean, and this Paleoarchean continental emergence could have been associated with magmatic underplating during mantle plume activities, which is also evidenced by the Paleoarchean enriched plume remnants in Eastern Hebei.

How to cite: Wang, C., Chu, H., Song, S., Zhao, G., Allen, M. B., and Fu, B.: Paleoarchean continental emergence in the North China Craton indicated by low δ18O granites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7082, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7082, 2026.

EGU26-7129 | Orals | TS7.1

Metamorphic P–T–t evolution of the Lüliang Group, North China Craton: Insights from phase equilibria modeling and geochronology 

Jiahui Qian, Changqing Yin, Jian Zhang, Peng Gao, Chengsen Lu, and Shangjing Wu

Unraveling the tectono-thermal history of medium- to low-grade belts will place important constraints on the regional tectonic evolution. There exists a Barrovian metamorphic belt in the Lüliang Group, Trans-North China Orogen (TNCO) of the North China Craton (NCC). Representative rock samples from chlorite zone, biotite zone, garnet zone and staurolite–kyanite zone have been collected to delineate the P–T–t evolution. A two-stage prograde P–T path characterized by heating first and then pressurizing is recovered from the garnet zone by phase equilibria modeling. The peak P–T conditions are constrained to be ~7.0 kbar/560 ℃. Decompression-dominated P–T paths involving Pmax (6.8–9.2 kbar/515–565 ℃) and Tmax (4.6–6.5 kbar/560–615 ℃) stages are obtained from the staurolite–kyanite zone. Metamorphic zircon from the staurolite–kyanite zone and garnet from the garnet zone yield U-Pb ages of 1850 ± 31 Ma and 1882 ± 67 Ma, respectively. Biotite from the biotite zone gives an 40Ar/39Ar age of 1762 ± 3 Ma. The geochronological results indicate that metamorphism of the Lüliang Group is younger than the formation age of the TNCO (~1.95 Ga), but is coeval to the subduction–collision orogeny (1.90–1.82 Ga) along the northern margin of the NCC. The distribution of the Barrovian metamorphic belt is also parallel to the latter orogen (E–W-trending). Consequently, combining with field observations and regional geological evolution, it is inferred that the genesis of Barrovian metamorphism accompanying with crustal thickening in the Lüliang Group may be related to the stress propagated from the 1.90–1.82 Ga orogeny along the craton’s northern margin.

How to cite: Qian, J., Yin, C., Zhang, J., Gao, P., Lu, C., and Wu, S.: Metamorphic P–T–t evolution of the Lüliang Group, North China Craton: Insights from phase equilibria modeling and geochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7129, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7129, 2026.

EGU26-7412 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Latest Early Cretaceous tectonic transition from contraction to large-scale extension in Southeast China: Insights from the magmatism along the Changle-Nan’ao Fault Zone 

Hanqiao Zheng, Junfeng Gong, Hongxiang Wu, Hongdan Deng, Yantao Hao, Kongyang Zhu, Zhiquan Yu, Jiakang Huang, Hanlin Chen, and Shufeng Yang

Long-lived subduction and variable plate geometry of the Paleo-Pacific plate resulted in multiple episodes of both extensional and contractional deformation. While tectono-magmatic evidence provides critical insights into the tectonic evolution of the South China Block (SCB), the timing and dynamic mechanisms governing the transition from late Early Cretaceous contraction to large-scale intraplate extension remain contentious. Here, we present zircon U-Pb ages, geochemical data, and Hf isotopic data for 5 samples from the NNE-trending dioritic dikes and granodiorites in the Changle-Nan’ao Fault Zone, Southeast China, as well as crustal thickness reconstructions based on Sr/Y and (La/Yb)N geochemical proxies to constrain the crucial tectonic transition in the late Early Cretaceous. Our samples exhibit comparable zircon U-Pb ages (105–103 Ma) and are characterized by enrichment in LILEs, pronounced depletion in HFSEs, and variable εHf(t) values. These features suggest that they derived from the mixing of felsic and mantle-derived mafic melts, differentiated at successive stages through fractional crystallization. Notably, the intrusion of the dioritic dikes along the fault zone highlights a phase of extensional activity. Integrated magmatic geochemistry and sedimentary stratigraphic records, coupled with crustal thickness data indicating a reduction to ~40 km before ~120 Ma followed by significant thickening to a peak of ~60–70 km at ~105 Ma, suggest two tectonic transitions at ~120 Ma and ~105 Ma, respectively. It is noteworthy that the extension observed in the coastal region due to slab break-off was manifested as coeval contraction in the inland region at ~105 Ma, which was subsequently followed by widespread extension across SE China. We propose that the tectonic transitions between the compression and extension were driven by changes in subduction angle of Paleo-Pacific slab, specifically the evolution from flat-slab subduction to slab roll-back and steepening.

How to cite: Zheng, H., Gong, J., Wu, H., Deng, H., Hao, Y., Zhu, K., Yu, Z., Huang, J., Chen, H., and Yang, S.: Latest Early Cretaceous tectonic transition from contraction to large-scale extension in Southeast China: Insights from the magmatism along the Changle-Nan’ao Fault Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7412, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7412, 2026.

EGU26-7443 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Metamorphic evolution and tectonic significance of Archean ultrahigh-temperature mafic granulites from the Northwestern Superior Province 

Xiaoman Wang, Changqing Yin, Shoufa Lin, Chris G. Couëslan, and Jiahui Qian

Ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism represents the most thermally extreme crustal metamorphism, defined by peak conditions of >900 °C and 0.7-1.3 GPa, and is typically preserved in rare Mg-Al-rich rocks. In this contribution, we report the identification of UHT mafic granulites from the Pikwitonei Granulite Domain, located in the Northwestern Superior Province. Based on petrographic observations and mineral chemical analyses, these mafic granulites can be subdivided into two types according to whether the rock includes garnets or not. Both two types of mafic granulites record three distinct metamorphic stage: (1) The pre-Tmax stage is marked by clinopyroxene-plagioclase-biotite inclusions in garnet core, and amphibole-plagioclase-magnetite-ilmenite inclusions in clinopyroxene core. (2) The Tmax stage is defined by a coarse-grained matrix assemblage of garnet/amphibole, clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene and magnetite. (3) Late development of garnet-quartz symplectite and amphibole along pyroxene rim represents the post-Tmax assemblage of garnet-bearing and garnet-free mafic granulites, respectively. Phase equilibrium modelling of these mafic granulites, carried out in the NCKFMASHTO system using the GeoPS software package, yields anticlockwise P-T paths, with peak P-T conditions of 940-1030 °C / 0.82-0.88 GPa (garnet-bearing type) and 1020-1040 ℃ / 0.68-0.85 GPa (garnet-free type). Metamorphic zircon U-Pb dating gives a mean 207Pb/206Pb age of 2680±11 Ma for garnet-bearing granulites and a continuum of ages from 2673±32 to 2543±21 Ma for garnet-free granulites. These results, combined with previous studies, suggest that this UHT event occurred prior to 2.68 Ga and underwent a prolonged cooling period during 2.67 to 2.54 Ga. One-dimensional thermal modelling results indicate that radiogenic heat production merely heated the rock to 640 °C at a depth of 35 km. Integrating metamorphic P-T-t paths with thermal calculation in the Pikwitonei Granulite Domain, we propose that this UHT event was probably triggered by extra mantle heat input from asthenospheric upwelling.

How to cite: Wang, X., Yin, C., Lin, S., Couëslan, C. G., and Qian, J.: Metamorphic evolution and tectonic significance of Archean ultrahigh-temperature mafic granulites from the Northwestern Superior Province, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7443, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7443, 2026.

Orogenic high-strain zones are fundamental features of the continental lithosphere. These structures accommodate plate convergence and influence the distribution of crustal deformation. However, the specific rheological processes that govern these zones across different tectonic settings remain a subject of investigation. Here, we integrate quantitative data from three distinct systems in China: the Hulin Complex (subduction), the Shangdan Shear Zone (collision), and the Diancang Shan (lateral extrusion). Our goal is to establish a grounded framework for how high-strain zones evolve. Our analysis shows that deformation follows a predictable path influenced by temperature, fluid activity, and strain partitioning.

We identify a consistent relationship between deformation style and kinematic vorticity (Wk). In the deep crust where temperatures exceed 650°C, deformation is characteristically diffuse. Data from the early Shangdan and Diancang Shan complexes indicate that this phase is dominated by pure shear (Wk =0.24–0.41). In these high-temperature regimes, pure shear contributes approximately 65% of the total strain. This mechanism facilitates vertical crustal thickening during the initial stages of plate interaction. As the crust cools to mid-crustal conditions between 300°C and 550°C, a mechanical transition occurs. Strain concentrates into narrow, high-strain paths. This localization coincides with a sharp increase in Wk to 0.53–0.74. This shift demonstrates that simple shear becomes the dominant mode for accommodating plate movement as the orogen matures.

Our integrated dataset suggests that these high-strain zones operate within a “stress window” of 10–50 MPa. Within this range, the crust adjusts its internal fabric to match tectonic driving forces. In subduction systems like the Hulin Complex, rapid slab rollback triggers thermal softening. This process drops differential stress to a minimum of 13–14 MPa and promotes regional extension. In contrast, collisional systems like the Shangdan Shear Zone support higher stresses between 33 and 45 MPa to drive mylonitization. We find that the transition from slow, diffuse flow to rapid, localized shear is non-linear. External factors often trigger this change. In the Shangdan Shear Zone, fluid influx acts as a catalyst. It increases strain rates by two orders of magnitude, from 10−15 to 10−13 s−1. Similarly, in the Diancang Shan, partial melting helps maintain high strain rates of 10−12 s−1 despite decreasing temperatures.

We conclude that high-strain zones function as dynamic features of the continental crust. They manage deformation by adjusting the ratio of pure shear to simple shear in response to the local thermal and fluid environment. Early-stage diffuse flow accommodates initial convergence through thickening. Later, localized simple shear facilitates lateral extrusion or exhumation. This mechanical flexibility allows the continental lithosphere to endure complex plate cycles. Our findings provide a quantitative framework for predicting how shear zones behave in active orogenic belts. These data bridge the gap between mineral-scale observations and large-scale tectonic processes.

How to cite: Zheng, H.: Rheological Evolution and Strain Partitioning in Orogenic High-Strain Zones: Constraints from Subduction to Collision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8705, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8705, 2026.

EGU26-9435 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

Redox and hydration evolution of Archean felsic magmatism in the North China Craton 

Yuanyuan Liu, Chao Wang, and Shuguang Song

The North China Craton (NCC) preserves geological records from the Eoarchean to the Neoarchean, providing a window into the secular evolution of Earth's early continental crust. By integrating zircon U-Pb-Hf-O isotopes, whole-rock geochemistry, and calculated magmatic physicochemical parameters (oxygen fugacity, fO2; water content, H2O) for felsic rocks from the NCC, we identify three distinct evolutionary stages marked by fundamental shifts in magmatic characteristics. The Paleo–Mesoarchean (~3.8–3.2 Ga) felsic rocks are dominated by sodic tonalite-trondhjemite-granodiorite (TTG) suite characterized by low K2O/Na2O ratios and high positive εHf(t) values. Their low magmatic fO2 (ΔFMQ –3 to 0) and H2O content (4–8 wt%) reflect partial melting of low-K juvenile sources under reduced and relatively dry conditions. A pivotal transition occurred during the mid-Mesoarchean (~3.0 Ga), with high K2O/Na2O ratios, elevated zircon εHf(t), increased whole-rock Nb/Ta ratios and a subtle rise in both magmatic fO2 and H2O. We attribute these signatures to an early pulse of crustal growth and recycling of subduction-related fluids. By the Neoarchean, the zircon εHf(t) values dropped significantly, indicating extensive crustal reworking, while zircon δ18O, magmatic fO2 and H2O rose dramatically (fO2:ΔFMQ -1.5 to +3; H2O: 6–16 wt%), comparable to modern arc magmas. These Neoarchean oxidized and hydrous felsic magmas were likely generated through effective water-fluxed melting of early-formed, underplated crust derived from the metasomatized mantle wedge. Notably, the redox and hydration evolution of the Archean crust in the NCC deviates from that of the global detrital zircon or TTGs records, suggesting that the onset of plate subduction could be diachronous across different cratons. Meanwhile, the convergence of these magmatic parameters at ~2.5 Ga marks a globally synchronous tectonic transition. Our findings also demonstrate that magmatic oxidation and hydration evolution could provide critical constraints on crust-mantle interactions.

How to cite: Liu, Y., Wang, C., and Song, S.: Redox and hydration evolution of Archean felsic magmatism in the North China Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9435, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9435, 2026.

EGU26-9557 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Geochemistry and tectonic setting of Neoproterozoic mafic rocks from the northern Tarim craton, NW China: Constraints for the evolution of the Rodinia supercontinent 

Jiakang Zheng, Qian Liu, DongHai Zhang, JiaHao Jing, Ming Cao, ChenYang Sun, and GuoChun Zhao

The Neoproterozoic mafic-ultramafic rocks exposed along the northern margin of the Tarim craton record the evolution of the Rodinia supercontinent and have been extensively studied. However, there has been long-lasting debates regarding the geodynamic processes responsible for these rocks. Some researchers suggested that the Neoproterozoic mafic-ultramafic intrusive rocks in northern Tarim may be the product of an independent mantle plume, whereas recent studies proposed that subduction process also contributed to the formation of these rocks. Different models have varying implications for the reconstruction of the Rodinia supercontinent, which further leads to the ambiguous paleogeographic position of the Tarim craton within the Rodinia supercontinent. Therefore, investigating the petrogenesis and tectonic setting of the Neoproterozoic intrusive rocks in the northern Tarim craton is crucial for constraining the paleogeographic location of the Tarim craton.

In this paper, we report whole-rock geochemical data of the ~810 Ma Quruqtagh mafic rocks and 660-600 Ma Aksu mafic rocks at the northeastern and northwestern margins of the Tarim craton, respectively, to evaluate their petrogenesis and tectonic setting. New findings provide constraints on the role and paleogeographic position of the Tarim craton during the Neoproterozoic evolution of the Rodinia supercontinent. The Quruqtagh Group I mafic rocks have OIB (oceanic island basalt) characteristics, including enrichments in light rare earth elements (LREEs; [La/Yb]N=11.6-12.2), no obvious Eu anomalies (Eu*=0.96-1.10), and relative enrichments in large ion lithophile elements (LILEs, e.g., Ba, Rb, Sr) and high field strength elements (HFSEs, e.g., Nb, Ta, Ti). Meanwhile, they show the relatively high Th/Yb (1.22-1.61), Nb/Yb (11.5-21.1), and low TiO2/Yb (0.51-0.66) ratios of the samples, within the OIB fields on the relevant discrimination diagrams. Accordingly, the Group I mafic rocks might have formed in an intracontinental extensional environment. In contrast, the Quruqtagh Group II mafic rocks have the characteristics of CAB (continental arc basalt). They are characterized by slight LREEs enrichments ([La/Yb]N = 1.25-2.49), relative enrichments of LILEs (e.g., Rb, Ba, Sr), and significant depletions in the HFSEs (e.g., Nb), suggesting that a continental arc setting.

Similar to the Quruqtagh Group I mafic rocks, the ~660-600 Ma Aksu mafic rocks exhibit OIB-like geochemical characteristics. They show significant LREEs enrichments ([La/Yb]N = 7.56-8.84) and slightly positive Eu anomalies (Eu* = 1.02-1.12). Their high Th/Yb (0.88-1.15) and TiO2/Yb (1.15-1.75) ratios and low Th/Nb (~0.1) ratios are akin to the OIB affinities. The Aksu mafic rocks display elevated Zr/Y ratios (6.58-8.89) and plot within the within-plate basalt fields on Ti-Zr-Y and Nb-Zr-Y discrimination diagrams, suggesting derivation from magmas generated in an intracontinental extensional setting.

The ~810 Ma Quruqtagh mafic rocks with both OIB and CAB characteristics, were probably subjected to subduction processes, and the 660-600 Ma Aksu OIB-like mafic rocks originated in an intracontinental extensional setting. Therefore, the northern margin of the Tarim craton likely experienced multiple episodes of subduction in the Neoproterozoic in response to the peripheral evolution of the Rodinia supercontinent.

This study was financially supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China project (grant 2024YFF0808000).

How to cite: Zheng, J., Liu, Q., Zhang, D., Jing, J., Cao, M., Sun, C., and Zhao, G.: Geochemistry and tectonic setting of Neoproterozoic mafic rocks from the northern Tarim craton, NW China: Constraints for the evolution of the Rodinia supercontinent, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9557, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9557, 2026.

EGU26-11399 | Orals | TS7.1 | Highlight

Importance of Eclogites from Cratonisation to the Phanerozoic Explosion of Onshore Life 

Hans Thybo, Bing Xia, Gaochun Wang, Zhipeng Zhou, and Irina Artemieva

Eclogite formation from lower crustal rocks requires high pressure at relatively low temperature in the presence of water. Due to the high temperature regime in the early Earth and the sparse observations of eclogitic rocks at the surface, it is generally expected that such rocks are rare in cratons. Our recent results show that large amounts of eclogitic lower crustal rocks are present below the seismic Moho in the Baltic Shield1. Such eclogites in various metamorphic grades may explain the high topography of the Scandes mountain range in northern Fennoscandia2. Our findings suggests that the amount of sub-Moho eclogite can be generally underestimated globally!

Eclogitization may also play a major role in plateau formation in Tibet, where new addition of mafic underplate to the overthickened crust may immediately transform into eclogite, which founder each time the eclogite layer exceeds a critical thickness3. The whole continental crust in the central Lhasa Block has low seismic velocity (<6.7 km/s), which indicates that this thickest crust on Earth is felsic down to the Moho at 80 km depth, explaining half the present topography by isostasy. However, underplating and partial melt in the crust are also required to explain the high elevation of the Tibetan Plateau and other major plateaux worldwide4.

By interpretation of >18,000 km of seismic profiles, we document that a mafic crustal layer is generally preserved in Proterozoic orogens but absent in Phanerozoic orogens5. This indicates a change in the global subduction style at the onset of the Phanerozoic, which caused massive eclogitization of lower crust in orogens and recycling of the eclogitic rocks into the mantle. The resulting buoyant felsic crust lifted continents above sea level, which enabled onshore life to develop, thus explaining the Neoproterozoic oxidation event and the explosion of life in the Phanerozoic.

1. Buntin, S. et al. Long-lived Paleoproterozoic eclogitic lower crust. Nature Communications 12 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-26878-5

2. Kahraman, M. et al. Northern Scandinavian mountains supported by a low-grade eclogitic crustal keel. Nat Commun 16, 606 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-55865-3

3. Wang, G., Thybo, H. & Artemieva, I. M. No mafic layer in 80 km thick Tibetan crust. Nature Communications 12, 1069 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21420-z

4. Zhou, Z., Thybo, H., Artemieva, I. M., Kusky, T. & Tang, C. C. Crustal melting and continent uplift by mafic underplating at convergent boundaries. Nat Commun 15, 9039 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-53435-7

5. Xia, B., Artemieva, I. M. & Thybo, H. Phanerozoic emergence of global continental collision and onset of massive crustal eclogitization. Geology 53 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1130/g52647.1

How to cite: Thybo, H., Xia, B., Wang, G., Zhou, Z., and Artemieva, I.: Importance of Eclogites from Cratonisation to the Phanerozoic Explosion of Onshore Life, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11399, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11399, 2026.

 

How to cite: Bader, T. and Li, J.: The Foping granulite–migmatite dome and the dichotomy of the Qinling–Dabie Orogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12645, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12645, 2026.

EGU26-12935 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Kinematics of the North China Block during Pangea Assembly and breakup in the Mantle Reference Frame and Their Implications for True Polar Wander 

Donghai Zhang, Baochun Huang, Wenhao Liu, Qian Zhao, Yigui Han, Jinlong Yao, Qian Liu, and Guochun Zhao

The North China Block (NCB), sandwitched between the Paleotethys and Paleo-Asian Ocean realms, played a pivotal role in the assembly and breakup of the Pangea supercontinent during the Paleozoic to Mesozoic. Yet the kinematic evolution of the NCB across the Pangea cycle—particularly its latitudinal drift, rotational behavior, and potential response to global-scale true polar wander (TPW)—remains debated due to data gaps in key intervals. We integrate new and published high-quality paleomagnetic data from the NCB spanning the Carboniferous to Jurassic to reconstruct its motion and assess TPW contributions. Our results show that the NCB resided at low paleolatitudes (~5–10°N) during the Late Carboniferous to the earliest Permian (~300 Ma), consistent with coeval equatorial faunal assemblages. Throughout the Permian, the NCB underwent persistent northward drift and clockwise rotation, culminating in the final closure of the Paleo-Asian Ocean by the Late Permian to Early Triassic. This trajectory aligns with the motion of Laurussia, indicating that the NCB had become an integral part of Pangea by the end of the Permian. In contrast, Early Jurassic volcanic rocks yield complex magnetization patterns with three distinct directional groups (shallow NW, moderate NE, and steep inclinations), suggesting either complicated response to the Jurassic Monstershift TPW event or multi-phase overprinting by regional tectonics. Critically, when compared with the apparent standstill of the adjacent Mongolia Block—which remained near ~30°N throughout the Carboniferous due to the counteraction between northward plate motion and southward TPW—the NCB’s steady northward migration provides a robust reference frame for isolating TPW signals in East Asia. We propose that the decoupled kinematics between the NCB and Mongolia during the Permo-Carboniferous reflects differential responses to the same TPW event, highlighting the necessity of multi-block analyses to disentangle plate tectonic motion from true polar wander in supercontinent cycles.

Keywords: North China Block; Pangea; Paleo-Asian Ocean; Paleomagnetism; True Polar Wander; Supercontinent cycle

Acknowledgments
This research is funded by the Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) (42372254), National Key R&D Program of China (2023YFF0803604, 2024YFF0808000)

 

How to cite: Zhang, D., Huang, B., Liu, W., Zhao, Q., Han, Y., Yao, J., Liu, Q., and Zhao, G.: Kinematics of the North China Block during Pangea Assembly and breakup in the Mantle Reference Frame and Their Implications for True Polar Wander, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12935, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12935, 2026.

EGU26-14629 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Critical evaluation of chemical mohometry 2: Correlated changes in geochemistry, fO2, and temperature in the Gangdese Arc 

Gloria Roman, Matthew J. Kohn, Armando Lopez, Chris Yakymchuk, and Allen F. Glazner

Crustal thickness represents a key parameter for understanding the geodynamic behavior and tectonic evolution of the continental crust, but its estimation remains challenging. Several trace element geochemical proxies in arc rocks have been proposed to infer crustal thickness, yet they do not account for other factors that also influence the chemistry of magmas, including oxygen fugacity (fO2), water fugacity, temperature and accessory mineral fractionation. Proxy calibrations also require significant averaging of data before robust correlations appear, leading to some preference for detrital zircon as a geochemical proxy because many data can be collected quickly.

The geochemistry and geochronology of the Gangdese arc in southern Tibet has been extensively studied, and several mohometry proxies have been tested using analyses in this region. In this study, we tested correlations among trace elements, temperature, and fO2 through analysis of detrital zircon in modern sands from the central region of the Gangdese arc. The geochemistry of detrital zircon has been shown previously to parallel whole-rock changes, so its geochemistry should serve as a mohometry proxy. LA-ICP-MS spot analyses simultaneously resolved U-Pb ages and trace element concentrations. Temporal changes in europium anomaly, Th/Yb, and Sm/Yb – all proposed as mohometers – were compared with previous zircon and whole-rock data, as well as with geochemical proxies for temperature (Ti proxy) and fO2 (Ce proxy).

With decreasing age from ~90 to ~15 Ma, zircon data show correlated changes with decreasing temperature and increasing Th/Yb, Eu anomaly, and fO2. Sm/Yb shows no clear trend through time, although all measurements correlate positively with temperature. Previously published whole-rock La/Yb shows large scatter in ~90 Ma samples, and a significant increase between ~55 and ~15 Ma, in parallel with Th/Yb, Eu anomaly, and fO2, and opposite temperature.

Although increases in La/Yb and Eu anomaly have previously been interpreted to indicate an increase in crustal thickness between at least ~60 Ma and ~15 Ma, our new data show these trends cannot be decoupled from correlated trends in fO2 and temperature. Thus, as yet, a trend in crustal thickness through time is not resolvable for the Gangdese arc and likely not for other locations, too. These observations highlight the need for methodological and theoretical improvements that correct for effects of other parameters that influence magma chemistry besides crustal thickness.

How to cite: Roman, G., Kohn, M. J., Lopez, A., Yakymchuk, C., and Glazner, A. F.: Critical evaluation of chemical mohometry 2: Correlated changes in geochemistry, fO2, and temperature in the Gangdese Arc, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14629, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14629, 2026.

EGU26-14780 | Orals | TS7.1

Critical evaluation of chemical mohometry 1: Calibration datasets and influences of intensive parameters on arc magma geochemistry 

Matthew Kohn, Gloria Roman, Armando Lopez, Chris Yakymchuk, and Allen Glazner

Chemical mohometry refers to the use of the geochemistry of arc magmas and/or magmatic minerals to infer depth to the Moho. This increasingly popular method in tectonics research relies on correlations between Moho depth and either trace element concentrations or their ratios, e.g., Hf, Ba, Sr/Y, La/Yb, Th/Yb, europium anomaly (Eu/Eu*), etc. These correlations are widely viewed to reflect depth-dependent changes to mineral stabilities, especially for feldspar and garnet. Here, we revisit the foundational whole-rock datasets to assess the influence of data scatter on calibrations. We also assess the effects of the following factors that influence mineral stabilities and melt geochemistry: oxygen fugacity (fO2), water fugacity (fH2O), temperature, and fractional crystallization of major and accessory minerals.

 

The following, depth-independent behaviors are evident:

  • Data scatter is large – a single Moho depth is typically represented by 50-75% of the global range in a single trace element concentration or ratio. Calibrations are statistically robust only after averaging hundreds of data points.
  • Different arcs have systematically different compositions, even at the same Moho depth, leading to systematic errors of ~10 km for some systems.
  • Increasing fH2O can depress plagioclase stability by 200 °C and increase garnet stability by hundreds of MPa. These changes to mineral stabilities strongly influence alkaline earth and rare-earth element concentrations and ratios (e.g., Sr/Y, La/Yb, etc.).
  • Increasing fO2 changes mineral assemblages and modes, and generally increases Eu/Eu* and apparent Moho depth.
  • Increasing temperature changes melt fraction and mineralogy, and can strongly influence Sr/Y, La/Yb, Th/Yb, and (at low pressure) Eu/Eu*.
  • Crystallization of accessory minerals, especially titanite, can strongly increase La/Yb. Sr/Y, and Eu/Eu* in separated liquids, leading to spuriously increasing calculated Moho depth.
  • Realistic variations in fO2, fH2O, temperature, and fractionation can each shift calculated Moho depth by 10-20 km.

 

These behaviors lead to the following conclusions:

  • Application of mohometry to the rock record should average hundreds of measurements per time slice. Such large datasets are rarely available, and may not be feasible to collect.
  • Concurrent changes to temperature, fO2, and fH2O should be quantified, otherwise uncertainties in either calculated Moho depth or changes to Moho depth through time are tens of km.
  • Crystallization sequences in genetically related magmas should be assessed to determine whether crystallization of trace phases affects trace-element concentrations and ratios used for mohometry.
  • Systematic sampling errors are difficult to avoid and lead to systematic but unknown errors in estimated Moho depth.
  • Extremely large datasets (hundreds of measurements per time slice) are rare, and simultaneous changes to fO2, fH2O, temperature, and melt fractionation are difficult to estimate. Consequently, future success in mohometry will require major streamlining of data collection and development of routine geochemical proxies for intensive parameters.
  • Calculations to date of Moho depth using geochemical mohometry do not consider covariation in intensive parameters, melt fractionation, and/or sampling errors, so should be viewed as unreliable.

How to cite: Kohn, M., Roman, G., Lopez, A., Yakymchuk, C., and Glazner, A.: Critical evaluation of chemical mohometry 1: Calibration datasets and influences of intensive parameters on arc magma geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14780, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14780, 2026.

EGU26-15297 | Orals | TS7.1

The Miocene tectonic transform of the South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS), eastern Himalayan 

Hanwen Dong, Zhuo Tang, Rongze Fei, Yuting Song, and Lingen Zeng

The compressional collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates has formed an extensive continental deformation zone and the Himalayan orogen belt, generating several east-west trending giant fault zones. Among these predominantly thrust fault zones, the South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS) is the only normal fault, extending over 2000 kilometers, and thus has become the largest single existing detachment fault system in the world . The STDS sharply separates the shallow un-metamorphosed or weakly metamorphosed Tethyan Himalayan Sequence (THS) from the deep high-grade metamorphosed, partially melted Greater Himalayan Crystalline Complex (GHC). The emergence of the STDS has revised the traditional view that compression and extension cannot coexist. During the entire Himalayan orogenic process, it has played a crucial controlling role in mountain uplift, the exhumation of high-grade metamorphic rocks at the root of the orogen, and the formation and migration of leucogranites. With the advancement and widespread application of high-pressure experiments, phase equilibrium simulation calculations, EBSD fabric analysis, and in-situ trace element-isotope dating techniques, significant progress has been achieved in STDS research, while new questions have also been raised. This study systematically reviews the new progress and existing controversies regarding the STDS and the Himalayan orogenic process, covering key aspects such as the active period of the STDS, genetic mechanisms, its relationship with leucogranites, and the geometry and kinematics of the Tethyan Himalayan D′ecollement (THD). By using multi-isotopic geochronology, the activity period of THD is determined, which further restricts the transition time from the southward movement of THD to the northward movement of STDS.

Acknowledge

This work was supported by the Deep Earth Probe and Mineral Resources Exploration - National Science and Technology Major Project (Grant No. 2024ZD1001006) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42472285, U2444202) and the Basic Research Fund of the State Key Laboratory of Deep Earth and Mineral Exploration (JKYDM2025203).

How to cite: Dong, H., Tang, Z., Fei, R., Song, Y., and Zeng, L.: The Miocene tectonic transform of the South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS), eastern Himalayan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15297, 2026.

EGU26-16032 | Orals | TS7.1

Modes of continental lithosphere destruction 

Yang Chu, Wei Lin, Ling Chen, Bo Wan, Michel Faure, and Mark B. Allen

Recent observations have challenged the traditional view that most continental lithosphere remains largely stable and maintains its primary structure following formation. It is now evident that in both convergent systems and mantle plume settings, continental lithosphere can be extensively destructed. This occurs through mechanical deformation or melt-rock interaction, leading to processes such as delamination or dripping of the lower lithospheric mantle. In this work, we focus on the convergent systems along the Tethyan Belt to examine the specific modes of continental lithosphere destruction and the factors or settings that govern the evolution of continental deformation.

As a weak overriding continent, the Central Iran Block has been greatly reworked by the collision between the Arabia and Eurasia, resulting in a nascent orogenic plateau. Through this process, continental deformation is initially localized within weak zones-the Alborz and Zagros belts-before gradually becoming more homogeneous to form a small, low-altitude plateau.

Acting as a rigid overriding continent, the South China Block underwent a protracted subduction of the Paleo-Pacific Plate, which triggered cyclical contraction and extension events in the Mesozoic. Within a single cycle, compression weakens the east margin of the thick continental lithosphere beneath the western South China Block; subsequent extension then destructs this part, leaving a thinned lithosphere. This progressive destruction model illustrates how a rigid continent responds to a continuous subduction setting.

Another example of a rigid overriding continent is the east North China Craton. Unlike South China, this region was modified during the Triassic continent collision. During this event, continent subduction bulldozed the lithosphere mantle and low crust of North China and then rebuilt it with materials of the subducting plate.

In summary, the process of continent destruction depends on the structure of the overriding plate and the stage of convergence (subduction vs. collision).

(1) Intensity of destruction: Continental destruction is generally more intense during collision than during subduction.

(2) Stress distribution: Stress tends to be localized during the early stages of continental destruction but gradually becomes more homogenized as collision progresses.

(3) Rigid continent dynamics: In rigid continents, destruction typically initiates at the border of the lithospheric root via delamination or dripping. Within episodic subduction/collision systems, this destruction can become cyclical, significantly reducing the overall size of the rigid continental lithosphere.

How to cite: Chu, Y., Lin, W., Chen, L., Wan, B., Faure, M., and Allen, M. B.: Modes of continental lithosphere destruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16032, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16032, 2026.

EGU26-16299 | ECS | Orals | TS7.1

What drove the delayed breakup of Nuna during Earth’s Middle Age?  

Ziyi Zhu, Peter Cawood, Ian Campbell, and Ryan McKenzie

Earth’s Middle Age (1.8-0.8 Ga) witnessed prolonged stability of the Nuna supercontinent, yet its breakup history remains enigmatic. We analyse the spatiotemporal evolution of arc and anorogenic magmatism, sedimentary deposition, and large igneous provinces (LIPs) emplacement during this period. Our results reveal that retreating accretionary orogens and back-arc extension occurred along the Laurentia-Baltic margins of Nuna from around 1.8 Ga to 1.5 Ga. The retreating mode was likely linked to elevated mantle temperatures, which, as supported by numerical models, enhanced rapid slab rollback and formation of wide back-arc basins. Importantly, LIPs during this interval were predominantly confined to Nuna’s margins, while widespread intracontinental plumes only emerged at 1.4-1.3 Ga. We propose that Nuna’s breakup was delayed until this time because earlier subduction delivered cold, dense oceanic lithosphere to the core-mantle boundary, inhibiting the rise of hot mantle plumes beneath the supercontinent. Only after this material was sufficiently heated could buoyant, hot mantle plumes rise beneath the continental blocks and drive fragmentation. This protracted stability maintained a warm upper mantle status, which weakened the continental lithosphere and reduced surface erosion, linking deep geodynamic processes to the environmental stasis of the ‘Boring Billion’.

How to cite: Zhu, Z., Cawood, P., Campbell, I., and McKenzie, R.: What drove the delayed breakup of Nuna during Earth’s Middle Age? , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16299, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16299, 2026.

A pattern of asynchronous uplift influenced drainage reorganization in the North Ordos Basin (NOB) of central China in Triassic times. In this study, the source-sink system of the NOB was reconstructed, and the source area was identified, based on an analysis of petrology, geochronology, and palaeocurrent direction analysis, offering a new perspective on the interaction between deep tectonic processes and surface responses in the northern part of the North China Block (N-NCB). Our zircon age data reveal three prominent peaks for the Palaeoproterozoic, Mesoproterozoic, and Upper Palaeozoic, suggesting that the N-NCB may have acted as the source area for the NOB. During the Late Triassic interval, increased zircon ages (1500–1800 Ma) indicate an enhanced influx of detrital material from the central N-NCB. Furthermore, analysis of thin sections and petrographic modal com[1]positions indicates a change in source areas from solely recycled orogenic sources to a combination of recycled orogenic and magmatic arc sources. The youngest zircon ages (~233.6 Ma) from the tuffaceous siltstone mark this transition, with palaeocurrent data supporting a change in the source area from the western to the central N[1]NCB after this time. This transition underscores the impact of the asynchronous uplift of the N-NCB on the source-to-sink system of the NOB, providing an innovative perspective for reconstructing the southward sub[1]duction process of the Okhotsk Plate and associated back-arc extension along the N-NCB.

How to cite: Xu, Y., He, D., Li, D., and Huang, H.: Triassic evolution of source-to-sink drainage systems in the North Ordos Basin of central China: Impact of asynchronous uplift history, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16316, 2026.

The origin and tectonic regime of Jurassic granites in Southeast (SE) China have remained controversial for decades. This study focuses on the granites exposed in Fogang and Xinxing Batholiths in central Guangdong and conducts geochemical and geochronological analyses of whole-rock and zircon. Mineralogical and geochemical data show that these granites are high-K calc-alkaline I-type granites. SIMS U-Pb dating on magmatic zircons yields consistent 206Pb/238U ages ranging from 158 Ma to 163 Ma, suggesting that these granites were emplaced during this period. Whole-rock Sr-Nd isotopic analysis reveal that these granites are characterized by initial Sr87/Sr86 ratios of 0.6802 to 0.7072 and negative εNd(t) values of -9.5 to -8.2. In addition, in-situ zircon Hf-O isotopic analysis shows negative εHf(t) values of -12.34 to -0.56 and high δ18O values of 7.64 ‰ to 10.08 ‰. Above characteristics suggest that these granites were probably formed by mixing supracrustal sedimentary components with minor mantle-derived magma. Thus, the granites from the Fogang and Xinxing Batholiths in SE China are interpreted to have been generated by the reworking of Proterozoic crust triggered by asthenosphere upwelling or mafic magma underplating. These Jurassic granites represent anorogenic magmatism, probably generated in an intraplate extensional setting due to the flat slab foundering beneath SE China.

How to cite: Lai, Z., Yin, C., and Qian, J.: Geochemical and Sr–Nd–Pb–Hf–O isotopic compositions of Jurassic granites in central Guangdong, SE China: Constraints on petrogenesis and tectonic setting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16523, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16523, 2026.

The geodynamic mechanism that shaped the growth and evolution of Neoarchean continental crust has always been controversial. Here, we employ mercury (Hg) isotopes to investigate the petrogenesis of 3.1–2.5 Ga granitoids from the North China Craton (NCC). Samples older than 2.6 Ga exhibit near-zero 199Hg values (−0.1 to 0.1‰), consistent with derivation from primitive mantle or reworked Eo–Paleoarchean crust. In contrast, those emplaced at 2.6–2.5 Ga display bimodal Δ199Hg signatures, reflecting dual mercury sources: primitive mantle (near-zero Δ199Hg) and recycled marine Hg (positive Δ199Hg). The 199Hg turnover around 2.6–2.5 Ga reject meteorite-impact, heat-pipe, and sagduction models for late Neoarchean NCC evolution and instead support subduction-driven tectonics as the dominant mechanism for surface-material recycling and crustal growth.

How to cite: Chang, R.:  Mercury isotopic turnover in 2.6–2.5 Ga granitoids: Evidence of oceanic subduction on late Neoarchean Earth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17017, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17017, 2026.

The Gaozhou region is situated in the southwestern Cathaysia Block of South China and represents the core of the Yunkai Terrane. Field geological mapping at a scale of 1:50,000 was undertaken for this study, coupled with geochemical analysis of both garnet-bearing and garnet-free biotite-plagioclase gneisses. Detailed petrography, mineral chemistry, and phase equilibrium modeling were further performed on garnet-biotite-plagioclase gneisses. Analytical results reveal that both garnet-bearing and garnet-free biotite-plagioclase gneisses share common geochemical features: high SiO₂ and Al₂O₃ contents, low TiO₂ content, low Na₂O/K₂O and Fe₂O₃T/K₂O ratios, high (La/Yb)N ratios, and negative Eu anomalies. These rocks are also depleted in Nb, Ta, Zr, and Hf, while showing enrichment in large-ion lithophile elements (LILEs) such as Rb, Th, and U. The inferred protolith is a sequence of clay-bearing greywacke with minor intercalated arkose, classifying it as a paragneiss. Based on petrological observations, two stages of metamorphic assemblage development in the garnet-biotite-plagioclase gneiss are identified: the peak assemblage of Grt+Pl+Bt+Kfs+Ms+L+Qz and the retrograde assemblage of Pl+Bt+Kfs+Ms+Qz. Constraints from mineral composition and phase equilibrium modeling yielded peak P-T conditions of 740-750 °C and 1.15-1.2 GPa, and the rocks subsequently experienced retrograde conditions below 650 °C. These findings define a clockwise P-T path involving cooling and decompression after the peak stage, indicative of an early crustal thickening event followed by rapid exhumation or uplift. Existing geochronological data place the timing of metamorphism in the Cathaysia Block during 460-400 Ma. Consequently, the metamorphic basement in the Gaozhou region recorded Early Paleozoic high-pressure amphibolite-facies metamorphism, revealing that the Yunkai Terrane was involved in the Caledonian crustal thickening event.

How to cite: Chen, D., Yin, C., Qian, J., and Wang, X.: Protolith attributes, metamorphic P-T evolution of the metamorphic basement in the Gaozhou region, western Guangdong: Implications for Early Paleozoic tectonic dynamics of South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17371, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17371, 2026.

The North China Craton, as one of the oldest cratons globally, preserves a complete record of Neoarchean (2.7–2.5 Ga) crustal evolution in its western Yinshan Block. However, there remains controversy regarding the late Neoarchean crustal evolution process and geodynamic setting of the Yinshan Block. Therefore, this study focuses on the rock assemblages in the Wuchuan Xiwulanbulang, Zhulagou, Hongshanzi, and Guyang areas of the Yinshan Block, including TTG gneisses, dioritic gneisses, and monzogranitic gneisses, as well as metamorphic mafic rocks (komatiites, komatiitic basalts, and tholeiites) in the Hongshanzi area. Systematic petrological, geochronological, whole-rock geochemical, and Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf isotopic studies were conducted on these rocks. Combined with previous research findings, we propose that the Neoarchean crustal evolution of the Yinshan Block can be divided into three stages: (1) (~2.7 Ga) dominated by mantle-derived magma underplating and initial continental crust formation, resulting in thickened mafic lower crust and minor TTG rocks; (2) (~2.7–2.53 Ga) characterized by the large-scale formation of TTG rocks and dioritic rock assemblages. The TTG rocks exhibit high (La/Yb)N and Sr/Y ratios, low MgO, Ni, Cr, and Mg# contents, and positive zircon εHf(t) and εNd(t) values. Their geochemical and isotopic features indicate derivation from partial melting of thickened mafic lower crust. The dioritic rocks display geochemical characteristics similar to Archean sanukitoids, likely originating from partial melting of thickened mafic lower crust with minor mantle input. (3) (~2.53–2.50 Ga) marked by the mixing and partial melting of earlier-formed TTG rocks and ancient crust, leading to the formation of potassium-rich granites, signifying the completion of cratonization.

Current understanding of the Neoarchean geodynamic regime in the Yinshan Block remains debated: (1) Some scholars have discovered Neoarchean high-Mg andesites (Archean sanukitoids) and high-Mg basalt-rhyolite bimodal suites in the region, suggesting that Neoarchean crustal growth in the Yinshan Block was primarily driven by plate subduction; (2) Other researchers argue that Neoarchean crustal growth in the Yinshan Block occurred mainly under a mantle plume regime. This study first reports a suite of late Neoarchean (~2.53 Ga) metamorphic mafic rocks in the Hongshanzi area. Through comprehensive petrological analysis, whole-rock geochemistry, and Nd-Hf isotopic analysis, these metamorphic mafic rocks are likely to have formed in a tectonic environment involving mantle plume-ridge interaction. Therefore, integrating the geochemical characteristics of coeval TTG gneisses, dioritic gneisses, and potassium-rich granitic gneisses, we propose that Neoarchean crustal growth in the Yinshan Block was primarily driven by mantle plume activity.

How to cite: Wang, X.: Late Neoarchean magmatic evolution and tectonic significance in the southern margin of the Yinshan Block, North China Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17556, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17556, 2026.

EGU26-18167 | Orals | TS7.1

Coupled S-Si isotopes reveal supracrustal origin of Archean continental crusts 

kun shang, Jian Zhang, Zaicong Wang, Ian Cawood, Yawen Cui, Ming Li, Ruihong Chang, Yanan Shen, and Guochun Zhao

The Archean continental crust, dominated by tonalite–trondhjemite–granodiorite (TTG) suites, is widely interpreted to have formed through partial melting of a hydrous mafic protolith. However, the nature of this protolith remains highly debated. Proposed sources include hydrothermally altered supracrustal basalts recycled to melting depths, as well as unaltered, mantle-derived gabbros emplaced into the lower crust by mantle plumes. Silicon and quadruple sulfur isotopes are powerful discriminants between these scenarios because they directly trace the relative supracrustal contributions to felsic continental crust. Here, we integrate whole-rock silicon and quadruple sulfur isotopes data from Neoarchean granitoids in the North China Craton to constrain the origin and evolution of their mafic protoliths. These granitoids display non-chondritic Δ³³S (to ~−0.06‰) and elevated δ³⁰Si (−0.09‰ to −0.05‰), which indicate supracrustal origin and contrast with previously reported mantle-like zircon δ¹⁸O values. A global compilation of Δ³³S and δ³⁰Si data shows that granitoids formed after 3.8 Ga consistently exhibit enriched δ³⁰Si and non-zero Δ³³S. Together, these observations indicate that Archean continental crust was generated by partial melting of supracrustal basalt rather than unmodified mafic cumulates.

How to cite: shang, K., Zhang, J., Wang, Z., Cawood, I., Cui, Y., Li, M., Chang, R., Shen, Y., and Zhao, G.: Coupled S-Si isotopes reveal supracrustal origin of Archean continental crusts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18167, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18167, 2026.

EGU26-18244 | Orals | TS7.1

Late Paleozoic magmatism set the stage for the present-day lower crust of West Tianshan, SW CAOB 

He Huang, Tao Wang, Daniel Gómez-Frutos, and Antonio Castro

The deep lithosphere influences mineral resource distribution and the planet’s habitability, yet probing its architecture remains challenging. The present-day lithospheric architecture is a terminal, time-integrated image shaped by long-term geological processes, among which magmatism plays a pivotal role. However, the exact relationship between ancient magmatic events and present-day lithospheric architecture has not been fully explored. In this study, we investigate Late Carboniferous to Middle Permian magmatic rocks in West Tianshan, SW Central Asian Orogenic Belt, using multi-proxy isotopic and elemental mapping and thermodynamic phase equilibrium modeling. Using radiogenic (Hf-Nd) isotope spatial imaging, we here show that felsic rocks constitute two distinct domains: an isotopically depleted domain (IDD) to the north and an isotopically enriched domain (IED) to the south. The two domains correspond well to differences in geophysical properties revealed by seismic and gravity data. The lower crust of IDD was built by magmatic differentiation of intermediate magmas sourced from an oceanic subduction-modified mantle. In contrast, the lower crust of IED was constructed through the differentiation of sanukitoid magmas derived from an ancient crust-metasomatized mantle, with variable-degree involvement of Tarim supracrustal relaminant. These findings directly link geophysical contrasts in the lithosphere to variations in deep-time magmatism, including mantle source heterogeneity and lower crustal differentiation. The study suggests that ancient magmatic rocks cannot only provide fresh insights into the dynamic processes that have shaped the lithosphere over geological time scales, but also be powerful proxies to understand present-day lithospheric architecture.

How to cite: Huang, H., Wang, T., Gómez-Frutos, D., and Castro, A.: Late Paleozoic magmatism set the stage for the present-day lower crust of West Tianshan, SW CAOB, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18244, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18244, 2026.

EGU26-19275 | Orals | TS7.1

From Deep Residence to Rapid Exhumation: Constraints on the ~1.81 Ga Collapse of the Trans-North China Orogen from the Zanhuang Complex 

Wen Zhang, Pinghua Liu, Lei Zou, Lilin Du, Chonghui Yang, and Guochun Zhao

The Paleoproterozoic Trans-North China Orogen (TNCO) is central to understanding the assembly of the North China Craton and the Columbia supercontinent. However, whether the metamorphic variations across the TNCO reflect diachronous tectonic events or differential exhumation processes remains a subject of ongoing debate. This study investigates the Daqian garnet-bearing amphibolites from the Zanhuang Complex to constrain the P–T–t evolution of the central TNCO.

Phase equilibria modeling reveals a well-preserved clockwise P–T trajectory characterized by peak high-pressure (HP) amphibolite-facies metamorphism (M2: 1.32–1.63 GPa, 715–750 °C), followed by near-isothermal decompression (M3: 0.61–0.88 GPa, 680–718 °C). Multi-mineral LA-ICP-MS U–Pb geochronology uncovers a significant temporal decoupling between peak and cooling stages: metamorphic zircons record the peak collision at ~1.87 Ga, whereas titanite, rutile, and apatite yield convergent cooling ages at ~1.81 Ga.

Our data indicate that the terrane experienced a prolonged deep-crustal stagnation (~60 Myr) with negligible cooling (<1 °C/Myr), followed by a pulse of extremely rapid exhumation (~22.5 °C/Myr) at ~1.81 Ga. We argue that the Zanhuang Complex underwent synchronous collision at ~1.87 Ga with the rest of the TNCO. Consequently, the observed regional metamorphic variations are not a result of diachronous tectonic arrival but rather reflect differential exhumation and isostatic rebound following lithospheric delamination. This rapid ~1.81 Ga event marks the definitive gravitational collapse of the orogen, providing new insights into the terminal stages of Paleoproterozoic orogenesis.

How to cite: Zhang, W., Liu, P., Zou, L., Du, L., Yang, C., and Zhao, G.: From Deep Residence to Rapid Exhumation: Constraints on the ~1.81 Ga Collapse of the Trans-North China Orogen from the Zanhuang Complex, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19275, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19275, 2026.

Mountain-building processes typically involve complex tectonic evolution marked by multiple episodes of metamorphism and deformation. Accurately constraining the timing of individual deformation events is essential for reconstructing tectonic history and deciphering geodynamic processes. However, structural overprinting, polymetamorphism, and the scarcity of datable minerals often hinder conventional geochronological methods from isolating and dating discrete deformation phases. In this study, we employ 40Ar/39Ar stepwise crushing geochronology on fluid inclusions within syn‑kinematic tourmaline from leucogranite dykes and quartz veins in the Chinese Altai orogen. As a key tectonic unit in central Asia, this orogen has a well‑established deformation, magmatic, and metamorphic geochronological framework, including Devonian and Permian reworking events, making it an ideal natural laboratory for validating dating results. Tourmaline, a chemically robust borosilicate with low potassium content and abundant fluid inclusions, is widely distributed in deformed terranes. Owing to its higher K/Ar isotopic closure temperature compared to micas and K‑feldspars, tourmaline represents an ideal mineral for 40Ar/39Ar geochronology targeting fluid inclusions.
Based on detailed structural and petrological constraints, three sets of syn‑kinematic tourmaline samples were analyzed via 40Ar/39Ar stepwise crushing:
Tur I: Oriented tourmaline crystals within Devonian rigid leucogranitic dykes, aligned parallel to the Permian (D3) fold axial plane. These tourmalines formed from high-temperature boron‑rich fluids derived from dehydration of surrounding metasedimentary rocks, which infiltrated tensile gaps generated during shortening of the earlier rigid dyke, and are interpreted as syn‑D3 axial‑planar tourmaline. 
Tur II: Disordered tourmaline from a syn‑D3 axial‑planar leucogranitic dyke, formed by melt injection into tensional gaps during compression of the rigid metasedimentary country rocks. The tourmalines represent a syn‑magmatic crystallization product from boron‑rich melts.
Tur III: Undeformed tourmaline occurring near the contact between a syn‑D3 axial‑planar quartz vein and its host Devonian leucogranitic dyke. The quartz veins formed by fluid injection into tensile gaps during the D3 event, and the tourmaline likely crystallized during fluid-rock interaction.
The three tourmaline sets yielded well‑defined 40Ar/39Ar plateau ages from primary fluid inclusions (PFIs) of approximately 320 Ma, 275 Ma, and 260 Ma. The PFI ages are consistent with 40Ar/39Ar step‑heating ages obtained from the crushed tourmaline powder, which primarily record argon released from the mineral lattice and thus correspond to the crystallization age of tourmaline. These results indicate that the Permian deformation initiated around ~320 Ma and continued until ~260 Ma, which aligns well with the established geochronological framework for Permian reworking in the Chinese Altai. Our study demonstrates that 40Ar/39Ar dating of fluid inclusions directly constrains the timing of tourmaline crystallization and the associated deformation. This approach overcomes limitations of traditional geochronometers by targeting deformation‑related fluids rather than recording cooling ages. The findings highlight tourmaline fluid inclusion geochronology as a powerful tool for directly dating tectonic events, particularly in reworked terranes where conventional methods face challenges. This technique offers a novel approach to reconstructing orogenic histories within complex metamorphic belts.

How to cite: Xiao, M. and Zhao, G.: Constraining deformation timing in orogenic systems with fluid inclusion 40Ar/39Ar geochronology of syn-tectonic tourmaline, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19622, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19622, 2026.

Oceanic arcs are crucial sites for producing new continental crust. However, how the continental crust has acquired its bulk “andesitic to dacitic” compositions is not well understood. To address this issue, we carry out an integrated study for granitoids from the East Junggar oceanic arc, Central Asian Orogenic Belt. All the granitoid samples with ages of 332–280 Ma have high SiO2 but low MgO contents, indicating a dominant crustal source. Based on zircon O isotopes, these granitoids can be divided into three groups: Group I (5.0 ± 0.46‰, 2SD), Group II (8.6 ± 0.47‰ to 9.4 ± 0.52‰, 2SD) and Group III (6.8 ± 0.36‰ to 7.4 ± 0.48‰, 2SD) with mantle-like, elevated and intermediate zircon δ18O ratios, respectively. The formation of Group I granitoids can be ascribed to partial melting of juvenile mafic crust, while Group II and III granitoids were likely derived from a mixed source of juvenile mafic crust and supracrustal rocks in variable proportions. Combined with their depleted mantle-like zircon εHf(t) values (+11.6 to +13.5), it is inferred that these supracrustal rocks were mainly isotopically unevolved, immature volcanogenic sediments. The zircon Hf–O isotope array is compatible with mixing between juvenile mafic crust and supracrustal volcanics (40–70% for Group II and 20–40% for Group III) in their magma sources. The incorporation of supracrustal rocks into such high-δ18O granitoids was likely associated with fore-/intra-arc basin closure triggered by arc–arc collision. Our results thus highlight the role of supracrustal recycling induced by collisional events in driving the compositional differentiation of oceanic arc crust from basaltic to felsic.

How to cite: Zhang, Y. and Huang, R.: Maturation of East Junggar oceanic arc related to supracrustal recycling driven by arc-arc collision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20976, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20976, 2026.

EGU26-21728 | Orals | TS7.1

Crustal structure and tectonic inheritance in the eastern Yangtze Craton: Reworking history of a buried Paleoproterozoic orogenic belt 

Qin Wang, Wenbin Jiang, Xiao Deng, Gaofeng Ye, Yueqiao Zhang, Shuwen Dong, and Rui Gao

After subduction of the oceanic plate and continental collision, ancient orogenic belts could be reactivated as intracontinental orogens or rift zones. These intracontinental weak zones often experienced multiphase deformation, magmatism, erosion and sedimentation, which raise ambiguity in interpretation of geological records. The Xuefengshan belt in central South China is generally regarded as the Early Neoproterozoic collision zone between the Yangtze and Cathaysia blocks, and behaved as the western boundary of the widespread Mesozoic deformation and magmatism in South China. However, recent study found SE-dipping mantle reflections beneath the eastern Yangtze Craton, suggesting a fossil subduction zone during the assembly of the Yangtze Craton. Here we combined a 2400-m-deep borehole in the Xuefengshan belt, high-resolution deep seismic and electrical structures, rock physics, and geological data to investigate the crustal structure of the eastern Yangtze Craton. Our results confirm the buried Paleoproterozoic orogen beneath Neoproterozoic strata of the eastern Yangtze Craton. The variations of the Moho depth and the lithospheric thickness, distribution of seismic reflections, low velocity anomalies and high conductivity anomalies in the Xuefengshan belt reveal multiple reworking events, including the Neoproterozoic intracontinental rifting and crustal thinning, the Triassic thrusting, magma underplating and granite intrusion, the basement-involved fold-and-thrust belt in the Mid-Late Jurassic, as well as crustal extension and graben development in the Cretaceous. Therefore, the Xuefengshan belt provides a unique example how tectonic inheritance controlled crustal reworking of an intracontinental orogenic belt.

How to cite: Wang, Q., Jiang, W., Deng, X., Ye, G., Zhang, Y., Dong, S., and Gao, R.: Crustal structure and tectonic inheritance in the eastern Yangtze Craton: Reworking history of a buried Paleoproterozoic orogenic belt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21728, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21728, 2026.

EGU26-21874 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Tracing Magmatic Redox Evolution Through Earth's History Using Zircon Geochemistry 

Xiangsong Wang, Guouchun Zhao, and Dingyi Zhao

The redox state of magmas serves as a key indicator of Earth's evolutionary processes, recording pivotal events such as changes in atmospheric composition, the emergence of life, and major tectonic shifts. This study utilizes zircon oxygen fugacity (ΔFMQ), an igneous oxybarometer, to explore the temporal variations in magma redox states across Earth's history. We find that the zircon ΔFMQ declines from 4.2–3.8 Ga, likely reflecting the Late Heavy Bombardment. A subsequent increase in ΔFMQ from 3.8–3.0 Ga is linked to processes such as water recycling in supracrustal materials and the thickening of continental crust. After 2.5 Ga, fluctuating ΔFMQ trends mirror the cycles of supercontinent formation, where introversion involves the subduction of reduced sediments from interior oceans, and extraversion involves oxidized sediments from exterior oceans. Our findings demonstrate the power of zircon ΔFMQ as a tool for tracing magma redox evolution, shedding light on significant geological processes and their timing in Earth's history.

How to cite: Wang, X., Zhao, G., and Zhao, D.: Tracing Magmatic Redox Evolution Through Earth's History Using Zircon Geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21874, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21874, 2026.

EGU26-21933 | ECS | Posters on site | TS7.1

Deep-Mantle Water Transport into the Continental Crust: Insights from Zircon Water and Hf-O Isotopes in Granulite Xenoliths 

Dingyi Zhao, Guochun Zhao, and Xiangsong Wang

Earth’s deep water cycle plays a fundamental role in plate tectonics, magmatism, and crustal differentiation. This study investigates the pathways and mechanisms of water transport from Earth’s interior to the continental crust by analyzing zircon water contents, U-Pb-Hf-O isotopes, and whole-rock geochemistry from granulite xenoliths in the Tuoyun Basin, Western Tianshan. We identified three distinct zircon generations: Neoproterozoic protolith zircons (~800-600 Ma) with high water contents (median: ~404 ppm), Paleozoic-Mesozoic metamorphic zircons (~600-100 Ma) showing pronounced water depletion (median: ~55 ppm), and Cretaceous-Paleogene host-basalt zircons (median: ~166 ppm). The elevated water contents and mantle-like δ18O values in the protolith and host-basalt zircons, combined with positive Nb-Ta anomalies and enriched Hf isotopes, indicate that the parental magmas were likely derived from a hydrous mantle transition zone rather than supracrustal sources. We propose a novel two-stage transport model where hydrous mantle-derived magmas first underplated the lower crust to form the protolith; subsequent granulite-facies metamorphism then dehydrated these rocks with a calculated efficiency of ~86%, releasing fluids that ascended to trigger mid-crustal water-fluxed melting and granitic magmatism. These findings provide direct geochemical evidence that granulite dehydration in the lower crust is a critical link in the deep-water cycle, facilitating the transport of mantle-derived water to the surface and driving the progressive maturation of the continental crust.

Acknowledgement: This study was financially supported by funding from the National Natural Science Foundation of China Major Project (41890831), the University of Hong Kong (HKU) Internal Grants for Member of Chinese Academy of Sciences (102009906) and for Distinguished Research Achievement Award (102010100), the Hong Kong RGC grants (JLFS/P-702/24 and 17308023), and the National Key Research and Development Program of China (2023YFF0803804).

How to cite: Zhao, D., Zhao, G., and Wang, X.: Deep-Mantle Water Transport into the Continental Crust: Insights from Zircon Water and Hf-O Isotopes in Granulite Xenoliths, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21933, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21933, 2026.

EGU26-22730 | Orals | TS7.1

Amphibole enrichment weakens the mid-to-lower crust of southern Tibet 

Junfeng Zhang and Xiong Wang

A mechanically weak mid-to-lower crust is widely invoked to explain plateau uplift, lateral lower-crustal flow, and lithospheric removal beneath southern Tibet, yet the processes responsible for such long-term weakening remain debated. Classical models relying on thermal softening of plagioclase or widespread partial melting are challenged by the low water solubility of plagioclase and by geotherms that are too cool to sustain pervasive melting. Here, we propose that arc-magmatic amphibole enrichment is primary control on deep-crustal rheology, seismic anisotropy, and tectonic evolution in southern Tibet. Here we show that modest hydration (1.0-1.5 wt.% H2O) stabilizes amphibole as a major phase (50-65 vol.%) at 30-55 km depths, transforming initially strong plagioclase-pyroxene-dominated lithologies into weak, anisotropic amphibolite. Phase‑equilibrium modeling combined with experimentally calibrated mineral rheology demonstrates that such amphibole‑rich assemblages are significantly less dense and up to two orders of magnitude weaker than their anhydrous equivalents. The resulting viscosity structure and seismic anisotropy align with geodetic constraints on ductile crustal flow and with the observed distribution of lower‑crustal earthquakes. At pressures greater than ~1.6–1.8 GPa (~55–60 km depth), amphibole breaks down to garnet + clinopyroxene, increasing density and promoting eclogitization that facilitates lithospheric delamination. Fluids released during amphibole breakdown may transiently weaken the lowermost crust and contribute to lower-crustal seismicity, but do not account for the long-lived regional weakness. Our results provide a unified, process-based frame work linking pre‑collisional arc magmatism to present‑day rheology, seismic structure, and the tectonic evolution of southern Tibet.

How to cite: Zhang, J. and Wang, X.: Amphibole enrichment weakens the mid-to-lower crust of southern Tibet, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22730, 2026.

TS8 – Applications of Tectonics and Structural Geology to Energy Transition, Natural Hazards, and Societal Needs

EGU26-2549 | PICO | TS8.2

Novel crustal stress profiling based on the criticality of natural fractures – a KTB example 

Xiaodong Ma, Haonan Wang, and Mark Zoback

Determination of in situ stress magnitude and orientation is fundamental for understanding crustal mechanics and facilitating subsurface exploration and development as well as hazard assessment. At present, in situ stress at depth is mainly estimated from borehole observations. Traditional methods, such as hydraulic fracturing tests, are mature and practical, yielding reliable estimates of the least principal stress but usually at a limited number of depths. Estimates of the maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) and stress orientation rely on observations of compressive or tensile failure of the borehole but can have considerable uncertainty depending on borehole conditions. Therefore, new approaches to estimate in situ stress magnitudes effectively are desired in stress characterization.
In this study, we extend a novel approach for stress determination that utilizes the natural fractures identified in deep boreholes. Critically-stressed natural fractures exhibit distinct thermal anomaly identifiable on temperature logs, whereas non-critically stressed fractures do not. Given an abundant and diverse set of natural fractures, inversion is feasible to estimate the magnitude of the maximum and minimum horizontal stresses utilizing the knowledge of the vertical stress (estimated from density logs).
We illustrate this novel approach with the KTB borehole data set. The classification facilitated a two-stage stress inversion that efficiently inverts the in situ stress orientation and absolute magnitude. The inverted stress matches well with independent borehole observations. The maximum discrepancy between the inversion results and the SHmax derived from wellbore failures is 26.6 MPa at 7 km depth, which is lower than the uncertainty of estimated SHmax magnitude (~47 MPa). The inverted SHmax orientation is N161.3°E, which is quite consistent with the observed SHmax orientation obtained from wellbore failures (~N160°E). To investigate stress heterogeneity over finer scales, the inversion was also applied to selected subsets of fractures along the KTB borehole. We evaluate the limitations and scale-dependence of this approach by considering the fracture distribution and fault perturbations. Our results demonstrate that profiling in situ stress via natural fractures is feasible and complementary to existing approaches, and can offer new insights on the characteristics of crustal stress, its spatial heterogeneity, and its interactions with geological discontinuities.

How to cite: Ma, X., Wang, H., and Zoback, M.: Novel crustal stress profiling based on the criticality of natural fractures – a KTB example, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2549, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2549, 2026.

Intersecting normal faults that depart from ideal Andersonian orientations in a rapidly extending rift, subject to both orthogonal and rotational opening as well as magmatic activity, generate complex patterns of stress interaction. We investigate these processes in the Wairakei Geothermal Field, the oldest and largest electricity producer within the Taupō Rift, Aotearoa New Zealand. There, boreholes show pervasive fracturing both near faults and in intervening blocks. We developed three-dimensional forward finite element models (FEM) with the Adeli open-source code which accounts for elasto-visco-plastic behaviour (pressure dependent Drucker-Prager plasticity and temperature dependent viscosity). We simulate far-field extension applied on a simplified crustal scale, synthetic fault system consistent with the structural settings. Three steeply dipping (70°) pre-existing faults are set mechanically weaker than the surrounding bedrock. One fault aligns with Andersonian strike, while two intersecting faults are misoriented by –15° and +30°.

Modeled fault displacements and stress rotations broadly agree with paleoseismic slip rates and with the limited but clear stress rotations observed in geothermal boreholes. Preliminary results provide indicators to explain enhanced crustal permeability and the exceptionally productive Wairakei Geothermal Field : zones of strain localisation where fracturing concentrates; stress ratio reflecting how faults behave kinematically with respect to the applied regional stress field; domains undergoing stress rotations and creating conditions where fractures of various orientations become optimally oriented for slip and dilation, most pronounced in domains within 1 km of the pre-existing faults.

Alternating boundary conditions between orthogonal and oblique rift extension (representing rotational rift opening or nearby magma deflation) further enhances the opening of fractures of different orientations at different times. We also tested the influence of the main faults dip and relative strength on resulting slip and dilation tendencies patterns.

This approach provides new insights into stress evolution in magmatic rifts, with implications for seismic and volcanic hazard assessment and for improving the targeting of permeable zones in geothermal reservoirs.

How to cite: Gerbault, M., Massiot, C., Ellis, S., and Villamor, P.: Modeling Stress and Deformation Near Intersecting Misoriented Normal Faults in the Taupō Rift, Aotearoa New Zealand: A New Approach to Target Geothermal Permeability?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2731, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2731, 2026.

This study presents a novel iterative method for inverting regional stress fields from focal mechanism data. Building upon key techniques in homogeneous stress inversion, the method enhances the accuracy of stress estimation. The procedure involves clustering seismic events based on spatial distribution to define discrete stress domains, followed by fault plane identification via a fault instability criterion, thereby relaxing the conventional assumption of uniform shear stress across all planes. Stress continuity between adjacent domains is imposed to ensure a smoothly varying stress field. The method is applied to both synthetic tests and earthquake data from the seismically active Sichuan–Yunnan region of China. Results demonstrate that, while principal stress orientations remain consistent with those obtained from conventional approaches, the proposed method provides more reliable estimates of the stress shape ratio, which align more closely with the regional tectonic framework.

How to cite: Guo, X. and Li, Z.: An Improved Method for Inverting the Spatiotemporal Stress Field Using Focal Mechanism Data and Its Application in Sichuan–Yunnan Region, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4589, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4589, 2026.

EGU26-5185 | PICO | TS8.2

Crustal stress state from combined anisotropic seismic imaging and geomechanical modeling 

Manuele Faccenda, Brandon Paul VanderBeek, and Gianmarco Del Piccolo

The Earth’s crust is a mechanically heterogeneous system in which stress, fractures, and geofluids are tightly coupled and jointly control deformation. Quantifying the present-day crustal stress state remains challenging, as it is commonly inferred from indirect and spatially sparse observations and often relies on simplifying assumptions in seismic imaging and mechanical models.

We present a methodological framework that combines probabilisitic anisotropic seismic imaging with geomechanical modeling to constrain the crustal stress state in a physically consistent manner. Seismic anisotropy in the upper crust, expressed through directional variations in elastic properties, is used as a proxy for fracture orientation, fracture density, and fluid-induced compliance, which are intrinsically linked to the ambient stress field. Incorporating anisotropic parameters into seismic imaging reduces inversion artifacts and enables a more robust characterization of stress-aligned fracture networks.

These seismic constraints are integrated into geomechanical models that simulate the stress field under realistic boundary conditions and rheological properties, and calibrated by direct comparison between observed stress indicators (e.g. seismic T-axes, surface faulting patterns, fast shear wave polarisations), anisotropy patterns and model-predicted stress orientations. This combined approach improves stress-state quantification by leveraging seismically-inferred 3D fracture patterns while also providing a framework to assess uncertainties arising from seismic imaging assumptions and mechanical parameter choices.

The proposed methodology is broadly applicable to tectonic and volcanic settings, as well as geothermal and oil fields, and offers a transferable strategy for improving stress-state estimates in regions where direct measurements are limited.

How to cite: Faccenda, M., VanderBeek, B. P., and Del Piccolo, G.: Crustal stress state from combined anisotropic seismic imaging and geomechanical modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5185, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5185, 2026.

EGU26-7235 | ECS | PICO | TS8.2

Characterization of stress heterogeneity around a fault zone based on inversion of hydraulic fracturing tests  

Barnabás Kövér, Valentin Gischig, Kai Bröker, Jordan Aaron, Men-Andrin Meier, Marian Hertrich, Domenico Giardini, and Stefan Wiemer

Characterization of the in-situ state of stress is critically important in many geoscience applications, including understanding fault mechanics. In-situ stresses can exhibit strong spatial heterogeneities, due to the influence of factors such as surface topography, slip along faults and fractures, as well as lithological contrasts. Our understanding of these factors has been limited by our inability to characterize the full stress tensor and its variability at high spatial resolution. Additionally, studying the relationship between fault mechanics and the heterogeneous stresses has been prevented by the lack of in-situ observations of fault slip in rock volumes well-characterized in terms of stress. The FEAR project provides a unique opportunity to tackle these gaps in our knowledge. As part of this project, a series of hydraulic stimulation experiments are performed in a fractured granitic rock mass intersected by major faults in ETH’s BedrettoLab. The induced seismicity and hydromechanical processes are monitored using a dense sensor network.

To characterize the stress field in the rock mass of interest, a detailed hydraulic fracturing campaign was performed in three vertical and eight inclined boreholes. We developed a new stress inversion method that can infer an arbitrarily inclined primary stress tensor from hydraulic fracturing tests performed in arbitrarily inclined boreholes. The method uses a grid search approach to invert the generalized Kirsch Solution and allows us to quantify the uncertainty of the solution (i.e. its sensitivity to error in the measured input data) both in terms of principal stress magnitudes and orientations. The required input data are fracture orientation from image logs, shut-in pressure, breakdown and fracture reopening pressure.

Applying our inversion technique to the data collected in the BedrettoLab resulted in 32 stress tensor solutions (including uncertainty) corresponding to different locations within the rock volume, as well as 14 additional data points of the S3 magnitude. Our results show that S3 is (sub-)horizontal in the entire rock volume, and its azimuth ranges from N147.8 to 211.4°E. The rock mass can be divided into two domains based on the stress regime: a normal faulting domain in the SSE portion of the rock volume and a strike-slip faulting domain in the NNW portion. Potential causes for the observed abrupt transition from normal to strikes-slip faulting may be compliance contrasts within the rock volume as well as fault slip along different geological structures. The normal faulting domain extends a few meters into the northern side of a major, SSW-ENE oriented fault, and it is unclear whether the transition is related to this fault.

Our high-resolution stress dataset will enable us to investigate the causes of the observed stress heterogeneity using numerical modeling tools, and to determine which faults are likely to slip and open during hydraulic stimulations. Once available, the experimental data of hydraulic stimulations will be compared to our predictions. This will provide an unprecedented opportunity to study the relationship between in-situ stresses and fault dislocation, ultimately resulting in an improved understanding of earthquake physics in general.

How to cite: Kövér, B., Gischig, V., Bröker, K., Aaron, J., Meier, M.-A., Hertrich, M., Giardini, D., and Wiemer, S.: Characterization of stress heterogeneity around a fault zone based on inversion of hydraulic fracturing tests , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7235, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7235, 2026.

EGU26-7920 | ECS | PICO | TS8.2

3D Geomechanical Model of the Lower Rhine Graben in the Cross-Boarder Region (BE–DE–NL) 

Adam Jones, Michal Kruszewski, Moritz Ziegler, and Florian Amann

Subsurface exploration for geoenergy resources within the seismically-active Lower Rhine Graben (LRG) in the cross-boarder region of Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands (NW Europe) needs to consider the tendency for induced seismic events as well as the effect of subsurface operations to the present-day crustal stresses. Regionally, geomechanical investigations are challenged by inconsistent coverage of reliable geologic and stress data below the Tertiary Rhineish lignite deposits. As deep geothermal exploration is currently focused entirely below these formations within marine sediments from Lower Carboniferous to the Devonian period, a first order 3D regional stress model to seismogenic depths up to 10 km is developed using a newly compiled 3D structural geological model combining data from three national datasets of the cross-boarder region. The structural geological model is distilled to a parameterized FEM mesh and used as input for numerical simulations of crustal stresses based on linear elasticity theory using the open-source MOOSE framework. Calibration of the resulting geomechanical model is completed using focal mechanisms from seismic catalogues, borehole failure observations, and hydraulic fracturing tests in boreholes within the LRG. 3D geomechanical model results of the LRG region provide a quantitative footing to support deep geothermal development through a spatially-continuous characterization of in situ stresses, even in greenfield prospects with little to no stress information, and an improved assessment of the reactivation potential of major faults in the region targeted for future geothermal development. 

How to cite: Jones, A., Kruszewski, M., Ziegler, M., and Amann, F.: 3D Geomechanical Model of the Lower Rhine Graben in the Cross-Boarder Region (BE–DE–NL), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7920, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7920, 2026.

EGU26-8840 | PICO | TS8.2

A Comparative Study of Conventional and Non-Destructive Methods of In-Situ Stress Measurement 

Zulfiqar Ali, Murat Karakus, and Giang D. Nguyen

Over the past many decades, in-situ stress measurement using overcoring (OC) and hydraulic fracturing (HF) methods has been scientifically accepted and commercially adopted worldwide as the benchmark techniques for quantifying in-situ stress in rock masses. However, with the increase in depth of mining operations, the application of OC and HF has become more cumbersome and costlier, requiring substantial drilling, specialized equipment, and favorable borehole conditions for reliable data collection. This paper investigates the potential of non-destructive techniques (NDTs) for in-situ stress estimation as practical alternatives to conventional methods. A structured comparison of the non-destructive techniques including AE, Deformation Rate Analysis (DRA), Secant Modulus Method (SMM) is presented with the conventional OC and HF methods based on the published literature. To validate these techniques further, non-destructive tests were conducted on oriented rock cores retrieved from a mine site in South Australia where conventional overcoring had been previously applied. The SMM and AE analyses were used to determine the stress tensor and magnitude & direction of principal stresses. The results show a good correlation with the OC data, reinforcing the reliability of NDTs of stress estimation. These findings suggest that integrated non-destructive methods can provide cost-effective alternatives to traditional in-situ stress measurement techniques, offering significant implications for deep mining projects and early-stage stress characterization where borehole access is limited.

How to cite: Ali, Z., Karakus, M., and D. Nguyen, G.: A Comparative Study of Conventional and Non-Destructive Methods of In-Situ Stress Measurement, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8840, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8840, 2026.

EGU26-12437 | PICO | TS8.2

Lithospheric Driving Forces From Recent Global Density Models 

Nicolai Nijholt, Renato Gutierrez Escobar, Marius Wouters, and Rob Govers

The motion and deformation of the lithosphere result from forces and stresses that are driven by lateral variations in gravitational potential energy (GPE). In turn, GPE variations derive from lateral differences in the thermal or lithological density distribution. The recent development of global lithospheric models allows us to take a step forward towards consistent estimates of Horizontal Gravitational Tractions (HGTs) that arise from lateral gradients in GPE. We find that lithospheric model LithoRef18 [Afonso et al. 2019] yields unrealistic GPE and HGT results. Our preferred HGT field uses lithosphere model WINTERC-G [Fullea et al. 2021] to incorporate horizontal GPE gradients with a laterally variable Lithosphere-Asthenosphere Boundary (LAB). The azimuth of HGTs is most strongly correlated with the azimuth of topographic gradients, while the HGT magnitudes correlates best with topography gradient magnitude for HGTs larger than 10MPa. The most significant HGT magnitudes, exceeding 100 MPa, occur along the edges of the Andes and Tibetan plateaus. Tractions in cratonic regions are generally low, except where surface, Moho, or LAB topology gradients are large. Our attempt to isolate the HGT of the overriding plate yields moderate oceanward HGTs in the forearc along all convergence zones, which may be interpreted as trench suction. We explore the sensitivity of the HGT to classical integration limits of the deepest Moho or 100km depth to find that HGT magnitudes are markedly different and that HGT directions are relatively insensitive to integration depth.

 

Afonso, J.C., Salajegheh, F., Szwillus, W., Ebbing, J. Gaina, C. (2019), A global reference model of the lithosphere and upper mantle from joint inversion and analysis of multiple data sets, Geophys. J. Int., 217(3), 1602–1628.

Fullea, J., Lebedev, S., Martinec, Z., Celli, N.L. (2021), WINTERC-G: mapping the upper mantle thermochemical heterogeneity from coupled geophysical–petrological inversion of seismic waveforms, heat flow, surface elevation and gravity satellite data, Geophys. J. Int., 226(1), 146–19.

How to cite: Nijholt, N., Gutierrez Escobar, R., Wouters, M., and Govers, R.: Lithospheric Driving Forces From Recent Global Density Models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12437, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12437, 2026.

EGU26-12678 | PICO | TS8.2

Application of seismic strain tensor shape analysis to global tectonics 

José A. Alvarez-Gómez, Jorge Alonso-Henar, and José L. Sánchez-Roldán

The analysis of earthquake focal mechanisms is a key tool for studying active tectonic deformation. Various stress inversion methods are frequently used based on this data to obtain stress tensors by making a series of assumptions that can compromise the reliability of the results. On the other hand, obtaining seismic deformation tensors from the summation of seismic moment tensors offers a solid alternative for characterising seismic strain tensors without the uncertainties inherent in stress-based approaches. In this work, we study the global distribution and shape of these combined seismic strain tensors, with special emphasis on their geometric properties and non-double-couple (NDC) components. Our results show systematic patterns in the shape of the tensor in different tectonic contexts. Shallow seismicity, predominantly associated with plate boundaries, shows alternating ellipsoid shapes between prolate and oblate along oceanic ridges, while subduction zones show planar-type strains (near the double-couple) in interface events and departures from this double-couple in back-arc zones. In contrast, deep seismicity within subduction slabs shows greater variability, with some slabs characterised by oblate ellipsoids and others by prolate geometries, indicating diverse deformation modes at depth. Continental collision zones, such as the Himalayan front and the Zagros belt, are dominated by oblate tensor shapes, while adjacent regions, such as the Tibetan plateau, exhibit prolate geometries, reflecting a significant component of uniaxial extension or constriction. Error estimation is addressed through probabilistic weighting of focal mechanisms based on uncertainties in event location and through a Monte Carlo perturbation scheme of the tensor components. This characterisation of aleatory errors ensures a robust evaluation of eigenvalues, eigenvectors, and parameters derived from them. The observed correlation between the tensor shape and the tectonic context highlights the usefulness of strain tensor-based approaches for seismotectonic studies. By characterising instantaneous seismic strain, the methodology proposed in this work complements the study of both brittle and ductile finite strain. These results contribute to improving global models of lithospheric deformation and show the importance of incorporating the geometry of seismic strain tensors into tectonic and geodynamic analysis, as well as their potential application to seismic risk.

How to cite: Alvarez-Gómez, J. A., Alonso-Henar, J., and Sánchez-Roldán, J. L.: Application of seismic strain tensor shape analysis to global tectonics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12678, 2026.

EGU26-12818 | ECS | PICO | TS8.2

Towards a global and quality-ranked pore pressure magnitude database - World Pressure Map 

Indira Shatyrbayeva, Florian Duschl, Julian Breitsameter, Malte J. Ziebarth, Oliver Heidbach, Birgit Müller, and Michael C. Drews

Deformation of the Earth’s crust is fundamentally governed by subsurface stress and pore fluid pressure, which together define effective stress as the difference between total stress and pore pressure. Effective stress controls a wide range of processes, such as fluid migration, sediment compaction, subsidence, fault reactivation and the earthquake cycle. It is also a key parameter for the design of subsurface engineering such as drilling operations, fluid and heat production as well as storage of CO2, radioactive waste, hydrogen and energy. For the safe exploration and operation of georeservoirs and for the development of mitigation strategies of induced hazard such as borehole failure, leakage due to fault reactivation, or induced seismicity a reliable quantification of the effective stress is essential.

Over the past four decades, subsurface horizontal stress orientations and, more recently, stress magnitudes have been systematically compiled and analysed using dedicated quality-ranking schemes. The data are publicly available through the World Stress Map (WSM) database. In contrast, pore pressure data remain fragmented and inconsistently documented. Where available, pore pressure information is typically dispersed across national, regional, commercial or private databases, as well as scientific publications and technical reports. Publicly accessible pore pressure databases are rare and generally lack standardised formats or the application of a common quality assessment. Furthermore, although pore pressure measurements have been collected since the early development of deep drilling primarily by the petroleum industry, most datasets have not been published due to confidentiality concerns. Consequently, pore pressure information is often limited to isolated case studies or regional analyses that neither provide digital data nor precise spatial referencing.

As a result, a global database with quality-ranked pore pressure data complementary to the WSM does not yet exist. This absence represents a major limitation for both fundamental geoscience research and practical application in reservoir management required for a sustainable energy future. To address this gap, this contribution aims to initiate the development of a global database using a quality-ranking scheme for direct pore pressure measurements and indirect pore pressure indicators. The proposed open-access resource referred to as the World Pressure Map is intended to combine data from different methods to make them comparable and to ensure long-term data availability.

How to cite: Shatyrbayeva, I., Duschl, F., Breitsameter, J., Ziebarth, M. J., Heidbach, O., Müller, B., and Drews, M. C.: Towards a global and quality-ranked pore pressure magnitude database - World Pressure Map, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12818, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12818, 2026.

EGU26-13001 | ECS | PICO | TS8.2

Geomechanical model calibration in the absence of in-situ stress magnitude data 

Louison Laruelle, Moritz O. Ziegler, Oliver Heidbach, Lalit Sai Aditya Reddy Velagala, Karsten Reiter, Silvio Giger, Mojtaba Rajabi, Denise Degen, and Fabrice Cotton

Geomechanical modeling aims to predict the 3D in-situ stress state of the Earth’s crust and to assess the stability of subsurface rock volumes for applications such as radioactive waste disposal, energy storage, or CO₂ geo-sequestration. However, model calibration typically relies on sparse in-situ stress magnitude data which are expensive to acquire, limited in spatial coverage, and may not represent stress conditions over larger rock volumes, away from the measurement sites. Here we present a probabilistic forward-calibration framework that uses the borehole failure interpreted from routinely acquired borehole-image logs as indirect stress data and formation integrity tests (FIT) to calibrate 3D geomechanical models.

Our approach integrates four types of indirect stress observations: the occurrence of borehole breakouts (BO), drilling-induced tensile fractures (DITF), formation integrity tests (FIT), and the documented absence of both BO and DITF at micro-hydraulic fracturing (MHF) stations. Although these indirect data provide only upper and lower limits on the stress state, they offer the critical advantage of scanning the entire borehole trajectory with high resolution, yielding far more extensive spatial coverage than point measurements. The absence of borehole failure provides simultaneous upper and lower bounds on horizontal stress magnitudes, addressing a key limitation in previous approaches that struggled to constrain the maximum horizontal stress magnitude. We developed a forward uncertainty quantification framework that explores hundreds of thousands of model scenarios at each observation point using linear elastic principles and compares the agreement between predicted and observed stress indicators through a probabilistic assessment.

In the Zürich Nordost siting region for a potential deep geological repository for radioactive waste in northern Switzerland, we leverage an exceptional stress magnitude dataset from two deep boreholes. This dataset comprises 30 high-quality microhydraulic fracturing tests and 15 dry sleeve reopening tests, accompanied by comprehensive borehole image logs and detailed laboratory measurements of Young's modulus and rock strength. Using the stress magnitude data alone to calibrate the geomechanical model yields accurate stress predictions with well-constrained uncertainties, providing a rigorous benchmark against which to evaluate models calibrated solely with indirect stress indicators.

Our results demonstrate that stress predictions based solely on indirect observations achieve comparable accuracy to those calibrated with an exceptionally large and robust dataset of in-situ stress magnitude data. For the magnitude of the minimum horizontal stress Shmin, high-agreement scenarios reproduce the reference stress predictions throughout most of the stratigraphic section, with uncertainties dominated by natural rock property variability rather than stress magnitude uncertainty. For the magnitude of the maximum horizontal stress SHmax, the approach successfully delivers constrains within physically realistic ranges, though systematic overestimation of 2–3 MPa in some formations suggests remaining model limitations. This work demonstrates that indirect stress data, readily available during routine drilling operations, can provide reliable, uncertainty-quantified stress predictions without requiring expensive in-situ stress measurement campaigns, opening new possibilities for stress field characterization in subsurface projects worldwide.

How to cite: Laruelle, L., Ziegler, M. O., Heidbach, O., Velagala, L. S. A. R., Reiter, K., Giger, S., Rajabi, M., Degen, D., and Cotton, F.: Geomechanical model calibration in the absence of in-situ stress magnitude data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13001, 2026.

EGU26-17493 | ECS | PICO | TS8.2

New borehole-based techniques for in situ stress measurement and related thermo-hydro-mechanical processes 

Kai Bröker, Benoît Valley, Marian Hertrich, Nathan Dutler, Patrick Steiner, Florian Soom, Paul Cook, and Yves Guglielmi

Accurate in situ stress characterization is essential for predicting the subsurface response to interventions such as underground construction, fluid injection, and fluid extraction. At depths of 2–5 km, which are typical of many such projects, the stress field is often heterogeneous and influenced by complex geological features. This makes reliable stress measurement both operationally critical and technically challenging. Borehole stability is another key concern, as deep boreholes are prone to stress-induced deformations such as breakouts that can damage equipment, impede drilling, and even lead to borehole collapse.

We present results and ongoing developments from two projects focused on novel in situ stress measurement techniques and thermo-hydro-mechanical processes around boreholes. These projects are based on experiments conducted at the Bedretto Underground Laboratory (BedrettoLab) in Switzerland (Ma et al., 2022). The BedrettoLab offers multiple boreholes, up to 400 m in length, located within a fractured granitic rock mass with an overburden of more than 1000 m.

The first project developed an improved technique to estimate the full stress tensor by inverting three-dimensional displacement data obtained during fluid injections in isolated borehole intervals (Bröker et al., 2025). A total of eleven test intervals were investigated, with displacements measured using a SIMFIP (Step-rate Injection Method for Fracture In situ Properties) probe. The results yield a complete stress profile obtained along approximately 60 m of an inclined borehole, revealing significant stress heterogeneity and rotations around an intersected fault zone.

In the second project, we developed a novel borehole probe to investigate the formation of thermally induced breakouts, which are strongly controlled by the in situ stress field. The probe can heat a packed-off borehole section while measuring borehole wall displacement. After extensive calibration in the laboratory, the probe was deployed in the BedrettoLab, and three in situ heating tests were successfully conducted up to 140 °C. Although no borehole breakouts were induced, the experiments provide valuable insight into thermo-hydro-mechanical coupling at borehole walls and its role in breakout initiation and borehole stability.

References:

Bröker, K., Guglielmi, Y., Soom, F., Cook, P., Hertrich, M., & Valley, B. (2025). In situ quantification of fracture slip induced by hydraulic injections in a deep borehole: A comparison of two different borehole techniques. Submitted to IJRMMS. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5967430

Ma, X., Hertrich, M., Amann, F., Bröker, K., Gholizadeh Doonechaly, N., Gischig, V., Hochreutener, R., Kästli, P., Krietsch, H., Marti, M., Nägeli, B., Nejati, M., Obermann, A., Plenkers, K., Rinaldi, A. P., Shakas, A., Villiger, L., Wenning, Q., Zappone, A., et al. (2022). Multi-disciplinary characterizations of the BedrettoLab – a new underground geoscience research facility. Solid Earth, 13(2), 301–322. https://doi.org/10.5194/se-13-301-2022

How to cite: Bröker, K., Valley, B., Hertrich, M., Dutler, N., Steiner, P., Soom, F., Cook, P., and Guglielmi, Y.: New borehole-based techniques for in situ stress measurement and related thermo-hydro-mechanical processes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17493, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17493, 2026.

EGU26-18531 | ECS | PICO | TS8.2

Crustal Stress Field Variations and Fault Reactivation Potential in the Lower Rhine Graben and its Adjacent Regions 

Michal Kruszewski, Adam Jones, Alessandro Verdecchia, Sebastián Carrasco Morales, Thomas Oswald, Rebecca Harrington, and Florian Amann

Characterizing the crustal stress state and its spatial variability is essential for the safe and sustainable development of structurally controlled deep geothermal systems. The seismically active Lower Rhine Graben (LRG), spanning parts of Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands, is a promising target for geothermal exploitation in fault-controlled, karstified carbonate reservoirs of Lower Carboniferous and Devonian age. However, at drillable depths, the stress field remains poorly constrained, raising concerns regarding fault reactivation and induced seismicity, as highlighted by moderate induced events at recent deep geothermal projects in Belgium and the Netherlands.

We present a quality-rated crustal stress database for the LRG and adjacent regions, integrating legacy and newly acquired stress indicators from earthquakes and recently drilled exploratory boreholes. Stress tensor inversion was performed using recent earthquake focal mechanisms, while borehole-based indicators from hydraulic fracturing tests and borehole deformation analyses provided direct constraints on stress orientations and absolute stress magnitudes at reservoir-relevant depths. These data were combined with publicly available present-day stress indicators from existing databases, and interpolated onto a regular 0.1° grid to generate a gridded stress field capturing regional-scale, long-wavelength variability.

The spatially variable stress field was integrated with mapped major faults to evaluate their reactivation potential by assigning stress orientations to individual fault segments. Our results indicate a clockwise rotation of the maximum horizontal stress from WNW–ESE in the Hohe Venn area west of the graben to NNW–SSE in the Rhenish Massif to the east. At geothermal reservoir depths, NW–SE-striking normal faults show elevated potential for shear reactivation and dilation, whereas NE–SW-striking thrust faults exhibit low potential for both mechanisms.

By integrating more than 135 stress indicators into a spatially resolved fault reactivation analysis, this study substantially increases stress data coverage in the region and provides quantitative constraints on fault stability and seismic hazard relevant for geothermal development, supporting site selection and risk-informed reservoir management in the tectonically active LRG.

How to cite: Kruszewski, M., Jones, A., Verdecchia, A., Carrasco Morales, S., Oswald, T., Harrington, R., and Amann, F.: Crustal Stress Field Variations and Fault Reactivation Potential in the Lower Rhine Graben and its Adjacent Regions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18531, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18531, 2026.

EGU26-19338 | PICO | TS8.2

PyFracTend: an Accessible Tool for 3D Stress-State Visualisation and Fault/Fracture Stability Assessment 

Roberto Emanuele Rizzo, Brian Burnham, Gonçalo Benitez Cunha, and David Healy

Accurate quantification of the subsurface stress state, and of its resolved components on faults and fractures, is critical for de-risking applications ranging from geothermal energy and subsurface storage to nuclear waste disposal. While the governing mechanics are well established—reactivation depends on resolved normal and shear stresses, pore-fluid pressure, and frictional resistance—practical barriers remain to accessible, reproducible tools for 3D stress-state visualisation and systematic evaluation of stress–structure interactions.

We present PyFracTend, an open-source Python implementation of the MATLAB-based workflow developed by Stephens et al. (2018), packaged with a cross-platform graphical user interface (GUI) to support reproducible analysis in both research and applied workflows. PyFracTend takes as input principal stress magnitudes and orientations (3D), pore-fluid pressure, and fault/fracture orientation datasets (azimuth and dip), together with user-defined mechanical parameters (e.g., coefficient of friction and cohesion, where applicable). The toolbox computes commonly used stability indicators—including slip tendency, dilation tendency, and related measures—and visualises results on stereonets and Mohr diagrams. All inputs and outputs are exported as analysis-ready tables, enabling straightforward integration with third-party software and downstream modelling.

To ensure consistency with established practice, we benchmark PyFracTend against the original MATLAB implementation, demonstrating agreement across representative stress states and discontinuity datasets. Finally, responding to the growing need for uncertainty-aware stress characterisation, PyFracTend integrates seamlessly with the pfs Python code (Healy & Hicks, 2022) for uncertainty quantification (e.g., Monte Carlo sampling of stress tensor parameters), thereby propagating stress uncertainties into probabilistic fault/fracture stability metrics.

References:

Stephens, T. L., Walker, R. J., Healy, D., Bubeck, A., & England, R. W. (2018). Solid Earth, 9, 847–858.

Healy, D. and Hicks, S. P. (2022). Solid Earth, 13, 15–39.

How to cite: Rizzo, R. E., Burnham, B., Benitez Cunha, G., and Healy, D.: PyFracTend: an Accessible Tool for 3D Stress-State Visualisation and Fault/Fracture Stability Assessment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19338, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19338, 2026.

EGU26-124 | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Abrupt structural deformation changes from the boundary to the interior of the Craton Basin 

Lei Huang, Zhao Wang, Yiyong Zhang, Xin Li, and Chiyang Liu

Stable intraplate cratonic blocks usually have less structural deformation and fewer earthquakes than other locations on Earth, but with strong compressional deformation around their periphery. Investigating how and why this different deformation occurred is beneficial for understanding why the cratonic block is so stable and how the intraplate in-plane stress is transmitted. In this work, we first investigated the structural deformation changes from the margin to the interior of the western Ordos Block (OB; one of the most tectonically stable area in China) via seismic data. The results show abrupt structural deformation changes from the margin to the interior of the OB in terms of the deformation strength (from strong to weak), structural orientation (high angle oblique relationships), and kinematics (from compression to wrenching). Our investigation also shows that such phenomena are widespread in cratonic blocks worldwide. The abrupt changes are probably induced by special in-plane stress transfer inside the cratonic block: when far-field stress is transmitted into continental interiors from active plate margins, the weak belt around the cratonic block filters and accommodates the in-plane stress. Consequently, this decreases the stress, changes the stress direction, and transmits the in-plane stress along a shallower layer (probably less than 1500 m). Furthermore, the compression stress from the plate margin is converted into shear stress within the cratonic block. This stress transmission manner makes reactivation of the deep preexisting faults difficult under far-field horizontal plate-boundary stresses in the cratonic block without vertical forces from the mantle, guaranteeing long-term stability and low seismicity. This understanding can provide a new perspective for the interpretation of earthquakes in stable continental regions. It can also be applied to appraise the long-term stability of sites for the storage of CO2.

How to cite: Huang, L., Wang, Z., Zhang, Y., Li, X., and Liu, C.: Abrupt structural deformation changes from the boundary to the interior of the Craton Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-124, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-124, 2026.

Abstract: Accurate construction of multi-scale fracture models is essential for optimizing hydraulic fracturing design, predicting sweet-spot distribution, and improving shale gas recovery in deep, structurally complex reservoirs. The Wufeng–Longmaxi shale in the northern Luzhou area is characterized by strong tectonic deformation, lithological heterogeneity, and fracture development across multiple scales. To address these challenges, this study proposes an integrated multi-scale fracture modeling framework that couples reservoir geomechanics, multi-attribute seismic analysis, and microstructural characterization. First, pre-stack seismic inversion was performed to derive elastic parameters, including P-impedance, Vp/Vs ratio, and density, which were further used to construct 3D mechanical property volumes such as brittleness index, Young’s modulus, and Poisson’s ratio. Curvature attributes and ant-tracking analysis were applied to delineate zones of enhanced structural deformation and large-scale fracture corridors. Second, triaxial rock mechanics experiments and CT-based digital core analysis were conducted to calibrate lithology-dependent failure criteria and layer-parallel anisotropic mechanical parameters for siliceous and calcareous shales, forming the basis of a heterogeneous geomechanical model. Finite-element simulations were then used to resolve the present-day in-situ stress field and quantify fracture openness, density, and orientation under mechanical–stratigraphic constraints. Results show that: (1) a NW–SE trending high-curvature anticline dominates the northeastern study area, where brittle siliceous shale (brittleness index > 0.65) accounts for 58%, and the maximum horizontal stress (NW 130°–150°) provides favorable conditions for fracture development; (2) large-scale fractures (>10 m) are controlled by curvature ridges and fault transfer zones, while mesoscale fractures (1–10 m) correlate positively with the product of brittleness index and bedding density, and (3) microscale fractures (<1 mm) exhibit strong coupling with TOC-rich domains (TOC > 3.5%). Integrating curvature volumes, ant-tracking results, geomechanical simulations, and microfracture fractal parameters yields a hierarchical workflow linking macroscopic structural guidance, mesoscale mechanical response, and microscale pore–fracture attributes. Field validation shows that the predicted fracture-rich zones match production performance with an accuracy of 82%. The L202 well, deployed using this workflow, achieved a post-fracturing daily gas rate of 2.3×10⁵ m³, 37% higher than adjacent wells. This integrated methodology overcomes the limitations of single-scale modeling and provides a robust framework for 3D shale gas reservoir evaluation and development in complex structural domains.

Keywords: Multi-scale fracture modeling; reservoir geomechanics; seismic attribute integration; in-situ stress; Luzhou area

How to cite: Ren, Q.: A Multi-Scale Fracture Modeling Framework Driven by Integrated Reservoir Geomechanics and Seismic Attribute Analysis: A Case Study from the Northern Luzhou Shale Gas Play, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1485, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1485, 2026.

EGU26-2105 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Fracture modeling of the hydrocarbon reservoir using geostatistical and neural network methods in the SW Iran Oilfield  

Zahra Tajmir Riahi, Ali Faghih, Bahman Soleimany, Khalil Sarkarinejad, and Gholam Reza Payrovian

Abstract

Fracture characterization and modeling are essential for hydrocarbon exploration and enhanced production. To model the fracture network in the Asmari reservoir of the Rag-e-Sefid Oilfield (SW Iran), this research characterizes fracture intensity using well, fracture driver, and fracture controller data. First, these data are analyzed to estimate fracture intensity. Then, fracture intensity is modeled using geostatistical methods. The geostatistical outputs are compared and calibrated based on the structural setting of the study area and the fracture indicator. Finally, selected fracture intensity data are integrated into a single model using an artificial neural network, resulting in a comprehensive fracture intensity model for the Asmari reservoir of the Rag-e-Sefid Oilfield. The results show that fracture intensity increases near the Rag-e-Sefid and Nourooz-Hendijan-Izeh Faults and in the fold forelimb and crest. The highest fracture intensity in the Asmari reservoir is observed at the intersection of structures with the N-S Arabian trend and the NW-SE Zagros trend, where the fold axis has rotated. Generally, the northwestern part of the Rag-e-Sefid anticline has higher fracture intensity than the southeastern part. The high fracture intensity in the northwest part of the Rag-e-Sefid Oilfield is related to inversion tectonics, multi-stage reactivation along pre-existing basement structures, and an older deformation history in this area compared to its southeastern part. The Asmari reservoir in the NW part of the Rag-e-Sefid anticline contains a greater share of oil and gas in its hydrocarbon traps than the SE part. Moreover, the results of this study indicate that the simultaneous use of different data and the integration of geostatistical and artificial neural network methods can effectively predict fracture distribution in hydrocarbon reservoirs and be used as a suitable technique for fracture modeling in natural oil and gas fields. This research suggests that artificial intelligence and quantum computing techniques provide efficient solutions for characterizing and modeling the entire scale of geological fractures in hydrocarbon reservoirs.

Keywords: Fracture modeling, Geostatistical and neural network methods, Asmari reservoir, Rag-e-Sefid Oilfield, SW Iran

How to cite: Tajmir Riahi, Z., Faghih, A., Soleimany, B., Sarkarinejad, K., and Payrovian, G. R.: Fracture modeling of the hydrocarbon reservoir using geostatistical and neural network methods in the SW Iran Oilfield , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2105, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2105, 2026.

EGU26-3278 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Integrated Characterization of Fracture Orientations and Hydraulic Properties in Crystalline Bedrock 

Hande Okutan, Jon Engström, Daniel Carbajal-Martinez, Mira Markovaara-Koivisto, Rebekka Salmi, Heini Reijonen, and Evgenii Kortunov

Understanding hydraulic properties in fractured crystalline bedrock is essential for predicting groundwater flow and heat transport in deep geological settings. This study focuses on the Kopparnäs Test Site in southern Finland, where the bedrock mainly consists of granites, granodiorites, and, commonly migmatitic mica gneiss.

Fracture orientation and aperture were characterized using acoustic (ABI) and optical borehole imaging (OBI), combined with hydraulic conductivity measurements obtained from zone-based slug tests in a borehole drilled to a depth of 233 m. Seven test zones at depths ranging from 18 m to 132 m were selected for integrated hydraulic conductivity and fracture analysis. The borehole intersects a nearly vertical east–west striking fault zone at approximately 100 m depth, where three core zones were targeted for hydraulic conductivity measurements. Each zone was analysed in terms of fracture frequency, orientation, and infilling to achieve an integrated understanding of hydraulic behaviour.

Structural analysis indicates that most fractures are steeply dipping, with dominant NNE-SSW orientations and dips towards the SSE. Sub-horizontal fractures mainly occur at shallow depths within the upper 100 m, which is typical of Finnish crystalline bedrock due to glacial unloading after the latest glaciation. Between 100-130 m, the borehole intersects a sub-vertical fault zone that significantly increases fracture frequency. Below this zone fracture frequency decreases markedly with only sporadic fractures observed.

Hydraulic conductivity remains within the same order of magnitude (10-9 m/s) but varies between zones reflecting differences in fracture characteristics rather than fracture density alone. Higher hydraulic conductivity is observed at shallow depths where fractures are predominantly sub-horizontal and partially open. In contrast, deeper sections are dominated by steeply dipping, mineral-filled fractures associated with reduced conductivity. Intermediate conductivities reflect mixed orientations and aperture conditions. Overall, fracture orientation and infilling exert a stronger control on hydraulic conductivity than fracture frequency, the role of fracture connectivity, aperture and mineral filling in governing fluid flow.

Core analysis revealed porosity values of about 30% at 140 m depth within heavily altered zones. A similar pattern is observed at the Kivetty site in central Finland, where increased alteration intensity correlates with higher total porosity, improved pore connectivity, and enhanced permeability. Future work will extend hydraulic testing to intervals with high porosity and include fracture aperture and spacing measurements to assess their combined influence. This integrated approach provides a robust framework for distinguishing hydraulically significant fractures from inactive ones, improving site characterization for groundwater resource management, geothermal energy exploration and deep geological repository safety assessments.

How to cite: Okutan, H., Engström, J., Carbajal-Martinez, D., Markovaara-Koivisto, M., Salmi, R., Reijonen, H., and Kortunov, E.: Integrated Characterization of Fracture Orientations and Hydraulic Properties in Crystalline Bedrock, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3278, 2026.

EGU26-3471 | Orals | ERE5.2

Heat transport in deforming fractured rocks: the effects of fracture slip and opening 

Silvia De Simone, Sebastián González-Fuentes, Sandro Andrés, and Víctor Vilarrasa

Heat transfer in fractured rocks is a key process for deep geothermal energy exploitation. Fractures represent the main pathways for fluid flow and advective heat transport, while diffusive thermal exchange occurs between the fluid within the fractures and the surrounding host rock. These two processes occur over very different spatial and temporal scales, and their variability is strongly influenced by fracture–rock heterogeneity, which ultimately controls geothermal performance.

In this work, we discuss two transient mechanical processes that can alter the geometry of fractured rocks during fluid circulation, thereby affecting heat transport and, consequently, the efficiency of geothermal plants. The first process involves flow channeling induced by shear slip activation in critically stressed fractures. We analyze this phenomenon at the single-fracture scale. Using analytical solutions and numerical simulations, we investigate the thermal response to the injection of a cold temperature pulse into a rough fracture, considering both synthetic and real heterogeneous aperture fields. The results reveal that fracture roughness has a significant influence on heat transport, with post-peak tailings of the breakthrough curves showing an anomalous transient decay rate in time before evolving toward the asymptotic regime with a -3/2 decay rate, which is characteristic of fracture-matrix diffusive heat exchange. This behavior is sensitive to variations in the fracture aperture field caused by the activation of relative sliding between fracture surfaces, with larger slips leading to earlier temperature peaks and delayed transitions to the asymptotic diffusive regime.

The second process focuses on cooling-induced thermal contraction of the rock surrounding the fractures, which tends to increase fracture aperture and directly affects fluid flow and advective heat transport. We analyze this phenomenon at the scale of the fractured rock mass. By means of a hybrid methodology that combines an analytical model with a particle tracking approach applied to Discrete Fracture Networks (DFNs), we numerically investigate the impact of cold fluid circulation in systems of fractures with different characteristics. Results show that rock contraction accelerates the advective transport resulting in a faster recovery of cold fluid at the outlet.

These analyses allow identifying the characteristics of fractured rocks that are most critical for heat transport under the occurrence of fracture slip and opening. This understanding is crucial to control the performance and lifetime of geothermal exploitations.

How to cite: De Simone, S., González-Fuentes, S., Andrés, S., and Vilarrasa, V.: Heat transport in deforming fractured rocks: the effects of fracture slip and opening, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3471, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3471, 2026.

EGU26-3852 | Orals | ERE5.2

The importance of structural geology in site characterisation of geoenergy and nuclear waste sites  

Jon Engström, Kati Ahlqvist, Sami Vallin, Nikolas Ovaskainen, and Nicklas Nordbäck

Heating and cooling in both industry and households in Europe has become increasingly important but it is still heavily dependent on fossil fuels. Shifting to low-carbon alternatives cuts emissions, strengthens energy security, and enhances the efficiency for these energy systems in the future. These goals can be achieved with a combination of efficient energy storage and clean energy production. Two example solutions within this field are the Cavern Thermal Energy Storage (CTES) and Deep Geological Repositories (DGR), the first used to store thermal energy and the second to solve the waste issue in climate-neutral nuclear energy production. These two solutions have the common requirement of needing advanced structural geological studies. During the last decade research have focused, for example, on developing CTES, which rely on subsurface caverns in low-permeable rocks that are near surface and remain stable when injected with hot and cold water. Today, there is broad international scientific consensus that high-level nuclear waste should not be stored at the surface in the long term. DGR are considered the best solution as they enclose the radioactive waste in suitable host rock formations located several hundreds of meters below the surface. DGR has also been extensively researched and advanced in several countries, and Finland is a global leader in developing the concept for the storage of nuclear waste within crystalline bedrock.

These storage concepts in crystalline bedrock depend on selecting rock blocks that lack major deformation zones and contain few faults and fractures. Hence, the structural geological modelling is an important tool to mitigate uncertainties and to assess the applicability of the bedrock volume for storage. Several methods exist to assess the bedrock, such as non-intrusive geophysical surveys and intrusive drilling of boreholes into the bedrock. State-of-the-art research shows that best results are achieved by combining multiple research methods within a well-designed research framework to define a 3D geological model of the site.   

Successful implementation of these energy storage projects requires the definition of parameters at early stages of the project to define the constrains for the structural geological 3D model. Detailed structural geological modelling enables evaluation of key aspects and mitigation of uncertainties, such as groundwater conditions, seismic risks, mechanical and thermal properties, as well as environmental factors for the project. This exploration approach can significantly reduce time constrains and costs during every step of these projects. In addition, these geological 3D models serve as an important tool for presenting and communicating projects, including their uncertainties, to policy makers, stakeholders and the public.  

How to cite: Engström, J., Ahlqvist, K., Vallin, S., Ovaskainen, N., and Nordbäck, N.: The importance of structural geology in site characterisation of geoenergy and nuclear waste sites , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3852, 2026.

EGU26-4021 | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Capturing natural fracture topology in DFNs for energy and storage applications 

Sarah Weihmann, Christoph Gärtner, James Mullins, Frank Charlier, and Klaus Fischer-Appelt

Many renewable subsurface energy systems rely on understanding fracture networks. In geothermal systems, fractures often provide the primary pathways for fluid flow, while in underground hydrogen storage (UHS) and carbon capture and storage (CCS), fracture networks can strongly influence pressure communication, injectivity or caprock integrity. Similarly, in nuclear waste repositories, fractures can compromise barrier integrity and limit containment. This study investigates the representativity of discrete fracture networks (DFNs) generated from high-resolution photogrammetric outcrop data to support robust models and simulations.

Observed data such as fracture orientations, lengths, intensities, and topological node classifications (X-, Y-, and I-nodes) are used to construct synthetic DFNs via (1) geometric modelling, (2) fracture-growth algorithms, and (3) tracemap extrusion. These DFNs are then meshed and integrated into single-phase flow simulations. Pressure gradients are applied to quantify the influence of fracture intensity and topology on flow behaviour across above fracture generation methods.

Results show systematic topological deviations between natural and synthetic networks. Geometric and growth-based methods overestimate X- and I-nodes while underrepresenting Y-nodes, affecting connectivity and predicted flow paths. Tracemap extrusion reproduces geometry more accurately but requires significantly higher computational resources. Flow simulations reveal that fracture intensity and node topology strongly influence pressure evolution and steady-state attainment. Both parameters are central to injectivity forecasting, (thermal) breakthrough prediction, and storage containment assessment.

Overall, the results demonstrate that current DFN generation methods reproduce fracture geometry reasonably well but struggle to match natural network topology, introducing systematic biases into models and simulations. Improving the representation of Y-node-dominated branching structures is therefore essential for developing more reliable models and simulations of fractured reservoirs and repositories.

How to cite: Weihmann, S., Gärtner, C., Mullins, J., Charlier, F., and Fischer-Appelt, K.: Capturing natural fracture topology in DFNs for energy and storage applications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4021, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4021, 2026.

EGU26-4053 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Permeability reduction in fractured geothermal field using heat-activated epoxy resin droplets: resolving droplet transport and adhesion dynamics 

Yutong Cui, Rishi Parashar, Yang Ying, Manish Bishwokarma, and Dani Or

The performance of enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) depends critically on effective water–rock heat exchange. This often requires creation of new fractures, however, for certain scenarios, occluding short-circuiting high flow fractures is needed. Here we introduce an approach for reducing the permeability of large fractures using heat-activated epoxy resin foam. The resin is transported as discrete droplets that become thermally activates (foam, expand and cure) in-situ at a prescribed temperature range. We present modelling and experiments for the transport and adhesion characteristics of resin droplets that result in gradual permeability reduction in large aperture fractures (mm-cm scale). The coupled transport and adhesion of resin droplets is represented in a 2-D numerical model enabling quantification of changes in pressure distribution, flow pathways, and effective permeability. Droplet adhesion considers velocity perturbations coupled with Hertz–Mindlin contact mechanics for thermally activated chemical reaction kinetics. Model predictions show good agreement with laboratory-scale fracture experiments, demonstrating the capability of the proposed approach to capture key mechanisms governing resin sticking and permeability alteration in fractured rock.

How to cite: Cui, Y., Parashar, R., Ying, Y., Bishwokarma, M., and Or, D.: Permeability reduction in fractured geothermal field using heat-activated epoxy resin droplets: resolving droplet transport and adhesion dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4053, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4053, 2026.

Faults critically control hydrocarbon migration and accumulation, especially in deep to ultra-deep environments where reservoir quality is generally poor. However, current understanding of fault-controlled hydrocarbon accumulation remains largely qualitative, relying on geological interpretation and conceptual models. A quantitative reconstruction of episodic hydrocarbon expulsion, migration, and accumulation during fault activity under in-situ temperature, pressure, and stress conditions remains lacking, thereby constraining a mechanistic understanding of fault-controlled petroleum systems. In western China, thrust-fault-controlled hydrocarbon reservoirs are widely developed in superimposed basins. This study establishes a geological conceptual model based on typical deep reservoirs, incorporating multiple reservoir–seal assemblages and fault systems. Numerical simulations of hydrocarbon migration and accumulation under fully coupled thermo‑hydro‑mechanical (THM) conditions were conducted using COMSOL Multiphysics. The research quantitatively evaluates the effects of fault geometry, reservoir–seal configurations, and fluid properties on accumulation dynamics. The high-resolution simulations of the fully coupled THM processes reveal that during active faulting periods, hydrocarbons preferentially migrate vertically along the high-permeability damage zone on the fault zone, and are blocked by the seal rock, showing a top-down charging into the reservoirs. During transitional periods, diminished vertical conductivity leads to hydrocarbon accumulation preferentially in proximal, bottom reservoirs. Hydrocarbon enrichment is jointly controlled by fault type (reverse faults being more favorable than normal faults), fault activity sequence, and the relationship between strata and fault tendency. Notably, a “seal-before-break” fault activity pattern can lead to instantaneous release of overpressure-driven hydrocarbons, facilitating highly efficient hydrocarbon accumulation. This study provides a quantitative reconstruction method for fault‑controlled hydrocarbon migration and accumulation under realistic subsurface conditions. It advances the mechanistic understanding of fault‑controlled petroleum systems and offers theoretical support for exploring deep fault‑related reservoirs.

How to cite: Jia, K., Liu, J., and Liu, K.: Hydrocarbon migration and accumulation in a thrust fault-controlled deep reservoir: Insight from the THM coupling numerical modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4203, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4203, 2026.

EGU26-4557 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

The fault in our clay: Variation in fault cementation in evaporite-bearing mudrocks and implications for sealing 

Griffin Page, Nathaniel Forbes Inskip, Alexis Cartwright-Taylor, Niko Kampman, and Andreas Busch

Mudrocks are a crucial resource for subsurface storage of gases or radioactive waste, both as host rock and caprock. They are characterised by  low primary permeability and high creep rates, limiting the lifespan of fractures, both decreasing the chance of leakage. Large faults pose a significant risk to this, as they act as coupled hydro-mechanical weak points, with potential for increased flow up-dip and along-strike. Gouge generation is well established as a process which limits this permeability increase, however cementation of void space in faults is less well studied.

We studied faults hosted in the Mercia Mudrock Group in the Bristol Channel (southwest UK). We find that gouge and cementation work cyclically with more than one mineral phase, indicating the hydro-mechanical development of a fault through its lifespan. In the fault core, veins tend to be redirected parallel to the mechanical discontinuity between damage zone and gouge, indicating the location of preferential flow. In the damage zone, veins are not always planar in the soft mudrocks and are often part of an anastomosing network which is influenced by other non-fault related structures, such as older veins, sand dyking, and mechanical stratigraphy. The elongated, fibrous gypsum and calcite crystals observed emphasise the importance of high fluid pressures to open and maintain these fractures.

We interpret episodic overpressures that build up layers of gypsum veining in the gouge core of a number of faults; however, the limited special extent of these veins suggests patch-style dilation and slip that may not pose a significant leakage risk. Gypsum veining appears to destroy most remaining evidence of a damage zone in these instances.

This is in contrast to brittle calcite, associated with rifting and inversion, which shows more fluid movement up-and-down-dip and appears to preserve the damage zone. This results in structures that can be reactivated, both by more calcite-bearing fluid but also overpressure caused by rehydration of anhydrite to. This reactivation causes brecciation of the calcite that is not seen in the gypsum despite the overprinting of stress events.

In summary, tectonic environments which open large fault patches potentially pose a higher risk to leakage through mudrock-hosted faults, than fluid overpressure events. However, cementation of these faults, while providing mechanical discontinuities for later dilation events, do appear to seal voids generated by fault activity.

How to cite: Page, G., Forbes Inskip, N., Cartwright-Taylor, A., Kampman, N., and Busch, A.: The fault in our clay: Variation in fault cementation in evaporite-bearing mudrocks and implications for sealing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4557, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4557, 2026.

Heating water using waste heat and excess renewable energy in Cavern Thermal Energy Storage (CTES) systems provides a sustainable solution for large-scale thermal energy storage. In addition to challenging economics of CTES, unexpectedly high thermal losses have been a major concern in many cases in the past. In crystalline bedrock, fractured brittle deformation zones can act as fluid pathways, potentially causing thermal losses and compromising cavern stability. Therefore, detailed modelling of these zones is essential for the safe and efficient operation of CTES facilities.

This study presents a workflow for geological characterization and deformation zone modeling at the planned site of the world’s largest CTES facility, VARANTO, in Vantaa, southern Finland. The dataset includes drill core samples totaling over 4 km, acoustic and optical borehole imaging, outcrop observations, and a photogrammetric model. We delineated deformation zone intersections from core samples and classified them into core and damage zones, defining zone dimensions for altered and fractured bedrock. We clustered orientation data from borehole imaging and core logs to determine mean fracture orientations, which, together with zone dimensions, were integrated into a 3D geological model to construct a volumetric representation of deformation zones. Additionally, we parameterized these zones based on properties such as core fracturing, fracture infill, and alteration to characterize and evaluate their structural significance in terms of stability and potential hydraulic conductivity.

The resulting 3D model improves understanding of potential fracture zones and thus pathways for groundwater flow and their impact for thermal and mechanical behaviour, supporting system simulations, monitoring, and maintenance. Representing deformation zones as volumes rather than surfaces enhances integration with groundwater flow models, reduces uncertainty, and enables more accurate prediction of hydraulic connectivity and thermal losses, thereby optimizing system performance. This workflow also provides a transferable methodology for other underground energy storage projects, facilitating risk assessment and design optimization in crystalline bedrock environments.

How to cite: Ahlqvist, K. M., Engström, J., Vallin, S., and Hagström, M.: Geological 3D modeling in crystalline bedrock for a cavern thermal energy storage site in S Finland - defining properties and parameters for deformation zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4833, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4833, 2026.

EGU26-4886 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Preparation of fracture data and delineation of bedrock domains for 3D DFN modeling of a cavern thermal energy storage site in Southern Finland 

Teemu Lindqvist, Kati Ahlqvist, Jon Engström, and Markku Hagström

Cavern thermal energy storage (CTES) is increasingly recognized as a key technology for integrating renewable energy sources and balancing seasonal heat supply and demand. The implementation of CTES in crystalline bedrock settings requires detailed characterization of brittle deformation zones and fracture networks that both control heat transfer and cavern stability. Site-scale zones of localized brittle deformation, ranging from tens of centimetres to several metres in thickness and tens to hundreds of metres in length, can often be identified from drillcore interpretations and represented deterministically in structural geological models. In contrast, fracture networks are commonly constrained by sparse observations of individual fractures with small apertures, necessitating stochastic approaches to account for limited sampling and uncertainty within poorly constrained subsurface volumes. Consequently, detailed fracture mapping and classification, together with the identification of volumes of bedrock constrained by the deformation zones, i.e. bedrock domains, are essential prerequisites for fracture network modelling that utilize, for example, Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) approaches.


In this study, we evaluate the usability of the conventionally acquired and subsequently classified fracture data for generating fracture sets for 3D DFN models in crystalline bedrock deformed by multiple tectonic events and comprising variably altered granites and gneisses. We also evaluate brittle deformation zones as constraints for determining structurally homogeneous bedrock domains. The study focuses on the planned largest CTES site in the world, VARANTO, located in Vantaa, southern Finland, with an approximate storage volume of 1 million m³ and a heat capacity of 90 GWh. The dataset comprises optical or acoustic borehole images (OBI and ABI) from 36 boreholes, fracture observations from oriented drillcores and field observations, and 3D deformation zone models available from earlier work.


The results indicate that classification of discontinuities from the OBI and ABI images based on filling type can present challenges in distinguishing between brittle fractures and other structures such as dikes without a brittle interface. In addition, variations in the OBI and ABI image quality may lead to intervals with limited or less distinct observations. These findings highlight the value of integrating supplemental data sources, such as the fractures mapped from oriented drill cores and field observations, to enhance interpretation and overall representativity of the fracture data. Moreover, using the deformation zone models to constrain the bedrock domains results in a domain pattern that is challenging in terms of drillhole fracture data availability for DFN modeling. Therefore, we briefly discuss filtering of the domains based on available data.

How to cite: Lindqvist, T., Ahlqvist, K., Engström, J., and Hagström, M.: Preparation of fracture data and delineation of bedrock domains for 3D DFN modeling of a cavern thermal energy storage site in Southern Finland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4886, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4886, 2026.

EGU26-6253 | Orals | ERE5.2

Why late-stage collisional orogens are favorable for geothermal exploration 

Marco Herwegh, Timothy Schmid, Daniela B. van den Heuvel, Christoph Wanner, Larryn W. Diamond, James Faulds, Alfons Berger, Tobias Diehl, and Herfried Madritsch

In contrast to convergent plate tectonics during subduction, collisional orogens in their late stages (e.g., Alps, Pyrenees, Himalayas) typically exhibit little to no magmatic activity. Consequently, these settings have historically received limited attention in exploration for geothermal energy. Nevertheless, such orogens do host active, amagmatic geothermal systems owing to the co-occurrence of several key features: (1) ongoing crustal-scale deformation within the brittle upper crust, which generates spatially dispersed, permeable fracture networks; (2) major, steep strike-slip and normal faults with permeable dilation zones that cut across the fracture networks; (3) geothermal gradients of 20–35 °C/km, which provide heat to circulating fluids; (4) pronounced topographic relief, which induces strong hydraulic head gradients between high surface elevations and valley floors.

The interaction of these features produces dynamic geothermal circulation systems: meteoric water infiltrates at high elevations into the dispersed fracture networks and is focused into the major faults, allowing the water to descend to depths up to 10 km and become heated to above 200 °C. Subvertical dilation zones within the major faults link the deep flow paths to the surface or relatively shallow depths, generally at lower elevations, allowing the topographically induced hydraulic gradients to drive the hot water up to discharge sites in the valley floors.

Unfortunately, in orogens where valleys are glacially over-deepened, outflow is commonly hidden under thick sequences of unconsolidated sediments. Therefore, the challenge in exploration in such settings is to locate these blind geothermal systems. To address this challenge, we examined the geothermal favorability of the mountainous Valais region in SW Switzerland, which is one of the most well-known areas of geothermal activity in the European Alps. Through collaboration among structural geologists, hydrogeochemists and seismologists, all available geological and hydrochemical data were compiled in a GIS database to conduct a Play Fairway Analysis. Each data layer was evaluated and rated for its ability to directly or indirectly indicate sites of deep thermal upflow. By weighting and combining these layers, we produced favorability maps displaying areas where active upflow of thermal water is most likely. A notable outcome is that most of the known thermal springs in the study area fall within the identified favorable areas. This success demonstrates the usefulness of the favorability maps in guiding more spatially-targeted exploration in the Valais region. Moreover, our methodology provides a transferable framework for exploration in similar geodynamic settings elsewhere.

How to cite: Herwegh, M., Schmid, T., van den Heuvel, D. B., Wanner, C., Diamond, L. W., Faulds, J., Berger, A., Diehl, T., and Madritsch, H.: Why late-stage collisional orogens are favorable for geothermal exploration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6253, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6253, 2026.

EGU26-7692 | Orals | ERE5.2

A massive hydraulic tomography experiment for the high-resolution characterization of the excavation induced fracture network using a travel-time based inversion scheme 

Ralf Brauchler, Axayacatl Maqueda, Rémi de La Vaissière, Médéric Piedevache, and Alain Laurent

The Meuse/Haute-Marne Underground Research Laboratory hosts a large-scale hydraulic tomography experiment designed to characterize fracture networks induced around open and sealed galleries. The objective of this study is to reconstruct their hydraulic properties and fracture geometry to validate a conceptual model describing stress redistribution during tunnel excavation. In the first step, cross-hole responses from gas permeability tests conducted by Solexperts SA were analyzed using an equivalent porous media approach consisting of a 3D travel-time-based tomographic inversion. In the second step, a sequential inversion scheme was applied to reconstruct discrete fracture planes in 3D.

Gas injection tests were carried out across 11 boreholes, each equipped with a movable multi-packer system comprising six intervals for injection or observation. This configuration enabled the recording of 1168 pressure interference signals with a signal-to-noise ratio sufficient for inversion.

The applied 3D travel-time-based tomographic approach relies on transforming the transient groundwater flow equation into the eikonal equation using an asymptotic approximation. This inversion method allowed reconstruction of the 3D gas diffusivity distribution, capturing the key features of the conceptual model related to stress redistribution during excavation. The sequential inversion approach integrates the 3D travel-time inversion with multivariate statistics and basic geological constraints. This method enables significant mesh refinement within the model domain while avoiding a strong ill-posed inversion problem. It successfully reconstructed fracture traces of the induced network parallel to the tunnel surface, including both extension and shear fractures.

Combining results from both approaches enhanced understanding of the spatial geometry of the induced fracture network around galleries: the 3D travel-time tomography provided a comprehensive spatial representation of the conceptual model, while the sequential inversion delivered high-resolution 3D images of fracture traces associated with its main properties.

How to cite: Brauchler, R., Maqueda, A., de La Vaissière, R., Piedevache, M., and Laurent, A.: A massive hydraulic tomography experiment for the high-resolution characterization of the excavation induced fracture network using a travel-time based inversion scheme, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7692, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7692, 2026.

EGU26-8504 | Orals | ERE5.2

Development of Large-scale Rock Friction Apparatuses at NIED, Japan 

Eiichi Fukuyama, Futoshi Yamashita, Shiqing Xu, Kazuo Mizoguchi, Hironori Kawakata, Kurama Okubo, Yoshiyuki Matsumoto, and Sumire Maeda

Development of large-scale rock friction apparatus started around 2010 at National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience (NIED) in Japan (Fukuyama et al., 2014, NIED Rep.). Until now, three generations of the apparatus have already been developed, whose sliding area ranges from 1.5 m to 6.0 m in length. The purpose of this project was to investigate the rock frictional properties and earthquake rupture process at various sliding scales. There are two important characteristics in these apparatuses. One is that the nucleation zone size can be generated within the sliding fault area. The other is that the nucleation process can be spatially monitored by local strain measurement array installed close to the sliding surfaces. When nucleation zone is confined to the experimental fault surfaces, the whole rupture process from initiation to termination could be able to be observed in the experiments (Yamashita et al., 2026, EGU). Using these apparatuses, many kinds of large-scale rock friction experiments have been conducted. Through such experimental research, the following results have been reported. 1) The spatial distribution of strength on the fault surface is heterogeneous, which had not been properly considered by small-scale experiments (Yamashita et al., 2015, Nature). 2) Such spatial heterogeneity of strength on the fault surface could contribute to the fault-size dependence of macroscopic rock friction as well as the rich spectrum of rupture behaviors, which are quite important for the modeling of earthquake generation process (Xu et al., 2023, Nat. Geosci.). Especially, due to high-speed loading (~1 mm/s) and long-distance sliding (~40 cm), ten-decimeter-scale heterogeneity on the fault surface could be generated, which is found to play an important role in large-scale friction experiments (Yamashita et al., 2018, Tectonophys.). In addition to these spatially heterogeneous fault friction experiments, rupture propagation has been investigated in detail to investigate the fracture energy (Okubo et al., 2026, EGU; Matsumoto et al., 2026, EGU). In the near future, we expect that such large-scale rock friction experiments would contribute significantly to seismology, especially, physics of earthquake generation process, by establishing new constitutive law(s) of the rock friction through the usage of dense arrays of near-fault observations.

How to cite: Fukuyama, E., Yamashita, F., Xu, S., Mizoguchi, K., Kawakata, H., Okubo, K., Matsumoto, Y., and Maeda, S.: Development of Large-scale Rock Friction Apparatuses at NIED, Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8504, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8504, 2026.

Abstract: Early-term inactive faults can be reopened as hydrocarbon migration channels under overpressure. Clarifying their opening mechanism during the hydrocarbon accumulation period is the foundation of hydrocarbon exploration. In view of the problem that early-term inactive faults in the Junggar Basin have the potential for cross-layer migration but the overpressure-driven opening mechanism is unclear, this study constructs a mechanical model coupled with strong and weak layer combinations and pore fluid pressure. Combined with the Mohr-Coulomb fracture criterion, the mechanical response characteristics of the faults under two boundary conditions of lateral confinement and unconfined confinement are analyzed, thereby revealing the opening mechanism of early-term inactive faults. The study shows that: (1) Under lateral confinement conditions, the overpressure evolution is in two stages: "Mohr circle translation - radius enlargement". Due to stress distribution, the Mohr circle is preferentially tangent to the original fracture line, which promotes the local opening of the fault. (2) Under lateral unconfined confinement conditions, the effective stress change is concentrated on the fracture surface, driving the Mohr circle to the left and reducing the critical stress value for opening early-term inactive faults. (3) Both laterally restricted and laterally unrestricted states exhibit the characteristics of "priority of overpressure zone, dominance of lower fault, and initial opening of overpressure segment", and can further extend along the original fault. (4) The study area as a whole shows that the critical opening pressure of the western fault is higher than that of the eastern fault, and this pressure has shown an evolution trend of "increasing-decreasing-increasing" since the end of the Triassic. Areas closer to the overpressure center of the source rock and with a smaller angle between the fault strike and the maximum principal stress have better opening properties. In the late hydrocarbon accumulation stage, some early-decaying faults open due to the overpressure reaching the critical condition, and can serve as effective hydrocarbon migration channels.

How to cite: Zhang, W. and Liu, H.: Research on the Opening Mechanism of Early-Term Inactive Faults: A Case Study of the Junggar Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9318, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9318, 2026.

EGU26-9512 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

Electric Self-Potential Measurements during Fluid Injection at the Bedretto Underground Laboratory 

Nadine Haaf, Jeroma Azzola, Liliana Vargas Meleza, Marian Hertrich, Valentin Gischig, Mathilde Wimez, Antonio Pio Rinaldi, Fridolin Straub, Maren Brehme, Domenico Giardini, Francisco Sorbeto, and Andreas Alcolea

Self-potential (SP) monitoring was implemented at the Bedretto Underground Laboratory as part of the BEACH experiment to complement multi-parameter observations during fluid-injection tests. Continuous SP measurements have been conducted since the end of October 2025, with data acquired so far covering the period until mid-December, and monitoring planned to continue throughout the current year.

The SP setup consists of nine non-polarizable Pb/PbCl₂ electrodes installed along the tunnel wall and within one borehole in the Mesozoic Crystalline Fault Zone. Tunnel-wall electrodes were placed in shallow drill holes and embedded using conductive contact material to ensure stable long-term coupling to the rock. A single electrode was installed in a 50m borehole to provide additional depth sensitivity. All electrodes were connected to a CR6 data logger, recording continuous SP time series with a sampling interval of one value per minute.

The recorded data span different operational phases, including background conditions as well as cold and warm water injection cycles and associated shut-in periods. This contribution presents an initial overview of the acquired SP dataset.

 

 

 

Acknowledgements:

BEACH – Energie Speicherung und Zirkulation von Geothermischer Energie in Bedretto receives funding from the Swiss Federal Office of Energy (SFOE), Project number SI/502817.

"Geo-INQUIRE is funded by the European Commission under project number 101058518 within the HORIZON-INFRA-2021-SERV-01 call."

How to cite: Haaf, N., Azzola, J., Vargas Meleza, L., Hertrich, M., Gischig, V., Wimez, M., Rinaldi, A. P., Straub, F., Brehme, M., Giardini, D., Sorbeto, F., and Alcolea, A.: Electric Self-Potential Measurements during Fluid Injection at the Bedretto Underground Laboratory, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9512, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9512, 2026.

EGU26-10407 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Structural Characteristics and Genesic Mechanism of Antiformal Negative Flower Structures: Insights from the Doseo Basin, Central-West African Rift System 

Yu Yang, Yifan Song, Kunye Xiao, Yebo Du, Xinshun Zhang, Li Wang, Yafei Ou, and Ying Hu

Unlike classical positive and negative flower structures, antiformal negative flower structures represent a unique structural type developed under strike-slip tectonic inversion regimes. Rarely reported in previous studies, the genesic mechanism of such structures remains poorly understood, particularly the mechanical reasons that inhibit the inversion of pre-existing normal faults under compressional conditions. Based on detailed interpretation of high-resolution seismic data, this study systematically investigates the tectonic setting, structural characteristics, and formation mechanism of antiformal negative flower structures in the Doseo Basin of the Central–West African Rift System, and discusses their implications for the structural evolution of strike-slip inversion basins and the development of hydrocarbon traps.

The Doseo Basin is located within the basin-controlling domain of the Central-West African Rift System and experienced two major tectonic episodes: transtension during the Early Cretaceous and intense tectonic inversion during the Eocene. These tectonic events resulted in the development of multiple types of inversion-related structures, including fault-associated, thrust-related, fold-dominated, and antiformal negative flower structures. Antiformal negative flower structures are mainly developed within the central low-relief uplift belt of the basin. In planar view, these structures are arranged in en echelon with a NWW-SEE trend, whereas in cross-section they are characterized by an antiformal uplift controlled by a set of normal faults. During the inversion stage, the pre-existing normal faults were not reactivated to reverse faults; instead, the strata experienced pronounced compressional arching. Notably, the spatial extent of the anticlinal uplift closely coincides with the distribution of the normal faults. Genetic analysis indicates that under the Early Cretaceous transtensional stress field, basement weak zones were reactivated, leading to the formation of normal faults and the initial development of negative flower structures. During this stage, the scale, vertical extent, and activity intensity of the normal faults were established. During the Eocene tectonic inversion, regional transpressional stress was superimposed on the negative flower structure system. However, constrained by two key factors, the relatively high mechanical stability of the early transtensional structures (related to fault cementation and lithological properties of surrounding rocks) and high dipping of the normal faults, the inversion-stage stress failed to reach the critical threshold required for fault polarity reversal. Instead, it was only sufficient to induce compressional arching of the strata, ultimately resulting in antiformal negative flower structures characterized by the preservation of pre-existing normal faults combined with an antiformal uplift.

This study demonstrates that the preservation of normal faults is jointly controlled by insufficient inversion-stage stress and the mechanical stability of pre-existing transtensional fault systems. These findings expand current genetic models of structural styles in strike-slip inversion basins and provide new geological constraints for structural interpretation and hydrocarbon trap prediction in the Doseo Basin and other analogous basins.

How to cite: Yang, Y., Song, Y., Xiao, K., Du, Y., Zhang, X., Wang, L., Ou, Y., and Hu, Y.: Structural Characteristics and Genesic Mechanism of Antiformal Negative Flower Structures: Insights from the Doseo Basin, Central-West African Rift System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10407, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10407, 2026.

EGU26-11471 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

Fracture network modeling with graph deep learning 

Ana Paula Burgoa Tanaka, Philippe Renard, Xiao Xia Liang, Julien Straubhaar, and Dany Lauzon

Most existing fracture modeling workflows rely on the generation of discrete fracture networks (DFN), which simulate fracture patches based on stochastic distributions of geometric parameters and generally neglect topological constraints. To address the DFN constraints, we propose applying graph theory and deep learning to characterize and generate coherent fracture networks from real-world datasets. Our approach broadens the range of quantitative methods available for fracture modeling; it is non-gridded and accounts for both geometry and topology in the generation of new networks. 

The generation of fracture networks based on a reference and/or analog network interpretation is useful for modeling subsurface uncertainties related to fracture positions and network intersections. This application is useful for sites where fracture interpretation is possible, but where full coverage of the study site is not available. For characterization, we integrate geometry, topology, kinematics, age relationships, and geomechanics to identify the most important connections within a network. For simulations, we combine a graph recurrent neural network (GraphRNN) for generating graph topology and graph denoising diffusion probabilistic models (DDPM) for generating node positions in space. Deep generative models learn distributions from the training fracture network data and generate new networks with a variable number of fracture lineaments, represented as edges, while intersections are represented as nodes.

Our method is applied to a real case study from the Western Helvetic Alps domain in Switzerland. The model is trained on graphs derived from the fracture network interpretation of a Cretaceous limestone aquifer. The generation of new fracture networks as graphs yields coherent topologies with statistical distributions similar to those of the training data for node degree and relative node positions (i.e., edge length and azimuth). Furthermore, the training dataset and the generated networks are compared using node centrality measures (betweenness and percolation), which help describe the network's connectivity and highlight preferential flow paths, thereby emphasizing the role of fracture connectivity in enhancing permeability and controlling flow anisotropy. The method is promising for the generation of fracture networks as an alternative approach that can be used to identify preferential fluid flow paths and to build scenarios for later flow simulation for hydrogeology, reservoir management, geothermal energy, nuclear waste disposal, and geologic sequestration.

How to cite: Burgoa Tanaka, A. P., Renard, P., Liang, X. X., Straubhaar, J., and Lauzon, D.: Fracture network modeling with graph deep learning, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11471, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11471, 2026.

EGU26-11476 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

Hydro-mechanical loading effects on flow through a single natural fracture 

Brandon Stock, Andrew Frampton, and Diego Mas Ivars

Fractured crystalline rocks are widely regarded as suitable host formations for waste isolation applications, including deep geological repositories for spent nuclear fuel. Fluid flow in these systems is predominantly controlled by networks of fractures whose hydraulic properties are governed by internal heterogeneity, contact area distribution, and stress-dependent aperture evolution. These properties are strongly influenced by in situ stress conditions, which may evolve over geological to engineering time scales due to processes such as glacial loading, stress redistribution, and excavation-induced damage. Robust representation of fracture-scale flow behaviour is therefore critical for the development and calibration of large-scale discrete fracture network models.

In this study, we investigate the coupled hydro-mechanical behaviour of a natural single fracture using a laboratory-scale flow experiment under increasing normal load. The fracture aperture field was reconstructed using high-resolution 3D scanning of the opposing fracture surfaces, with vertical alignment refined using pressure-sensitive film measurements. A systematic sensitivity analysis of 27 alignment cases, incorporating translational uncertainties along the x-, y- and z-directions was performed to quantify their influence on flow behaviour. Measured flow rates were compared against predictions from the local cubic law under varying normal stress. Results demonstrate that flow is highly sensitive to fracture surface alignment, with misalignment along the flow direction and normal direction exerting the dominant influence. The local cubic law systematically overestimates flow by at least two orders of magnitude for all loading cases. Furthermore, the application of a constant correction factor to convert mechanical to hydraulic aperture, calibrated under unloaded conditions, fails to reproduce experimental flow rates as normal load increases. We propose a stress-dependent correction factor linked explicitly to the evolution of fracture contact area. Incorporating this relationship yields close agreement with experimental observations across all loading and alignment cases.

How to cite: Stock, B., Frampton, A., and Mas Ivars, D.: Hydro-mechanical loading effects on flow through a single natural fracture, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11476, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11476, 2026.

Ensuring the safe disposal of high-level radioactive waste in a suitable host rock requires compliance with several legally defined criteria. In Germany, these criteria are established by Repository Site Selection Act (Standortauswahlgesetz – StandAG). One of the key hydrogeological criteria constrains the hydraulic conductivity of the host rock to values below 10-10 m/s. In crystalline rocks, hydraulic conductivity is governed by contributions from both the rock matrix and the fracture network, with transport typically dominated by fractures.

Fractures are characterized by multiple parameters, including orientation (strike and dip angles), fracture size (strike and dip lengths), volumetric fracture density (number of fractures per unit volume), and hydraulic aperture. The main objectives of this study are to (i) evaluate the sensitivity of effective hydraulic conductivity to individual fracture parameters and their correlations, (ii) test a DFN-based workflow for hydraulic upscaling at the representative elementary volume (REV) scale, and (iii) identify parameter combinations that satisfy the hydraulic safety criterion defined by StandAG for nuclear waste repositories.

Parameter correlations represent dependent relationships between fracture properties. Semi-correlated DFN models account for relationships between fracture aperture, strike length, and fracture density while incorporating a stochastic term to capture natural variability, whereas uncorrelated DFN models assume full parameter independence.

Both semi-correlated and uncorrelated DFN models were considered to investigate the influence of correlations between fracture length, aperture, and volumetric fracture density on hydraulic behavior. The proposed workflow integrates DFN generation using the software Frackit, the upscale of fracture-scale properties to an equivalent porous medium (EPM) based on Oda’s method assuming cubic-law fracture-scale flow, and flow simulations performed with FEFLOW 10 to derive effective hydraulic conductivity.

The DFNs were generated within a cubic volume of 50×50×50 m³. Fracture lengths range from a few to several tens of meters, volumetric fracture densities vary between approximately 10-4 and 10-2 m-3, strike and dip angles span 0–180° and 0–90°, respectively, and fracture apertures extend from 10-7 to 10-2 m.

The results show that (1) fracture aperture was consistently found to be the strongest parameter controlling hydraulic conductivity in both semi-correlated and uncorrelated models. In semi-correlated models, volumetric fracture density and fracture dimensions such as strike and dip lengths also significantly affect the effective hydraulic conductivity. Strike and dip angles exhibited low sensitivity. In uncorrelated models, the aperture alone dominates flow, while other parameters show negligible influence. (2) Effective hydraulic conductivity compatible with the StandAG limit is typically found when fracture apertures are small, i.e., smaller than 10-4 m, strike lengths are short, i.e., shorter than 10 m, and fracture density is moderate to high, i.e., higher than 1 × 10-3 m-3, in semi-correlated models. In uncorrelated models, hydraulic conductivity below the standard limit is primarily controlled by small apertures, i.e., smaller than 10-4 m, independent of fracture density.

How to cite: Jimenez, V. and Renz, A.: Sensitivity analysis of fracture parameters in discrete fracture network (DFN) models for effective hydraulic conductivity under StandAG, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12023, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12023, 2026.

EGU26-13002 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

Transient permeability in ductile rocks: the competition between deformation and healing 

Gabriel Meyer, Francesco Lazari, and Marie Violay

Fluid circulation in ductile rocks controls the deposition of critical resources such as copper and molybdenum, as well as the potential for deep, supercritical geothermal systems. However, the mechanisms that allow or hinder such circulation under high temperature and pressure conditions remain poorly understood.

In this study, we conducted two sets of healing experiments on thermally cracked Lanhelin granite, both water-saturated and dry, under high confining pressure and temperature. The first set of experiments was carried out under hydrostatic conditions (Peff = 85 MPa) with increasing temperature (21–400 °C). The second set was conducted under triaxial conditions, in which specimens were deformed at Peff = 85 MPa, temperatures ranging from 200 to 600 °C, and a strain rate of 10⁻⁶ s⁻¹. In both cases, permeability was continuously recorded throughout.

Under hydrostatic conditions, permeability remained roughly constant at room temperature and in dry samples, but decreased by up to an order of magnitude over 8 hours at 400 °C. Under triaxial deformation, water-saturated specimens were weaker and exhibited more ductile behavior compared to dry samples. Moreover, the more ductile the sample, the greater the increase in permeability observed leading up to failure.

Microstructural evidence supports chemical crack self-healing as the dominant healing mechanism in the hydrostatic experiments. In the deformed samples, post-mortem analysis revealed that the observed increase in permeability is associated with pervasive cracking throughout the bulk of the rock.

Overall, our study demonstrates the necessity of deformation to generate permeability in ductile rocks, while also highlighting the transient nature of this permeability.

How to cite: Meyer, G., Lazari, F., and Violay, M.: Transient permeability in ductile rocks: the competition between deformation and healing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13002, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13002, 2026.

EGU26-13705 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

Fault-controlled paleofluid flow in shale caprocks: Structural, geochemical, and mineralogical evidence from the Bristol Channel Basin (UK) 

Tunahan Aykut, Nicolas Beaudoin, Christopher Wibberley, Jade Dutilleul, Laurent Emmanuel, and Jean-Paul Callot

Understanding the development of fault zones in caprock shales and their impact on permeability is critical when considering underground CO2 storage in aquifers and depleted reservoirs. To enhance this knowledge, we characterize the paleofluid system in seismic-scale faults cutting through low-permeability shale formations, assesing whether fluids recorded in the fault core and damage zone record large-scale migration and enhanced effective permeability. The Somerset coast (UK), along the southern margin of the Bristol Channel Basin, exposes shale and marl dominated Mesozoic caprock successions dissected by seismic-scale normal and inverted faults, of which the timing of initial activity is well constrained by radiochronology and which exhibit well-preserved fault cores and damage zones as well. In this study, we present field-based structural analyses, petrographic investigations, stable isotope geochemistry (δ¹³C, δ¹⁸O) and clay mineralogy (XRD) from six selected outcrops. The vein-rich damage zones exhibit calcite and gypsum precipitation, recording transient fluid-flow episodes during reactivation. Stable isotope data, combined with fluid inclusion petrography, indicate that these episodes were dominated by meteoric fluids (δ¹⁸O<-10‰ VPDB) from which synkinematic calcite precipitated in faults at geothermal conditions (<60°C). When considering published radiogenic ages for the extensional development (150-120 Ma) and subsequent inversion (50-20 Ma) of the considered faults, the recharge of meteoric fluids in the fault at depth is consistent with regional paleogeographic reconstructions showing fluctuating emergence of landmasses in the area during the Late Triassic to Cretaceous. Within this framework of episodic fluid circulation, most fault cores are mechanically sealed rather than swelling-sealed, with permeability reduction controlled by grain-size reduction and the development of aligned clay fabric. Nevertheless, mineralized fault cores demonstrate that fault sealing is not static, during episodes of elevated fluid pressure or reactivation, permeability may be locally and temporarily enhanced along discrete slip surfaces. This behavior is strongly controlled by fault-zone architecture, with increasing displacement promoting gouge thickening and fabric development, ultimately leading to more effective long-term sealing. Beyond regional implications, our study reconstructs kilometer-scale downward fluid-flow along faults, supporting the significant impact of the damage zone on the long-term integrity of clay-rich caprocks.

How to cite: Aykut, T., Beaudoin, N., Wibberley, C., Dutilleul, J., Emmanuel, L., and Callot, J.-P.: Fault-controlled paleofluid flow in shale caprocks: Structural, geochemical, and mineralogical evidence from the Bristol Channel Basin (UK), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13705, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13705, 2026.

EGU26-14875 | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Hydraulic fracturing of the transverse isotropic argillite from Tournemire in a hollow cylinder triaxial cell: experimental study and analytical modelling 

Dragan Grgic, Albert Giraud, Coffi Gbewade, Bastien Walter, and Mohamed Moumni

To study the effect of hydraulically induced damage in a caprock (argillite from Tournemire), hydraulic fracturing tests were conducted in a hollow cylinder triaxial cell on core samples with inner borehole, oriented parallel to the bedding plans. Acoustic Emission (AE) monitoring and strain measurements during hydraulic fracturing tests, as well as post-mortem X-ray CT analysis were carried out. Samples were subjected to stresses representative of the in-situ stress state, and different injection rates of low-viscosity fluid (water) were tested.

Overall, the breakdown pressure is higher and AE activity due to microcracking damage (which increases almost simultaneously with the pressure drop) appears earlier when the injection flow rate increases. During the second injection phase, peak pressures are lower, pressurization rates are higher and stress-strain behaviour is stiffer. The analysis of values of Rise Angle (RA) and Average Frequency (A-FR) indicates that increasing the injection flow rate generates more tensile cracks and increases the severity of damage. The cumulative damage variable, calculated from AE activity, increases significantly just before the first pressure drop and this increase is stiffer when the injection flow rate increases. This confirms that the use of a low-viscosity fluid (water) induces the propagation of unstable cracks, which initiate almost simultaneously with the pressure drop in the borehole, and that this propagation is faster for higher injection rates.

The breakdown pressure and the crack orientation are analysed thanks to the elastic theory for transverse isotropic materials and chemo-hydro-mechanical coupled processes at the borehole wall. The analysis of core samples deformations and X-ray images, and post-mortem visual observation of samples surface indicate that cracks are primarily oriented parallel to the bedding planes and the core sample axis.

How to cite: Grgic, D., Giraud, A., Gbewade, C., Walter, B., and Moumni, M.: Hydraulic fracturing of the transverse isotropic argillite from Tournemire in a hollow cylinder triaxial cell: experimental study and analytical modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14875, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14875, 2026.

Fluid injection into fractured crystalline rock enhances permeability by opening new fractures and reactivating natural ones, yet the relative roles of fluid pressure and elastic stress transfer remain insufficiently constrained. In this study, we develop a fully coupled hydro-mechanical Particle Flow Code in 3 Dimensions (PFC3D) model calibrated against two mini-frac tests in Rotondo Granite at the Bedretto Underground Laboratory. Applied to intact and naturally fractured intervals, the model reproduces the observed pressure evolution and enables quantitative analysis of fracture slip and stress redistribution, thereby revealing two distinct reactivation mechanisms. The first mechanism arises from effective stress reduction. Elevated pore pressure lowers the effective normal stress and weakens frictional resistance, leading to localized and directionally consistent shear within the high-pressure core. Weaker and more diffuse slip develops outward following the pattern of elastic stress perturbation, and minor shear failure appears at the far edge of the fluid-affected region due to shear stress transfer acting on the compressed faces of the opening fracture. This spatially hierarchical slip structure reflects a transition from deformation dominated by effective stress reduction to deformation dominated by elastic stress transfer. The second mechanism is governed by elastic stress transfer. Deformation of pressurized fractures redistributes surrounding stresses and induces weak, remote shear on neighboring fractures that remain disconnected from the fluid. The resulting stress perturbation resembles that generated by localized volumetric expansion and promotes slip on nearby fractures. An analytical estimate indicates that the radial extent of stress perturbation exceeds the fluid-pressurized region and increases with injected volume while decreasing with rock stiffness. These results establish a unified, field-calibrated framework linking fluid pressure, fracture deformation, and stress redistribution during hydraulic stimulation.

How to cite: Shen, H., Hofmann, H., Zang, A., Zhang, S., Zhou, J., and Yoon, J. S.: Reactivation of Natural Fractures Driven by Fluid Pressure and Stress Transfer During Hydraulic Stimulation: A Three-Dimensional Discrete Element Modeling Study of the Bedretto Underground Laboratory, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14876, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14876, 2026.

Fractures significantly control subsurface heat and fluid transport and the mechanical properties of rock formations. Natural and stimulated fracture growth processes are thus essential for production of oil and gas in conventional and unconventional reservoirs, caprock integrity, underground storage of carbon dioxide, hydrogen, or wastewater, and for geothermal energy production in systems that require fracture stimulation or that depend on natural fractures for heat extraction. While the formation of fractures is conventionally seen as a purely mechanical process, chemical processes can decrease or increase the propensity for fracture growth as a function of stress conditions, fluid chemical and physical environment, rock composition, and rate of change of fracture driving loading conditions. The influence of chemical reactions on rock fracture processes and their implications for subsurface energy resources is thus increasingly recognized.

In combination with field structural observations of fractures in a variety of natural settings, we conduct double torsion fracture mechanics tests for sandstone, shale, and polycrystalline halite to quantify effects of fluid chemical environment on fracture mechanical properties. Tests are conducted under a range of fluid compositional and environmental conditions that are relevant to subsurface hydrogen and CO2 storage and geothermal energy production. Double torsion fracture mechanics tests measure fracture toughness and subcritical fracture index. Fracture toughness quantifies the loading stress for critical fracture growth, and subcritical fracture index the rate of fracture propagation under subcritical loading conditions. Tests are conducted under ambient room conditions, in dry N2, CO2, or H2 gas environments, and partially or completely saturated aqueous conditions. Some materials are also reacted in an autoclave under elevated temperature and pressure conditions in the presence of H2 and N2 gas prior to fracture testing.

Both fracture toughness and subcritical fracture index are influenced by the chemical environment to varying degree dependent on rock mineral composition, fluid composition, and environmental conditions. For all rock types except polycrystalline halite, samples tested under dry conditions have higher toughness and subcritical index values compared to partially or fully water-saturated samples. This can be beneficial for caprock integrity of CO2 or H2 storage reservoirs where injected gas would dry out the formation reducing the tendency for fracture-controlled leakage of top seals. Aqueous chemical reactions triggered by H2 or CO2 gas injection in porous reservoirs can both impede and enhance mechanical fracture processes depending on the combined effects of mineral dissolution and concurrent precipitation of newly formed minerals. With increasing temperature, the effects of aqueous mineral reactions on fracture properties are generally more pronounced, demonstrating the significance of reactive fracture processes in conventional and enhanced geothermal reservoirs. It is envisioned that chemical effects of fracture growth can be utilized to reduce undesired fracture growth or to optimize stimulated fracture growth to obtain desired fracture geometries that benefit subsurface energy operations.

How to cite: Eichhubl, P. and Gajda, D.: Fracture growth under reactive subsurface conditions: Processes, Mechanisms, and Significance for Geoenergy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15090, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15090, 2026.

EGU26-18678 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.2

A Comparative Study of Deterministic and Stochastic DFN Models for Rock Mass Hydraulic Property Estimation 

Marina Facci, Silvia Favaro, Stefano Casiraghi, Federico Agliardi, Silvia Mittempergher, Waqas Hussain, Jeffrey Hyman, Ramil Gainov, Oleksandr Slipeniuk, Massimo Fogazzi, and Andrea Bistacchi

Discrete Fracture Network (DFN) models are widely used for predicting the hydraulic properties of heterogeneous fractured rock masses through the implementation of diverse numerical and semi-analytical methods. However, recent advancements in the parametrization of fracture networks by statistical analyses of field and geophysical data are not yet fully integrated into the capabilities of standard DFN simulators. Available 3D stochastic DFN generators (i) lack the ability to produce realistic topological relationships, and (ii) are limited to random spatial distributions of fracture seeds based on Poisson processes, thereby excluding clustered or regular patterns common in real fracture systems. In the case of heterogeneous rock masses with multiple clustered fracture sets, this leads to an inaccurate representation of connectivity, which significantly impacts the accuracy of hydraulic property estimates and flow modeling results. In addition, the simplified shape of fractures in DFN codes – either rectangular or elliptical, is very different from what observed in our natural sample, where due to mutual abutting relationships the fractures tend to have a triangular or trapezoidal shape, with a strong impact on the evaluation of P32 (i.e. the volumetric fracture intensity), that is a critical parameter in DFN generation. We present a comparative experiment in which a 3D deterministic fracture network was reconstructed from high resolution micro-CT scans of Miocene diatomitic marls (equivalent to the Tripoli Fm., Palena, Central Italy) using a combination of open-source and commercial software, including Move, Petrel, and PZero. This deterministic model was then compared with multiple stochastic DFN realizations sharing the same statistical parameters, generated with DFNWorks, Move and Petrel. Finally, the hydraulic properties of resulting fracture networks and their impacts on flow simulations were assessed using the flow-based model (Petrel), the semi-analytical Oda approach (Petrel and Move) and fully numerical simulations (finite volume in DFNWorks).

Our results indicate that advanced numerical methods, where flow is really simulated along interconnecting fractures, exhibit a greater sensitivity to input data quality than semi-analytical approaches. This discrepancy arises because methods such as the Oda approach rely on idealized assumptions and spatially averaged parameters, disregarding critical parameters such as network topology, connectivity, and fracture aspect ratios. In absence of experiments conducted under controlled lab conditions, we tend to trust the more advanced numerical results (e.g. DFNWorks finite volume) with respect to simplified semi analytical approaches (e.g. Oda).

How to cite: Facci, M., Favaro, S., Casiraghi, S., Agliardi, F., Mittempergher, S., Hussain, W., Hyman, J., Gainov, R., Slipeniuk, O., Fogazzi, M., and Bistacchi, A.: A Comparative Study of Deterministic and Stochastic DFN Models for Rock Mass Hydraulic Property Estimation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18678, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18678, 2026.

EGU26-19033 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Dating faulting and fluid circulation using the U-Pb carbonate geochronometer reveals Cenozoic reactivation in Gower, Wales 

Nathalie Dawe, Catherine Mottram, Mark Anderson, Billy Andrews, and Matthew Watkinson

With renewed interest in the Bristol Channel and Celtic Sea Basins for geoenergy, South Wales offers the opportunity to study exposed basement rocks at the basin margins. Field relationships show NW-SE and NE-SW trending faults, joints, and fissure fills in South Wales underwent multiple episodes of deformation. Previous studies assume deformation initiated during the Late Variscan, with extensional reactivation during the Mesozoic (e.g. Wright et al., 2009). Recent studies demonstrate the importance of Cenozoic reactivation of Mesozoic structures in the Wessex Basin (Parrish et al., 2018), Bristol Channel Basin (Connolly et al., 2024), and Ireland (Monchal et al., 2023). Due to challenges dating fault rocks associated with low-temperature deformation, the timing of reactivation of Variscan structures is poorly constrained - only one previous study in Gower dates Cretaceous hematite (Ault et al., 2016). New data using the U-Pb carbonate geochronometer at Limeslade Bay, Gower, yields multiple U-Pb ages spanning the Mesozoic to the Cenozoic. A N-S oriented, blocky calcite vein yields a Triassic 206Pb/238U intercept age of 245 ± 11 Ma (MSWD = 2.3, n = 31), and alteration-seam recrystallised host rock yields a Jurassic 206Pb/238U intercept age of 186 ± 19 Ma (MSWD = 2.3, n = 37). Six samples associated with strike-slip deformation yield Eocene-Oligocene (39 - 24 Ma) ages. NW-SE dextral and NE-SW sinistral fault systems displace calcite veins of 27.0 ± 3.4 Ma (MSWD = 1, n = 62) and 24.53 ± 1.28 Ma (MSWD = 1.7, n = 37), respectively. Additionally, an Oligocene (28.6 ± 2.5 Ma, MSWD = 1.2, n = 55) vein is disrupted by Miocene deformation, where a 206Pb/238U intercept age of 13.6 ± 5 Ma (MSWD = 1.4, n = 41) was obtained for recrystallised calcite cross-cutting earlier Oligocene vein fabrics. Cenozoic fault reactivation occurred during N-S compression, resulting from far-field stress during the late Oligocene to Miocene Pyrenean-Alpine orogenies. Fluid circulation is significant in reactivating basin margin structures during basin inversion, which poses a hazard to many geoenergy applications.

 

References:

AULT, A. K., FRENZEL, M., REINERS, P. W., WOODCOCK, N. H. & THOMSON, S. N. 2016. Record of paleofluid circulation in faults revealed by hematite (U-Th)/He and apatite fission-track dating: An example from Gower Peninsula fault fissures, Wales. Lithosphere, 8, 379-385.

CONNOLLY, J., ANDERSON, M., MOTTRAM, C., PRICE, G. & SANDERSON, D. 2024. Using U-Pb carbonate dating to constrain the timing of structural development and reactivation within the Bristol Channel Basin, SW England. Journal of the Geological Society.

MONCHAL, V., DROST, K. & CHEW, D. 2023. Precise U-Pb dating of incremental calcite slickenfiber growth: Evidence for far-field Eocene fold reactivation in Ireland. Geology, 51, 611-615.

PARRISH, R. R., PARRISH, C. M. & LASALLE, S. 2018. Vein calcite dating reveals Pyrenean orogen as cause of Paleogene deformation in southern England. Journal of the Geological Society, 175, 425-442.

WRIGHT, V., WOODCOCK, N. H. & DICKSON, J. A. D. 2009. Fissure fills along faults: Variscan examples from Gower, South Wales. Geological Magazine, 146, 890-902.

How to cite: Dawe, N., Mottram, C., Anderson, M., Andrews, B., and Watkinson, M.: Dating faulting and fluid circulation using the U-Pb carbonate geochronometer reveals Cenozoic reactivation in Gower, Wales, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19033, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19033, 2026.

EGU26-20002 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Study on mechanism and control of space fracture instability of thick and hard roof under dip angle effect in coal mines 

Xuan Cui, Shengli Yang, and Huiying Zhou

China currently possesses a substantial number of coal seams characterized by thick hard roofs and steep inclinations. With continuous advancements in mining mechanization, increasing mining height and working face length, as well as intensified extraction intensity, the fracture of thick hard roofs induces high-intensity dynamic disturbances and extensive impacts. During weighting periods, intense strata behaviors—such as support crushing, rib spalling, roof collapse, and coal wall spalling—occur frequently. Moreover, the inclination angle of the working face leads to recurrent accidents, including support biting and overturning, severely compromising safe and efficient mining operations. Conventional beam or thin-plate theories are inadequate for analyzing thick hard roofs, as they neglect shear effects induced by roof thickening. The post-fracture structure of thick hard roofs differs significantly from that of thin roofs, resulting in variations in support–surrounding rock interactions and overburden spatial fracture behavior, thereby exacerbating ground control challenges.   To elucidate the disaster mechanisms associated with thick hard roof fracturing and to develop corresponding stability control strategies, this study focuses on the 140502 working face of Kouzidong Coal Mine and the 0448 working face of Chunyi Coal Mine, employing a comprehensive approach that integrates theoretical analysis, numerical modeling, platform development, similar material simulation experiments, rock mechanics testing, and in-situ measurements. The research addresses five key aspects: (1) the law of mine pressure manifestation under thick hard roofs; (2) theoretical analysis of medium-thick plate deformation and failure in roof strata; (3) inclination-thickness coupling effects on roof fracturing; (4) spatial fracture patterns of overburden strata; and (5) support–surrounding rock interactions.

How to cite: Cui, X., Yang, S., and Zhou, H.: Study on mechanism and control of space fracture instability of thick and hard roof under dip angle effect in coal mines, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20002, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20002, 2026.

EGU26-20086 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Stress-controlled fracture closure and anisotropic flow in carbonate reservoirs: implications for CO₂ storage 

Hager Elattar, Paul W.J. Glover, Richard Collier, and Charlotte Botter

Abstract: Natural fractures exert a first-order control on permeability, sealing capacity, and stress sensitivity of carbonate reservoirs, yet quantitative links between measured fracture-surface roughness and evolving transport properties remain poorly constrained across scales. We present a workflow that combines high-resolution optical surface profilometry with numerical closure and flow modelling to evaluate fracture hydraulic behaviour under effective stress, with implications for CO₂ storage efficiency and containment in fractured carbonates. A 4 × 4 cm fractured carbonate sample is split along the fracture plane to expose complementary surfaces, which are imaged using 3D optical microscopy in the metrology laboratory. Surface height grids are processed in Vision64 and exported for analysis. We computed roughness statistics and constructed aperture fields by digitally pairing the two surfaces, thereby enabling progressive mechanical closure to be simulated as either a prescribed displacement (closure) or field-stress-controlled loading.

Using closure-dependent aperture maps, we quantified transport anisotropy by solving pressure-driven flow through the fracture for orthogonal directions. Conductivity/permeability proxies are calculated using both cubic-law scaling and a spatially variable conductivity formulation (k ∝ b³) solved on the aperture grid. In parallel, capillary entry pressure is estimated from aperture distributions to evaluate stress-dependent sealing. Results show a nonlinear reduction in connected aperture with increasing closure, producing rapid declines in fracture conductivity and increases in capillary entry pressures as contact patches expand and percolating pathways collapse. Directional differences in flow and sealing metrics reveal pronounced anisotropy inherited from the surface topography, with dominant flow aligned with the most persistent connected channels.

Finally, stress-path sweeps (injection/depletion and shear ramp scenarios) demonstrate how effective normal stress and shear-related dilation can produce contrasting permeability–capillary responses, highlighting the potential for hysteresis and path dependence during CO₂ injection and pressure cycling. This integrated approach provides a quantitative bridge between laboratory-scale roughness measurements and stress-sensitive fracture transport, supporting improved parameterisation of fractured carbonate reservoirs in CO₂ storage models and risk assessment for leakage versus immobilisation.

Keywords: capillary entry pressure, fracture roughness, CO₂ storage integrity, anisotropy.

 

How to cite: Elattar, H., Glover, P. W. J., Collier, R., and Botter, C.: Stress-controlled fracture closure and anisotropic flow in carbonate reservoirs: implications for CO₂ storage, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20086, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20086, 2026.

EGU26-20517 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.2

An experimental study of fault growth in a 2D Biaxial apparatus 

Sakshi Yadav, Axelle Amon, Giovanni Camanni, Giacomo Russo, Enza Vitale, and David Iacopini

Placing constraints on the geometry and growth of faults has significant implications for the management of resources in the subsurface; faults are widespread structures and can either compartmentalise subsurface reservoirs or provide favourable fluid migration pathways.

There are two widely accepted models of fault growth: the isolated fault growth model and the constant length fault growth model. These models, largely derived from field, seismic, and analogue modelling data, both describe three stages in fault growth: (1) propagation of fault segments, (2) slip accumulation on fault segments, and (3) segment interaction and linkage. However, they differ in how the initial fault segments interact, whether they are kinematically dependent, and how rapidly their full length is established. The debate is currently still open on which model best describes natural faults, and what geological controls favor one model over the other.

To further address the topic of fault growth, we investigate the different stages of growth through two sets of experiments. First, loading experiments are performed on intact samples of a rock analogue material to track both the propagation of the fracture and the displacement accumulation to test which of the two fault growth models most accurately describes the initial stages of fault propagation. Second, loading experiments are performed on samples with pre-cuts to replicate realistic fault segment geometries, to track fault tip migration and displacement partitioning during the linkage stage of fault growth, to test geometrical controls on the process of fault linkage.

The samples are made of a rock analogue material capable of accommodating displacement gradients through ductile processes, similar to those observed in natural rocks over geological timescales. This material is cohesive and allows the creation of pre-cuts to replicate fault segment geometries. Loading experiments are conducted in a biaxial apparatus at low strain rates, coupled with an interferometric technique using an optical bench to obtain speckle patterns. These speckles are employed to track in high resolution the increase in the length of the fault using Diffusive Wave Spectroscopy (DWS). In addition, we concurrently use the same speckle patterns to track displacement along the fault using Digital Image Correlation.

How to cite: Yadav, S., Amon, A., Camanni, G., Russo, G., Vitale, E., and Iacopini, D.: An experimental study of fault growth in a 2D Biaxial apparatus, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20517, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20517, 2026.

EGU26-21242 | Posters on site | ERE5.2

Velocity-dependent frictional properties of fault gouges in the Upper Rhine Graben under hydrothermal conditions: Implications for induced seismicity 

Tesfay Kiros Mebrahtu, Michael Rudolf, André Niemeijer, Virginia Toy, Laurence Warr, and Andreas Henk

The Upper Rhine Graben (URG) is a tectonically active area that has been extensively investigated for its geothermal energy potential. However, modification of fluid pressures in subsurface reservoir for geothermal energy production can affect the regional stress field inducing seismicity that causes high public and social concern as well as economic losses, e.g., in Landau, Insheim, Soultz-sous-Fôrets, Rittershofen, Strasbourg, and Basel. The effective frictional strength and stability of faults depend on the nature of stimulation, the reservoir conditions, and subsurface fault rock characteristics. It is crucial that we explore the complex relationships between these factors and the frictional stability of faults for safe geothermal energy operations. In this study, to understand the seismic potential of faults in geothermal reservoir rocks, we investigated how the frictional behaviour of fault gouges from the URG area varies when stimulated with fluids at different temperatures and pressures using hydrothermal rotary shear friction experiments.

Our data are fit by rate-and-state friction laws (RSF) and the mechanical results are supplemented with microstructural observations to identify the active deformation mechanisms. We also analyzed porosity, grain size, shape, and mineralogy of fault gouges employing scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive spectroscopy. Simulated fault gouges were prepared from Muschelkalk, Buntsandstein, Rotliegend, and crystalline basement rocks (granite and gneiss), and velocity-stepping tests were conducted at temperatures from 20 to 250 ºC, effective normal stresses of 60 and 75 MPa, pore fluid pressures of 40 and 50 MPa, and slip velocities 0.3 to 100 µm/s, depending on the fault gouge type. Moreover, X-ray diffraction (XRD) was performed on the fault gouge samples to determine their mineralogical composition, which significantly influences the mechanical behavior of the gouges.

We observed differences in gouge sliding strength and frictional character as a function of both sliding velocity and temperature. Preliminary mechanical results show a strong temperature dependent steady-state strength during initial sliding, with friction coefficients in the range of 0.38 – 0.9. All the fault gouges exhibit stable velocity-strengthening (aseismic) behavior, except those derived from Rotliegend and granite, which show a transition from velocity strengthening to velocity weakening with increasing sliding velocity at T>200 ºC. The rate-and-state parameters (a, b, and Dc) for Rotliegend and granite show a transition from a velocity-neutral to velocity- and strain-weakening behavior at temperatures between 200 and 250 ºC. This transition enhances mechanical instability and creates conditions more favorable for earthquake nucleation. In contrast, the Muschelkalk and Buntsandstein samples revealed velocity-strengthening and strain-hardening behavior, favouring aseismic creep over dynamic rupture, which we interpret to be mainly due to the presence of small amounts of weak hydrous minerals and amorphous content. These results indicate that the Rotliegend and crystalline basement rocks (granite) are more prone to induced seismicity than Muschelkalk and Buntsandstein. Our findings provide vital insights into the understanding of fault behavior at regional scales, allowing constraint input for seismic models, and strengthen the connection to numerical models.

How to cite: Mebrahtu, T. K., Rudolf, M., Niemeijer, A., Toy, V., Warr, L., and Henk, A.: Velocity-dependent frictional properties of fault gouges in the Upper Rhine Graben under hydrothermal conditions: Implications for induced seismicity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21242, 2026.

   Chlorite pseudomorphs in metaperidotites are not unusual in the Alps and are often in the vicinity of garnet peridotites, for example in the Ulten Zone of northern Italy (Pellegrino et al., 2021). If no garnet survives, then considering the important high-pressure and tectonic implications of garnet peridotite, it is important to demonstrate the former presence of garnet.
    In Washington state, two similar ultramafic bodies inside the ~91-95 Ma Wenatchee Ridge Orthogneiss, a highly deformed tonalite pluton, contain cm-scale chlorite pseudomorphs consisting of Cr (1-6.5 wt%) clinochlore. The host rock typically contains Ol-Srp-Tr±Chl±En±Tlc±Cum±Chr±Mag. One body is typically foliated and contains highly flattened chlorite pseudomorphs with undeformed tremolite and cummingtonite, whereas the other body contains spectacularly deformed, including isoclinally folded, enstatite.
    Chlorite occurs especially as relatively fine-grained randomly oriented flakes within the pseudomorphs. Rarely, chromite grains form s-shaped patterns inside. There is locally a slight core-to-margin variation in Cr content. These pseudomorphs are interpreted as a result of hydrous fluids accessing the rocks during cooling and decompression, resulting in chlorite replacing garnet.
    Minor minerals present include ilmenite (minor geikielite or pyrophanite components), barite, pentlandite grains rimmed by awaruite inside magnetite grains, rare Ni-As grains (probably orcelite), chromite, and heazlewoodite in pentlandite.
    A remarkable aspect of the chlorite pseudomorphs is the presence of late, thin (tens of microns), foliation-parallel calcite veins (no magnesite or dolomite). Normally confined to the pseudomorphs, they increase in thickness from margin to core, indicating a mechanical connection to the chlorite. Assuming countervailing volume expansion from decompression and volume decrease from cooling, a small volume loss, approximately consistent with the volume of the calcite veins, occurs for decreases of approximately 0.4 GPa and 400 °C. Lack of pre-existing carbonate indicates CO2 was introduced via fluid infiltration, whereas Ca may have been liberated from diopside or tremolite breakdown.
    The veins are complex; some are composed purely of calcite, whereas others display fibrous, dilational characteristics and multiple minerals. A Fe-Ca-Si-O mineral (andradite?) is present locally. Small lozenges of probable lime, a rare and unstable mineral, occur. Lime has been reported from limestone xenoliths and pyrometamorphic settings, and is thought to form above 900 °C (Khoury et al., 2016), and readily reacts to portlandite. The veins must be late, forming from local Ca but an external CO2-rich fluid.
     We tentatively propose a P-T path from the Grt-Ol-En field through the Di-Chl-En-Ol field, and into the Tr-Ol field, and finally into the Di-Atg fields of Lakey & Hermann (2022). This is consistent with the near absence of diopside but very late Di+Atg after tremolite, and indicates replacement of garnet by chlorite above about 2 GPa. This could indicate origin of these bodies at >2 GPa and ca. 800 °C, and a decompression and cooling path merging with that of the terrane at 600-650 °C and 1 GPa. Such pressures and the required tectonism would be a new twist on the Cordilleran Orogeny in the U.S. Pacific Northwest.

How to cite: Girot, D. L. and Magloughlin, J. F.: Evidence for retrogression of garnet peridotite in large ultramafic bodies, with late CO2-infiltration, and formation of heazlewoodite, orcelite, awaruite, andradite(?), lime, and pentlandite, and possible UHP metamorphism, Washington, USA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2258, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2258, 2026.

EGU26-2334 | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Fluid inclusion and Mineralogical investigation of garnet and rutile quartz, Kashan, Iran 

Arman Fakheri, Rahim Masoumi, Sina Asadzadeh Tarehbari, Mohammadreza Panahi, and Mohammadreza Rezapour

Abstract:

Quartz crystals containing garnet and rutile inclusions are found in the southwest of Kashan, Iran, adjacent to the Gohrood granitoid intrusive body. This area belongs to the Urmia-Dokhtar magmatic belt, located in the central part of the Iranian plateau with NW-SE trend. The intrusive body related to the garnet and rutile bearing quartzes shows granodiorite-tonalite composition with an age of 17 to 19 million years (Middle Miocene) which has intruded into Jurassic shales, sandstones, limestone, and also cretaceous and Eocene marls which have caused contact metamorphism in surrounding rocks and consequently the formation of typical skarn and hornfels in the area.

The studied quartz crystals show size ranges of 1-12 cm which have been formed inside cracks and fractures. The main alteration zones observed in the area consist of silicification, chlorite, epidote associated with hematite, and jarosite mineralization.

Different varieties of quartz crystals in terms of color and fluid inclusion characteristics are found in the study area: transparent and semi-transparent crystals, yellow crystals (citrine), dark crystals, smoky to reddish brown crystals (garnet inclusion), and rutile quartz.

The carried out fluid inclusion studies indicate that the mean temperature and salinity calculated for the transparent and semi-transparent quartzes are 308 °C and 7.5 wt.% NaCl and 360 °C and 1.6 wt.% NaCl, respectively, and generally, based on the carried out microthermometry studies, the estimated formation temperature ranges between 300-550 °C. The Hydrothermal fluid most likely reached the surface through the faults and joints of Gohrood granitoid with minimal contact with surface fluids, and near the surface mixing with meteoric waters, causing the loss of high temperature and salinity. During rising, these fluids have decomposed the minerals such as biotite, amphibole, and feldspars, which caused the alteration of the wall-rock. The performed microprobe and SEM studies on the inclusions containing garnet in the studied samples show the mineralogical composition of grossular.

How to cite: Fakheri, A., Masoumi, R., Asadzadeh Tarehbari, S., Panahi, M., and Rezapour, M.: Fluid inclusion and Mineralogical investigation of garnet and rutile quartz, Kashan, Iran, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2334, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2334, 2026.

EGU26-3339 * | ECS | Orals | GMPV3.1 | Highlight

Stimulating Hydrogen Generation in Serpentinised Peridotite: Field-Scale Injection Experiments in Oman 

Joanna Shannon, Eric T. Ellison, Sulaiman Al Mani, Juerg M. Matter, and Alexis S. Templeton

Hydrogen is expected to play a central role in the global energy transition, yet most industrial hydrogen production remains associated with significant CO₂ emissions. Natural hydrogen generated during serpentinisation of ultramafic rocks offers a low-carbon alternative, but its distribution, generation rates, and recoverability remain poorly constrained. To date, most research has focused on identifying naturally occurring hydrogen systems. Here, we explore a complementary approach: testing whether hydrogen-producing reactions in ultramafic rocks can be engineered to achieve economic production through subsurface stimulation. We present results from the Rock Hydrogen Project, a field-scale pilot experiment conducted in serpentinised peridotite in Oman, a globally recognised natural laboratory for ultramafic-hosted fluid–rock interactions. The project investigates the feasibility of enhancing hydrogen generation through controlled water injection into fractured peridotite at almost 1km depth. Downhole geophysical logging was used to characterise fracture distributions, providing a structural framework for interpreting pressure and flow responses. Then, a large-volume water injection, followed by a pump-back phase was completed. During this test, pressure, flow, fluid chemistry, and resulting gas compositions were monitored. Hydrological data outlines injectivity and pressure evolution, while recovered fluids and gases were analysed for major and trace elements, noble gases and major gas compositions using gas chromatography and noble gas mass spectrometry. This integrated dataset captures the coupled hydrological and geochemical evolution of fluids during subsurface circulation and the influence of stress-dependent permeability. Recovered fluids show pronounced chemical modification relative to injected waters, including increased salinity, alkaline pH (up to ~11.5), increased gas concentrations and highly reducing conditions. Measured gas compositions are dominated by hydrogen and small amounts of methane. Together, these observations indicate rapid fluid-rock interaction during injection and recovery. Ongoing work aims to test whether such stimulation can drive the production of hydrogen in fractured peridotite at relatively low temperatures. Next steps include the continued development of fracture network models based on downhole data, continued integration of hydrological and geochemical observations, and the drilling of an additional borehole to establish an injection–production array to test optimal rate of fluid circulation for hydrogen production. These efforts aim to quantify net hydrogen generation rates, evaluate scalability, and improve understanding of the coupled processes governing stimulated hydrogen systems in ultramafic reservoirs.

How to cite: Shannon, J., Ellison, E. T., Al Mani, S., Matter, J. M., and Templeton, A. S.: Stimulating Hydrogen Generation in Serpentinised Peridotite: Field-Scale Injection Experiments in Oman, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3339, 2026.

EGU26-3638 | Orals | GMPV3.1

Serpentinization versus carbonation: geochemical and thermodynamic constraints from an ophiolitic reaction profile  

Qing Xiong, Hong-Da Zheng, Xiang Zhou, Biao Chang, Hong-Kun Dai, Hong-Zhu Cai, Ming Chen, and Jian-Ping Zheng

Peridotite carbonation is an efficient process for carbon sequestration in Earth’s carbon cycle. This process is inevitably associated with serpentinization. However, the interplay of the two processes and the fluid-rock reaction details remain elusive. Here we present a ~330-meter-long fluid-peridotite reaction profile with a southward zonation of harzburgite, serpentinite to soapstone-bearing listvenite in the Luobusa ophiolite (Tibet). From harzburgite to listvenite, gradual decreases in whole-rock MgO, SiO2 and FeOT as well as nearly constant Al2O3 and trace-element patterns suggest a continuous reaction from serpentinization to carbonation. The H2O+ contents were rapidly elevated during serpentinization, and then abruptly dropped once the carbonation initiated as evidenced by a jump in CO2 contents. Such contrasting volatile behaviors indicate a competition between serpentinization and carbonation, which caused strong variations in H2 fugacity and redox states in the reaction system and controlled the compositional variations of involved fluids and crystallization of zoned magnesites. Clumped isotopes constrain the carbonation temperatures up to ~192-302 °C. In addition, thermodynamic modelling shows that the mineralogical, chemical and redox variations from serpentinization to carbonation are consistent with those observed in the Luobusa profile. C-O isotopic compositions suggest that the fluids were derived primarily from the mantle and added by those from surface reservoirs. Such CO2-rich fluids migrated along the trans-lithospheric thrust in Himalaya and reacted with the ophiolite, forming the studied profile. This study shows that the serpentinization-versus-carbonation processes may suppress the capacity of carbon sequestration, and calls for a reevaluation of the sequestrated carbon budget in ophiolite-rich orogens.

How to cite: Xiong, Q., Zheng, H.-D., Zhou, X., Chang, B., Dai, H.-K., Cai, H.-Z., Chen, M., and Zheng, J.-P.: Serpentinization versus carbonation: geochemical and thermodynamic constraints from an ophiolitic reaction profile , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3638, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3638, 2026.

EGU26-4134 | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Geochemical characteristics of serpentinite types and their implications for tectonic environments 

Huei-Fen Chen, Ju-Lien Pi, Chieh-Ming Liu, Yu-Ho Li, and Tzu-Hsuan Huang

In eastern Taiwan, the metamorphic rocks of the Yuli Belt are mainly derived from subducted oceanic sediments, metabasite, arc-related volcanic rocks, and serpentinite bodies, which were subsequently exhumed from the subduction zone. This study focuses on serpentinites in Taiwan, including those from two distinct tectonostratigraphic units, the Yuli Belt and the Coastal Range, and aims to distinguish different types of serpentinites based on their mineral assemblages and geochemical characteristics. Based on mineralogy, microstructures, and geochemical features, serpentinites can be broadly classified into three major types in Taiwan. The first type, Eastern Taiwan Ophiolite serpentinites (ETO), is predominantly derived from oceanic crust, occurring as blocks within the mudstone of the Lichi Mélange. These serpentinites are mainly composed of mesh-textured fibrous chrysotile, sometimes containing incompletely serpentinized relict olivine. They lack subduction-related fluid signatures such as As and Pb, and display As/Ce ratios lower than 20. The second type located within the subduction zone of Yuli Belt. These serpentinites accompany with the schists, and are dominated by bladed antigorite. The subduction-related fluid metasomatism bring more As, Pb and Sb into serpentinite. Variations in As/Ce ratios reflect the shallower subduction depths in northern Yuli Belt and greater depths in the southern Yuli Belt. The third type comprises high-temperature metamorphic serpentinites. Their antigorite crystal morphology is distinctly different from the bladed form, having transformed into extremely fine-grained antigorite indicative of high-temperature recrystallization. New olivine porphyroblasts formed during high-temperature metamorphism, and magnetite aggregates developed around these olivine grains. They exhibit the lowest As/Ce ratios, and fluid-related elements such as As, Pb, and Sb are significantly depleted. The third type of high-temperature metamorphic serpentinite usually appears as large xenoliths in second type serpentinite in the northern part of the Yuli belt, while the metamorphic temperature of the surrounding schist is only 420-470°C, indicating that the third type of serpentinite was encapsulated and squeezed up in a state of plastic flow. This implies that the rheological behavior of serpentinites within the mantle wedge may be highly complex.

How to cite: Chen, H.-F., Pi, J.-L., Liu, C.-M., Li, Y.-H., and Huang, T.-H.: Geochemical characteristics of serpentinite types and their implications for tectonic environments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4134, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4134, 2026.

EGU26-10175 | ECS | Orals | GMPV3.1

The Grischun-Malenco fossil Ocean-Continent-Transition: the fate of the subcontinental mantle in a Wilson cycle and its significance for H2 exploration 

Francesca Dimasi, Gianreto Manatschal, Marc Ulrich, Pauline Chenin, and Quentin Gasser

Serpentinization is a fluid–rock interaction process occurring in specific geodynamic settings, whereby aqueous fluids react with mantle-derived source rocks to produce serpentinite, ± magnetite, and native hydrogen (H₂). Among the key parameters controlling this process, the Fe²⁺ content of primary mantle minerals is directly linked to the capacity for H₂ generation. Because serpentine minerals themselves may incorporate Fe²⁺, serpentinites may retain a degree of “fertility” for continued H2production. In the context of the energy transition, this aspect is of fundamental importance, as zones potentially suitable for H2 extraction are commonly associated with partially to fully serpentinized mantle rocks. Such continental environments are typically suture zones, i.e. rift-inversion orogen that once hosted the subcontinental mantle exhumed along ocean–continent transitions (OCTs).

Several mountain belts worldwide preserve continental-margin ophiolites, consisting of subcontinental lithospheric mantle directly overlain by basaltic lavas and intruded by small gabbroic plutons and rare mafic dikes. However, only a few are sufficiently well constrained in terms of tectonic evolution and petrology. The Grischun–Malenco area (southeastern Swiss and northern Italian Alps) represents the type locality of a fossil OCT, whose history has been precisely reconstructed from pre- to post-rift stages through numerous fundamental studies. The Grishun–Malenco OCT developed along the Jurassic Alpine Tethys and facilitated the subcontinental mantle exhumation to the seafloor. These mantle rocks experienced variable degrees of serpentinization, whereas more proximal domains (present-day Malenco), remaining beneath the continental crust, may undergone only limited serpentinization. During subsequent Eo-Alpine convergence, the Grischun–Malenco area was buried within a potential serpentinization window above the subducting slab, i.e. within a supra-subduction zone located in the hanging wall of the compressional system. Finally, during Meso-Alpine convergence, the area was incorporated into the orogenic lid and tectonically emplaced onto the European plate. Tectonic reconstructions suggest that, structural inheritance, particularly Jurassic rift segmentation, facilitated the emplacement of large mantle bodies into the hanging wall, rather than their dismemberment into thin tectonic slices.

The Grischun–Malenco area therefore constitutes a natural laboratory for investigating serpentinization-driven H2production in continental settings. Integrated investigation of serpentinization processes in continental and supra-subduction environments; combined with constraints on the pressure–temperature conditions of multiple serpentinization events and assessments of source-rock fertility based on Fe²⁺/Fe³⁺ ratios; will provide critical guidance for future hydrogen exploration.

How to cite: Dimasi, F., Manatschal, G., Ulrich, M., Chenin, P., and Gasser, Q.: The Grischun-Malenco fossil Ocean-Continent-Transition: the fate of the subcontinental mantle in a Wilson cycle and its significance for H2 exploration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10175, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10175, 2026.

EGU26-10215 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Changing deformation style during natural serpentinite carbonation to talc-magnesite and quartz-magnesite 

Manuel D. Menzel, Vicente López Sánchez-Vizcaíno, Antonio Jabaloy Sánchez, and Carlos J. Garrido

Strategies of underground carbon sequestration by CO2 injection into ultramafic rocks at depth, inducing carbonation of Mg-silicates, face challenges to predict and monitor the evolution of reaction progress, fluid flow, and geo-mechanical responses. The fossil geological rock record of naturally carbonated mantle rocks allows to investigate the involved non-trivial coupling of thermal-hydrological-mechanical-chemical feedback processes across the necessarily large spatial and temporal scales.

To explore the interplay between carbonation reactions and deformation, we investigate the field- to micro-scale structures of a sequence of variably carbonated, serpentinized harzburgites from the Advocate complex of the Baie Verte Ophiolite, Newfoundland. The ultramafic rocks were progressively carbonated at 280 – 350 °C to brucite-magnesite bearing serpentinite, magnesite-talc rock and listvenite due to metamorphic fluid infiltration along a nearby fault zone [1].

Serpentinites show the recrystallization of lizardite to antigorite + brucite. This was related to semi-brittle fracturing and brucite-magnetite veins, together with oriented growth of antigorite. Incipient carbonation proceeded along the brucite veins and replacing remnant lizardite domains. Subsequently, reaction of antigorite with CO2 to magnesite–talc rocks led to talc-rich domains that develop a penetrative foliation. Magnesite shows continued growth of Fe-zoned magnesite, commonly with euhedral facets. In places, talc fringes develop in strain shadows of magnesite grains, indicating that ductile deformation was assisted by dissolution-precipitation.

In contrast, the carbonation reaction talc + CO2 to quartz–magnesite caused common semi-brittle deformation in listvenite. This is manifested by boudinage and sub-parallel sets of quartz extension veins mostly arranged normal to foliation and in oblique echelon arrays, consistent with syn-reaction shearing. At the outcrop scale, these veins cut listvenite layers and boudins, without continuation into talc-magnesite rock. At the microscale, similar quartz veins transect elongated magnesite porphyroblasts in magnesite-talc-quartz rock and foliated listvenite. Their termination at the porphyroblast rims together with co-precipitated magnesite along the vein-walls indicate that they formed synchronous to carbonation reaction. Strongly foliated transitions from talc-rich lithologies to listvenites further show apparent mylonitic fabrics with crystallographic preferred orientations with maxima of [001]Mgs normal and [001]Qtz parallel to foliation. This fabric is inconsistent with low-temperature (< 400°C) dislocation creep, but was likely caused by oriented growth under deviatoric stress. Fuchsite-filled stylolites in quartz-depleted listvenites further attest for prolonged deformation and permeability renewal by pressure solution. Our results indicate that, in line with with experimental evidence [2], carbonation is related to a changing deformation style with increasing reaction extent, from brittle veining in serpentinite, to ductile creep in talc and semi-brittle fracturing in listvenite, although dissolution-precipitation creep mechanisms are relevant during all stages. The studied case example underlines that deformation is a key factor for extensive carbonation. We further show that pressure solution can maintain permeability even in fully carbonated listvenites and may lead to nearly pure magnesite rocks.

 

Funding: RUSTED project PID2022-136471NB-C21 & C22 funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and ERDF – a way of making Europe. M.D.M further acknowledges ERC project OZ (grant: 101088573).

 

References:

[1] Menzel et al., 2018, Lithos, doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2018.06.001

[2] Eberhard et al., in review, Science Advances

How to cite: Menzel, M. D., López Sánchez-Vizcaíno, V., Jabaloy Sánchez, A., and Garrido, C. J.: Changing deformation style during natural serpentinite carbonation to talc-magnesite and quartz-magnesite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10215, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10215, 2026.

Natural hydrogen produced by fluid-rock interactions such as serpentinisation has recently been gaining traction as a potential source of carbon-free, green energy, that could go a long way towards mitigating the ongoing climate crisis1. This has led to accelerated efforts globally to identify geological sites at which hydrogen production can be stimulated, and the pressures, temperatures and fluid compositions at which hydrogen production can be optimised. Hydrogen production through serpentinisation involves a coupled redox transformation of Fe2+ to Fe3+ and H2O to H2, owing to which ultramafic lithologies are promising targets for stimulated hydrogen production, owing to their substantial Fe content2.

In this contribution we present the results of modelled fluid-rock interactions between a serpentinised peridotite from the Lizard Ophiolite Complex, United Kingdom and an engineered brine of a composition similar to ones used for CO2 sequestration experiments. Models were constructed by utilising the PHREEQC suite of codes3 using the carbfix.dat database4, at pressures of 50, 100 and 200 bars, temperatures of 100⁰, 200⁰ and 300⁰C and mass of H2O in the solution varying from 0.05-200kg. 1 kg of an almost completely serpentinised peridotite, consisting of chlorite, serpentine and magnetite was chosen as the starting material and fluid injection models were simulated by reacting increasingly dilute solutions with the host rock in successive steps. The models predict hydrogen production to peak at 200 bar and 300⁰C, at which 5.73 mole/kgw hydrogen is produced at low water/rock ratios. The amount of hydrogen produced appears to have a positive correlation with temperature and increases rapidly with increasing temperature. On the other hand, hydrogen production is inversely correlatable with the mass of H2O in the solution and decreases with increasing amounts of H2O as the simulations proceed. The effect of temperature appears to be much more pronounced on the amount of hydrogen produced, compared to the effect of fluid pressure. Only minor increases are observed in the amount of hydrogen produced with increasing fluid pressure (5.68 mole/kgw at 50 bar and 300⁰C increasing to 5.73 mole/kgw at 200 bar and 300⁰C). Our results, although preliminary, highlight the potential of ultramafic lithologies such as the Lizard Ophiolite Complex to play an important role in natural hydrogen stimulation endeavours.

  • Zgonnik, V. The occurrence and geoscience of natural hydrogen: A comprehensive review. Earth Sci Rev 203, 103140 (2020).
  • Osselin, F. et al. Orange hydrogen is the new green. Nat Geosci 15, 765–769 (2022).
  • Parkhurst, D., Appelo, C. A. J. & Survey, U. S. G. Description of Input and Examples for PHREEQC Version 3: A Computer Program for Speciation, Batch-Reaction, One-Dimensional Transport, and Inverse Geochemical Calculations. Techniques and Methods https://pubs.usgs.gov/publication/tm6A43 (2013) doi:10.3133/tm6A43.
  • Voigt, M., Marieni, C., Clark, D. E., Gíslason, S. R. & Oelkers, E. H. Evaluation and refinement of thermodynamic databases for mineral carbonation. Energy Procedia 146, 81–91 (2018).

How to cite: Dobe, R. and Wheeler, J.: Evaluating the feasibility of stimulating natural hydrogen production from the Lizard Ophiolite Complex, UK, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10436, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10436, 2026.

EGU26-12133 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Mineralogical variation and elemental distribution within a natural carbonation cement sequence (Sverrejfellet, Svalbard): results and implications 

Andrea Pierozzi, Adrienn Szucs, Kerstin Drost, Federica Meloni, Sandor Kele, Laszlo Rinyu, and Juan Diego Rodriguez Blanco

The natural carbonation of basalts has been extensively studied in recent years, as it helps us understand how this process develops and the factors that influence it, particularly in various geological settings and with respect to element mobility. The natural analog of Sverrefjellet in Svalbard remains largely unexplored, yet it presents an intriguing case due to its unique mineralogy. This study aims to correlate petrography, X-ray diffraction (XRD) results, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), cathodoluminescence, and elemental composition in order to gain insights into the mechanisms behind the carbonation sequence of basaltic rocks from the Sverrefjellet volcano in Svalbard.

Sverrefjellet, which erupted about one million years ago, consists of cinder cones, pillow lavas, and dikes formed under subglacial conditions (Treiman 2012). According to Pierozzi et al. (2025), the carbonate cement formed in relation to the alkali basalts of the volcano results from the carbonation process. These findings and new data from the carbonate cement can provide valuable insights into the sample's composition and evolution, the influence of the basaltic host rock, and the environmental conditions during carbonation. The carbonate cement sequence primarily consists of calcite-type carbonates within the magnesite-calcite-siderite compositional range. Various stages of carbonation are evident in the cements, indicating a shift in crystal chemistry from calcian proto-dolomite to Ca-poor magnesite, ultimately leading to a mixture of Fe-rich carbonates (siderite) and non-carbonate cements.

Throughout these stages, distinct behaviors of minor and trace elements are observed, revealing the conditions of the system during cement development. The findings emphasize the significant influence of the host rock's geochemistry on the composition and evolution of carbonate cements.

Treiman, A. H. (2012) ‘Eruption age of the Sverrefjellet volcano, Spitsbergen Island, Norway’, Polar Research. Norwegian Polar Institute, 31

Pierozzi, A., Faulkner, N., Szucs, A. M., Terribili, L., Maddin, M., Meloni, F., Devkota, K., Zubovic, K. P., Guyett, P. C., & Rodriguez-Blanco, J. D. (2025). Natural carbonation in alkali basalts: Geochemical evolution of Ca–Mg–Fe carbonates at Sverrefjellet, Svalbard. Carbon Capture Science & Technology, 17, 100510. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ccst.2025.100510

How to cite: Pierozzi, A., Szucs, A., Drost, K., Meloni, F., Kele, S., Rinyu, L., and Rodriguez Blanco, J. D.: Mineralogical variation and elemental distribution within a natural carbonation cement sequence (Sverrejfellet, Svalbard): results and implications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12133, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12133, 2026.

EGU26-13122 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Water Activity as a Mechanistic Control on CO₂ Mineralization in Basalt 

Mari Chikaarashi

While rapid CO₂ mineralization in basalt has been demonstrated at both laboratory and field scales, the existing studies predominantly treat water as a bulk reaction or a transport medium. Parameters such as injection volume, fluid composition, and water-rock ratio have been investigated, yet the physical state of water at the basalt surface, particularly the level of water activity required to initiate and sustain fast carbonation remains unquantified. Thus, there remains much room for assessment in the water activity conditions required to trigger the fastest and most CO₂ mineralization yield on basaltic rocks. 

This study systematically quantifies water activity as an independent control on CO₂ mineralization kinetics and uptake capacity in basaltic materials. By identifying threshold and optimal water activity regimes, the study aims to understand the mechanism of how the spatial distribution of water and effective surface area jointly influence basalt carbonation. 

Basalt samples will be mechanically powderized with a controlled particle size to vary surface area. Water conditions will be regulated by varying relative humidity and liquid water availability in an environmental chamber. The level of exposure to water ranges from humid air to CO₂-saturated solution infusion, allowing direct comparison between gas–solid carbonation pathways and water-mediated dissolution–precipitation mechanisms. The CO₂ exposure chamber can be used to regulate gas composition and environmental conditions. CO₂ uptake will be quantified in real-time using flux-based measurements. Post-reaction products are analyzed with TGA-MS to determine the reaction efficiency. 

Overall, CO₂ mineralization is expected to show a strong dependence on water activity, with minimal uptake under dry conditions and maximum under high-humidity, non-flooded regimes, consistent with recent observations. Increased effective surface area is expected to enhance both kinetics and total uptake, with water mediating gas–solid reactions most effectively. By constraining the role of surface water films and dissolution–precipitation dynamics in basalt carbonation, this study provides new mechanistic insights relevant to optimizing field-scale CO₂ mineralization strategies in basaltic formations.

How to cite: Chikaarashi, M.: Water Activity as a Mechanistic Control on CO₂ Mineralization in Basalt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13122, 2026.

Natural carbonation of ultramafic rocks is a key process controlling the long-term carbon cycle, as exposed peridotites can directly sequester atmospheric CO2 through carbonation associated with chemical weathering. To constrain the conditions and sources of fluids involved in past natural carbonation processes and magnesite formation, isotopic analyses (δ18O, δ13C and 87Sr/86Sr) were conducted on massive magnesite veins (n = 37) hosted within the exhumed mantle section of the ophiolitic sequence of the Central Sudetic Ophiolite (SW Poland). Samples were collected from three tectonically dismembered ultramafic units: (1) Szklary; (2) Braszowice; (3) Wiry.

Oxygen isotope compositions are most variable in Szklary (δ18O = 22.4 to 31.0‰ SMOW), show a moderately narrower range in Braszowice (22.0 to 29.6‰ SMOW), and are relatively homogeneous in Wiry (27.3 to 28.8‰ SMOW). Carbon isotope values further differentiate the units: Szklary magnesites exhibit the lightest carbon (δ13C = -11.8 to -17.9‰ VPDB), Braszowice samples show consistently heavier values (-10.6 to -13.9‰ VPDB), whereas Wiry displays the widest range toward heavier carbon (-5.5 to -13.8‰ VPDB). Strontium isotopes also vary systematically, with uniformly low 87Sr/86 ratios in Braszowice (~0.7065), more variable values in Szklary (~0.7071 - 0.7117), and the most radiogenic signatures in Wiry (~0.710 - 0.721).

Previous interpretations commonly assumed that magnesite formation was associated with weathering under tropical conditions, in which the oxygen isotopic composition of meteoric water can be approximated as δ18O = 0.0‰ (SMOW). This model is widely invoked for the formation of massive magnesite veins and is supported by evidence for intense weathering of the ultramafic host rocks, including the presence of laterites. Under this assumption, calculated crystallization temperatures range from ~46 °C in Szklary to ~100 °C in Braszowice. Carbon isotope data indicate a dominant contribution of soil-derived CO₂ in Szklary, with increasing influence of additional carbon sources in Braszowice and especially in Wiry.

For samples with low Rb/Sr ratios, variations in 87Sr/86 can be attributed primarily to differences in the isotopic composition of the fluids, indicating multiple Sr sources. The predominance of homogeneous, low 87Sr/86 values at Braszowice is consistent with a crustal fluid source, comparable to ratios reported for Variscan granitoids and nephrites hosted in ultramafic rocks [1]. This suggests that at least some magnesite bodies formed during the Variscan overprint of ophiolitic massifs, contemporaneously with serpentinite-related nephrite formation. This interpretation is supported by elevated ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr ratios in samples with higher Rb/Sr from both Szklary and Braszowice, which likely reflect radiogenic ingrowth over hundreds of millions of years. In contrast, the high variability and generally elevated 87Sr/86 values observed in Wiry are more consistent with contemporaneous Sr isotope heterogeneity and may record Sr mobilization during Miocene tropical weathering of older crustal rocks [2].

[1] Gil, G. et al., 2020. Ore Geology Reviews118, 103335.

[2]  Waroszewski, J. et al., 2021. Catena204, 105377.

Acknowledgements: Research financially supported by NCN PRELUDIUM project 2022/45/N/ST10/00879

How to cite: Cieślik, B., Pietranik, A., and Kierczak, J.: Stable and radiogenic isotopes (δ18O, δ13C and 87Sr/86Sr) as tracers of complex carbonation of ultramafic rocks: Evidence from three magnesite deposits, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13569, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13569, 2026.

EGU26-13709 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

In situ oxygen isotope thermometry of carbonate–silicate assemblages in carbonated ultramafic rocks from the Point-Rousse Complex (Newfoundland, Canada) 

Israel David Garduño-Torres, Manuel D. Menzel, José Alberto Padrón-Navarta, Vicente López Sánchez-Vizcaíno, Maria Rosa Scicchitano, Melanie J. Sieber, and Carlos J. Garrido

Carbonated ultramafic rocks such as soapstones and listvenites provide natural evidence of extensive fluid-rock interaction between mantle-derived lithologies and CO2-bearing fluids and serve as natural analogues for carbon sequestration. Oxygen isotope fractionation represents a powerful tool for constraining both temperature conditions and fluid sources during the carbonation process. Here, we present preliminary results from an integrated study combining in situ oxygen-isotope analyses with microscale textural observations in a carbonated ultramafic sequence from the Point-Rousse Complex (Baie Verte Ophiolite, Newfoundland, Canada). In situ oxygen isotope measurements were performed using Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) targeting five mineral phases: antigorite, talc, magnesite, dolomite, and quartz. Phase-specific reference materials [1,2,3,4] were analyzed during the same analytical session to correct for matrix effects and to monitor instrumental drift.

The studied Point-Rousse Complex sequence comprises ophicarbonates (≤ 5.4 wt% CO₂), antigorite‑bearing soapstones (antigorite–talc–carbonate rocks, 12.8–17.1 wt% CO₂), quartz‑bearing soapstones (quartz–talc–carbonate rocks; 19.5–34.9 wt% CO₂), and listvenites (28.6–46.1 wt% CO₂). Ophicarbonates display non-pseudomorphic textures, with δ¹⁸O values of 4.3–5.2‰ (VSMOW) in antigorite, 7.6–8.6‰ in talc, and 11.1–12.2‰ in magnesite. Antigorite‑bearing soapstones show massive to foliated textures, with recrystallized antigorite overgrowing large magnesite grains, dolomite veins, and talc defining foliated domains. These rocks exhibit similar δ¹⁸O values in antigorite (4.2–5.2‰) and magnesite (9.9–11.7‰), but distinct values in talc (4.3–7‰) and dolomite (10.1–10.7‰). Quartz‑bearing soapstones and listvenites show more complex textures, including Fe‑rich zones in magnesite and talc–quartz coronas around dolomite. Magnesite exhibits a wide range of δ¹⁸O (10.6–17.7‰) with variable values in Mg-rich cores (Fe# = 0.01) and Fe-rich rims (Fe# = 0.16). Talc, dolomite, and quartz show relatively homogeneous δ¹⁸O values (6.1–6.9‰, 10.5–12.8‰, and 11.1–13‰, respectively).

Preliminary oxygen isotope thermometry based on texturally equilibrated serpentine-magnesite and serpentine-talc pairs yields carbonation temperatures of 244 ± 21 °C for ophicarbonates and 309 ± 43 °C for the antigorite‑bearing soapstones. Calculated apparent δ¹⁸O values of the fluid at these temperatures range between 3.7 and 5.4‰, consistent with metamorphic fluids. These results suggest a multi‑stage carbonation at moderate temperatures involving a progressively evolving fluid composition.

Funding: We acknowledge funding for doctoral fellowship FPI2022/PRE2023_IACT_059 (IDG) and Grants PID2022-136471NB-C21 & 22 (RUSTED) by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and FSE+. JAPN, CJG & MDM further acknowledge funding from the ERC project OZ (DOI: 10.3030/101088573).

[1] Scicchitano et al. (2021) DOI: 10.1111/ggr.12359

[2] Scicchitano et al. (2022) DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2021.11.025

[3] Scicchitano et al. (2025) DOI: 10.1111/ggr.70031

[4] Sliwinski et al. (2018) DOI: 10.1111/ggr.12194

How to cite: Garduño-Torres, I. D., Menzel, M. D., Padrón-Navarta, J. A., Sánchez-Vizcaíno, V. L., Scicchitano, M. R., Sieber, M. J., and Garrido, C. J.: In situ oxygen isotope thermometry of carbonate–silicate assemblages in carbonated ultramafic rocks from the Point-Rousse Complex (Newfoundland, Canada), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13709, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13709, 2026.

EGU26-14418 | ECS | Orals | GMPV3.1

Bridging Laboratory and Field Scales: A Plug-Flow Reactor to Assess Interactions Between Dissolved CO2 and Mafic/Ultramafic Rock 

Audrey Frappier, Maryam Kariminouroddin, and Kent Novakowski

A plug-flow reactor (PFR) with a 40-60 kg capacity for crushed rock at a targeted particle size range of 4.0-12.5 mm has been constructed to assess CO2-H2O-rock interactions and derive kinetic dissolution rates. By employing particle sizes significantly larger than those used in conventional laboratory dissolution experiments, this system aims to improve the accuracy of laboratory-derived rates relative to field behaviour. Preliminary testing has been conducted using three different mafic/ultramafic site samples from eastern Canada: feldspar-dominant samples from Tamworth, Ontario; forsterite-dominant samples from Thetford Mines, Quebec; and North Mountain Basalt samples from Nova Scotia. Deuterium and potassium chloride are used as conservative tracers to validate flow behaviour within the PFR, providing a baseline for reactive tracer experiments. Reactive tracers are implemented to estimate the effective surface area of the packed sample particles. Tracers with sorptive properties that have been preferentially explored include cesium chloride, strontium chloride, fluorescein, and rhodamine. Batch experiments were performed to characterize sorption kinetics and equilibrium behaviour across particle sizes. These results are compared to the breakthrough curves from flow-through experiments using a retardation factor to estimate the distribution coefficient. CO2-saturated water is prepared in a separate vessel at ambient temperature and a maximum pressure of 25 psi to produce a solution with a pH of ~4.6, comparable to the values during field-scale injections. Preliminary dissolution experiments recycled the CO2-H2O solution through the PFR to create semi-batch conditions and provide insights into the dynamic fluid chemistry as dissolution progresses. Temperature, pressure, pH, and conductivity are recorded at the inlet and outlet, while intermittent fluid sampling determined divalent cation and secondary metal concentrations over time. Steady-state concentrations were used to calculate dissolution rates normalized to the effective surface area. Transport behaviour was analyzed using an independent model based on the advection-dispersion equation accounting for retardation and permanent sorption coupled to mixing equations for the inlet and outlet zones of the PFR.  PHREEQC was employed to predict reactive transport results from dissolution. Comparisons between experimental and modeled dissolution rates provide insight into scaling laboratory results to field conditions and improving predictions of mafic/ultramafic rock reactivity for mineral carbonation.

How to cite: Frappier, A., Kariminouroddin, M., and Novakowski, K.: Bridging Laboratory and Field Scales: A Plug-Flow Reactor to Assess Interactions Between Dissolved CO2 and Mafic/Ultramafic Rock, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14418, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14418, 2026.

EGU26-15365 | ECS | Orals | GMPV3.1

Experimental assessment of H2 generation from Central Texas alkali basalts under CO2-coupled and high pH conditions 

Orsolya Gelencsér, Estibalitz Ukar, András Fall, Tongwei Zhang, and Toti Larson

Igneous rocks are gaining increasing attention as valuable natural resources in the energy transition. Among them, ultramafic and mafic lithologies are attractive because of their carbon mineralization potential. Another emerging aspect is abiotic hydrogen (H2) generation via the oxidation of reduced iron in the rock-forming minerals, a well-documented process for ultramafic systems known as serpentinization. However, the reaction pathway(s) for hydrogen generation from mafic rocks remain poorly understood. Compared to ultramafic rocks, mafic rocks have a more diverse mineralogy that may include Al- and alkali-bearing silicates, which may drive H₂ production in different reaction pathways. This study evaluates the H2 generation potential of Late Cretaceous silica undersaturated alkali basalt from the Balcones Igneous Province in Central Texas under different pressurized gas conditions (CO2 and Ar).

Static batch experiments were conducted to study rock-water-gas interactions and to assess the H2 generation potential of the basalt. We placed millimeter-sized rock fragments in teflon-lined Hastelloy reactors at elevated pressure (12-17 bar) and temperature (90°C), using both Ar- and CO2-saturated water. The effect of NiCl2, a potential soluble reaction catalyst, was also tested. Mineralogical and chemical changes resulting from rock-water-gas interactions were analyzed using optical microscopy, X-ray powder diffraction, and scanning electron microscopy. Headspace gas composition was measured with gas chromatography, and pH, conductivity, and solution chemistry were monitored throughout the experiment.

After 133 reaction days, the highest H2 yield was observed in the experiment with CO2-rich fluids containing added NiCl2. Comparable H2 production occurred in the Ar experiment, while lower H2 yield was observed in the experiment using CO2 alone. The results indicate that the addition of NiCl2 to CO2-rich fluids enhances the H2 generation. In addition to H2 generation, carbonate mineral precipitation was observed in CO2 experiments, further demonstrating concurrent carbon mineralization. The solution chemistry also reflects differences between settings: the CO2 experiments exhibited lower pH and elevated dissolved elemental concentrations, whereas the Ar experiment maintained higher pH and resulted in less dissolution of the original rock matrix.

Collectively, these findings demonstrate that silica undersaturated mafic rocks, such as the abundant intrusive bodies of the Balcones Igneous Province, have significant potential for both geologic H2 production and carbon sequestration.

How to cite: Gelencsér, O., Ukar, E., Fall, A., Zhang, T., and Larson, T.: Experimental assessment of H2 generation from Central Texas alkali basalts under CO2-coupled and high pH conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15365, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15365, 2026.

Ocean basin basalt is well recognised as a potentially massive reservoir for CO2 removal via carbon mineralization due to the appropriate mineralogy and the presence of moderate porosity and permeability in these rocks. Similar mafic and ultramafic mineralogy reside terrestrially in exhumed oceanic crust, tectonically active continental margins, and even in stable cratonic settings. As disposal of the necessary volumes of carbon via mineralization requires injecting large volumes of CO2 in either supercritical or dissolved form, having sufficient permeability and porosity in the rock is critical to success. In the few studies that have been conducted on the hydrogeology of terrestrial ultramafics, fluid flow is largely governed by sparsely distributed fractures and faults, with little advection into the surrounding intact rock matrix. The process of carbon mineralization is therefore dependent on advective CO2 transport in the fractures but primarily relies on diffusion-driven transfer into the intact rock matrix. The process of matrix diffusion is well understood from detailed studies of contaminant transport in fractured rock, and robust analytical and numerical models can be used to demonstrate the process, evaluate the timing, and resolve the efficacy for commercial-scale carbon disposal in these settings. To illustrate the impact of fracture and rock properties on the success of carbon mineralization, an analysis is conducted with a radial transport model which can simulate CO2 injection in discrete fractures accounting for matrix diffusion. The analysis is based on a range of bulk permeabilities (1×10-17 m2 to 1×10-12 m2) and matrix porosities (1-4%) obtained from site investigations, and a range of fracture apertures, fracture spacings, and injection pressures.  The cubic law is used to convert permeability to fracture aperture under given fracture spacings. Notwithstanding the geochemical reactions that will be involved, just the process of matrix diffusion illustrates that the matrix pore space can be largely filled with dissolved CO2 given the presence of sufficient fractures and enough time. Considering that the CO2 is also stripped via diffusion from the fractures over time/distance during injection and there is no significant form of CO2 egress from the matrix, there is no need for overlying caprock protection. As has been previously recognised, the largest potential limitation is the limited permeability of these rock types which constrains the volume of fluid that can be injected under acceptable pressure gradients. This is a very similar problem to that experienced in the geothermal industry, whereby hydraulic stimulation (without proppant) of healed fractures is successfully employed. 

How to cite: Novakowski, K.: The importance of fractures and matrix diffusion to the success of carbon mineralization in terrestrial mafic/ultramafic rock bodies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15459, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15459, 2026.

EGU26-16029 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Element mobility during serpentinization of the Tulameen Alaskan-type intrusion, British Columbia 

Victoria Windsor and Simon Peacock

The serpentinization of ultramafic rocks occurs under some of the Earth's most extreme geochemical conditions, with strongly reducing fluids, extreme pH, and low silica activity, which contribute to unique element mobility, including the mobilization of aluminum in H2O-rich fluids. This study presents a petrographic and geochemical analysis of partially serpentinized ultramafic rocks from the dunite core of the Tulameen Alaskan-type mafic-ultramafic intrusion in British Columbia, Canada. Mineral composition and textural relationships are used to establish alteration conditions during serpentinization of the intrusion, identify evidence of fluid-mediated element mobility, and reconstruct element transport mechanisms during alteration. Fluid mobile components typically exhibit anisotropic length scales of equilibrium, with fluid-mobile components equilibrating on far greater length scales parallel to permeable pathways than perpendicular to them. Electron microprobe analyses of samples from the Tulameen Intrusion reveal high aluminum content in antigorite and lizardite after olivine (0.14- 2.01 wt% Al2O3). Thermobarometry, mineral composition, and textural analysis indicate that most serpentinization of the Tulameen intrusion occurred at 300-450°C in the antigorite+brucite stability field, and continued as the intrusion cooled. Fluids were H2O-dominated with high pH (>8), low oxygen fugacity (FMQ-4), low silica activity (less than 10−2.5 at the serpentinization front), and low salinity during serpentinization. Correlation between the occurrence of Fe-rich serpentine (2.12-5.45 wt% FeO) and relatively high chlorine levels (0.02-0.05 wt% Cl) implicates salinity in fluid-based iron mobility. Comparative analysis of the alteration conditions identified in the Tulameen and known mechanisms of aluminum mobility suggests that aluminum becomes mobile in H2O-dominated fluids at high pH via the formation of AlO2- anions. These discoveries have implications for ongoing research on serpentinite reactivity in carbon sequestration and on the remobilization of mineral resources during hydrothermal alteration.

How to cite: Windsor, V. and Peacock, S.: Element mobility during serpentinization of the Tulameen Alaskan-type intrusion, British Columbia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16029, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16029, 2026.

EGU26-19487 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

 Temperature and Water–Rock Ratio Controls on Boron Behavior in Serpentinized Peridotites 

Jianing Zhu, Wolfgang Bach, Christian Hansen, Chuan-Zhou Liu, Chang Zhang, and Tong Liu

Serpentinites formed in abyssal settings show large variations in boron concentration and δ¹¹B, even within similar tectonic environments. To explore the processes controlling boron incorporation and isotopic fractionation during oceanic serpentinization, we developed a stepwise reaction-path model simulating progressive water–rock interaction, using experimentally derived data for B partioning and isotopic fractionation between fluid and rock. The model tracks the coupled evolution of B concentration and δ¹¹B in the solid through multiple reaction loops, characterized by evolving temperature and decreasing water–rock ratios.

Model results indicate that B concentration and δ¹¹B evolve asynchronously during serpentinization. However, at given B contents, serpentinites show a variety of δ¹¹B values, reflecting its strong sensitivity to reaction history rather than equilibrium with a single fluid reservoir. Progressive reaction loops produce divergent isotopic trajectories, in response to the degree of fluid renewal and cumulative fractionation during serpentinization.

Comparison with natural samples shows that B systematics of serpentinites from the Atlantis Massif are best explained by multi-stage serpentinization under relatively restricted fluid conditions, during which progressive fractionation drives δ¹¹B toward lower values despite significant B enrichment. In contrast, serpentinites from the 15°20′N transform fault, Mid-Atlantic Ridge, consistently exhibit seawater-like δ¹¹B, more resembling open-system behaviors involving repeated interactions between fresh fluids and new rock volumes.

These results demonstrate that reaction-path modeling provides a robust framework for interpreting boron isotope systematics in abyssal serpentinites and highlight the critical role of fluid–rock interaction history, along with temperature and bulk composition, in controlling δ¹¹B signatures.

 

How to cite: Zhu, J., Bach, W., Hansen, C., Liu, C.-Z., Zhang, C., and Liu, T.:  Temperature and Water–Rock Ratio Controls on Boron Behavior in Serpentinized Peridotites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19487, 2026.

EGU26-20378 | Orals | GMPV3.1

Low-Temperature Carbon Mineralisation and Hydrogen Production in Basalt 

Elizabeth Phillips, Martin Voigt, Andre Baldermann, Céline Mandon, Þordís L. Ólafsdóttir, Snædís H. Björnsdóttir, Viggó Tor. Marteinsson, and Sigurdur Reynir Gíslason

Hydrogen generation has been observed under conditions relevant to subsurface carbon mineralization, however, conditions that promote H2 production and its relevance to carbon mineralization remain understudied. In low-temperature (50°C) batch experiments with CO2-charged North-Atlantic-seawater and mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) glass, hydrogen and methane were produced and carbonates were formed.  DNA extraction was attempted by 16S rRNA gene amplification was unsuccessful. Accordingly, no evidence was found for microbial presence that could explain formation of the reduced gases. Here, we quantify CO2 mineralization, H2 and CH4 production in experiments under mild conditions (50°C and 1.5 bar pCO2) relevant to subsurface carbon mineralization using the Carbfix method with MORB and seawater. Significant H2 production was not observed in higher temperature (130°C) experiments, conflicting with earlier studies. We provide evidence for H2 and CH4 production via water rock reactions (i.e., low temperature serpentinization) using aqueous cation concentrations, x-ray diffraction data and FTIR data of reaction products. Findings of this work have implications for pilot-scale studies injecting CO2-charged seawater into basalt formations, such as the Seastone project in southwest Iceland by Carbfix. This study highlights key variables to analyze in such studies to assess reduced gas formation, which can be sources of metabolic energy for microbial communities, a potential source of H2 for energy or feedstock use, or an additional reaction pathway for injected CO2. Findings from this work have implications for scaling carbon mineralization projects as they grow in importance in response to global warming.

How to cite: Phillips, E., Voigt, M., Baldermann, A., Mandon, C., Ólafsdóttir, Þ. L., Björnsdóttir, S. H., Marteinsson, V. Tor., and Gíslason, S. R.: Low-Temperature Carbon Mineralisation and Hydrogen Production in Basalt, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20378, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20378, 2026.

EGU26-20851 | Orals | GMPV3.1

RedOx gradient as the main driver for magnetite formation during serpentinization: implications for natural H2 production 

Benjamin Malvoisin, Paula Dörfler, Anne-Line Auzende, Fabrice Brunet, Mathilde Cannat, Håkon Austrheim, and Mary-Alix Kaczmarek

Serpentinization reaction is known as one of the main sources of natural H2 at the Earth’s surface. Estimates of H2 production during this reaction require an in-depth understanding of the mineralogical processes leading to iron oxidation. The study of serpentinized peridotites collected at 13 localities at mid-ocean ridges, in ophiolites and ultramafic bodies reveals the development of an alteration sequence during reaction.  At the olivine contact, a first reaction zone is composed of a fine-grained mixture of serpentine, Fe-brucite and awaruite (Reaction Zone 1). Thermodynamic modelling with the latest data for the Fe(OH)2 endmember indicates that awaruite formation limits H2 production with H2 concentrations comprised between 10-3 and 10-2 mol/kg. These values are consistent with the maximum values measured in fluids expelled at ultramafic-hosted hydrothermal sites. At the mesh rim, a second alteration zone composed of Ni-bearing magnetite, serpentine and Mg-brucite is found (Reaction Zone 2). Serpentine and Mg-brucite display a porous symplectite microtexture, indicating formation after Reaction Zone 1 by a dissolution-precipitation process. Magnetite formation in Reaction Zone 2 could not be reproduced with thermodynamic modelling by modifying, as previously thought, temperature or water to rock ratio. However, removing H2 from the system was found to reproduce both the mineralogy and the composition of Reaction Zone 2. This indicates that H2 diffusion is the main driver for magnetite formation during serpentinization. The H2, aq concentrations at the equilibrium with Reaction Zone 2 fall in the 10-7 - 10-3 mol/kg range. Based on the mineralogical observations and thermodynamic modelling performed here, two regimes for H2 production during olivine serpentinization can be proposed. If H2 diffusion is limited, the serpentinizing fluid contains between 10-3 and 10-2 mol/kg of H2 but the overall H2 production is one order of magnitude smaller than previous estimates. If H2 diffusion proceeds rapidly, the overall H2 production is comparable to previous estimates but the expected H2 concentration in the serpentinization fluid at the equilibrium with the reaction products is extremely low (10-7 to 10-3 mol/kg).

How to cite: Malvoisin, B., Dörfler, P., Auzende, A.-L., Brunet, F., Cannat, M., Austrheim, H., and Kaczmarek, M.-A.: RedOx gradient as the main driver for magnetite formation during serpentinization: implications for natural H2 production, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20851, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20851, 2026.

EGU26-22497 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV3.1

Mineral Carbonation: Processes, Mechanisms, and Its Role in the Carbon–Hydrogen Cycle 

Dingkui Zhou, Shuyun Cao, Xiaowen Li, Xuemei Cheng, Jianhua Liu, Yanlong Dong, and Shu Jiang

Mineral carbonation represents a promising carbon capture and storage (CCS) approach, offering permanent CO2 sequestration via spontaneous reactions, abundant natural feedstocks, and low environmental impact. Mafic and ultramafic rocks, in particular, exhibit high carbonation potential due to their rich magnesium, iron and calcium content. This paper provides a systematically study of the reaction process, intrinsic mechanisms, and role of mineral carbonation in the carbon-hydrogen cycle. (1) Reaction process and mechanisms in mineral carbonation. Mineral carbonation is a dissolution– precipitation process involving Mg2+-, Ca2+-, or Fe2+-rich silicates (e.g., olivine, pyroxene) and CO2-rich fluids. It proceeds through three stages: CO2 dissolves to form carbonic acid, dissociating into HCO3- and CO32- (stage 1); the resulting acidity promotes silicate dissolution, releasing metal ions (e.g., Mg2+, Ca2+) (stage 2); and metal cations react with carbonates ions to precipitate stable carbonate minerals (stage 3). Carbonation in peridotite and pyroxenite is often coupled with serpentinization, leading to the co-formation of carbonates and serpentine minerals. Under certain conditions, abiogenic H2 and organic carbon are also produced, offering implications for astrobiology, early life origins, and clean energy. (2) Role of water in mineral carbonation. Water and H+ ions play a critical role in enhancing silicate dissolution, facilitating the release of Mg2+, Ca2+, and Fe2+. Carbonate ions from hydrated CO2 combine with these cations to form stable minerals. In aqueous supercritical CO2 systems, water content affects carbonation efficiency by influencing pore volume, while nanoscale water films regulate the types of carbonate mineral types formed. Silicate dissolution is typically the rate-limiting step, controlled by mineral structure and composition, and strongly influenced by pH, temperature, and water activity, etc. (3) Long-term reactivity and tectonic integration in carbon-hydrogen system. Effective reactivity is maintained through fluid overpressure, reaction-induced porosity, dissolution channels, and fracturing, which collectively enhance fluid infiltration and promote complete carbonation. Mineral carbonation across diverse tectonic settings and is closely linked to plate activity. It acts as a long-term carbon sink in oceanic and continental lithosphere, while subduction zones facilitate deep carbon and hydrogen transport into the mantle, driving the long-term global carbon-hydrogen cycle.

How to cite: Zhou, D., Cao, S., Li, X., Cheng, X., Liu, J., Dong, Y., and Jiang, S.: Mineral Carbonation: Processes, Mechanisms, and Its Role in the Carbon–Hydrogen Cycle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22497, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22497, 2026.

Ophiolitic succession of the Eastern Mediterranean region includes one of the most famous natural H2 leakage spot, globally known as “Chimera Gas Seepage”, noted since ancient times. Geochemical analysis on the seepage revealed that the origin of the gas is abiotic and along CH4, %10-12 of H2 is associated with the seepage due to the serpentinisation process which is widely accepted as one of the main mechanisms for the natural H2 generation.

Radiolysis, considered as another natural H2 generation process, is defined as the decomposition of H2O by decay of 232Th-238U-40K causing an increase in radioactivity levels. Therefore, increasing radioactivity levels can be detected to identify potential natural H2 generating zones by calculating the radiogenic heat generation. This study aims to test this hypothesis by implementing the usually neglected or overlooked 232Th-238U-40K concentration measurements, also known as SGR logs. A-1 well drilled in the onshore portion of the Antalya Bay, SW Turkey, includes 232Th-238U-40K concentration measurements covering an allochthonous ophiolitic section. Penetration into the ophiolites by a well, proximity of well location to the Cirali gas seepage (60 km NE of the seepage) and 2D seismic sections acquired in the region make the study area a perfect spot to test the applicability of integrated methods for natural H2 exploration.

The most significant finding along the ophiolitic section of the A-1 well is the presence of a peak in radiogenic heat generation that might indicate a potential natural H2 generation zone. On the other hand, thermal models derived from the interval velocities of 2D seismic survey nearby indicate that vast majority of generated H2 by serpentinisation process must have migrated from the deepest sections of the ophiolites as temperatures are generally quite low in the area. Apart from that, thermal models also demonstrate the presence of temperature anomalies exhibiting themselves as rapid lateral increases in temperatures that can be associated with the fluids in the sedimentary succession.

As a conclusion, this study provides a unique workflow to reveal potential natural H2 generating zones that can be applied all along the wells if 232Th-238U-40K concentration measurements cover zone of interest not only in the Eastern Mediterranean but for any region. In terms of play fairway, 2 play types have been identified. Naturally generated H2 can accumulate both in the serpentinites as it is already proven by Chimera gas seepage, or it can migrate into Plio-Miocene aged reservoirs in the area. In terms of expulsion mechanism, heavy deformation and compressional tectonic phase controlled by ongoing convergence of African and Anatolian plates create faults and fracture zones that might allow migration of natural H2 from the deeper sections into the shallower structures. However, detailed geomechanical analysis should be performed to understand and prevent potential seal breach risks. The methodologies provided by this study might unlock the path to a potential natural H2 discovery that can turn the Eastern Mediterranean region into a unique natural H2 exploration theatre.

How to cite: Uyanik, A.: Highlighting Natural H2 Generation Potential of the Eastern Mediterranean Ophiolites by Implementing 232Th-238U-40K Concentration Measurements and Thermal Modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-758, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-758, 2026.

EGU26-2992 | ECS | Orals | ERE1.8

Exploring Helium in European Rifts: New Insights from the Upper Rhine Graben 

Anna Wallentin, Jesica Murray, Laurent Truche, and Damien Lemarchand

Helium is a critical raw material for medical, industrial, and scientific applications, yet its global supply is largely dependent on hydrocarbon production, linking helium availability to CO₂ emissions and geopolitical constraints. This dependency has driven growing interest in alternative, low-carbon helium sources, particularly radiogenic helium systems associated with N₂-rich and CO₂-poor geological fluids. However, the geological controls on helium generation, migration, and accumulation in such non-hydrocarbon systems remain poorly constrained.

Radiogenic helium systems require the combination of a U–Th-enriched crystalline basement generating helium through alpha decay, sufficient heat to liberate helium from mineral hosts, and fault- and fracture-controlled pathways enabling upward migration while limiting diffusive loss. Where suitable reservoir and seal configurations exist, migrating helium may locally accumulate. Continental rift and geothermal provinces seem especially favourable for these conditions due to elevated heat flow, crustal thinning, and dense fault networks.

In this study, we first compile helium data from the literature to produce a Europe-wide map linking helium occurrence to rifts, sedimentary basins, and Variscan basement exposures, providing a european framework for helium exploration. New helium concentration data from thermal fluids in the Upper Rhine Graben are used to assess the spatial distribution of helium fluxes and their relationship with fault architecture. While near-surface degassing limits shallow accumulation, major fault systems emerge as first-order controls on helium transport. Their deeper continuations beneath sedimentary basins represent promising exploration targets where appropriate reservoir–seal configurations may allow helium retention. This study provides a preliminary framework to guide exploration of helium in European rift and geothermal settings.

How to cite: Wallentin, A., Murray, J., Truche, L., and Lemarchand, D.: Exploring Helium in European Rifts: New Insights from the Upper Rhine Graben, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2992, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2992, 2026.

EGU26-6527 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Understanding natural hydrogen systems: From generation to surface emissions 

Antonio Cremonesi, Lorenzo Borghini, Amerigo Corradetti, Anna Del Ben, Marco Franceschi, and Lorenzo Bonini

Natural hydrogen (H₂), often referred to as white hydrogen, is attracting increasing attention as a potential subsurface energy resource. Its occurrence, migration, and preservation are strongly controlled by faults and fracture networks, which regulate fluid flow, fluid–rock interactions, and overall reservoir integrity. This contribution provides a state-of-the-art review of current research on natural hydrogen systems, with particular focus on the role of fault and fracture zones and on recent advances from Italy as an emerging natural laboratory.

At the global scale, natural hydrogen has been reported in a wide range of structurally complex geological settings, including rift zones, ophiolitic complexes, mid-ocean ridges, sedimentary basins, and fractured crystalline basement (e.g., Zgonnik, 2020; Wang et al., 2023; Sequeira et al., 2025; Gorain, 2025). Hydrogen can be generated through multiple processes—such as serpentinization, radiolysis, organic matter pyrolysis, and mantle degassing—that commonly operate in tectonically active and faulted environments. Owing to its small molecular size and high diffusion coefficient, hydrogen migration is particularly sensitive to fracture connectivity, fault permeability, and fault (re-) activation, making structural architecture a primary control on both accumulation and leakage.

Field observations, well data, and monitoring studies indicate that hydrogen frequently migrates along fault and fracture networks, may accumulate transiently within structurally controlled traps, or is released at the surface through focused seepage (Prinzhofer et al., 2019; Baciu and Etiope, 2024). Recent studies emphasize that circulation of hydrogen-rich fluids within fault zones can significantly modify the mechanical and transport properties of host rocks through fluid–rock interactions, potentially leading to either enhanced or reduced permeability and sealing capacity (Sequeira et al., 2025; Gorain, 2025). These coupled processes have important implications for fault stability, leakage risk, and the long-term viability of subsurface energy systems.

In this context, Italy is a particularly favourable setting for research on natural hydrogen. The country hosts a broad spectrum of geological environments conducive to hydrogen generation and migration, including ophiolites, such as those exposed in the Tuscan–Emilian Apennines, active fault systems, geothermal areas, and sedimentary basins sealed by evaporites. Recent structural, geochemical, and geophysical studies suggest that the occurrence of hydrogen in Italy is closely linked to fault architecture, deformation processes, and multiscale fluid circulation (Azor de Freitas et al., 2025).

By integrating global observations with insights from Italian case studies, this review outlines current research trends, identifies key knowledge gaps, and highlights the need for multidisciplinary approaches combining field investigations, monitoring of potential gas emissions from active fault systems, interpretation of subsurface data and conceptual modelling of potential reservoirs and hydrogen emission areas. These insights are directly relevant to low-carbon energy exploration and to the assessment of fault-controlled leakage, reservoir performance, and system stability in subsurface energy applications.

How to cite: Cremonesi, A., Borghini, L., Corradetti, A., Del Ben, A., Franceschi, M., and Bonini, L.: Understanding natural hydrogen systems: From generation to surface emissions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6527, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6527, 2026.

EGU26-7111 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Imaging and quantifying ophiolite-hosted natural hydrogen potential in the northern UAE Semail Ophiolite using petrophysically guided joint inversion of geophysical data  

Mohamed Sobh, Mohammed Y. Ali, Hakim Saibi, Ahmed Abdelmaksoud, and Islam Fadel

Natural hydrogen (H₂) emissions in the northern United Arab Emirates (UAE) occur within the northern continuation of the Semail Ophiolite, where serpentinized peridotites, fault permeability, and groundwater circulation jointly control H₂ generation and migration. Recent soil-gas surveys in Ras Al Khaimah (RAK) and the Masafi structural window report systematic H₂ anomalies above a regional background, including locally elevated concentrations along fault corridors and lithological contacts. In parallel, regional geophysical studies in the UAE–Oman mountain belt provide independent constraints on the ophiolite’s three-dimensional architecture, indicating kilometre-scale thickness variations and structural segmentation, while broadband magnetotelluric (MT) models resolve resistivity contrasts and conductive zones consistent with fluid-focused deformation along major fault systems.

Here we develop an integrated, exploration-oriented workflow that constrains depth-resolved ultramafic/serpentinized source geometry and evaluates its spatial consistency with mapped surface H₂ anomalies. We combine available gravity and magnetic datasets with petrophysical constraints and geological priors to perform petrophysically guided joint inversion, targeting (i) the depth extent and volume of ultramafic bodies, (ii) the distribution of serpentinization-related physical property changes, and (iii) structurally controlled corridors that may promote water ingress and gas migration. Where available, MT-derived constraints on conductive pathways and seismic interpretations of basin/foreland structure are used to reduce non-uniqueness and to test competing structural models.

We then translate the recovered 3D ultramafic geometry into bounded H₂ generation estimates by coupling volume-based metrics with physically realistic limits, including temperature constraints informed by regional geothermal/Curie-depth patterns and process caps imposed by hydrogen solubility and water supply. Spatial comparisons between predicted subsurface H₂-favourable domains and mapped soil-gas anomalies provide a quantitative test of whether surface signals preferentially occur above specific ophiolite blocks and fault systems. The results establish a reproducible template for assessing hydrogen in ophiolite-hosted environments under realistic data availability, supporting evidence-based prioritization of targets in the UAE and across the wider Arabian ophiolite belt.

How to cite: Sobh, M., Ali, M. Y., Saibi, H., Abdelmaksoud, A., and Fadel, I.: Imaging and quantifying ophiolite-hosted natural hydrogen potential in the northern UAE Semail Ophiolite using petrophysically guided joint inversion of geophysical data , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7111, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7111, 2026.

EGU26-8255 | Orals | ERE1.8

The impact of erosion processes on natural H2 resource potential in Alpine-style orogens 

Frank Zwaan, Anne C. Glerum, Sascha Brune, Dylan A. Vasey, John B. Naliboff, Gianreto Manatschal, and Eric C. Gaucher

Natural hydrogen gas (H2) generated through the serpentinization of mantle rocks is a promising source of clean energy. For large-scale serpentinization and natural H2 generation to occur, the mantle rocks need to be brought into a optimal temperature range (the serpentinization window) and into contact with water. Alpine-style rift-inversion orogens, formed during the closure of rift basins, provide excellent environments for serpentinization-related natural H2 generation, while also harbouring extensive volumes of sediments in which natural H2 accumulation could form. In such orogens, erosion is known to have an important impact on exhumation processes and sediment distribution, but to what degree erosion efficiency influences natural H2 resource potential remains poorly understood. We use numerical geodynamic models of rift-inversion to explore and, importantly, quantify the relative roles of erosion and tectonic processes by applying different erosion efficiencies and initial rift phase durations.

Our modelling shows that, regardless of erosion efficiency, initial rift duration is a dominant factor during both the extension and inversion phase. Prolonged rifting causes increased mantle exhumation and thus higher natural H2 generation potential. Erosion efficiency exerts only a secondary effect, in that more efficient erosion modestly reduces H2 generation potential by narrowing the serpentinization window. Inversion of advanced rift basins results in asymmetric orogens in which mantle material is incorporated into the overriding wedge, a configuration that is critical for generating high natural H2 generation potential in these systems. Nevertheless, efficient erosion of otherwise symmetric orogens formed after limited rifting allows for a shift to an asymmetric style, with significant mantle exhumation and natural H2 generation potential.

However, efficient erosion and associated fast exhumation of relatively hot material in orogens can also decrease the vertical extent of the serpentinization window, reducing natural H2 generation potential. Moreover, rapid erosion can remove the otherwise abundant potential reservoir rocks and seals needed for exploitable natural H2 accumulations to form. Still, these negative effects of erosion on “conventional” natural H2 resources (involving H2 accumulation in reservoir rocks), may be favourable for “unconventional” natural H2 resources. Systems with relatively hot mantle material close to the surface may in fact be suitable for stimulated natural H2 exploitation efforts, involving direct drilling of the mantle source rock itself.

Thus, although erosion efficiency is not the dominant factor, it can still have a considerable impact on natural H2 potential in rift-inversion orogens. Therefore, a thorough understanding of the evolution of those orogens targeted for exploration, will be of great importance. This challenge can be aided by numerical geodynamic models such as those presented here, with which we perform a first-order analysis of natural examples from the Pyrenees, Alps, and Betics.

How to cite: Zwaan, F., Glerum, A. C., Brune, S., Vasey, D. A., Naliboff, J. B., Manatschal, G., and Gaucher, E. C.: The impact of erosion processes on natural H2 resource potential in Alpine-style orogens, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8255, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8255, 2026.

EGU26-9629 | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Deciphering Intermittently Bubbling Degassing Mechanisms of He‐Rich N2 ‐Bubbles at theSedimentary Basin‐Basement Interface by Surface Geophysics and Gas Geochemistry 

Emmanuel Léger, Philippe Sarda, Cédric Bailly, Hermann Zeyen, Marc Pessel, Eric Portier, Gregoire Dupuy, Rémi Lambert, Alexandra Courtin, Damien Guinoiseau, Damien Calmels, Véronique Durand, Gael Monvoisin, Anne Battani, Manuel Moreira, Jocelyn Barbarand, and Benjamin Brigaud

With the growing emphasis on reducing the carbon footprint of transport, there is increasing interest in identifying local sources of hydrogen (H₂) and helium (He) closer to consumers. In this context, we present an integrated approach combining near-surface geophysical imaging, soil gas sampling, and bubbling well gas sampling to investigate fluid and gas pathways near a fault system in the Morvan massif, located in the southeastern Paris Basin. Using electrical resistivity and seismic refraction tomography, we mapped a fault network in the area. Soil gas sampling along these faults revealed a helium hotspot, strongly linked to a specific fault segment, indicating a preferential pathway likely driven by water advection. Additionally, exceptionally high helium concentrations were detected in nitrogen (N₂)-dominated free gas from two nearby bubbling wells, closely associated with the soil helium hotspot. Our geophysical data further suggest the presence of a shallow water reservoir at the basement-sediment interface, containing N₂-He gas bubbles. In contrast, hydrogen (H₂) exhibits a broader spatial distribution, likely due to biological production and consumption processes, as well as soil aeration. A potential geological seep, with diffusion controlled by clay and marls, may also contribute to H₂ dispersion. The distinct spatial patterns observed for He and H₂ reflect their differing transport mechanisms. We propose a simple geochemical model to explain the N₂- and He-rich signature of the bubble gas, attributing it to the exsolution of dissolved atmospheric N₂ during recharge, while radiogenic He originates from the underlying granitic basement.

How to cite: Léger, E., Sarda, P., Bailly, C., Zeyen, H., Pessel, M., Portier, E., Dupuy, G., Lambert, R., Courtin, A., Guinoiseau, D., Calmels, D., Durand, V., Monvoisin, G., Battani, A., Moreira, M., Barbarand, J., and Brigaud, B.: Deciphering Intermittently Bubbling Degassing Mechanisms of He‐Rich N2 ‐Bubbles at theSedimentary Basin‐Basement Interface by Surface Geophysics and Gas Geochemistry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9629, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9629, 2026.

EGU26-10130 | Orals | ERE1.8

Assessing potential ‘copper in place’ in subvolcanic brines 

Michele Paulatto, Matthew Jackson, Haiyang Hu, Andrew Berry, Laura Crisp, Roger Beckie, and Adam Pacey

Global copper demand is projected to increase from 22.8 Mt in 2024 to 35 Mt by 2040, driven largely by the transition to green energy technologies. Existing and announced Cu mining projects are forecast to meet only 70% of this demand by 2035, creating a significant supply deficit. Mining of subvolcanic magmatic brines - hypersaline and potentially supercritical fluids enriched in metals – has been proposed as an alternative source (Blundy et al., 2021). Here, we assess the potential mass of Copper Initially in Place (CIIP) in such reservoirs.

Based on published resistivity models from 46 active magmatic-hydrothermal systems, we estimate the typical volume of brine reservoirs to range from 10 to 200 km3 and the average top reservoir depth to be 1.7 km, well within reach of modern drilling technology. Typical reservoir porosity in the shallow sub-critical zone is 8±6% and decreases to 3±3% in the deeper supercritical zone. Copper concentration in the brines is the most uncertain property.  Data from fluid inclusions and Cu solubility modelling suggest that most brine reservoirs will host modest Cu concentration (ca. 10’s to 100’s ppm), but values could exceed 10,000 ppm in the most Cu enriched systems.

We combine these estimates of reservoir volume, porosity and copper concentration using a probabilistic Monte Carlo framework to provide estimates of CIIP. Our analysis indicates a lognormal CIIP distribution with a median (P50) of 8.6 Mt and a P90 of 55 Mt, suggesting that individual magmatic brine resources may be comparable in size to conventional copper porphyry deposits. Moreover, a single high-flow-rate well tapping into a supercritical reservoir could produce approximately 2.4 kt of copper per year. A large-scale operation comprising multiple wells could yield 0.24 Mt/year, equivalent to roughly 1% of current global demand.

A Cu brine mine could extract geothermal energy from the produced fluids. We envisage a self-powered Cu brine mine, with net positive energy per kg of Cu and a minimal environmental footprint. While significant challenges remain regarding exploration for copper-rich brine reservoirs and production of very hot and possibly supercritical brines, brine mining offers a potentially significant source of Cu that could be produced with much lower energy demand and negative environmental impact than conventional mining.

Blundy, J., et al. "The economic potential of metalliferous sub-volcanic brines." Royal Society Open Science 8.6 (2021): 202192.

How to cite: Paulatto, M., Jackson, M., Hu, H., Berry, A., Crisp, L., Beckie, R., and Pacey, A.: Assessing potential ‘copper in place’ in subvolcanic brines, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10130, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10130, 2026.

EGU26-10381 | ECS | Orals | ERE1.8

The link between deep groundwater flow and serpentinization-sourced H2 production in rift inversion orogens: the example of the Engadine valley (SE Switzerland) 

Quentin Gasser, Gianreto Manatschal, Peter Alt-Epping, Eric C. Gaucher, Samuel Pierre, Francesca Dimasi, and Marc Ulrich

The Engadine valley, located in the Grischun area in SE Switzerland, presents multiple mineralized springs distributed along the Engadine fault. Hydrogen (H2) concentration measured along the Engadine fault can reach up to 1900 ppm, indicating the presence of both, a deep groundwater flow system and a deep-seated 'kitchen'. These observations suggest that the Engadine fault may control the regional hydrodynamics and likely also the hydrogen production along the Engadine valley. A key factor to identify and understand the location of the H2 kitchen, fluid pathways and related water in- and H2 out-flow is the understanding of the nappe stack in the Grischun area and its relation to the Engadine fault. The latter, represents a major SW-NE striking >100km long structure that resulted from post-collisional oblique strike-slip movements during Oligocene-Miocene time. It transects the Late Cretaceous Austroalpine nappe stack, floored by the Pennine, ultramafic rocks bearing ophiolites, inherited from the closure of the Alpine Tethys proto-oceanic domain. Thus, a key question is whether there is a hydrodynamic link between the ultramafic source rocks flooring the rift-inversion nappe stack, the Engadine fault, acting as a possible conduit for deep water circulation, and the occurrence of springs and H2 anomalies in the soil gas. To answer to this question, we constructed a numerical hydrodynamic model of the Engadine and surrounding area, including the Engadine fault. This model allows us to carry out regional-scale simulations to investigate the interplay between topography and a deep, permeable conduit (e.g. Engadine fault) and its control on hydrothermal circulation. The model couples groundwater flow, heat transport and solute transport, and will be calibrated with surface observations (location of springs and chemical anomalies in water and soil gas). First results suggest that fluid upwelling occurs SW of St.Moritz and NE of Scuol along the Engadine valley, whereas the fault-segment between St.Moritz and Scuol corresponds to a region of meteoric recharge. This SW-NE distribution of deep upwelling correlates well with first geochemical field measurements. Future work will include chemical fluid-rock interaction to fully understand the hydro-chemical conditions of H2 formation and H2 pathways to the surface along the Engadine valley. Ultimately, this well-constrained, regional scale model, will serve as an exploration tool, allowing us to quantitatively evaluate the potential for energy-related exploitation (H2 and/or geothermal).

How to cite: Gasser, Q., Manatschal, G., Alt-Epping, P., Gaucher, E. C., Pierre, S., Dimasi, F., and Ulrich, M.: The link between deep groundwater flow and serpentinization-sourced H2 production in rift inversion orogens: the example of the Engadine valley (SE Switzerland), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10381, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10381, 2026.

EGU26-11903 | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Numerical Modeling of Geothermal Heat and Lithium Co-Production in Fault-Hosted Reservoirs 

Benoit Lamy-Chappuis, Edoardo Pezzulli, and Thomas Driesner

The dual production of geothermal energy and lithium from fault-controlled reservoirs, such as the Rittershoffen doublet in the Upper Rhine Graben (URG), presents a significant opportunity for the energy transition. However, long-term feasibility depends heavily on the complex interplay of fluid flow and chemical transport. We developed a numerical model using a control volume finite element method with embedded discontinuities, calibrated against comprehensive field data (pressure transients, tracers, and thermal profiles).

Our results reveal a highly heterogeneous flow field: a rapid primary path through the major fault/damage zone creates hydraulic "short-circuits," while slower secondary paths sweep the surrounding fractured reservoir. While thermal energy production remains remarkably stable over a 50-year forecast, lithium concentrations are more sensitive to these flow dynamics.

We show that in the absence of active lithium leaching, concentrations decline as lithium-depleted brine recirculates. However, we demonstrate that even modest leaching rates (0.3 g/m3/yr) can sustain concentrations above 100 ppm. These findings highlight that constraining in-situ leaching rates and hydraulic connectivity is not just a geological challenge, but a critical requirement for de-risking the "lithium-from-brine" industry in the URG.

How to cite: Lamy-Chappuis, B., Pezzulli, E., and Driesner, T.: Numerical Modeling of Geothermal Heat and Lithium Co-Production in Fault-Hosted Reservoirs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11903, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11903, 2026.

Reliable subsurface temperature models are a key prerequisite for geothermal exploration, reservoir assessment, and broader subsurface energy applications. Within the GeoChaNce research project, we present an integrated geological and thermal characterization of the Bavarian part of the North Alpine Foreland Basin (NAFB), combining petrophysical analyses of a large heterogeneous well dataset with advanced geostatistical modelling approaches.

The thermal analysis focuses on developing a fully volumetric 3D temperature model that covers depths ranging from 300 m to 5000 m true vertical depth. The temperature dataset comprises 196 bottom-hole temperature (BHT) values, which were corrected using Monte Carlo methods to account for uncertainty, and 19 high-quality continuous temperature logs, including wireline and fiber-optic measurements. To robustly account for data heterogeneity and measurement uncertainty, particularly in the error-prone BHT correction methods, Empirical Bayesian Kriging (EBK) was applied within a 3D framework. The model was computed on a 100 × 100 × 100 m voxel grid and provides probabilistic temperature distributions for P10, P50, and P90 scenarios. Cross-validation using a leave-one-out approach yields a mean standard error of 5.6 K, with more than 87% of predictions falling within the modelled 90% confidence interval.

The resulting temperature model reproduces well-known regional thermal anomalies of the Molasse Basin, including positive anomalies in the Munich and Landshut areas and a pronounced negative anomaly associated with the Wasserburg Trough. In addition, a 3D Empirical Bayesian Indicator Kriging approach was used to derive probability maps for reaching specific temperature thresholds (e.g., 80 °C and 100 °C), providing a robust probabilistic framework for geothermal assessment.

Ongoing work focuses on coupling the solely statistical EBK temperature model with lithology-specific thermal conductivity data derived from laboratory measurements, mixing-law models, and petrophysical interpretations of logging data. This will allow calibration of the temperature field, derivation of regional heat-flow densities, and calculation of horizon-based temperature gradients. The GeoChaNce results provide an improved, uncertainty-aware thermal framework for the Bavarian Molasse Basin, contributing to more reliable geothermal resource assessments and forming a key component for a future geothermal decision-support system for the reservoir.

How to cite: Schölderle, F. and Zosseder, K.: From Heterogeneous Well Data to Probabilistic 3D Temperature Modelling of the Bavarian Molasse Basin for Geothermal Exploration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13093, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13093, 2026.

EGU26-13177 | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Architecture and controlling factors of intra-salt deformation in diapiric structures: A numerical modelling approach 

Manel Ramos, Ritske Huismans, Leonardo Muniz Pichel, Thomas Theunissen, Jean-Paul Callot, Alexandre Pichat, Naim Célini, Sabine Delahaye, and Claude Gout

Salt tectonics is often simplified with a homogeneous halite rheology, but natural evaporite sequences are heterogeneous, including frictional-plastic anhydrite and low-viscosity K-Mg salts, that can alter the architecture and controlling factors of intra-salt deformations in diapiric structures. We use 2D high-resolution finite-element simulations (FANTOM) to investigate how the vertical position of intra-salt layers controls the formation, geometry, and internal architecture of salt diapirs. The models simulate diapirism driven by sedimentary loading (with varying sedimentation rates and no basal tectonics) and explore different intra-salt stratigraphies. Our results shows that layer position have a first-order control on diapir evolution. When an anhydrite layer is placed at the top of the salt sequence, it acts as a stiff caprock that limits salt flow, resulting in a broad, low-relief salt structure with minimal surface deformation. In contrast, a mid-level anhydrite induces flow partitioning and a bimodal deformation pattern: it decouples movements above and below anhydrite, producing sharp diapir margins and localized folding and disruption of the internal layers. This leads to contrasted intra-diapir complexity. If the strong layer is located near the base of the salt, it initially shows high diapirism from the upper salt but eventually forces the lower salt to flow inside this first diapirs. These tall diapirs are associated with intense rotation of the minibasins and the development of welds where the intra-salt layer breaks and salt flows upward. The presence of low-viscosity K-Mg salt layers further amplifies internal deformation: these weak units flow fast and undergo drastic thinning, creating additional shear zones and irregular internal geometries without significantly impeding diapir growth. Our high-resolution models demonstrate that even thin intra-salt layers significantly influence the localization of deformation, thereby shaping both the external form and internal structure of diapirs. These results are applicable to layered evaporite sequences (LES, e.g. Zechstein Basin) and offer a new way for interpreting complex intra-salt features observed at the seismic scale. These insights have important implications for structural interpretation, resource exploration, and the development of salt formations as effective caprock for CO₂ and for hydrogen storage in salt caverns.

How to cite: Ramos, M., Huismans, R., Pichel, L. M., Theunissen, T., Callot, J.-P., Pichat, A., Célini, N., Delahaye, S., and Gout, C.: Architecture and controlling factors of intra-salt deformation in diapiric structures: A numerical modelling approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13177, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13177, 2026.

EGU26-13651 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Building a Picture of the Geological Hydrogen and Helium System in West Texas, USA 

James Thompson, C. Nur Schuba, Gabriel Pasquet, Saad Salah, Edna Rodriguez Calzado, Elizabeth Horne, Rama Arasada, Vincent Mow, Dane Kasperczyk, Jelena Markov, Shuvajit Bhattacharya, Lorena Moscardelli, and Mark Shuster

Geological hydrogen and helium exploration have increased substantially in recent years, driven by requirements for the energy transition and high-tech industries. These efforts have highlighted the need for fundamental understanding of the underlying geologic systems influencing the generation, migration, and storage of these gases. Since hydrogen (H2) and helium (He) are naturally produced in the subsurface via chemical and nuclear reactions involving major igneous rock types that are common in crystalline basements (e.g., mafic/ultramafic for hydrogen and felsic for helium), predicting and mapping basement terranes and lithologies has become a key focus in these new exploration efforts. Further, historical data from oil and gas wells have suggested the presence He and H2 at depth. While these findings offer promising leads, many of these measurements are outdated and require modern verification to assess their current relevance and potential for commercial accumulation.

Our research aims to generate regional-scale interpretations of the He and H2 system across the state of Texas. To this end, we explore field and well data to complement and refine existing basement lithology interpretations previously derived from core and geophysical data. The main contribution of our work is the application of Bayesian analysis as the basis for joint inversion of gravity and aeromagnetic data to produce probabilistic estimates of basement lithologies throughout the state. Secondly, the extensive analysis of soil and well gas samples for determining He and H2 generation and storage. Thirdly, improve well log analysis of basin scale lithological interpretations to increase the accuracy of the hydrogen and helium migration and storage potential across the system. These methods ultimately aim to significantly improve the predictive capability of He and H2 plays based on a suite of geochemical and geophysical data.

The research is currently focusing on the Permian Basin and Ouachita Thrust Belt region in West Texas (USA) that have traditionally been targeted for oil and gas exploration. The Mesoproterozoic basement of the Permian Basin forms an intractonic sag and consists of a complex assemblage of igneous and metamorphic rocks, which are rock types known to generate He and H2. Interestingly, the basin comprises a 300-1200 m thick Permian evaporite sequence, which may act as an effective seal for basement-sourced He and H2. A soil gas survey was conducted to identify potential emission zones and to evaluate the sealing potential of the evaporite sequence. This survey was complemented by well data to investigate gas presence below any overburden. In the most favorable areas, long-term H₂ monitoring was implemented to assess possible cyclicity (e.g., diurnal, seasonal) in gas emissions. Basement rock sampling and well gas analyses provide insights into both past and potentially ongoing reactions beneath the overburden, helping to constrain the He and H2 system and the geological controls.

In this presentation, we demonstrate this approach to generate Texas-wide basement lithology maps. We focus on specific compositions relevant to geologic He and H2 exploration, and highlight the utility of these maps to help focus future exploration and development efforts for this rapidly growing field of study.

How to cite: Thompson, J., Schuba, C. N., Pasquet, G., Salah, S., Rodriguez Calzado, E., Horne, E., Arasada, R., Mow, V., Kasperczyk, D., Markov, J., Bhattacharya, S., Moscardelli, L., and Shuster, M.: Building a Picture of the Geological Hydrogen and Helium System in West Texas, USA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13651, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13651, 2026.

EGU26-15257 | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Autothermic Pyrolysis in-situ Conversion Technology and Pilot Test Project 

Wei Guo, Chaofan Zhu, Qiang Li, Sunhua Deng, and Fengtian Bai

Energy consumption and heating efficiency are key bottlenecks constraining the large-scale application of in-situ conversion technology. Autothermic pyrolysis in-situ conversion technology (ATS) proposes an innovative solution: by injecting oxidants such as ambient-temperature air into preheated shale formations, the exothermic oxidation reaction of residual carbon after the thermal cracking of kerogen is utilized to continuously generate substantial heat. This sustains the self-propagating thermal cracking process within the reservoir, significantly reducing the need for external energy supply. Laboratory experiments and numerical simulations show that, through precise control of process dynamics, the technology can achieve an energy efficiency of up to 14.80. With the auxiliary injection of a small amount of hydrocarbon gas, its applicability in shale formations with oil content below 5.0% can also be greatly enhanced.

To advance the engineering application of this technology, our team has developed a series of supporting key technologies, including efficient heating technology, shale complex fracture network construction technology, cross-scale multi-field coupling numerical simulation technology for thermal, fluid, solid, and chemical processes, underground space sealing technology, in-situ catalytic enhancement technology, and an integrated development system combining in-situ conversion, waste heat recovery, and CO₂ sequestration. This has established a comprehensive technological support system. Based on these technologies, our team has conducted two pilot tests in the Qingshankou Formation and Nenjiang Formation of the Songliao Basin in China, at formation depths of 80 meters and 480 meters, respectively. Both tests successfully extracted crude oil and natural gas, verifying the feasibility of this technological approach.

With the growing global demand for cleaner extraction of fossil energy resources, this technology can be widely applied in areas such as in-situ development of oil shale and low-to-moderate maturity shale oil, in-situ coal-to-oil and gasification, in-situ hydrogen production from crude oil, and high-temperature upgrading of heavy oil, demonstrating broad prospects for engineering applications.

How to cite: Guo, W., Zhu, C., Li, Q., Deng, S., and Bai, F.: Autothermic Pyrolysis in-situ Conversion Technology and Pilot Test Project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15257, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15257, 2026.

Abstract

Against the backdrop of the global energy transition, hydrogen is gaining prominence as a clean energy carrier due to its zero emissions and high energy density. In-situ gasification of crude oil reservoirs for hydrogen production has thus emerged as a promising technology. However, conventional process of H2 production from crude oil suffer from high operating temperatures and energy consumption. Developing effective catalysts to lower the required reaction temperature is therefore crucial.

In this study, a series of Fe-based catalysts, including Fe-Zn, Fe-Co and Fe-Ni composite catalysts, were developed. Their properties were comprehensively characterized, and their catalytic performance was evaluated through hydrous pyrolysis experiments. The results indicate that all catalysts significantly reduced the initial hydrogen production temperature. The Fe‑Ni catalyst exhibited the best performance, followed by Fe‑Co and Fe‑Zn. The abundant micropores in these catalysts facilitated the cracking of short‑chain hydrocarbon intermediates, thereby enhancing hydrogen yield. Furthermore, the presence of Fe improved the catalysts' resistance to coking. The reaction mechanism during in‑situ catalytic gasification of crude oil was also explored. This work provides theoretical insights and technical guidance for the future engineering application of in‑situ hydrogen production from crude oil gasification.

Keywords: Hydrogen production; Crude oil; In-situ gasification; Fe-based catalyst

How to cite: Deng, S., Liu, H., and Guo, W.: In-situ catalytic hydrogen production from crude oil gasification using Fe-based composite catalyst: An experimental investigation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16296, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16296, 2026.

The evidence base for geological hydrogen sources is expanding rapidly, moving from anecdotal reports to systematic surveys, exploration, and focused research that address fundamental knowledge gaps. These efforts will determine whether geological hydrogen remains a small-scale, local energy source or can evolve into a large-scale resource capable of contributing meaningfully to the global energy transition. In this interactive presentation, we aim to present and discuss effective ways of applying thermo-hydro-mechano-chemical (THMC) modelling approaches to geological hydrogen research. The objective is to reduce interdisciplinary barriers and to enable effective discussion that optimizes the use of THMC modelling for constraining fundamental research questions. These questions primarily relate to assessments of geological hydrogen resource potential and to informing exploration strategies and detection methods.

Much of the scientific and technical progress in deep-seated applications in recent decades has benefited from the development of THMC numerical and theoretical models. Such applications range from fossil fuel exploration and recovery to geothermal energy utilization, ore-forming systems, and the assessment and mitigation of induced seismicity. These advances were facilitated by improvements in computational capability and algorithmic development, enabling effective integration of experimental results and field observations into models. This has often enabled the development of a mechanistic understanding of nonlinear and tightly coupled THMC processes operating at depth across wide spatial and temporal scales.

Geological hydrogen systems are similarly governed by crustal processes, which can be described as interconnected components encompassing the generation, migration, accumulation, and preservation of hydrogen. Leveraging established multiphysics modelling approaches to investigate these components can provide valuable insights. Key examples include constraining migration mechanisms of dissolved or free-phase hydrogen from deep source regions toward potentially exploitable reservoirs, and assessing fluxes into and out of hydrogen reservoirs. Assessing the relative timescales  can enable first-order evaluation of losses due to biotic and abiotic reactions, as well as accumulation potential.

How to cite: Aharonov, E., Roded, R., and Toussaint, R.: A cross-disciplinary exchange between modelling, field studies, and industry: How can multiphysics modeling advance geological hydrogen resource development?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16404, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16404, 2026.

EGU26-18056 | Orals | ERE1.8

Establishing meaningful soil gas measurements for geological hydrogen research and exploration 

Jelena Markov, Vincent Mow, Dane Kasperczyk, Michael Breedon, Martin Moran, David Down, Michael Camilleri, Julian Strand, and Jiabin Liang

Unlike traditional hydrocarbon and mineral exploration, where decades of empirical data informed threshold values, natural hydrogen exploration requires establishing new baselines for what constitutes an economically significant anomaly. To use soil gas measurements as an effective tool in the geological hydrogen research and exploration we must understand the limitations of the existing instruments, what are background hydrogen values in soil and what other data are required for the reliable interpretation of the soil gas measurements and monitoring data sets.
 Current technology constraints remain a significant challenge in natural hydrogen soil gas sensing. Field-appropriate commercially available sensors exhibit combinations of limited operating ranges, cross-sensitivity to humidity and other gases, baseline drift over time and exposure, and hysteretic dynamics. CSIRO has developed Seeptracker multi-gas (hydrogen, methane, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide) monitoring device. In this presentation we want to share findings regarding the commercially available hydrogen sensing components comprising Seeptracker and results of deploying this instrument around the world to collect soil gas data in various geological settings. Seeptracker utilises multiple commercially available sensors to measure hydrogen and other gases and the output is enhanced by an extensive calibration routine to improve gas measurement accuracy. Developing Seeptracker revealed the challenge of balancing sensing quality, deployment compatibility, and cost/effort scaling. To achieve suitable long-term large-scale autonomous field deployment requires a clearly and concisely defined study scope, together with a well-characterised sensor package and robust calibration routine to address the multi-variate challenge. 
 Interpreting multi-gas measurements introduces both opportunities and risks for false positives. Effective interpretation of soil gas data for geological hydrogen research requires integration with multiple complementary datasets. Geological mapping identifying serpentinisation fronts, radiolytic source rocks, or fault systems provides essential structural context. Geophysical surveys, particularly magnetotellurics and gravity, can delineate subsurface fluid pathways and potential trap geometries. Geochemical analysis of associated gases, including methane, helium, nitrogen, carbon and noble gas isotopes, potentially enables source discrimination and migration pathway delineation. 
Our work with Seeptracker deployments across diverse geological settings around the world suggests that sustained hydrogen concentrations in soil gas can be used as an effective tool for natural hydrogen exploration, but it cannot be used in isolation. The detailed follow-up investigation is required, particularly when accompanied by spatial coherence and temporal stability and crucially ensuring that measured natural hydrogen is geological. Our studies demonstrate that continuous monitoring data capturing temporal variability, rather than single-point measurements, enhances interpretation confidence. In this presentation we show the performance of the current hydrogen sensors within the CSIRO multi-gas monitoring system Seeptracker, including limitations, and present soil gas monitoring results from various sites around the world. We also show in greater detail soil gas studies from Australia, and the interpretation of the soil gas monitoring results is constrained by geochemical, geophysical and isotope data sets.

How to cite: Markov, J., Mow, V., Kasperczyk, D., Breedon, M., Moran, M., Down, D., Camilleri, M., Strand, J., and Liang, J.: Establishing meaningful soil gas measurements for geological hydrogen research and exploration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18056, 2026.

EGU26-18135 | ECS | Orals | ERE1.8

Sequence-stratigraphic control on facies and karst in Europe’s largest geothermal carbonate reservoir: The Malm Reservoir of the South German Molasse Basin (greater Munich area) 

Aurélia Crinière, Valerie Ernst, Kilian Beichel, Daniel Bendias, Bob Bamberg, Felix Schölderle, Mohamed Nasralla, Daniela Pfrang, Ishani Banerjee, and Kai Zosseder

The Upper Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous (Purbeck) sedimentary succession of the South German Molasse Basin, here referred as the Malm Reservoir, hosts one of the largest hydrothermal resources in continental Europe. It exhibits strong heterogeneity driven by depositional facies variability within a sequence stratigraphic framework, diagenetic overprint including karst horizon development, and structural elements typical for foreland sedimentary basins. The GIGA-M project aims to study the deep geothermal reservoir of the greater Munich area through integrated well data and large-scale 3D seismic interpretation, providing the geological basis for a reservoir management model enabling synergetic geothermal utilisation. Hydraulically active zones in the most productive geothermal wells are commonly observed within karstified intervals (Hörbrand et al., 2025, Schölderle et al., 2023) and are therefore commonly described as one of the main reasons for the exceptional productivity of the reservoir. Facies architecture and Mesozoic to Cenozoic faults further influence reservoir heterogeneity and fluid flow. Karst horizons are unevenly distributed throughout the reservoir, indicating a complex interplay of syn-depositional and diagenetic controls that is common in many karstified carbonate reservoirs worldwide.

This study evaluates how sequence stratigraphy, facies architecture, and karst development control flow zones and matrix porosity in the Malm Reservoir. The analysis focuses on stratigraphic and facies organisation and karst characterisation. Available well data and recent studies indicate that fault systems and fractures play only a minor role in the hydraulic behaviour of the Malm Reservoir; consequently, they are not a primary focus of this study. Our workflow integrates geophysical well logs, mud-log descriptions, and borehole image logs to identify and classify karst features in wells and, where flow data are available, to correlate karst categories with observed flow zones. This approach enables the recognition of karst horizons associated with enhanced porosity and permeability, directly relevant to reservoir quality and well-interference assessment.

A regional sequence stratigraphic framework (Wolpert et al, 2022; Wolpert, 2020) is used to link relative sea-level changes to facies distribution within the carbonate ramp system. Facies associations primarily control matrix porosity and storage properties, whereas sequence boundaries mark exposure surfaces and sedimentary gaps where karst can develop. While early diagenetic karst may initiate at sequence boundaries, the most extensive karst development is interpreted to result from prolonged subaerial exposure of the reservoir during the Cretaceous, highlighting the critical importance of identifying and differentiating sequence boundaries according to their timing and duration of exposure. This Cretaceous karst generation is considered the main candidate for the laterally extensive karst systems that cross-cut facies boundaries and form the main geothermal flow zones, as confirmed by flow observations in wells. These karst horizons exert a first-order control on transmissivity and hydraulic connectivity. Within the GIGA-M project, this stratigraphic and karst framework provides the geological basis for developing facies- and karst-probability maps calibrated with existing and future GIGA-M 3D seismic data, enabling the assessment of flow connectivity and well interference and supporting geothermal reservoir management at the greater Munich area scale.

How to cite: Crinière, A., Ernst, V., Beichel, K., Bendias, D., Bamberg, B., Schölderle, F., Nasralla, M., Pfrang, D., Banerjee, I., and Zosseder, K.: Sequence-stratigraphic control on facies and karst in Europe’s largest geothermal carbonate reservoir: The Malm Reservoir of the South German Molasse Basin (greater Munich area), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18135, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18135, 2026.

Young igneous geothermal systems recharge by magmatic activity. Due to Iceland’s location on the mid-ocean ridge, repeated dyking compensates here for the spreading. This study examines the impact of intrusive and eruptive events on the thermal evolution of the Krafla geothermal system. The so-called “Krafla fires” in 1975-84 were a volcanic episode comprising 20 intrusive and eruptive events, during which seven of them intersected the geothermal system.

The effects of repeated dyking on temperature, pressure, and enthalpy, as well as steam content, are modelled in simple 2D profiles with HYDROTHERM (USGS). Calculating a heat budget can help to exploit geothermal energy sustainably: How much energy is inputted by the dykes into the geothermal system? How much of this heat is lost to the atmosphere by advection and conduction? How fast is heat transferred in the subsurface?

The total heat input of the dyke into the geothermal system is 0.5-1 x 1018 J. During, and shortly after the eruptive episode, the dyke nearly cools down to the ambient temperatures of the system. Models and previous analyses of steam clouds in air photos indicate that around 10 % of the heat is lost from the surface to the atmosphere, mostly in the first weeks/months after the dyking event, while 90 % of the dyke’s energy is dissipated into the geothermal reservoir. As the system is already close to the boiling point, the additional heat input by the dyke, leads to steam generation, which rises in the high-permeable lava-hyaloclastite layer. It collects below the clay cap and rises through fissures and fractures. In the lower permeable layer of basement intrusions, the steam is less mobile and stays in the vicinity of the dyke. The main changes in temperature and pressure can be observed in the two-phase and superheated steam regions, where enthalpy increases strongly compared to the initial setting. Long-term simulations indicate that the heat input by the dykes formed in the Krafla fires remains in the reservoir for at least several decades and plays a critical role in maintaining the geothermal system.

How to cite: Fehrentz, P., Gudmundsson, M. T., and Reynolds, H. I.: Thermal effects of intrusive events on geothermal systems: Heat transfer modelling during (and after) the Krafla volcano-tectonic episode 1975-84, NE-Iceland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18250, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18250, 2026.

EGU26-18410 | ECS | Orals | ERE1.8 | Highlight

Exploring natural hydrogen in the NW Pyrenees (France) 

Aurore Laurent, Molly Boka-Mene, Thomas De Boisgrollier, Laurent Fontanelli, Sébastien Potel, and Benoît Hauville

Natural hydrogen (H2) is emerging as a promising carbon-free energy source, aligning with France’s ambition for carbon neutrality and energy sovereignty by 2050. Yet, its occurrence, distribution and long-term sustainability remain largely unexplored. In this context, the H2 and helium exploration company 45-8 Energy was granted the “Grand Rieu” exploration license in the northwestern Pyrenees (SW France), to further investigate its natural H2 system prospectivity, with the objective of drilling an exploration well in the near future.

The license covers part of the Mauleon Basin (North-Pyrenean Zone), a Cretaceous hyperextended rift basin inverted during the Tertiary Pyrenean orogeny (e.g. Saspiturry et al., 2020). This region and the adjacent Pyrenean foreland (Arzacq basin) to the north benefit from extensive historical datasets acquired since the 1950s by major academic research programs (e.g. Orogen project) and the Oil & Gas industry (e.g. historical Lacq and Meillon gas fields), including deep exploration wells, 2D/3D seismic reflection surveys and gravimetric and magnetic data.

Our current work aims to integrate and interpret these datasets to characterize each element of the H2 system and perform volumetric and risking evaluations of H2 prospectivity within the Grand Rieu license. Geophysical studies (e.g. Wang et al., 2016; Wehr et al., 2018; Lehujeur et al., 2021; Saspiturry et al., 2024) highlighted gravimetric, magnetic and velocity anomalies suggesting the existence of a large mantle body at depth (8-10 km) under ideal P-T conditions for serpentinization and H2 generation. Numerous active H2 seepages measured at the surface along the North Pyrenean Frontal Thrust system (Lefeuvre et al., 2022) suggest active serpentinization at depth and preferential migration pathways along regional faults. Proven Upper Jurassic and Lower Cretaceous carbonate reservoirs with overlying effective seals are well-known northward in the Pyrenean foreland (Lacq and Meillon gas plays). However, their presence and properties in the Mauleon Basin remain historically poorly studied and therefore needed to be further characterized to improve their predictability. Ongoing seismic interpretation, aiming to identify potential traps and H2 migration pathways at regional scale, reveals a complex structural framework directly linked to Cretaceous hyperextension and following Cenozoic Pyrenean compression. Preliminary results suggest the existence of deep-seated structures suitable for H2 accumulation.

Overall, the Mauleon Basin appears to offer a unique geological setting favorable for natural H2 generation, migration and accumulation. Further characterization of these processes through dynamic numerical modelling is necessary to better constrain the natural H2 system. In addition, volumetric and risking evaluations will guide the selection of a drilling target within the Grand Rieu license, marking a critical step toward assessing the viability of natural hydrogen as a sustainable energy resource in France’s energy transition.

How to cite: Laurent, A., Boka-Mene, M., De Boisgrollier, T., Fontanelli, L., Potel, S., and Hauville, B.: Exploring natural hydrogen in the NW Pyrenees (France), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18410, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18410, 2026.

EGU26-19864 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Coupled chemical and nanostructural evolution of solid bitumen derived from oils with heterogeneous composition 

Qizhang Fan, Peng Cheng, Xianming Xiao, and David Misch

Solid bitumen is an important organic matter (OM) component in shale systems, and its chemical and resulting nanopore structure exert a strong control on unconventional reservoir properties. Solid bitumen is commonly regarded as a product of thermal evolution of primary kerogen or secondary transformation products such as retained oil. The nanoporous structure of post-oil solid bitumen is strongly influenced by the molecular composition of its organic precursors.

In this study, pyrolysis experiments on heterogeneous precursor oil samples were conducted to systematically investigate the coupled chemical and nanostructural evolution of solid bitumen under proceeding thermal maturation. A combination of Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Raman spectroscopy, optical reflectance measurements, pore structural characterization, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was applied.

The results show that the size and arrangement of aromatic structural units and the abundance of functional groups vary for solid bitumen derived from different oil types at comparable thermal maturity level. These nanostructural variations control nanopore development, leading to systematic differences in pore types and pore size distributions among samples. Micropores and small mesopores are closely linked to the growth, stacking, and structural reorganization of aromatic clusters, whereas stress-related processes mainly control larger mesopores and therefore exhibit a weaker coupling with molecular-scale aromatic evolution.

This study suggests that nanopore development in post-oil solid bitumen is not solely governed by thermal maturity but is also strongly influenced by the composition of precursor oils. These findings are important for assessing the fluid storage and transport behavior of fine-grained OM-rich sedimentary rocks. 

How to cite: Fan, Q., Cheng, P., Xiao, X., and Misch, D.: Coupled chemical and nanostructural evolution of solid bitumen derived from oils with heterogeneous composition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19864, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19864, 2026.

EGU26-20209 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE1.8

Characterising the Heterogeneity of Transmissibility and Hydraulically Active Zones in the Deep Geothermal Reservoir in Bavaria  

Valerie Ernst, Schölderle Felix, Aurélia Crinière, and Kai Zosseder

The Upper Jurassic-Lower Cretaceous (Malm-Purbeck) reservoir of the North Alpine Foreland Basin (NAFB) in Bavaria represents one of Europe’s most important deep hydrothermal reservoirs for sustainable heat supply. Reservoir transmissibility shows strong spatial variability and remains insufficiently characterized. In particular, the linkage between basin-scale transmissibility, vertically resolved hydraulically active zones, and their sequence stratigraphic context has not yet been systematically investigated. This gap is addressed by integrating transmissibility, hydraulically active zones, and a sequence-stratigraphic framework to provide a comprehensive characterisation of the reservoir.

Transmissibility values were derived from pressure transient analyses of geothermal and research well tests, resulting in a harmonised dataset of 57 high-quality measurements across the NAFB. These data were used to generate a basin-wide probabilistic transmissibility map using Empirical Bayesian Indicator Kriging (EBIK), a geostatistical approach that explicitly accounts for spatial uncertainty and is well-suited for sparse datasets. The resulting map confirms a general decrease in transmissibility with increasing burial depth from north to south, while also revealing regional deviations from this trend.

To resolve reservoir heterogeneity at the vertical scale, flowmeter measurements from 14 wells were analysed to identify hydraulically active zones and quantify their relative contribution to total flow. By distributing total well transmissibility according to flow contribution and zone thickness, transmissibility values were converted into permeability for individual hydraulically active zones. This approach reveals a systematic decrease in permeability with depth, characterized by distinct regional reservoir types previously identified by multivariate statistical analyses.

Hydraulically active zones were further positioned within a sequence-stratigraphic framework, enabling basin-scale correlation. The results demonstrate that hydraulically active zones occur predominantly within specific sequence-stratigraphic intervals, while deeper units contribute progressively less to flow. Although sequence-stratigraphy does not directly control permeability magnitude, it provides a consistent framework for understanding the vertical distribution of flow zones. Overall, this study provides the first integrated basin-scale assessment linking transmissibility, hydraulically active zones, and sequence stratigraphy in the NAFB. The results significantly improve reservoir characterisation, form a robust basis for static and dynamic modelling, and will be a key component of a decision support model for deep geothermal energy in the future.

 

How to cite: Ernst, V., Felix, S., Crinière, A., and Zosseder, K.: Characterising the Heterogeneity of Transmissibility and Hydraulically Active Zones in the Deep Geothermal Reservoir in Bavaria , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20209, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20209, 2026.

EGU26-939 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Thermophysical Characterization of Major Rock Types and Subsurface Thermal Modeling in the Ladakh Himalaya, India: Implications for Geothermal Energy 

Ayan Dutta, Labani Ray, Nishu Chopra, Eswara Rao Sidagam, Sandeep Kumar Prajapati, and Nagaraju Podugu

The growing urgency of global atmospheric decarbonization and reaching net zero carbon emission underscores the importance of shifting our dependency from fossil fuels to relatively cleaner renewable resources. Though India’s average annual CO2 emission growth from fossil fuels decreased from 6.4 % (2005-2014) to 3.6% (2015-2024) in recent times, India still stands as the third largest emitter of carbon at 3.2 billion tonnes per year (2024), reflecting the importance of expanding its renewable energy portfolio. Among the renewable energy resources, geothermal energy, which uses the natural heat stored inside the Earth, holds considerable potential for India, particularly along the Himalayan belt. The Ladakh Himalaya, which forms the northwestern sector of the India-Eurasia collision zone, is the focus of the current study. Ladakh is considered a highly promising geothermal province due to its active tectonics, crustal deformation, and widespread occurrences of numerous hot springs, like Puga, Chumathang, Panamik, Changlung, and Demchok where temperature reaches up to 90 oC. However, despite its strong geothermal potential, the region has limited subsurface thermal characterization, which poses challenges for effective resource assessment and sustainable exploitation.

This study presents an integrated approach that combines field and laboratory based geophysical datasets and geodynamic context to improve understanding of subsurface thermal structure for sustainable geothermal assessment. A comprehensive thermophysical dataset including thermal conductivity, porosity, density, specific heat capacity and radiogenic heat production has been generated in the present study from representative rock types. These include granitoid, sandstone, limestone, ophiolite, phyllite, schist and gneiss belonging to different geological formations such as Higher Himalayan Crystalline, Zanskar Formation, Lamayuru Formation, Indus formation, Ladakh Batholith and Khardung-Shyok Formation. Temperature measurements are carried out in boreholes for determining geothermal gradient, which is essential for calculating surface heat flow. These parameters serve as crucial inputs and boundary conditions, along with the available geological and geophysical information for constructing numerical thermal model and the quantification of crustal heat generation.

The thermal modelling simulates temperature distribution with depth and enhances the understanding of the lithospheric thermal structure of Ladakh, helping to delineate prospective zones for geothermal energy exploration. This work demonstrates the value of multi parameter geomodelling to transform sparse field observations into a robust geothermal assessment. The outcomes significantly contribute to future clean energy strategies, support a promising pathway towards global energy transition to achieve decarbonization goals and provide a framework for regional energy security of a remote mountainous region like Ladakh.   

Keywords: Geothermal energy; Heat flow; Thermal conductivity; Radiogenic heat production; Thermal modelling; Ladakh Himalaya.

How to cite: Dutta, A., Ray, L., Chopra, N., Sidagam, E. R., Prajapati, S. K., and Podugu, N.: Thermophysical Characterization of Major Rock Types and Subsurface Thermal Modeling in the Ladakh Himalaya, India: Implications for Geothermal Energy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-939, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-939, 2026.

This study presents a high-resolution tectono-stratigraphic characterisation of the Palaeocene–Eocene Sylhet–Kopili interval on the Upper Assam Shelf using a 371.5 km² 3D post-stack time-migrated seismic volume integrated with two deep wells. Targeting the 2.5–3.5 s TWT interval, time-slices (3.048–3.200 s) combined with geometric (dip, curvature), discontinuity (similarity), and amplitude-based (reflection magnitude) attributes reveal two distinct structural domains. The north-western sector is dominated by syn-depositional normal faults forming tilted blocks and fault-bend folds, whereas the south-eastern sector is characterized by E–W to ENE–WSW sinistral strike-slip faults, S-shaped bends, relay splays, and NE–SW transfer faults that generate localized transtensional pull-apart structures. Dip and curvature attributes enhance fault-plane continuity and fault-block geometries, while reflection magnitude highlights deformation-controlled variations in reflector strength and stratigraphic contrast within the Kopili and Prang intervals. Similarity and dip-magnitude co-interpretation sharply delineate fault segmentation, linkage zones, and deformation intensity, significantly improving structural resolution compared to conventional seismic interpretation. Synthetic ties to wells W-01 and W-02 (correlation 0.6–0.72) validate key horizons and strengthen structural control. This work provides the first high-resolution 3D multi-attribute imaging of the Sylhet-Kopili interval, resolving deformation styles previously undocumented in the Upper Assam Shelf. The resulting framework delineates multiple trap geometries-tilted blocks, horsts, and fault-bend closures—and demonstrates the value of integrated dip, curvature, similarity, and magnitude attributes for improving tectono-stratigraphic interpretation in foreland basin settings.

How to cite: Kalyani, K. and Kirti Rao Gautam, P.: Tectono-Stratigraphic Characterization of the Paleocene–Eocene Interval in the Upper Assam Shelf Using Integrated 3D Seismic Attribute Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-972, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-972, 2026.

EGU26-1427 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

3-D Geological Modeling from Legacy Seismic Data with Consideration of Uncertainties 

Daniel Satizabal, Ítalo Gomes Gonçalves, Jan von Harten, Nils Chudalla, David Nathan, and Florian Welmann

Geological modeling is an essential component of reservoir characterization in geothermal exploration. A geological model aims to understand the spatial relation between geological features such as rock unit boundaries, horizons and discontinuities (unconformities, faults) at various scales. However, geological models can contain significant uncertainties – often due to limited information at depth. It is therefore imperative to use all available information, including legacy data. In the KarboEx2-project, legacy seismic data from former coal exploration in the region of North Rhine Westphalia are digitized and reprocessed with modern seismic processing workflows. In our contribution here, we investigate how uncertainties in the interpretation of this legacy data can be considered in subsequent geological modeling workflows.

In the context of model construction, this type of uncertainty relates to the real position of the input points, commonly associated to data uncertainties (seismic processing, picking and interpretation, etc.). Several position points result from the picking of the horizons on legacy seismic data. A simple way to address this type of uncertainty is to perform sampling from the data treating it as fully correlated (i.e., moving all points simultaneously) or fully uncorrelated (i.e., moving all points independently). However, geological errors are commonly correlated with distance. One possibility to consider spatial correlations is to generate a geological surrogate model with a lower-dimensional representation of modelled interface. In addition to accounting for different uncertainties in space, such a low-dimensional representation allows to perform inference, sensitivity analysis, etc. We explore here a workflow based on the application of a variational Gaussian process (VGP) model and universal co-kriging for implicit geological modeling from inducing points using two open-source Python packages (GeoML, GemPy).

Our results show that it is possible to create surrogate models efficiently for a range of geological settings – with a balance between the dimension (input points) of the surrogate model and the level of complexity of the original interface. In addition, due to a variational approach, uncertainties in the input data can also be represented in the surrogate model. In next steps, the generated surrogate models will then be integrated into geothermal exploration workflows, including the uncertainties in the legacy seismic data.

How to cite: Satizabal, D., Gomes Gonçalves, Í., von Harten, J., Chudalla, N., Nathan, D., and Welmann, F.: 3-D Geological Modeling from Legacy Seismic Data with Consideration of Uncertainties, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1427, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1427, 2026.

EGU26-1660 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Three-Dimensional Geological Model of Scoria and Clinker as Major Groundwater Flow Media in Volcanic Aquifers 

YoonHo Choi, Jeong-Wook Kim, Mi-Sol Ham, Jun-Beom Park, Hyuk- Joon Koh, and Soo-Hyoung Moon

The southernmost island of the Republic of Korea, Jeju Island, is composed of multi-layered lava flows formed by repeated volcanic activity and sedimentary layers deposited during quiescent periods between eruptions. Approximately 96% of the island’s total water use is supplied by groundwater, making groundwater the most critical water resource in the region. Therefore, accurate identification of the spatial distribution of aquifers and the major groundwater flow pathways is essential for sustainable groundwater management.

The objective of this study is to establish a 3D geological model for the mid-mountain area of Jeju Island and to quantitatively characterize the spatial distribution of the volcanic aquifer system and the major groundwater flow pathways. This approach enhances the understanding of groundwater recharge and flow mechanisms and provides a scientific basis for future groundwater conservation and management.

The 3D geological modeling results are summarized as follows. The basal Seogwipo Formation occurs below approximately 50 m above mean sea level and has an average thickness of about 50 m. It is overlain by basaltic lava flows with a total thickness of approximately 400 m, emplaced by at least 14 eruptions over the past 500,000 years. Intercalated sedimentary layers mainly consist of mudstone and silty sandstone and are generally less than 5 m thick. These fine-grained, silt–clay–dominated layers act as semi-confining units that retard downward infiltration of rainfall. Scoria and clinker layers occur mainly at the upper and lower boundaries of lava flows and increase in frequency from high-elevation zones to low-lying areas. In contrast to the dense basalt, these porous layers serve as major groundwater flow pathways.

How to cite: Choi, Y., Kim, J.-W., Ham, M.-S., Park, J.-B., Koh, H.-J., and Moon, S.-H.: Three-Dimensional Geological Model of Scoria and Clinker as Major Groundwater Flow Media in Volcanic Aquifers, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1660, 2026.

Faults may act either as preferential migration pathways or as effective sealing barriers during hydrocarbon accumulation. Therefore, robust evaluation of fault sealing capacity is critical for assessing trap integrity and reducing exploration risk in fault-controlled reservoirs. Conventional fault-sealing assessments are commonly restricted to two-dimensional cross-sections or single-point analyses, which are insufficient to represent the pronounced spatial heterogeneity and structural complexity of fault systems.To address these limitations, this study proposes a three-dimensional quantitative evaluation method for fault sealing capacity based on displacement pressure difference. Taking the K area gas field in the step-fault zone of the Pinghu Slope, Xihu Depression, as a case study, we integrate three-dimensional structural modeling with geological property modeling. Fault planes are discretized, and key controlling attributes—including in-situ stress, shale content, burial depth, and fault activity timing—are assigned to individual fault elements, allowing calculation of both fault rock displacement pressure and the displacement pressure of juxtaposed reservoirs in three-dimensional space. This framework enables simultaneous evaluation of vertical and lateral sealing capacities.The results indicate that faults within the P5 and P6 members of the Pinghu Formation exhibit relatively strong sealing capacity and constitute the principal sealing intervals in the study area, consistent with existing exploration outcomes. In addition, faults located adjacent to the depocenter generally display enhanced sealing capacity, highlighting favorable zones for future exploration. Compared with traditional fault-sealing evaluation methods, the proposed approach significantly improves spatial resolution and visualization of sealing capacity, enhances evaluation efficiency, and reduces the subjectivity inherent in point-based analyses. This method is therefore well suited for fine-scale characterization of fault-controlled hydrocarbon accumulation in structurally complex basins.

Keywords:Fault sealing capacity; Displacement pressure difference; Three-dimensional fault model; Xihu Depression

How to cite: Yan, J. and Xue, H.: Three-Dimensional Evaluation of Fault Sealing Capacity Based on Fault Attributes and Displacement Pressure Difference: Application to the K Area of the Pinghu Slope, Xihu Depression, East China Sea Shelf Basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2441, 2026.

EGU26-4835 | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Model-Parameter Sensitivity Analysis on Representative Elementary Volumes for Small-Scale Geological Heterogeneities. 

Jesse Steinvoort, Alex Daniilidis, Hemmo Abels, and Sebastian Geiger

Subsurface reservoir models typically use grid cells of tens to hundreds of meters in the horizontal directions, and several to tens of meters in the vertical direction. The effects of small-scale heterogeneities (below grid cell size) on fluid flow are often ignored or assumed to have an effective ’upscaled’ average in reservoir simulations. The used grid-cell size might not correspond to the scale at which these fluid-rock interactions can be accurately averaged. The smaller scale geological heterogeneities (from pore scale up to meter scale and tens of meters, or outcrop scale) and fluid behavior (e.g., capillary vs gravitationally dominant flow regimes) play an important role in CO2 sequestration and hydrogen storage. Ideally, the grid cell size of a reservoir model is determined by the representative elementary volume (REV) which accurately captures the net effect of smaller scale structures on a certain fluid for a certain (representative) volume. We perform a rigorous analysis on the influence of sub-meter scale heterogeneities on REV scales for single-phase flow. Using generated 3D models of 2x2x2m size we vary the bed thickness, dip angle, azimuth angle, and permeability distribution (values and fining or coarsening upwards), and determining their impact on the REV. To do this a sensitivity analysis is performed on the parameters and the three calculated dimensions of the REV.

How to cite: Steinvoort, J., Daniilidis, A., Abels, H., and Geiger, S.: Model-Parameter Sensitivity Analysis on Representative Elementary Volumes for Small-Scale Geological Heterogeneities., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4835, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4835, 2026.

EGU26-5316 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Global sensitivity analysis of multistage injection in geothermal reservoirs using surrogate models 

Jorge Nicolas Hayek Valencia, Mauro Cacace, and Denise Degen

A characterization regarding the mechanical response of subsurface reservoirs is of increasing interest for energy-related applications, including geothermal energy production and storage of georesources and waste. Modelling the dynamic response of geological formations to fluid injection often relies on fully coupled thermo-hydro-mechanical (THM) models, which provide a high-fidelity representation of the governing physical processes. These models support operational and design decisions under significant geological and parametric uncertainties. However, their high computational cost severely limits their applicability in large-scale statistical analysis and thus limiting the potential to account for these uncertainties.

Still, understanding how uncertainties in reservoir and operational parameters influence application-relevant outcomes is essential for stimulation design and risk mitigation. Global sensitivity analysis offers a quantitative framework to identify the controls on selected quantities of interest (QoIs). The choice of a QoI is inherently problem-dependent and reflects the specific operational objective or risk-related question being addressed, making it a central element in the interpretation of model results.

To overcome the computational demands of full-order THM simulations, we employ non-intrusive reduced-order modeling techniques to efficiently and accurately approximate the transient reservoir response. Projection-based model reduction methods target accurate, physics-based response characterization, resulting in interpretable, physics-consistent, and scalable surrogate models. We train surrogate models using solutions of the coupled THM equations. These surrogates are then used to perform global sensitivity analyses for different choices of QoIs. Finally, we demonstrate the proposed workflow through an application to the Groß Schönebeck geothermal field, featuring a multistage injection scenario, that provides a basis for future analyses targeting induced seismicity. 

How to cite: Hayek Valencia, J. N., Cacace, M., and Degen, D.: Global sensitivity analysis of multistage injection in geothermal reservoirs using surrogate models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5316, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5316, 2026.

EGU26-5432 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

3D Modelling and Retrodeformation of the Western Helvetics: Insights from the swissAlps 3D Project 

Matteo Furlan, Marco Herwegh, Alfons Berger, Fritz Schlunegger, Sofia Brisson, Tobias Diehl, Riccardo Monti, Philippos Garefalakis, Sebastian P. Drvoderic, Stefan Strasky, Eva Kurmann, and Ferdinando Musso Piantelli

3D geological modelling is an essential tool for visualization, interpretation and retrodeformation of orogenic systems. Cross-sections restoration allows improved correlations between present-day structures and their paleogeographic evolution. Despite such advantages, accurately representing polydeformed orogenic belts remains challenging due to their structural complexity, large spatial extent, and multiphase tectonic histories.

To address these challenges, the swisstopo-funded swissAlps 3D (SA3D) project (2024–2030) aims to develop a consistent, large-scale 3D geological model of the major lithostratigraphic and structural boundaries of the Swiss Alpine region. As part of SA3D, the Helvetics 3D (HL3D) project focuses on the 3D reconstruction of the Swiss Helvetic domain. This work focuses specifically on the 3D geometry of the External Crystalline Massifs (ECM), from the Aar Massif to the Aiguilles Rouges–Mont Blanc massifs and the overlaying Helvetic nappe stack.

The Helvetic nappes overlying the ECM – composed of allochthonous Mesozoic marine limestones, marls, shales, and sandstones – experienced multiple deformation phases from ~39 Ma to the present (Burkhard, 1988). These events produced complex structural geometries, including recumbent and isoclinal folds and major thrust systems, making the Helvetic domain a key natural laboratory for verifying and reconstructing 3D geological structures.

The elaborated 3D model is based on 2D geological datasets, interpreted and re-validated cross-sections, borehole data, other published 3D geological models, and geophysical datasets. Except for the Aar Massif (Musso Piantelli et al. 2026), most of the Helvetic realm is characterized by limited subsurface constraints, with sparse borehole information, seismic profiles, and mainly geological cross-sections. To address this limitation, we developed a workflow combining explicit and implicit 3D modelling techniques, preserving the accuracy of detailed geological observations while increasing modelling efficiency.

Here, we present the preliminary results from the HL3D project, illustrating the 3D modelling of the ECMs in the westernmost Swiss Helvetic domain and their progressive retrodeformation from the present-day configuration back to the Miocene Grindelwald deformation phase (Handegg, Oberaar, and Pfaffenchopf phases; Herwegh et al., 2023). The 3D geometry of this area indicates the ECMs as elongated domes, with the long axes of the Aiguilles Rouges/Mont-Blanc and Aar/Gastern massifs respectively, plunging to the ENE and WSW. Their histories characterized by differential uplift, combined with an a-cylindrical and en-echelon arrangement of the basement units, affected the overlaying Helvetic nappe stack, and continues to control large-scale structures such as the Rawil depression.

The retrodeformation of this Miocene uplift shows that the Rawil depression formed in response to the inversion of a complex paleogeographic geometry of the former European passive margin during late-stage collision between the Adriatic and European plates. In this context, the ECMs and the overlying nappe stack experienced an uplift exceeding 8 km (Herwegh et al., 2023; Mercier et al., 2023).

In summary, this first HL3D model and its retrodeformation (i) provides new insights into the geometry and structural evolution of the western ECM, (ii) demonstrates the necessity and strength of 3D modelling in unravelling Alpine complex tectonic evolution, and (iii) reveals the initial extent and paleogeographic configuration of the central part of the European passive continental margin.

How to cite: Furlan, M., Herwegh, M., Berger, A., Schlunegger, F., Brisson, S., Diehl, T., Monti, R., Garefalakis, P., Drvoderic, S. P., Strasky, S., Kurmann, E., and Musso Piantelli, F.: 3D Modelling and Retrodeformation of the Western Helvetics: Insights from the swissAlps 3D Project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5432, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5432, 2026.

EGU26-6945 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Stepwise and uncertainty-aware 3D structural modelling of the Devonian subsurface in the Eastern Eifel region (Germany) 

Atefeh Rahimi, Jan Von Harten, Nils Chudalla, and Florian Wellmann

Three-dimensional structural geological models are widely used to describe subsurface geometry, but their quality strongly depends on how geological complexity and data uncertainty are handled during model construction. In this study, we present a stepwise workflow for building an uncertainty-aware 3D structural model of the Devonian subsurface in the Eastern Eifel region (Germany) using universal co-kriging implemented in the open-source modelling software GemPy.

The modelling approach follows a gradual and controlled strategy. The model construction starts with a simplified stratigraphic framework based on surface geological data. Major Devonian units are added sequentially, followed by the introduction of a main fault structure. Although the modelling steps are applied sequentially, the model is always fully constructed from the input data and can therefore be completely reproduced on this basis. This enables transparent model building and supports future integration into forward uncertainty quantification and sensitivity analysis workflows. This stepwise procedure allows continuous validation of the model and helps to isolate the effect of individual modelling choices, such as unit simplification, fault geometry, and orientation constraints.

Fault modelling is based on a limited number of geometrically constrained fault points and orientations. This setup reproduces a meaningful displacement across the fault while keeping layer surfaces smooth and geologically plausible on both sides. The focus is not on producing a final deterministic model, but on creating a reproducible baseline model that can be extended towards uncertainty quantification.

The resulting 3D structural framework provides a robust basis for future integration of additional geological or geophysical data and for uncertainty analysis using stochastic or ensemble-based approaches. This work demonstrates how stepwise 3D structural modelling with GemPy supports geological consistency while preparing the model for uncertainty-aware subsurface analysis in structurally complex regions. 

How to cite: Rahimi, A., Von Harten, J., Chudalla, N., and Wellmann, F.: Stepwise and uncertainty-aware 3D structural modelling of the Devonian subsurface in the Eastern Eifel region (Germany), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6945, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6945, 2026.

The Julong'an deposit is a large volcanic rock type uranium deposit located in the western part of the Xiangshan uranium ore field in Fuzhou City, Jiangxi Province. This study comprehensively utilized topographic maps, geological maps of mineral deposits, 26 exploration line profiles, 5 mid section plans, 65 drill holes etc. Using the “show-hide” interactive 3D geological modeling method, a 3D geological model of the Julong'an uranium deposit was constructed based on GOCAD software (Figure 1). Through 3D modeling, the following deep geological features were revealed:

  • The second memberof the Ehuling Formation is thin in the north and thick in the south, with an exposed elevation of -610 to + Between profile lines 68 and 74, the bottom interface rises sharply from south to north, with a drop of 893m, and the north-south profile is in an "S" shape.
  • The second memberof the Daguding Formation is thick in the north and thin in the south, with an exposed elevation of -700 to + Between lines 68 and 74, the thickness of the rhyolitic dacite increases sharply from an average of 15m to over 764m, and within a range of 240m from north to south, the thickness increases by over 749m. The top interface drops by more than 768m, forming an east-west "lava waterfall distribution".
  • The fault structures mainly include the nearly north-south F7 fault, a hidden fault, and the east-west Niutoushan-Julong'an-Chuankeng volcanic collapse structure. The hidden fault is located on the west side of F7, and the two merge to the north with a gradually widening distance to the south. The cutting depth gradually becomes shallower from north to south. The shallow part of the F7 fault is a steeply dipping main fracture zone, while the deep part gradually transitions into a gently dipping crack dense zone. The fracture appears in an "Open fork" shape on the east-west cross-section and in an inverted "Open fork" shape on the horizontal cross-section (Figure 2). When the fissure zone approaches the intersection of different geological interfaces, mineralization significantly increases, forming a dense vein ore bodies. In the diamond shaped block of Julong'an, other nearly north-south and eastward dipping faults have similar characteristics and mineralization patterns. So, deep mineral exploration should focus on the intersection of the fracture zones of north-south faults and the interfaces between volcanic rock formations, angle unconformities, and intrusion interfaces, especially in the composite areas of east-west volcanic collapse structures on the southern part, which are key target areas for searching for large and rich minerals.

Funding: National Natural Science Foundation of China (42472130), ECUT Research Development Fund (K20240018), and the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangxi Province (20242BAB25183).

How to cite: Wu, Z., Guo, F., Li, B., and Li, G.: 3D geological modeling of the Julong'an uranium deposit in Jiangxi Province and implications for deep geological feature analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8900, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8900, 2026.

EGU26-9578 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.6

Causes of uncertainties in geomodelling inputs: data review of Paleozoic geology of the Euregion Meuse-Rhine 

Jasper Maars, Jasper Hupkes, Alexander J.P. Houben, Geert-Jan Vis, Allard W. Martinius, Cornelis R. Geel, Marleen de Ceukelaire, and Hemmo Abels

Geological models are needed for subsurface engineering purposes, and it is crucial to identify their uncertainties. However, uncertainties in their input are easily overlooked. Through a data review of Paleozoic geology in the Eurogion Meuse-Rhine, sources of uncertainty were identified in geomodelling input. Causes of uncertainty were classified into four groups: (a) stratigraphic interpretation, (b) fault interpretation, (c) transferring data, and (d) uncertainty in legacy materials. The causes of uncertainty are interlinked, causing the uncertainty chain in geomodelling to be more complex than generally considered. 

The Paleozoic geology in the study region is structurally complex and geomodelling is hampered by limited outcrops and scattered input data. This study compiles geomodelling input and examines data inconsistencies. We collected legacy literature and maps, conducted fieldwork, and compiled a dataset of 738 boreholes. New borehole data are included, and two legacy boreholes (Kastanjelaan-2 and RWTH-1) were re-evaluated. Differences are observed between various stratigraphic profiles for these two boreholes among different sources. Here, we propose updated stratigraphic interpretations for them. Comparing a newly drilled borehole with an existing geological cross-section reveals a >1 km depth mismatch between stratigraphic units. Comparing the stratigraphy of the borehole dataset with different geologic maps shows various degrees of agreement. The identified inconsistencies demonstrate the necessity of validating input data before embarking on any geomodelling exercise.

How to cite: Maars, J., Hupkes, J., Houben, A. J. P., Vis, G.-J., Martinius, A. W., Geel, C. R., de Ceukelaire, M., and Abels, H.: Causes of uncertainties in geomodelling inputs: data review of Paleozoic geology of the Euregion Meuse-Rhine, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9578, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9578, 2026.

EGU26-9598 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.6

CO2 Injection Simulation in Thalassinoides-bearing rocks: Implications for geological carbon sequestration 

Jose Colmenares, Hassan Eltom, and Korhan Ayranci

Geological carbon sequestration (GCS) is a key technology for mitigating CO₂ emissions from hard-to-abate industrial sources, it has been tested in various subsurface formations including basalts, coal seams, shales, carbonate rocks, sandstones and salt formations.  With carbonates and sandstones being the most widely utilized reservoirs for long-term storage. Although these formations may exhibit favorable porosity and permeability, they are typically heterogenous because of various depositional processes and diagenesis modifications. Such heterogeneity has significant impact on CO₂ injectivity, migration, and storage efficiency.

Bioturbation, the reworking and modification of sediments by organisms represents an additional and often underexplored source of heterogeneity in both carbonate and sandstone reservoirs. Burrow networks can locally enhance or impede fluid flow, thereby influencing CO2 injectivity, migration behavior, and storage performance. This study investigates the role of bioturbation, represented by Thalassinoides networks, in controlling CO2 storage behavior in tight sedimentary strata, with the Upper Jurassic Hanifa Formation of Saudi Arabia serving as a representative case study.

High-resolution X-ray computed tomography scans of Thalassinoides-bearing carbonate rock samples were used to capture the three-dimensional geometry and connectivity of the burrow networks. These data served as training images for multipoint statistics modeling, allowing the construction of a realistic fine-scale rock model that preserve burrow morphology and spatial continuity. To facilitate dynamic flow simulations, the model was upscaled to a coarser grid while maintaining the nature of the burrow network. In this study, three different burrow permeability values (1, 10, and 100 mD) were tested while maintaining the matrix permeability constant (0.1 mD). CO₂ injection simulations were performed using a numerical reservoir simulator, testing the three different scenarios: 1. high burrow permeability (100 mD), 2. medium burrow permeability (10 mD), and 3. low burrow permeability (1 mD).

The results demonstrate that the permeability contrast between the Thalassinoides burrow network and its surrounding matrix has a major control on CO₂ plume diffusion. A high permeability contrasts promote rapid injectivity while leading to a strong channelized flow confined to the burrow networks with poor CO₂ penetration into the matrix. A medium permeability contrast allows for a balanced CO₂ flow and efficient CO2 diffusion into the matrix. A low permeability contrast results in a more homogeneous CO₂ diffusion and an improved storage efficiency due to high penetration into the rock matrix.

These findings highlight the necessity of incorporating bioturbation-induced heterogeneity into GCS assessments. Explicitly accounting for ichnological assemblages can improve simulation accuracy, optimize injection strategies, and support more robust site selection for GCS projects. Similar refinements can be applied in Saudi Arabia and in analogous sedimentary settings worldwide.

How to cite: Colmenares, J., Eltom, H., and Ayranci, K.: CO2 Injection Simulation in Thalassinoides-bearing rocks: Implications for geological carbon sequestration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9598, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9598, 2026.

EGU26-10020 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Integrating and comparing structural modeling methods within a digital workbench 

Jan von Harten, Alexander Lüpges, Marzieh Baes, Jan Niederau, Florian Wellmann, Bernhard Rumpe, and Mauro Cacace

The creation of reliable structural geological models is often a crucial component of geoscientific workflows. Challenges emerge not only from the availability of data and model construction but also regarding the knowledge and accessibility of software, coding abilities (particularly for open-source tools), and geological expertise. These obstacles hinder the exploration, evaluation, and comparison of diverse modeling methods, often leading to highly customized workflows for specific scenarios that are labor-intensive to create and hard to reuse in other settings.

To mitigate these issues, we present a workbench for digital geosystems that employs a component-and-connector software architecture alongside both textual and graphical domain-specific languages (DSLs) to establish a modular framework. Within this framework, we define fixed interface formats for each workflow step, allowing components responsible for specific tasks to be interchangeable. Structural modeling serves as the initial step in these workflows, which also encompass 3D mesh generation, simulation, and visualization, thereby representing a typical geoscientific workflow.

Within this design, multiple components can be integrated for each workflow step, facilitating straightforward method comparison. Additionally, the DSLs enhance usability for users who may not have extensive coding experience.

We will showcase the software architecture and DSL system through a series of simple models with an emphasis on structural geological modeling and comparisons among multiple implicit modeling methods. A cloud-based version of the graphical DSL will be provided to test the workbench with a curated set of input datasets.

How to cite: von Harten, J., Lüpges, A., Baes, M., Niederau, J., Wellmann, F., Rumpe, B., and Cacace, M.: Integrating and comparing structural modeling methods within a digital workbench, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10020, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10020, 2026.

EGU26-10312 | Posters on site | ERE5.6

An updated 3D Temperature model of the Netherlands 

Hen Brett, Hans Veldkamp, Jan-Diederik van Wees, Jon Limberger, and Cedric Thieulot

Subsurface temperature is a critical parameter when assessing the geothermal energy potential of a region. Regardless of how favorable an aquifer may be in terms of porosity, permeability, or depth, geothermal exploitation is not economically viable if temperatures are insufficient. As part of the ThermoGIS project, we produce nationwide estimates of geothermal energy potential for the entire Netherlands, which requires a high-resolution statistically robust model of subsurface temperature.

This research adopts a combined physics-based and data-driven approach to estimate the three-dimensional temperature field beneath the Netherlands down to a depth of 10 km. The model is discretized on a regular mesh with a horizontal resolution of 1 × 1 km in longitude and latitude, and a variable vertical resolution that averages between 10 and 30 m in the upper 5 km, and 200 m down to 10 km. This represents a five-fold increase in resolution compared to the most recent published temperature model of the Netherlands (Bekesi et al., 2020).

We first construct a three-dimensional lithological model of the Netherlands comprising 101 distinct litho-stratigraphic layers. Based on expert stratigraphic knowledge, lithological compositions are assigned to each layer. These layers are then populated with thermal conductivity and radiogenic heat production values derived from standard reference data (Hantschel and Kauerauf, 2009), yielding an initial prior model.

Using these prior conductivity and radiogenic heat fields, we solve the three-dimensional steady-state heat diffusion equation using centered finite differences. The model parameters are subsequently updated using Ensemble Smoother Multiple Data Assimilation (Emerick and Reynolds, 2013) to match a high-quality dataset of mostly corrected bottom-hole temperature measurements, and DST and geothermal production temperatures.

A key innovation distinguishing this model from previous temperature models of the Netherlands (Bonte et al., 2012; Bekesi et al., 2020) is the use of efficient numerical solvers combined with a more accurate and detailed lithological model, enabling an order-of-magnitude increase in spatial resolution. Our model was written entirely in python and the code will be made open source upon publication.

How to cite: Brett, H., Veldkamp, H., van Wees, J.-D., Limberger, J., and Thieulot, C.: An updated 3D Temperature model of the Netherlands, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10312, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10312, 2026.

EGU26-10705 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Automatization of Geomechanical Modeling for Complex Geological Structures Using Isogeometric Analysis 

Racha Achour, Denise Degen, Oliver Heidbach, Karsten Reiter, Mauro Cacace, and Florian Wellman

Predictions of the three-dimensional in-situ stress state are crucial for the site selection process for deep geological repositories for nuclear waste and their long-term safety. However, the geological configurations relevant to a potential siting region, such as fault offsets, salt intrusions, and intersecting sedimentary units, create increasing structural complexities. These complexities, especially in the form of intersecting lithological boundaries and interfaces, present significant challenges for the discretization using the Finite Element Method (FEM). In the FEM, lithological boundaries and interfaces are commonly modeled using spline-based representations, which are then geometrically approximated by finite elements. This process introduces an additional layer of geometrical approximations that can lead to discretization errors, mesh distortions, and the need for repeated geometry regeneration when testing different model scenarios.

This study investigates whether the Isogeometric Analysis (IGA) as a discretization method can enhance and facilitate geometric fidelity and contribute to an automated modeling workflow. Unlike FEM, IGA employs the same spline basis functions (e.g., NURBS) for both the geometrical representation and numerical approximation. This direct application of splines eliminates the need for a geometry-to-mesh approximation step, allowing for an exact representation of both lithological boundaries and structural features, such as faults. The workflow for IGA differs from traditional FEM primarily in the preprocessing, solver implementation, and postprocessing stages: geometry is handled directly through control points, spline basis functions replace conventional shape functions, and the numerical solution is stored at these control points before being mapped back to the physical domain. While IGA does not necessitate a separate meshing step, refining the spline representation may still be required.

To evaluate this approach, we begin with a three-layer benchmark model previously used in sensitivity analyses and introduce a fault that offsets the lithological layers. IGA is utilized to compute stress, strain, and displacement fields, with its performance compared to that of the FEM, focusing on the impact of the geometrical approximation. The results aim to illustrate how exact geometrical representation and spline refinement influence stress predictions, particularly in areas where faults or salt contacts create sharp geometrical variations.

This work represents a significant advancement toward a more automated and reliable geomechanical modeling workflow. By reducing the need for manual geometrical regeneration and directly integrating spline-based representations into the analysis, IGA can streamline model scenario exploration and support more consistent gemechanical modeling for repository-scale studies.

How to cite: Achour, R., Degen, D., Heidbach, O., Reiter, K., Cacace, M., and Wellman, F.: Automatization of Geomechanical Modeling for Complex Geological Structures Using Isogeometric Analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10705, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10705, 2026.

EGU26-10778 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Probabilistic Evaluation of Structural Uncertainty in a Synthetic Geological Benchmark Using GeoBUS 

Ezgi Satiroglu, Christin Bobe, Claudia Finger, Francisco Muñoz-Burbano, and Florian Wellmann

Reliable characterization of subsurface geology is a key prerequisite for reducing uncertainty in geoscientific studies and for lowering costs and risks in geothermal drilling. In this study, we apply GeoBUS (Geological modeling by Bayesian Updating of Scalar fields), a probabilistic structural geological modeling workflow, to a synthetic benchmark that represents the characteristic succession of geological units in the canton of Thurgau, Switzerland. As an initial test case, we construct a representative one-dimensional geological model based on available legacy data.

In the first step, a geological prior model is created by introducing epistemic structural uncertainty, perturbing the depths of geological interface points within predefined bounds. For each realization, implicit geological modeling is performed using radial basis function interpolation, resulting in an ensemble of scalar fields from which geological interfaces are represented as isolines of common scalar values.

In a second step, we calculate synthetic surface-wave dispersion curves based on the geological models using representative literature values and considering uncertainties and model variations. The dispersion curves are then inverted for subsurface velocity profiles to estimate biases and resolution limits of inversion schemes compared to the ground truth. We will test an ensemble of plausible subsurface models that is consistent with the dispersion data rather than as a single deterministic solution.

In the third step, literature-based seismic velocities are assigned to the geological units in the prior ensemble of geological model to enable comparison with the seismic data inversion results. An ensemble-based Bayesian update step is then applied to the scalar field ensemble, resulting in a posterior ensemble that is consistent with the assimilated seismic information. By evaluating each scalar field to derive geological interfaces, we obtain a posterior ensemble of geological models that consistently integrates information from both geological modeling and geophysical inversion and allows structural uncertainty to be quantified.

Using a synthetic example, we assess the performance of the GeoBUS workflow with respect to (1) the structural uncertainty in the geological model and (2) the value of information contained in the seismic data, including the influence of measurement sensitivity and prior constraints that may lead to updates in model regions weakly constrained by the assimilated seismic data. Validating the approach in this controlled one-dimensional setting provides an essential benchmark before extending the study to higher-dimensional and more complex geological settings.

This work was funded by the European Union’s Horizon Europe Framework Programme for Research and Innovation under the GeoHEAT project (Grant Agreement No. 101147571)

How to cite: Satiroglu, E., Bobe, C., Finger, C., Muñoz-Burbano, F., and Wellmann, F.: Probabilistic Evaluation of Structural Uncertainty in a Synthetic Geological Benchmark Using GeoBUS, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10778, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10778, 2026.

EGU26-10942 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Effects of deep geothermal injection and extraction well modeling approaches on flow and heat transport in multilayer aquifers 

Kimberley Niehage, Thomas Graf, and Insa Neuweiler

Geothermal reservoir modeling often focuses on fractured or single-layer systems, even though multilayer porous aquifers offer an additional opportunity for geothermal energy extraction. This study examines how specific modeling assumptions influence the flow field and thermal evolution in stratified geothermal systems. It focuses on a representative multilayer aquifer of the Bückeberg Formation in the North German Basin. The targeted interval contains stacked sandstone units separated by claystone between depths of 1200 and 1400 m with reservoir temperatures around 70 °C and injection rates of several tens of litres per second.

A three dimensional numerical model is developed in the open source software OpenGeoSys to evaluate groundwater flow and heat transport in this layered system. As the fluid viscosity is temperature-dependent, the resulting flow field evolves over time. To investigate the associated water distribution around the well, injection and extraction are represented using three numerical approaches. First, a pipe based implementation is used to explicitly model the flow through the wells so that the distribution of injected and produced water between the sandstone layers is not prescribed but governed by the geological and hydraulic properties of the multilayer aquifer. Further, two imposed injection concepts are applied for comparison: a line based source term and a source term defined on a cylindrical borehole surface. Moreover, the approximation of constant viscosity is assessed by comparison with simulations using both constant and temperature-dependent viscosity for the three well implementations. 

Preliminary results show that temperature-dependent viscosity noticeably alters the flow field and affects the evolution of production temperature. These tendencies confirm the relevance of viscosity formulation when analysing thermal behaviour in multilayer geothermal systems. The ongoing comparison of injection and extraction well approaches extends these findings by including the influence of inflow and outflow patterns on the flow field near the wells, where flow paths in multilayer aquifers are inherently more complex. This highlights the importance of choosing appropriate inflow and outflow conditions for modeling the thermo-hydraulic response of stratified reservoirs.

How to cite: Niehage, K., Graf, T., and Neuweiler, I.: Effects of deep geothermal injection and extraction well modeling approaches on flow and heat transport in multilayer aquifers, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10942, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10942, 2026.

EGU26-11230 | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Comparison of modelling practices for groundwater flow and heat transport in heterogeneous deep geothermal systems 

Ishani Banerjee, Aurélia Crinière, Emilio Sánchez-León, and Kai Zosseder
Coupled flow and heat transport models are essential for understanding subsurface processes and for assessing the long-term sustainability of deep geothermal systems. Due to its favourable geothermal conditions, the South German Molasse Basin, characterised by the fractured and karstic carbonate Upper Jurassic Malm aquifer, is Germany’s most productive geothermal region. Extensive development has made numerical reservoir modelling mandatory for permits and critical for assessing project viability and impacts on nearby plants, supporting informed decisions by both operators and authorities.
 
This study presents an analytical review of geothermal reservoir modelling methodologies applied at 22 existing geothermal plants in the South German Molasse Basin. We examine how key geological features, including stratigraphy, faults, karst horizons, and lateral facies variations, are represented with different conceptual and numerical approaches, from explicit structural integration to effective or homogeneous parametrisation.
 
We systematically evaluate the strengths and limitations of prevailing modelling approaches, benchmark them against state-of-the-art methods, and identify key methodological gaps. We further analyse how subsurface data (e.g., pressure, temperature, porosity, permeability, and inflow zones) are incorporated into models and classify parameters by their level of constraint (measured, derived, calibrated, or assumed), enabling consistent cross-comparison.
 
We identify a wide range of modelling approaches, largely due to geological heterogeneity within the reservoir. Calibration practices also vary significantly, with most studies focused on hydraulic calibration with pressure data, while thermal calibration based on temperature measurements remains rare.
 
We also discuss methodological limitations, including the absence of uncertainty analysis of model outcomes and the limited use of operational data for model validation. These factors influence model predictions and have implications for the long-term sustainable management of geothermal resources. By synthesising reservoir modelling practices and contextualising them within state-of-the-art approaches from other sedimentary reservoirs, this review provides a reference framework to support more consistent, transparent, and robust geothermal reservoir modelling and to facilitate knowledge transfer across sedimentary systems.
 

How to cite: Banerjee, I., Crinière, A., Sánchez-León, E., and Zosseder, K.: Comparison of modelling practices for groundwater flow and heat transport in heterogeneous deep geothermal systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11230, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11230, 2026.

EGU26-11468 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

A sketch-based REV library for tidal lithofacies 

Annelotte Weert, Sebastian Geiger, and Allard W. Martinius

Tidal reservoirs exhibit complex sedimentary architectures that remain a major challenge to capture in subsurface geological models. In particular, predicting the influence of sedimentary heterogeneities on fluid-flow behavior across multiple spatial scales still remains a major challenge. Simplified or generic modeling approaches often fail to represent the multiscale elements that are characteristic to tidal deposits, resulting in uncertainty in flow predictions and reservoir performance. This limitation is especially critical for geo-energy applications, where reliable forecasts are required to design efficient injection, storage, or drainage strategies.

This study adopts a scale-aware approach based on the concept of the Representative Elementary Volume (REV), defined as the minimum volume over which a heterogeneous property, such as permeability, can be considered effectively homogeneous. Identification of the REV at relevant modelling scales enables consistent upscaling of petrophysical properties and reduces uncertainty in geological models and flow simulations. As such, REV-based approaches are essential for building robust geo-models that capture key geological heterogeneities and support reliable performance forecasting for subsurface energy applications.

The methodology is demonstrated using reservoir rocks from the Viking Graben (Norway), comprising the Middle Jurassic Brent Group, where the reservoir interval represents a highly heterogeneous tidal depositional system. Detailed sedimentological core logging of selected intervals with pronounced heterogeneity is used to identify the principal lithofacies within the reservoir. For each lithofacies, sketch-based geological models are constructed to capture characteristic heterogeneity, such as key architectural elements, facies proportions, and spatial relationships. This sketch-based approach enables transparent and concept-driven representation of the geological complexity for each lithofacies. For each lithofacies model, the REV is systematically calculated for single-phase flow, resulting in a lithofacies-specific REV. Together, these models form a REV library in which each lithofacies is associated with a representative scale that captures its characteristic heterogeneity. This library provides a transferable framework that can be applied to similar reservoirs worldwide, supporting improved upscaling and flow modeling in data-limited subsurface energy applications.

How to cite: Weert, A., Geiger, S., and Martinius, A. W.: A sketch-based REV library for tidal lithofacies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11468, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11468, 2026.

EGU26-11917 | Posters on site | ERE5.6

(Auto) Differentiating geophysics: gravity modelling with spatio-temporal neural fields 

Akshay Kamath, Sam Thiele, Lachlan Grose, and Richard Gloaguen

Implicit neural representations (INR) have emerged as a flexible tool for implicit modelling of subsurface structures. Works such as GeoINR (Hillier et al., 2023), and curlew (Kamath et al., 2025) have laid the foundation for building increasingly complex geological models with neural fields. Linking these modelling approaches to geophysical forward models would enable better constraints on the 3D structural geological models (SGM) widely used to predict subsurface geometry for mining, engineering and energy applications.

Specifically, within curlew, geological structures are defined as distinct neural fields. Each field can “learn” arbitrary geometries that fit the available constraints, including geological and petrophysical data. The different fields are then chained together with offsetting and overprinting relationships to derive geological complexity. In this contribution, we combine the spatio-temporal model building capabilities of curlew with a highly optimized FFT-quadrature based gravity forward model (Wang et al., 2023) to generate gravity data from implicit fields. The entire framework is built within PyTorch, which allows us to update SGMs of subsurface geometry populated with property distributions through inversions of gravity datasets. Our preliminary results show that the ability to incorporate several different kinds of losses, as well as constrain both the geometry and property, dramatically improve the inversion results compared to standard inversion techniques.

References:

Hillier, M., Wellmann, F., de Kemp, E. A., Brodaric, B., Schetselaar, E., and Bédard, K.: GeoINR 1.0: an implicit neural network approach to three-dimensional geological modelling, Geosci. Model Dev., 16, 6987–7012, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-16-6987-2023, 2023.

Kamath, A., Thiele, S., Moulard, M., Grose, L., Tolosana-Delgado, R., Hillier, M., & Gloaguen, R. (2025). Curlew 1.0: Spatio-temporal implicit geological modelling with neural fields in python. doi:10.31223/x5kx81

Wang, X., Liu, J., Li, J. et al. Fast 3D gravity and magnetic modelling using midpoint quadrature and 2D FFT. Sci Rep 13, 9304 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-36525-2.

How to cite: Kamath, A., Thiele, S., Grose, L., and Gloaguen, R.: (Auto) Differentiating geophysics: gravity modelling with spatio-temporal neural fields, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11917, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11917, 2026.

EGU26-11921 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

3D geological modelling with curlew and neural fields 

Samuel Thiele, Akshay Kamath, Lachlan Grose, Raimon Tolosana-Delgado, Michael Hillier, and Richard Gloaguen

Implicit structural geological modelling methods can integrate various geological constraints to rapidly constrain subsurface geometries, and are widely used for resource evaluation, geotechnical and hazard assessment, and reservoir characterisation. However, established approaches based on conventional interpolators (e.g., radial basis functions or co-kriging) often suffer from interpolation artefacts (“bubbles”) and can struggle to incorporate common constraints like stratigraphic relationships (inequalities) and geophysics data. 

In this contribution we present an update on progress developing curlew, an open-source python package for structural geological modelling using neural fields (https://github.com/samthiele/curlew/). This flexible modelling framework incorporates various local constraints (value, gradient, orientation and (in)equalities) and tailored global loss functions to ensure data-consistent and geologically realistic predictions. Progressive Random Fourier Feature encodings are adopted as a tool for improving the convergence and reliability of neural fields, and drop-out based approaches to uncertainty assessment are explored. We also present a newly developed method for deriving non-interpolated (analytical) geological prototype models and illustrate how these can be used as useful priors for hyperparameter optimization and the creation of subsequent data-driven (interpolated) models. 

Finally, the applicability of these approaches to real-world data is demonstrated through several case-studies, including the Altenberg-Teplice Caldera (Germany) and Stonepark-Pallas Green region (Ireland). 

How to cite: Thiele, S., Kamath, A., Grose, L., Tolosana-Delgado, R., Hillier, M., and Gloaguen, R.: 3D geological modelling with curlew and neural fields, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11921, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11921, 2026.

Subsurface reservoirs are used for various applications, driving the energy transition towards zero-carbon energy. Making optimal use of subsurface reservoirs is a great challenge for society these days. Geological CO2 Sequestration (GCS) can play a significant role in reducing anthropogenic CO2 emissions while allowing society to slowly phase out traditional energy sources. An accurate representation of GCS requires computationally expensive modelling of complex physical phenomena at various scales. These models involve many uncertain reservoir parameters and imprecise input information, demanding the generation of representative ensembles of models, thus making the computational cost even higher. In this talk, I will share our experience in the simulation of GCS applications using high-fidelity physics-based computational models. I will present parametrization technology, which allows us to develop a unified modelling framework with multiphase thermal-compositional formulation capable of covering a wide variety of GCS challenges. Several reservoir engineering applications relevant to the CO2 sequestration portfolio will be shown as well.

How to cite: Voskov, D.: Modeling of reservoir applications relevant to the CO2 sequestration portfolio, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12605, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12605, 2026.

EGU26-12711 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.6

Statistical Assessment of Fracture Areal Intensity (P21) Representative Elementary Area in Digital Outcrop Models 

Stefano Casiraghi, Daniela Bertacchi, Gabriele Benedetti, Silvia Mittempergher, and Andrea Bistacchi

Among the geometrical parameters that can be calculated from an outcrop analogue, fracture areal intensity (P21), defined as the ratio between the total sum of fracture trace length and the sampling area, represents the stopping criterion of 2D marked point process stochastic Discrete Fracture Network models (DFN) or 3D simulations if properly upscaled to its volumetric equivalent (P32). Given the heterogeneous nature of fracture networks, P21 calculation is inherently scale and position dependent, meaning that its value changes depending on the scan area size and its position within the outcrop boundary. For this reason, P21 calculation cannot be separated from the concept of Representative Elementary Volume (REV) or Area (REA), in case of 2D outcrop studies. Depending on the field of application, REV or REA size definition changes, adapting to the different sampling strategies and parameters specific to that research field. We propose a novel approach to define the REA for the P21 parameter as a range bounded by a lower and an upper limit. The upper limit, often overlooked but nonetheless theorized, identifies the largest representative domain, which is crucial for optimizing computational efficiency. To determine the REA range, we evaluate the shape, mean, and variance of P21 value statistical distributions across scan areas of increasing radius. Each statistical parameter is assessed by combining formal statistical tests and diagnostic plots. Within a multi-parametric framework, the method enables a detailed analysis of the statistical behavior of the dataset, facilitating more objective and informed decisions when defining the REA range.

How to cite: Casiraghi, S., Bertacchi, D., Benedetti, G., Mittempergher, S., and Bistacchi, A.: Statistical Assessment of Fracture Areal Intensity (P21) Representative Elementary Area in Digital Outcrop Models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12711, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12711, 2026.

EGU26-13931 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.6

The impact of reservoir modelling techniques on CO2 storage 

Filipe Lira, Mathias Erdtmann, Hadi Hajibeygi, Allard Martinius, and Sebastian Geiger

CO2 storage could benefit hard-to-abate industries that face significant challenges in reducing their greenhouse gas emissions. To mitigate global warming without affecting industrial production, there is an urgent need to develop large-scale CO2 storage projects, which, among other factors, depend on reliable forecasts of subsurface CO2 behavior.

Knowledge of the fluid flow in depleted or producing reservoirs provides an important background, but cannot be directly applied to forecast the shape and position of the injected CO2 mass. In deep saline aquifers, one of the main promising storage sites with relatively high storage capacity, injecting CO2 (a lower-viscose fluid) into brine (a higher-viscose fluid) is sensitive to reservoir heterogeneities. Due to this viscosity contrast, CO2 retention is affected by permeability variations of less than one order of magnitude. Consequently, any permeability contrast within the reservoir can favor structural-stratigraphic and residual trapping mechanisms. Moreover, injection affects not only flow behavior near the wellbore but also geomechanical responses over larger areas, requiring a multiscale approach to represent the deep saline aquifer's heterogeneity. Given these particularities and considering that CO2 project forecasts rely primarily on reservoir modeling, questions commonly arise about which technique to use for constructing 3D geological models.

We present a comparative analysis of two stochastic methods for modeling reservoir properties: (1) Sequential Indicator Simulation/Sequential Gaussian Simulation (SIS/SGS) and (2) Multiple-Point Statistics (MPS). Both methods were used to build geological models of the Jureia-Ponta Aguda Formation, a deep saline aquifer in the offshore Santos Basin, Brazil. The formation is a 2,000 m-thick reservoir composed of fluvio-deltaic to shallow marine sediments occurring at depths below 800 m. Based on a dataset of 40 wells and 2D/3D seismic data, an area of 4,000 km2 was modeled at a 1:100,000 mapping scale, with representative geologic elements having a minimum dimension of 1 km. The comparison focuses on the dynamic response of each model under CO2 injection. Key inputs for decision-making in a storage project, including the well injectivity and the area affected by pressure variations and CO2 saturation, are quantified to assess the impact of the reservoir modeling technique on CO2 subsurface behavior.

The SIS/SGS model exhibits a more continuous distribution of reservoir properties, whereas the MPS model better captures the geometry of geological elements, resulting in a more discretized spatial distribution of facies, porosity, and permeability. In a direct comparison, the two models produce different fluid-flow behavior, and the MPS technique appears to be the best choice at first glance because it more accurately represents the inputs. However, the sparse subsurface dataset carries a high level of uncertainty, and different geologic scenarios have a greater impact on the CO2 plume geometry, the pressure front size, and well injectivity than the modeling methodology itself.

As the choice of modeling algorithm becomes less critical in the uncertainty process, addressing CO2 subsurface behavior should focus on the range of possible geologic scenarios. The structural-stratigraphic-sedimentologic framework, along with capillary pressure and drainage/inhibition permeability curves, is the key factor in reservoir models that support decision-making for a storage project.

How to cite: Lira, F., Erdtmann, M., Hajibeygi, H., Martinius, A., and Geiger, S.: The impact of reservoir modelling techniques on CO2 storage, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13931, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13931, 2026.

EGU26-17661 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

3D geomodel of the Eastern Tauern Dome (Tauern Window - Eastern Alps) 

Silvia Favaro, Riccardo Monti, Ralf Schuster, and Andrea Bistacchi

The Tauern Window in the Eastern Alps represents an ideal natural laboratory to investigate the three-dimensional architecture due to deformation processes related to continental collision and indentation. It exposes deeply subducted and subsequently exhumed European crust and remnants of the Alpine Tethys ocean beneath nappes derived from the Adriatic upper-plate, which frame the window (Austroalpine units). South of the Tauern Window, the Austroalpine Rieserferner and Drau–Möll blocks acted as indenting wedges during Oligocene-Miocene Adria–Europe convergence, while the Southern Alps form the leading edge of the Adriatic indenter. Lower-plate units exposed in the Tauern Window record a complex tectono-metamorphic evolution from Late Cretaceous to Miocene times, including accretion and subduction (D1-D2), exhumation and isoclinal folding of the Alpine Tethys ophiolites of the Penninic nappes (D3), formation of the crustal-scale Venediger duplex and nappe stacking of the European crust (D4), and overprint of earlier duplex structures by late-stage indentation, doming and lateral escape (D5). The final configuration of the Eastern and Western Tauern domes is then represented by several doubly plunging, upright antiforms deforming the D4 roof thrust of the Venediger duplex and the overlying units. In order to validate these nappe-scale structures, three-dimensional modelling was performed using the open-source software PZero (https://github.com/gecos-lab/PZero).

Geological 3D modelling in such metamorphic belts is hindered by both mathematical and geological complexities, including the interpolation of polydeformed surfaces and the definition of a consistent geological legend. Traditional explicit modelling approaches often generate inconsistencies, while fully time-aware implicit modelling is difficult to apply due to poorly constrained or heterogeneous ages of tectono-metamorphic boundaries. In this project we use the Structural Topology model (STm) approach that integrates conceptual geological interpretation with topological analysis of these units (i.e. volumes) and their boundaries (i.e. surfaces), systematically classifying (i) units as tectono-metamorphic, tectono-stratigraphic, or intrusive, and their boundaries (ii) as being conformal or discordant with the internal foliation of units, and (iii) according to crosscutting relationships that reveal the tectonic evolution. For all these model entities, a polarity is defined that, in addition to constrain stratigraphic and structural relationships, allows constraining the gradient of the scalar field used for implicit interpolation.

We believe that this strategy allows reconstructing topologically and geologically consistent 3D models despite polyphase deformation and reactivation of structures. The resulting 3D geomodel also provides new insights into the architecture and exhumation history of the Eastern Tauern Dome and offers a transferable framework for geological 3D modelling in complex orogenic belts.

How to cite: Favaro, S., Monti, R., Schuster, R., and Bistacchi, A.: 3D geomodel of the Eastern Tauern Dome (Tauern Window - Eastern Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17661, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17661, 2026.

EGU26-18061 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Adaptive Geological Model Parameterization Using Reversible Jump MCMC 

Nils Chudalla, David Nathan, and Florian Wellmann

Uncertainty quantification is a key component of geological modeling for mining, exploration, and civil engineering. While uncertainty estimation workflows for implicit structural modeling and inversion are well established for fixed parameter spaces, they require the number of model parameters to be defined a priori. This assumption is often unjustified and subjected to bias, as the number of geological layers or phases is commonly unknown, leading to models that are either overly complex or overly simplistic. Trans-dimensional Markov chain Monte Carlo methods provide a powerful framework for model selection by favoring parsimonious representations in settings with high uncertainty. In particular, Reversible Jump Markov chain Monte Carlo (RJ-MCMC) has recently gained attention for solving inverse problems with variable dimensionality. In this study, we investigate the applicability of RJ-MCMC to parameters governing geological interpolation functions. By automatically inferring the optimal number of parameters, the method reduces reliance on subjective user choices. We generate synthetic geophysical data from simple structural models to establish ground truth and perform geophysical inversion (gravity) by updating ensembles of prior structural models. This probabilistic framework enables likelihood-based model evaluation and supports further inference as new data become available. Generated candidates can be grouped to identify model archetypes that fit the data, while parsimony is maintained.

How to cite: Chudalla, N., Nathan, D., and Wellmann, F.: Adaptive Geological Model Parameterization Using Reversible Jump MCMC, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18061, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18061, 2026.

EGU26-18878 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.6

The Structural Topology model: integrating topology and ontology in 3D geological modelling 

Riccardo Monti, Andrea Bistacchi, Waqas Hussain, Silvia Favaro, Marco Herwegh, Sebastian Drvoderić, Matteo Furlan, Ferdinando Musso Piantelli, Giovanni Dal Piaz, and Bruno Monopoli

Three-dimensional geological modelling is increasingly used to analyze and investigate the geological evolution of complex areas, offering advantages over classical 2D maps and cross-sections, to test and validate geometries and structural (topological) relationships against sparse field data.

Within this context, 3D modelling in polymetamorphic belts poses different challenges, first the absence of formally defined stratigraphic surfaces that are transposed and cancelled by multi-stage tectono-metamorphic events. Alternative tectonostratigraphic or tectonometamorphic units are used when mapping in these environments, but the non-formal definition of these units and of their boundaries can lead to topological ambiguities and even inconsistencies in geological legends, that in turn lead to geo-ontological deficiencies in the modelling process – i.e. deficiencies in the explicit and formal shared conceptualization of the geological meaning and role assigned to units and boundaries.

To address these issues, it is essential to explicitly integrate topological and ontological reasoning into the modelling workflow, building a consistent geological legend, in order to generate valid 3D models both in implicit and explicit modelling approaches.

Here, we present the Structural Topology model (STm), a workflow grounded in classical structural geology’s thinking and field mapping knowledge, which systematically analyses scale-dependent topological relationships between surfaces and volumes to reconstruct a geologically valid and internally consistent 3D legend based on the concept of a generalized structural polarity. This is a vector that, depending on the geological environment and modelling purpose, can be defined as the younging direction (when relative or absolute ages are available), but also structural position with respect to some convenient reference, and cross-cutting relationships allowing to constrain a sequence of geological events. In this framework, units are classified as tectonometamorphic (TMU), tectonostratigraphic (TSU), stratigraphic (SU), intrusive (IU), or shear zone (SZ) according to their origin and evolution. Their boundaries may be conformal to the main foliation (in the broadest sense, including bedding) or discordant, e.g. at some tectonic contacts, shear zones and unconformities.

The formal definition of units with internal polarity, conformal vs. discordant boundaries with polarity, and cross-cutting relationships, allow connecting geological ontology with a topological model that can be implemented in a 3D model. In addition, properly defining polarity for each model entity allows using implicit surface methods (that operate by interpolating a scalar field whose gradient is the polarity) at each stage of the modelling workflow.

Here we present an implementation of the STm within the PZero open-source software (https://github.com/gecos-lab/PZero), including a lightweight graphical interface that enables the construction of STm-based geological legends from a Polarigram, where units are plotted against polarity. Examples from complex polymetamorphic areas in the Alps demonstrate that geological topology can be robustly defined even when geological ontology remains ambiguous and scale-dependent, providing a consistent foundation for 3D geological modelling.

How to cite: Monti, R., Bistacchi, A., Hussain, W., Favaro, S., Herwegh, M., Drvoderić, S., Furlan, M., Musso Piantelli, F., Dal Piaz, G., and Monopoli, B.: The Structural Topology model: integrating topology and ontology in 3D geological modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18878, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18878, 2026.

EGU26-21157 | ECS | Orals | ERE5.6 | Highlight

A multi-scale analysis bridging the gap from centimetres to reservoir simulation cell size for heterogeneous tidal reservoirs 

Iuliia Kapustina, John A Howell, and Sean Kelly

Accurate subsurface characterization is essential for energy transition technologies including geothermal systems, carbon capture and storage (CCS), and hydrogen storage. Reservoir models face a critical challenge: core measurements of petrophysical properties at centimetre scale are used to populate simulation cells which are typically 10-100 m, creating a very large scale gap (1010). Inappropriate upscaling methods lead to systematic errors in flow predictions and fail to preserve the impact of heterogeneity at different levels, particularly in heterolithic depositional environments such as tidal systems where mud drapes create extreme vertical flow barriers. Here, we present a novel approach for multi-scale study that uses virtual outcrop analogues including standard virtual outcrops and high-resolution mini-models collected using smartphone-based lidar. The Sego Sandstone Formation from Sego Canyon (the Book Cliffs, Utah, USA) serves as the case study, representing a tide- and wave-influenced shoreline succession. These deposits serve as analogues to the Garn Formation in the mid-Norwegian Continental Shelf and similar tidal reservoirs.

The workflow comprises three steps. The first step includes small-scale models (1-5 m extent; 1 cm grid resolution) where virtual mini-model data captures centimetre-scale sedimentary heterogeneity. These models were then upscaled to 1 m horizontal and 0.1 m vertical resolution, followed by statistical regression analysis. The second step involves meso-scale models (25×25×15 m model size; 1×1×0.1 m cell size) where these regression relationships are applied, enabling systematic testing of upscaling methods under controlled conditions. These meso-scale models were then upscaled to 25 m horizontal and 1 m vertical resolution, representing typical cell dimensions for reservoir models. Statistical and regression analysis were repeated to derive reservoir-scale upscaling parameters. The final step comprises macro-scale reservoir models with outcrop-scale dimensions and 25×25×1 m cell size, applying validated upscaling parameters from the previous step. Outcomes were compared with original small-scale data to quantify the impact of multi-resolution heterogeneity and identify which geological features have the most influence on upscaled values.

Results demonstrate that depositional architecture fundamentally controls upscaling behaviour, with heterogeneity significantly affecting permeability predictions at all levels. Clean sand facies (tidal bars, shoreface) show predictable behaviour with minimal scale effects on horizontal permeability and moderate vertical anisotropy controlled primarily by cross-bedding dip. Heterolithic facies (inter-bar, offshore transition zones) display moderate horizontal permeability variation but extreme vertical permeability reduction due to continuous mud drapes creating severe vertical flow barriers. Overall, permeability shows complex behaviour at different scales, which cannot be captured by placing data from centimetre-scale core plug measurements directly into simulation cells - a critical limitation for subsurface studies. This methodology is transferable across all depositional environments and directly applicable to energy transition projects requiring accurate multi-resolution flow predictions.

How to cite: Kapustina, I., Howell, J. A., and Kelly, S.: A multi-scale analysis bridging the gap from centimetres to reservoir simulation cell size for heterogeneous tidal reservoirs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21157, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21157, 2026.

EGU26-21192 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Joint structure-based inversion of electrical resistivity and seismic travel-time data for fault characterization. 

Andrea Balza Morales, Nino Menzel, Hansruedi Maurer, and Florian M. Wagner

Structure-based inversion offers a geologically informed alternative to conventional voxel-based approaches by explicitly representing subsurface interfaces. This enables inversion results to be interpreted in terms of meaningful geological structures rather than smoothed property distributions. Extending this concept to a joint inversion framework further allows multiple geophysical data sets to update a single shared geological model, exploiting complementary sensitivities to better constrain subsurface structure and reduce interpretational ambiguity.

Here, we investigate the effectiveness of structure-based joint inversion for imaging tectonic features in a faulted near-surface environment by jointly inverting electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and travel-time tomography data. The inversion framework is built around an implicit geomodel in which fault-related interface points are included directly in the model vector (Balza Morales et al., 2025). Both geophysical methods contribute to a single objective function, enabling tectonic interface geometry and associated physical property distributions to evolve consistently during inversion.

The workflow is evaluated using (i) synthetic experiments in a crosshole setting and (ii) field data acquired in the Southern Erft block, a structurally complex tectonic setting in the Lower Rhein Embayment (Menzel et al., 2024). This work provides two contrasting environments: one in which ERT and SRT exhibit strongly complementary sensitivities, leading to improved interface recovery and increased stability of fault geometry updates in joint inversion; and a second in which limited coverage from one method restricts the degree of complementarity, so that while joint inversion can still be performed, it offers only minor improvements over the single-method structure-based inversion. The field case is used to assess how structure-based inversion improves fault interpretation relative to voxel-based inversion through explicit parameterization of geological interfaces derived from an initial conceptual geomodel, and to test whether joint inversion produces more robust and consistent updates to the shared geomodel under realistic acquisition conditions and noise.

By systematically contrasting voxel-based, single-method structure-based, and joint structure-based inversions, the analysis examines how increasing levels of geological coupling influence the stability, interpretability, and geological plausibility of inferred fault architecture while maintaining consistency with an optimized (joint) data misfit. While demonstrated here using ERT and seismic travel-times the proposed evaluation strategy and inversion framework are transferable to other geophysical methods and subsurface applications where structural complexity limits conventional interpretation.

References:

Menzel, N. and Klitzsch, N. and Altenbockum, M. and Müller, L. and Wagner, F.M. (2024): Prospection of faults on the Southern Erftscholle (Germany) with individually and jointly inverted refraction seismics and electrical resistivity tomography. Journal of Applied Geophysics. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jappgeo.2024.105549

Balza-Morales, A., Förderer, A., Wellmann, F., Maurer, H., & Wagner, F. M. (2025). Structure-based geophysical inversion using implicit geological models. Geophysical Journal International, https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggaf445

How to cite: Balza Morales, A., Menzel, N., Maurer, H., and Wagner, F. M.: Joint structure-based inversion of electrical resistivity and seismic travel-time data for fault characterization., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21192, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21192, 2026.

EGU26-21479 | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Imaging fault-controlled karst systems through integrated Resistivity and IP inversion in the Umbria-Marche Apennines, Piani di Montelago (Sefro, MC) 

Miller Zambrano, Nunzia Lucci, Selenia Ramos, Jose Baena, Humberto Arellano, Jose Eriza, Anakarina Arias, Yoan Mateus, Danica Jablonska, and Dougliemis Torres

Fault-controlled karstic systems hosted in carbonates strongly influence groundwater flow and morphological evolution, including the development of associated basins. Characterizing the geometry of the karst system and related sedimentary basins may contribute to modelling the groundwater system, determining hazards related to collapse, and understanding the relationship with associated geological structures. However, subsurface imaging and geophysical characterization may be challenging due to the depth of the hosting rocks, the presence of saturated layers, and the dimensions of the area affected by the systems. In the case of large and morphologically complex areas, 3D deep full-waveform geo-electrical surveys using wireless devices help to overcome the limitations of conventional small-scale electrical surveys. In particular, the ability to generate integrated Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) and Induced Polarization (IP) models has proven effective in imaging karst features, allowing the detection of cavities and structural complexity.

The Piani di Monte Lago basin, in the Umbria–Marche sector of the Central Apennines, is an intramountain karst–tectonic basin characterized by the development of seasonal lakes and presents a poorly understood karst system with fast water discharge. Its evolution has been shaped by karst processes, with poljes and active ponor drainage developing under the combined influence of tectonic deformation, lithological contrasts, and Pleistocene geomorphological changes.

This work aims to characterize fracture zones and karst features through a combined application of deep ERT and Induced Polarization (IP). The approach integrates acquisition, processing, modelling, and geological interpretation to achieve a more accurate subsurface image in this structurally complex setting.

The survey was conducted using the FullWaver® wireless system (IRIS Instruments), deploying 15 dual-channel receivers and a 5-kW transmitter across an 800 × 800 m area. Flexible quadrupole configurations and dipoles up to 1000 m enabled investigation depths of about 200 m, while GPS synchronization ensured precise time-domain measurements of resistivity, IP, and self-potential, with a timing accuracy of 250 µs.

The generated models, constrained by geological and topographic data, reveal sharp resistivity contrasts between the carbonate substratum and overlying lacustrine deposits. IP variations highlight fracture zones and possible buried structures that control hydraulic connectivity. These results provide new insights into the structural influence on karst development and clarify subsurface drainage patterns. By integrating geophysical inversion with geological constraints, this approach reduces uncertainty and refines 3D models in structurally complex carbonate settings. The findings have direct implications for groundwater resource management, environmental assessment, and land-use planning in tectonically active regions.

How to cite: Zambrano, M., Lucci, N., Ramos, S., Baena, J., Arellano, H., Eriza, J., Arias, A., Mateus, Y., Jablonska, D., and Torres, D.: Imaging fault-controlled karst systems through integrated Resistivity and IP inversion in the Umbria-Marche Apennines, Piani di Montelago (Sefro, MC), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21479, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21479, 2026.

EGU26-21718 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

The eastern Lepontine dome nappe stack 3D model (swissAlps3D) 

Matteo De Guglielmi, Filippo Schenker, Stefan Schmalholz, Anindita Samsu, Yves Gouffon, and Ferdinando Musso Piantelli

Over the past few decades, 3D geometrical modelling of the subsurface geological structure has become an essential tool in structural geology, significantly improving the visualization and interpretation of complex geological architectures. However, due to their structural complexity and multi-phase deformation histories, orogenic belts remain a major challenge for 3D modelling. The swissAlps3D project (2024-2030), led by swisstopo, aims to build a consistent, large-scale underground 3D geological model of the main geological and structural boundaries of the Swiss Alps and neighbouring regions. The project is subdivided into eight domain-specific sub-projects, including the Lepontine 3D project (LP3D). Here, we present the datasets, modelling strategy, and preliminary results of a 3D geological model of the eastern Lepontine dome.

The Lepontine dome consists predominantly of amphibolite-facies metamorphic rocks of late Eocene–Oligocene age and covers approximately 4,500 km² at the surface. At depth, it extends from the Simplon Fault Zone to the west and from the Forcola Line to the east. It is further bounded by the Periadriatic Lineament to the south and the Northern Steep Belt to the north. Structurally, it comprises a tectonic window within the Central Alps, which exposes the deepest Alpine nappes in the core of the bell-shaped architecture. It is made up predominantly of polycyclic basement gneisses, intruded by Permo-Carboniferous granitoids and locally bounded by a thin autochthonous or parautochthonous Mesozoic-Cenozoic sedimentary cover. Moreover, ductile isoclinal sheath folding, complex fold interference structures and a strongly debated tectono-stratigraphy (swisstopo 2024) make the Lepontine dome a challenging area for testing and refining its tectonic evolution and 3D modelling techniques capable of representing such units.

The presented 3D geological model, targets the major lithostratigraphic and structural units of the dome and is constructed by combining explicit and implicit 3D modelling approaches that interpolate a heterogeneous input dataset composed of newly acquired and published geological and structural maps, cross-sections, borehole data, existing 3D geological models, and available geophysical constraints from the literature. Preliminary modelling results depict from bottom to top the Leventina-Lucomagno, Simano, Adula, Piz Terri-Lunschania, Vals, Aul, Grava and Tomül nappes. These Lepontic and Lower Penninic units dip eastward at low angle beneath the overlying Pennine and Austroalpine nappe stack. Emphasis is placed on the 3D-architecture of the Lepontic-Penninic boundary, which is dissected by the Forcola extensional shear zone and is interpreted to form an eastward-developing ramp–flat geometry.

How to cite: De Guglielmi, M., Schenker, F., Schmalholz, S., Samsu, A., Gouffon, Y., and Musso Piantelli, F.: The eastern Lepontine dome nappe stack 3D model (swissAlps3D), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21718, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21718, 2026.

We will never cease to be interested in fluid flow in the subsurface.  Only the fluid changes.

For the energy transition the emphasis of our modelling efforts is changing, however.  Aspects we could accept as ‘reasonable representation’ in oil and gas production projects (especially gas) are less acceptable for storage projects.

This talk will pick out two key elements which differ for ‘transition work’ from a modelling perspective:

  • The need for multi-scale modelling (the REV, sometimes requires for production, always required for storage), and

 

  • The need for better reservoir-scale structural representation – we’re good at sedimentary heterogeneity but much less so, in practice, for structural heterogeneity.

The expertise with scenario-based workflows, familiar from decades of production projects, applies directly to storage projects.  The principal difference is the lack of calibration data for aquifer-scale storage projects, as these are operating at scales more familiar from regional exploration groups, yet requiring a representation of physics more comparable to km-scale EOR production projects.  With such consequent uncertainty, this means the need for scenarios increases and the requirement for a base case decreases, to the point that ‘base case’ modelling becomes effectively meaningless for storage projects.

For geothermal projects the requirements change again, which even more emphasis on structural modelling.  The challenge here is marginal economics of geothermal projects and hence a different approach to project management (and resulting need for modelling support).  In the extreme case, the argument can be made for ‘no modelling, just fund a pilot project and learn from experience’.  A more nuanced approach would be to take learnings from existing modelling work for other projects (production or storage) and apply selectively and sensibly to the geothermal arena.

The talk will illustrate the above with reference to some example model workflows.

How to cite: Bentley, M.: Modelling Workflows for the Energy Transition - New Tricks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21861, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21861, 2026.

EGU26-22110 | ECS | Posters on site | ERE5.6

Geomechanical modelling of tectonic stresses in deep geothermal reservoirs of the Upper Rhine Graben, Germany 

Sornnalad Wittayasettakul, Tesfay Mebrahtu, and Andreas Henk

The demand for energy transition is growing rapidly as climate change accelerates, and concerns about energy security have also increased due to heightened geopolitical tensions. Geothermal energy is a reliable and sustainable solution that produces both heat and electricity with low greenhouse gas emissions and reduces dependence on fossil fuels. The Upper Rhine Graben (URG) is widely recognised as one of Europe’s most promising regions for geothermal development. However, the risk of induced seismicity associated with fluid injection and production processes poses a significant challenge to public acceptance and project viability. Therefore, understanding the crustal stress state is crucial to ensuring a safe and efficient operation of a geothermal plant.

This study employed a three-dimensional (3D) geomechanical-numerical modelling approach to predict the local in situ stress distribution and fracture networks in a faulted reservoir located near Karlsruhe, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. The structural model showing the subsurface geometry was built using a horizon and fault interpretation derived from 3D seismic data provided by an industry partner. This structural model was discretised and parameterised utilizing Visage (Petrel Reservoir Geomechanics software from SLB). Rock mechanical properties, including modulus of elasticity, Poisson’s ratio, bulk density, Biot coefficient, tensile strength, unconfined compressive strength, cohesion, friction angle, and hydraulic properties, were assigned to each formation. These properties were derived from samples taken in outcrops with Muschelkalk, Buntsandstein, Rotliegend, and crystalline basement rocks for laboratory testing.

The boundary conditions of the Finite Element model were calibrated using the minimum horizontal stress magnitudes measured in a nearby well, and the orientation of the maximum horizontal stress obtained from the World Stress Map database. After validation, modelling results provide a prognosis of the complete 3D stress tensor in the entire model domain. Among others, this can be used for well path planning and optimal well placement. To evaluate the probability of reactivation of the faults under the modelled stress conditions, a slip tendency analysis was performed. In particular, faults within the Muschelkalk formation exhibited a higher slip tendency compared to other target units, indicating zones of elevated seismic risk. These findings provide critical insights for geothermal reservoir development and contribute to risk mitigation strategies aimed at minimising induced seismicity.

How to cite: Wittayasettakul, S., Mebrahtu, T., and Henk, A.: Geomechanical modelling of tectonic stresses in deep geothermal reservoirs of the Upper Rhine Graben, Germany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22110, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22110, 2026.

TS9 – General Topics in Tectonics and Structural Geology

TS10 – Other Co-organized Sessions and Short Courses

EGU26-1897 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

The Unreliable Narrator: LSTM Internal States Fluctuate with Software Environments Despite Robust Predictions 

Ryosuke Nagumo, Ross Woods, and Miguel Rico-Ramirez

Since the robust performance of Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) networks was established, their physics-awareness and interpretability have become central topics in hydrology. Seminal works (e.g., Lees et al. (2022)) have argued that LSTM internal states spontaneously capture hydrological concepts, and suggested that cell states can represent soil moisture dynamics despite not being explicitly trained on such data. Conversely, more recent studies (e.g., Fuente et al. (2024)) demonstrated that mathematical equifinality causes non-unique LSTM representations with different initialisations.

In this work, we report an arguably more systematic "bug" in the software environment that causes instability in internal states. We initially aimed to investigate how internal states behave differently when trained with or without historical observation data. We encountered this issue while reassembling a computational stack and attempting to replicate the initial results, as the original Docker environment was not preserved. While random seeds have been indicated to lead to different internal state trajectories, we found the computational backend (e.g., changing CUDA versions, PyTorch releases, or dependent libraries) also produces them. These are the findings:

  • In gauged catchments: Discharge predictions remained stable (in one catchment, NSE was 0.88 ± 0.01) across computational environments, yet the internal temporal variations (e.g., silhouette, mean, and std of cell states) fluctuated noticeably.
  • In pseudo-ungauged scenarios: The prediction performance itself became more reliant on the computational environment (in the same catchment, NSE dropped to 0.31 ± 0.15), yet the internal temporal variations of the cell states fluctuated only as much as they did during the gauged scenario.

These findings suggests that instability in the computational environment poses not only a risk of altering interpretability in training (by altering internal states) but also casts doubt on reliability in extrapolation (by altering outputs).

It is worth mentioning that we confirmed this is not a replicability issue; completely identical cell states and predictions are produced when the computational environment, seeds, and training data are held constant. We argue that such stability must be established as a standard benchmark before assigning physical meaning to deep learning internals.

How to cite: Nagumo, R., Woods, R., and Rico-Ramirez, M.: The Unreliable Narrator: LSTM Internal States Fluctuate with Software Environments Despite Robust Predictions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1897, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1897, 2026.

EGU26-2771 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

New EGU Manuscript Types: Limitations, Errors, Surprises, and Shortcomings as Opportunities for New Science (LESSONS) 

John Hillier, Ulrike Proske, Stefan Gaillard, Theresa Blume, and Eduardo Queiroz Alves

Moments or periods of struggle not only propel scientists forward, but sharing these experiences can also provide valuable lessons for others. Indeed, the current bias towards only publishing ‘positive’ results arguably impedes scientific progress as mistakes that are not learnt from are simply repeated. Here we present a new article type in EGU journals covering LESSONS learnt to help overcome this publishing bias. LESSONS articles describe the Limitations, Errors, Surprises, Shortcomings, and Opportunities for New Science emerging from the scientific process, including non-confirmatory and null results. Unforeseen complications in investigations, plausible methods that failed, and technical issues are also in scope. LESSONS thus fit the content of the BUGS session and can provide an outlet for articles based on session contributions. Importantly, a LESSONS Report will offer a substantial, valuable insight. LESSONS Reports are typically short (1,000-2,000 words) to help lower the barrier to journal publication, whilst LESSONS Posts (not peer-reviewed, but with a DOI on EGUsphere) can be as short as 500 words to allow early-stage reporting. LESSONS aim to destigmatise limitations, errors, surprises and shortcomings and to add these to the published literature as opportunities for new science – we invite you to share your LESSONS learnt.

 

Finally, a big thank you from this paper’s ‘core’ writing team to the wider group who have helped shape the LESSONS idea since EGU GA in 2025, including PubCom and in particular its Chair Barbara Ervens.

How to cite: Hillier, J., Proske, U., Gaillard, S., Blume, T., and Queiroz Alves, E.: New EGU Manuscript Types: Limitations, Errors, Surprises, and Shortcomings as Opportunities for New Science (LESSONS), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2771, 2026.

EGU26-3077 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

False Starts and Silver Linings: A Photocatalytic Journey with Layered Double Hydroxides 

Anna Jędras and Jakub Matusik

Photocatalysis is frequently presented in the literature as a straightforward route toward efficient degradation of pollutants, provided that the “right” material is selected. Layered double hydroxides (LDH) are often highlighted as promising photocatalysts due to their tunable composition and reported activity in dye degradation. Motivated by these claims, this study evaluated LDH as mineral analogs for photocatalytic water treatment, ultimately uncovering a series of unexpected limitations, methodological pitfalls, and productive surprises.

In the first stage, Zn/Cr, Co/Cr, Cu/Cr, and Ni/Cr LDHs were synthesized and tested for photocatalytic degradation of methylene blue (0.02 mM) and Acid Blue Dye 129 (0.3 mM). Contrary to expectations,1 photocatalytic performance was consistently low. After one hour of irradiation, concentration losses attributable to photocatalysis did not exceed 15%, while most dye removal resulted from adsorption. Despite extensive efforts to optimize synthesis protocols, catalyst composition, and experimental conditions, this discrepancy with previously published studies could not be resolved.

To overcome limitations related to particle dispersion, surface accessibility, and charge-carrier separation, a second strategy was pursued by incorporating clay minerals as supports.2 Zn/Cr LDH, identified as the most active composition in preliminary tests, was coprecipitated with kaolinite, halloysite, and montmorillonite. Experiments with methylene blue (0.1 mM) and Acid Blue 129 (0.3 mM) demonstrated enhanced adsorption capacities. However, photocatalytic degradation efficiencies remained poor, typically below 10% after one hour, indicating that apparent performance gains were largely adsorption-driven rather than photochemical.

This failure proved to be a turning point. Instead of abandoning LDH entirely, they were combined with graphitic carbon nitride (GCN) to form a heterostructure.3 This approach resulted in a dramatic improvement: after optimization of the synthesis protocol, 99.5% of 1 ppm estrone was degraded within one hour.4 Further modifications were explored by introducing Cu, Fe, and Ag into the LDH/GCN system. While Cu and Fe suppressed photocatalytic activity, silver, at an optimized loading, reduced estrone concentrations below the detection limit within 40 minutes.5

This contribution presents a full experimental arc - from promising hypotheses that failed, through misleading adsorption-driven “successes,” to an ultimately effective but non-intuitive solution - highlighting the value of negative results and surprises as drivers of scientific progress.

This research was funded by the AGH University of Krakow, grant number 16.16.140.315.

Literature:

1            N. Baliarsingh, K. M. Parida and G. C. Pradhan, Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., 2014, 53, 3834–3841.

2            A. Í. S. Morais, W. V. Oliveira, V. V. De Oliveira, L. M. C. Honorio, F. P. Araujo, R. D. S. Bezerra, P. B. A. Fechine, B. C. Viana, M. B. Furtini,
              E. C. Silva-Filho and J. A. Osajima, Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering, 2019, 7, 103431.

3            B. Song, Z. Zeng, G. Zeng, J. Gong, R. Xiao, S. Ye, M. Chen, C. Lai, P. Xu and X. Tang, Advances in Colloid and Interface Science, 2019, 272, 101999.

4            A. Jędras, J. Matusik, E. Dhanaraman, Y.-P. Fu and G. Cempura, Langmuir, 2024, 40, 18163–18175.

5            A. Jędras, J. Matusik, J. Kuncewicz and K. Sobańska, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2025, 15, 6792–6804.

How to cite: Jędras, A. and Matusik, J.: False Starts and Silver Linings: A Photocatalytic Journey with Layered Double Hydroxides, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3077, 2026.

EGU26-4074 | Orals | EOS4.4

Instructive surprises in the hydrological functioning of landscapes 

James Kirchner, Paolo Benettin, and Ilja van Meerveld

BUGS can arise in individual research projects, but also at the level of communities of researchers, leading to shifts in the scientific consensus.  These community-level BUGS typically arise from observations that are surprising to (or previously overlooked by) substantial fractions of the research community.  In this presentation, we summarize several community-level BUGS in our field: specifically, key surprises that have transformed the hydrological community's understanding of hillslope and catchment processes in recent decades.  

Here are some examples.  (1) Students used to learn (and some still do today) that storm runoff is dominated by overland flow.  But stable isotope tracers have convincingly shown instead that even during storm peaks, streamflow is composed mostly of water that has been stored in the landscape for weeks, months, or years.  (2) Maps, and most hydrological theories, have typically depicted streams as fixed features of the landscape.  But field mapping studies have shown that stream networks are surprisingly dynamic, with up to 80% of stream channels going dry sometime during the year.  (3) Textbooks have traditionally represented catchment storage as a well-mixed box.  But tracer time series show fractal scaling that cannot be generated by well-mixed boxes, forcing a re-think of our conceptualization of subsurface storage and mixing.  (4) Waters stored in aquifers, and the waters that drain from them, have traditionally been assumed to share the same age.  But tracers show that waters draining from aquifers are often much younger than the groundwaters that are left behind, and this was subsequently shown to be an inevitable result of aquifer heterogeneity. 

Several examples like these, and their implications, will be briefly discussed, with an eye to the question: how can we maximize the chances for future instructive surprises?

How to cite: Kirchner, J., Benettin, P., and van Meerveld, I.: Instructive surprises in the hydrological functioning of landscapes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4074, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4074, 2026.

Coming from geosciences, we hopefully know what we want to do. Coming from numerics, however, we often know quite well what we are able to do and look for a way to sell it to the community. A few years ago, deep-learning techniques brought new life into the glaciology community. These approaches  allowed for simulations of glacier dynamics at an unprecedented computational performance and motivated several researchers to tackle the numerous open questions about past and present glacier dynamics, particularly in alpine regions. From another point of view, however, it was also tempting to demonstrate that the human brain is still more powerful than artificial intelligence by developing a new classical numerical scheme that can compete with deep-learning techniques concerning its efficiency.

Starting point was, of course, the simplest approximation to the full 3-D Stokes equations, the so-called shallow ice approximation (SIA). Progress was fast and the numerical performance was even better than expected. The new numerical scheme enabled simulations with spatial resolutions of 25 m on a desktop PC, while previous schemes did not reach simulations below a few hundred meters.

However, the enthusiasm pushed the known limitations of the SIA a bit out of sight. Physically, the approximation is quite bad on rugged terrain, particularly in narrow valleys. So the previous computational limitations have been replaced by physical limitations since high resolutions are particularly useful for rugged topographies. In other words, a shabby house has a really good roof now.

What are the options in such a situation?

  • Accept that there is no free lunch and avoid contact to the glacialogy community in the future.
  • Continue the endless discussion about the reviewers' opinion that a spatial resolution of 1 km is better than 25 m.
  • Find a real-world data set that matches the results of the model and helps to talk the problems away.
  • Keep the roof and build a new house beneath. Practically, this would be developing a new approximation to the full 3-D Stokes equations that is compatible to the numerical scheme and reaches an accuracy similar to those of the existing approximations.
  • Take the roof and put it on one of the existing solid houses. Practically, this would be an extension of the numerical scheme towards more complicated systems of differential equations. Unfortunately, efficient numerical schemes are typically very specific. So the roof will not fit easily and it might leak.

The story is open-ended, but there will be at least a preliminary answer in the presentation.

 

How to cite: Hergarten, S.: How useful is a new roof on a shabby house? An example from glacier modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4196, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4196, 2026.

EGU26-4587 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

The importance of describing simple methods in climate sensitivity literature 

Anna Zehrung, Andrew King, Zebedee Nicholls, Mark Zelinka, and Malte Meinshausen

“Show your working!” – is the universal phrase drilled into science and maths students to show a clear demonstration of the steps and thought processes used to reach a solution (and to be awarded full marks on the exam). 

Beyond the classroom, “show your working” becomes the methods section on every scientific paper, and is critical for the transparency and replicability of the study. However, what happens if parts of the method are considered assumed knowledge, or cut in the interests of a word count? 

An inability to fully replicate the results of a study became the unexpected glitch at the start of my PhD. Eager to familiarise myself with global climate model datasets, I set out to replicate the results of a widely cited paper which calculates the equilibrium climate sensitivity (ECS) across 27 climate models. The ECS is the theoretical global mean temperature response to a doubling of atmospheric CO2 relative to preindustrial levels. A commonly used method to calculate the ECS is to apply an ordinary least squares regression to global annual mean temperature and radiative flux anomalies. 

Despite the simplicity of a linear regression between two variables, we obtained ECS estimates for some climate models that differed from those reported in the original study, even though we followed the described methodology. However, the methodology provided only limited detail on how the raw climate model output – available at regional and monthly scales – was processed to obtain global annual mean anomalies. Differences in these intermediate processing steps can, in turn, lead to differences in ECS estimates.

Limited reporting of data-processing steps is common in the ECS literature. Whether these steps are considered assumed knowledge or deemed too simple to warrant explicit description, we demonstrate that, for some models, they can materially affect the resulting ECS estimate. While the primary aim of our study is to recommend a standardised data-processing pathway for ECS calculations, a secondary aim is to highlight the lack of transparency in key methodological details across the literature. A central takeaway is the importance of clearly documenting all processing steps – effectively, to “show your working” – and to emphasise the critical role of a detailed methods section.

How to cite: Zehrung, A., King, A., Nicholls, Z., Zelinka, M., and Meinshausen, M.: The importance of describing simple methods in climate sensitivity literature, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4587, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4587, 2026.

Observation of atmospheric constituents and processes is not easy. As atmospheric chemists, we use sensitive equipment, for example mass spectrometers, that we often set up in a (remote) location or on a moving platform for a few-weeks campaign to make in-situ observations. All this with the goal of explaining more and more atmospheric processes, and to verify and improve atmospheric models. However, glitches can happen anywhere in an experiment, be it in the experimental design, setup, or instrumental performance. Thus, complete data coverage during such a campaign is not always a given, resulting in gaps in (published) datasets. And the issue with air is that you can never go back and measure the exact same air again. Here, I would like to share some stories behind such gaps, and what we learned from them. This presentation aims to encourage early career researchers who might be struggling with feelings of failure when bugs, blunders and glitches happen in their experiments - you are not alone! I will share what we learned from these setbacks and how each of them improved our experimental approaches.

How to cite: Pfannerstill, E. Y.: Why are there gaps in your measurements? Sharing the stories behind the missing datapoints, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5494, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5494, 2026.

Over a 24-year research period, three successive experimental investigations led to three publications, each of which falsified the author’s preceding hypothesis and proposed a revised conceptual framework. Despite an initial confidence in having identified definitive solutions, subsequent experimental evidence consistently demonstrated the limitations and inaccuracies of earlier interpretations. This iterative process ultimately revealed that samples, in particular geological reference materials, sharing identical petrographic or mineralogical descriptions are not necessarily chemically equivalent and can exhibit markedly different behaviors during chemical digestion procedures. These findings underscore the critical importance of continuous hypothesis testing, self-falsification, and experimental verification in scientific research, particularly when working with reference materials assumed to be identical. I will be presenting data on the analysis of platinum group elements (PGE) and osmium isotopes in geological reference materials (chromitites, ultramafic rocks and basalts), which demonstrates the need for challenging matrices for method validation. 

How to cite: Meisel, T. C.: Self-falsification as a driver of scientific progress: Insights from long-term experimental research, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5771, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5771, 2026.

EGU26-6794 | ECS | Orals | EOS4.4

Back to square one (again and again): Finding a bug in a complex global atmospheric model   

Nadja Omanovic, Sylvaine Ferrachat, and Ulrike Lohmann

In atmospheric sciences, a central tool to test hypotheses are numerical models, which aim to represent (part of) our environment. One such model is the weather and climate model ICON [1], which solves the Navier-Stokes equation for capturing the dynamics and parameterizes subgrid-scale processes, such as radiation, cloud microphysics, and aerosol processes. Specifically, for the latter exists the so-called Hamburg Aerosol Module (HAM [2]), which is coupled to ICON [3] and predicts the evolution of aerosol populations using two moments (mass mixing ratio and number concentration). The high complexity of aerosols is reflected in the number of aerosol species (total of 5), number of modes (total of 4), and their mixing state and solubility. The module calculates aerosol composition and number concentration, their optical properties, their sources and sinks, and their interactions with clouds via microphysical processes. Aerosol emissions are sector-specific and based on global emission inventories or dynamically computed.

Within our work, we stumbled upon an interesting pattern occurrence in our simulations upon changing/turning off single emission sectors. If we, e.g., removed black carbon from aircraft emissions, the strongest changes emerged over the African continent, which is not the region where we were expecting to see the strongest response. Further investigations revealed that this pattern emerges independently of the emission sector as well as species, confirming our suspicion that we are facing a bug within HAM. Here, we want to present how we approached the challenge of identifying and tackling a bug within a complex module with several thousand lines of code.

 

[1] G. Zängl, D. Reinert, P. Ripodas, and M. Baldauf, “The ICON (ICOsahedral Non-hydrostatic) modelling framework of DWD and MPI-M: Description of the non-hydrostatic dynamical core,” Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, vol. 141, no. 687, pp. 563–579, 2015, ISSN: 1477-870X. DOI: 10.1002/qj.2378

[2] P. Stier, J. Feichter, S. Kinne, S. Kloster, E. Vignati, J. Wilson, L. Ganzeveld, I. Tegen, M. Werner, Y. Balkanski, M. Schulz, O. Boucher, A. Minikin, and A. Petzold, “The aerosol-climate model ECHAM5-HAM,” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 2005. DOI: 10.5194/acp-5-1125-2005

[3] M. Salzmann, S. Ferrachat, C. Tully, S. M¨ unch, D. Watson-Parris, D. Neubauer, C. Siegenthaler-Le Drian, S. Rast, B. Heinold, T. Crueger, R. Brokopf, J. Mülmenstädt, J. Quaas, H. Wan, K. Zhang, U. Lohmann, P. Stier, and I. Tegen, “The Global Atmosphere-aerosol Model ICON-A-HAM2.3–Initial Model Evaluation and Effects of Radiation Balance Tuning on Aerosol Optical Thickness,” Journal of Advances in Modeling Earth Systems, vol. 14, no. 4,e2021MS002699, 2022, ISSN: 1942-2466. DOI: 10.1029/2021MS002699

How to cite: Omanovic, N., Ferrachat, S., and Lohmann, U.: Back to square one (again and again): Finding a bug in a complex global atmospheric model  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6794, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6794, 2026.

In situ cloud measurements are essential for understanding atmospheric processes and establishing a reliable ground truth. Obtaining these data is rarely straightforward. Challenges range from accessing clouds in the first place to ensuring that the instrument or environment does not bias the sample. This contribution explores several blunders and unexpected glitches encountered over fifteen years of field campaigns.

I will share stories of mountain top observations where blowing snow was measured instead of cloud ice crystals and the ambitious but failed attempt to use motorized paragliders for sampling. I also reflect on winter campaigns where the primary obstacles were flooding and mud rather than cold and snow. While these experiences were often frustrating, they frequently yielded useful data or led to new insights. One such example is the realization that drone icing is not just a crash risk but can also serve as a method for measuring liquid water content. By highlighting these setbacks and the successful data that emerged despite them, I aim to foster a discussion on the value of trial and error and persistence in atmospheric physics.

How to cite: Henneberger, J.: How Not to Measure a Cloud: Lessons from Fifteen Years of Fieldwork Failures, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8228, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8228, 2026.

EGU26-8359 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Do trees save lives under climate change? It’s complicated  

Nils Hohmuth, Nora L. S. Fahrenbach (presenting), Yibiao Zou (presenting), Josephine Reek, Felix Specker, Tom Crowther, and Constantin M. Zohner

Forests are powerful climate regulators: Their CO2 uptake provides a global biogeochemical cooling effect, and in the tropics, this cooling is further strengthened by evapotranspiration. Given that temperature-related mortality is a relevant global health burden, which is expected to increase under climate change, we set out to test what we thought was a promising hypothesis: Can forests reduce human temperature-related mortality from climate change? 

To test this, we used simulated temperature changes to reforestation from six different Earth System Models (ESMs) under a future high-emission scenario, and paired them with age-specific population data and three methodologically different temperature-mortality frameworks (Cromar et al. 2022, Lee et al. 2019, and Carleton et al. 2022). We expected to find a plausible range of temperature-related mortality outcomes attributable to global future forests conservation efforts.

Instead, our idea ran head-first into a messy reality. Firstly, rather than showing a clear consensus, the ESMs produced a wide range of temperature responses to reforestation, varying both in magnitude and sign. This is likely due to the albedo effect, varying climatological tree cover and land use processes implemented by the models, in addition to internal variability which we could not reduce due to the existence of only one ensemble member per model. Consequently, the models disagreed in many regions on whether global forest conservation and reforestation would increase or decrease temperature by the end of the century.

The uncertainties deepened when we incorporated the mortality data. Mortality estimates varied by up to a factor of 10 depending on the ESM and mortality framework used. Therefore, in the end, the models could not even agree on whether forests increased or decreased temperature-related mortality. We found ourselves with a pipeline that amplified uncertainties of both the ESM and mortality datasets.

For now, the question remains wide open: Do trees save us from temperature-related deaths in a warming world, and if so, by how much?

 

* The first two authors contributed equally to this work.

How to cite: Hohmuth, N., Fahrenbach (presenting), N. L. S., Zou (presenting), Y., Reek, J., Specker, F., Crowther, T., and Zohner, C. M.: Do trees save lives under climate change? It’s complicated , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8359, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8359, 2026.

EGU26-10401 | ECS | Orals | EOS4.4

The empty mine: Why better tools do not help you find new diamonds 

Ralf Loritz, Alexander Dolich, and Benedikt Heudorfer

Hydrological modelling has long been shaped by a steady drive toward ever more sophisticated models. In the era of machine learning, this race has turned into a relentless pursuit of complexity: deeper networks and ever more elaborate architectures that often feel outdated by the time the ink on the paper is dry. Motivated by a genuine belief in methodological progress, I, like many others, spent considerable effort exploring this direction, driven by the assumption that finding the “right” architecture or model would inevitably lead to better performance. This talk is a reflection on that journey; you could say my own Leidensweg. Over several years, together with excellent collaborators, I explored a wide range of state-of-the-art deep-learning approaches for rainfall–runoff modelling and other hydrological modelling challenges. Yet, regardless of the architecture or training strategy, I repeatedly encountered the same performance ceiling. In parallel, the literature appeared to tell a different story, with “new” models regularly claiming improvements over established baselines. A closer inspection, however, revealed that rigorous and standardized benchmarking is far from common practice in hydrology, making it difficult to disentangle genuine progress from artefacts of experimental design. What initially felt like a failure to improve my models turned out to be a confrontation with reality. The limiting factor was not the architecture, but the problem itself. We have reached a point where predictive skill is increasingly bounded by the information content of our benchmark datasets and maybe more importantly by the way we frame our modelling challenges, rather than by model design. Like many others, I have come to believe that if we want to move beyond the current performance plateau, the next breakthroughs are unlikely to come from ever more complex models alone. Instead, as a community, we need well-designed model challenges, better benchmarks, and datasets that meaningfully expand the information available to our models to make model comparisons more informative.

How to cite: Loritz, R., Dolich, A., and Heudorfer, B.: The empty mine: Why better tools do not help you find new diamonds, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10401, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10401, 2026.

EGU26-13630 | ECS | Orals | EOS4.4

How NOT to identify streamflow events? 

Larisa Tarasova and Paul Astagneau

Examining catchment response to precipitation at event scale is useful for understanding how various hydrological systems store and release water. Many of such event scale characteristics, for example event runoff coefficient and event time scale are also important engineering metrics used for design. However, deriving these characteristics requires identification of discrete precipitation-streamflow events from continuous hydrometeorological time series.

Event identification is not at all a trivial task. It becomes even more challenging when working with very large datasets that encompass a wide range of spatial and temporal dynamics. Approaches range from visual expert judgement to baseflow-separation-based methods and objective methods based on the coupled dynamics of precipitation and streamflow. Here, we would like to present our experience in the quest to devise the “ideal” method for large datasets – and trust us, we tried, a lot. We demonstrate that expert-based methods can be seriously flawed simply by changing a few meta parameters, such as the length of displayed periods, baseflow-separation-based methods deliver completely opposite results when different underlying separation methods are selected, and objective methods suddenly fail when dynamics with different temporal scales are simultaneously present.

Ultimately, we realized that finding a one-size-fits-all method was not possible and that compromises had to be made to select sufficiently representative events across large datasets. Therefore, we advocate for pragmatic case-specific evaluation criteria and for transparency in event identification to make study results reproducible and fit for purpose, if not perfect.

How to cite: Tarasova, L. and Astagneau, P.: How NOT to identify streamflow events?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13630, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13630, 2026.

EGU26-14148 | Orals | EOS4.4 | Highlight

Buggy benefits of more fundamental climate models 

Bjorn Stevens, Marco Giorgetta, and Hans Segura

A defining attribute of global-storm resolving models is that modelling is replaced by simulation.  In addition to overloading the word “model”  this avails the developer of a much larger variety of tests, and brings about a richer interplay with their intuition.  This has proven helpful in identifying and correcting many mistakes in global-storm resolving models that traditional climate models find difficult to identify, and usually compensate by “tuning.”  It also means that storm-resolving models are built and tested in a fundamentally different way than are traditional climate models. In this talk I will review the development of ICON as a global storm resolving model to illustrate how this feature, of trying to simulate rather than model the climate system, has helped identify a large number of long-standing bugs in code bases inherited from traditional models; how this can support open development; and how sometimes these advantages also prove to be buggy.

How to cite: Stevens, B., Giorgetta, M., and Segura, H.: Buggy benefits of more fundamental climate models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14148, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14148, 2026.

EGU26-14374 | Orals | EOS4.4

The dangerous temptation of optimality in hydrological and water resources modelling 

Thorsten Wagener and Francesca Pianosi

Hydrological and water systems modelling has long been driven by the search for better models. We do so by searching for models or at least parameter combinations that provide the best fit to given observations. We ourselves have contributed to this effort by developing new methods and by publishing diverse case studies. However, we repeatedly find that searching for and finding an optimal model is highly fraught in the presence of unclear signal-to-noise ratios in our observations, of incomplete models and of highly imbalanced databases. We present examples of our own work through which we have realized that achieving optimality was possible but futile unless we give equal consideration to issues of consistency, robustness and problem framing. We argue here that the strong focus on optimality continues to be a hindrance for advancing hydrologic science and for transferring research achievements into practice – probably more so than in other areas of the geosciences.

How to cite: Wagener, T. and Pianosi, F.: The dangerous temptation of optimality in hydrological and water resources modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14374, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14374, 2026.

Among soil physical analyses, determination of the soil particle-size distribution (PSD) is arguably the most fundamental. The standard methodology combines sieve analysis for sand fractions with sedimentation-based techniques for silt and clay. Established sedimentation methods include the pipette and hydrometer techniques. More recently, the Integral Suspension Pressure (ISP) method has become available, which derives PSD by inverse modeling of the temporal evolution of suspension pressure measured at a fixed depth in a sedimentation cylinder. Since ISP is based on the same physical principles as the pipette and hydrometer methods, their results should, in principle, agree.

The ISP methodology has been implemented in the commercial instrument PARIO (METER Group, Munich). While elegant, the method relies on pressure change measurements with a resolution of 0.1 Pa (equivalent to 0.01 mm of water column). Consequently, the PARIO manual strongly advises avoiding any mechanical disturbance such as thumping, bumping, clapping, vibration, or other shock events. This warning is essentially precautionary, because to date no systematic experimental investigation of such disturbances has been reported.

To explore this issue, we prepared a single 30 g soil sample following standard PSD procedures and subjected it to 26 PARIO repeated measurement runs over a period of five months, each run lasting 12 h. Between runs, the suspension was remixed but otherwise not altered. The first ten runs (over ten days) were conducted without intentional disturbance to establish baseline repeatability. This was followed by eight runs with deliberately imposed and timed disturbances that generated single or repeated vibrations (“rocking and shocking”). After approximately two and five months, we conducted additional sets of five and three undisturbed runs, respectively.

We report how these mechanical disturbances, along with temperature variations during measurement and the time elapsed since sample pre-treatment, affected the derived PSD. The results provide a first quantitative assessment of how fragile—or robust—the ISP method and PARIO system really are when reality refuses to sit perfectly still.

 

How to cite: Nemes, A. and Durner, W.: Rocking and Shocking the PARIOTM: How Sensitive Is ISP-Based Particle-Size Analysis to Mechanical Disturbance?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14763, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14763, 2026.

EGU26-14852 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Some Norwegian soils behave differently: is it an inheritance from marine sedimentation? 

Attila Nemes, Pietro Bazzocchi, Sinja Weiland, and Martine van der Ploeg

Predicting soil hydraulic behavior is necessary for the modeling of catchments and agricultural planning, particularly for a country like Norway where only 3% of land is suitable for farming. Soil texture is an important and easily accessible parameter for the prediction of soil hydraulic behavior. However, some Norwegian farmland soils, which formed as glacio-marine sediments and are characterized by a medium texture, have shown the hydraulic behavior of heavy textured soils. Coined by the theory behind well-established sedimentation-enhancing technology used in waste water treatment, we hypothesized that sedimentation under marine conditions may result in specific particle sorting and as a result specific pore system characteristics. To test this, we designed four custom-built devices to produce artificially re-sedimented columns of soil material to help characterize the influence of sedimentation conditions. We successfully produced column samples of the same homogeneous mixture of fine-sand, silt, and clay particles obtained by physically crushing and sieving (< 200 µm) subsoil material collected at the Skuterud catchment in South-East Norway, differing only in sedimentation conditions (deionized water vs 35 g per liter NaCl solution). Then, the inability of standard laboratory methods to measure the saturated hydraulic conductivity of such fine material, led us to “MacGyver” (design and custom-build) two alternative methodologies to measure that property, i.e. i) by adapting a pressure plate extractor for a constant head measurement and ii) by building a 10 m tall pipe-system in a common open area of the office, in order to increase the hydraulic head on the samples. There was a learning curve with both of those methods, but we have found that the salt-water re-sedimented columns were about five times more permeable than the freshwater ones, which was the complete opposite of our expectations. However, an unexpected blunder in the conservation of our samples suggests that our hypothesis should be further explored rather than dismissed. These contributions hint about the mechanisms that may underlie the anomalous hydraulic behaviour of certain Norwegian soils and raise new questions on the formation of marine clays, improving knowledge available for land managers and modellers.

 

How to cite: Nemes, A., Bazzocchi, P., Weiland, S., and van der Ploeg, M.: Some Norwegian soils behave differently: is it an inheritance from marine sedimentation?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14852, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14852, 2026.

EGU26-16619 | Orals | EOS4.4

The unknown knowns – the inconvenient knowledge in hydrogeology we do not like to use 

Okke Batelaan, Joost Herweijer, Steven Young, and Phil Hayes

“It is in the tentative stage that the affections enter with their blinding influence. Love was long since represented as blind…The moment one has offered an original explanation for a phenomenon which seems satisfactory, that moment affection for his intellectual child springs into existence…To guard against this, the method of multiple working hypotheses is urged. … The effort is to bring up into view every rational explanation of new phenomena, and to develop every tenable hypothesis respecting their cause and history. The investigator thus becomes the parent of a family of hypothesis: and, by his parental relation to all, he is forbidden to fasten his affections unduly upon any one” (Chamberlin, 1890).

The MADE (macro-dispersion) natural-gradient tracer field experiments were conducted more than 35 years ago. It aimed to determine field-scale dispersion parameters based on detailed hydraulic conductivity measurements to support transport simulation. A decade of field experiments produced a 30-year paper trail of modelling studies with no clear resolution of a successful simulation approach for practical use in transport problems.  As a result, accurately simulating contaminant transport in the subsurface remains a formidable challenge in hydrogeology.

What went awry, and why do we often miss the mark?

Herweijer et al. (2026) conducted a ‘back to basics’ review of the original MADE reports and concluded that there are significant inconvenient and unexplored issues that influenced the migration of the tracer plume and or biased observations. These issues include unreliable measurement of hydraulic conductivity, biased tracer concentrations, and underestimation of sedimentological heterogeneity and non-stationarity of the flow field. Many studies simulating the tracer plumes appeared to have ignored, sidestepped, or been unaware of these issues, raising doubts about the validity of the results.

Our analysis shows that there is a persistent drive among researchers to conceptually oversimplify natural complexity to enable testing of single-method modelling, mostly driven by parametric stochastic approaches. Researchers tend to be anchored to a specialised, numerically driven methodology and have difficulty in unearthing highly relevant information from ‘unknown known’ data or applying approaches outside their own specialised scientific sub-discipline. Another important aspect of these ‘unkowns knowns’ is the tendency to accept published data verbatim. Too often, there is no rigorous investigation of the original measurement methods and reporting, and, if need be, additional testing to examine the root cause of data issues.

Following the good old advice of Chamberlin (1890), we used a knowledge framework to systematically assess knowns, unknowns, and associated confidence levels, yielding a set of multi-conceptual models. Based on identified 'unknowns', these multi-models can be tested against reliable 'knowns' such as piezometric data and mass balance calculations.  

Chamberlin, T.C., 1890, The method of multiple working hypotheses. Science 15(366): 92-96. doi:10.1126/science.ns-15.366.92.

Herweijer J.C., S. C Young, P. Hayes, and O. Batelaan, 2026, A multi-conceptual model approach to untangling the MADE experiment, Accepted for Publication in Groundwater.

How to cite: Batelaan, O., Herweijer, J., Young, S., and Hayes, P.: The unknown knowns – the inconvenient knowledge in hydrogeology we do not like to use, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16619, 2026.

EGU26-17373 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

The Hidden Propagator: How Free-Slip Boundaries Corrupt 3D Simulations 

Laetitia Le Pourhiet

Free-slip boundary conditions are routinely used in 3D geodynamic modelling because they reduce computational cost, avoid artificial shear zones at domain edges, and simplify the implementation of large-scale kinematic forcing. However, despite their apparent neutrality, our experiments show that free-slip boundaries systematically generate first-order artefacts that propagate deep into the model interior and can severely distort the interpretation of continental rifting simulations.

Here we present a set of 3D visco-plastic models inspired by the South China Sea (SCS) that were originally designed to study the effect of steady-state thermal inheritance and pluton-controlled crustal weakening. Unexpectedly, in all simulations except those with a very particular inverted rheological profile (POLC), the free-slip boundary on the “Vietnam side” of the domain generated a persistent secondary propagator, producing unrealistic amounts of lithospheric thinning in the southwest corner. This artefact appeared irrespective of crustal rheology, seeding strategy, or the presence of thermal heterogeneities.

We identify three systematic behaviours induced by free-slip boundaries in 3D:
(1) forced rift nucleation at boundary-adjacent thermal gradients,
(2) artificial propagator formation that competes with the intended first-order rifting, and
(3) rotation or shearing of micro-blocks not predicted by tectonic reconstructions.

These artefacts originate from the inability of free-slip boundaries to transmit shear traction, which artificially channels deformation parallel to the boundary when lateral thermal or mechanical contrasts exist. In 3D, unlike in 2D, the combination of oblique extension and boundary-parallel velocity freedom leads to emergent pseudo-transform behaviour that is entirely numerical.

Our results highlight a key negative outcome: free-slip boundaries cannot be assumed neutral in 3D rift models, especially when studying localisation, obliquity, multi-propagator dynamics, or the competition between structural and thermal inheritance. We argue that many published 3D rift models may unknowingly include such artefacts.

 

How to cite: Le Pourhiet, L.: The Hidden Propagator: How Free-Slip Boundaries Corrupt 3D Simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17373, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17373, 2026.

EGU26-18600 | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Data Disaster to Data Resilience: Lessons from CEDA’s Data Recovery  

Edward Williamson, Matt Pritchard, Alan Iwi, Sam Pepler, and Graham Parton

On 18 November 2025, a small error during internal data migration of between storage systems of the JASMIN data analysis platform in the UK led to a substantial part of the CEDA Archive being made temporarily unavailable online (but not lost!). The unfortunate incident caused serious disruption to a large community of users (and additional workload and stress for the team), it provided important learning points for the team in terms of:  

  • enhancing data security,  
  • importance of mutual support among professional colleagues,  
  • the value of clear and transparent communications with your users 
  • a unique opportunity to showcase the capabilities of a cutting-edge digital research infrastructure in the recovery and return to service with this “unscheduled disaster recovery exercise”. 

 

We report on the circumstances leading to the incident, the lessons learned, and the technical capabilities employed in the recovery. One example shows, nearly 800 Terabytes of data transferred from a partner institution in the USA in just over 27 hours, at a rate of over 8 Gigabytes per second using Globus. The ability to orchestrate such a transfer is the result of many years of international collaboration to support large-scale environmental science, and highlights the benefits of a federated, replicated data infrastructure built on well-engineered technologies.

How to cite: Williamson, E., Pritchard, M., Iwi, A., Pepler, S., and Parton, G.: Data Disaster to Data Resilience: Lessons from CEDA’s Data Recovery , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18600, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18600, 2026.

EGU26-19755 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Opposite cloud responses to extreme Arctic pollution: sensitivity to cloud microphysics, or a bug? 

Rémy Lapere, Ruth Price, Louis Marelle, Lucas Bastien, and Jennie Thomas

Aerosol-cloud interactions remain one of the largest uncertainties in global climate modelling. This uncertainty arises because of the dependence of aerosol-cloud interactions on many tightly coupled atmospheric processes; the non-linear response of clouds to aerosol perturbations across different regimes; and the challenge of extracting robust signals from noisy meteorological observations. The problem is particularly acute in the Arctic, where sparse observational coverage limits model constraints, pristine conditions can lead to unexpected behaviour, and key processes remain poorly understood.

A common way to tackle the challenge of uncertainties arising from aerosol-cloud interactions in climate simulations is to conduct sensitivity experiments using cloud and aerosol microphysics schemes based on different assumptions and parameterisations. By comparing these experiments, key results can be constrained by sampling the range of unavoidable structural uncertainties in the models. Here, we apply this approach to a case study of an extreme, polluted warm air mass in the Arctic that was measured during the MOSAiC Arctic expedition in 2020. We simulated the event in the WRF-Chem-Polar regional climate model both with and without the anthropogenic aerosols from the strong pollution event to study the response of clouds and surface radiative balance. To understand the sensitivity of our results to the choice of model configuration, we tested two distinct, widely-used cloud microphysics schemes.

Initial results showed that the two schemes simulated opposite cloud responses: one predicted a surface cooling from the pollution that was reasonably in line with our expectations of the event, while the other predicted the opposite behaviour in the cloud response and an associated surface warming. These opposing effects seemed to suggest that structural uncertainties in the two schemes relating to clean, Arctic conditions was so strong that it even obscured our ability to understand the overall sign of the surface radiative response to the pollution.

However, since significant model development was required to couple these two cloud microphysics schemes to the aerosol fields in our model, there was another explanation that we couldn’t rule out: a bug in the scheme that was producing the more unexpected results. In this talk, we will explore the challenges of simulating the Arctic climate with a state-of-the-art chemistry-climate model and highlight how examples like this underscore the value of our recent efforts to align our collaborative model development with software engineering principles and Open Science best practices.

How to cite: Lapere, R., Price, R., Marelle, L., Bastien, L., and Thomas, J.: Opposite cloud responses to extreme Arctic pollution: sensitivity to cloud microphysics, or a bug?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19755, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19755, 2026.

All statistical tools come with assumptions. Yet many scientists treat statistics like a collection of black-box methods without learning the assumptions. Here I illustrate this problem using dozens of studies that claim to show that solar variability is a dominant driver of climate. I find that linear regression approaches are widely misused among these studies. In particular, they often violate the assumption of ‘no autocorrelation’ of the time series used, though it is common for studies to violate several or all of the assumptions of linear regression. The misuse of statistical tools has been a common problem across all fields of science for decades. This presentation serves as an important cautionary tale for the Earth Sciences and highlights the need for better statistical education and for statistical software that automatically checks input data for assumptions.

How to cite: Steiger, N.: Pervasive violation of statistical assumptions in studies linking solar variability to climate, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19776, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19776, 2026.

EGU26-20122 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

Developing Matrix-Matched Empirical Calibrations for EDXRF Analysis of Peat-Alternative Growth Media 

Thulani De Silva, Carmela Tupaz, Maame Croffie, Karen Daly, Michael Gaffney, Michael Stock, and Eoghan Corbett

A key reason for the widespread use of peat-based growth media in horticulture is their reliable nutrient availability when supplemented with fertilisers. However, due to environmental concerns over continued peat-extraction and use, peat-alternatives (e.g., coir, wood fibre, composted bark, biochar) are increasingly being used commercially. These alternative media often blend multiple materials, making it crucial to understand elemental composition and nutrient interactions between components. This study evaluates whether benchtop Energy Dispersive X-ray Fluorescence (EDXRF) can provide a rapid method for determining the elemental composition of peat-alternative components.

Representative growing media components (peat, coir, wood fibre, composted bark, biochar, horticultural lime, perlite, slow-release fertilisers, and trace-element fertiliser) were blended in different ratios to generate industry-representative mixes. Individual components and prepared mixes were dried and milled to ≤80 μm. An industry-representative mix (QC-50: 50% peat, 30% wood fibre, 10% composted bark, 10% coir, with fertiliser and lime additions) and 100% peat were analysed by EDXRF (Rigaku NEX-CG) for P, K, Mg, Ca, S, Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu and Mo, and compared against ICP-OES reference measurements. The instrument’s fundamental parameters (FP) method using a plant-based organic materials library showed large discrepancies relative to ICP-OES (relative differences: 268–390 084%) for most elements in both QC-50 and peat, with the exception of Ca in QC-50 (11%). These results confirm that the FP approach combined with loose-powder preparation is unsuitable for accurate elemental analysis of organic growing media.

An empirical calibration was subsequently developed using 18 matrix-matched standards (CRMs, in-house growing media and individual component standards). Matrix matching is challenging because mixes are mostly organic by volume, yet variable inorganic amendments (e.g., lime, fertilisers, and sometimes perlite) can strongly influence XRF absorption/enhancement effects. Calibration performance was optimised iteratively using QC-50 as the validation sample, until relative differences were <15% for all elements. When applied to 100% peat, agreement with ICP-OES results improved substantially for some macro-elements (e.g. Mg 10%, Ca 1%, S 19%) but remained poor for most trace elements (28–96%), demonstrating limited transferability of this calibration method across different elements and matrices tested.

Overall, these results demonstrate that loose powder preparation does not provide sufficiently robust accuracy for EDXRF analysis of organic growing media even with meticulous empirical matrix-matched calibration. We are therefore developing a pressed pellet method using a low-cost wax binder to improve sample homogeneity (packing density) and calibration transferability. Twenty unknown mixes will be analysed using both loose powder and pressed-pellet calibrations, and agreement with reference data (ICP-OES) will confirm method validation, supporting the development of EDXRF as a novel approach for growing media analysis.

How to cite: De Silva, T., Tupaz, C., Croffie, M., Daly, K., Gaffney, M., Stock, M., and Corbett, E.: Developing Matrix-Matched Empirical Calibrations for EDXRF Analysis of Peat-Alternative Growth Media, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20122, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20122, 2026.

EGU26-20375 | ECS | Posters on site | EOS4.4

From Field to File: challenges and recommendations for handling hydrological data 

Karin Bremer, Maria Staudinger, Jan Seibert, and Ilja van Meerveld

In catchment hydrology, long-term data collection often starts as part of a (doctoral) research project. In some cases, the data collection continues on a limited budget, often using the field protocol and data management plan designed for the initial short-term project. Challenges and issues with the continued data collection are likely to arise, especially when there are multiple changes in the people involved. It is especially difficult for researchers who were not directly involved in the fieldwork to understand the data and must therefore rely on field notes and archived data. They then often encounter issues related to inconsistent metadata, such as inconsistent date-time formats and inconsistent or missing units, missing calibration files, and unclear file and processing script organization.

While the specific issues may sound very case-dependent, based on our own and other’s experiences from various research projects, it appears that many issues recur more frequently than one might expect (or be willing to admit). In this presentation, we will share our experiences with bringing spatially distributed groundwater level data collected in Sweden and Switzerland from the field to ready-to-use files. Additionally, we provide recommendations for overcoming the challenges during field data collection, data organization, documentation, and data processing using scripts. These include having a clear, detailed protocol for in the fieldwork and the data processing steps, and ensuring it is followed. Although protocols are often used, they are frequently not detailed enough or are not used as designed. The protocols might also not take into account the further use of the data, such as for hydrological modelling, beyond field collection. 

How to cite: Bremer, K., Staudinger, M., Seibert, J., and van Meerveld, I.: From Field to File: challenges and recommendations for handling hydrological data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20375, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20375, 2026.

In 2014 we developed the Wageningen Lowland Runoff Simulator (WALRUS), a conceptual rainfall-runoff model for catchments with shallow groundwater. Water managers and consultants were involved in model development. In addition, they sponsored the steps necessary for application: making an R package, user manual and tutorial, publishing these on GitHub and organising user days. WALRUS is now used operationally by several Dutch water authorities and for scientific studies in the Netherlands and abroad. When developing the model, we made certain design choices. Now, after twelve years of application in water management, science and education, we re-evaluate the consequences of those choices.

The lessons can be divided into things we learned about the model’s functioning and things we learned from how people use the model. Concerning the model’s functioning, we found that keeping the model representation close to reality has advantages and disadvantages. It makes it easy to understand what happens and why, but it also causes unrealistic expectations. Certain physically based relations hampered model performance because they contained thresholds, and deriving parameter values from field observations resulted in uncertainty and discussions about spatial representativeness.

Concerning the practical use, we found that the easy-to-use, open source R package with manual was indispensable for new users. Nearly all users preferred default options over the implemented user-defined functions to allow tailor-made solutions. Parameter calibration was more difficult than expected because the feedbacks necessary to simulate the hydrological processes in lowlands increase the risk of equifinality. In addition, lack of suitable discharge data for calibration prompted the request for default parameter values. Finally, the model was subject to unintended model use, sometimes violating basic assumptions and sometimes showing unique opportunities we had not thought of ourselves.

C.C. Brauer, A.J. Teuling, P.J.J.F. Torfs, R. Uijlenhoet (2014): The Wageningen Lowland Runoff Simulator (WALRUS): a lumped rainfall-runoff model for catchments with shallow groundwater, Geosci. Model Dev., 7, 2313-2332, doi:10.5194/gmd-7-2313-2014

How to cite: Brauer, C.: Re-evaluating the WALRUS rainfall-runoff model design after twelve years of application, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21915, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21915, 2026.

EGU26-255 | Orals | GD1.1

Geomagnetic jerks as core surface flow acceleration pulses – observations and simulations. 

Frederik Madsen, Kathy Whaler, Will Brown, Ciarán Beggan, and Richard Holme

Geomagnetic jerks are the fastest variations we observe in secular variation (SV) of the internal geomagnetic field. They have been deemed spatiotemporally unpredictable, and thus make it difficult to forecast magnetic field changes. Recent core surface flow-inversions of satellite SV data show that pulses in modelled azimuthal flow acceleration are contemporaneous with localised low latitude jerks observed in the Atlantic and Pacific from 2000—2024.

In order to explore to what extent such pulses might be responsible for observed geomagnetic jerks, we simulate them with synthetic flow models. We use a Fisher–Von Mises probability distribution to spatially define the pulse, which ensures that its spherical harmonic expansion in terms of poloidal and toroidal spherical harmonic coefficients converges. To recover a dynamic flow, we add uncorrelated noise to these toroidal and poloidal acceleration coefficients.  After this, we obtain SV from flow acceleration using the diffusionless induction equation, investigating a variety of background flows and core-surface magnetic field structures with our flow-acceleration pulse. Finally, we plot the expected SV at the Earth’s surface.

We successfully generate geomagnetic jerks, similar to those observed by CHAMP in the Atlantic in 2003.5 and 2007, and Swarm in the Pacific in 2017 and 2020. This pulse-like simulator for low-latitude jerks is in agreement with results from numerical dynamo simulations, which suggest that jerks originate from Alfvén wave packets emitted from the inner-outer core boundary. Our results further suggest that there is no need for waves longitudinally propagating along the outer core surface for jerks to occur.

How to cite: Madsen, F., Whaler, K., Brown, W., Beggan, C., and Holme, R.: Geomagnetic jerks as core surface flow acceleration pulses – observations and simulations., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-255, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-255, 2026.

EGU26-2141 | Orals | GD1.1

Patches of negative core-mantle boundary heat flux: simulations of mantle convection and implications for core dynamics 

Frederic Deschamps, Joshua Guerrero, Hagay Amit, Filipe Terra-nova, and Wen-Pin Hsieh

Heat flux at the Earth’s core-mantle boundary (CMB) partially controls the outer core dynamics and its associated geodynamo. On the mantle side, lateral variations in temperature above the CMB trigger lateral variations in heat flux with low temperature (typically, in and around subducted slabs) and high temperatures (at plumes roots and beneath hot thermo-chemical piles) areas being associated with high and low heat flux regions, respectively. Spatial and temporal variations in temperature are, in turn, controlled by details of mantle convection and mantle material properties. Here, we investigate the influence on CMB heat flux of two key parameters: the excess internal heating within piles of hot, dense material (also referred to as primordial material) modelling the large low shear-wave velocity provinces (LLSVPs) observed by global seismic tomography maps; and the temperature-dependence of thermal conductivity. For this, we perform a series of high-resolution numerical simulations of thermo-chemical convection in spherical annulus geometry using the code StagYY. Importantly, the total heating rate within the mantle is fixed, meaning that an excess heating within piles is balanced by a reduced heat released elsewhere. The initial condition on composition consists in a thin basal layer of chemically denser material, which subsequently evolves into piles of hot, primordial material on the top of which plumes are being generated. Our simulations show that the CMB heat flux is lower than the core adiabatic heat flux throughout the base of primordial material piles, and that it can be locally negative, i.e., heat flows from the mantle to the core. We further investigated the conditions needed for such patches to appear. As one would expect, a larger internal heating excess and a stronger temperature dependence of thermal conductivity both favor the development of negative heat flux patches. However, patches disappear if the piles excess heating gets too large. In this case, heat released in the regular mantle is strongly reduced, allowing plumes generated at the top of piles to extract more heat from these piles. Finally, our simulations predict relatively large CMB heat flux spatial heterogeneity, together with substantial temporal variations in this heterogeneity. Our findings have strong implications for core dynamics. In particular, they support the hypothesis that partial stratification at the top of the core can occur beneath LLSVPs, reconciling geomagnetic and seismic observations. In addition, and based on core dynamics studies, the CMB heat flux heterogeneity and temporal variations predicted by our simulations may play a key role in the occurrence of geomagnetic superchrons.

How to cite: Deschamps, F., Guerrero, J., Amit, H., Terra-nova, F., and Hsieh, W.-P.: Patches of negative core-mantle boundary heat flux: simulations of mantle convection and implications for core dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2141, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2141, 2026.

EGU26-2437 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Geomagnetic data assimilation utilizing the ensemble Kalman smoother 

Zeng Zhipeng and Lin Yufeng

In data assimilation, smoothers improve estimates of the system state by incorporating future observations. However, in geomagnetic data assimilation, the application of smoothers requires solving complex adjoint operators associated with the full nonlinear MHD equations, and the computation of gradients of the objective function is computationally expensive. Here, we employ the ensemble Kalman smoother (EnKS), which exploits ensemble-based statistical correlations across different times and thereby avoids the explicit construction of adjoint operators. We evaluate the performance of EnKS using synthetic observation experiments in moderately nonlinear models and compare it with Ensemble Kalman Filter (EnKF). The results show that both methods recover similar velocity field structures. EnKS exhibits velocity intensities closer to the reference model and performs better in the recovery of the surface flows. However, EnKS is more sensitive to sampling errors, which lead to filter divergence in the magnetic field. We further examine the impact of model error on EnKS, where the model error only arises from variations in viscous effects. The results show that model error causes the loss recovery of some dominant velocity field modes in the recovered solution and ultimately leads to filter divergence. Overall, our results indicate that EnKS can further improve recovery quality in regimes where EnKF already achieves reasonable performance, but may perform worse in regions strongly affected by sampling errors.

How to cite: Zhipeng, Z. and Yufeng, L.: Geomagnetic data assimilation utilizing the ensemble Kalman smoother, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2437, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2437, 2026.

EGU26-2575 | Orals | GD1.1

Ancient geodynamo driven by lunar tides beneath a basal magma ocean 

Richard F. Katz, Murray B.C. Kiernan, Hamish C.F.C. Hay, David W. Rees Jones, and James F.J. Bryson

Dynamo action in Earth's liquid-iron core has generated a magnetic field for at least 3.4 billion years. Prior the onset of solidification that formed the inner core at about 1 Ga, the energy source driving the geodynamo is unknown. Contemporaneously, the bottom of the mantle may have been fully molten, forming a basal magma ocean. We propose that the boundary between this silicate magma and the immiscible, liquid core was susceptible to tides driven by the Moon’s gravity. We present theoretical predictions for the laminar component of this tidal flow. Our results indicate that a tidal resonance provided enough energy to sustain dynamo action for ~3.5 Gyr by turbulent magnetic induction. Lunar tides may thus have played a key role in generating Earth's ancient magnetic field, which shielded early life from solar radiation.

How to cite: Katz, R. F., Kiernan, M. B. C., Hay, H. C. F. C., Rees Jones, D. W., and Bryson, J. F. J.: Ancient geodynamo driven by lunar tides beneath a basal magma ocean, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2575, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2575, 2026.

Slab pull has come to be widely regarded as a dominant driver of plate motions. The nature of slab–plate coupling is typically conceptualised in terms of the Orowan–Elsasser stress-guide model, in which the capacity of the slab to support a differential stress results in a tension-like force transmitted through the subduction hinge, providing an edge force on the trailing plate. Meanwhile, advances in geodynamic modelling now allow subduction to be simulated using increasingly Earth-like constitutive behaviour and, critically, permit the internal force balance to be examined explicitly. While the forces driving tectonic plates on Earth remain debated, the force balance within any given numerical model should be unambiguous.  I discuss results from a vertically integrated horizontal force balance applied to a suite of numerical subduction models. I focus on a particularly useful decomposition that highlights the role of topographic (or gravitational potential energy–related) forces, including ridge push, plate tilting driven by asthenospheric pressure gradients, and—critically—the influence of non-isostatic trench topography. Each of these topographic forces can be expressed in terms of differences in the integrated vertical normal stress - a proxy for the topographic-related pressure gradients in the boundary layer. The trench topographic force,   or trench pull force, is of special interest because it mediates the coupling between predominantly vertical loading imparted by the slab and a horizontal force (pressure gradient) acting on the trailing plate.  Numerical models suggest that a tension-like formulation of net slab pull plays at most a secondary role. Instead, it is primarily through the trench topographic force (trench pull) that the slab induces a net horizontal force on the trailing plate. Numerical models provide a direct means to isolate, compare, and quantify the trench topographic force relative to a tension-like edge force, and to establish quantitative bounds that can guide future analytical investigation of trench topographic forces. 

How to cite: Sandiford, D.: Re-examining Slab Pull: Trench Topography and Trailing Plate Force Balance in Numerical Subduction Models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2649, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2649, 2026.

EGU26-2743 | Orals | GD1.1

Physics of the flattening of ocean floor depth and heat flow records 

Olga Aryasova and Yakov Khazan

Oceanic lithospheric plates form from hot mantle material ascending along the axis of mid-ocean ridges (MORs). As newly formed lithosphere moves away from the ridge, it cools from the surface, leading to progressive deepening of the ocean floor due to thermal contraction and to a decrease in surface heat flow. Turcotte and Oxburgh (1967) proposed a model in which the lithosphere is treated as a cooling half-space with a uniform initial temperature and purely conductive heat transport. Assuming constant thermophysical properties, this model predicts that heat flow and seafloor depth vary linearly with age¹² and age¹², respectively. Observations of ocean floor topography and heat flow follow these trends up to ages of approximately 50–60 Myr. For older lithosphere, however, the agreement breaks down: observed heat flow is higher and seafloor depth is shallower than predicted by the half-space model.

Several models have been proposed to account for this discrepancy, but all of them are purely kinematic in nature. For example, the widely used “plate model” assumes that temperature is fixed at a certain depth within the mantle. At young ages, the solution coincides with the half-space model, whereas at greater ages it asymptotically approaches the prescribed basal temperature. Although both the basal temperature and the depth of the thermal boundary can be adjusted to fit observations, no known physical mechanism can sustain the boundary condition assumed by this model.

In contrast, we demonstrate that a rheological instability developing within the cooled upper part of the lithospheric plate explains the observations both qualitatively and quantitatively. The key point is that such an instability inevitably arises in a plate cooled from above. Our quantitative analysis is based on experimentally determined non-Newtonian rock viscosity (Hirth and Kohlstedt, 2003) and on the formulation of the Rayleigh number for Arrhenius-type rheology (Solomatov, 1995; Korenaga, 2009). We show that the characteristic Rayleigh number of the instability increases as surface heat flow decreases. Owing to the strong temperature dependence of viscosity, only the lower part of the cooled lithosphere is potentially unstable. For a given heat flow, the thickness of this deformable layer is self-consistently determined by the condition of maximum Rayleigh number. Once the Rayleigh number reaches its critical value, an instability develops that supplies heat to the oceanic lithosphere, inhibits further cooling, and results in the observed flattening of heat flow and seafloor depth records with age.

How to cite: Aryasova, O. and Khazan, Y.: Physics of the flattening of ocean floor depth and heat flow records, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2743, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2743, 2026.

EGU26-3465 | Orals | GD1.1

Core-surface kinematic control of polarity reversals in advanced geodynamo simulations 

Julien Aubert, Maylis Landeau, Alexandre Fournier, and Thomas Gastine

The geomagnetic field has undergone hundreds of polarity reversals over Earth's history, at a variable pace. In numerical models of Earth's core dynamics, reversals occur with increasing frequency when the convective forcing is increased past a critical level. This transition has previously been related to the influence of inertia in the force balance. Because this force is subdominant in Earth's core, concerns have been raised regarding the geophysical applicability of this paradigm. Reproducing the reversal rate of the past million years also requires forcing conditions that do not guarantee that the rest of the geomagnetic variation spectrum is reproduced. These issues motivate the search for alternative reversal mechanisms. Using a suite of numerical models where buoyancy is provided at the bottom of the core by inner-core freezing, we show that the magnetic dipole amplitude is controlled by the relative strength of subsurface upwellings and horizontal circulation at the core surface. A relative weakening of upwellings brings the system from a stable to a reversing dipole state. This mechanism is purely kinematic because it operates irrespectively of the interior force balance. It is therefore expected to apply at the physical conditions of Earth's core. Subsurface upwellings may be impeded by stable stratification in the outermost core. We show that with weak stratification levels corresponding to a nearly adiabatic core surface heat flow, a single model reproduces the observed geomagnetic variations ranging from decades to millions of years. In contrast with the existing paradigm, reversals caused by this stable top core mechanism become more frequent when the level of stratification increases i.e. when the core heat flow decreases. This suggests that the link between mantle dynamics and magnetic reversal frequency needs to be reexamined.

How to cite: Aubert, J., Landeau, M., Fournier, A., and Gastine, T.: Core-surface kinematic control of polarity reversals in advanced geodynamo simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3465, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3465, 2026.

EGU26-3504 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Thermal Conductivity of Iron and Iron Alloys at Planetary Core Conditions 

Eric Edmund

The thermal conductivity of iron and iron alloys play a key role in determining how telluric planetary cores cool over time. The thermal conductivity of core-forming alloys is needed to establish the heat budget for core and mantle processes. This budget in turn controls the characteristics of core and mantle dynamics, as well as the geologic timescales over which they are active. However, there is little consensus on the effect of composition on the thermal conductivity of iron at conditions relevant to planetary interiors. Here I present the results of recent experimental investigations to understand how the thermal conductivity varies for iron and iron alloys varies at extreme pressures and temperatures, providing quantitative insight into the transport properties of core-forming alloys.

How to cite: Edmund, E.: Thermal Conductivity of Iron and Iron Alloys at Planetary Core Conditions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3504, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3504, 2026.

Sub-plate mantle flow traction (MFT) has been considered as a major driving force for plate motion; however, the force acting on the overlying plate is difficult to constrain. One of the reasons lies in the variable rheological flow laws of mantle rocks, e.g. linear versus power-law rheology, applied in previous studies. Here, systematic numerical models are conducted to evaluate MFT under variable rheological, geometrical and kinematic conditions. The results indicate that MFT with power-law rheology is much lower than that with linear rheology under the same mantle/plate velocity contrast. In addition, existence of a lithospheric root in the overlying plate could enhance MFT, where integrated normal force acting on the vertical walls of lithospheric root is much lower than the shear force in a large-scale domain. In a regime of several thousand kilometers, MFT with power-law rheology is comparable to the ridge push of about 3×1012N/m, whereas that with linear rheology is comparable to the slab pull of about 3×1013 N/m. The roles of MFT in driving plate motion are further analyzed for the Tethyan evolution. It indicates that MFT with power-law rheology could partially support the cyclic Wilson cycles experienced in the Tethyan system, whereas that with linear rheology could easily dominate any kinds of plate tectonic evolutions. The quantitative evaluation of MFT in this study clarifies the roles of rheological flow laws on MFT and could help to better understand the contrasting results in previous numerical studies.

How to cite: Cui, F., Li, Z.-H., and Fu, H.-Y.: Quantitative evaluation of mantle flow traction on overlying tectonic plate: Linear versus power-law mantle rheology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3641, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3641, 2026.

Subduction is considered the primary driver of plate tectonics, which is sometimes accompanied by back-arc spreading. Back-arc deformation on Earth exhibits substantial variability, ranging from compressional regimes in the Japan Sea to rapid spreading with rates up to 15 cm/yr in the Lau Basin. Even within a single subduction zone, back-arc basins can exhibit significant spatial and temporal variability in spreading rates along the trench. The mechanisms underlying this variability remain inadequately understood. To address this issue, we compiled global back-arc deformation rates and quantified slab area penetration into the deeper mantle. Additionally, we conducted a series of numerical simulations to elucidate the factors that govern back-arc deformation rate. Our global back-arc compilation and numerical models reveals a robust negative correlation between back-arc spreading rate and slab penetration into the deeper mantle, highlighting the initial stage of subduction as the peak phase of back-arc spreading. Furthermore, numerical simulations offer insights into the underlying dynamic mechanisms, demonstrating that slab-driven poloidal flow play a dominant role in governing back-arc deformation rates.

How to cite: Jian, H.: Evolution of slab-driven poloidal flow symmetry governs back-arc deformation rates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3957, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3957, 2026.

EGU26-4040 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Global Mapping of Small-Scale Heterogeneities at the Core-Mantle Boundary: Insights from Deep Learning Analysis of PKP Precursors 

Yurui Guan, Juan Li, Zhuowei Xiao, Wei Wang, and Tao Xu

Small-scale lateral heterogeneities at the lowermost mantle are fundamental to understanding mantle convection dynamics and core-mantle interactions. PKP precursors, generated by seismic scattering from fine-scale structures near the core-mantle boundary (CMB), provide a powerful yet underutilized probe for imaging deep Earth heterogeneities. However, the manual identification of these weak signals is inefficient, subjective, and inadequate for the vast volumes of modern seismic data.
We present a comprehensive analysis of global PKP precursor observations using a supervised deep learning framework combined with iterative human-guided optimization. Processing over 2 million vertical-component waveforms from earthquakes (Mw ≥ 6.0) recorded between 1990 and 2024, we automatically identified 227,770 high-quality PKP precursor signals—an order of magnitude increase compared to previous global compilations. This unprecedented dataset, termed DeepScatter-PKP, provides the densest and most spatially complete observational foundation for characterizing CMB scattering structures to date.
To systematically evaluate the stability and spatial distribution of scattering signals, we developed a dual-probability framework integrating precursor occurrence probability (Pocc) and scatterer location probability (Pscat). This approach enables simultaneous assessment of broad-area scattering stability and precise localization of strong scatterers. Our significantly enhanced sampling density and coverage connect previously isolated scattering patches into continuous anomaly belts, notably beneath the Pan-American region and the western Pacific margin.
Cross-validation with independent seismic phases confirms the robust embedding of multiple ultra-low velocity zones (ULVZs) within diverse velocity heterogeneity backgrounds, suggesting thermochemical origins involving remnants of multi-episode subducted slabs, partial melting, and interactions with large low-velocity provinces (LLVPs). Extension to undersampled regions reveals six previously unidentified high-potential strong scattering zones, including beneath the South Atlantic, high-latitude Eurasia, and circum-Antarctic domains.
Our results demonstrate that small-scale scatterers occur in both high-velocity and low-velocity domains, highlighting the diversity and independence of their origins beyond LLSVP boundaries. The DeepScatter-PKP dataset and dual-probability framework establish priority targets for future multi-phase joint inversions and high-resolution CMB imaging, offering new constraints on the thermochemical state and dynamic evolution of Earth's deep interior.

How to cite: Guan, Y., Li, J., Xiao, Z., Wang, W., and Xu, T.: Global Mapping of Small-Scale Heterogeneities at the Core-Mantle Boundary: Insights from Deep Learning Analysis of PKP Precursors, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4040, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4040, 2026.

EGU26-4065 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Signal separation of temporal gravity signals for low-amplitude signal detection 

Darsana Lekshmy Raj, Roland Pail, and Betty Heller-Kaikov

Lithospheric uplift, once attributed mainly to plate tectonic and isostatic processes, is now recognized to be strongly influenced by convective processes in the Earth's mantle. Advances in satellite observations and data analysis have strengthened geodetic constraints on geodynamic models, specifically through satellite gravimetry. However, the superposition of mass change signals driven by different Earth processes requires robust signal separation to quantify the contributions of individual processes in the data.

Signal separation is a fundamental challenge in geodetic datasets, which commonly represent the superposition of multiple physical signals. Previous studies have explored isolating solid-Earth signals due to glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) [1] applying a neural network–based signal separation method to simulated temporal gravity data. The neural network (NN) was trained to recognize and separate individual signal components by exploiting prior knowledge about their characteristic spatiotemporal behavior, derived from forward-modeled time-variable gravity data and additional constraints.

The employed NN architecture is a multi-channel U-Net designed to separate superimposed temporal gravity signals arising from mass redistribution in the atmosphere and oceans, continental hydrosphere, cryosphere, and solid Earth. The network separates these combined inputs into their constituent sub-components. The framework is generally applicable to signal separation in any three-axis dataset (e.g., latitude, longitude, and time), using a sampling strategy in which the data are partitioned along one axis to determine the optimal two-axis combination for training [2].

This work presents progress towards extracting signals originating from deep-Earth processes, particularly mantle convection signals, from time-variable gravity data such as observed by the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) and GRACE-Follow on (GRACE-FO) satellite missions. In this context, NN-based signal separation has been demonstrated primarily for signals with comparably large amplitudes. In contrast, time-variable gravity signals caused by processes in the Earth's mantle are approximately three orders of magnitude weaker than signals related to surface processes, rendering their detection and separation particularly challenging. The current study therefore focuses on enhancing sensitivity to low-amplitude mantle signals by leveraging the ability of machine learning methodologies to learn subtle spatiotemporal patterns.

For application to real data from the GRACE/-FO missions or the upcoming Mass-Change and Geosciences International Constellation (MAGIC), we propose training the framework on representative forward-modeled signals and simulated noise and subsequently applying the trained separation model to observational time-variable gravity data.

 

References:

  • Heller-Kaikov B, Karimi H, Lekshmy Raj D, Pail R, Hugentobler U, Werner M. 2025 Signal separation in geodetic observations: satellite gravimetry. Proc. R. Soc. A 481: 20240820.
  • Heller-Kaikov B, Pail R, Werner M. 2025, Neural network-based framework for signal separation in spatio-temporal gravity data Computers & Geosciences, Volume 207, 2026, 106057, ISSN 0098-3004.

How to cite: Lekshmy Raj, D., Pail, R., and Heller-Kaikov, B.: Signal separation of temporal gravity signals for low-amplitude signal detection, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4065, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4065, 2026.

EGU26-4320 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Stable continental-scale drainage of North America reveals hydrated upper mantle anomaly due to long-lived oceanic subduction  

Xi Jin, Lijun Liu, Zebin Cao, Hao Dong, Rong Yang, Alison M Anders, and Chunyang Gao

Seismic tomography provides critical insights into Earth’s evolution, yet the origin of deep-mantle seismic velocity anomalies—particularly slow anomalies—remains debated. Here we constrain the nature of the slow anomalies within the mantle transition zone (MTZ) beneath eastern North America by quantifying their dynamic impact on continental-scale drainage evolution and offshore sedimentation since the Miocene using coupled mantle–surface process modeling. We show that reproducing the observed stability of the Mississippi River basin, the long-term subsidence of the eastern North American margin, and the sedimentary record of the Gulf of Mexico requires a dynamic-topography scenario consistent with neutral net buoyancy of these slow anomalies. Independent geophysical observations further support this interpretation: the MTZ slow anomalies spatially correlate with the remnant Farallon slab within the lower mantle, and coincide with regions of elevated electrical conductivity. This implies that the slow seismic anomalies beneath eastern North America are best explained by hydratedcompositional heterogeneity associated with long-lived Farallon subduction, rather than by a purely thermal origin. Our results further support regional buoyancy compensation, in which dense melts above the MTZ are offset by buoyant hydrous and/or thermal contributions, yielding neutral buoyancy at long wavelengths despite strong seismic velocity reduction. Finally, the predicted trajectories of subducted slabs and mantle flow from data assimilation models indicate that the MTZ slow anomalies mostly likely represent dehydration of the Mesozoic Farallon slab within the lower mantle, providing a long-lived source ofmantle volatile circulation.

How to cite: Jin, X., Liu, L., Cao, Z., Dong, H., Yang, R., Anders, A. M., and Gao, C.: Stable continental-scale drainage of North America reveals hydrated upper mantle anomaly due to long-lived oceanic subduction , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4320, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4320, 2026.

I present the results of a series of numerical experiments, based on a visco-elasto-plastic rheological model of the lithosphere, aimed at studying the interplay between mantle convection and tectonic processes at continental margins. In these experiments, the reference thermal states of the oceanic and continental lithospheres are described by a plate cooling model and by the solutions of the steady heat equation, respectively, while a small non-adiabatic temperature gradient is assumed for the asthenosphere and transition zone. The resulting thermo-mechanical model incorporates both vertical (Rayleigh-Benard) and horizontal (small-scale) convection and allows to predict the state of stress across continental margins, as well as some tectonic processes that are observed in these regions. Small-scale convection arises from lateral temperature gradients. It always develops along passive margins, where the thermal regime of the oceanic lithosphere meets the downward-dipping isotherms of the continental lithosphere. This form of horizontal convection has the potential to deform the lower part of the continental lithosphere, generate Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities, and produce up to ~50 MPa of compressional stress across continental margins. The formation of Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities is accompanied by lithospheric thinning, which in turn induces negative thermal anomalies that contribute to the maintenance of isostatic equilibrium by increasing the density of the residual lithosphere. These anomalies propagate towards the interior of the continental lithosphere, until the increased rheological strength associated with lower temperatures is sufficient to prevent further delamination. Therefore, the lower continental lithosphere is always colder than predicted by steady-state solutions of the heat equation. Basal landward traction along passive margins, resulting from small-scale convection, is further enhanced when the oceanic lithosphere adjacent to the continental margin is bounded by a spreading ridge. In this instance, numerical experiments consistently show the existence of an active spreading component, up to 5 mm/yr, which generates additional traction below the continental margins and contributes to a compressive stress regime in these regions. Consequently, a net horizontal landward push develops along the continental margins of a tectonic plate, which combines with other driving forces to determine the plate kinematics. Finally, numerical experiments show that non-adiabatic vertical temperature gradients drive the formation of Rayleigh-Benard convective cells with a wavelength of 600-700 km and a height 500-600 km.

How to cite: Schettino, A.: Sea-floor spreading, small-scale convection, and passive margins: Interplay and effect on the driving forces of Plate Tectonics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4362, 2026.

EGU26-4939 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Mapping geological hiatus using a manual and a digital approach: A case study from China 

Berta Vilacís, Sara Carena, Jorge N. Hayek, Gabriel Robl, Hans-Peter Bunge, and Jincheng Ma

Dynamic topography is a crucial geodynamic observable that emerges as a consequence of flow in the mantle. Buoyancies associated with mantle convection induce vertical deflections at the Earth's surface. Negative surface deflections create depositional environments and allow sedimentation to occur, while positive surface deflections create erosional/non-depositional environments, that induce gaps (hiatuses) in the geological record. The temporal and spatial extent of these gaps can be mapped using geological maps and regional studies, thus providing a means of tracking mantle processes through geological time.
Here, we compare a manual and digital extraction of hiatus distributions in China. We utilise a manually compiled dataset of un/conformable contacts and compare it to a digital contact extraction using the recently published digital geological map of China. The digital approach is limited to surface data, whereas the manual approach allows the utilisation of subsurface information. We find that the digital approach is substantially faster than the manual extraction. Our results indicate that the optimal methodology combines digital processing with refinement of manual subsurface information. Furthermore, we observe that mapping the absence and presence of a geological series shows very similar results when processed using either approach. The current limitation to a wider application of this approach is the limited availability of digital geological maps. A standardised digital database of geological maps enhanced with subsurface information (i.e., covered geological maps) is necessary to promote the use of geological data within the wider Earth science community, and would increase the opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration.

How to cite: Vilacís, B., Carena, S., Hayek, J. N., Robl, G., Bunge, H.-P., and Ma, J.: Mapping geological hiatus using a manual and a digital approach: A case study from China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4939, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4939, 2026.

EGU26-5753 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

First results for experiments on inner core attenuation 

Léo Carin, Sanjay Manda, Efim Kolesnikov, Julien Chantel, Nadège Hilairet, and Sébastien Merkel

The Earth’s inner core is made of a solid iron alloy. Seismic observations suggest a structure and an anisotropy which leads to variations in both the velocity and the attenuation of the seismic waves. Attenuation is the loss of energy during the propagation of the seismic waves. Whether this attenuation arises from intrinsic properties of the iron alloys or extrinsic origins remains an open question. In this context, studying attenuation in metallic alloys could help improving our knowledge about the physical properties and the geodynamic of the inner core.

Extrinsic attenuation is linked to external environment that impact the wave propagation, such as scattering or heterogeneities. Intrinsic sources are related to the properties of the material itself such as its viscoelastic behavior. This work focuses on the latter and particularly on the anelastic relaxation, which is one of the sources of internal friction.

In this work, we seek to understand attenuation mechanisms in metals at high temperature. The experiments are conducted on a dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) instrument with control of temperature and oxygen fugacity albeit at ambient pressure. We use a Mg alloy as analogous material to that of the inner core, which presents similar crystallographic structure and is expected to behave the same way.

Here, we will present some results and hypotheses derived from temperature, frequency, and strain sweeps realized with DMA. These analyses allow us to investigate viscoelastic values like internal friction, storage and loss modulus at different conditions. Results show a temperature-dependent behavior that can be related to the underlying mechanisms. Scanning electron microscopy analyses (electron back scattered diffraction) were performed to further assess the attenuation mechanisms involved in our experiments. Grain size, texture or grain boundaries were analyzed to understand our analogous material. These experiments are led in conditions which could allow us to discuss attenuation in the inner core.

How to cite: Carin, L., Manda, S., Kolesnikov, E., Chantel, J., Hilairet, N., and Merkel, S.: First results for experiments on inner core attenuation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5753, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5753, 2026.

EGU26-5754 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Understanding Relaxation Mechanisms in Metals: Application to Earth’s Inner Core  

Sanjay Manda, Léo Carin, Efim Kolesnikov, Julien Chantel, Nadege Hilairet, and Sébastien Merkel

The majority of metallic materials exhibit viscoelastic or anelastic behavior when subjected to elastic cyclic loading under specific temperature and frequency conditions. This anelastic nature is commonly characterized by the dissipation or loss of mechanical energy, manifested as a hysteresis loop between stress-strain signals. The energy loss is quantified by the loss tangent (tanδ) or the inverse of quality factor (Q-1). The origin of this dissipation is associated with internal variables, particularly the microstructure, and this phenomenon is referred to as internal friction. The microstructures are inherently complex, and their overall response is governed by multiple factors such as solute type and content, crystallographic texture, dislocation density, residual stresses, and grain boundary characteristics. Consequently, any modification in microstructure directly influences the internal friction behavior. Additionally, the operating temperature and imposed frequency strongly affect the magnitude of  tanδ. This work provides a comprehensive summary of the role of microstructural parameters on the viscoelastic behavior of various metals over a wide range of length and time scales and over an extensive temperature range.

Subsequently, the understanding of internal friction in metallic materials is extended to the earth’s inner core. It is well established that inner core exists under extreme conditions, with very high temperatures (~5700 K) and extremely high pressures (~330 GPa). Under such conditions, reliable estimates of seismic wave dissipation or attenuation are not readily available. At same time, the underlying mechanisms governing seismic wave propagation remain unclear. This study provides a summary and proposes plausible attenuation mechanisms in the earth’s inner core over a range of testing conditions. These are supported by dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) experiments and atomistic simulations. 

 

How to cite: Manda, S., Carin, L., Kolesnikov, E., Chantel, J., Hilairet, N., and Merkel, S.: Understanding Relaxation Mechanisms in Metals: Application to Earth’s Inner Core , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5754, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5754, 2026.

EGU26-5779 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Implications of post-perovskite on the density of lowermost mantle structures based on geoid and core-mantle boundary topography observations 

Justin Leung, Andrew M. Walker, Paula Koelemeijer, and D. Rhodri Davies

The origin of the two large low-velocity provinces (LLVPs) remains debated today. The debate has often focused on their density, which can provide us insight into their origin. For example, if LLVPs were long-lived features, they would require a higher intrinsic density (the difference in density to the background mantle under the same temperature and pressure) than their surroundings to negate their positive thermal buoyancy and to remain physically stable at the base of the mantle for billions of years. Better constraints on the origin of LLVPs would provide further insight into dynamic processes at the lower boundary of the mantle. This has implications for how the deep mantle impacts Earth’s surface.

Long-wavelength observations of the geoid and core-mantle boundary (CMB) topography are particularly sensitive to the lowermost mantle. These observables have therefore been used to infer the density of LLVPs, often attributing a higher intrinsic density, if any, to chemical heterogeneity. Yet, many of these studies have not jointly considered the effects of chemical composition with the transition from bridgmanite to post-perovskite on lowermost mantle density. This phase transition is associated with a 1-2% increase in density, but occurs primarily in cold regions, thus impacting the amplitude and spatial patterns of the geoid and CMB topography. Therefore, the presence of post-perovskite can affect inferences of LLVP chemical composition and density from geodetic observables. It is therefore important to take the presence of post-perovskite into account when inferring LLVP density and chemical composition from geoid and CMB topography observations.      

Here, we investigate the geodetic signatures expected from a range of scenarios related to the distribution of post-perovskite within different models of lowermost mantle temperature and composition. We calculate synthetic density fields from existing temperature and compositional fields as predicted by geodynamic simulations and a recent thermodynamic database. These density fields are then convolved with kernels derived from models of instantaneous mantle flow to obtain synthetic geodetic observables. We show that the effect of a higher post-perovskite density alone produces a comparable effect to chemical heterogeneity on the geoid and CMB topography. This implies that the effects of post-perovskite need to be taken into account when modelling dynamic processes and inferring physical properties in the deep mantle.

How to cite: Leung, J., Walker, A. M., Koelemeijer, P., and Davies, D. R.: Implications of post-perovskite on the density of lowermost mantle structures based on geoid and core-mantle boundary topography observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5779, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5779, 2026.

EGU26-6077 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Resolving the Iron Phase Stability Debate in Earth's Inner Core: A Consistent Thermodynamic Benchmark 

Hua Yang, Lei Wan, Yunguo Li, Lidunka Vočadlo, and John Brodholt

Understanding the stable phase of iron under Earth's inner core conditions is fundamental to interpreting its composition, evolution, and dynamics. Despite its importance, the stability of candidate phases (e.g., bcc, fcc, hcp) remains contentious due to the extreme pressure-temperature conditions and the meagre free energy differences (~10 meV/atom) between them. This has resulted in conflicting predictions from ab initio, force field, and machine learning approaches. To resolve this discrepancy, we introduce a Bain-path thermodynamic integration (BP-TI) method that directly computes free energy differences from the work performed by internal stress along a transformation path. This approach eliminates the need for an external reference system and avoids the uncertainties associated with conventional entropy calculations. Applying this rigorous benchmark with strict convergence criteria, we find that hcp Fe is the thermodynamically stable phase with the highest melting temperature under inner core conditions. In contrast, bcc Fe is consistently shown to be metastable across all tested interatomic potentials and computational methods. This metastability is intrinsic, persisting independent of simulation cell size and thus is not a finite-size artifact. Our findings reconcile previous disparities and provide a robust thermodynamic foundation for future studies of inner-core properties and dynamics.

How to cite: Yang, H., Wan, L., Li, Y., Vočadlo, L., and Brodholt, J.: Resolving the Iron Phase Stability Debate in Earth's Inner Core: A Consistent Thermodynamic Benchmark, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6077, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6077, 2026.

EGU26-6533 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

High‑Spin Antiferromagnetic B1‑Phase FeO: Implications for the Martian Inner core 

Zhongxu Pan, Wenzhong Wang, and Zhongqing Wu

Seismic data from the InSight mission reveal that Mars possesses a structure comprising a crust, mantle, and core, with recent studies indicating the existence of a solid inner core. While the composition of the inner core of Mars remains unclear, but some scholars argue that it might be FeO and/or Fe3C. Here, the thermoelastic properties of high‑spin antiferromagnetic B1‑phase FeO was derived from first‑principles calculations, and the composition of the core was inverted by combining with the previous experimental data. Additionally, the possible light element components in the Martian outer core have also been restricted. These results provide a new starting point for the composition of the Martian core and might have implications for understanding the chemical composition and magnetic evolution of the Mars.

How to cite: Pan, Z., Wang, W., and Wu, Z.: High‑Spin Antiferromagnetic B1‑Phase FeO: Implications for the Martian Inner core, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6533, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6533, 2026.

EGU26-6558 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Constraining iron content in the lower mantle through electrical conductivity of bridgmanite 

Kui Han, Sinan Özaydın, Hongzhan Fei, Lianjie Man, Fei Wang, Artem Chanyshev, Anthony Withers, Alexander Grayver, and Tomoo Katsura

Iron content in the lower mantle significantly influences mineral density and mantle convection dynamics. Electrical conductivity, an important physical property of minerals and rocks, is highly sensitive to iron content. Ground-based and satellite geomagnetic observations reveal radial and lateral variations in electrical conductivity in the lower mantle, where some conductive anomalies are up to one order of magnitude higher than the ambient mantle. However, the poorly understood quantitative correlation between iron content and electrical conductivity hinders our ability to decipher the composition of the lower mantle. We systematically measured the electrical conductivity of Al-bearing bridgmanite, the most abundant mineral in the lower mantle, as a function of iron content (XFe= 0.1–0.37) at 27 GPa and temperatures up to 2000 K, corresponding to conditions in the uppermost lower mantle. Our results demonstrate that bridgmanite conductivity increases substantially with iron content while exhibiting minimal temperature dependence. This remarkable sensitivity of bridgmanite conductivity to iron content enables us to constrain the iron content of the lower mantle through geomagnetic observations.

How to cite: Han, K., Özaydın, S., Fei, H., Man, L., Wang, F., Chanyshev, A., Withers, A., Grayver, A., and Katsura, T.: Constraining iron content in the lower mantle through electrical conductivity of bridgmanite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6558, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6558, 2026.

High-frequency seismic scattered waves provide unique sensitivity to small-scale heterogeneity in the lowermost mantle and at the core mantle boundary (CMB), but their interpretation is challenged by wavefront healing and the huge cost of full-waveform simulations at frequencies above about 1 Hz. We evaluate the precision of radiative transfer equation (RTE) modelling compared with wave equation (WE) modelling to establish a basis for future coupled RTE-WE approaches to high-frequency seismic scattering at the CMB.

We have used the RTE based on the Monte Carlo method to efficiently simulate the global transport of seismic energy with a 1D spherical symmetrical model and reproduced scattered waves, such as PKP precursors and Pdiff coda. Now, WE simulations are employed in localised CMB domains to resolve deterministic wave structure interactions, including scattering, interference, and diffraction. Forward models are constructed from the CMB and D” layer, including layered structures, CMB topography, ultra-low velocity zones, and distributed volumetric heterogeneity. We analyse full waveform simulations in terms of their associated energy distributions and envelopes, and explore how these waveform-derived quantities can be related to seismic intensities modelled by RTE under different structural cases. This framework provides a way toward coupling RTE simulations with WE modelling in further studies, enabling detailed investigation of CMB structure using localised wave equation modelling while substantially reducing the computational cost of global high-frequency simulations.

How to cite: Zhang, T. and Sens-Schönfelder, C.: High-Frequency Seismic Scattering at the Core Mantle Boundary: Insights from Radiative Transfer Equation and Wave Equation Modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7762, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7762, 2026.

The emergence of plate-like surface motion in self-consistent mantle convection models is a key behaviour requiring detection in numerical experiment results featuring terrestrial characteristics. However, the identification and verification of candidate plates is a challenging task, in practice. On Earth, narrow divergent, convergent, and strike-slip plate boundaries as well as regions exhibiting widespread diffuse deformation, comprise roughly 10 to 20% of the lithosphere that does not adhere to rigid body motion. Accordingly, the detection of candidate plates must be performed in light of the existence of diffuse deformation occurring regularly as a tectonic characteristic. To address this challenge, we have recently developed a new plate detection tool, `platerecipy`, that utilizes the Random Walker (RW) segmentation algorithm to identify candidate plates in both mantle convection model output as well as global geophysical data sets and terrestrial measurements. We describe how the discrete probability solution arising from RW can be used to both assess confidence in the association of each location with a distinct rigid plate, and to identify diffuse surface regions. Furthermore, we show how utilizing the RW probabilities can significantly improve Euler vector inversion for fitting the plate motion as a probability field allows for a systematic means of incorporating uncertainties inherent to the plate detection process. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our method by applying it to the surface of a mantle convection model and a terrestrial strain-rate dataset. We show how our findings can be used for an Euler vector inversion that allows plate rigidity analysis.

How to cite: Javaheri, P. and Lowman, J.: Implementing Platerecipy: an open access tool utilizing a graph theory method for detecting tectonic plate boundaries in geophysical data sets and numerical model output, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8360, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8360, 2026.

EGU26-8727 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Geodynamic Validation and Scalability of TerraNeo: Matrix-Free Mantle Convection Framework 

Ponsuganth Ilangovan, Gabriel Robl, Fatemeh Rezaei, Berta Vilacis, Andreas Burkhart, Nils Kohl, Marcus Mohr, and Hans-Peter Bunge

Mantle convection models are of utmost importance in understanding the physics governing major geological processes of our planet such as earthquakes, mountain building, etc. The TerraNeo framework is focussed on creating extreme-scale high-resolution geodynamic models which it achieves
with the massively parallel matrix-free finite element package HyTeG. To handle the Stokes system which arises from the conservation of mass and
momentum equations, a multigrid preconditioned Krylov subspace solver is used, whereas to handle the advection term in the conservation of energy
equation, an operator splitting approach based on the modified method of characteristics (particles) is used.

We first present standard numerical benchmark experiments for geodynamic validation of the framework against other community codes. In addition, we verify order of convergence of error in velocity and pressure against highly accurate solutions for the Stokes system computed with the propagator matrix method for radially varying viscosity and density cases. Next, a mantle circulation model with spatially varying physical parameters (viscosity and density) and assimilated plate velocities is simulated from a past physical state to present day and assessed for geodynamic correctness. Finally, we present scalability studies performed on the supercomputer SuperMUC-NG Phase 1 at LRZ (91st in TOP500, Nov’ 25). In these experiments, we were able to scale the framework to a global model resolution of ≃ 7.5 km on > 300, 000 MPI processes. These results combined with the numerical benchmarking of the framework clearly show that TerraNeo is well suited for creating large-scale geodynamic models.

How to cite: Ilangovan, P., Robl, G., Rezaei, F., Vilacis, B., Burkhart, A., Kohl, N., Mohr, M., and Bunge, H.-P.: Geodynamic Validation and Scalability of TerraNeo: Matrix-Free Mantle Convection Framework, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8727, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8727, 2026.

Cratons such as the Guiana Shield are often considered as stable regions, undergoing long-term emergence and denudation due to buoyancy. However, by integrating geological and geomorphological observations with apatite fission-track analysis, we define a history involving repeated episodes of burial and exhumation over the last 500 Myr.

Over much of the shield, the thermal history is dominated by the effects of earliest Jurassic magmatism, followed by Early Cretaceous exhumation coincident with the onset of seafloor spreading in the southern South Atlantic when South America was driven westward by mantle flow from the hot, upwelling upper mantle in the southeast toward the downwelling, pre-Andean subduction zone in the west.

Further episodes of regional exhumation occurred in Aptian-Albian time coincident with a global-scale plate reorganization and in Eocene times coincident with a slowdown in the movement of the South American plate. Results from the Amazon Basin also define these four episodes.

Thermal data from a deep well in the Amazon Basin show that the Early Cretaceous and Eocene exhumation episodes were preceded by burial by kilometre-scale thicknesses of cover, subsequently removed. Continuity of data from basin to shield suggests that burial extended across the shield. Early Cretaceous exhumation led to formation of a base-Cretaceous peneplain across the entire continent, from the Andes (during post-orogenic collapse) to the Amazon Basin and the Guiana Shield. This peneplain was then buried beneath Cretaceous–Paleogene sediments prior to the onset of Eocene exhumation, which also extended into in the offshore. The Eocene episode also correlates with post-orogenic collapse of the Andes.

Miocene exhumation correlates with a regional, late Miocene unconformity, onshore and offshore, coincident with a slowdown in the movement of the South American plate. This episode resulted in the formation of a vast coastal planation surface, along the Guyanas Atlantic margin and in the incision of the present-day valley along the Amazon River, leading to the reversal of the Amazon River.

The history of repeated burial and exhumation defined for the Guiana Shield appears to be a common property of supposedly stable cratons. The correlation between Andean tectonics, episodes of exhumation and changes in the motion of the South American plate, shows that sub-lithospheric forces and intra-plate stress governed the vertical movements across the continent.

 

References

Baby et al., 2025. The Northern Central Andes and Andean tectonic evolution revisited: an integrated stratigraphic and structural model of three superimposed orogens. Earth Sci. Rev. https://doi.org/10.1016/j. earscirev.2024.104998

Japsen et al., 2025. Ups and downs of the Guiana Shield and Amazon Basin over the last 500 Myr. Gondw. Res. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2025.06.020

Stotz et al., 2023. Plume driven plate motion changes: New insights from the South Atlantic realm. J. S. Am. Earth Sci. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2023.104257

Szatmari & Milani, 2016. Tectonic control of the oil-rich large igneous-carbonate- salt province of the South Atlantic rift. Mar. Pet. Geol. https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2016.06.004

How to cite: Japsen, P., Green, P. F., and Bonow, J. M.: Ups and downs of the Guiana Shield and Amazon Basin driven by sub-lithospheric forces and intra-plate stress, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8912, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8912, 2026.

EGU26-9286 | Orals | GD1.1

Upper Mantle Controls on the Phanerozoic Evolution of Western and Central Europe  

Judith Bott, Magdalena Scheck-Wenderoth, Tilman May, and Mauro Cacace

Shear-wave tomography models of the upper mantle below Western and Central Europe are indicative of a thermally very heterogeneous lithosphere-asthenosphere system. High shear-wave velocities indicate a deep 1300 °C isotherm and thus a thick (ca. 200 km) lithosphere in the southwestern North Sea and the Paris Basin. This contrasts with a shallower (< 120 km) lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary across the European Cenozoic Rift System and much of the British Isles. These major, long-wavelength thickness fluctuations of the thermal boundary layer are locally superposed by a number of smaller-scale thermal anomalies reaching into the lithospheric mantle (such as the Eifel mantle thermal anomaly). Previous work indicates that the distribution of earthquakes in this region is related to density and strength variations inside the mantle lithosphere that affect the localization of present-day crustal deformation. With this contribution, we explore and discuss the potential ages of the imaged upper mantle thermal anomalies in an attempt to delineate their roles in the geological past. Thereby we make use of the multiphase tectonic evolution recorded in the overlying sedimentary systems and crystalline crust. To evaluate if and where the upper mantle structure may have controlled Paleozoic to Cenozoic crustal deformation phases, we investigate spatial correlations between upper mantle temperature variations as derived from shear-wave tomography models with major crustal structures of known geological age and tectonic setting. Our new findings provide important observational constraints for geodynamic models of Western and Central Europe – a region affected by glacial isostatic adjustment, foreland orogenic processes as well as extensional and passive margin tectonics.

How to cite: Bott, J., Scheck-Wenderoth, M., May, T., and Cacace, M.: Upper Mantle Controls on the Phanerozoic Evolution of Western and Central Europe , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9286, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9286, 2026.

The Hawaiian–Emperor Seamount Chain (HESC) is the longest volcanic island chain in the world, which is formed by the thermal erosion of the Pacific Plate by a hot mantle plume. The HESC has two major characteristics. First, it features an approximately 60° bend formed around 47 million years ago (Ma), giving rise to its distinctive geometry. Second, over the past ~2 million years (Myr), the HESC has developed into two sub-parallel Loa-Kea trends that exhibit markedly different incompatible element and isotopic signatures, resulting in its distinctive geochemical characteristics. The causes of the two features remain vigorously debated. Here, we use global-scale geodynamic models to investigate their formation mechanisms. We find that intra-oceanic subduction systems existed in the North Pacific from the Jurassic to the Eocene, exerting significant influences on Pacific Plate motion and the thermo-chemical evolution of the Hawaiian plume from its generation at the Large Low–Velocity Provinces (LLVPs), to its drift beneath the plate, and finally its structural evolution throughout the mantle.
We quantitatively resolve the relative contributions of Pacific Plate rotation and Hawaiian hotspot drift to the formation of the Hawaiian-Emperor Bend (HEB). We propose that the demise of the Kronotsky intra-oceanic subduction system was the primary driver of a major rotational reorganization of the Pacific Plate at ~47 Ma, which our numerical simulations quantify as a ~30° rotation. Using global mantle convection models, we successfully reproduce the slab structures, the basal thermochemical anomalies including the LLVPs and an intermediate-scale anomaly (the Kamchatka anomaly) beneath the northwestern Pacific, and more importantly the present-day location of the Hawaiian hotspot. Our model predicts a predominantly southwestward migration of hotspot over the past ~80 Myr. This hotspot trajectory is consistent with plate kinematic constraints, but differs substantially from those of earlier geodynamic models that predict a predominantly southward or southeastward hotspot motion. We find the westward component of the hotspot motion is crucial for the formation of HEB. Further analysis suggests that an Late Jurassic-Cretaceous intra-oceanic subduction system in the northeast Pacific provided the forcing necessary to drive this westward hotspot migration. Combined with modeled Pacific Plate motion, we have fully reproduced the observed ~60° HEB. Furthermore, subduction activity in the North Pacific influenced the structural evolution of the Hawaiian plume, triggering a bottom-up splitting of the plume conduit. This splitting generated internal material zoning, which is expressed at the surface as parallel Loa–Kea geochemical trends. These findings not only explain the geometry and geochemistry of the HESC, but also provide insights on the tectonic evolution of the North Pacific.

How to cite: Zhang, J. and Hu, J.: Geometry and Geochemistry of the Hawaiian–Emperor Seamount Chain reproduced by global plate-mantle coupling geodynamic models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9615, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9615, 2026.

EGU26-9724 | Orals | GD1.1

Plume-driven rapid paleo stress field changes in western Europe since Mid-Cretaceous inferred from analytic upper mantle flow models 

Hans-Peter Bunge, Jorge Nicolas Hayek, Ingo Leonardo Stotz, Beth Kahle, and Berta Vilacis

We derive global stress fields through time using an analytical asthenospheric flow estimation that involves plate motions, subduction geometry, and time-variable plume flux. Among these, the most effective way to drive rapid regional stress changes in the continents is by varying plume flux, especially when more than one plume is present, as is the case for Europe. We apply our paleostress model to the case study of western Europe, a region that experienced rapid, substantial, and large-scale lithospheric stress changes in the Late Mesozoic and Cenozoic. We find that the behaviour of pressure-driven asthenosphere flow, resulting from variations in plume flux, dominates the rapidly temporo-spatially varying stress signal. Given the potential causes of stress change in this particular region, we further interpret the tectonic changes in the context of dynamic topography as expressed by the stratigraphic record, shifts in plate motion, paleostress indicators, and past interpretations of the tectonic evolution of Europe. Through this approach we move away from the paradigm of stress changes being driven by plate-boundary or body forces in the lithosphere, and emphasize the active role of the mantle and the importance of interpreting models in relation to multiple process-linked observations.

How to cite: Bunge, H.-P., Hayek, J. N., Stotz, I. L., Kahle, B., and Vilacis, B.: Plume-driven rapid paleo stress field changes in western Europe since Mid-Cretaceous inferred from analytic upper mantle flow models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9724, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9724, 2026.

EGU26-9778 | Orals | GD1.1

Stratigraphic and fission track evidence for the rising Iceland Plume in the Maastrichtian  

James Chalmers, Peter Japsen, and Paul Green

Stratigraphic evidence shows the presence of an unconformity starting at 68 Ma (Maastrichtian) in the Canadian archipelago, on- and off-shore west and north Greenland, in Svalbard, on the Lomonosov Ridge, in East Greenland, on- and off-shore Norway and the Faroe Basin (Japsen et al., 2023). These observations are consistent with interpretation of apatite fission track data in the same areas. We suggest that this unconformity reflects doming above the rising head of the Iceland Plume in the upper mantle and prior to its impact at the base of the lithosphere at 62 Ma, 6 Myr later. These observations are consistent with the predictions of Campbell (2007) who showed evidence that pre-impact doming can become evident 3 to 10 Myr before plume impact, and that the diameter of the dome can be of the order of 1000 to 2000 km.

References.

Campbell, 2007. Testing the plume theory. Chem. Geol. 241, 153–1117. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2007.01.024

Japsen, Green, Chalmers, 2023. Synchronous exhumation episodes across Arctic Canada, North Greenland and Svalbard in relation to the Eurekan Orogeny. Gondwana Research, 117, 207-229. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2023.01.011

How to cite: Chalmers, J., Japsen, P., and Green, P.: Stratigraphic and fission track evidence for the rising Iceland Plume in the Maastrichtian , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9778, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9778, 2026.

EGU26-10169 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

3DSlabs – a global tomography-based upper mantle slab geometry model 

Yi-Wei Chen and Jyun-Ling Wang

Subducting slabs play a fundamental role in controlling mantle circulation, plate motions, and surface tectonics. Global slab geometry models such as Slab2 provide an essential community reference by integrating seismicity to describe the geometry of subduction zones worldwide. In many regions, however, slabs are inferred to extend beyond the depth range of seismicity, motivating the incorporation of complementary constraints from seismic tomography.

Here we introduce 3DSlabs, a new global three-dimensional upper mantle slab geometry model constructed from seismic tomography. Following the workflow of Wu et al. (2016), fast tomographic velocity anomalies are interpreted and mapped into continuous three-dimensional slab surfaces using GOCAD. Unlike automated iso-surfacing, this approach allows complex variations in slab dip and curvature to be represented with high fidelity. Furthermore, by mapping seismic velocity directly onto the slab surfaces, 3DSlabs facilitates the identification and tracking of subducted buoyancy anomalies, such as aseismic ridges, plateaus, and hotspot tracks.

To maximize utility for the community, 3DSlabs is integrated with the Geodynamic World Builder (GWB), ensuring direct compatibility with geodynamic codes such as ASPECT. The resulting high-fidelity model is well suited for instantaneous mantle flow modeling and investigations of slab–mantle interaction. The inferred subducted features mapped onto these surfaces further provide new opportunities to investigate how along-slab heterogeneities influence subduction dynamics.

How to cite: Chen, Y.-W. and Wang, J.-L.: 3DSlabs – a global tomography-based upper mantle slab geometry model, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10169, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10169, 2026.

EGU26-10499 | Posters on site | GD1.1

Analysis of Seismic Cycle Deformation for the Ms7.1 Wushi Earthquake in Xinjiang Based on Geodetic Data 

zhang qingyun, xie quancai, and zhu shuang

On January 23, 2024, an Ms7.1 earthquake struck Wushi County, Aksu Prefecture, Xinjiang. While resulting in relatively limited casualties and economic losses, the event posed a certain threat to the geological safety of the Tianshan region. The Tianshan seismic belt has a history of intense seismic activity, with 17 recorded earthquakes of magnitude 7 or greater since 1716, including four exceeding magnitude 8. Notably, the Wushi earthquake is the largest event in this belt since the 1992 Ms7.3 Suusamyr earthquake in Kyrgyzstan. The 1992 Suusamyr earthquake was the first in the Tianshan region recorded by broadband digital seismographs, whereas the recent Wushi earthquake presents a valuable opportunity for a detailed case study using modern high-precision geodetic techniques. Occurring at the junction of the South Tianshan and the Wushi Basin, this event provides a crucial chance to investigate the deformation characteristics of strong earthquakes within the Tianshan seismic belt and to reveal the associated seismogenic structures and mechanisms. This research carries significant implications for understanding fault activity absorption mechanisms within the Tianshan Mountains and the characteristics of active deformation along the boundary between the Tianshan orogen and its foreland basin.

For the Wushi earthquake area, we acquired Sentinel-1 satellite data and GNSS data covering the region. Pre-seismic data collection included 200 frames from Sentinel-1 ascending track (T56) and 208 frames from descending track (T136). For co-seismic deformation analysis, data from tracks T56, T136, and T34 were utilized. Post-seismic data comprised 44 frames from track T56 and 36 frames from track T136. Time-series InSAR and D-InSAR methods were employed to derive regional deformation. The co-seismic results show significant line-of-sight surface deformation in both ascending and descending tracks, with a maximum displacement of approximately 75 cm. Fault slip distribution inversion indicates that the earthquake occurred on a northwest-dipping, left-lateral strike-slip fault with a variable strike and a thrust component. Co-seismic slip was primarily concentrated at depths between 4 and 25 km. Post-seismic deformation results suggest that short-term deformation was mainly induced by an Ms5.7 aftershock. Pre-seismic GNSS deformation results reveal differential crustal activity between the eastern and western sections of the Maidan Fault Zone within the study area, with higher activity observed in the eastern segment where the Wushi earthquake occurred.

Future work will involve analyzing pre-seismic InSAR deformation results to obtain long-term, large-scale seismic cycle deformation fields for the Tianshan earthquake region. The co-seismic slip motion consistency model will be applied to analyze the seismogenic structure and mechanism of the Wushi earthquake. Furthermore, numerical simulations will be employed to elucidate the coupling mechanisms of various post-seismic deformation effects, such as afterslip, viscoelastic relaxation, and pore rebound, following the Wushi earthquake. This integrated approach aims to establish a more systematic understanding of the earthquake's seismogenic mechanism and its post-seismic deformation processes.

 

How to cite: qingyun, Z., quancai, X., and shuang, Z.: Analysis of Seismic Cycle Deformation for the Ms7.1 Wushi Earthquake in Xinjiang Based on Geodetic Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10499, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10499, 2026.

Histories of vertical lithospheric motion preserved in sedimentary basins provide constraints on evolving mantle buoyancy and convection histories. We present a quantitative analysis of subsidence, exhumation and stratigraphic hiatuses to constrain mantle dynamics during the Cretaceous–Cenozoic, illustrated by case studies from northwestern Australia. Basin analysis across multiple basins from this region calculates the continental-scale vertical response to evolving geodynamic forces, from Jurassic–Cretaceous subsidence during sub-basin development associated with rifting and Gondwana breakup to the recent northeastward tilting of Australia driven by dynamic topography linked to slab subduction beneath the Indonesian margin.

In particular, our kinematic reconstructions of the Northern Carnarvon Basin quantify Jurassic–Cretaceous nearshore intraplate rift-extension rates (~8 mm/yr), with rift cessations at ~155 and ~120 Ma coinciding with major Gondwana breakup events. This temporal correspondence demonstrates strong coupling between far-field plate reorganisations and regional vertical and lateral motions and constrains lithospheric controls on strain localisation during Gondwana breakup events.

Integration of compaction and paleothermal data identifies two significant Mesozoic exhumation episodes that correlate spatially with mapped magmatic bodies, implying that thermal perturbations from sub-lithospheric sources drove regional uplift. Jurassic–Early Cretaceous NE–SW gradients in uplift and exhumation shoe dynamically evolving magmatic systems, associated with the Kerguelen and Exmouth plumes. In addition, we present uncertainty propagation analysis. This analysis indicates that robust coverage and high-quality data on the Northwest Shelf reduces uncertainty in subsidence and exhumation estimates, thereby increasing our confidence in the results and conclusions from this study.

How to cite: Clark, S., Makuluni, P., and Hauser, J.: Dynamic Reconstructions of Basins in Australia: Stratigraphic Constraints on Cretaceous to Cenozoic Mantle Convection, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10561, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10561, 2026.

EGU26-10775 | Posters on site | GD1.1

Constraining properties of mantle circulation models using disparate observations 

J. Huw Davies, James Panton, Abigail Plimmer, Paul Beguelin, Morton Andersen, Andy Nowacki, Stepehn Mason, Chris Davies, Bob Myhill, Tim Elliott, James Wookey, Gareth Roberts, Conor O'Malley, Ana Ferreira, William Sturgeon, Oli Shorttle, Walker Andrew, Paula Koelemeijer, Franck Latallerie, and Andy Biggin

Properties of the mantle are difficult to constrain and critical for controlling mantle evolution and dynamics. We attempt to constrain these properties by comparing the outputs from mantle circulation models (MCMs) to 9 disparate observations.  Over 250 MCMs driven at the surface by 1 Ga of plate motion history are considered. A metric is developed to quantify the fit/misfit between each observation and MCM prediction. The observations include, global seismic tomography, SOLA seismic inference of the Pacific upper mantle, global surface wave phase velocity data set, gradients of seismic velocity in the deep mantle, dynamic topography, geoid, geomagnetic reversals, temperature difference between MORB and OIB source regions, and the difference in amount of recycled oceanic crust in MORB versus OIB source regions. The comparisons are done with (i) heatmaps of each metric for each MCM, (ii) correlation between the metrics and input parameters, (iii) analyses of sub-sets where only a single MCM parameter is changed, (iv) random forest analysis where the importance and partial dependence plot of MCM parameters are produced for each metric. From this analysis we find that parameters can be constrained, including for example the temperature at the core mantle boundary, the preferred equation of state, the preferred plate motion history model, the presence of a basal layer, the buoyancy number of the recycled basalt, viscosity profile. For example the MCMs prefer a cooler core-mantle boundary, a mantle reference frame-based plate motion history, a Murnaghan EoS and a basalt buoyancy number in the lower mantle of around 0.4-0.5. Methods, analyses and further results will be presented.

How to cite: Davies, J. H., Panton, J., Plimmer, A., Beguelin, P., Andersen, M., Nowacki, A., Mason, S., Davies, C., Myhill, B., Elliott, T., Wookey, J., Roberts, G., O'Malley, C., Ferreira, A., Sturgeon, W., Shorttle, O., Andrew, W., Koelemeijer, P., Latallerie, F., and Biggin, A.: Constraining properties of mantle circulation models using disparate observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10775, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10775, 2026.

EGU26-11226 | Orals | GD1.1

Insights on mantle convection from global tomography 

Eric Debayle, Durand Stéphanie, Shuyang Sun, and Yanick Ricard

In this presentation, I will review some of our recent global tomography results, that provide constraints on the Earth mantle structure and mantle convection.

In the upper mantle, we have recently constructed global tomographic models of SV wave velocity, 𝑉𝑠𝑣, and radial anisotropy, 𝜉, using the same tomographic approach, with similar regularization and smoothing for the Rayleigh and Love wave data. We also use Rayleigh waves to constrain the azimuthal anisotropy, the quality factor 𝑄 and the melt content. We find that a 1-D model of radial anisotropy, close to PREM, but including a 3D crustal structure, explains the Love/Rayleigh differences almost everywhere, except in oldest parts of the continents and youngest parts of the Pacific ridge. No age dependence of the radial anisotropy 𝜉 in the oceanic upper mantle is required, while age is the main parameter controlling 𝑉𝑠𝑣, melt content and azimuthal anisotropy. In the asthenosphere, azimuthal anisotropy aligns on a large scale with present  plate motion only for fast plates (> ∼4 cmyr−1), suggesting that only fast-moving plates produce sufficient shearing at their base, to organize the flow on the scale of the entire tectonic plates. Part of the azimuthal anisotropy is also frozen in the shallow oceanic lithosphere. The presence of a small amount of partial melt, by reducing mantle viscosity, facilitates plate motion and large-scale crystal alignment in the asthenosphere.

We have also built global shear tomographic models of the whole mantle for the shear velocity (SEISGLOB2) and attenuation (QL3D). In the lower mantle, SEISGLOB2 has revealed a change in the shear velocity spectrum at around 1000 km depth. The spectrum is the flattest (i.e. richest in "short" wavelengths corresponding to spherical harmonic degrees greater than 10) around 1000 km depth and this flattening occurs between 670 and 1500 km depth. QL3D combines various S-phase measurements, including surface waves, direct (S, SS, SSS, SSSS), core-reflected (ScS, ScSScS, ScSScSScS), diffracted (S𝑑𝑖𝑓𝑓) and their depth phases (e.g., sS, sScS, sS𝑑𝑖𝑓𝑓), providing extensive depth and spatial coverage. A high attenuation zone highlights the peculiar nature of the mantle around 1000 km depth. This may indicate the presence of a global low-viscosity layer, in a region that roughly corresponds to the upper boundary of the Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs), and where various changes in the continuity of slabs and mantle plumes have been observed. Our 3D shear quality factor model also confirms that the LLSVPs are attenuating, at least for body waves with periods near  35 s. The correlation between strong attenuation and low shear velocities within these regions suggests that the shear quality factor mostly captures the thermal signature of the LLSVP.

How to cite: Debayle, E., Stéphanie, D., Sun, S., and Ricard, Y.: Insights on mantle convection from global tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11226, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11226, 2026.

EGU26-12125 | Orals | GD1.1

The Réunion Island mantle plume – isotopic constraints on core addition or ancient silicate component? 

Matthias Willbold, Nils Messling, Xiguang Huang, and Dirk Hoffmann

The geochemical composition of ocean island basalts (OIB) from Réunion Island has been controversially interpreted as recording either interaction between the mantle and Earth’s core [1] or the preservation of an ancient, Hadean silicate reservoir isolated since early Earth differentiation [2,3]. Resolving this debate bears directly on the nature of deep mantle heterogeneity, the longevity of early-formed reservoirs, and the efficiency of whole-mantle mixing through time. In particular, the extinct 182Hf-182W decay system provides a powerful tracer of both, core contribution due to the strong siderophile behaviour of W during core formation as well as early silicate differentiation processes because of the short half-life of 182Hf.

Here we present new high-precision radiogenic W isotope data (μ182W) for 39 basaltic lavas from Réunion Island, complemented by major and trace element compositions and long-lived radiogenic isotope ratios including 143Nd/144Nd, 87Sr/86Sr, and 206,207,208Pb/204Pb. Measured μ182W values range from 0 to –11, fully overlapping with the range reported in previous studies of Réunion and related plume products [1–3]. These results confirm that the Réunion mantle source is isotopically heterogeneous and requires the involvement of a geochemically distinct component not represented in depleted upper mantle reservoirs.

By integrating short-lived and long-lived isotope systematics with trace element constraints, we evaluate the origin of this component and its implications for deep Earth processes. In particular, we assess whether the observed μ182W anomalies are more consistent with contributions from an early-formed silicate reservoir that avoided complete mantle homogenization, or with addition of core-derived material to the mantle plume source. Our dataset is discussed in the context of isotopic findings that provide compelling evidence for ongoing or episodic core–mantle chemical exchange recorded in OIB sources [4].

The combined data of Réunion basalts indicate that core addition is the most likely process to explain the chemical and isotopic observations. Our findings allow qualitative constraints on the mass exchange between the Earth’s core and mantel and highlight the importance of integrating multiple isotope systems to disentangle the complex history of mantle plume sources and their role in recording the mass exchange from core to surface on Earth.

References:

[1] Rizo et al. (2019) Geochemical Perspectives Letters, 6–11.

[2] Peters et al. (2018) Nature, 555, 89–93.

[3] Pakulla et al. (2025) Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 653.

[4] Messling et al. (2025) Nature, 642, 376–380.

How to cite: Willbold, M., Messling, N., Huang, X., and Hoffmann, D.: The Réunion Island mantle plume – isotopic constraints on core addition or ancient silicate component?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12125, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12125, 2026.

EGU26-12227 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

On the role of tomographic resolution and uncertainty in reconstructing past mantle flow 

Roman Freissler, Bernhard S.A. Schuberth, Ingo L. Stotz, Christophe Zaroli, and Hans-Peter Bunge

Tomographic images play a crucial role in estimating the thermodynamic state of Earth's mantle, yet reliable quantification of their uncertainties is essential for drawing robust conclusions in geodynamics. In particular, reconstructions of past mantle flow that rely on tomographic inputs require a practical handling of the difference in spatial scales between predictions from fluid dynamics and the heterogeneities observable through seismology. This scale discrepancy can indeed already be addressed through so-called tomographic filtering as a post-processing step applied to standard forward models of mantle circulation. However, integrating such approaches technically into adjoint or inverse modeling frameworks—used in data-driven mantle flow reconstructions—remains to be thoroughly explored.

Here, we perform a fully synthetic experiment to highlight the difficulties in quantitatively linking tomographic images with geodynamic models. Specifically, we employ the Subtractive Optimally Localized Averages (SOLA) method—a linear Backus–Gilbert-type inversion technique—to image a reference mantle circulation model. The SOLA inversions are based on finite-frequency traveltime residuals derived from full-waveform numerical seismograms computed for the geodynamic reference model.

Drawing on the insights provided by this synthetic experiment, we propose a workflow for adjoint-based mantle flow reconstructions that aims to leverage the tools provided by the SOLA approach. For the tomographic component, this involves generating spatially optimized averaging kernels that characterize local resolution (i.e. the specific tomographic filter), along with rigorous uncertainty estimates for parameter averages obtained by the propagation of data errors (both being built-in features of SOLA). On the geodynamic side, one should first aim to incorporate measures of tomographic resolution directly into the misfit/cost function of the adjoint method. This step is critical because the adjoint model validation compares observed surface dynamic topography in time with its prediction from the reconstructed flow history, which is highly sensitive to the tomographic input.  Once resolution-related biases are factored in, small model ensembles should make it possible to practically account for stochastic uncertainties, eventually yielding more robust constraints on mantle flow history. We suggest that the success of a specific misfit function and the realization of model ensembles can be assessed with dedicated synthetic closed-loop experiments, prior to their actual application.

Overall, our results offer practical guidance towards a strategy that integrates the complete tomographic information, including resolution and uncertainty, into fully operational reconstructions of past mantle flow.

How to cite: Freissler, R., Schuberth, B. S. A., Stotz, I. L., Zaroli, C., and Bunge, H.-P.: On the role of tomographic resolution and uncertainty in reconstructing past mantle flow, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12227, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12227, 2026.

EGU26-12420 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Rapid mass redistributions in the deep mantle from satellite gravity and interactions with core flows 

Charlotte Gaugne Gouranton, Isabelle Panet, Mioara Mandea, Marianne Greff-Lefftz, and Séverine Rosat

Constraining the transport of mass in the Earth’s mantle over a broad range of timescales is a key step in order to understand the mantle convection and its dynamic interactions with tectonic plates and core flows. Mapped with high accuracy all over the globe from GRACE and GRACE Follow-On satellite missions, the temporal variations of the gravity field can provide unique information on potential rapid mass redistributions within the Earth’s deep interior, even if their separation with the signals from the Earth’s fluid enveloppe is challenging. In the present study, we focus on the base of the mantle and the boundary with the core (CMB). Applying dedicated methods of space-time patterns recognition in the gravity field, we identify a rapid, anomalous north-south oriented gravity signal at large spatial scales across the Eastern Atlantic ocean in January 2007, which evolves over months to years. We show that this signal likely originates, at least partly, from the solid Earth ; it appears concomittant, both spatially and temporally, with the 2007 geomagnetic jerk. We hypothesize that it may be induced by vertical displacements of the perovskite to post-perovskite phase transition, caused by moving thermal anomalies near the base of the African Large Low Shear Velocity Province. This may result in the creation of a decimetric dynamic CMB topography over a timespan of a few years. To assess a potential link with the 2007 geomagnetic jerk, we finally investigate the impact of these changes in core-mantle boundary topography on the flow and the geomagnetic field in a thin layer at the top of the core. These results stress the interest of satellite gravimetry for providing novel insights into the dynamical interactions between the mantle and the core.

How to cite: Gaugne Gouranton, C., Panet, I., Mandea, M., Greff-Lefftz, M., and Rosat, S.: Rapid mass redistributions in the deep mantle from satellite gravity and interactions with core flows, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12420, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12420, 2026.

EGU26-12612 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Core–mantle coupling: New insights into the magnetic and thermal evolution of Earth 

Louis Müller, Kristina Kislyakova, Lena Noack, Evelyn Macdonald, Gwenaëlle Van Looveren, and Anuja Raorane

The Earth has possessed a magnetic field for at least ~4.3 Ga, as indicated by paleomagnetic data. To constrain Earth’s thermal and magnetic evolution, parameterized core models have traditionally relied on a parameterized mantle assumed to be vigorously convecting due to plate tectonics. By neglecting spatial variations in mantle temperature and viscosity, these models typically predict an inner core nucleation (ICN) age of 0.5–0.8 Ga, which requires a thermally driven dynamo prior to that time. Recent experimental constraints indicating higher core thermal conductivities have therefore led to the “new core paradox,” in which sub-adiabatic conditions can result in gigayear-long interruptions of the modeled geodynamo.

Alternatively, studies that couple higher-dimensional mantle convection models with parameterized core evolution have found that hot initial core temperatures and an insulating primordial lid above the core–mantle boundary (CMB) are required to reproduce the present-day inner core size, with minimal influence from the surface tectonic regime. However, these studies did not predict magnetic field strengths and showed that the available magnetic dissipation overestimates Earth’s magnetic field in the early evolution and underestimates it at later times.

Here, we present a new two-dimensional mantle convection model coupled to a core evolution model that incorporates state-of-the-art mineral physics data and magnetic field strength scaling laws. Our results require a ~200 km thick primordial dense layer and the presence of the post-perovskite phase at the base of the mantle, forming a CMB thermal lid that inhibits strong early core-cooling. By varying surface plasticity and the maximum density contrast of the lower mantle relative to the ambient mantle, we identify best-fit models that reproduce both inner core growth and the secular variation of the magnetic field.

Assuming a bulk silicate Earth (BSE) composition, 12 wt.% light elements in the core, a core thermal conductivity of 125 W m⁻¹ K⁻¹, an initial CMB temperature of 4564 K, and a CMB lid that is 7% denser than peridotite, ICN occurs at ~1.3 Ga, while the thermal dynamo ceases after ~3 Ga. Future constraints on the presence and evolution of a thermally stable layer in the core will further refine models of Earth’s magnetic field evolution.

How to cite: Müller, L., Kislyakova, K., Noack, L., Macdonald, E., Van Looveren, G., and Raorane, A.: Core–mantle coupling: New insights into the magnetic and thermal evolution of Earth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12612, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12612, 2026.

EGU26-13060 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

A late onset of plate tectonics as a solution of the New Core Paradox. 

Valentin Bonnet Gibet and Nicola Tosi

The Earth has sustained a magnetic field for at least 3.4 billion years, generated by convective motions of liquid iron within the outer core. Maintaining such a long-lived geodynamo requires efficient cooling of the core. However, a high core thermal conductivity as suggested by experiments and theoretical calculations reduces the convective power available prior to inner-core nucleation, making the continuous persistence of the magnetic field more difficult. This apparent incompatibility between high thermal conductivity estimates and evidence for a ~3.4 Ga-long geodynamo is known as the “New Core Paradox”. Because core cooling is primarily controlled by heat transfer through the overlying solid mantle, an accurate quantification of the heat extracted from the core via mantle convection is therefore essential to resolving this paradox.

Today, the mantle cools efficiently mainly through plate tectonics, via subduction of cold large plates. But when plate tectonics actually began is still debated. Did it start soon after Earth formed, around 4.5 billion years ago? Did it appear later, between 4 and 3 billion years ago? Or is it a more recent process, less than a billion years old?

We explored how different styles of mantle cooling would have influenced Earth’s thermal and magnetic history. We explored either a mobile surface like modern plate tectonics (i.e. mobile lid) or a less efficient, stagnant-lid-like regime (where the surface doesn’t move), or a transition from stagnant- to mobile-lid regime at a given time and with a given duration. This is important because how Earth’s mantle cooled over time is closely tied to its ability to keep generating a magnetic field.

We built a global model for the Earth coupling a core model including inner core formation and the possibility to form stably stratified layers, with a mantle model simulating different convective (hence cooling) regimes.

We performed a Markov Chain-Monte Carlo inversion using as constraints the present-day size of the inner core, the continuous 3.4 billion years old magnetic record, and the mantle potential temperature record. We inverted the viscosity parameters, tectonic transition parameters and core thermal conductivity. Our models successfully reproduce all the constraints for an onset between 4.0 Ga and 2.5 Ga, with a bimodal distribution characterized by a relatively early onset of mobile-lid convection with a long-duration transition, or a later onset with a more rapid transition to a mobile-lid regime. Our result show that the late and rapid transition case allows for a core thermal conductivity up to 110 W/m/K, providing a possible solution to the New Core Paradox.

How to cite: Bonnet Gibet, V. and Tosi, N.: A late onset of plate tectonics as a solution of the New Core Paradox., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13060, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13060, 2026.

Light elements are thought to be essential components of liquid cores in terrestrial planets and play a key role in core formation, chemical evolution, and the generation of planetary magnetic fields. In multicomponent iron–light element (Fe–LE) systems, when multiple light elements coexist in liquid iron, their solubilities are mutually constrained, forming an anti-correlated solubility relationship, referred to here as simultaneous solubility.

Here we investigate the simultaneous solubility and exsolution behavior of light elements in the Fe–Si–C–(H) system using a combination of high-pressure and high-temperature experiments and machine-learning force field accelerated molecular dynamics (MLFF-MD) simulations. Multi-anvil experiments conducted at pressures of 9–21 GPa and temperatures of 1400–2200 °C reveal that these light elements can dissolve simultaneously in liquid iron and exhibit simultaneous solubility limits, with exsolution of Si, C, and H observed during melting and quenching. Complementary MLFF-MD simulations of the Fe–Si–C system provide atomic-scale insights into light element interactions in metallic melts and reproduce the experimentally observed anti-correlated solubility trends under core-relevant conditions.

By combining experimental and computational results, we derive simultaneous solubility relationships in the Fe–Si–C–(H) system and show how they vary with temperature and pressure. These results suggest that in reduced planetary cores, such as those of Mercury and Earth, Si, C, and H may coexist as simultaneously dissolved light elements. As the liquid core cools, the progressive decrease in simultaneous solubility drives continuous exsolution of light elements, providing an additional potential energy source for core dynamics and offering a potential explanation for chemical heterogeneity at the core–mantle boundary (CMB).

How to cite: Li, Y. and Zhu, F.:  Light Elements Exsolution in the Fe–Si–C–(H) System of Terrestrial Planet Liquid Cores, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13280, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13280, 2026.

EGU26-13514 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

High pressure melting of Fe-Si alloys with applications to the lunar core composition and dynamo processes 

Ben Kalman, Wenjun Yong, and Richard Secco

Earth’s magnetosphere is generated by convective dynamo action within its liquid metallic outer core. This same core-driven dynamo process has been inferred for other terrestrial planetary bodies which either presently possess a magnetosphere, or may have in the past. These bodies include Ganymede, Mercury, the Moon, and Asteroid 4 Vesta. However, understanding these core processes requires that the core composition be known. By experimentally determining the solid-liquid phase transitions of core-relevant alloys, the likely compositions of these terrestrial cores may be constrained.

            Experiments were conducted on 8 Fe-Si alloys in the range of Fe-5 wt% Si to Fe-33 wt% Si (FeSi) using a 1000-ton cubic anvil press, at pressures of 3-5 GPa and temperatures into the liquid state. A central 5-hole BN cylinder held 5 different Fe-Si sample compositions simultaneously with a thermocouple located at the base of the BN cylinder, and was surrounded by a graphite furnace within a pyrophyllite cubic pressure cell. Following quenching of each experiment, the samples were analysed by electron microprobe for composition and texture. From these analyses, the solidus and liquidus boundaries were mapped across the aforementioned compositional range at of 3, 4, and 5 GPa.

            It was determined that the melting boundary for 3-5 GPa was roughly 50-150 K higher than that of 1 atm, with a eutectic composition of Fe-20 wt% Si. Across the 3-5 GPa range, there was an increase in the melting boundary of roughly 50-75 K. Using pressure and temperature estimates from previous core modelling studies, a range of approximately 10-15 wt% Si was suggested for the core of the Moon.

How to cite: Kalman, B., Yong, W., and Secco, R.: High pressure melting of Fe-Si alloys with applications to the lunar core composition and dynamo processes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13514, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13514, 2026.

The structure of the Earth's deep mantle is a result of complex processes that are influenced by surface tectonics through the subduction of oceanic lithosphere and by core dynamics through the heat flow across the core-mantle-boundary. The other way around the structures in the deep mantle affect the Earth's surface by feeding mantle plumes that sustain volcanism. By modulating the heat flow at the CMB the mantle also affects the dynamics of the core and the magnetic field.

These processes focus in the D'' layer that marks the mysterious few hundred kilometers directly above the core-mantle-boundary which contain dominant features like the Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces and features with rather extreme properties like the Ultra Low Velocity Zones. Knowledge of the structural features in the D'' layer is of importance for the understanding of long- and short-term processes in our direct environment at the surface of the Earth.

The remoteness of D'' layer more than 2,500 kilometers below the surface poses challenges for geophysical investigations and limits the resolution of seismological imaging. Seismic tomography with surface waves and normal modes therefor locate the large scale features, only. Detailed wavefield analysis and modeling of particular seismic phases, often based on array observations provide more detailed information about locally dominating structures and their contrasts. For the characterization of distributed small scale structures that can be referred to as heterogeneity even wavefield analysis fails due to the superposition of waves scattered at different locations of the heterogeneous material. Such heterogeneity can for instance represent remnants of oceanic crust that has been subducted down to the CMB.

Despite the complexity of signals generated by distributed heterogeneity the analysis of high frequency scattered waves provides constraints on the presence structures at short length scales of a few kilometers in the deep mantle. I review the theoretical basics of scattering theory and the observational evidence for deep Earth distributed heterogeneity. I discuss new observations of high frequency seismic waves scattered in the deep mantle together with limitations in the interpretation imposed by the nature of the scattered wavefield.

How to cite: Sens-Schönfelder, C.: Investigating small-scale deep-mantle structure, the stories told by high frequency scattered waves, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14881, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14881, 2026.

EGU26-15073 | Orals | GD1.1

 Persistent Geochemical Zonation (“Striping”) within the Galápagos Mantle Plume 

Mark Richards, Matthew Gleeson, Cinzia Farnetani, Kaj Hoernle, and Sally Gibson

Some hotspot tracks, such as those formed by the Hawai’i and Galápagos mantle plumes, exhibit long-lived cross-track isotopic zonation, thought to reflect the streaking out of heterogeneous material in the plume conduit during upwelling. In lavas associated with the Galápagos mantle plume, three geochemical domains, present for at least 15 Myr, have been identified: northern, southern and central. The most extreme isotopic enrichments are observed in the northern domain of the Cocos Ridge at ~15 Ma, and in the southern domain of the Galápagos Archipelago at the present day. Owing to the northward migration of the Galápagos Spreading Center above the plume at ~5-10 Ma, this relationship suggests that geochemical enrichment in the Galápagos basalts is greatest above the region of the plume furthest from the nearby mid-ocean ridge. We examine the hypothesis that these temporal and spatial variations in geochemical enrichment reflect a ''shallow mantle control'', associated with differences in the mean depth of melting. We conducted forward melting models of a mixed peridotite-pyroxenite mantle to calculate the isotopic composition of the resulting melts formed under two different mantle flow regimes. Our results demonstrate that variations in the average pressure of melt generation, due to the influence of the nearby ridge axis, may explain the range of isotopic compositions across ~15 Ma of Galápagos plume-related volcanism. The patterns of isotopic zonation observed along the hotspot track confirm the paradigm of persistent plume striping, with variations in the degree of geochemical enrichment modulated by shallow mantle processes.

How to cite: Richards, M., Gleeson, M., Farnetani, C., Hoernle, K., and Gibson, S.:  Persistent Geochemical Zonation (“Striping”) within the Galápagos Mantle Plume, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15073, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15073, 2026.

EGU26-15113 | Orals | GD1.1

 Geophysically Determined Island Habitat History and Colonization of the Galápagos Islands by Central American Iguanas 

Mark Richards, Gabriele Gentile, Kristopher Karnauskas, and Felipe Orellana-Rovirosa

The Galápagos Islands’ unique endemic flora and fauna originated mainly from colonization from South and Central America, including the famous Galápagos iguanas. Genetic analysis suggests that these iguanas arrived from Central America ~5-12 Ma million years ago (Late Miocene) or even earlier, yet the oldest of the present-day islands were formed at ~3.5 Ma. Recent geophysical analysis shows that now-submerged islands along the Cocos Ridge (Galápagos hotspot track) provided terrestrial habitat for colonization and differentiation during the time frame ~6-18 Ma. Remarkably, this was also a time window during which ocean currents and winds were much more favorable for transport from mainland Central America to these ancient islands, prior to the closing of the Isthmus of Panama at ~3-5 Ma due to regional plate tectonic forces. Thus, we can explain both the colonization timing and provenance of Galápagos iguanas in a framework that shows much promise for understanding the origins of other unique Galápagos species.

How to cite: Richards, M., Gentile, G., Karnauskas, K., and Orellana-Rovirosa, F.:  Geophysically Determined Island Habitat History and Colonization of the Galápagos Islands by Central American Iguanas, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15113, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15113, 2026.

EGU26-15485 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

New measurements of inner core attenuation 

Carl Martin and Hrvoje Tkalčić

The nature and properties of the inner core has been a topic of keen interest since its discovery as a solid body by Lehmann in 1936. Since then, there have been numerous studies into its (isotropic and anisotropic) velocity and attenuation structure. These models typically feature strong hemispherical and layered structures, which dominate the interpretations of these models.

In this study, we focus on the attenuation structure of the inner core: energy that is lost inelastically, i.e. not through elastic scattering or redistribution. Here, we will demonstrate the progress we have made in creating a data set of new measurements of attenuation in the inner core from a variety of seismic phases (but especially PKPdf-PKPbc) with a focus on improving the spatial distribution of observations from previous studies using earthquakes from 2018--2025. We go on to benchmark our results against those of Pejic et al (2017), who used 400 high quality dt* measurements to invert for attenuation structure in the uppermost 400 km of the inner core.

How to cite: Martin, C. and Tkalčić, H.: New measurements of inner core attenuation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15485, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15485, 2026.

During the last 7 years several groups have reported paleomagnetic data documenting an unprecedented interval during the Ediacaran Period when the global geomagnetic field strength was only 10 to 3 percent of the present-day value, defining an ultra-low time-averaged field interval (UL-TAFI) from 591 to 565 Ma. Moreover, the EMANATE hypothesis suggests that atmospheric H loss to space through the UL-TAFI weak magnetosphere led to increased oxygenation, assisting the Avalon explosion of animal life (Tarduno et al., 2025). A relatively rapid increase in field strengths after the UL-TAFI has been suggested to record the onset of inner core nucleation; the return of magnetic shielding may have assisted subsequent Cambrian evolution. Herein, we present new data that suggest: 1. the UL-TAFI was at least 90 million years long, beginning in the Cryogenian Period and, 2. the field may have completely collapsed to zero during events as long as 200 kyr within the UL-TAFI. While the existence of the UL-TAFI does not comment on the need for core supercooling for inner core nucleation, the extended duration defined here is compatible with some models for such a process.  Variations of the field strength and dipolarity within the UL-TAFI may record bistability between the weak and strong field branches of the geodynamo as seen in some numerical simulations. This bistability, proposed to characterize the very start of the geodynamo, may have also been the underlying nature of the field during late Neoproterozoic times, explaining seemingly anomalous magnetic directions from global sites. The extended duration of the UL-TAFI, and the episodic complete collapse of the dynamo, support the hypothesis that H loss and increased oxygenation of the atmosphere and ocean, enabled the radiation of macroscopic Ediacaran animal life.

How to cite: Tarduno, J., Blackman, E., Schneider, J., and Cottrell, R.: A fibrillating Cryogenian-Ediacaran magnetic field: Implications for the nature of the dynamo, inner core nucleation, and the Avalon explosion of life, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15540, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15540, 2026.

EGU26-15742 | Orals | GD1.1

A North-Pacific slab-flux pulse drove the ~50 Ma TPW reversal 

Alessandro Forte, Petar Glišović, Marianne Greff-Lefftz, David Rowley (Deceased), and Shayan Kamali Lima

True polar wander (TPW) records displacements of Earth’s rotation axis induced by mantle convective redistribution of internal mass anomalies. A TPW reversal near ~50 Ma inferred from paleomagnetic data remains debated, particularly its cause and its robustness across reference frames. We present 70-million-year, tomography-assimilative mantle-convection reconstructions that evolve present-day seismic structure backwards in time, with an energy-consistent flow formulation, yielding time-dependent density, inertia tensor, and TPW. Three independent diagnostics converge on a single, time-localized driver: (i) maps of the long-wavelength geoid-rate (∂N/∂t) show a focused Aleutian–Kamchatka lobe at 50 Ma; (ii) off-diagonal inertia-tensor time derivatives peak contemporaneously at this time; and (iii) cap-blanking experiments that zero anomalies within a 30–40° North-Pacific cap erase the U-turn, whereas comparable caps elsewhere do not. We interpret the causative structure as a coherent North-Pacific (“Kula–Izanagi” sensu lato) slab-flux pulse entering the lower mantle.

Predicted TPW paths quantitatively match palaeomagnetic trajectories across multiple mantle frames (reduced χ² ≈ 0.6; mean path-averaged angular misfit ≈ 1.7°) and reproduce the observed ~50 Ma U-turn bracketed by twin maxima in TPW speed. Present-day mantle-driven TPW rates of 0.2–0.4° Ma-1 imply ~20–40% of the 20th-century geodetic rate. In head-to-head tests, slab-history reconstructions (with or without hotspot-fixed “domes”) differ markedly in azimuth and TPW-speed evolution, tend to distribute path reorientation over 60–45 Ma, and yield substantially larger misfits to the same data.

These results (i) isolate a geographically localized, time-specific mantle driver of the ~50 Ma TPW reversal, (ii) demonstrate reference-frame robustness using explicit misfit metrics, and (iii) provide a transferable workflow – geoid-rate mapping, inertia-tensor derivatives, and cap-blanking – for attributing TPW events to concrete mantle processes.

How to cite: Forte, A., Glišović, P., Greff-Lefftz, M., Rowley (Deceased), D., and Kamali Lima, S.: A North-Pacific slab-flux pulse drove the ~50 Ma TPW reversal, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15742, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15742, 2026.

With the plans of the MAGIC/NGGM mission approved, there will be several decades of satellite gravity  data available. Both periodic and secular mass changes can be studied with this data, mostly surface mass changes like hydrology, ice melt, glacial isostatic adjustment, and large earthquakes. With the increasing time period of the gravity data set, smaller processes in the signal can be detected. Therefore, we conduct sensitivity analysis on small temporal gravity signals which can be related to mass change due to mantle convection.

We perform various sensitivity analysis studies to understand the added benefit of detecting mantle flow with satellite gravity change observations. A fast stoke solver (FLAPS) is developed that is based on an axisymmetric half annulus geometry. The model evolves over 50 years after which the difference between the initial and final state to compute the rate of change. Realistic Earth models (PREM) as well as synthetic models are tested to better understand the sensitivity of the gravity change data. To understand 3D variations in structure and viscosity, we use the open-source mantle flow software ASPECT and incorporate interior models related to ESA's 4D Dynamic Earth project. For the upper mantle the WINTERC-G model incorporates multi data types information in a joint inversion. New analysis show data sensitivity down to the transition zone. For the lower mantle, we use available global tomography models.

The gravity change observations are sensitive to the absolute viscosity state of the mantle. This is contrary to dynamic topography and geoid data, which do not have this sensitivity and studies using these data always have an ambiguity wrt. viscosity state. Moreover, it seems that the gravity change data is more sensitive to the lower mantle of the Earth. 3D calculations need HPC resources and we show that the mesh resolution needs high computational demands to consistently account for the temporal gravity due to mantle flow. Nevertheless, the modelled magnitude of the gravity change linked to global mantle convection seems to be larger than the formal error estimates of the GRACE and GRACE-FO instrumentation. A longer acquisition period will reduce the secular errors in the ocean, atmosphere and tidal correction models, such that eventually mantle convection can be studied directly by satellite gravimetry.

How to cite: Root, B. and Thieulot, C.: Global simulations of temporal gravity due to mantle flow and their sensitivity to the mantle rheology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16730, 2026.

EGU26-16736 | Orals | GD1.1

Vertical motions and Cretaceous basin evolution of the Barents Sea Basin in relation to mantle-induced dynamic topography 

Elena Babina, Berta Vilacís, Patrick Makuluni, and Stuart Clark

The geological evolution of the Barents Sea Basin in the Arctic region during the Cretaceous reflects a complex interplay between subsidence and uplift processes. In this study, we analyse well lithostratigraphic data to identify hiatuses, unconformities and depositional periods, assess their spatial distribution, and quantify subsidence using the backstripping technique. Our results reveal episodic deposition and hiatuses across all wells during the Early Cretaceous, followed by a dominant basin-wide hiatus in the Late Cretaceous. Early Cretaceous subsidence was spatially variable, the southeastern parts of the Barents Sea Basin experienced more intensive subsidence compared to other areas. These observations could be linked to the influence of mantle-driven dynamic topography on basin evolution in relation with the High Arctic Large Igneous Province. The results indicate the importance of geodynamic processes in controlling basin architecture and stratigraphic development, with implications for understanding sedimentary evolution and hydrocarbon prospectivity in the Barents Sea.

How to cite: Babina, E., Vilacís, B., Makuluni, P., and Clark, S.: Vertical motions and Cretaceous basin evolution of the Barents Sea Basin in relation to mantle-induced dynamic topography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16736, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16736, 2026.

EGU26-17051 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Geomagnetic Field Dynamics During Excursions and Reversals 

Sunaina Shinu, Ahmed Nasser Mahgoub Ahmed, and Monika Korte

The geomagnetic field undergoes both long-term and short-term deviations from its predominantly dipolar configuration, expressed as polarity reversals and geomagnetic excursions. These episodes are characterized by significant drops in field intensity and an increase in the paleosecular variation index (PSV index), reflecting changes in the underlying geodynamo. This work focuses on analysing the temporal evolution of the field during these events in order to better constrain the dynamics of the geodynamo.

We utilized some of the most reliable paleomagnetic data-based models such as LSMOD.2, GGFSS70, GGFMB and PADM2M, encompassing different time periods to analyse the rate of change in the dipole moment and the PSV index. A sawtooth pattern of gradual dipole decay followed by rapid recovery during reversals, as proposed by past studies, has been observed in our study on the Matuyama Brunhes reversal. But, in contrast, we observed an opposite behavior of fast decay and slow recovery during most of the excursions. Accordingly, the PSV index exhibited a slow growth–fast recovery pattern during the reversal and a fast decay–slow recovery pattern during many excursions, although the PSV index results vary more than the dipole moment results. In this study, we test whether similar or distinct asymmetries characterize the Gauss–Matuyama reversal. The preliminary outputs from the newly developing Gauss–Matuyama field model were made use for that. Here, we will report the results of this ongoing work.

How to cite: Shinu, S., Nasser Mahgoub Ahmed, A., and Korte, M.: Geomagnetic Field Dynamics During Excursions and Reversals, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17051, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17051, 2026.

EGU26-17109 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Constraining deep mantle thermal evolution by linking geodynamic modelling, absolute plate motions and normal mode seismology 

Anna Schneider, Bernhard Schuberth, Paula Koelemeijer, Alex Myhill, and David Al-Attar

The frequency of geomagnetic field reversals varies on time scales of tens of millions of years, reflecting mantle-controlled changes in outer core flow that sustains the geodynamo. Accurate knowledge of lateral heat flow variations across the core–mantle boundary (CMB) and their evolution over geologic time is therefore fundamental to understanding the long-term geodynamo behaviour.

Here, we aim at generating robust predictions of lower mantle thermal evolution based on compressible high-resolution mantle circulation models (MCM). By assimilating 410 million years of plate motion history, which coincides roughly with two mantle overturns, the time span of geologically-informed structure above the CMB covers the Cretaceous normal superchron and beyond. To estimate uncertainties in lower mantle thermal evolution, we will employ systematic variations of model parameters, with a focus on uncertainties in the underlying absolute plate motion reference frame. Appraisal of the MCMs will be performed by predicting seismic data that can be compared to observations. Long-period normal mode data are particularly suited in this context, as they provide global constraints. In addition, splitting functions show high sensitivity to variations in the absolute reference frame. The realistic histories of mantle thermal evolution and CMB heat flux that we aim for in this project can in future be linked to geodynamo models and thus be used to predict time-series of Earth's magnetic field behaviour.

How to cite: Schneider, A., Schuberth, B., Koelemeijer, P., Myhill, A., and Al-Attar, D.: Constraining deep mantle thermal evolution by linking geodynamic modelling, absolute plate motions and normal mode seismology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17109, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17109, 2026.

Within the DFG Priority Program 2404 'Reconstructing the Deep Dynamics of Planet Earth over Geologic Time' (DeepDyn, https://www.geo.lmu.de/deepdyn/en/) we investigate possible seismic signatures related to deep Earth processes. Specifically, we investigate seismic anisotropy, by measuring shear wave splitting (SWS) of SKS, SKKS, and PKS phases. Thereby, we determine the splitting parameters, the fast polarization direction Φ and the delay time δt, using both the energy-minimization and the rotation-correlation methods. Especially, we search for phase pair discrepancies based on the observation type (null vs. split) between SKS and SKKS phases. Such discrepancies are indications for a lowermost mantle contribution to the splitting signal because these phases propagate along different paths after leaving the core. Besides using own measurements, we complement our database with measurements from Wolf et al., GJI, 2025. In two regions, beneath Siberia and North America, we find laterally varying values for Φ, in the D’’ layer just above the core-mantle boundary. The preferred directions of Φ are thought to be due to the alignment of minerals resulting from shear in a material flow. In the centers of the study regions, where high seismic velocity is present in global seismic tomography models, mainly null measurements are retrieved whereas systematic variations of Φ seem to dominate at the edges of the high seismic velocity anomalies which are often interpreted as remnants of slabs. A preliminary interpretation for our observations may be that the sinking slab material pushes local mantle material aside, inducing a flow pattern which causes an alignment of minerals and thereby seismic anisotropy.

How to cite: Ritter, J. and Dresler-Dorn, F.: Mantle flow pattern from seismic anisotropy above the core-mantle boundary underneath Siberia and North America, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17168, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17168, 2026.

EGU26-17208 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1 | Highlight

Unraveling the composition and structure of the Earth's outer core 

Federico Daniel Munch, Jack van Driel, Amir Khan, John Brodholt, and Lidunka Vocadlo

The structure of Earth's crust, mantle, and core holds clues to its thermal state and chemical composition, and, in turn, its origin and evolution. Geophysical techniques, and seismology in particular, have proved successful at probing Earth's deep interior and have done much to advance our understanding of its inner workings from mantle convection to crystallization and solidification of Earth’s liquid core. As the outer core cools and solidifies, light elements, such as Si, S, C, O and H, preferentially partition in the fluid outer core. However, the exact composition and thermal state of the outer core remains unknown. Traditionally, the composition of the core has been determined by performing theoretical ab initio calculations on candidate compositions and comparing the results for Vp, Vs and density to seismic reference models (e.g., PREM). Instead, we determine structure, composition and thermal state of Earth's outer core by inverting a plethora of short- and long-period seismic and astronomic-geodetic data in combination with new density functional theory calculations that are fit to a novel Gaussian Process Regression (GPR) equation of state (EoS). The GPR-EoS allows us to self-consistently compute thermo-elastic properties of liquid multi-component mixing models in the Fe-Ni-Si-S-C-O-H system along outer-core adiabats and across its entire pressure and temperature range. By mapping out the thermo-chemical model space of Earth’s outer core that match the seismic and geophysical data within uncertainties, we find two families of solutions characterised by: 1) Si (~4 wt%) and negligible amounts of H and C and 2) C and H (both 0.5 wt%) and smaller amounts of Si (<1 wt%). A correlation between H content and outer-core thermal structure is apparent, such that solutions with little-to-no H correspond to relatively high CMB and ICB temperatures (4100--4400~K and 5750–6000 K, respectively), whereas models with large amounts of H are characterised by lower CMB and ICB temperatures (~3600 K and 4750 K).

How to cite: Munch, F. D., van Driel, J., Khan, A., Brodholt, J., and Vocadlo, L.: Unraveling the composition and structure of the Earth's outer core, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17208, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17208, 2026.

EGU26-17266 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Assessing the effect of weak tectonic plate boundaries in 3D global mantle circulation models 

Fatemeh Rezaei, Hans-Peter Bunge, Ponsuganth Ilangovan Ponkumar Ilango, Berta Vilacís, Gabriel Robl, Nils Kohl, and Marcus Mohr

A key characteristic of plate tectonics is strain localization along narrow, weak boundaries between otherwise rigid tectonic plates. This localization enables efficient deformation, subduction, and plate motion, and plays a central role in the dynamic evolution of Earth. However, in mantle circulation models, plate velocities are often assimilated as surface boundary conditions without accounting for the rheological weakness of plate boundaries, relative to the surrounding lithosphere.

Weak plate boundaries can be reproduced via sophisticated strain weakening rheologies. While effective, this strategy makes the Stokes system nonlinear and incurs substantial computational cost.

Here, we exploit the fact that data assimilation implies that the locations of plate boundaries are known a priori and introduce specifically prescribed weak zones along plate boundaries in the models. These low-viscosity zones allow us to mimic the natural strain localization of Earth’s lithosphere, allowing deformation to focus at plate margins. We show that this approach can provide a computationally efficient and robust framework for bridging the gap between simplified convection models and the complex tectonic behavior of the real Earth.

How to cite: Rezaei, F., Bunge, H.-P., Ponkumar Ilango, P. I., Vilacís, B., Robl, G., Kohl, N., and Mohr, M.: Assessing the effect of weak tectonic plate boundaries in 3D global mantle circulation models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17266, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17266, 2026.

EGU26-17485 | Orals | GD1.1 | Highlight

Predicting present-day Earth’s lithospheric stress using analytical upper mantle flow models 

Ingo L. Stotz, Jorge Nicolas Hayek, Hans-Peter Bunge, and Sara Carena

Understanding the internal dynamics, structure, and composition of our planet is a fundamental goal of Earth science, and geodynamic modelling has been central to this effort by providing a theoretical window into mantle convection. Moreover, the asthenosphere plays a key role in linking mantle dynamics to surface observations; its channelized nature allows it to be described analytically within the framework of Couette and Poiseuille flow regimes.

Using this framework, we predict global stress fields and compare them directly with observations from the World Stress Map (WSM), a global compilation of crustal stress indicators. Our approach enables fast hypothesis testing and the development of first-order expectations for how different mantle flow states influence surface stress patterns. It also identifies three distinct basal shear traction regimes, depending on whether the asthenosphere locally moves faster than, slower than, or at the same velocity as the overlying plate. As a result, some regions experience driving tractions, others resisting tractions, while some are nearly traction-free. These results show that stress field patterns cannot be explained without realistic upper mantle flow geometries, particularly the spatial distribution and combined effects of plumes, slabs, and plate-driven flow.

 

How to cite: Stotz, I. L., Hayek, J. N., Bunge, H.-P., and Carena, S.: Predicting present-day Earth’s lithospheric stress using analytical upper mantle flow models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17485, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17485, 2026.

EGU26-18500 | ECS | Posters on site | GD1.1

Mantle temperatures from global seismic models: Uncertainties and limitations 

Gabriel Robl, Bernhard S.A. Schuberth, Isabel Papanagnou, and Christine Thomas

Many geophysical studies require knowledge on the present-day temperature distribution in Earth’s mantle, which can be estimated from seismic velocity perturbations imaged by tomography in combination with thermodynamic models of mantle mineralogy. However, even in the case of (assumed) known chemical composition, both the seismic and the mineralogical information are significantly affected by inherent limitations and different sources of uncertainty. We investigate the theoretical ability to estimate the thermal state of the mantle from tomographic models in a synthetic closed-loop experiment and quantify the interplay of tomographically damped and blurred seismic heterogeneity in combination with different approximations for the mineralogical conversion from seismic velocities to temperature. Our results highlight that, given the limitations of tomography and the incomplete knowledge of mantle mineralogy, magnitudes and spatial scales of a temperature field obtained from global seismic models deviate significantly from the true state. The average deviations from the reference model are on the order of 50–100 K in the upper mantle and can increase with depth to values of up to 200 K, depending on the resolving capabilities of the respective tomography. Furthermore, large systematic errors exist in the vicinity of phase transitions due to the associated mineralogical complexities. When used to constrain buoyancy forces in time-dependent geodynamic simulations, errors in the temperature field might grow non-linearly due to the chaotic nature of mantle flow. This could be particularly problematic in combination with advanced implementations of compressibility, in which densities are extracted from thermodynamic mineralogical models with temperature-dependent phase assemblages. Erroneous temperatures in this case might activate ‘wrong’ phase transitions and potentially flip the sign of the associated Clapeyron slopes, thereby considerably altering the model evolution. Overall, the strategy to estimate the present-day thermodynamic state of the mantle must be selected carefully to minimize the influence of the collective set of uncertainties.

How to cite: Robl, G., Schuberth, B. S. A., Papanagnou, I., and Thomas, C.: Mantle temperatures from global seismic models: Uncertainties and limitations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18500, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18500, 2026.

Reconstructing the thermo-chemical evolution of Earth’s mantle across geological time is a central challenge in the geosciences. Addressing this problem increasingly relies on adjoint-based approaches, which cast mantle convection modelling as an inverse problem and enable the systematic assimilation of observational data into time-dependent simulations. Such methods underpin emerging efforts to build a digital twin of Earth’s mantle: a dynamic, physics-based representation constrained by diverse geological and geophysical observations.

To date, adjoint geodynamic inversions have primarily relied on constraints that act at the beginning or end of model evolution, or at Earth’s surface only, such as plate motions, geodesy, or seismic tomography. However, these datasets provide limited leverage on the evolving thermal and chemical structure of the mantle through time. Intra-plate volcanic lavas offer an underexploited observational constraint, as their major- and trace-element geochemistry records the pressure, temperature, and composition of mantle melting at the time of eruption, providing direct insight into past lithospheric thickness, plume excess temperature, and mantle source heterogeneity.

Here, we present an integrated framework for assimilating geochemical information from ocean island basalts into adjoint models of mantle convection using the Geoscientific ADjoint Optimisation PlaTform (G-ADOPT). Using simulation-informed inversions of rare earth element concentrations, we demonstrate the power of geochemical data to recover the thermal structure of plume melting regions, including lithospheric thickness and plume excess temperature. We then use synthetic experiments to show how these geochemically derived constraints on melting conditions can be incorporated into adjoint reconstructions, substantially improving recovery of mantle temperature fields and flow trajectories relative to inversions based on surface or boundary constraints alone.

By explicitly linking geochemical observables to mantle thermal structure and flow, this approach reduces non-uniqueness in time-dependent inversions and strengthens the ability of adjoint models to retrodict mantle evolution. More broadly, it highlights the transformative potential of integrating geochemistry into data-assimilative geodynamic frameworks and represents a key step toward a fully constrained digital twin of Earth’s interior.

How to cite: Davies, R. and Ghelichkhan, S.: Assimilating Intra-Plate Lava Geochemistry into Adjoint Reconstructions of Earth’s Mantle Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19074, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19074, 2026.

EGU26-20350 | ECS | Orals | GD1.1

Reconstructing Cenozoic Dynamic Topography 

Sia Ghelichkhan and Rhodri Davies

Dynamic topography, the transient deflection of Earth's surface driven by mantle convection, exerts a first-order control on continental flooding, sedimentary basin subsidence, and long-term eustatic sea level. Changes in dynamic topography have been invoked to explain the widespread Cretaceous marine transgression, the subsequent retreat of epicontinental seas, and regional patterns of uplift and subsidence that cannot be attributed to tectonics alone.

Here I present global, high-resolution retrodictions of dynamic topography evolution over the Cenozoic, constrained by seismic tomography, plate kinematic reconstructions, and geological proxies of past surface elevation. These models reveal how migrating mantle upwellings and downwellings have driven substantial changes in surface elevation across multiple continents throughout the Cenozoic. The retrodicted patterns of dynamic topography change provide estimates of mantle-driven sea level contributions, offering new constraints on interpreting the stratigraphic and palaeogeographic record in terms of deep Earth processes.

How to cite: Ghelichkhan, S. and Davies, R.: Reconstructing Cenozoic Dynamic Topography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20350, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20350, 2026.

Recent advances in geodynamo modelling have been very successful in explaining many features of the geo-
magnetic field, including the field reversals and excursions. Previous studies have shown that the dynamics 
of these features depend on spatial variation in the core-mantle boundary (CMB) heat flux pattern. Contrary to 
previous studies, an up-to-date mantle reconstruction for the last 200 Myr provides patterns with a higher degree 
of complexity, featuring a network of interconnected regions with subadiabatic heat flow. We use these patterns 
as outer boundary conditions for dynamo simulation in order to explore whether its evolution can explain the 
observed variation in reversal rate. While the impact of large-scale structures at the core-mantle boundary has 
been thoroughly explored by Frasson et al. (2025), the contribution of smaller scales remains poorly constrained, 
which we aim to cover within the scope of these studies.

For our study, we apply the codensity approach which combines the effects of thermal and compositional density 
to represent both thermally driven convection and the enrichment of the outer core with light elements due to 
the inner core solidification. We first investigate the relative impact of thermal and compositional convection 
a for patterns with various degrees of complexity, defined by the spherical harmonics degree truncation lmax
Our models indicate that the field dynamics, including the reversal rate, depends on the truncation lmax, with 
solutions for lmax = 8 and lmax = 16 exhibiting more reversals than higher truncation degrees. This effect is 
present in models with mixed convection (a = 0.33 and a = 0.66). However, when compositional convection 
clearly dominates (a = 0.99), the pattern has no impact on the reversal behaviour, and the model evolves 
similarly to the homogeneous case. We also observe the emergence of subsurface low-radial-velocity regions, 
reminiscent of the stably-stratified lenses discussed by Mound et al. (2019). Our models also show strong 
zonal flows comparable to those discussed in Frasson et al. (2025). Our ongoing work focuses on comparing 
simulations for the CMB heat flux pattern at the present-day time and during the CNS.

How to cite: Lohay, I. and Wicht, J.: Influence of Small-Scale Core-Mantle Boundary Structures on the Dynamics of the Earth’s Outer Core, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20825, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20825, 2026.

The investigation of geomagnetic variations has revealed the presence in Earth's core of a planetary-scale, axially columnar and eccentric gyre flow. Together with the magnetic anomaly of low intensity presently seen beneath the South Atlantic, these structures show that longitudinal hemisphericity is a common feature of the geodynamo. Here, we propose that these hemispherical features result from the onset properties of spherical shell rotating convection in presence of an imposed axial magnetic field, with spatially homogeneous fixed-flux thermal boundary conditions. For an Earth-like range of background magnetic field amplitudes, we find hemispherical critical convection modes that are largely supported by a magneto-Archimedes-Coriolis (MAC) balance and where viscosity plays a secondary role. Pursuing this analysis with fully developed, turbulent self-sustained dynamo simulations, we find that hemispherical modes inherited from convection onset can be maintained if the MAC balance is not perturbed by inertia, the force coming at the next order in the force balance. The presence of the eccentric gyre is therefore conditioned to the magnetic energy matching or exceeding the kinetic energy in the system, the so-called strong-field dynamo regime. The simulations also feature low magnetic intensity anomalies that rotate westward together with the gyre flow.  We highlight a strong correlation between the gyre longitudinal position, the low intensity focus of magnetic intensity, and the eccentricity of the dynamo-generated dipole, showing that these hemispherical structures are indeed linked by the properties of magnetic induction.

How to cite: Grasset, L.: Longitudinally hemispheric structures in the geodynamo : from their physical origin to their geomagnetic consequences, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21834, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21834, 2026.

EGU26-297 | ECS | Orals | GD2.2

The Main Central Thrust, a Possible Early Paleozoic Structure Reactivated During the Cenozoic: Insights from the NW Himalaya 

Rahul Dixit, Arvind Jain, Paramjeet Singh, Saurabh Singhal, and Gargi Deshmukh

The northern Indian passive margin has witnessed at least two Wilson-cycle-related collisional events since the Proterozoic: the Early Paleozoic Bhimphedian Orogeny and the Cenozoic Himalayan Orogeny. The latter, triggered by the India–Asia collision, produced a series of orogen-scale structures including the Main Frontal Thrust, Main Boundary Thrust, Main Central Thrust (MCT), and South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS), which cut the Himalaya into distinct lithotectonic belts. However, the extent to which vestiges of the Early Paleozoic tectonism persist remains uncertain due to extensive overprinting by Cenozoic deformation. This ambiguity has revived debates on whether the major Himalayan fault systems are exclusively Cenozoic tectonic boundaries or the reactivation of long-lived, inherited Early Paleozoic structures.

This study investigates the tectonic evolution of the MCT, a several-kilometre-thick, foreland-propagating, high-strain shear zone that activated ca. 27–11 Ma. It structurally juxtaposes the Neoproterozoic Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS) over the Paleoproterozoic Lesser Himalayan Sequence. Integrated structural mapping and U-Pb zircon geochronology were conducted on the GHS rocks from the proximal hanging wall of the MCT in the Dhauliganga (Garhwal) and Pabbar (Himachal) valleys of the NW Himalaya. Ductilely deformed psammitic, ortho- and aplite gneisses, leucogranite, and migmatite display NE-dipping mylonite foliation, NNE-plunging stretching lineation, and persistent top-to-the-SW ductile shearing, consistent with regional MCT kinematics.

Detrital zircon spectra constrain the maximum depositional age of the GHS metasedimentary protoliths to 849 ± 6.7 Ma. These country rocks were syn- to post-tectonically intruded by orthogneiss and leucogranite along a major crustal conduit, the proto-MCT, during the Early Paleozoic Bhimphedian Orogeny. In the Dhauliganga Valley, three distinct tectonothermal pluses are recorded at 554 ± 6.8 Ma, 489 ± 2.8 Ma, and 471 ± 3.2 Ma. In the Pabbar Valley, coeval crustal anatexis along the proto-MCT produced stromatic migmatite at 508 ± 6.7 Ma and 473 ± 3.1 Ma. These ages collectively reflect magmatism, regional metamorphism, and pervasive deformation along the proto-MCT during the Bhimphedian Orogeny. During the Cenozoic Himalayan Orogeny, this dormant proto-MCT was reactivated and subsequently evolved to present-day MCT. This is evident by tectonothermal pulses at 20 ± 3.0 Ma and 16 ± 1.2 Ma, recorded in the leucogranite and aplite gneiss in the Dhauliganga Valley. Notably, a comparable tectonic evolution of the STDS during the Early Paleozoic (a~499–467 Ma) and Cenozoic (~34–25 Ma and 23–13 Ma) has been documented in the upper reaches of the Dhauliganga Valley.

Together, these findings demonstrate that both the MCT and STDS originated as coeval Early Paleozoic proto-tectonic structures and were subsequently reactivated during Late Eocene to Early Miocene Himalayan deformation phases. This dual-stage tectonic evolution underscores that the Himalayan crustal architecture is fundamentally inherited from Early Paleozoic orogenesis, with Cenozoic deformation preferentially exploiting these pre-existing anisotropies. Therefore, comprehensive Himalayan tectonic models must integrate the contributions of Early Paleozoic tectonism, rather than attributing these major shear zones solely to the Cenozoic displacement.

How to cite: Dixit, R., Jain, A., Singh, P., Singhal, S., and Deshmukh, G.: The Main Central Thrust, a Possible Early Paleozoic Structure Reactivated During the Cenozoic: Insights from the NW Himalaya, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-297, 2026.

EGU26-1221 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

2D thermomechanical numerical models of passive margin reactivation 

Miguel João, Patricia Cadenas, João Duarte, Nuno Rodrigues, Afonso Gomes, Ricardo Pereira, Filipe M. Rosas, Nicolas Riel, and J. Kim Welford

Subduction is a key driving mechanism in Plate Tectonics, but how it initiates is still poorly understood.

Subduction initiation is thought to be a complex and evolving tectonic process. It consists of stages of lithospheric contractional deformation that may reactivate inherited structures, potentially localizing deformation in a proto-plate boundary and leading to subduction.

During the Cenozoic, the most common site to initiate subduction was at passive margins (Lallemand and Arcay, 2021). Hence, the importance of understanding the main controlling mechanisms that lead to subduction initiation at these locations. These processes are thought to be dependent on various factors, such as the presence of a weak zone (e.g., a serpentinized exhumed mantle layer, serpentine-filled normal and detachment faults), a pre-existing stress/strain field, and the structure/architecture of the rifted margin.

Using high-resolution 2D geodynamic numerical models carried out with the code LaMEM, this work investigates the mechanisms that may control the reactivation on magma-poor rifted margins. In particular, by testing different parameters (e.g., length of the passive margin, presence of a serpentinized layer), different deformation regimes (e.g., strain-rates) and the thermomechanical state of the system that may lead to subduction initiation in these locations.

Furthermore, seismic reflection lines were interpreted in order to better understand and characterize the magma-poor rifted margin archetype (West Iberian rifted margin) and its tectonic structure distribution. The data interpreted helped constrain fault distribution and their geometry in numerical models conducted.

Preliminary results show that serpentine-filled tectonic structures (e.g., inherited normal and detachment faults from the rifting process) facilitate the reactivation of the rifted margin by localizing compressive-induced deformation. Additionally, models show that the presence of serpentinized exhumed mantle in a hyperextended domain, constrain the localization of deformation in this section, leading to an earlier subduction initiation. Therefore, we can infer that the presence of serpentinized exhumed mantle and/or the existence of rift inherited tectonic structures, deeply weakens the passive (or rifted margin). Notwithstanding, results also show that there is a first order dependence on the thermal age of the continental lithosphere (e.g., strength and thickness) for the locus of strain localization. Followed by a second order dependence on passive margin length as a constraining mechanism for the locus of subduction.

How to cite: João, M., Cadenas, P., Duarte, J., Rodrigues, N., Gomes, A., Pereira, R., Rosas, F. M., Riel, N., and Welford, J. K.: 2D thermomechanical numerical models of passive margin reactivation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1221, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1221, 2026.

EGU26-1278 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

3D Numerical modelling of induced subduction initiation by transference 

Ângela Lourenço, Filipe M. Rosas, João C. Duarte, and Nuno Rodrigues

Subduction initiation remains one of the critical unsolved problems of modern plate Tectonics (e.g., Stern, 2004; Stern and Gerya, 2018). At passive margins, oceanic lithosphere is old and negatively buoyant, but also thick and very strong. Thus, spontaneous foundering of this lithosphere at these locations requires forces higher than the ones driving tectonic plates in nature (slab-pull and ridge-push, e.g., Cloething et al., 1982, 1989; Mueller and Phillips, 1991). Therefore, different authors have proposed different conceptual processes of induced subduction initiation, in which pre-existent, inherited (mechanical and/or chemical) lithospheric weaknesses, including older subduction zones, might trigger the formation of a new one.

One of these processes is the so-called subduction initiation by transference (Stern, 2004), in which it is argued that a crustal buoyant obstacle (e.g., a continental terrane) could arrive at a subduction zone, causing it to shut down, and triggering a new subduction at the back-end of such a terrane, i.e., causing the subduction zone to be transferred there from its original (frontal) position.

In the present paper, we present new preliminary results of 3D numerical models (LaMEM code of Kaus, 2016) to understand the (geo)dynamic viability of subduction initiation by transference, and to gain new insights on the main parameters governing the possibility of its occurrence in nature. We use buoyancy driven models of continental terrane accretion against the overriding plate (OP) of a subduction zone, to find out if subduction transference is “caused” by the scrapping-off of the continental crustal portion of the terrane against the OP (e.g., Tetreault and Buiter, 2012), or if true front-to-back transference of subduction, critically implying rupture of the lithosphere at the back margin of the terrane, is really possible. Our still preliminary results seemingly suggest that the scrapping-off scenario is more viable, while the true transference one might depend on two key factors: 1) the trench-parallel width of the continental terrane relatively to the width of the oceanic subducting slab; and 2) the existence vs. absence of a weakened (faulted and serpentinized?) zone in the back-end margin of the accreting terrane.

 

 

Acknowledgements:

This work is supported by the Portuguese Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia, FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): UID/50019/2023, LA/P/0068/2020 https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020) and https://doi.org /10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025 

How to cite: Lourenço, Â., Rosas, F. M., Duarte, J. C., and Rodrigues, N.: 3D Numerical modelling of induced subduction initiation by transference, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1278, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1278, 2026.

The transition from continental rifting to oceanic accretion - and the related initiation of the spreading ridge - remains one of the least understood phases in plate tectonics. This study presents new seismic reflection observations from the Møre and Vøring margins offshore Norway, revealing a series of deep dome-like structures in the outer rifted domain. These features, identified across multiple profiles, are interpreted as crystallized magmatic bodies - possibly gabbroic sills or lenses -emplaced during the rift-to-drift transition. The domes are associated with high seismic reflectivity and velocity, and spatially correlate with the boundary between sills and lava flows, suggesting a strong magmatic control.

It is proposed that these domes represent proto-magma chambers or magma mush zones, potentially marking early, stuttering attempts at ridge initiation. Their alignment sub-parallel to the continent-ocean boundary (COB) implies a broader magmatic axis at the margin scale. These findings challenge the conventional notion of a sharp COB and support a more transitional, structurally complex Continent-Ocean Transition Zone (COTZ). The study highlights the need for revised mapping protocols and further investigation into the thermal and temporal evolution of these magmatic features to better understand the onset of oceanic spreading.

How to cite: Peron-Pinvidic, G.: Magmatic domes and the initiation of oceanic processes at the Mid-Norwegian rifted margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2508, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2508, 2026.

EGU26-3648 | Posters on site | GD2.2

Microplate Dynamics Through the Wilson Cycle: Insights from Modelling and Observations 

Zhong-Hai Li, Sheng Yu, Fengyuan Cui, and Peigen Luo

Microplates are widely distributed at plate margins and within plates, playing vital roles in the Wilson Cycle. However, their dynamic behaviour and feedback mechanisms across different stages remain poorly constrained. This study synthesizes insights from numerical modelling and geological observations, focusing on the roles of microplates in three key tectonic settings of the Wilson Cycle. Firstly, at divergent plate margins, microplates disrupt the continuity and uniformity of continental rifting, leading to asymmetric rift propagation and complex mid-ocean ridge reconfigurations. Secondly, at convergent plate margins, microplates may undergo crust-mantle decoupling during subduction, induce slab dip angle variation, terminate subduction process and facilitate new subduction initiation. Finally, in intraplate orogens, the heterogeneity of microplates during continental collision could lead to variations in strain distribution and lithospheric deformation, making it a key factor in driving the differential evolution of orogenic processes. This review highlights rheological strength as the primary control on the dynamic behaviour of microplates. Strong microplates transmit tectonic stress, whereas weak ones promote strain localization and accommodate major deformation. Natural cases align with model predictions, highlighting microplate strength as a key factor in shaping divergent plate margins, subduction geometry, and intraplate deformation. Overall, microplates significantly modulate the spatial complexity and temporal rhythms of the Wilson Cycle by controlling local rheological structure and strain localization tendencies. They may play critical roles in better understanding the global tectonic activities, as well as the further development of plate tectonics theory.

How to cite: Li, Z.-H., Yu, S., Cui, F., and Luo, P.: Microplate Dynamics Through the Wilson Cycle: Insights from Modelling and Observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3648, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3648, 2026.

EGU26-4005 | Orals | GD2.2

Mid-ocean ridge extinctions as amplifiers of plate-tectonic reorganizations 

Guido Gianni, Conrado Gianni, Leandro Gallo, Chistian Sippl, and Victor Ramos

Plate-tectonic reorganizations are characterized by rapid shifts in plate motions, boundary forces, and margin tectonics, yet the role of mid-ocean ridge extinctions (MOREs) during these events remains poorly constrained. We address this gap by systematically examining a suite of MOREs occurring within plate reorganizations and by comparing them with strength-profile analyses of thermally evolving oceanic lithosphere beneath spreading axes following spreading shutdown. Thermal models and strength-envelope calculations show that extinct ridges undergo rapid lithospheric strengthening, developing sufficient mechanical resistance to transmit slab-pull stresses within ~2–10 Myr after spreading cessation. This rapid welding transforms formerly weak ridge–transform networks into coherent lithospheric blocks capable of mediating far-field stress transfer. We illustrate this process using three well-constrained Cenozoic MOREs. Extinction of the Wharton Ridge promoted Indo–Australian plate welding and enhanced slab pull along the Sunda–Java trench, accelerating plate motion and sustaining post-collisional India–Asia convergence. Progressive shutdown of Pacific–Farallon ridge fragments enabled coupling between the Pacific and North American plates and facilitated subsequent Pacific stress transmission, driving deformation in the Gulf of California rift and the San Andreas system. In the western Pacific, cessation of the Shikoku Ridge strengthened the Philippine Sea Plate, enabling efficient transmission of slab pull in the Ryukyu–Nankai/Izu–Bonin–Mariana double subduction system and triggering trench advance and regional compressional tectonics in northeast Japan. Our results indicate that MOREs act as active amplifiers of plate reorganizations by enhancing lithospheric coupling and facilitating far-field stress propagation. These findings support a cascading, plate-to-plate mode of tectonic reorganization (rather than mantle-driven) and highlight extinct ridges as critical nodes in the episodic reorganization of the global plate network. Building on these insights, we extend the discussion to the Paleozoic–Mesozoic Tethyan system, where successive terrane collisions and episodes of subduction initiation may likewise have involved MOREs acting as stress transmitters across ridge–transform networks.

How to cite: Gianni, G., Gianni, C., Gallo, L., Sippl, C., and Ramos, V.: Mid-ocean ridge extinctions as amplifiers of plate-tectonic reorganizations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4005, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4005, 2026.

EGU26-4262 | Orals | GD2.2

When obduction meets accretion: new geochronological and metamorphic constraints on an Albian-Campanian transient subduction-obduction system in NE Oman  

Giulio Viola, Sara Degl'Innocenti, Costantino Zuccari, Francesco Giuntoli, Ivan Callegari, Andrew Kylander-Clark, and Gianluca Vignaroli

Late Cretaceous convergence between the Afro-Arabian and Eurasian plates triggered a short-lived yet complex subduction–obduction cycle along the Arabian margin, culminating in the Campanian obduction of Neo-Tethyan oceanic lithosphere onto the Arabian continent. Although the Oman Mountains preserve an exceptional record of this evolution, the timing and tectonic significance of deformation and metamorphism along the Arabian margin remain poorly constrained. This is particularly true for the Jabal Akhdar Window (JAW), a tectonic feature traditionally regarded as exposing the most external, non-metamorphic and little deformed portions of the margin.

We present new geochronological constraints integrated with structural and metamorphic data that call for a revision of the tectonic history of the Cryogenian–Cretaceous JAW succession. Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material (RSCM) and chlorite–white mica–quartz–water multiequilibrium thermobarometry constrain synkinematic temperatures and pressures for two distinct regional contractional deformation phases (D1 and D2), while U–Pb dating of structurally constrained calc-mylonites provides much-needed absolute age control on deformation.

D1 records pervasive brittle–ductile to ductile deformation affecting both the pre-Permian basement and the overlying Permian passive-margin carbonates, with an overall top-to-the-NE transport direction. U–Pb geochronology of top-to-the-NE calc-mylonites yields an age of 106 ± 13 Ma, consistent with field-based constraints and regional correlations. Synkinematic RSCM and thermobarometric data indicate upper greenschist- to lower blueschist-facies conditions (~370 °C, minimum ~0.7 GPa), consistent with an Albian HP–LT accretionary event related to early convergence along the Arabian margin. D1 is interpreted as due to progressive nappe stacking within a NE-verging accretionary prism formed above an immature and short-lived intracontinental SW-directed subduction zone.

D2 represents a younger, lower-grade, top-to-the-S/SW-verging deformation event localized within Upper Cretaceous carbonates, mainly in the northern JAW. RSCM analyses from top-to-the S/SW calc-mylonites constrain synkinematic temperatures to ~330 °C, while U–Pb carbonate ages from the same rocks cluster between ~80 and 75 Ma. These data link D2 deformation to southwestward obduction, coeval with the emplacement of the Semail Ophiolite and Hawasina nappes.

We propose a two-stage evolution for the northeastern Oman Mountains, involving a transient, SW-directed Albian subduction associated with HP–LT accretion followed by Late Cretaceous obduction driven by a newly established NE-dipping intraoceanic subduction zone.

These results demonstrate that HP–LT metamorphism in the JAW is regionally developed and temporally resolved, highlighting the critical role of geochronology of structurally well-constrained fabrics in deciphering transient subduction–obduction processes during the Late Cretaceous Wilson Cycle evolution of the Arabian margin.

How to cite: Viola, G., Degl'Innocenti, S., Zuccari, C., Giuntoli, F., Callegari, I., Kylander-Clark, A., and Vignaroli, G.: When obduction meets accretion: new geochronological and metamorphic constraints on an Albian-Campanian transient subduction-obduction system in NE Oman , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4262, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4262, 2026.

EGU26-4503 | Posters on site | GD2.2

2D numerical models of the Variscan post-collisional evolution:example from the Valpelline Series (western Alps) 

Alessandro Regorda, Marco Filippi, Manuel Roda, Fabiola Caso, Chiara Benedetta Piloni, Federico Farina, and Michele Zucali

The Carboniferous-Permian evolution of the Variscan belt, marking the transition from continental collision to post-collisional extension, is particularly difficult to investigate because the post-collisional metamorphism overprints the previous history of subduction and collision. In fact, the collision is followed by widespread high- to ultra-high-temperature metamorphism in the early Permian (e.g., Schuster and Stüwe, 2008), interpreted as the expression of a large-scale transtensional regime linked to active shear zones across Pangea (Muttoni et al., 2003). In addition, uncertainties in Pressure-Temperature (PT) estimates and metamorphic geochronology complicate the discrimination of successive events.
In this study, we focus our analysis on the Valpelline area where the Variscan post-collisional evolution is well preserved. The rocks in the area offer the possibility of integrating high-precision age determinations with robust PT constraints, allowing the discrimination of two closely spaced metamorphic events (M1 and M2) separated by only a few Myr (Filippi et al., 2025). We compare these PT constraints with predictions obtained from 2D thermo-mechanical numerical models performed with the FALCON code (Regorda et al., 2023), to investigate the evolution of convergent–divergent tectonic systems, with particular emphasis on post-collisional processes. In particular, we developed three models characterised by different durations of an intermediate gravitational phase before the beginning of the extension.
Our simulations indicate that the onset of post-collisional divergence promotes the reactivation of structures inherited from the preceding convergence phase. In fact, extension in the upper crust is accommodated by normal faulting associated with the reactivation of pre-existing compressional structures. This evolution leads to the progressive thinning of the thickened continental crust, driven by asthenospheric upwelling beneath the slab. This process is enhanced by relatively high temperatures and reduced viscosities at the base of the subducting plate compared to that of the mantle wedge, which favour efficient strain localization. In addition, the agreement between model predictions and high-precision PT estimates and geochronological data indicates that the initiation of a divergent tectonic regime shortly after collision (within a maximum of 5 Myr) is required to explain the observed metamorphic evolution of the Valpelline rocks.

References
M. Filippi, F. Farina, M. Ovtcharova, F. Caso, M. Roda, C. B. Piloni, and M. Zucali. High-precision zircon geochronology constrains early permian exhumation of the deep adriatic crust in the western italian alps. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 671:119689, 2025. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2025.119689.

G. Muttoni, D. V. Kent, E. Garzanti, P. Brack, N. Abrahamsen, and M. Gaetani. Early permian pangea ‘b’ to late permian pangea ‘a’. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 215(3):379–394, 2003. doi:10.1016/S0012-821X(03)00452-7.

A. Regorda, C. Thieulot, I. van Zelst, Z. Erdős, J. Maia, and S. Buiter. Rifting venus: Insights from numerical modeling. Journal of Geophysical Research: Planets, 128(3): e2022JE007588, 2023. doi:10.1029/2022JE007588.

R. Schuster and K. Stüwe. Permian metamorphic event in the Alps. Geology, 36:603–606, 2008. doi:10.1130/G24703A.1.

How to cite: Regorda, A., Filippi, M., Roda, M., Caso, F., Piloni, C. B., Farina, F., and Zucali, M.: 2D numerical models of the Variscan post-collisional evolution:example from the Valpelline Series (western Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4503, 2026.

EGU26-5345 | Posters on site | GD2.2

A window on the amalgamation of Western Gondwana: Geological history of the Ouaddaï massif (E. Chad) 

Alexis Plunder, Olivier Blein, Moussa Isseini, Issaka Ousman Al-Gadam, Mathieu Chevillard, Emanuel Djedouboum, Philippe Lach, Abdeltif Lahfid, Jérémie Melleton, Olivier Rouzeau, and Guillaume Vic

The Saharan metacraton was assembled during pre-Neoproterozoic to Neoproterozoic times and was strongly remobilised during the Pan African orogeny. The Ouaddaï massif in eastern Chad represents the core of the Saharan metacraton, yet its geological history remains poorly documented. In this study, we combine of field observations, petrological analysis of metamorphic rocks, and geochemical and geochronological constraints to reconstruct the tectono-metamorphic evolution of the Ouaddaï massif. The study area is dominated by collision-related plutonic rocks and migmatitic gneisses, within which inliers of older basement occur. Geochemical data indicate a transition from active-margin to collisional magmatism, with a compositional evolution from diorite to granite. This suite is cross-cut by syenogranites and alkaline granites with shoshonitic affinities, interpreted as post-collisional granitoids derived from tonalitic rocks to sedimentary protoliths. Geochronological data (U-Pb on zircon and monazite) point to a ca. 1000 Ma age for orthogneisses inliers. Granitoids of the Ouaddaï massif record emplacement ages from 620 to 590 Ma, coeval with high-temperature metamorphism characterized by peak pressure-temperature conditions of 1.2 GPa and 850°C (mafic granulite) and around 0.8 GPa and 700°C (sillimanite-garnet bearing migmatites). Integrating our new results with regional data, we discuss the existence and geodynamic evolution of the Saharan Metacraton. Our findings emphasize the significance of the Saharan Metacraton as a key region for understanding the extensive reworking of cratonic lithosphere during both a Tonian magmatic phase prior and the assembly of Gondwana.

How to cite: Plunder, A., Blein, O., Isseini, M., Ousman Al-Gadam, I., Chevillard, M., Djedouboum, E., Lach, P., Lahfid, A., Melleton, J., Rouzeau, O., and Vic, G.: A window on the amalgamation of Western Gondwana: Geological history of the Ouaddaï massif (E. Chad), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5345, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5345, 2026.

EGU26-5352 | Orals | GD2.2

Presence of continental slivers in oceanic transform faults determined by rift inheritance 

Attila Balázs, Taras Gerya, and Gábor Tari

The theory of plate tectonics describes how continents are separated from each other by lateral movement that is accommodated by transform faults connecting mid-ocean ridge sections, which leaves inactive fracture zones on the ocean floor. The occurrence of continental crustal slivers in these fracture zones at distances of hundreds of kilometres to 1,000 kilometres from continents has been documented worldwide, yet their occurrence is not expected from classical plate tectonic theory. Here we use three-dimensional magmatic-thermomechanical numerical simulations to investigate the transition from continental rifting to the birth of oceanic transform fault zones and their relationship to mantle melting and crustal tectonics (1). These simulations show that continental slivers are entrapped within shear zones in the oceans inherited from preceding continental rifting stage. They also show three distinct stages of transform fault zone formation—continental rift linkage, proto-transform, oceanic transform—resulting from progressive strain localization into a narrowing extension-parallel strike-slip shear zone. Additionally, continental sliver emplacement into oceanic lithosphere is shown to be associated with specific stages of subsidence and uplift linked to the changing transtensional and transpressional stress field. Short-lived transpression and transform uplift episodes are driven by transient stages of overlapping ridge geometries even in the absence of large-scale plate velocity reorganization. These processes modify the ocean floor morphology, mid-ocean ridge melting conditions and transform fault seismicity.

(1) Balazs A., Gerya T., Tari G. 2025. Presence of continental slivers in oceanic transform faults determined by rift inheritance. Nature Geoscience, 18, 1303–1310.

How to cite: Balázs, A., Gerya, T., and Tari, G.: Presence of continental slivers in oceanic transform faults determined by rift inheritance, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5352, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5352, 2026.

EGU26-5365 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Unifying rift terminology in the northeast Atlantic: towards a harmonized framework 

Fenna Ammerlaan, Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic, and J. Kim Welford

Rifted margins form through multi-phased periods of rifting, stretching and thinning of the continental lithosphere until breakup is complete and oceanic lithosphere is formed. It is widely accepted that rifted margins can be partitioned into distinct structural domains (proximal, necking, distal (hyperextended and exhumed), outer and oceanic), which are characterized by their architecture and associated rift stages. However, no consensus has been reached yet on how the different domain boundaries should be defined. As a result, the terminology used to describe rifted margin domains remains inconsistent across studies, hindering comparison between margins and limiting the development of a unified conceptual framework.

A key challenge for establishing robust nomenclature is the dependency of the domain boundary on the constraining data type. Structural, geophysical and magmato-stratigraphic data inherently result in different boundaries. The oversimplistic concept of a Continent Ocean Boundary (COB) is a classic example of this, where the definition is heavily dependent on the method and data utilized. A similar ambiguity is present for the various structural domains, such as the boundary between the necking and distal domains. The inconsistency in terminology highlights the need for unification of the nomenclature through a novel classification framework.

In this contribution, we compile and synthesize published contributions to construct this set of unifying definitions for rifted margin domain boundaries. Through an extensive literature review, we highlight the existing terminology discrepancies. We focus on the Northeast Atlantic region, including the NE Greenland & Norway and the SE Greenland & Faroe-Hatton-Rockall margins, as an ideal test laboratory for our work. The regional tectonic history captures a complete evolution from Devonian post‑orogenic collapse through multiple rifting phases and finally Cenozoic breakup and magmatism. The area has been extensively studied because of past hydrocarbon exploration, providing ample constraints. Finally, local complexities including microcontinents (e.g., Jan-Mayen), failed rift basins (e.g., Rockall Basin) and anomalous ridges (Greenland-Iceland-Faroe Ridge) ensure that our framework will capture the full spectrum of rifted margin architectures.

Our preliminary results confirm that domain boundaries shift systematically depending on the dataset used, reinforcing the need for a unifying classification approach. We present the foundations of a novel framework for defining rifted margin domain boundaries, showcasing its application to the NE Atlantic. This framework aims to bridge across the rifting terminology, ultimately improving cross‑margin comparisons and fostering greater consistency within the rifting community.

How to cite: Ammerlaan, F., Peron-Pinvidic, G., and Welford, J. K.: Unifying rift terminology in the northeast Atlantic: towards a harmonized framework, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5365, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5365, 2026.

EGU26-6670 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Simulating the role of slab steepening and roll back in exhuming subducted continental lithosphere using 2D geodynamic numerical modelling (Saih Hatat Window, Oman Mountains) 

Fabiola Caso, Pietro Sternai, Alessandro Petroccia, Simone Pilia, and Francesco Giuntoli

Although continental lithosphere can enter the subduction zone, how buoyant continental crust sinks below 100 km of depth and is then exhumed remains hard to understand. Exhumation of continental lithosphere is testified by the occurrence at the surface of high pressure rocks in several orogenic belts. Despite the existence of different models describing the exhumation of high pressure rocks, they consider only tectonic settings where both upper and lower plates are either continental or oceanic.

In the Oman mountains, high pressure continental rocks crop out in the Saih Hatat Window surrounded by obducted oceanic lithosphere. Here, oceanic obduction occurred during subduction of continental lithosphere, setting a peculiar framework where a denser lithosphere overrides the subducting lighter continental crust.

In this study we used 2D thermo-mechanical geodynamic numerical modelling to investigate the mechanisms that drive exhumation of the continental lithosphere beneath obducted oceanic lithosphere. We validate the geodynamic numerical models with the pressure-temperature-time estimates from the Oman Mountains natural samples and we compare the final architecture reproduced by our models with the regional tomographic models available from the Oman region, which allow to infer the presence of a NE-dipping steep slab beneath the Oman mountains.

Our models reproduce the subduction of continental rocks up to ~150 km, with crustal material returning up to the surface guided by the steepening of the slab dip and by slab roll back. The result is a stack of continental material surrounded by obducted oceanic lithosphere. Concluding, exhumation of continental lithosphere is accompanied by a slight heating at the bottom of the exhumed continental crust, triggered by asthenosphere flow after the slab dip increased.

How to cite: Caso, F., Sternai, P., Petroccia, A., Pilia, S., and Giuntoli, F.: Simulating the role of slab steepening and roll back in exhuming subducted continental lithosphere using 2D geodynamic numerical modelling (Saih Hatat Window, Oman Mountains), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6670, 2026.

EGU26-6672 | ECS | Orals | GD2.2

Influence of Tectonic Inheritance on the Extensional Architecture of the Iberia–Newfoundland Margins  

Begoña Amigo Marx, Oscar Fernandez, and Josep Poblet

The Variscan (~370–290 Ma)–Alleghanian (~335–265 Ma) orogen was fragmented during the Mesozoic opening of the Atlantic Ocean, resulting in a complex margin architecture shaped by both extensional processes and inherited tectonic structures. This complexity challenges orogen reconstruction, as current models often underestimate the influence of tectonic inheritance and superimposed rifting. Understanding the interaction between extension and inherited crustal features is therefore essential.

Remnants of this orogen occur offshore in the West Iberian Margin (WIM) and Newfoundland Margin (NM), which form conjugate margins with marked along-strike variability. We restore the marine domains to their pre-breakup configuration and examine how basement characteristics, inferred from geophysical data, controlled extension patterns. We quantify margin extension, its partitioning between upper and lower crust, and its balance with total crustal stretching.

Our reconstruction correlates onshore and offshore basement domains and proposes a new zoning of the Variscan–Alleghanian basement. Results indicate that Mesozoic rifting was oblique to the inherited orogenic architecture, providing new insights into the structural variability of the WIM–NM system. This highlights the role of lithological composition in the Variscan basement and Avalon terranes in shaping rift geometry.

How to cite: Amigo Marx, B., Fernandez, O., and Poblet, J.: Influence of Tectonic Inheritance on the Extensional Architecture of the Iberia–Newfoundland Margins , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6672, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6672, 2026.

EGU26-7866 | Posters on site | GD2.2

What unsteady transpression models tell us about orogenic wedge kinematics of progressive arcs 

Manuel Díaz-Azpiroz, Jorge Alonso-Henar, Carlos Fernández, Juan Carlos Balanyá, Alejandro Jiménez-Bonilla, and Inmaculada Expósito

Arc kinematics is mostly oblique, such that deformation at different parts of their orogenic wedges responds to specific combinations of rotational and non-rotational strains. To inquire about the influence of obliquity evolution in orogenesis, we propose a kinematic model that helps to understand bulk strain distribution along arcuate wedges, which is essential to interpret their structural patterns. Our model set-up considers one branch of a progressive arc, where curvature increases with arc evolution, in this case from an initial straight configuration. Displacement vectors are parallel along the arc and normal to the arc chord. This configuration imposes convergence with increasing obliquity towards the arc tips and along time at any point along the arc but its apex, where it is always orthogonal. We have applied the unsteady vorticity analytical model of Alonso-Henar et al. (2025) to reproduce bulk strain kinematics along an orogenic wedge developed in such a progressive arc. We consider the deformation zone boundary is defined by a vertical backstop, which results in monoclinic transpressional kinematics. We define ten sectors along the arc branch from the apex to the tip. Each sector is defined by its final obliquity, which ranges from α = 90º at the apex to α = 0º at the tip, with 10º variations. Sectional kinematic vorticity (Wk) increases accordingly from 0 to 1, and also along time. Maximum shortening normal to the backstop is 0.8 at the apex, and progressively decreases toward the tip, where it is 0.4. Arc evolution is divided into eight stages, each one defined by 0.1 increase of the frontal shortening.

Our model reproduces similar results (strain accumulation along time and along the arc) to those obtained through more classical steady models. However, some of our results are specific to unsteady vorticity evolution, thus inherent to progressive arcs. For instance, there is not a unique relationship between some strain parameters (e.g., the orientation of the maximum horizontal stretching axis) and the obliquity of one arc segment, because the path followed by the orogenic wedge to attain such obliquity is also relevant. Unexpectedly, our model also suggests that passive lines rotate faster than strain ellipsoids. Therefore, at any sector along the arc and any evolutionary stage, the angle that such lines make with the displacement vector is larger than the angle that the main structural traces make with the arc chord. This result poses questions on the interpretations of the so-called orocline test.

References:

Alonso-Henar, J., Fernández, C., Díaz-Azpiroz, M., Druguet, E. (2025) Unsteady transpression: How progressive variations in kinematic vorticity influence finite strain in shear zone evolution. Journal of Structural Geology 198, 105462.

How to cite: Díaz-Azpiroz, M., Alonso-Henar, J., Fernández, C., Balanyá, J. C., Jiménez-Bonilla, A., and Expósito, I.: What unsteady transpression models tell us about orogenic wedge kinematics of progressive arcs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7866, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7866, 2026.

The Cretaceous High Arctic Large Igneous Province (HALIP; 135 – 75 Ma) is a massive magmatic province preserved in the circum-Arctic region through a series of volcanic flows, sills, and dykes. The plumbing geometry of LIPs, often showcased through the dyke swarms, can inform the paleo-stress regime, rheological behaviour, and tectonic history of the region. Pre-drift plate tectonic reconstruction models have identified the presence of HALIP’s signature 1600 km diameter, quasi-circular circumferential dyke swarm which encloses a radial dyke swarm extending onshore to continental masses including the Queen Elizabeth Islands of the Canadian Archipelago. The foci of the swarms are debated to be derived via mantle plume, continental rifting, or combined mechanisms, producing three major pulse events and resulting in the intrusion of the associated dykes. The earliest dykes are thought to bare economic concentrations of Ni-Cu-PGE sulfides, specifically in Axel Heiberg Island and western Ellesmere Island, Canada. Despite HALIP’s massive extent and prospectivity for Ni-Cu-PGE deposits, it remains one of the least explored LIPs on Earth based on its remote location, limited surface exposure, extensive glacial coverage, and scarce, discontiguous geophysical data.

In particular, the presence of HALIP dykes in northeastern Ellesmere Island is suspected, yet remains unmapped. The Paleogene Eurekan deformation and orogeny (63 – 35 Ma) has been hypothesized to have reworked the dykes in the region, overprinting the extent of HALIP with orogenic deformation. Here, we test the theory that unmapped HALIP dykes extend into northeastern Ellesmere Island and are subsequently impacted by the Eurekan deformation, suggesting an increased geographical presence and prospectivity of the LIP.

To test this theory, we present a series of three-dimensional numerical models to investigate the presence, impact, and prospectivity of HALIP dykes in northeastern Ellesmere Island. Utilising the open-source geodynamic code Advanced Solver for Planetary Evolution, Convection, and Tectonics (ASPECT), we superimpose a range of dyke configurations to evaluate the structural controls of HALIP dykes on host rocks at depth during the convergent plate tectonic boundary conditions that took place during Eurekan deformation. The range of dyke configurations are collated from a comprehensive review of dyke and host rock samples from neighbouring regions to accurately parameterize and configure the models to HALIP and the High Arctic, allowing for a direct link between outsourced field data and our numerical modelling.

The suite of Eurekan deformed HALIP dyke models are then critically contrasted to available geological and geophysical data in the region. Finally, we produce an analysis of the likelihood that HALIP intrusions were overprinted by Eurkean deformation, or that the HALIP extent is not as significant as previously thought. Our work here provides new insights into an understudied area of the Canadian Arctic, which may be a future site for critical mineral prospectivity.

How to cite: Nielsen, J. P. and Heron, P. J.: The influence of orogenesis on a large igneous province: a focus on Eurekan deformation on HALIP in the Canadian High Arctic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8113, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8113, 2026.

EGU26-8254 | Posters on site | GD2.2

Early rift-related Mesozoic magmatism in Newfoundland: A synthesis of recent work and links to North Atlantic opening 

Alexander L. Peace, Hamish Sandeman, Phil J. A. McCausland, J. Kim Welford, Emma Keefe, Ai Gusti Guna, Gregory Dunning, and Meixia Geng

Small-volume, alkaline mafic intrusions of Tithonian age (~148 Ma) in north-central Newfoundland form the Notre Dame Bay Magmatic Province (NDBMP) representing a useful onshore expression of early North Atlantic rift-related magmatism in the Newfoundland–Iberia-Ireland rift system. Over the past decade, a diverse body of new work has emerged combining structural geology, geochronology, palaeomagnetism, geochemistry, petrology, and geophysics. Here, we synthesise these results to develop an integrated regional framework for the timing, emplacement, and tectonic significance of this magmatic episode.

High-precision CA-ID-TIMS U–Pb zircon and 40Ar/39Ar phlogopite ages constrain emplacement of the NDBMP to a short-lived Tithonian pulse at ca. 148 Ma, contemporaneous with early offshore rifting and basin development. Structural mapping and field studies demonstrate that lamprophyre dykes preferentially exploited pre-existing Appalachian structures, including faults linked to an Iapetus suture, and locally record post-emplacement reactivation. Joint inversion of airborne gravity gradiometry and magnetic data reveals the 3-D geometry of the intrusions at shallow crustal levels and highlights structural focusing at the intersection of inherited fault systems and likely penetrating to Moho-scale structures. New petrochemical and isotopic data indicate derivation from low-degree partial melting of a metasomatised lithospheric mantle source, whereas palaeomagnetic results are consistent with coherent motion of the Newfoundland block with North America during Late Jurassic rifting.

These complementary datasets emphasise the importance of structural inheritance, lithospheric architecture, and distal extension-driven upwelling in generating early rift magmatism along magma-poor margins. However, key uncertainties remain regarding magma transport pathways at depth, the relationship between radial dyke swarms and regional stress evolution, and links to conjugate margin processes. We outline future research directions that integrate offshore data, improved geochronology, and plate-scale reconstructions to further refine models of North Atlantic rift initiation, whilst also considering the implications for rift evolution globally.

How to cite: Peace, A. L., Sandeman, H., McCausland, P. J. A., Welford, J. K., Keefe, E., Guna, A. G., Dunning, G., and Geng, M.: Early rift-related Mesozoic magmatism in Newfoundland: A synthesis of recent work and links to North Atlantic opening, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8254, 2026.

The Mexican Orogen is the most important tectonic event recorded during the Late Cretaceous-Paleocene in Mexico. This orogen conforms to the majority of the Mexican territory, and its origin is probably related to the subduction dynamics in the western margin of the North American plate. Many studies had concentrated their efforts in the foreland fold-thrus belt toward the eastern part of Mexico. However, the geometry, kinematic, and amount of shortening to the hinterland part of the orogen are unknown. Additionally, the age and kinematics of the shortening structures associated with the inversion of the early Cretaceous Arperos basin, now in the hinterland part, remains an enigma. In this work, we present a detailed structural analysis of the shortening structures and U-Pb detrital zircon ages of sedimentary rocks located in the western-central part of Mexico, with the proposal to know the main features of the contractional deformation and resolve the enigma about the Arperos basin inversion during the Mexican Orogen. The rocks of the western sector of the Arperos basin are composed of a sequence of volcaniclastic sandstone interbedded with shale and thin layers of limestone with a maximum depositional age of 133.3 ±1.1 to 110.27±0.77 Ma. This sequence is unconformably covered by a synorogenic turbidite package with a maximum depositional age of 101 ±1 Ma. All these rocks are strongly deformed by folding with a pervasive sub-horizontal axial plane cleavage and 70% shortening. Although, the Arperos basin rocks record a less pervasive second cleavage. The mesoscopic folds are asymmetric with a subhorizontal axial plane, and are class 1C, 3, and 2 based on Ramsay's classification. There is a second fold generation in the rocks of Arperos basin that refolds the firs folds. The refolded folds are type-3 mainly. The reverse faults dip 30–60° to the NE and SW, having displacements of tens of centimeters and are penetrative on the scale of tens of meters.

The data obtained in this work suggest that the hinterland part of the Mexican Orogen is represented by sedimentary rocks of Arperos Basin and synorogenic turbidites. These rocks were folded and thrusted during the late Cretaceous when the Arperos basin closed. Their complex deformation can be explained by a progressive deformation accommodated during the development of orogen.

How to cite: Díaz, A. and Vásquez, A.: Complex deformation recorded in the western sector of the Cretaceous Arperos Basin. Late Cretaceous-Paleocene Mexican Orogen, central Mexico., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8831, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8831, 2026.

EGU26-9138 | Orals | GD2.2

Terrane accretion explains thin and hot ocean-continent back-arcs 

Ritske S. Huismans, Zoltan Erdős, Sebastian G. Wolf, and Claudio Faccenna

The origin of hot ocean-continent back-arc regions with very thin mantle lithosphere and very high surface heat flow in both extensional and contractional ocean-continent subduction systems is highly enigmatic and unresolved. These first order characteristics have often been explained with either convective mantle lithosphere removal or by back-arc extension. However, it is unclear what may cause the proposed convective thinning and/or delamination of eclogitic lower crust over very wide regions, whereas back-arc extension is either not observed or insufficient to explain the observed very thin mantle lithosphere. Notably, many of these ocean-continent systems have a long history of terrane accretion. Here we show, using thermo-mechanical model experiments, that terrane accretion provides a consistent explanation for the observed key characteristics and naturally leads to rheologically weak back-arcs with continental crust directly on top of hot sub-lithospheric mantle.

Associated article:

Erdős, Z., Huismans, R.S., Wolf. S., Facenna, C. (2025), Terrane accretion explains thin and hot ocean-continent back-arcs. Science Advances 11, eadq8444. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adq8444  

How to cite: Huismans, R. S., Erdős, Z., Wolf, S. G., and Faccenna, C.: Terrane accretion explains thin and hot ocean-continent back-arcs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9138, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9138, 2026.

EGU26-9854 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Structural versus thermal inheritance controlling the location of compression-induced subduction initiation 

Éva Oravecz, Taras Gerya, and Attila Balázs

New subduction zones may initiate either in intra-oceanic setting or in the vicinity of rifted margins. At both sites, the requirement of subduction initiation is the efficient strain localization and sufficient in-situ external forcing to overcome the shear and bending resistance of the lithosphere. While the age-dependent negative buoyancy of the oceanic lithosphere is the greatest at the ocean-continent boundary and therefore, rifted margin should be more favorable sites for subduction initiation, the increasing mechanical coupling between the oceanic and continental domains and the coeval strengthening of the rifted margin have been suggested to limit subduction initiation along the ocean-continent boundary to the first few tens of million years after continental break-up. This, in particular, suggests that the duration of the transitional interval between rifting and plate convergence plays a crucial role in determining the location of subduction initiation.

In this study, we investigated compression-induced subduction initiation in young and narrow oceanic basins, where the thermo-tectonic age of the rifted margin is low and thus, it is weak and more prone to strain localization. By using the I3ELVIS-FDSPM numerical code, we tested the duration of the plate motion reversal from rifting to convergence, and evaluated the role of the associated structural and thermo-rheological inheritance in controlling the location of subduction initiation. The models tracked the dynamic changes in the lithospheric strength and strain patterns, while the applied two-way coupling between the high-resolution 3D geodynamical and surface processes models allowed for the joint analysis of the crustal tectonics, thermal structure, melting, topography evolution, and the erosion-sedimentation processes.

The results show that abrupt plate motion changes lead to ridge-inversion and subsequent intra-oceanic subduction initiation along the extinct spreading ridge, controlled by the inherited thermal- and melt-induced weakening effects of the shallow lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary. In contrast, when the transition between rifting and plate convergence exceeds a few million years, strain localization is linked to inherited lithospheric-scale weak zones, such as pre-existing suture zones underneath the continental margin, while the inherited thermal structure no longer exerts a substantial influence on the location of subduction initiation. These modeling inferences align with observations from natural subduction initiation sites, such as the Algerian margin and the eastern Japan Sea.

How to cite: Oravecz, É., Gerya, T., and Balázs, A.: Structural versus thermal inheritance controlling the location of compression-induced subduction initiation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9854, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9854, 2026.

EGU26-11861 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Formation of global subduction networks and large-scale convection facilitated by climate-induced weakening of convergent plate boundaries.  

Michaël Pons, Stephan V. Sobolev, Charitra Jain, and Menno Fraters

On Earth, the long-term development of plate tectonics is often explained by the Wilson cycle, which spans hundreds of millions of years and involves the repeated opening and closing of ocean basins through lithosphere recycling and continental movement. These cycles feature alternating phases of supercontinent assembly and breakup. Their dynamics are fundamentally connected to mantle convection and to subduction. Subduction networks are essential for both supercontinent breakup and rapid plate movements. We suggest that the development and longevity of Earth's global subduction networks are affected by water-rich sediments resulting from continental erosion. These sediments can accumulate at convergent margins and reduce their frictional strength, promoting long-lasting subduction and sustained slab rollback. As individual subduction systems expand and link together, they can create a global subduction network that increases plate mobility and promotes large-scale plate reorganizations, ultimately supporting a return to continental assembly. To test this hypothesis, we use the ASPECT numerical code, combined with the Geodynamic World Builder to run a suite of three-dimensional global geodynamic models by prescribing an initial plate configuration using GPlately. We examine two end-member Earth-like scenarios: (i) models without initial prescribed subduction zones and ridges, where plume-driven regional subduction evolves into a global subduction network, and (ii) a setup with pre-defined plate boundaries and subduction zones corresponding to the GPlates-derived configuration at 1 Ga, demonstrating that sustained subduction can be maintained when friction is locally reduced. On Earth, such frictional weakening may vary over time in response to climatic conditions, such as Snowball Earth episodes, which enhance erosion, sediment flux at plate boundaries. Our results highlight the fundamental role of surface water and sediment supply in regulating the longevity of subduction systems and, ultimately, the emergence and maintenance of large-scale plate tectonics.

How to cite: Pons, M., V. Sobolev, S., Jain, C., and Fraters, M.: Formation of global subduction networks and large-scale convection facilitated by climate-induced weakening of convergent plate boundaries. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11861, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11861, 2026.

EGU26-12412 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Influence of lower crustal rheology on orogenic growth modes 

Nuno Rodrigues, Nicolas Riel, Filipe Rosas, Muriel Gerbault, Jaime Almeida, Afonso Gomes, and João Duarte

Collisional systems mark the end of a Wilson cycle, where after a period of oceanic subduction two continental plates collide. In response to intense crustal deformation, high topographic features are developed and orogens are formed. Orogens can display multiple architectonic styles, shifting between compressional/extensional episodes and transitioning from wedges to plateaus. The large-scale processes that control different orogenic growth modes are greatly influenced by lower crustal rheology, which can enable and promote switches in tectonic modes and allow orogenic plateaus to be formed.

In the present study we use geodynamic numerical modelling to investigate the control of lower crustal rheology in different orogenic growth processes, using the geodynamic code LaMEM (Kaus et al., 2016) to perform high-resolution (512 x 128 x 256) 3D buoyancy-driven models. For realistic density variations, we couple LaMEM with the thermodynamic code MAGEMin (Riel et al., 2022). Using this modelling setup, we specifically assess the role of different continental crust rheological configurations in determining the dynamic feedbacks that control orogenic growth and architecture (for ca. 50 Myr).

Here, we obtain the P-T-t paths in our models and compare them to those recorded in different natural orogenic settings. We attempt to establish a correlation between different orogenic growth modes and natural analogues that record similar burial and exhumation patterns. In this sense, we seek to constrain which geodynamic scenarios can better produce the P-T-t paths observed in natural orogenic settings.

References:

Kaus, B., et al., 2016. Forward and inverse modelling of lithospheric deformation on geological timescales. In: Proceedings of the NIC Symposium, (John von Neumann Institute for Computing (NIC), NIC Series vol. 48.

Riel, N., Kaus, B. J. P., Green, E. C. R., & Berlie, N. (2022). MAGEMin, an Efficient Gibbs Energy Minimizer: Application to Igneous Systems. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 23(7). https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GC010427

 

This work is supported by FCT, I.P./MCTES through national funds (PIDDAC): LA/P/0068/2020 - https://doi.org/10.54499/LA/P/0068/2020 , UID/50019/2025, https://doi.org/10.54499/UID/PRR/50019/2025, UID/PRR2/50019/2025

How to cite: Rodrigues, N., Riel, N., Rosas, F., Gerbault, M., Almeida, J., Gomes, A., and Duarte, J.: Influence of lower crustal rheology on orogenic growth modes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12412, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12412, 2026.

EGU26-13121 | Orals | GD2.2

The effect of magma poor and magma rich rifted margins on continental collision dynamics 

Valeria Turino, Valentina Magni, Hans Jørgen Kjøll, and Johannes Jakob

Rifted margins form when continents rift apart and are commonly characterized by a thinned transition zone between the continental crust and the oceanic crust. This transition zone can display a wide range of characteristics, which primarily depend on the regional tectonic evolution. The velocity and duration of the rifting process as well as the geodynamic setting influence the properties and geometry of the margins, which are often grouped into two main categories: magma-poor and magma-rich.
Magma-rich margins are characterized by large input of mafic melt, while magma-poor margins are characterized by much less magma production during the rifting process, resulting in variations in geometry and rheology of rifted margins worldwide.

Using the finite elements code Citcom, we show how different types of rifted margins can influence the dynamics of continental collision, focusing on the time and depth of slab break-off after collision and the fate of margin material. We compared these models as a function of various parameters (e.g., margin length, density, and viscosity), in order to understand how the architecture of a passive margin affects the dynamics of continental collision.

We find that rifted margins have a noticeable impact on subduction dynamics, as we observe large variability in slab break-off times and depths. In particular, the presence of a rifted margin can delay slab break-off to up to 60 Myr after the onset of collision.
Our results show that a large portion of the weak crust of magma-poor margins is likely to detach from the subducting plate and accrete to the upper plate, while the dense and strong mafic and ultramafic component of magma-rich margins causes most of the margin to subduct and be lost into the mantle, leaving only a small fraction of transitional and oceanic crust at the surface. Therefore, the volume of accreted material is much larger when the margin is magma-poor than magma-rich, which is consistent with geological observations that fossil magma-poor rifted margins are preserved in many mountain ranges, whereas remnants of magma-rich rifted margins are scarce.
Importantly, our results show that rifted margin type controls the architecture of the subsequent collisional phase of the Wilson cycle.

How to cite: Turino, V., Magni, V., Kjøll, H. J., and Jakob, J.: The effect of magma poor and magma rich rifted margins on continental collision dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13121, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13121, 2026.

EGU26-13859 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Detrital rutile geochronology of the Vahic Superunit helps to understand the closure of the Alpine Tethys in the Western Carpathians 

Ludwik de Doliwa Zieliński, Tomáš Potočný, Karolina Kośmińska, and Jarosław Majka

The Vahic Unit represents a critical tectonic element of the Western Carpathians, proposed as the oceanic suture zone that separates the Central Western Carpathian (CWC) block from the North Europeanplatform. Interpreted as the eastern continuation of the South Penninic (Alpine Tethys) oceanic domain, the Vahicum is primarily represented by the Belice Unit, which preserves a sedimentary record of the Vahic Ocean's evolution. This sequence includes Upper Jurassic radiolarites and Lower Cretaceous pelagic limestones, conformably overlain by Upper Cretaceous flysch.

Structurally, the Vahicum occupies the lowermost position in the orogenic wedge, situated beneath the Tatric crystalline basement. It is believed that the closure of the Vahic Ocean occurred during the Late Cretaceous (Late Turonian to Maastrichtian), marked by the subduction of oceanic and attenuated continental crust beneath the prograding CWC overriding plate. This process was supposed to result in high-pressure/low-temperature (HP/LT) metamorphism, typical of Penninic-type subduction zones, although these signals are often fragmented due to subsequent tectonic reworking, and in larger scale non existent.

In this study, six sandstone samples were collected from the Vahic Unit to investigate, through a detrital rutile geochronological campaign, its tectonic and sedimentological evolution. From each sample, approximately 200 rutile grains were extracted, with roughly half selected for detailed age and trace element analysis.

These findings are compared with previously acquired data from the Magura and Silesia supernits to constrain regional provenance better. In the Magura transect, prominent age peaks align with Variscan (c. 400–280 Ma) and Alpine (c. 160–90 Ma) events, including dominant Alpine maxima at 137–126 Ma and 115–105 Ma. In contrast, the Silesian samples consistently exhibit a prominent Variscan peak, with Alpine tectonic signatures (e.g., a dominant peak at 95 Ma) appearing only in the young, Oligocene deposits. Integrating the rutile age data from the Vahic Superunit into this regional framework allows for a more comprehensive reconstruction of the evolving paleodrainage and tectonic maturation of the Carpathian orogenic wedge.

How to cite: de Doliwa Zieliński, L., Potočný, T., Kośmińska, K., and Majka, J.: Detrital rutile geochronology of the Vahic Superunit helps to understand the closure of the Alpine Tethys in the Western Carpathians, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13859, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13859, 2026.

EGU26-15528 | ECS | Orals | GD2.2

Emergent tectonic cycles along the Panthalassan margin of East Gondwana from numerical plate reconstruction 

Addison Tu, Sabin Zahirovic, Samuel Boone, Richard Glen, Luke Mahoney, Tristan Salles, and Andres Rodriguez Corcho

A persistent limitation in reconstructions of East Gondwana is the absence of a margin-scale numerical plate model. Existing reconstructions are largely regional or schematic, commonly rely on limited datasets, and in many cases conflict across adjacent sectors of the margin. To address this gap, a new numerical tectonic reconstruction of the East Gondwanan margin is presented, spanning 780–0 Ma and focusing on the coupled evolution of eastern Australia, the East Antarctic margin, and New Zealand during 780–250 Ma. The reconstruction is embedded within a globally consistent plate framework and links seamlessly to established Mesozoic–Cenozoic reconstructions, providing continuity across the full evolution of the Panthalassa-facing margin.  

The model synthesises ~113,000 datapoints across ~12,000 geological samples, including igneous, detrital, and metamorphic geochronology, igneous isotopic geochemistry, potential-field datasets, paleogeographic constraints, and extensive literature synthesis. Implemented in GPlates, the reconstruction enforces plate-like behaviour and enables inherited geological features, such as rift systems and suture zones, to be tracked through time. 

At the scale of the full margin, the reconstruction captures a series of first-order tectonic events and behaviours. Neoproterozoic–Cambrian rifting marks the initial development of Panthalassa as an Atlantic-type ocean, followed by a transition to a Pacific-type system with the initiation of continent-dipping subduction between ~555 and 525 Ma. Convergence is punctuated by major collisional events, including accretion of the VanDieland Superterrane at ~495 Ma and collision of the Hikurangi Plateau at ~100 Ma; in both cases, subduction jump promotes trench rollback and back-arc spreading that matures into rifting. In contrast, episodes of highly oblique plate motion drive inboard oblique subduction and transform systems, displacing the East Lachlan (430–395 Ma) and New England (430–395, 360–330, and 285–260 Ma) superterranes along strike and generating substantial vertical-axis rotation and oroclinal curvature. These processes illustrate how obliquity and lithospheric inheritance complicate simple opening–closing cycles along long-lived convergent margins. 

By resolving these processes within a single, internally consistent reconstruction, this work provides a framework for identifying emergent tectonic cycles along the East Gondwanan margin. Interpreted within a modern Wilson Cycle context, the results highlight how inherited lithospheric architecture and subduction dynamics condition whether convergence leads to rollback, rifting, or continued accretion along long-lived supercontinent margins. 

How to cite: Tu, A., Zahirovic, S., Boone, S., Glen, R., Mahoney, L., Salles, T., and Rodriguez Corcho, A.: Emergent tectonic cycles along the Panthalassan margin of East Gondwana from numerical plate reconstruction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15528, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15528, 2026.

EGU26-16797 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

How does ocean arcs’ silicate weathering affect the atmospheric CO2 budget through supercontinent cycles? 

Maelis Arnould, Alexandre Janin, and Andrew Merdith

One efficient driver for atmospheric CO2 removal over 10-100 Ma timescales is silicate-rich rock weathering, which is notably favored in the context of arc magmatism (Gernon et al., 2021). The modeling of the past evolution of atmospheric CO2 therefore requires to finely reconstruct the evolution of past subduction zones, which is challenging due to the permanent recycling of oceanic lithosphere. One difficulty notably resides in the reconstruction of intra-oceanic arcs, which leave almost no direct imprints in the geological record, although they could significantly contribute to the atmospheric CO2 removal through silicate weathering, especially in the tropics (Gaillardet et al., 2011).

We propose to test how the variability of intra-oceanic arcs can affect the amount of CO2 removed from the atmosphere through supercontinent cycles. To do so, we use 3D numerical models of whole-mantle convection self-generating Earth-like plate tectonics in order to quantify the temporal evolution of the number and length of intra-oceanic arcs, in a fully-dynamic context, independent of any plate reconstructions. We use the automatic plate tessellation algorithm MAPT3 based on the open-source library Topology ToolKit (Janin et al., 2025) to detect intra-oceanic subduction zones. We show that the total length of intra-oceanic arcs varies significantly depending on the continental configuration in the models. We then test the sensitivity of atmospheric CO2 absorption level through silicate weathering to mantle convective parameters, to the latitudinal distribution of the intra-oceanic arcs, their width and fraction above sea-level, and the potential effect of True Polar Wander. We show that in a fully-dynamic model, it is possible to reach the amount of extra-weathering required to possibly explain the atmospheric CO2 and temperature drops observed, especially during periods of continental aggregation. Nevertheless, the amount of intra-oceanic subduction zones in the geodynamic models varies over longer timescales than in the plate reconstruction, and cannot explain alone, rapid cooling events, such as during the Hirnantian (Marcilly et al., 2022).

How to cite: Arnould, M., Janin, A., and Merdith, A.: How does ocean arcs’ silicate weathering affect the atmospheric CO2 budget through supercontinent cycles?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16797, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16797, 2026.

EGU26-17186 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.2

Two-stage oceanic opening with its continental margins, revealed by elemental zircon U–Pb/Hf/TE signatures: the case of the Chamrousse ophiolite in the Western Alps. 

Maureen Gunia, Adrien Vezinet, Carole Cordier, Emilie Janots, and Alexis Plunder

The Chamrousse ophiolite, located in the French External Alps, has long been considered as the suture of an ocean opened during the Cambro-Ordovician (496 ± 6 Ma, Ménot et al., 1988). This has been recently challenged by new U–Pb zircon results revealing a dual geological history, occurring in the Cambro-Ordovician (520-460 Ma) and in the Devono-Carboniferous (360-345 Ma), see Gunia et al., 2025. Futhermore, this complex is bounded by North-Gondwana flysch units (Fréville et al., 2018). Additional information is needed to define geodynamic interpretations. Here, we present combined zircon U–Pb/Hf and trace element signatures obtained on these two igneous populations via in-situ approaches.

Zircon showing Cambro-Ordovician U–Pb dates, identified in meta-trondhjemites and amphibolites, feature elemental geochemistry of U and Yb contents indicative of continental affinities. ε176Hfinitial of ca. +5 point to a mantle source intermediate between depleted and enriched end-members. We interpret these results as indicating zircon crystallisation during the continental rifting of the North of Gondwana.

Zircon that crystallized during the Devono-Carboniferous event, identified in mafic-ultramafic units, show trace-element characteristics and an ε176Hfinitial of ca. +12 suggestive of an oceanic zircon origin from a chemically depleted mantle source. This Devono-Carboniferous event is interpreted as reflecting the actual oceanic opening, facilitated by pre-thinned Cambro-Ordovician continental crust.

In addition, new structural data suggest the opening occurs through the development of an asymmetric detachment that enabled exhumation of mantle-derived rocks with limited magma production, followed rapidly by its closure during the Variscan collision (330-300 Ma, Jacob et al., 2023). The new results presented here highlight the two-stage tectonic evolution, making this short-lived oceanic basin an exceptional case study before the final assembly of Pangea.

Reference list:

Fréville, K., Trap, P., Faure, M., Melleton, J., Li, X. H., Lin, W., ... & Poujol, M. (2018). Structural, metamorphic and geochronological insights on the Variscan evolution of the Alpine basement in the Belledonne Massif (France). Tectonophysics726, 14-42.

Gunia, M., Cordier, C., Janots, E., Vezinet, A., Milloud, V., Jacob, J. B., & Guillot, S. (2025). The Chamrousse Ophiolite (Western Alps, France): Relict of a Devono‐Carboniferous Ocean. Terra Nova.

Jacob, J. B., Janots, E., Cordier, C., & Guillot, S. (2023). Discovery of Variscan orogenic peridotites in the Pelvoux massif (western Alps, France). BSGF-Earth Sciences Bulletin194(1), 2.

Ménot, R. P., Peucat, J. J., Scarenzi, D., & Piboule, M. (1988). 496 My age of plagiogranites in the Chamrousse ophiolite complex (external crystalline massifs in the French Alps): evidence of a Lower Paleozoic oceanization. Earth and Planetary Science Letters88(1-2), 82-92.

How to cite: Gunia, M., Vezinet, A., Cordier, C., Janots, E., and Plunder, A.: Two-stage oceanic opening with its continental margins, revealed by elemental zircon U–Pb/Hf/TE signatures: the case of the Chamrousse ophiolite in the Western Alps., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17186, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17186, 2026.

EGU26-17950 | Orals | GD2.2

A systematic approach to reconstruct ophiolite tectonic setting and paleo-position from outcrop analysis and geochemistry: the example of the North Calabria Unit (Southern Apennines, Italy) 

Gianluca Frasca, Gianreto Manatschal, Giacomo Prosser, Daniela Rubatto, Marc Ulrich, Luca Barale, Nadia Curetti, and Roberto Compagnoni

Ophiolites derive from different tectonic settings, including mid-ocean ridges (MOR), supra-subduction zones (SSZ), and ocean–continent transitions (OCT). However, discriminating among these settings and relocating ophiolitic fragments nowadays in orogens to their original paleo-position in space and time remains challenging.

This study aims at constraining the original tectonic setting and paleo-position of three isolated and fragmented ophiolite slivers belonging to the North Calabria Unit (Basilicata region, southern Italy). The North Calabria Unit represents a strongly dismembered association of mantle, mafic, and continental crustal rocks incorporated into the southern Apennine orogenic system. These units are interpreted as remnants of the Jurassic Alpine Tethys, later affected by Alpine–Apennine convergence and tectonic reworking.

We investigate three ophiolite slivers using a multiscale approach integrating detailed field observations, petrological and geochemical analyses, zircon geochronology, and plate-kinematic reconstructions. Particular emphasis is placed on the characteristics of key lithologies and, critically, on the nature of their contacts, which provide first-order constraints on the original tectonic setting of these slivers.

Key observations include: (i) Mid-Jurassic cherts stratigraphically overlying MOR-type basalts, sealing tectonic contacts between depleted mantle and gabbros affected by crustal contamination; (ii) amphibolite and gneiss tectonically juxtaposed with gabbros, with zircon age and composition compatible with  a pre-rift lower continental crustal origin; and (iii) the possible circulation of Cr-rich, mantle-derived fluids along low-angle faults at the top of continental crustal rocks.

When integrated with kinematic reconstructions, these observations indicate that the studied ophiolite slivers originated in an OCT setting developed during Jurassic rifting of the European side of the Alpine Tethys, possibly near Sardinia, rather than in a fully oceanic MOR or SSZ environment.

Our workflow provides a framework to locate fragmented ophiolites in rifted margins and can be applied to interpret dismembered ophiolites in orogenic belts worldwide.

How to cite: Frasca, G., Manatschal, G., Prosser, G., Rubatto, D., Ulrich, M., Barale, L., Curetti, N., and Compagnoni, R.: A systematic approach to reconstruct ophiolite tectonic setting and paleo-position from outcrop analysis and geochemistry: the example of the North Calabria Unit (Southern Apennines, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17950, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17950, 2026.

EGU26-1431 | ECS | Posters on site | GD3.1

Flow through a slab tear? Lateral variations in seismic anisotropy beneath the Colombian Andes 

Christopher Carchedi, Lara Wagner, and Gaspar Monsalve

Slab tears are observed around the globe with increasing frequency as datasets and imaging methodologies improve, though the interactions between slab tears and the surrounding mantle flow remain enigmatic. Constraints on mantle flow around and through slab tears are crucial to a comprehensive understanding of slab-mantle interactions, as (1) cross-tear flow may allow mixing between upper mantle reservoirs otherwise separated by subducting slabs, and (2) cross-tear flow may impact the strength of nearby corner flow and therefore influence regional dynamic topography. However, the ability to study slab tears and their impact on mantle flow is limited by the number of slabs with clearly observed tearing and sufficient measurement density to capture lateral variations in mantle flow across the tear. On both counts, the Colombian Andes serve as an ideal region to study the interplay between slab tears and mantle dynamics.

The Colombian Andes are shaped by complex interactions between the subducting Nazca and Caribbean plates, as most clearly manifested by the Caldas Tear—a sharp lateral offset in slab seismicity near 5.5°N spanning more than 150 km. Using data collected across this boundary during the recent MUSICA (Modeling, Uplift, Seismicity, and Igneous geochemistry of the Colombian Andes) broadband seismic deployment, we investigate lateral variations in seismic anisotropy across the Colombian Andes by measuring shear-wave splitting of SKS and SKKS phases from teleseismic earthquakes.

Measurements of shear-wave splitting offer direct observational constraints on seismic anisotropy. Seismic anisotropy in the upper mantle forms primarily from the deformation-induced alignment of intrinsically anisotropic olivine crystals. Under various ambient stress and hydration conditions, different olivine petrofabrics develop that relate the bulk anisotropic fast direction to the orientation of maximum extensional strain. By inferring petrofabric type, shear-wave splitting measurements can directly constrain the geometry of deformation in the upper mantle and thus provide insight into the impact of complex slab geometry on mantle dynamics.

Our findings detail a complex regional pattern of mantle flow as the result of three interacting flow components: (1) entrained trench-perpendicular corner flow in the mantle wedges above sinking plates, (2) mantle flow through the Caldas Tear, and (3) trench-parallel flow far east of both subducting plates. Measured splitting delay times far exceed those expected from lithospheric anisotropy alone and thus support a deeper anisotropic source. Additionally, we observe strong back azimuthal variations in splitting measurement quality and quantity that demand further investigation. Future work will explore constraining lateral and vertical anisotropic complexity simultaneously using splitting intensity tomography.

How to cite: Carchedi, C., Wagner, L., and Monsalve, G.: Flow through a slab tear? Lateral variations in seismic anisotropy beneath the Colombian Andes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1431, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1431, 2026.

EGU26-2307 | ECS | Orals | GD3.1

Depth rotations of azimuthal seismic anisotropy associated with relative importance of Couette/Poiseuille flow in the asthenosphere 

Zhirui Ray Wang, Clinton P. Conrad, Sergei Lebedev, Giampiero Iaffaldano, and John R. Hopper

Azimuthal seismic anisotropy in the upper mantle is crucial for understanding the spatial patterns of past and present upper mantle deformation. Traditional interpretation of such anisotropy attributes to relative shear between surface plates and mantle. This requires the orientation of anisotropy azimuths to remain constant with depth. However, inferences of azimuthal anisotropy based on surface wave tomographic models often reveals depth-dependent azimuths. To this end, the existence of mechanically weak, thin asthenosphere beneath the lithosphere facilitates the channelization of plate-driven Couette flow and pressure-driven Poiseuille flow. The combination of two flows, especially when misaligned, yields depth rotations of asthenospheric shear. This provides a geodynamically plausible link between asthenospheric flow properties and depth rotations of azimuthal seismic anisotropy. In this submission, we utilize publicly available azimuthal seismic anisotropy models together with predictions from a global mantle flow model that incorporates Couette/Poiseuille flow. We find that Poiseuille flow profoundly affects depth rotations of seismically inferred azimuthal anisotropy. Prominent depth rotations are under the Atlantic basin and the Nazca plate, where Poiseuille flow dominates the modeled asthenospheric flow regime. Significant Poiseuille flow may exist beneath the Indian basin, yet with small depth rotation, probably because of its directional alignment with Couette flow. Our results indicate that interpretation of azimuthal seismic anisotropy cannot be simply tied to relative shearing between plates and mantle. Instead, the relative importance of Couette and Poiseuille flows must be taken into account.

How to cite: Wang, Z. R., Conrad, C. P., Lebedev, S., Iaffaldano, G., and Hopper, J. R.: Depth rotations of azimuthal seismic anisotropy associated with relative importance of Couette/Poiseuille flow in the asthenosphere, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2307, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2307, 2026.

EGU26-3092 | Orals | GD3.1 | Highlight

Seismic anisotropy measurements within AdriaArray: a review of previous and new data 

Silvia Pondrelli, Julia Rewers, Piotr Środa, Katarina Zailac, Josip Stipčević, and Simone Salimbeni

The central Mediterranean area is a place where seismic anisotropy measurements have been collected for years, mainly along the Italian peninsula. Several different techniques have been applied to obtain this information, that carries relevant indications on the state of deformation at depth, both in the Earth’s crust and in the mantle. The most common type of measurements comes from the analysis of shear wave splitting of core phases (*KS), and from splitting intensity measurements. Seismic anisotropy patterns are a major support in answering questions such as where tectonic plates are actively deforming and which processes drive plate deformation. These are some of the questions addressed by the AdriaArray project. The seismic experiment AdriaArray aimed to densify the collection of seismographic data to the east with respect to the Adriatic microplate. The area covered by the project spans from southern France to the Black Sea in longitude and from Central Europe to the central Mediterranean in latitude, reaching the Sicily channel and the Hellenic Trench. Part of this wide area is already well studied for seismic anisotropy, as previously obtained data show. However, AdriaArray acquired data from 950 permanent and temporary broad-band stations thanks to the cooperation of nearly 40 institutions (https://orfeus.readthedocs.io/en/latest/adria_array_main.html) and most of them, located in the eastern part of AdriaArray study region, are now under analysis. Within the project, a Collaborative Research Group dedicated to seismic anisotropy has been created. It is working on building a dataset of shear-wave splitting measurements by improving already produced results with new data. The same has been done with splitting intensity measurements, with ongoing analyses for regions such as Sardinia, the eastern Adriatic coast and further east.

How to cite: Pondrelli, S., Rewers, J., Środa, P., Zailac, K., Stipčević, J., and Salimbeni, S.: Seismic anisotropy measurements within AdriaArray: a review of previous and new data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3092, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3092, 2026.

The Slave craton in northwest Canada is characterized by thick, cold, depleted lithosphere, and its surface geology includes some of the oldest rocks on the planet. In addition, the central Slave has proven economic importance, with a thriving diamond industry fed by suites of Miocene kimberlites. Previous studies of Slave craton architecture and anisotropy suggested a stratified lithosphere within the central Slave, likely associated with craton formation processes and subsequent metasomatism.

Since the original shear-wave splitting studies carried out in the central Slave craton, new seismograph installations have been carried out which permit an expanded view of the architecture of the craton as a whole, as well as its margins. Here we measure (or remeasure) shear wave splitting parameters for the complete dataset, which spans up to three decades for the longest-running stations. This systematic approach allows for a comprehensive comparison of anisotropic parameters across the craton.

Preliminary results suggest that NE-SW fast-polarization orientations dominate the craton at a large scale, though with significant local variability in the central Slave, suggesting lateral variability in lithospheric properties. We look for azimuthal variations in splitting measurements that may indicate stratified anisotropy, and we compare the results with models of azimuthal anisotropy from recent surface wave tomography studies.

How to cite: Darbyshire, F. and Dave, R.: Seismic anisotropy in the Slave craton, northern Canada: inferences from a new shear-wave splitting compilation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3197, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3197, 2026.

EGU26-3264 | Posters on site | GD3.1

Crustal structural and anisotropy in northeastern Tibetan Plateau from receiver functions 

Ruiqing Zhang and Yixiong Hua

Abstract

Deformation in northern (NE) Tibet is essential for understanding the geodynamic processes of crustal thickening and outward growth associated with the Indo-Asian collision. We analyze receiver function data recorded by the regional seismic array of ChinArray-Ⅱ and permanent stations of the study region. The crustal thickness and Vp/Vs ratio are estimated using the H–κ grid searching technique (Zhu et al., 2000) . We also perform a joint analysis of Pms from radial and tangential receiver functions to measure fast polarization direction and splitting time (Liu et al., 2012). The harmonic analysis is adopted to obtain reliable crustal azimuthal anisotropy (Sun et al., 2012). Our result shows that the crust is significantly thickened (≥50 km) west of ~103°, while the Vp/Vs ratio is relatively low (~1.73) beneath the Qilian orogeny. We also found measurements of crustal azimuthal anisotropy beneath 71 stations in which the Pms arrivals with a dominant degree-2 back azimuth variations. The crustal anisotropy shows a north-south change across the Longshoushan fault. The measured splitting time in the region south of the Longshoushan fault is 0.22-1.02 s (with an average of 0.46 s). The fast direction mainly along the NW direction is roughly close to the fast polarization from XKS (Chang et al., 2021), which is parallel to the trending of the Qian orogenic belt, indicating a vertically coherent lithospheric deformation beneath the NE Tibet. To the north, the Alxa block exhibits a NNE-NE fast polarization with an average delay time of ~0.47s. Such observation differs from the fast-axis direction of mantle anisotropy, indicating that the crust and lithospheric mantle are decoupled. The north-south variation in crustal anisotropy of our study area may suggest that the growth front of the northeastern Tibetan Plateau may have extended to the Longshoushan fault.

 

Acknowledgments

Seismic data of the ChinArray was provided by the International Earthquake Science Data Center at Institute of Geophysics, China Earthquake Administration (https://doi.org/10.11998/ IESDC). Seismic waveforms recorded by the permanent stations of the China National Seismic Networks can be downloaded from the National Earthquake Data Center, China Earthquake Administration (https://data.earthquake.cn/) (Zheng et al., 2010). This research was supported by the NSF of China (42030310, 42474133).

 

References

Zhu, L., & Kanamori, H. 2000. Moho depth variation in southern California from teleseismic receiver functions. J. Geophys. Res., 105(B2), 2969–2980.

Liu H., Niu F., 2012. Estimating crustal seismic anisotropy with a joint analysis of radial and transverse receiver function data. Geophys. J. Int., 188: 144–164.

Sun Y., Niu F., Liu H., et al. 2012. Crustal structure and deformation of the SE Tibetan plateau revealed by receiver function data. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett., 349-350: 186–197.

Chang L., Ding Z., Wang C., 2021. Upper mantle anisotropy and implications beneath the central and western North China and the NE margin of Tibetan Plateau. Chin. J. Geophys. (in Chinese), 64(1):114-130.

How to cite: Zhang, R. and Hua, Y.: Crustal structural and anisotropy in northeastern Tibetan Plateau from receiver functions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3264, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3264, 2026.

EGU26-3503 | Posters on site | GD3.1

Singularity points in multi-layered anisotropic medium  

Alexey Stovas

The slowness surfaces for P, S1 and S2 waves in anisotropic medium are defined by solving the Christoffel equation. The regular point on the slowness surface can be mapped on corresponding group velocity surface. The irregular (singularity) point on the slowness surface results in the plane curve in the group velocity domain (Stovas et al., 2024).

The characteristic equations for double and triple singularity points define the tangent cone of second and third order, respectively. If the plane wave passes through singularity points in some layers of multilayered model, the effective characteristic equation has order given by product of orders of characteristic equations from individual layers. Therefore, the order of effective characteristic equation can be computed as N=2K3L, where K and L are the number of layers with double and triple singularity points, respectively. The effective characteristic polynomial FN(Δp1,Δp2,Δp3)  (the N-th order tangential cone) for multi-layered model can be computed by resultant of individual characteristic polynomials,where Δpj,j=1,2,3, are the increments in slowness projections.The number of individual branches is given by J=Floor[(N+1)/2]. The dual curve ΦM (V1,V2,V3)=0 is the group velocity umage of Nth-order singularity point, where M=N(N-1)-2n-3c (Quine, 1982), with n and c being respectively the number of nodes and cusps for curve FN=0. It is shown that the tangential cone does not have cusps (c=0) but can have nodes if N≥6. The inflection points and bitangents for curve FN=0 respectively result in cusps and nodes for dual curve ΦM=0. The cusps affect the Gaussian curvature computed in vicinity of singularity point (Stovas et al., 2025). The irregularities in phase and group domain are illustrated in Figure by dots for two-layer model with double singularity points in both layers (N=4, J=2, n=2 and M=8).

Figure. Two-layer model with double singularity points. a) Curve F4=0 in affine plane (phase domain). Four inflection points on converted wave branch are shown by black dots. Two bitangents are shown by dotted lines limited by gray dots. b) Group velocity image (Φ8=0) of quartic singularity point (dual curve). Four cusps are shown by black dots, and two nodes are shown by gray dots. Solid and dashed lines stand for pure wave modes (S1S1 and S2S2) and converted (S1S2 and S2S1) waves, respectively.

References

Stovas, A., Roganov, Yu., and V. Roganov, 2024, Singularity points and their degeneracies in anisotropic media, Geophysical Journal International 238 (2), 881- 901.

Stovas, A., Roganov, Yu., and V. Roganov, 2025, Gaussian curvature of the slowness surface in vicinity of singularity point in anisotropic media, Geophysical Journal International 240 (3), 1917-1934.                                                                    

Quine, J.R., 1982, A Plücker equation for curves in real projective space, Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society, 85, no.1, 103-107.

How to cite: Stovas, A.: Singularity points in multi-layered anisotropic medium , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3503, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3503, 2026.

EGU26-4099 | Orals | GD3.1

Mapping upper-mantle fabric at continental scale: frozen tectonics and active flow patterns in western Canada 

Andrew Frederiksen, Christian Phillips, and Yu Gu

Teleseismic shear-wave splitting is a widely-used technique for measuring oriented fabric in the crust and upper mantle; such fabric is an important marker for current or past deformation. The technique yields both the orientation (fast direction) and cumulative intensity (split time) of the net fabric. However, published splitting results, particularly split times, can have puzzling inconsistencies that make mapping splitting over large areas challenging; semivariograms of compiled splitting results show a lack of spatial coherence in split time measurement when studies using different methods are combined. I present modelling work that demonstrates that these inconsistencies result from an inherent bias in splitting measurement, particularly pronounced for split time, that is sensitive to details of the data processing methods and is amplified by averaging single-event measurements. With a correct choice of averaging method (error-surface stacking), this bias can be mitigated sufficiently to allow split time to be mapped over large areas, as demonstrated using compiled data from western Canada. The results show strong spatially-coherent variations along the strike of the Cordillera, which may represent regions of dominant vertical vs. horizontal flow in the upper mantle, driven by complex Cordilleran active tectonics.

How to cite: Frederiksen, A., Phillips, C., and Gu, Y.: Mapping upper-mantle fabric at continental scale: frozen tectonics and active flow patterns in western Canada, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4099, 2026.

EGU26-4243 | Orals | GD3.1

Subslab flow beneath subduction zones revealed by multiple-layer shear wave splitting inversion 

Ban-Yuan Kuo, Cheng-Chien Peng, and Jean-Paul Montagner

Shear wave splitting is widely used to probe seismic anisotropy, but its depth resolution is limited. Building on the formulation of Silver and Savage (1994), we apply a Bayesian inversion that explicitly accounts for uncertainty in shear-wave polarization orientation (θ) to resolve multilayer anisotropy from splitting parameters. We apply this approach to source-side S and SKS data from the Cocos subduction zone, and to SKS data from station NNA above the South America subduction zone and station SNZO at the southern Hikurangi margin. Subduction in all three regions is shallow to flat, minimizing dip-angle effects on SKS. The inversion yields tightly constrained fast directions for both upper and lower anisotropic layers. Three-layer inversions show progressive rotation with depth consistent with two-layer solutions, but are not required by the data. In the Cocos system, the upper-layer fast direction is unambiguously aligned with Cocos plate motion in the NNR reference frame, consistent with subduction-entrained flow. In contrast, beneath NNA and SNZO, the upper and lower layers exhibit trench-subparallel and trench-normal anisotropy, respectively—opposite in layering sense to the poloidal–toroidal flow structure predicted by dynamic models. If both layers reside in the subslab mantle, the trench-parallel upper layer flow would decouple the deeper mantle from the slab, raising questions about how the apparent subduction-driven flow is maintained at depth. Alternatively, the upper layer may reflect deformation within or above the slab. Possible sources of trench-parallel anisotropy include frozen-in oceanic lithospheric fabrics, trench-parallel mantle-wedge flow, or inherited fabrics related to nearby continental shear zones. These results highlight the complexity of subslab dynamics and demonstrate the value of probabilistic multilayer inversion for interpreting shear-wave splitting.

 

How to cite: Kuo, B.-Y., Peng, C.-C., and Montagner, J.-P.: Subslab flow beneath subduction zones revealed by multiple-layer shear wave splitting inversion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4243, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4243, 2026.

The recent increase in seismic activity in the southern Sichuan Basin has attracted substantial public interest and simultaneously provides an important opportunity to investigate upper crustal anisotropy, which offers key constraints on the regional stress field and crustal deformation. In this study, we obtained 1,845 high-quality local shear-wave splitting measurements from 15 stations, along with 2,027 null measurements from 19 stations. The results reveal a single anisotropic layer characterized by a horizontal symmetry axis at depths of approximately 3–7 km. The fast polarization directions exhibit clear spatial variability, which is primarily controlled by the spatial distribution of earthquakes rather than temporal evolution. Near the Baimazhen Syncline, the fast polarization directions align with the strike of the strata and form a circular pattern around the synclinal core, indicating that the anisotropy in this region is dominantly structure-controlled. In contrast, stations located in the southern Weiyuan Anticline and the western Baimazhen Syncline display fast directions of N171.7°E and N45.9°E, respectively. These orientations are consistent with the P axes derived from earthquake focal mechanisms, suggesting that anisotropy in these areas is primarily governed by the regional stress field. Overall, this study enhances our understanding of the complex geological framework of the southern Sichuan Basin and underscores the need for caution when interpreting potential temporal variations in seismic anisotropy in future investigations. This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 42374124).

How to cite: Qiang, Z., Wu, Q., and Li, Y.: Spatial Heterogeneity of Upper Crustal Anisotropy in the Southern Sichuan Basin (China) Revealed by Local Shear-Wave Splitting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4419, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4419, 2026.

EGU26-4571 | ECS | Posters on site | GD3.1

Seismic anisotropy analysis across Southwestern Australia reveals ENE‐trending lithospheric architecture linked to Archean Yilgarn Craton formation 

Miriam Gauntlett, Caroline Eakin, Nitarani Bishoyi, Ping Zhang, John-Paul O'Donnell, Ruth Murdie, Meghan Miller, Robert Pickle, and Reza Ebrahimi

The southwest region of Western Australia is one of the oldest continental regions on Earth, hosting the Archean Yilgarn Craton, bounded by the Proterozoic Albany-Fraser and Pinjarra orogens. Here we calculate shear wave splitting of the PKS and SKS teleseismic phases using stations from Phases 1 and 2 of the WA Array (average station spacing 40 km), as well as other temporary and permanent networks in the study region. We find evidence for coherent seismic anisotropy, with the regional average delay time (1.24 ± 0.62 s) comparable to the global average, δt = 1 s. Although fast polarization orientations show variation, they are not aligned with current plate motion and the expected asthenospheric flow direction. In the South West Terrane, fast polarization orientations match the trend of ancient structural faults. By contrast, structural faults in the Youanmi Terrane and the Eastern Goldfields Superterrane are oriented at an angle compared to the E–W and NE–SW fast polarizations. Instead, the seismic anisotropy pattern shows a striking similarity to E–W trending Precambrian (2.42 Ga) dykes that extend uninterrupted across the Yilgarn Craton. We propose that lithospheric fabrics frozen-in at the time of craton formation (~2.76–2.65 Ga) generated a mechanical weakness which subsequently influenced the orientation and emplacement of the dykes. Further evidence for a similar, ancient (~2.73 Ga) architectural fabric comes from recent isotope geochemistry analysis of primary ENE-trends within the Yilgarn Craton. Overall, these results point toward large-scale, fossilized lithospheric fabric within the Yilgarn Craton, preserved for over two billion years, offering a unique window into the formation and early evolution of the continent. 

How to cite: Gauntlett, M., Eakin, C., Bishoyi, N., Zhang, P., O'Donnell, J.-P., Murdie, R., Miller, M., Pickle, R., and Ebrahimi, R.: Seismic anisotropy analysis across Southwestern Australia reveals ENE‐trending lithospheric architecture linked to Archean Yilgarn Craton formation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4571, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4571, 2026.

EGU26-5755 | Posters on site | GD3.1

Mapping the Ivrea Geophysical Body and its anisotropic properties beneath the Western Alps using receiver functions analysis 

Judith Confal, Silvia Pondrelli, Simone Salimbeni, and Nicola Piana Agostinetti

We constrain the extent and anisotropic properties of the Ivrea Geophysical Body (IGB) beneath the Western Alps using receiver function (RF) analysis of 66 teleseismic datasets. The IGB represents one of the most prominent examples of shallow mantle material within continental crust, yet its geometry, composition, and tectonic significance remain debated beyond its well-known positive gravity anomaly. Using teleseismic waves recorded from temporary seismic deployments and permanent seismic networks across the western Alps, we perform a comprehensive receiver function (RF) analysis that indicates the presence of anisotropic mantle materials at shallow depth, associated with the occurrence of the IGB, in terms of P-to-s converted energy out of the radial plane. We characterise the anisotropic rock volumes solving an inverse problem using a Neighbourhood Algorithm. The results indicate that 35 out of 66 RF data-sets from this study, together with five additional stations from a previous study, display coherent anisotropic characteristics directly above the high-gravity anomaly and can be associated with the IGB. These stations exhibit strong anisotropy (~15%) and a coherent fast-axis pattern that systematically rotates from south to north, following the arcuate geometry of the Alpine trench. The depth distribution of the anisotropic interfaces constrains the IGB as a continuous lithospheric-scale body approximately 170 km long, 30-50 km wide, and 20-45 km thick, with its upper boundary as shallow as 1 km depth. The whole body is slightly dipping towards the East. Seismic velocities and anisotropy magnitudes indicate a dominantly mantle-derived composition, consistent with a peridotitic protolith variably overprinted by serpentinite-rich shear zones. Our results refine the three-dimensional extent of the IGB and demonstrate that its anisotropic fabric records the deformation associated with Alpine subduction, slab rollback, and subsequent exhumation, providing new constraints on the tectonic evolution of the western Alpine lithosphere.

How to cite: Confal, J., Pondrelli, S., Salimbeni, S., and Piana Agostinetti, N.: Mapping the Ivrea Geophysical Body and its anisotropic properties beneath the Western Alps using receiver functions analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5755, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5755, 2026.

EGU26-5995 | Orals | GD3.1

Radial anisotropy of the upper mantle 

Sergei Lebedev, François Lavoué, Nicolas L. Celli, and Andrew J. Schaeffer

The enigmatic radial anisotropy of the upper mantle remains difficult to resolve. Recent global models show strong disagreements and suggest different inferences on mantle dynamics and evolution. Here, we present a new radially and azimuthally anisotropic shear-wave velocity model of the upper mantle, LLCS-2026, and validate its key patterns using independent seismic and thermodynamic phase-velocity inversions for tectonic-type-average 1D profiles. LLCS-2026 is computed using waveform fits of 1,630,432 seismograms (1,252,717 vertical; 377,715 transverse components). Automated multimode waveform inversion is used to extract structural information from surface and S waveforms in very broad period ranges, from 11 to 450 s, with most data sampling in the 20–350 s period range. The vertical and transverse component waveforms are jointly inverted for the isotropic average shear-wave velocities, their pi-periodic and pi/2-periodic azimuthal anisotropy, and radial anisotropy. Statistical and manual outlier analysis yields a final dataset of 1,009,038 seismograms (765,302 vertical, 243,736 transverse components) that constrains the final model, which captures complex patterns of seismic isotropic and anisotropic structure within the Earth. In agreement with previously published models, prominent low-velocity anomalies indicative of thin lithosphere and partial melting are observed at 20-150 km depth beneath mid-ocean ridges. At 300-400 km, however, high isotropic-average velocities are present in the vicinity of some of the ridges in the Indian and Atlantic oceans. They suggest drips of cold, lithospheric mantle material, probably related to rapid lithospheric cooling in the complex 3D context of triple junctions and ridge-hotspot systems. Radial anisotropy is positive (Vsh > Vsv) at 100-150 km depth everywhere in the mantle, with cratons showing smaller anisotropy compared to other units. Below 200-250 km depth, radial anisotropy is negative (Vsv > Vsh) nearly everywhere. The depth at which the anisotropy sign changes varies with tectonic region. The anisotropy sign flips at the shallowest depth (~200 km) beneath young oceans and continents and at the greatest depth (~250 km, on average) beneath cratons. Radial anisotropy is also negative in the top 50 km of the oceanic lithosphere. Together with azimuthal anisotropy observations, this indicates a complex pattern of crystallographic preferred orientations created by mantle flow beneath mid-ocean ridges, with an interplay between the alignment of crystals due to the vertical flow below the ridge and the lateral flow away from it. Independent seismic (Civiero et al. 2024) and thermodynamic (Lebedev et al. 2024; Xu et al. 2025) inversions of phase-velocity data confirm and validate the anisotropy-sign-flip observations and inferences.

References

Civiero, C., Lebedev, S., Xu, Y., Bonadio, R. and Lavoué, F., 2024. Toward tectonic‐type and global 1D seismic models of the upper mantle constrained by broadband surface waves. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 114, 1321-1346.

Lebedev, S., Fullea, J., Xu, Y. and Bonadio, R., 2024. Seismic thermography. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 114, 1227-1242.

Xu, Y., Lebedev, S. and Fullea, J., 2025. Average physical structure of cratonic lithosphere, from thermodynamic inversion of global surface-wave data. Mineralogy and Petrology, 1-12.

How to cite: Lebedev, S., Lavoué, F., Celli, N. L., and Schaeffer, A. J.: Radial anisotropy of the upper mantle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5995, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5995, 2026.

EGU26-7464 | Posters on site | GD3.1

AlpRA25: a new radial anisotropy model of the Alps from ambient noise and earthquake surface waves 

Thomas Meier, Henrique Berger Roisenberg, Felix Eckel, Amr El-Sharkawy, Claudio Rosenberg, Lapo Boschi, and Fabio Cammarano

The Alps, together with the Northern Apennines and the Northern Dinarides, represent one of the most complex and best-studied examples of continental collision in the world. Over the years, several active and passive seismic experiments have been deployed in the Alpine region. More recently, the installation of large and dense seismic arrays, such as AlpArray and AdriaArray, has provided unprecedented spatial coverage, enabling the development of increasingly detailed seismic velocity models. However, most existing regional models of the Alps primarily rely on isotropic seismic velocities. Radially anisotropic models, which map the parameter ξ = Vsh²/Vsv², provide complementary information by revealing the preferential orientation of anisotropic minerals and structural fabrics produced by past and ongoing tectonic processes.

In this study, we combine ambient noise and earthquake surface-wave data from more than 3,300 permanent and temporary broadband seismic stations to construct a high-resolution Alpine Radial Anisotropy model (AlpRA25) of the crust and upper mantle. Ambient noise data collected between 2017 and 2019 from approximately 700 seismic stations were used to calculate ~46,000 Rayleigh- and ~40,000 Love-wave dispersion curves. These were merged with ~295,000 Rayleigh- and ~200,000 Love-wave dispersion curves obtained from about 6,000 earthquakes recorded at approximately 3,300 broadband seismic stations between 1990 and 2022, resulting in a total of ~295,000 Rayleigh and ~240,000 Love dispersion curves spanning periods from 3 to 250 s.

These data were inverted for phase-velocity maps using a least-squares algorithm with an average knot spacing of 30 km. An a posteriori outlier analysis discarded 15% of the interstation measurements with the highest residuals, after which the model was recomputed. Local dispersion curves were then extracted at each grid node and evaluated for their frequency-dependent roughness. The Rayleigh and Love local dispersion curves were jointly inverted for 1-D shear-wave velocity structure using a particle swarm optimization algorithm, yielding vertical and horizontal shear-wave velocities (Vsv and Vsh, respectively). The final AlpRA25 model is a high-resolution 3-D model of Vsv, Vsh, and ξ from 5 to 250 km depth, covering the Alps, the Northern Apennines, the Northern Dinarides, and the adjacent foreland and back-arc basins. AlpRA25 provides new constraints on the lithospheric architecture and deformation of the Alpine region, highlighting the role of radial anisotropy in imaging tectonic processes from the crust to the upper mantle.

How to cite: Meier, T., Berger Roisenberg, H., Eckel, F., El-Sharkawy, A., Rosenberg, C., Boschi, L., and Cammarano, F.: AlpRA25: a new radial anisotropy model of the Alps from ambient noise and earthquake surface waves, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7464, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7464, 2026.

The Haiyuan Fault, a major strike-slip structure in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau margin, is bounded by the first-order Tibetan Plateau and South China blocks, plus the second-order Ordos and Alxa blocks. Seismic anisotropy serves as a robust proxy for probing deep crustal deformation, geodynamic processes, and subsurface seismic structures. We conducted receiver function analyses on teleseismic data from two dense profiles and five broadband stations across the study area; crustal thickness (42–56 km) and Vp/Vs ratios (1.60–1.88) were quantified by the H-κ domain search algorithm, while common conversion point (CCP) imaging delineated the Moho discontinuity across the Haiyuan Arc Fault Zone. Crustal thickening reflects shortening driven by Tibetan-Eurasian collision, with the Haiyuan tectonic evolution linked to high-temperature/pressure regimes induced by Indo-Asian convergence. CCP images reveal a distinct Moho offset and ambiguous continuity beneath the fault zone, confirming it as a Moho-penetrating transcrustal structure associated with intense crustal extrusion from the plateau interior. We characterized multi-scale crustal anisotropy via shear-wave splitting (SWS) analysis of local earthquake data. SWS parameters exhibit clear zoning controlled by the Haiyuan Fault: fast polarization orientations are NNE–NE north of the fault and WNW–EW south of it. Within ~10 km of the fault, fast orientations align with the fault strike (WNW), indicating the fault’s stress influence range spans dozens of kilometers. Enhanced normalized time-delays near the fault signal stronger anisotropy along this strike-slip belt. Upper crustal anisotropy likely arises from crack-induced fabric, whereas middle-lower crustal anisotropy reflects deformation-controlled fabric. Spatial anisotropy patterns imply the combined effects of stress, faulting, and local tectonics. Notably, SWS results suggest the Haiyuan Fault constitutes the actual crustal boundary of the northeastern Tibetan Plateau, ~200 km north of the previously reported plateau block boundary.

How to cite: Shi, Y. and Gao, Y.: Crustal Deformation of the Haiyuan Fault Zone Inferred from Dense Seismic Array Observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8643, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8643, 2026.

EGU26-8791 | Posters on site | GD3.1

Crustal Anisotropy Characteristics in the North China Craton 

Qiong Wang, Yuan Gao, and Geng Liu

    The North China Craton (NCC) exhibits a marked east-west contrast in its present-day tectonic framework. The eastern region  features a thinned lithosphere hosting extensional basins like the Zhangjiakou-Bohai seismic belt and the Shanxi Graben. This area experiences intense crustal deformation and frequent seismicity. Conversely, the western region possesses a thicker lithosphere, greater crustal stability, and weak seismic activity. The central orogenic belt acts as a transitional zone in crust-mantle structure, characterized by dramatic crustal thickness variations, evidence of lithospheric modification, remnants of ancient structures, and is key for studying crust-mantle coupling/decoupling. 
    Crustal anisotropy serves as a crucial indicator for revealing lithospheric deformation. Analysis of seismic wave velocity anisotropy quantitatively constrains crustal stress, assesses fault activity, and infers deep material flow. This provides  essential constraints for seismic hazard assessment and tectonic dynamics research.
    This study utilized local-earthquake data (M>1) from the National Fixed Seismic Network to investigate crustal anisotropy across the NCC using the SAM (Shear-wave splitting Analysis Method) method. The extensive dataset, covering multiple temporal windows of seismic activity, provides strong temporal continuity and spatial coverage for analyzing anisotropy characteristics. Results reveal complex fast-wave polarization directions (FPDs) across the study area. The average FPD (~73°) aligns well with the regional mean maximum horizontal compressive stress (SHmax) direction in the NCC. However, the FPDs also display distinct local features correlating with specific structures, indicating significant local variability in the regional stress field. This manifestation of localized crustal anisotropy characteristics is vital for understanding the region's geodynamic activity. The local stress field variations suggest a heterogeneous crustal stress distribution, likely influenced by multiple geological factors.

How to cite: Wang, Q., Gao, Y., and Liu, G.: Crustal Anisotropy Characteristics in the North China Craton, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8791, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8791, 2026.

EGU26-9651 | ECS | Orals | GD3.1

Multi-scale Seismic Anisotropy of the Rotondo Granite: Linking Deformation Fabrics to Wave Propagation 

Emily Hinshaw, Alberto Ceccato, Alba Zappone, Whitney Behr, and Anne Obermann

We investigate the seismic anisotropy of the Rotondo granite (Gotthard Massif, Swiss Alps) by integrating geological and geophysical data from lab to field scale. We compare our modeled anisotropic properties with decameter measurements from boreholes and kilometer-scale regional seismicity data from the Bedretto Underground Laboratory for Geosciences and Geoenergies, demonstrating clear links between deformation fabrics and observed seismic anisotropy across scales. 

Using field- and micro-scale analyses of deformation styles and fabric orientations, we delineate discrete structural domains characterized by varying strain intensities and fabric types, ranging from isotropic granite to fractured zones or proto-mylonitic shear zones. Proto-mylonitic zones exhibit strong phyllosilicate SPO and higher percentage of Vp anisotropy (~8-27%, range is dependent on compositional variations). Fractured zones vary in frequency within the Rotondo massif and also exhibit elevated Vp anisotropy (>7.5%). For each structural domain, we compute effective elastic stiffness tensors (or 'rock recipes') to characterize their intrinsic seismic velocities. We introduce a new approach for combining multiple lithological “rock recipes” that emphasizes collective impact on bulk anisotropy and spatial context, rather than volume-weighted averaging. 

We observe a scale-dependent shift in anisotropic influence, where the control of ductile fabrics (<20 m) is progressively superseded by fractures as the observational scale increases. When these heterogeneous fabrics are aggregated, destructive interference among strongly anisotropic components reduces the bulk anisotropy to ~2.5%, which is below laboratory measured values. We find good agreement between our theoretical results and cross-borehole effective Vp measurements within the Bedretto Lab. We also find qualitative evidence for anisotropy between event relocation models (e.g. Double Difference or NonLinLoc) of background seismicity in the region at the 1-5 kilometer scale. These results demonstrate consistency in seismic anisotropy estimation across methods and scales, and show the utility of geologically-based anisotropy characterization.

How to cite: Hinshaw, E., Ceccato, A., Zappone, A., Behr, W., and Obermann, A.: Multi-scale Seismic Anisotropy of the Rotondo Granite: Linking Deformation Fabrics to Wave Propagation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9651, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9651, 2026.

EGU26-10259 | ECS | Orals | GD3.1

Seismic Anisotropy in the Subducting Slab and Mantle Wedge of the Western Hellenic Subduction Zone from Receiver Functions 

Josefine Ziegler, Stéphane Rondenay, and Nicola Piana Agostinetti

The Western Hellenic Subduction Zone is characterized by a transition from oceanic to continental subduction. The change occurs at the Kephalonian transform fault. However, how this transition takes place at depth remains a topic of discussion. This setting thus provides us with an ideal natural laboratory to investigate how differences in subduction regimes affect the structure and dynamics of the system.
To this end, we compute receiver functions across two seismic arrays from the MEDUSA broadband network, one imaging the oceanic subduction and the other imaging the continental subduction. We computed teleseismic receiver functions and performed harmonic decomposition along both lines. We then inverted these results to image the overriding crust, mantle wedge and slab, in terms of their velocity and anisotropic properties. By comparing the seismic properties of the continental and oceanic slabs, we aim to identify key differences in slab structure, seismic anisotropy, dehydration, and metamorphism between the two subduction regimes.
Preliminary results confirm a dipping low velocity zone in both regimes, corresponding to the slab's crust. Its signal is lost below 60 km in the isotropic component but remains visible to greater depths in the anisotropic component. Furthermore, we identify a low velocity layer within the mantle wedge which could resemble the altered LAB of the overriding plate. What sets the two domains apart is the cutoff depth of the isotropic component of the slab – it can be traced 10 km deeper in the South than in the North – and a generally lower anisotropy in the southern mantle wedge.
Until now the LAB has rarely been observed through conventional receiver function analysis or tomography in subduction zones. We therefore suggest that anisotropic inversion may provide unique insight into the structure of the mantle wedge and the subducting slab.

How to cite: Ziegler, J., Rondenay, S., and Piana Agostinetti, N.: Seismic Anisotropy in the Subducting Slab and Mantle Wedge of the Western Hellenic Subduction Zone from Receiver Functions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10259, 2026.

EGU26-10489 | ECS | Posters on site | GD3.1

3-D Anisotropic Structure of the Upper Mantle beneath the Iranian Plateau Using SKS Splitting Intensity Tomography 

Shiva Arvin, Haiqiang Lan, Ling Chen, Zhaoke Ke, Yi Lin, Li Zhao, and Morteza Talebian

The Iranian plateau, characterized by the Arabia-Eurasia continental collision in the Zagros and the Makran oceanic subduction system, presents a unique opportunity to investigate the underlying processes of lithospheric deformation and upper-mantle dynamics. Previous studies of upper mantle seismic anisotropy, mostly using SK(K)S splitting and occasionally direct S waves revealed complex patterns for the fast axes. The observed rotations of fast axis obtained from S and SK(K)S waves along different tectonic setting, the difference in fast directions between S and SK(K)S phases in central Iran, evidence for two-layer anisotropy, and ambiguity regarding the depth origin of observed anisotropy emphasize the need for further studies. These challenges, together with the pronounced tectonic heterogeneity of the Iranian plateau, call for tomographic approaches that allows for the localization of anisotropic structure. In this study, we utilize SKS splitting intensity tomography to elucidate the depth distribution of the anisotropic properties of the upper mantle beneath the Iranian plateau. Our dataset includes teleseismic events with magnitude above 5.5 and epicentral distances between 90 and 130 degrees recorded by 151 permanent (2015-2021) and 296 temporary seismic stations (2003-2021). We employ a three-dimensional full-wave anisotropy tomography method using splitting intensity, which provides enhanced depth resolution compared to traditional shear wave splitting methods. This method utilizes perturbation theory to establish the linear relationship between splitting intensity and anisotropic parameters, including the azimuth of fast axis and anisotropy strength, and incorporates Green's function databases to efficiently compute the sensitivity or Fréchet kernels. Splitting intensity measurements are inverted to construct a three-dimensional model of upper-mantle azimuthally anisotropic structure beneath the study area. Results show clear lateral differences in anisotropic strength and fast-axis orientation specifically between the Zagros and Alborz regions, as well as the adjacent domains. Vertical profiles illustrate depth-dependent heterogeneous anisotropic structures across the lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary into the asthenospheric upper mantle. These variations likely reflect the combined influence of regional tectonic processes, continental collision, lithospheric deformation, and present-day mantle flow patterns beneath the Iranian plateau. Our results highlight the potential of SKS splitting intensity tomography to resolve complex mantle anisotropy and shed new light on the three-dimensional deformation structure of the upper mantle. The observed lateral and depth variations in anisotropy provide new insights into how the relationship between surface tectonics and upper-mantle deformation varies spatially across major tectonic domains such as the Zagros, Makran, Central Iran, and the Alborz.

How to cite: Arvin, S., Lan, H., Chen, L., Ke, Z., Lin, Y., Zhao, L., and Talebian, M.: 3-D Anisotropic Structure of the Upper Mantle beneath the Iranian Plateau Using SKS Splitting Intensity Tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10489, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10489, 2026.

EGU26-10589 | ECS | Posters on site | GD3.1

Seismic Anisotropy Beneath the Dinarides: Implications for Adria-Eurasia Convergence 

Katarina Zailac, Silvia Pondrelli, Simone Salimbeni, and Josip Stipčević

Seismic anisotropy can provide important constraints about deformation processes within the lithosphere and underlying asthenosphere, as well as mantle flow patterns in tectonically complex regions. This study presents observations of seismic anisotropy in the upper mantle beneath the Dinarides and adjacent regions based on teleseismic SKS phase recordings from the AdriaArray temporary deployment, complemented by selected stations from the Croatian permanent seismic network and other available stations in the region. The combined datasets provide improved spatial coverage and allow for a more continuous regional assessment of anisotropic structure beneath the Dinarides.

Seismic anisotropy is investigated using a splitting-intensity approach, applied to teleseismic SKS phases. The splitting intensity quantifies the relative amplitude of the transverse component with respect to the radial component and provides a more robust measure of anisotropic effects. From the azimuthal variation of splitting intensity, the splitting parameters, fast-axis orientation and delay time, can be estimated, enabling direct comparison with earlier shear-wave splitting studies.

The inferred anisotropic pattern beneath the southern Dinarides is regionally coherent with fast axes in the direction perpendicular to the strike of the mountain chain. The fast axes in the Internal Dinarides, on the other hand, are generally pointing in the direction parallel to the strike of the mountain chain, which is also supporting previously published results. New and previously unpublished measurements are presented for stations in the northern Dinarides and in the transitional zone between the Dinarides and the Pannonian Basin, providing improved spatial coverage across this geodynamically important boundary.

This study highlights the importance of dense seismic observations and complementary analysis approaches for resolving anisotropic structures in complex orogenic settings. The expanded dataset and inclusion of splitting intensity measurements provide new constraints on upper-mantle deformation beneath the Dinarides and contribute to a more comprehensive understanding of the coupling between lithospheric tectonics and mantle dynamics in the central Mediterranean region. 

How to cite: Zailac, K., Pondrelli, S., Salimbeni, S., and Stipčević, J.: Seismic Anisotropy Beneath the Dinarides: Implications for Adria-Eurasia Convergence, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10589, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10589, 2026.

EGU26-11156 | Orals | GD3.1

A review of the sensitivity of seismic wave velocity and attenuation to fracturing 

Nicolas Barbosa, German Rubino, Eva Caspari, and Klaus Holliger

Fractures are ubiquitous throughout the Earth’s upper crust, spanning scales from microscopic cracks to large fault systems. Their hydromechanical behavior plays a critical role in controlling fluid migration in hydrocarbon, geothermal, and groundwater reservoirs, which, in turn, makes fracture detection, characterization, and monitoring an important objective in geoscience and engineering applications. Seismic methods, as indirect and non-invasive tools, have become central to this effort due to their ability to probe fractured media with adequate resolution and depth penetration. This work synthesizes our recent experimental and theoretical advances in the study of seismic characterization of fractured rocks, driven by several key observations. First, most fractured reservoirs exhibit effective seismic anisotropy because fractures often develop preferentially aligned with the local principal stress directions, leading to direction-dependent wave propagation. This anisotropy can be estimated using techniques such as shear-wave splitting, azimuthal velocity variations, and amplitude variations with offset and azimuth. Furthermore, we show that incorporating both fracture-induced and intrinsic background anisotropy, a rather common scenario in fractured environments, into inversion workflows is essential for a robust interpretation. Second, when a seismic wave propagates through a fluid-saturated fractured reservoir, it will be significantly attenuated and dispersed as a result of multiple intrinsic (e.g., inelastic effects due to solid and/or fluid friction effects) and extrinsic (e.g., geometrical spreading) mechanisms. In particular, when a seismic wave propagates through a fluid-saturated porous rock containing fractures, it produces fluid pressure gradients between the more compliant fractures and the stiffer embedding rock as well as between hydraulically connected fractures with different orientations and/or properties. Consequently, fluid flows until the pressure equilibrates, a phenomenon commonly referred to as wave-induced fluid flow (WIFF). This mechanism can alter the effective compliance of the fractures. Such compliance changes can significantly influence velocity and attenuation anisotropy across the seismic frequency range. The dependence of this type of mechanism on the petrophysical properties, fracture-geometry, and distribution makes the analysis of frequency-dependent seismic attributes particularly informative with regard to the hydromechanical properties. [NB2] Third, seismic responses in fractured media are highly sensitive to changes in their stress state, fluid saturation, and geometrical properties, thus, facilitating corresponding monitoring efforts through time-lapse seismic surveys. Finally, highly permeable fractures can often be directly imaged since open fractures with partial surface contacts generally have large mechanical compliance, which, in turn, produces strong scattering of seismic waves. Indeed, there is evidence from full-waveform sonic log data to suggest that the fracture mechanical compliance obtained from P-wave velocity changes and transmission losses correlates with the degree to which fractures are hydraulically open.

How to cite: Barbosa, N., Rubino, G., Caspari, E., and Holliger, K.: A review of the sensitivity of seismic wave velocity and attenuation to fracturing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11156, 2026.

EGU26-12795 | ECS | Posters on site | GD3.1

Crustal Anisotropy Variations Revealed by Local S-wave Splitting in the Source Region of 2023 Kahramanmaraş Earthquakes along the East Anatolian Fault Zone 

Ceyhun Erman, Paola Baccheschi, Seda Yolsal-Çevikbilen, Tuna Eken, and Tuncay Taymaz

The 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake doublet (Mw 7.8 and Mw 7.7) produced an extensive rupture along several segments of the East Anatolian Faults (EAF), and triggered intense aftershock activity in southeastern Türkiye. This seismic sequence therefore provides an exceptional dataset to investigate the crustal anisotropy in such a complex tectonic area. In this study, we evaluated the crustal anisotropy in the source region of these catastrophic earthquakes by conducting a detailed local S-wave splitting (SWS) analysis on a relocated earthquake catalogue. We have performed shear-wave splitting measurements over several thousand local-S waveforms recordings of 31 permanent broadband seismic stations operated by AFAD (Turkish Earthquake Data Center) that were extracted using precise relocation of aftershock activity. After a visual quality control procedure for each splitting analysis, a total of 486 high-quality measurements were obtained. The results reveal a highly heterogeneous anisotropic pattern, with fast direction oriented from N80°W to N79°E and mean fast direction for the whole dataset of N16°E, reflecting the lateral variations in the regional stress field along the EAF, the Sürgü-Çardak Fault (SÇF), and the Malatya Fault. A transition between stress-induced and structure-related anisotropy is clearly identified across different segments of the EAF. Stations in close proximity to the EAF exhibit a dominant structure-induced anisotropic signature, characterized by the strict alignment of FPDs parallel to the fault geometry. Overall, the obtained results provide a comprehensive perspective on how the upper crust responds to substantial stress release, thus offering critical insights into the mechanical behaviour of complex fault networks where the regional collisional stress regimes and strike-slip faulting systems converge.

How to cite: Erman, C., Baccheschi, P., Yolsal-Çevikbilen, S., Eken, T., and Taymaz, T.: Crustal Anisotropy Variations Revealed by Local S-wave Splitting in the Source Region of 2023 Kahramanmaraş Earthquakes along the East Anatolian Fault Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12795, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12795, 2026.

EGU26-13229 | ECS | Posters on site | GD3.1

Joint body- and surface-wave probabilistic transdimensional tomography of upper mantle seismic anisotropy 

Gianmarco Del Piccolo, Joseph Byrnes, James Gaherty, Brandon VanderBeek, Manuele Faccenda, and Andrea Morelli

Body- and surface-wave seismic data provide complementary sensitivities to the anisotropic elastic structure of the Earth, and the potential constraints of a simultaneous inversion would extend significantly beyond those of the individual phases. However, joint body- and surface-wave anisotropic imaging remains limited, mainly because of the high nonlinearity of the problem and the different inversion methods traditionally adopted for body- and surface-wave phases. Here, we implement a nonlinear transdimensional stochastic solver based on the reversible-jump Markov chain Monte Carlo (RJMCMC) algorithm to simultaneously invert P-, S- and Rayleigh-wave data. By sampling irregularly meshed anisotropic velocity models for the upper mantle, with different mesh configurations and complexities adaptable to the heterogeneous data constraints, we populate an ensemble of variable solutions describing the data within the uncertainties. The method is validated using independent synthetic seismograms simulated with SPECFEM3D Globe in an anisotropic upper mantle plume model. We show how the different sensitivities of the data translate into different constraints on upper mantle seismic structure, and we analyze metrics to quantitatively assess uncertainties in the inferred solutions.

How to cite: Del Piccolo, G., Byrnes, J., Gaherty, J., VanderBeek, B., Faccenda, M., and Morelli, A.: Joint body- and surface-wave probabilistic transdimensional tomography of upper mantle seismic anisotropy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13229, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13229, 2026.

Bridgmanite is the most abundant intrinsically-anisotropic constituent of the lower mantle. Its deformation, thus, potentially translates to large-scale anisotropy that would accumulate in high-stress regions, particularly the interaction between subducted materials and the surrounding mantle. While most of the lower mantle is generally considered well-mixed, recent observations suggest structures at mid-mantle depths (800 – 1500 km). Their origin, however, often remains enigmatic. Recent state-of-the-art deformation experiments in bridgmanite at lower-mantle temperatures and pressures reveal a depth-dependent behavior of anisotropy. Coupled with realistic geodynamic models of mantle convection, the large-scale imprint of the depth-dependent fabric reveals a purely deformation-driven seismic discontinuity between 1000 – 1400 km depth that matches observations. The discontinuity appears sharpest in actively deforming regions, and becomes negligible closer to neutral ones. In this work, we investigate its seismic detectability around a subduction zone using three-dimensional global waveform modeling via AxiSEM3D. Given its likely presence across a broad range of frequencies, we assess the suitability of SS precursors for detecting this feature. Enhanced using array seismological methods, results show the presence of SS precursors in the transverse component generated by the anisotropic discontinuity. In addition, a flattened slab geometry produces a shallower SS precursor due to the interface formed between an overlying isotropic slab and an underlying strongly anisotropic (VSH>VSV) layer. We examine the azimuthal dependence of precursor amplitudes and their frequency dependence, with particular emphasis on the microseismic frequency band (~0.05 – 0.25 Hz). In light of these recent findings, we discuss its implications on the nature and origin of mid-mantle discontinuities.

How to cite: Magali, J. K., Yuan, Y., and Thomas, C.: Seismic detectability of a deformation-induced anisotropic discontinuity in the Earth’s lower mantle around a subduction zone using synthetic global modeling of SS precursors, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19103, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19103, 2026.

The Manila–Taiwan–Ryukyu subduction system provides a natural laboratory for investigating the transition from active oceanic subduction to mature arc–continent collision at a complex plate junction. While dense geophysical observations across Taiwan are commonly interpreted in terms of arc–continent collision and crustal-scale orogenic processes, the contributions of underlying mantle circulation and interacting slabs remains poorly quantified. This deficiency is critical because subduction-driven mantle flow can influence regional stress and deformation over distances of up to ~600 km, the ~500-km-long Taiwan orogen—particularly where neighboring slabs interact through slab edges, slab gaps, and potential tearing or detachment. Here, we investigate these processes using three-dimensional finite-element geodynamic models ASPECT. Starting from an simplified double-subduction configuration, we isolate the first-order signatures of slab–slab interactions from the complexity of regional tectonics. Systematic sensitivity tests varying inter-trench distance and convergence geometry are conducted to quantify their effects on mantle flow and regional stress–strain patterns. To connect model dynamics to seismological observables, we further predict seismic anisotropy by tracking the development of crystal preferred orientation within the modeled mantle flow. Model prediction of stress, strain, and seismic anisotropy are compared with earthquake focal mechanisms, island-wide GNSS-derived strain rates and SKS splitting observations. These comparisons constrain the extent to which double-subduction–driven mantle flow contributes to geophysical observables, and they identify which observables are most sensitive to specific subduction parameters and slab–slab interaction geometries.

 

How to cite: Hu, W.-L. and Tan, E.: Geodynamic Modeling of Slab–Slab Interactions in the Manila–Taiwan–Ryukyu Subduction System , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2911, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2911, 2026.

EGU26-3631 | Posters on site | GD2.5

Continental breakup facilitated by lower crustal magmatism 

Hongdan Deng, Hanlin Chen, Ömer Bodur, Hans Thybo, Craig Magee, Zhizhao Bai, Patrice Rey, and Derek Keir

The role of magmatism in modulating continental breakup remains a topic of debate1. We present new, high-resolution 3D seismic reflection data from the South China Sea that reveals voluminous lower crustal magmatism occurred ~7–10 Myr before breakup along a >1,000 km long, NE–SW trending belt offset 100 km landwards of the eventual continental rupture. Through integration with numerical geodynamic models of continental extension, we show that a thermal anomaly associated with such lower crustal magmatic intrusion facilitate continental breakup. Specifically, our models show focused magma intrusion weakens the crust, promoting strain localization and migration that can lead to continental rupture 10’s–100’s km away from the site of initial magmatism.

How to cite: Deng, H., Chen, H., Bodur, Ö., Thybo, H., Magee, C., Bai, Z., Rey, P., and Keir, D.: Continental breakup facilitated by lower crustal magmatism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3631, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3631, 2026.

EGU26-6730 | ECS | Orals | GD2.5

Tectonic–ecosystem interactions in collision zones: a case study from the Cyclops Mountains of Indonesian New Guinea 

Max Webb, Isbram Ginanjar Hikmy, David Gold, Gison Morib, Clayton Magill, James Kempton, and Amy Gough

The island of New Guinea occupies the northern margin of the Australian Plate and has experienced rapid northward motion over the past ~30 million years. This movement led to collisions with volcanic island arcs on the Pacific Plate, producing some of Earth’s youngest mountain belts. These tectonic interactions not only reshaped the landscape but also created conditions for species diversification by fragmenting habitats, isolating ecosystems, and expanding land area. As volcanic islands accreted and were progressively uplifted, montane environments became separated from surrounding lowlands, promoting endemism across individual mountain ranges, exemplified by taxa such as Birds of Paradise. Understanding when and how these volcanic islands formed and collided with the Australian margin is therefore critical for linking tectonic processes with palaeo-landscape evolution and the development of megadiverse regions such as New Guinea.

The Cyclops Mountains provide a key example of this process. They represent a remnant volcanic island arc and ophiolite complex that was obducted onto the northern Australian margin in the early Miocene. Along with other accreted island fragments across northern New Guinea, the Cyclops Mountains were further uplifted and became increasingly isolated from lowland environments during final arc–continent collision in the Pliocene. This tectonic isolation fostered the development of distinct montane ecosystems that today host highly localised species, including Attenborough’s long-beaked echidna (Zaglossus attenboroughi), highlighting the dominant influence that collisional tectonic processes have had on New Guinea’s biogeographic evolution.

Here we present a new workflow for resolving the links between tectonic processes and palaeo-ecosystem change in active collision zones. By integrating geological fieldwork, palaeogeographic reconstructions, geochronology, biostratigraphy, and organic biomarker analyses, we reconstruct the emergence, submergence, and uplift of volcanic islands in the Cyclops Mountains from the Eocene through the Plio-Pleistocene, providing new insight into how tectonics shape long-term environmental and biological change.

How to cite: Webb, M., Hikmy, I. G., Gold, D., Morib, G., Magill, C., Kempton, J., and Gough, A.: Tectonic–ecosystem interactions in collision zones: a case study from the Cyclops Mountains of Indonesian New Guinea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6730, 2026.

EGU26-6861 | Orals | GD2.5

Recovering Missing Continental Crust to Understand Paleozoic Tectonic Evolution in East Asia 

Daniel Pastor Galán, Ariuntsegtseg Ganbat, Atsushi Miyashita, and Tatsuki Tsujimori

Plate tectonics describes Earth’s lithosphere as a mosaic of rigid plates whose interactions drive volcanism, seismicity, mountain building, and crustal recycling. While oceanic crust is continuously created and destroyed as a conveyor belt, continental crust is commonly viewed as buoyant and long-lived. However, global geochemical estimates reveal a major imbalance between continental crust production and preservation, implying that large volumes of continental material have been recycled into the mantle throughout Earth’s history. The lack of direct geological evidence for this loss represents a key gap in our understanding of long-term Earth’s tectonic evolution.

Here, we address this problem using the record of NE Japan, a long-lived subduction system that preserves sedimentary and magmatic archives linked to arc processes. We analyze magmatic and detrital zircon U–Pb ages, Hf isotopes, and trace element (TE) geochemistry from forearc (sedimentary) and arc (igneous) units. Detrital zircon populations define age peaks at ~430, 360, 270, 184, 112, and 7 Ma, accompanied by a progressive loss of older zircon components through time. Hf isotopic data show three major shifts in crustal contribution that coincide with changes in the dominant age populations. In addition, REE systematics in igneous zircons indicate significant changes in magmatic redox conditions. Igneous zircon U/Yb ratios shift from enriched mantle/crustal values in 450–430 Ma samples to mantle values in ~270 Ma samples, documenting replacement of continental lithosphere with juvenile material. Ti-in-zircon temperatures show thermal pulses at ~430 Ma and ~270 Ma, supporting episodic magmatic flare-ups.

The sedimentary record reveals episodic magmatic flare-ups combined with sustained tectonic erosion, leading to the progressive removal of older crustal sources. A major Late Carboniferous event marks the complete loss of Precambrian crust beneath the arc, while we interpret that Cretaceous melting of the Permian arc crust might be linked to mid-ocean ridge subduction. These observations indicate cryptic continental loss beneath the NE Japan forearc. The igneous record corroborates the forearc sedimentary signal and provides additional constraints on the origin and evolution of individual crustal blocks. Together, the results are consistent with a Late Cambrian–Ordovician arc collision and help constrain the mechanisms responsible for large-scale continental loss beneath the NE Japan forearc during the Carboniferous, which should be accounted for in tectonic and paleogeographic reconstructions.

 

How to cite: Pastor Galán, D., Ganbat, A., Miyashita, A., and Tsujimori, T.: Recovering Missing Continental Crust to Understand Paleozoic Tectonic Evolution in East Asia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6861, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6861, 2026.

EGU26-7570 | Orals | GD2.5

Tectonic segmentation of the Manila subduction zone and its implication 

Shu-Kun Hsu, Wen-Nan Wu, Lien-Kai Lin, Shiou-Ya Wang, Yi-Ching Yeh, Leo T. Armada, and Carla B. Dimalanta

Based on multi-channel seismic profiles, we have found that northern end of the Philippine Fault Zone (PFZ) is extended to the offshore area of Luzon Island. The northern terminus of the PFZ is terminated at the Manila Trench near ~119°E and ~17.5°N. As a result, the Manila Trench is segmented into two segments off the west Philippine. In fact, we can recognize four roughly NW-SE trending fault zones off west Luzon; the southernmost branch could be the offshore extension of the principal NW-SE trending PFZ in central Luzon. A new transform fault of ~40 km long has been formed to connect the northern and the southern Manila Trench segments. Because the slip along the PFZ was estemated to be 2 to 2.5 cm/yr, it implies that the age of occurrence of the PFZ is 1.5 to 2 Ma. Our age estimation of the PFZ is more or less coherent with geologic observation inland. However, the trend of the Manila Trench has changed ~35° counterclockwise from north to south. Coinciding with the NW-SE trending PFZ in central Luzon, the Manila subducting slab beneath central Luzon has been segmented as revealed by seismic tomography and seismicity. The northern subducted slab dips 40° eastward, while the southern slab dips 80° eastward. The segmentation of the Manila subduction zone along the NW-SE trending principal PFZ could predominate earthquakes, regional kinematics and crustal deformation.

How to cite: Hsu, S.-K., Wu, W.-N., Lin, L.-K., Wang, S.-Y., Yeh, Y.-C., Armada, L. T., and Dimalanta, C. B.: Tectonic segmentation of the Manila subduction zone and its implication, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7570, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7570, 2026.

EGU26-9922 | Posters on site | GD2.5

Transition from continental- to ocean-verging crustal-scale normal faults in the northwestern South China Sea 

Fan Zhou, Matthias Delescluse, Manuel Pubellier, Laetitia Le Pourhiet, and Louise Watremez

The South China Sea (SCS) formed in a forearc and post-orogenic environment related to the Mesozoic subduction of the Paleo-Pacific plate. It started rifting at >65 Ma and ended at 32 Ma in the eastern part and 23–19 Ma in the southwestern part, respectively. The driving mechanisms for the rifting of the SCS mainly include two models. One is the pull-apart basin model, which attributes the driving force to the collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates, inducing block extrusion along the Red River Fault System (RRFS) with sinistral strike-slip motion, while the other is the rifted basin model, which emphasizes the pull from the southward subduction of the Proto South China Sea (PSCS) plate, leading to dextral motion of the RRFS. In this study, we interpret a ~300 km-long seismic line with velocity structure by combining multi-channel seismic (MCS) and wide-angle seismic (WAS) data in the Qiongdongnan Basin (QDNB), which is located in the northwestern SCS and close to the RRFS. We identify a hyper-thinned continental crust with southward (oceanward)-dipping detachments cutting through the crust and sometimes offsetting the Moho vertically up to 8 km. This contrasts with most observations in the SCS that indicate northward (continent-ward) vergence of extensional crustal structures. Based on the thermo-mechanical model of Zhou et al. (2025), we interpret these structures as the products of reactivated orogenic inherited crustal structures. Combining other seismic observations in the northwestern SCS, there is an east to west transition in crustal vergence from northward to symmetric and then to southward. Furthermore, considering the location of our seismic line between the RRFS and the QDNB, we also propose that this reflects the influence of  strike-slip motion along the RRFS, leading to preferential activity of southward-dipping crustal structures under the effect of a horsetail structure. This indicates a dextral activity of the southern RRFS during the SCS rifting, in agreement with the PSCS hypothesis.

How to cite: Zhou, F., Delescluse, M., Pubellier, M., Le Pourhiet, L., and Watremez, L.: Transition from continental- to ocean-verging crustal-scale normal faults in the northwestern South China Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9922, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9922, 2026.

EGU26-10677 | Posters on site | GD2.5

Mantle plume formation away from the LLSVPs 

Jie Liao, Hongxue Xu, Yang Li, and Zhuo Fan

Formation of mantle plumes is often linked to the large low-shear-velocity provinces (LLSVPs) along the core-mantle boundary (CMB) evidenced by their strong spatial associations. However, a small portion of mantle plumes lie far from the major Pacific and African LLSVPs, and their formation cannot be explained by the classical models. Geophysical observations reveal that a few mantle plumes locate nearby the high seismic velocity anamolies (e.g., slab graveyard) along the CMB, indicating the influence of the subduction slabs on plume generation. In this study, we propose that the heterogenous accumulation of subduction slabs along the CMB may facilitate plume generation.

To test this hypothesis, we established a thermo-mechanically coupled numerical model. The model incorporated variations in slab distribution along the CMB to simulate slab graveyard heterogeneity and tracked the distribution of chemical components. The key results are: (1) In the models with heterogenous distribution of subduction slabs along the CMB, mantle plumes are formed induced by the lateral sliding of the heavy subduction slabs. This process is driven by gravity-induced migration and convergence of low-viscosity, high-buoyancy thermo-chemical material in the thermal boundary layer, which generates local thermal-buoyancy anomalies. (2) In the models with homogeneous distribution of subduction slabs or no subduction slabs, mantle plumes failed to form. (3) The initiation rate of mantle plumes correlates positively with slab accumulation height variations and thermal boundary layer thickness; conversely, a higher proportion of dense chemical components in the slab graveyard suppresses plume initiation.

Our modeling results may provide new insights on mantle plume formation away from the LLSVPs along the CMB, which could explain the observed mantle plumes that locate far from the LLSVPs in the present day.

How to cite: Liao, J., Xu, H., Li, Y., and Fan, Z.: Mantle plume formation away from the LLSVPs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10677, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10677, 2026.

EGU26-10965 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.5

Mid-Ocean Ridge obstruction Cause A New Subduction zone 

Guangxu Wang and Jie Liao

Izu-Bonin-Mariana (IBM) subduction zone, which situated in the western Pacific and eastern Japan, is a major segment of the Pacific subduction system. Based on the geochemical investigations of ophiolites (Ishizuka et al., 2011), IBM is generally considered initiated approximately 52–51 Ma through a gravitational collapse across the transform fault. And then the subsequential spontaneous subduction of IBM began, which corroborated by numerical simulations (Maunder et al., 2020; Ritter et al., 2024). However, recent studies indicate that the IBM has involved horizontal convergence in its subduction initiation (Li et al., 2022). Two-dimensional geodynamic models have verified that the early-stage IBM subduction pattern dominated by horizontal compression is consistent with geochemical observation (Liu et al., 2024), whereas the source of such horizontal forces remains unclear.

Geological reconstructions reveal that the initiation of IBM was synchronous with the subduction of Izanagi-Pacific Ridge. Based on that, we hypothesize that the subduction of the mid-ocean ridge played a important role in the initiation of this new subduction. To verify this idea, we use the 3D thermomechanical coupled numerical code I3VIS to construct a subduction model incorporating both the Izanagi-Pacific Ridge and the transform fault where IBM subduction initiated. Model results demonstrate that when the Izanagi-Pacific Ridge caused subduction obstruction, stress redistributed laterally, thereby inducing horizontal compression along the transform fault. The new subduction was first triggered locally, and then gradually expanded across the entire transform fault, ultimately forming the full-scale initiation of the new subduction zone.

This model confirms that the subduction obstruction of the mid-ocean ridge can redistribute local stress to lateral weak structures, thereby triggering the transition or expansion of the new subduction zone, which as a potential process for the initiation of the IBM subduction. This proposed model validates a new mechanics of subduction initiation driven by indirect factors, and provides novel insights into subduction dynamics.

 

Ishizuka, O., Tani, K., Reagan, M.K., Kanayama, K., Umino, S., Harigane, Y., Sakamoto, I., Miyajima, Y., Yuasa, M., Dunkley, D.J., 2011. The timescales of subduction initiation and subsequent evolution of an oceanic island arc. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 306, 229–240.

Maunder, B., Prytulak, J., Goes, S., Reagan, M., 2020. Rapid subduction initiation and magmatism in the western pacific driven by internal vertical forces. Nat. Commun. 11, 1874.

Ritter, S., Balázs, A., Ribeiro, J., Gerya, T., 2024. Magmatic fingerprints of subduction initiation and mature subduction: numerical modelling and observations from the izu-bonin-mariana system. Front. Earth Sci. 12, 1286468.

Li, H.-Y., Li, X., Ryan, J.G., Zhang, C., Xu, Y.-G., 2022. Boron isotopes in boninites document rapid changes in slab inputs during subduction initiation. Nat. Commun. 13, 993.

Liu, Liang, Li, H.-Y., Liu, Lijun, Ryan, J.G., Morgan, J.P., Ren, K.-X., Xu, Y.-G., 2024. Horizontally forced initiation of the izu-bonin-mariana subduction zone. Commun. Earth Environ. 5, 91.

How to cite: Wang, G. and Liao, J.: Mid-Ocean Ridge obstruction Cause A New Subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10965, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10965, 2026.

EGU26-13723 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.5

A Comparative Study of Anomalous Post-rift Subsidence in the East and South China seas 

Xueting Zhao, Chun-Feng Li, and Peter Clift

Following cessation of rifting, the continental margin basins of the East and South China sea entered a post-rift stage, during which basement subsidence has traditionally been attributed to lithospheric cooling and thermal contraction. However, quantitative analyses from multiple sub-basins indicate that rapid or accelerated subsidence persisted into the post-rift period and locally exceeds predictions of classical thermal subsidence models. This is anomalous subsidence compared to simple rift models. In this study, we conduct a comparative analysis of post-rift subsidence histories in several representative basins in the East and South China seas. Regional porosity-depth relationships were established based on drilling data or generic models, and backstripping analyses were performed to reconstruct tectonic subsidence histories after accounting for sediment loading. Thermal subsidence and stretching factors were further calculated and compared with theoretical extensional subsidence models. Our results show that pronounced anomalous subsidence has developed since ~5.3 Ma in the Xihu Sag of the East China Sea, since ~5 Ma in the Yinggehai-Song Hong Basin, since ~2–5.3 Ma in the Qiongdongnan Basin, and since ~18 Ma in the Zhu III Depression and Baiyun Sag of the Pearl River Mouth Basin. Although these accelerated subsidence events all occurred during the post-rift stage, they exhibit marked differences in timing and persistence between basins. The mismatch between observed subsidence and model-predictions suggests that post-rift subsidence cannot be explained solely by lithospheric cooling, but is likely influenced by additional processes such as deep-seated mantle up or downwelling, tectonic reactivation, or mid and lower crustal flow driven by sedimentary loading. These findings highlight the stage-dependent and diachronous nature of post-rift anomalous subsidence in the East and South China sea marginal basins and provide new quantitative constraints on post-rift basin dynamics and sedimentary responses.

How to cite: Zhao, X., Li, C.-F., and Clift, P.: A Comparative Study of Anomalous Post-rift Subsidence in the East and South China seas, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13723, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13723, 2026.

EGU26-14104 | Posters on site | GD2.5

Tracking the subduction-collision transition in the Taiwan-Philippine-New Guinea regions: a simple structural scheme to assist kinematic reconstructions 

Cédric Bulois, Manuel Pubellier, Nicolas Chamot-Rooke, Frédéric Mouthereau, Matthias Delescluse, Florence-Annette Labis, Simon Bufféral, and Laetitia Le Pourhiet

In Southeast Asia, the contact between oceanic plates of Pacific affinity (Caroline and West Philippine seas) and the Eurasia and Australia plates of continental nature is rarely marked by high mountain ranges. Instead, it is characterised by fold-and-thrust belts involving volcanic arcs and slices made of continent-derived sediments. At every location, the tectonic style results from the oblique docking of the oceanic plates against the continental margins.

In this compressional setting, we identify two discrete systems developing the one after the other. The first system is marked by arcuate frontal thrusts bounded by oblique strike-slip lateral ramps, that are ubiquitous and vary in size from a few tens of meters to a few tens of kilometers. The regional convergence obliquity leads to a migration of the plates contact with consecutive tectonic periods of 1 to 2 Myrs, controlling the rapid triggering of subduction jumps that progressively change the location of the plates boundary over time. The second system corresponds to the onset of shear partitioning marked by the formation of a new subduction zone along which long, subparallel strike-slip faults form. Therefore, these new structures intersect previous ones, and the resulting sliver plate is affected by a margin-parallel stretching regime accommodating the progression of the docking and velocity variations during the convergence.

Thus, our study describes the evolution from one system to the other in Taiwan, Northern Philippines, Southern Philippines, Eastern Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. It also highlights important shifts that are necessary to discriminate small, Recent-to-Actual displacements imposed by GPS data (from 0Ma to 2Ma) from those deduced from longer-term motions documented along the main faults. In the frontal units of the Taiwan foothills or in the Luzon sedimentary wedge, recent tectonic slices typically disappear as we go backward in time by just a few Ma. In Southern Philippines, compression began in the latest Miocene–earliest Pliocene times with flat-and-ramp system, before being progressively replaced by the N–S Philippine Fault throughout the entire archipelago. In Eastern Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, the Sorong Fault also crosscuts Mid-Miocene docking structures marked by the flat-and-ramps features. Any regional reconstruction requires to unravel the two systems and date them carefully.

How to cite: Bulois, C., Pubellier, M., Chamot-Rooke, N., Mouthereau, F., Delescluse, M., Labis, F.-A., Bufféral, S., and Le Pourhiet, L.: Tracking the subduction-collision transition in the Taiwan-Philippine-New Guinea regions: a simple structural scheme to assist kinematic reconstructions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14104, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14104, 2026.

EGU26-15779 | Orals | GD2.5

Seismological Research Progress on Tectonic Deformation and Magmatisc System in the Sumatran Oblique Subduction Zone 

Ling Chen, Jia Wei, Mingye Feng, Xin Wang, Qiancheng Liu, Xu Wang, Shengji Wei, Liang Zhao, Rahmat Triyono, and Supriyanto Rohadi

The Sumatra subduction zone, characterized by oblique subduction, ranks among the most tectonically and magmatically active regions on Earth. This unique dynamic regime has forged a suite of prominent geological features, including the large-scale strike-slip Great Sumatran Fault, recurrent and often devastating mega-earthquakes, and vigorous arc volcanism crowned by the Toba supervolcano. The collection of these phenomena establishes the region as an unparalleled natural laboratory for probing the fundamental couplings between plate tectonic dynamics, crustal deformation, and magmatic processes in an oblique convergence setting. Our recent integrated seismological studies provide new, multi-scale constraints on this system. Specifically, high-resolution seismic imaging reveals along-strike bending and morphologic complexity of the subducting slab, which directly modulates plate coupling and influences the nucleation segments of megathrust ruptures. Precise relocation of medium-sized earthquakes further refines the megathrust geometry and defines trench-parallel seismicity belts bracketing the seismogenic zone. The along-strike variations of these belts and the steeper dip angles of the down-dip belt are well correlated with strong gradients in slab geometry, controlling rupture distribution. Beneath the Toba volcanic area, our joint shear-wave velocity and attenuation model resolves a multi-level magma plumbing system with a distinct column–corridor–reservoir architecture. This system is co-located with fluid-rich fault zones, pointing to a tectonically mediated pathway for melt migration from the mantle wedge to shallow storage. These findings provide mechanistic links between regional geodynamics and localized hazard expression. Building on this foundation, our ongoing research integrates multidisciplinary observations towards a comprehensively investigation of the Sumatran subduction system and its surroundings. Through systematic global comparison, we aim to elucidate the dynamics of oblique subduction and its fundamental controls on continental deformation, volcanic evolution and the spatiotemporal patterns of major geological hazards.

How to cite: Chen, L., Wei, J., Feng, M., Wang, X., Liu, Q., Wang, X., Wei, S., Zhao, L., Triyono, R., and Rohadi, S.: Seismological Research Progress on Tectonic Deformation and Magmatisc System in the Sumatran Oblique Subduction Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15779, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15779, 2026.

EGU26-19323 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.5

From Indosinian to Yanshanian tectonic events recorded in the Palawan Continental Block, Philippines: New constraints from zircon U-Pb-Hf isotopes 

Florence Annette Labis, Frédéric Mouthereau, Manuel Pubellier, Laetitia Le Pourhiet, Cédric Bulois, Tiphaine Larvet, Andrew Exequiel Tabilog, Nikko Balanial, Gabriel Theophilus Valera, and Betchaida Payot

Southeast Asia records a prolonged and complex tectonic history from the Permian to the Cenozoic, marked by the accretion of continental fragments, subduction-related magmatism, and repeated reorganization of plate boundaries. Within this framework, the Palawan Continental Block (PCB) contains one of the most complete records of Mesozoic–Cenozoic continental margin evolution in the western Philippines and records key evidence of pre-Cenozoic tectonic events. However, the genetic relationships among its internal tectonic blocks remain unresolved. This study utilizes zircon U–Pb geochronology and Hf isotopic data from Paleozoic to Cenozoic strata extending from northern Palawan to Mindoro Island to constrain the timing, provenance, and tectonic affinity of rocks forming the PCB.

Igneous and detrital zircons from the Mindoro Metamorphics define a coherent Middle to Late Permian age population (270–254 Ma) with uniformly low Th/U ratios (<0.1), indicating a major Permian tectonothermal event related to the Indosinian orogeny. Jurassic strata from northwest Panay yield distinct unimodal age peaks at ~252 Ma (Early Triassic) and ~174 Ma (Middle Jurassic). The Middle Jurassic population overlaps with unimodal Early to Middle Jurassic age peaks (189–182 Ma) from strata on Busuanga Island, recording the development of Yanshanian arc magmatism along the South China continental margin. The recognition of both Permian-Triassic Indosinian (ca. 255-202 Ma) and Jurassic-Cretaceous Yanshanian (ca. 200-100 Ma) tectono-magmatic signatures, characteristic of the South China margin, establishes a direct temporal and genetic link between the tectonic evolution of the PCB and that of southern China. Moreover, the comparable detrital zircon age spectra and Hf isotopic signatures of the Permian-Eocene strata from Palawan and Mindoro indicate derivation from a common continental source, supporting the interpretation of the PCB as a single continental fragment rather than a collage of discrete accreted terranes.

How to cite: Labis, F. A., Mouthereau, F., Pubellier, M., Le Pourhiet, L., Bulois, C., Larvet, T., Tabilog, A. E., Balanial, N., Valera, G. T., and Payot, B.: From Indosinian to Yanshanian tectonic events recorded in the Palawan Continental Block, Philippines: New constraints from zircon U-Pb-Hf isotopes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19323, 2026.

EGU26-19549 | ECS | Orals | GD2.5

Imaging Subducting and Detached Slabs Beneath Southeast Asia Using Full-Waveform Tomography 

Chujie Liu, Eric Sandvol, Stephen Grand, and Winchelle Sevilla

The tectonic history of Southeast Asia has been largely shaped by extensive subduction, with thousands of kilometers of lithosphere subducted since the Mesozoic. The tectonics of the Indonesia-Philippines region are particularly complex, with the convergence of the Australian plate from the south, the Indian plate from the west, and the Philippine Sea plate from the east. This region also features several deformation zones involving several microplates, whose kinematic reconstructions remain poorly understood. In this study, we use full-waveform adjoint tomography to elucidate the seismic absolute P- and S-wave velocity structure in the crust and mantle beneath Southeast Asia. We have collected a large waveform dataset from all available broadband seismic stations within and surrounding Southeast Asia, including a dense array in the Philippines. The inversion optimizes the normalized correlation coefficient between observed and synthetic seismograms within individual time windows. This approach allows us to fit regional multipathed waveforms and provides high-resolution seismic velocity images from the crust to depths of about 1000 km. Our model clearly reveals subducting slabs in the upper mantle beneath the Indonesia-Philippines region, including the Sumatra and Java slabs, the opposingly dipping Manila and Philippine Sea slabs, the Sangihe and Halmahera slabs beneath the Molucca Sea, and the Celebes Sea slab. These slabs correlate well with seismicity and show varying depth extents and dip angles. They behave differently when interacting with the mantle transition zone, with the southern Sumatra, Java, and Sangihe slabs clearly penetrating through the 660-km discontinuity. In addition, we identify several detached slab fragments in the upper mantle, including one beneath the Sulu Sea, likely associated with subduction at the Negros trench, and another northwest-dipping structure east of Sulawesi. In the mantle transition zone and lower mantle, we observe several broad fast anomalies beneath the South China Sea and the Philippine Sea plate that are disconnected from shallower slabs. These anomalies may correspond to the subducted Proto-South China Sea slab and the East Asian Sea slab, respectively, as proposed by recent tectonic reconstructions. Furthermore, our model shows a slab-like fast structure in the transition zone and lower mantle beneath northern Borneo, potentially representing a subducted and detached slab from the northwest Borneo Trough. Our high-resolution tomographic images provide new insights on how these slabs interact with the 660 km discontinuity as they have descended into the lower mantle.

How to cite: Liu, C., Sandvol, E., Grand, S., and Sevilla, W.: Imaging Subducting and Detached Slabs Beneath Southeast Asia Using Full-Waveform Tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19549, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19549, 2026.

EGU26-21221 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.5

Probing into the Diapirism in Southwest Taiwan by Numerical Simulation 

Fang-Yi Lee, Eh Tan, and Laetitia Le Pourhiet

Mud diapirs are widely observed offshore southwestern Taiwan and are generally interpreted to originate from the overpressured Gutingkeng Formation, which experienced rapid sedimentation. Fluid enrichment within this formation reduces its bulk density relative to the surrounding strata, allowing buoyancy forces to drive upward migration and diapir formation. However, recent gravity analyses challenge this classical diapirism model by indicating a positive density contrast associated with the observed diapirs. This apparent contradiction raises the question of whether buoyant diapirism can coexist with a positive density anomaly.

In this study, we use numerical simulations incorporating visco–elasto–plastic rheology to investigate the formation mechanisms of mud diapirs under varying physical conditions. The models explore the effects of viscosity, elastic moduli, and density contrasts between diapiric material and the overlying sedimentary layers. Our results demonstrate that diapiric structures with a positive density contrast can be successfully reproduced. We further show that diapirism is systematically accompanied by the development of sedimentary basins filled with unconsolidated sediments, which introduce a strong negative density contrast relative to surrounding rocks. Gravity forward modeling indicates that a sedimentary basin with a thickness of approximately 500 m is sufficient to generate a gravity anomaly of ~5 mGal, consistent with observed data. These results suggest that the presence of positive-density diapirs does not preclude buoyancy-driven ascent and can be reconciled through the combined effects of diapirism and syn-deformational sedimentation.

How to cite: Lee, F.-Y., Tan, E., and Le Pourhiet, L.: Probing into the Diapirism in Southwest Taiwan by Numerical Simulation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21221, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21221, 2026.

EGU26-21741 | Posters on site | GD2.5

Testing the Pull-Apart vs. Subduction-Driven Rifting Debate with 3D Geodynamic Models 

Louise Watremez, Laetitia Le Pourhiet, Manuel Pubellier, Matthias Delescluse, Nicolas Chamot-Rooke, Anthony Jourdon, and Fan Zhou

Tectonic structures associated with continental rifting depend on numerous factors: the nature and mechanical behaviour of the stretched lithosphere, geological inheritance, thermal conditions, and geodynamic forces. The South China Sea exhibits a complex geodynamic history, marked by pre-existing structures (granitoids, etc.). Oceanic accretion in the South China Sea began in the east around 32 Ma and propagated southwestward around 22 Ma, accompanied by a change in the extension direction. Spreading stopped around 16 Ma. The rifting phase lasted longer in the west, leading to the development of a wide rift, accompanied by core complexes and exhumed mantle.

Previous numerical modelling studies show that the formation of a wide rift requires a ductile lower crust and high temperatures at the base of the crust. Structural and thermal inheritance promotes distributed deformation. However, in 3D, an additional mechanism is required to slow down oceanic propagation in order to allow the formation of a wide rift. One possibility is the action of compressive stresses, which, in the case of the South China Sea, may be linked to the topography of the Indochinese block resisting rift propagation.

Here we explore another hypothesis for slowing an oceanic propagator: the transition from N–S extension to an N–S strike-slip system. The opening kinematics of the South China Sea remains debated, between (1) a pull-apart model linked to left-lateral motion along the Red River Fault associated with extrusion of the Indochinese block, and (2) a continental-rifting model induced by subduction of the proto–South China Sea. Modelling rift propagation toward a major transform fault allows us to assess how different kinematic scenarios influence the opening of the South China Sea, the formation of crustal structures, and topography. End-member models fail to reproduce a wide rift, whereas intermediate conditions better account for the slowing of rift propagation, the width of the rift, and the oblique localization of deformation in the southwest basin.

How to cite: Watremez, L., Le Pourhiet, L., Pubellier, M., Delescluse, M., Chamot-Rooke, N., Jourdon, A., and Zhou, F.: Testing the Pull-Apart vs. Subduction-Driven Rifting Debate with 3D Geodynamic Models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21741, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21741, 2026.

EGU26-21953 | Orals | GD2.5 | Highlight

Lithospheric delamination controls the Mesozoic Magmatic Province in South China 

Haijiang Zhang and Zengqian Hou

It is known that the current lithosphere of the South China Block is as thin as 60-70 km, yet what mechanisms modified the lithospheric structure remain highly controversial. Here we apply a new joint seismic inversion algorithm of body wave arrival times, surface wave dispersion data and teleseismic receiver functions to image lithosphere velocity structure of South China. Tabular high-velocity anomalies are imaged at depths of ~90–150 km in the asthenosphere beneath the convergent belt between the Yangtze and Cathaysia blocks that remain weakly connected with the stable Yangtze lithosphere. Based on obtained seismic images and available geochemical data, we interpret these detached fast wavespeed anomalies as partially destabilized lower lithosphere that initially delaminated at 180–170 Ma and has relaminated to their original position after warming up in the mantle by now. We conclude that delamination is the most plausible mechanism for the lithospheric modification and the formation of a Mesozoic Basin and Range-style magmatic province in South China by triggering adiabatic upwelling of the asthenosphere and consequent lithospheric extension and extensive melting of the overlying crust. Moreover, it also has a major control on the rich deposits of various metals in South China.

How to cite: Zhang, H. and Hou, Z.: Lithospheric delamination controls the Mesozoic Magmatic Province in South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21953, 2026.

EGU26-22352 | Orals | GD2.5

Thermomechanical models of the arc-continent collision in Taiwan 

Eh Tan, Yuan-Hsi Lee, Chi-Hsin Chen, and Shu-Huei Hung
The Taiwan orogeny represents a prime example of arc-continent collision, characterized by complex geological structures, rapid exhumation, and dynamic deformation. To elucidate these processes, we developed advanced thermomechanical models incorporating key physical mechanisms: chlorite dehydration, mantle hydration, mantle wedge partial melting, magma migration, magma latent heat, and elasto-visco-plastic rheology.
Our simulations reveal critical insights into the collision dynamics. When the subducting plate transitions from oceanic to continental crust, the lower density of continental crust inhibits subduction. The resulting orogenic mass deflects the Philippine Sea plate, causing the forearc crust to buckle and form a forearc basin. This basin accumulates substantial sedimentary material over time. As the basin matures, extension in its center creates a fault, allowing the arc and its basement rocks to thrust over the forearc sediments. This thrusting drives rapid uplift of the basin fill and ultimately causes the forearc basement to subduct beneath the Philippine Sea plate.
This integrated model explains several first-order observations: the absence of the original forearc basement, the seismicity patterns, the timing of Longitudinal Valley fault initiation, and the dramatic vertical motions preserved in the Coastal Range sedimentary record. By linking mantle processes to surface deformation, our results provide a mechanistic explanation for the extreme topography and rapid strain accumulation characteristic of Taiwan's collision zone.

How to cite: Tan, E., Lee, Y.-H., Chen, C.-H., and Hung, S.-H.: Thermomechanical models of the arc-continent collision in Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22352, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22352, 2026.

EGU26-22538 | ECS | Posters on site | GD2.5

Intraplate magmatism driven by secondary plumes in the upper mantle 

Jiahao Kou and Jie Liao

Most magmatism on Earth is linked to passive mantle upwelling at mid-ocean ridges, dehydration of subducting plates, or mantle plume, additionally, subduction zones are proposed to induce melting of hydrated mantle, thereby driving magmatism (Yang & Faccenda, 2020). Geophysical observations show that some global hotspot associated mantle plumes do not directly penetrate the mantle transition zone (MTZ) but stall beneath it, nevertheless, significant low velocity anomalies and volcanism persist in the upper mantle and lithosphere (Hua et al., 2022; Tang et al., 2014). This phenomenon indicates that deep stalled mantle plumes can trigger shallow magmatism, yet the underlying dynamic processes and mechanisms remain unclear.

To clarify the nature of such spatially discontinuous plume-related magmatism, we developed a thermodynamic-geodynamic coupled model to systematically explore its core dynamic processes and mechanisms (Gerya & Yuen, 2003). Results demonstrate that after ascending to the region beneath the MTZ, the mantle plume is trapped by the phase transition barrier at the 660 km depth boundary. Its sustained heating preferentially melts the hydrated mantle within the MTZ, weakening rock strength and forming a melt-enriched layer. Subsequent disturbances from the subducting plate ultimately drive the melt to breach the boundary barrier and ascend to the base of the lithosphere. The model confirms that hydrated mantle in the MTZ is the direct source of shallow ascending melt, which remains uncontaminated or only minimally contaminated by mantle plume material. This study further quantifies the regulatory effects of mantle plume temperature, water content of the MTZ hydrated mantle, and phase transition parameters at the 660 km boundary on melt generation, enrichment, and ascent.

Our model results are highly consistent with observed shallow low-velocity anomalies associated with global stagnant mantle plumes, providing a plausible explanation for magmatism in these regions. This research deepens our understanding of shallow volcanism, and provides a new dynamic perspective for interpreting the discontinuous distribution of upper mantle low-velocity anomalies and inferring the spatiotemporal characteristics of intraplate volcanism.

 

 

Reference

Gerya, T. V., & Yuen, D. A. (2003). Rayleigh–Taylor instabilities from hydration and melting propel “cold plumes” at subduction zones. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 212(1-2), 47-62.

Hua, Y., Zhao, D., & Xu, Y.-G. (2022). Azimuthal anisotropy tomography of the Southeast Asia subduction system.Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 127, e2021JB022854.

Tang, Y., Obayashi, M., Niu, F. et al.(2014). Changbaishan volcanism in northeast China linked to subduction-induced mantle upwelling. Nature Geoscience, 7, 470-475.

Yang, J., & Faccenda, M. (2020). Intraplate volcanism originating from upwelling hydrous mantle transition zone. Nature, 579, 88-91.

How to cite: Kou, J. and Liao, J.: Intraplate magmatism driven by secondary plumes in the upper mantle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22538, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22538, 2026.

The Tanintharyi Shelf in the Andaman Sea, a key yet understudied segment of the Indo-Eurasian plate collision-related back-arc basin, hosts a Cenozoic carbonate platform with substantial hydrocarbon potential. This study integrates high-resolution 2D/3D seismic reflection data, well logs, regional stratigraphy, and global tectono-climatic records to systematically decipher the origin, morphological evolution of this platform, with a focus on tectono-climatic coupling mechanisms. Our findings reveal that the platform did not develop as a typical continental shelf-marginal rimmed system but on a fault-bounded restricted basement high as isolated patch reef. The evolution of the platform was governed by a trinity of coupled factors: (1) the rift tectonics provide basement highs as substrate; (2) the eustatic sea-level fluctuations drove aggradation-backstepping cycles and subaerial exposure; (3) and the Neogene Tibetan plateau uplift intensified Asian monsoons, increasing siliciclastic input through the Irrawaddy-Salween river systems, ultimately drowning the platform. This study establishes a predictive tectonostratigraphic framework for fault-bounded carbonate platforms in back-arc rift settings, linking far-field tectonics (Tibetan uplift), regional structural dynamics, and local sedimentary processes.

How to cite: Luan, X.: Tectonic–climatic controls on the growth and drowning of carbonate platforms: evidence from the Tanintharyi Shelf, Andaman Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22558, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22558, 2026.

Faults are lithospheric fracture zones that undergo substantial displacement driven by tectonic stress, serving as direct indicators of crustal kinematics. Compared to other fault varieties, normal faults are typically less influenced by multi-stage tectonic superposition. Their relatively straightforward structural styles make them ideal candidates for modeling fault evolution. Modes of fault evolution have long been disputed between the constant-length and tip-propagation models, but questions remain: are traditional frameworks overly reductive, or does the hybrid model offer a more accurate representation of geological reality?

South China underwent two distinct extensional episodes during the Late Mesozoic, resulting in extensional structures and detachment faults. The Yuechengling area preserves a comprehensive record of these events; specifically, the Tianhu Fault and the Ziyuan Detachment Fault correlate closely with these episodes, providing an ideal laboratory for studying detachment fault evolution. Low-temperature geochronology and thermal history inversions reveal that the Tianhu Fault initiated southward propagation at 140 Ma, accompanied by rapid cooling. While the fault's tips transitioned to a slow-cooling phase at 40 Ma, the central segment reached this stage as early as 70 Ma. Conversely, the Ziyuan Detachment Fault initiated at approximately 100 Ma and did not enter a slow-cooling regime until 40 Ma. The evolution of the Tianhu Fault concurs with the hybrid model, whereas the Ziyuan Detachment Fault initiated synchronously across its strike at 100 Ma, arguing for the constant-length model. We attribute this differential evolution to variations in rock mechanical properties, extension rates, and fluid activity.

Although Cenozoic extensional structures in South China are primarily concentrated in southeastern offshore regions—leaving few visible deformation markers—our data suggest that Cenozoic extension was superimposed onto Late Mesozoic faults, driving the continuous uplift and cooling of their hanging walls. This process is consistent with the Late Mesozoic–Cenozoic tectonic migration from the northwest of the South China Block toward the South China Sea. The transition to slow cooling at 40 Ma likely reflects a regional stress field shift: the opening of the South China Sea absorbed major extensional stress, effectively terminating far-field effects within the continental interior.

How to cite: Liu, T. and Chu, Y.: Structural evolution of the Ziyuan detachment of the Yuechengling dome and its tectonic implications to the Late Mesozoic-Cenozoic extension in South China , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22619, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22619, 2026.

This study investigates the tectonic connection between the southern East China Sea Basin (ECSB) and the opening of the South China Sea (SCS). By integrating sedimentary records, seismic stratigraphy, and detrital zircon geochronological evidence, we propose that the tectono‑sedimentary evolution of the southern ECSB is closely linked to the opening and subsequent contraction of the SCS.

During the Paleocene‒Eocene, the southern ECSB (represented by the Lishui‒Jiaojiang Sag) and the basins around Taiwan exhibited highly similar evolutionary features: synchronous marine transgression, extensive paralic to shallow‑marine deposition, and diffuse extension lacking distinct boundary faults. This pattern contrasts sharply with the narrow, fault‑controlled half‑grabens in the northern ECSB. A key piece of evidence is the development of a major breakup unconformity in both regions during the late Eocene‒early Oligocene. This unconformity is characterized by truncation and tilting without compressional structures and corresponds in time to the initial opening of the SCS.

Detrital zircon U‒Pb dating provides independent support for the tectonic correlation between the two regions. Late Eocene sediments in the southern ECSB display a distinct provenance signature, with age spectra highly consistent with those of the northeast Mindoro block on the southern SCS margin, indicating that both belonged to the same continental block prior to breakup. Furthermore, the subsequent subduction and contraction of the SCS oceanic crust beneath the Philippine Sea Plate has brought the present‑day southern East China Sea into a subduction‑related tectonic setting.

Based on the synchronicity of sedimentary‑tectonic evolution and provenance links, combined with previous reconstructions of subducted slabs, we propose that before the opening of the SCS, its northern passive margin extended eastward, encompassing the southern ECSB. The Paleogene extension, sedimentary infill, development of the breakup unconformity, and subsequent tectonic processes in the southern ECSB were thus predominantly controlled by the rifting/spreading and eventual consumption of the eastern SCS. This understanding provides a new perspective for deciphering the tectonic connectivity of the East Asian continental margin.

How to cite: Fu, X. and Zhu, W.: Tectonic affinity between the southern East China Sea Basin and the northern South China Sea margin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22651, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22651, 2026.

EGU26-22862 | Orals | GD2.5

Differential Hydrocarbon Enrichment Patterns in the Eastern Tethys: Insights from Supercontinent Breakup and Assembly 

Weilin Zhu, Xiaowei Fu, Zhao Shijie, Zhou Zengyuan, and Zhu Zhiwei

The Tethyan tectonic domain ranks among the world's most prolific hydrocarbon provinces. However, its eastern segment exhibits comparatively lower petroleum potential, significantly contrasting with the Middle East, with substantial variations in petroleum geological conditions across different basins. However, the fundamental geodynamic controls underlying this disparity remain poorly constrained. Through systematic analysis of the tectonic evolution of the eastern Tethys (including collision, rifting, drift, and accretion of major Gondwana-derived blocks) alongside the developmental characteristics and petroleum geology of associated basins, this study reveals that the nature, morphology, and scale of the underlying continental blocks exert fundamental controls on the formation and preservation of hydrocarbon-rich basins. These blocks are categorized into three types: large cratons, ribbon terranes, and microcontinental blocks. Large cratonic blocks (e.g., India, South China, North China, Tarim) possess high deformation resistance, with major tectonic deformation predominantly confined to their margins. Consequently, they typically preserve multiphase superimposed basins even related to pre-Gondwana rifting, developing multiple petroleum systems with substantial resource potential. In contrast, ribbon terranes (e.g., Lhasa, Qiangtang, Sibumasu) exhibit weak basements and commonly undergo pervasive modification by subsequent collisional and subduction-related tectonism. Only basins formed during the latest tectonic stage are effectively preserved, with locally favorable petroleum geological conditions. Similarly, microcontinental blocks in eastern Indonesia primarily preserve hydrocarbon-rich basins from the latest tectonic phase. However, Australian-affiliated blocks within this group, remaining in the relatively early stages of collision, can additionally retain continental margin deposits from the northern Australian block. The nature of the basement fundamentally dictates the development and modification of overlying petroliferous basins. This study provides a novel perspective for understanding differential hydrocarbon enrichment patterns across macroscopic regions.

How to cite: Zhu, W., Fu, X., Shijie, Z., Zengyuan, Z., and Zhiwei, Z.: Differential Hydrocarbon Enrichment Patterns in the Eastern Tethys: Insights from Supercontinent Breakup and Assembly, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22862, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22862, 2026.

EGU26-565 | ECS | Orals | GM2.4

Post-rift evolution of the southeastern Australia Great Escarpment from apatite 4He/3He thermochronology 

Wenbo Zhan, Lingxiao Gong, Marissa Tremblay, Magdalena Curry, and Malcolm McMillan

High-relief great escarpments are prominent geomorphic features characterizing many passive continental margins, extending for hundreds to thousands of kilometers subparallel to the continent-ocean boundary and connecting coastal plains with upland plateaus. Initial formation of these escarpments is most often attributed to oceanic rifting preceding passive margin development. However, in many cases, including our study area in SE Australia, these escarpments have persisted for tens to hundreds of millions of years after rifting, raising questions about their geomorphic origin and evolution. One of the challenges to understanding the evolution of great escarpments is that erosion-driven exhumation produced during their retreat from the coast is expected to be too small in magnitude to be recorded by conventional thermochronometers, such as apatite fission track (AFT). Here, we present apatite 4He/3He thermochronology results from a bedrock transect across the SE Australian escarpment. Existing AFT and conventional (U-Th)/He data in SE Australia appear to lack sufficient resolution to fully document the timing of cooling associated with escarpment retreat. Apatite 4He/3He thermochronology, on the other hand, is sensitive to temperatures as low as 35 ºC, making it suitable for detecting cooling signals from the estimated 1-1.5 km total exhumation associated with escarpment retreat in this region. Preliminary thermal history models based on our initial apatite 4He/3He data document an increase in cooling rates across the coastal plain ca. 120-80 Ma. This late Cretaceous signal overlaps with the initiation of rifting of the Tasman Sea and is consistent with a plateau degradation style of escarpment evolution, where the escarpment formed and retreated to near its present-day position rapidly after rifting. Ongoing acquisition of additional apatite 4He/3He data will allow us to further assess the extent of late Cretaceous cooling along the coastal plain and better constrain landscape evolution models of escarpment development.

How to cite: Zhan, W., Gong, L., Tremblay, M., Curry, M., and McMillan, M.: Post-rift evolution of the southeastern Australia Great Escarpment from apatite 4He/3He thermochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-565, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-565, 2026.

The dynamic Cape south coast of South Africa is widely recognised for its extensive occurrence of aeolian coastal dunes and older (cemented) aeolianites; the latter are thought to preserve records of dune formation spanning multiple glacial-interglacial cycles. However, existing records are dominated by Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 1 and 5e ages. Extensive and (assumed) much older deposits have been identified, but are largely unstudied. By reconstructing their chronologies, we aim to generate new insights into coastal change during the Early to Middle Pleistocene and examine the factors that control long-term preservation of aeolianite deposits on a tectonically stable coastline. We anticipate preservation to be largely influenced by local topography and underlying geology.

Here we focus on the geomorphic history of Walker Bay, southwest of Cape Town. Our aim is to integrate a suite of geophysical (ground penetrating radar-GPR), geochemical (ICP-MS, SEM) and luminescence (TT-OSL (quartz) and post-IR-IRSL (K-feldspar)) dating methods to unravel the chronology, structure and provenance of dune sands within the embayment. 

Initial results indicate an age range of ~1 million years to ~600,000 years. The applied methods TT-OSL, IR225, and IR290 show some results that are close to each other, while others vary outside the error range. We also observe several unusual aeolian deposits, some of which are far from the modern coastline and reach elevations of more than 250m above sea level (amsl). Other locations with closely juxtaposed aeolianites (dating to >600ka), substantially greater than any yet published for this coastline, and uncemented sands (late Pleistocene) dated to MIS-3, a period with fewer records & sea-levels were significantly lower than present. The results challenge existing models, which suggest that pulses of dune formation occurred primarily during the MIS-5 and MIS-1 highstands. Several questions arise as to the mechanisms of aeolianite formation/preservation at such heights and distances relative to the modern coast, and the results present further questions: Is Walker Bay Unique? Or are such complex suite deposits much more widespread? On this basis, we consider whether methodological and sampling limitations have led to a spatio-temporal biased record of long-term dune formation in this region. Or is it a completely different system than what has been observed on the coast before?

How to cite: Borde, H., Carr, A., Cawthra, H., and Cowling, R.: Extending the record of coastal aeolian landscape change into the Middle and Early Pleistocene: a multi-method comparison SAR-OSL, TT-OSL and post-IRIR, Walker Bay, South Africa, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-641, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-641, 2026.

EGU26-675 | ECS | Orals | GM2.4

Open to closed basin: tectonic and climatic feedback in the evolution of the largest Himalayan lake system  

Sumit Sagwal, Anil Kumar, Pradeep Srivastava, Subhojit Saha, and Mohd Shahrukh

The geomorphological evolution of landscapes is primarily governed by the coupled influence of tectonics and climate, with their relative dominance varying through time and space. In the Ladakh Himalaya, where active deformation intersects pronounced Quaternary climatic fluctuations, this coupling produces a distinct geomorphic signature. The Muglib Valley, formerly the outlet of Pangong Tso, demonstrates a system in which tectonic forcing initiated hydrological reorganisation, subsequently amplified by climatic variability. The region lies along the Karakoram Fault system, where oblique right-lateral slip with a vertical component (3–5 mm yr⁻¹) has modified basin geometry, offset valley alignments, and generated localised blockages that facilitated lake formation. Detailed geomorphic and sedimentological analyses across seven field sections reveal marked spatial variability: stacked gravels and conglomerates represent sustained fluvial aggradation, while thick fan and lacustrine deposits reflect progressive sediment overloading and hydrological stagnation, respectively. Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) ages indicate a steady flow of water from Pangong Tso between ~54 ± 4.3 ka and 21 ± 3 ka. Thereafter, the channel was cut and eventually abandoned at ~9 ± 1 ka. The latter coincides with intensified monsoonal precipitation during the Holocene Climate Optimum, which enhanced sediment flux and triggered fan progradation, ultimately blocking the Muglib outlet. This geomorphic transformation converted Pangong Tso from an open to a closed basin, isolating an upstream catchment of ~2000 km² and terminating water and sediment supply to the Tangste River. The findings demonstrate that slow but persistent tectonic activity along the Karakoram Fault primarily governed drainage reorganisation, while monsoon intensification acted as an additive trigger that accelerated fan aggradation and hydrological isolation. The Muglib system thus provides an example of coupled tectonic–climatic feedback that has reshaped the fluvial architecture and sediment connectivity in the Trans-Himalayan landscape.

How to cite: Sagwal, S., Kumar, A., Srivastava, P., Saha, S., and Shahrukh, M.: Open to closed basin: tectonic and climatic feedback in the evolution of the largest Himalayan lake system , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-675, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-675, 2026.

The geomorphic and sedimentological evolution of the dynamic Satluj River basin is understood through a detailed analysis that combines comprehensive morpho-sedimentary mapping, lithofacies analysis, and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating to evaluate the impact of base-level fluctuations. Although the valley is far from the current coastline, evidences of minor changes in base level caused by climate and sea level processes reach deep into the hinterland is clearly seen in such a dynamic mountain catchment of the Himalaya. These changes majorly control river dynamics, sediment transport, and overall landscape evolution. Frequent landslides, temporary channel damming, lake formation, and large fluvio-lacustrine sedimentary successions direct periods of enhanced sediment input and aggradation. Morphotectonic indices and the presence of seismites in these deposits suggest significant tectonic influence on base-level-driven geomorphic responses.

Optical chronology identifies two major aggradation phases: one from about 30 to 24 ka and another from about 17 to 11 ka. During these phases, more sediment was deposited, less material was transported, and the local base level temporarily rose owing to valley damming. In these periods, the landscape was unstable, resulting in numerous mass-wasting events, the creation of dammed palaeolakes, and the preservation of extensive sedimentary records. Subsequent incision stages form strath terraces, vertically incised gorges, offset channels, and modifications in the shape of Quaternary sediments. This indicates that the base level declined again and tectonic activity resumed.

The observed relationship between aggradation-incision cycles, dammed lakes, and tectonically influenced base-level fluctuations demonstrates how climate-driven base-level modifications can be greatly amplified in dynamic mountain belts. The findings suggest that base-level signals connected to sea-level fluctuations may have an indirect impact on sedimentation and geomorphology over significant distances upstream through complex sediment-routing systems. This study adds new constraints on late Quaternary catchment-scale geomorphic adjustment and improves understanding of how sea-level-induced base-level changes interact with tectonics, landslides, and fluvial processes to shape the Himalayan landscape.

How to cite: Shahrukh, M. and Kumar, A.: Propagation of Base-Level Signals into an Active Himalayan Catchment: Morpho-Sedimentary and OSL Evidence from the Satluj River Valley, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-730, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-730, 2026.

The deglaciation history of the European Alps is thought to be well established, however, the timing of glacier retreat in the eastern Alps remains poorly constrained. Here, we present the first 10Be exposure ages from the Klagenfurt Basin (Carinthia, Austria), which was covered by the piedmont lobe of the Drau glacier during the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). The 10Be ages were obtained from glacially polished quartz veins between ~530 and ~800 m a.s.l. and range from 17.4±0.6 to 13.5±0.7 ka (mean age: 15.9±1.0 ka). The age data indicate that deglaciation of the Klagenfurt Basin occurred near the end of the Oldest Dryas stadial and are consistent with published 10Be ages from the flat tops of the ~2000-m-high Nock Mountains farther north (mean age: 15.0±1.2 ka) (Wölfler et al., 2022). Both data sets refute a widely accepted scenario, in which the southeastern Alps were already ice-free by ~19-18 ka (e.g., van Husen, 1997; Reitner, 2007; Ivy-Ochs et al., 2023). Our reassessment of the underlying age constraints for this still prevailing view shows that the respective 14C ages were obtained from bulk-sediment samples in two postglacial lakes (Lake Längsee: Schmidt et al., 1998, 2002; Lake Jeserzer See: Schmidt et al, 2012). 14C ages from bulk lake-sediment samples are, however, known to overestimate the true sedimentation age due to a reservoir effect (e.g., Ilyaschuk et al., 2009; Hou et al., 2012). At Lake Längsee, the overestimation of the true sedimentation ages by the 14C ages is confirmed by a layer of Neapolitan Yellow Tuff, whose age was independently determined by 40Ar/39Ar dating at its origin (Deino et al., 2004). Later deglaciation than previously assumed is further supported by two published 10Be age data sets from the Hohe Tauern mountains, which indicate LGM ice-surface lowering between ~18.6 and ~14.8 ka (Wirsig et al., 2016) and rock-glacier stabilization at ~16-14 ka (Steinemann et al., 2020), respectively. Our interpretations agree with palaeo-precipitation records derived from cave carbonates, which indicate enhanced autumn and winter precipitation during the LGM and until ~17 ka (Spötl et al., 2021; Warken et al., 2024). The combined evidence presented in our study shows that deglaciation of the southeastern Alps occurred at ~16-15 ka and hence later than previously thought.

References

Deino et al., 2004, J. Volcanol. Geotherm. Res., 133, 157–170, doi.org/10.1016/S0377-0273(03)00396-2.

Hou et al., 2012, Quat. Sci. Rev., 48, 67–79, doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.06.008.

Ilyaschuk et al., 2009, Quat. Sci. Rev., 28, 1340–1353, doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2009.01.007.

Ivy-Ochs et al., 2023, In: European Glacial Landscapes—The Last Deglaciation, 175–183, doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-323-91899-2.00005-X.

Reitner, 2007, Quat. Int. 164/165, 64–84, doi.org/10.1016/j.quaint.2006.12.016.

Schmidt et al., 1998, Aquat. Sci. 60, 56-88.

Schmidt et al., 2002, Quat. Int., 88, 45–56.

Schmidt et al., 2012, J. Quat. Sci. 27, 40–50. doi.org/10.1002/jqs.1505.

Spötl et al., 2021, Nature Commun. 12, 1839, doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-22090-7.

Steinemann et al., 2020, Quat. Sci. Rev. 241, 106424, doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106424.

Warken et al., 2024, Comm. Earth Environ. 5, 694, doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01876-9.

Wirsig et al., 2016, Quat. Sci. Rev. 143, 37–50, doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2016.05.001.

Wölfler et al., 2022, J. Quat. Sci., 37, 677–687, doi.org/10.1002/jqs.3399.

How to cite: Hampel, A. and Hetzel, R.: Deglaciation of the Klagenfurt Basin (Austria): constraints from 10Be exposure dating and implications for the glacial history of the southeastern Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1613, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1613, 2026.

EGU26-1787 | ECS | Posters on site | GM2.4

Accelerated uplift of the Rhenish Massif (central Europe) since 700–800 ka revealed by isochron-burial dating of strath terraces 

Monica Terraza, Reinhard Wolff, Ralf Hetzel, Benedikt Ritter, Steven Binnie, Johannes Preuss, Christian Hoselmann, Michael Weidenfeller, and Stefan Heinze

The uplift of the Rhenish Massif is recorded by strath terraces along major rivers, however, absolute age control for the terraces is still scarce, and terrace correlations with Quaternary climate cycles are uncertain and partly contradictory. Along the Rhine, two terrace levels – the Older and Younger Main Terrace (OMT and YMT) – occur above a marked break-in-slope, which separates a steep lower valley from a broad upper valley with gentle slopes. Based on limited paleomagnetic data, an age of 730–800 ka for the YMT was often assumed and used to estimate rock uplift (e.g., Meyer & Stets, 1998). Here, we present the first 10Be – 26Al isochron-burial ages for the OMT and YMT at two sites: Kasbach-Ohlenberg and Bad Hönningen. At Kasbach-Ohlenberg, the OMT yields a burial age of 1.4–1.6 Ma, while the YMT is dated to 0.7–0.8 Ma. These ages and the small vertical distance of only a few meters between both terraces indicate a prolonged period with little river incision, followed by a phase of more rapid incision and rock uplift. The elevation of the bedrock strath of the YMT above the Rhine (i.e., ~160 m) implies an average uplift rate of ~200 m/Ma during this phase. At Bad Hönningen, the OMT yields a burial age of 1.1-1.4 Ma. This younger age and the higher elevation of the OMT at this site suggest that rock uplift increases toward the internal part of the Rhenish Massif. The temporal coincidence between the onset of uplift and plume-related intraplate volcanism in the Eifel at ~700 ka (e.g., Lippolt et al., 1983) suggests a mantle-driven origin for the uplift. Our ongoing work will result in additional age–elevation data for terrace sites along the Rhine, thus enabling a more detailed reconstruction of the timing, rate, and spatial variability of uplift in the Rhenish Massif.

References
Lippolt, H.J., 1983. Distribution of volcanic activity in space and time. In: Fuchs, K., von Gehlen, K., Mälzer, H., Murawski, H., Semmel, A. (Eds.), Plateau Uplift. Springer, Berlin, pp. 112–120.
Meyer, W., Stets, J., 1998. Junge Tektonik im Rheinischen Schiefergebirge und ihre Quantifizierung. Z. dt. geol. Ges. 149, 359–379. https://doi.org/10.1127/zdgg/149/1998/359.

How to cite: Terraza, M., Wolff, R., Hetzel, R., Ritter, B., Binnie, S., Preuss, J., Hoselmann, C., Weidenfeller, M., and Heinze, S.: Accelerated uplift of the Rhenish Massif (central Europe) since 700–800 ka revealed by isochron-burial dating of strath terraces, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1787, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1787, 2026.

EGU26-2959 | Posters on site | GM2.4

Quantification of Quaternary loess cover and integrated denudation rates using cosmogenic nuclide Aluminium-26 and Beryllium-10 disequilibrium (Mecsek Mountains, Pannonian Basin) 

Zsófia Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Mads Farschou Knudsen, Márton Bauer, Tamás Telbisz, Aster Team, and Krisztina Sebe

In areas of multiple exposure-burial histories the use of two cosmogenic radionuclides (CRN) with different half-lives allows to reveal the disequilibrium between CRN concentrations and provide a better understanding of landscape evolution. This study aims to quantify bedrock denudation rates in the Western Mecsek Mts (southern Pannonian Basin), a low-elevation hilly area that is currently being exhumed from under its loess cover deposited during the Quaternary glaciations. Concentrations of 10Be and 26Al were measured in samples taken from flat, soil-covered ridge tops and stream sediments from several small river catchments composed of Permian and Triassic sandstones and conglomerates. Low 26Al/10Be ratios are indicative of unsteadiness caused by significant past burial of the bedrock surfaces. A Monte Carlo (MC) model was developed to reveal the temporal evolution of the loess cover as a function of glacial-interglacial climate, and to determine the true rate of bedrock denudation accounting for both loess-covered periods with shielding and zero erosion as well as phases of exposure and bedrock denudation during periods without loess.

Our model showed that higher-elevation catchments and ridges were exposed for 40 to 85%, while lower-elevation areas were uncovered for less than 30% of time during the last 1 Ma. The modelled time integrated bedrock denudation rates were similar for the ridge crests and basin-averaged samples suggesting a steady relief. However, a well-expressed difference was found between the areas spending most of the time loess covered and the less covered group with mean integrated denudation rates of 5±5 m/Ma and 19±8 m/Ma, respectively. Single nuclide 10Be denudation rates overestimated the modelled, time-integrated denudation rates by a factor of ~1.5 for the more exposed group and by a factor of ~13 (up to >30) for the mostly covered areas. These rates, especially the latter, are slower than published values for similar climatic, tectonic, and topographic settings. If the simple, single nuclide 10Be approach was used, these differences would have remained hidden, and the true lowering rate of bedrock would have been overestimated by a factor that increases with the shielding time.

This is the first study quantifying the influence of past loess covers on CRN concentrations in bedrock and to estimate the denudation rates corrected for this shielding. Our findings reveal that the steady-state assumption of the CRN concentrations may also be violated in small, non-glaciated catchments without intermittent sediment storage. Where single-nuclide 10Be denudation rates are higher than sediment-trap estimates, the shielding effect of past sediment cover (such as loess) could also explain the discrepancy. Accordingly, we recommend the use of the paired 26Al/10Be approach to test the presumption of cosmogenic nuclide equilibrium not only in large catchments and formerly glaciated areas, but also in settings where past sediment cover may have lasted long enough to lower the CRN ratio.

Funding: PURAM, Mecsekérc Ltd., NKFIH project FK 124807. Sample processing: Cosmogenic Laboratories of Budapest (n=16) and of the University of Edinburgh (n=4); AMS measurements: ASTER, Aix en Provence (n=16) and SUERC, Glasgow (n=4)

How to cite: Ruszkiczay-Rüdiger, Z., Knudsen, M. F., Bauer, M., Telbisz, T., Team, A., and Sebe, K.: Quantification of Quaternary loess cover and integrated denudation rates using cosmogenic nuclide Aluminium-26 and Beryllium-10 disequilibrium (Mecsek Mountains, Pannonian Basin), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2959, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2959, 2026.

Over the past decade, several research groups have developed and applied methods for using Infra-Red Stimulated Luminescence (IRSL) from sand-sized grains of alkali feldspar collected from the active channels of different rivers. These methods used either conventional multiple grain IRSL measurements, or single grain IRSL determinations, but all depend on comparisons of results from different sampling locations to reconstruct virtual velocity. In its simplest form, this approach relies on the Ergodic principle as the basis for time-space equivalence of different samples. While this can often represent a successful approach, recent anthropogenic disturbances to fluvial systems may in some cases render this method problematic. For example, where channel engineering or dam construction cuts off or modifies the natural sediment supply, samples collected downstream of these locations may provide signals that are inconsistent with those from upstream.

For this reason, our research team has been developing IRSL approaches to attempt to reconstruct sediment storage times and virtual velocity by inverting measured Multiple Elevated Temperature (MET) IRSL signals from single grains of alkali feldspar. Some grains preserve a record that is shaped by multiple episodes of storage during burial and light exposure during transport; storage causes trapped charge populations responsible for IRSL signals to grow in a predictable manner, while light exposure causes a reduction in each population. Multiple IRSL signals measured at a range of temperatures in the laboratory display different sensitivity to light, resulting in different degrees of “bleaching” (reduction in trapped charge). When a grain is subject to multiple episodes of burial and bleaching, the different IRSL signals move away from being in an equilibrium ratio with each other, allowing us to constrain their past burial and bleaching histories, within some limits. In this presentation, we shall compare results from this novel single grain MET-IRSL inversion approach with conventional IRSL sediment transport approaches, and assess performance from grains subject to laboratory simulations of different burial-bleach cycles. The new technique has great potential to help understand contemporary and past fluvial dynamics and sediment storage, as well as determination of sediment sources and channel erosional processes, and can contribute significantly to applications such as catchment carbon dynamics, or assessing impacts of engineering structures.

How to cite: Rhodes, E. and Spano, T.: Reconstructing virtual velocity and fluvial dynamics using MET-IRSL from single grains of sand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4552, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4552, 2026.

EGU26-5323 | Posters on site | GM2.4

A gradient boosted decision tree approach for high-resolution luminescence chronologies 

Sebastian Kreutzer, Maryam Heydari, Paul R. Hanson, Annette Kadereit, Shannon A. Mahan, and Christoph Schmidt

Luminescence ages are powerful agents for tracing past sediment dynamics and deciphering complexities inherent in the evolution of past landscapes. If applied in temporal periods suitable for luminescence-based methods, they provide accurate dating results but with somewhat limited spatial resolution. This is primarily due to the time-consuming nature of luminescence sample preparation and measurement procedures. Luminescence screening methods, for instance, using portable equipment [1] that focuses only on light intensities rather than absorbed dose/dose-rate ratios, provide a convenient shortcut. Assuming a suitable geologically homogeneous environment, they provide initial insights and relative chronologies and can be useful in developing an appropriate sampling strategy for a more detailed study.

However, the hope of delivering, even provisionally, instant chronologies could not yet be satisfied. While our approach similarly cannot offer instant chronologies, we propose here a gradient-boosted decision tree approach [2] to model the complex interactions among physical parameters (e.g., dose rate, water content, sedimentology) and convert luminescence intensity values into the age domain. Our approach uses age-depth relationships of ages and intensities from different profiles, combined with additional features such as geographical information (latitude, longitude, depth below ground surface). We demonstrate that we can satisfactorily and robustly predict pseudo-luminescence ages from signal intensities using only a small training dataset (n = 31). This enables us to considerably enhance the age resolution of luminescence dating chronologies in suitable environments, particularly in those where sedimentary deposits are relatively homogenous.

A limitation of our approach is our reliance on a favourable, homogeneous sampling environment (here, sandy deposits of aeolian origin), which cannot be directly transferred to other geologically more complex settings; however, we are confident that the general approach remains valid and can be adapted on regional scales to increase age resolution.

References

[1] Sanderson, D. C. W. and Murphy, S.: Using simple portable OSL measurements and laboratory characterisation to help understand complex and heterogeneous sediment sequences for luminescence dating, Quaternary Geochronology, 5, 299–305, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quageo.2009.02.001, 2010.

[2] Chen, T. and Guestrin, C.: XGBoost: A Scalable Tree Boosting System, in: Proceedings of the 22nd ACM SIGKDD International Conference on Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining, New York, NY, USA, 785–794, https://doi.org/10.1145/2939672.2939785, 2016.

How to cite: Kreutzer, S., Heydari, M., Hanson, P. R., Kadereit, A., Mahan, S. A., and Schmidt, C.: A gradient boosted decision tree approach for high-resolution luminescence chronologies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5323, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5323, 2026.

EGU26-5827 | Posters on site | GM2.4

Helium-based thermochronometry and cosmogenic noble gas geochemistry in the Thermochronology @ Purdue (T@P) noble gas mass spectrometry facility 

Marissa M. Tremblay, Hongcheng Guo, Eric T. Dziekonski, Ryan B. Ickert, and Devin Blair

The Thermochronology @ Purdue (T@P) noble gas mass spectrometry facility was established at Purdue University between 2020 and 2023. In this presentation, we will detail the T@P laboratory’s instrument configuration and demonstrate the facility’s capabilities for both helium-based thermochronometry and cosmogenic noble gas geochemistry. The primary instrument in the T@P laboratory is an Isotopx NGX, a multi-collector sector field mass spectrometer with a Nier-type source, which has a custom detector configuration consisting of three discrete dynode electron multipliers, including one fitted with an electrostatic filter, and two Faraday cups with ATONA® amplifiers. The NGX is connected to a custom-built, fully automated, ultra-high vacuum extraction line that includes an activated charcoal cryogenic trap and two getters for gas purification, two manometrically-calibrated gas standards for sensitivity calibration (air and 3He-enriched helium), and a manometrically-calibrated 3He spike for measurements of radiogenic 4He by isotope dilution. Gases are extracted by heating samples under vacuum using a diode laser system in a feedback control loop with either a calibrated optical pyrometer (better than ± 10 ºC precision), or a bare, thin-wire thermocouple in contact with the sample (better than ± 3 ºC precision). We will present isotopic analyses made in the T@P laboratory of reference materials for both helium-based thermochronometry (Durango apatite) and cosmogenic noble gas geochemistry (CRONUS-P, CRONUS-A, CREU-1) as well as from example applications in Earth and planetary surface processes.

How to cite: Tremblay, M. M., Guo, H., Dziekonski, E. T., Ickert, R. B., and Blair, D.: Helium-based thermochronometry and cosmogenic noble gas geochemistry in the Thermochronology @ Purdue (T@P) noble gas mass spectrometry facility, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5827, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5827, 2026.

EGU26-5853 | Posters on site | GM2.4

 Radiofluorescence as a tool to estimate the degree of friction-induced heat caused by co-seismic slip  

Maryam Heydari, André Niemeijer, and Sebastian Kreutzer

Sufficient temperature rise during frictional heating is a key parameter controlling whether luminescence dating of fault gouges can determine the timing of past earthquakes. Regardless, the true temperatures induced in the rock during a co-seismic slip event are often unknown. This significantly hampers the accuracy of luminescence age results from fault gouges. Laboratory-controlled friction experiments can adequately simulate different friction scenarios by modulating normal stress and slip velocity and then recording induced temperatures using thermocouples [1] or an infrared camera [2]. However, monitoring those events in nature is highly impractical for past events.

Systematic luminescence studies on ultraviolet (UV) radiofluorescence (RF) of quartz reported a strong correlation between heating and subsequently recorded UV-RF signaldynamics [3,4].

Here, we explore the potential of UV-RF to shed light on the extent of friction-induced temperature in quartz-bearing host rocks. In our experiments, we tested one sediment quartz sample with a known luminescence characteristic and a polymineral sample from the North Tehran Fault. For one part of each sample, we first recorded a UV-RF temperature profile after heating subsamples in batches from 30 ºC to 575 ºC in increments of 25 ºC. The other (untreated) part was then subjected to frictional heating in the laboratory under a normal stress of 12 MPa and a slip velocity of 5 cm/s using a rotary shear apparatus. During the experiment, the frictional heat was recorded using an infrared camera. We then measured the UV-RF signal and projected the results onto the signal-preheat profile to estimate the (unknown) frictional heat temperature.

Although our study is preliminary at this stage, we could calculate realistic friction-induced temperatures for the quartz sample. In contrast, the UV-RF signals of the polymineral sample will require additional experiments. We will present the experimental design and initial results, and discuss the challenges and the potential of our approach for tracking the temperature levels generated by earthquakes.

References

[1] Kim, J.H., Ree, J.-H., Choi, J.-H., Chauhan, N., Hirose, T., Kitamura, M., 2019. Experimental investigations on dating the last earthquake event using OSL signals of quartz from fault gouges. Tectonophysics 769, 228191. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2019.228191

[2] Heydari, M., Kreutzer. S., Hung, C.C., Martin, L., Ghassemi, M.R., Tsukamoto, S., Niemeijer, A., under review, Scientific Reports. Unveiling Earthquakes: Thermoluminescence Signal Resetting of a Natural Polymineral Sample in Laboratory-Produced Fault Gouge

[3] Friedrich, J., Pagonis, V., Chen, R., Kreutzer, S., and Schmidt, C.: Quartz radiofluorescence: a modelling approach, Journal of Luminescence, 186, 318–325, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlumin.2017.02.039, 2017a.

[4] Friedrich, J., Fasoli, M., Kreutzer, S., and Schmidt, C.: The basic principles of quartz radiofluorescence dynamics in the UV - analytical, numerical and experimental results, Journal of Luminescence, 192, 940–948, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jlumin.2017.08.012, 2017b.

How to cite: Heydari, M., Niemeijer, A., and Kreutzer, S.:  Radiofluorescence as a tool to estimate the degree of friction-induced heat caused by co-seismic slip , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5853, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5853, 2026.

EGU26-8126 | ECS | Orals | GM2.4

Quartz luminescence and ESR thermochronometry of drill-core sediments from the Anadarko Basin, USA 

Aditi K. Dave, Melanie Kranz-Bartz, Gilby Jepson, Maxime Bernard, Christoph Schmidt, Audrey Margirier, and Georgina E. King

Constraining rock time–temperature histories below ~100 °C (corresponding to the upper ~3 km of the Earth’s crust) is crucial for understanding the interactions between tectonics, erosion, and climate over Quaternary timescales. However, reconstructing thermal histories spanning 104-10⁶ years within the ~25-75 °C temperature range remains a significant challenge. Trapped-charge dating techniques, such as Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) and Electron Spin Resonance (ESR), enable measurement of different temperature-sensitive (< 100 oC) trapped charge dating signals within quartz minerals, thereby offering the potential to fill this temporal and thermal gap. Quartz OSL signals often saturate over timescales of ~104 years, while ESR signals saturate over longer timescales of ~106 years; used together, these methods provide a powerful tool for constraining cooling and exhumation histories over the Quaternary.

A key challenge in establishing quartz OSL and ESR thermochronometry as a robust method lies in the lack of reliable and comprehensive benchmark studies. This study addresses this limitation by investigating quartz from drill-core sediments in the Anadarko Basin (Oklahoma, USA) with a well-constrained temperature history (~30−80 oC) based on empirical calibration with a stable geothermal gradient. Down-core measurement of OSL and ESR signals show promising results exhibiting a systematic decrease in intensity with increasing temperature (and depth), with OSL signals reaching saturation in the lower temperature range. Here, we conduct a detailed investigation of sample-specific signal saturation limits, thermal decay kinetics and temperature-sensitivity of OSL and ESR signals, followed by inversion of these different trapped charge signals for temperature. Our results provide a comprehensive and robust benchmark study to assess the potential and limitations of quartz OSL and ESR thermochronometry for reconstructing temperature histories in natural settings.

How to cite: Dave, A. K., Kranz-Bartz, M., Jepson, G., Bernard, M., Schmidt, C., Margirier, A., and King, G. E.: Quartz luminescence and ESR thermochronometry of drill-core sediments from the Anadarko Basin, USA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8126, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8126, 2026.

EGU26-9469 | ECS | Posters on site | GM2.4

Dating DK: Cosmogenic 10Be depth profiling of glacial outwash plains in Denmark 

Lis Allaart, Jesper Nørgaard, Mads Faurschou Knudsen, Lærke Therese Andersen, Jakob Birk Nielsen, and Nicolaj Krog Larsen

During the Quaternary period the Fennoscandian ice sheet reached far into Europe on several occasions. Especially the last two ice sheet expansions, the Saalian and Weichselian, left many marks on the Danish land surface and shaped the landscape, leaving behind outwash plains, terminal moraines, tunnel valleys, and other glacial landforms. Although, there is general consensus regarding which ice advances resulted in which landscape features, most correlations have not yet been verified by absolute dating. To improve constraints on the ice cover history of the Danish area, we have carried out 10Be profiling on several outwash plains across Denmark. These outwash plains have been chosen (i) to constrain the timing of the overall ice margin retreat across Denmark, and (ii) to decipher whether the northern part of the prominent 90-degree landform (the “Main Stationary line”) belongs to the Last Glacial Maximum advance (~20.000 years ago) or a previous ice advance, such as the Kattegat advance (~30.000 years ago). Denmark is located right at the foothills of the Fennoscandian ice sheet, and we expect our results to have strong implications on the understanding of ice sheet dynamics at play during advance-retreat cycles of continental sized ice sheets, as well as to improve the understanding of the glacial history of Northern Europe. At EGU some of the preliminary results from this investigation will be presented.

10Be profiling is a technique which involves sampling sediment from several depths below the surface at a specific location. Interpretation of the 10Be concentrations can lead to age estimation of the sampled deposit, since the concentrations will depend on the cosmogenic exposure history of the sediment package. A set of samples from different depths are needed to separate the pre- and post-burial 10Be nuclide concentrations or to draw attention to 10Be irregularities throughout the profile indicating asynchronous deposition. The numerical modelling of nuclide concentrations carried out in this study serves as proof of concept and highlights the applicability of the 10Be profiling approach. Hence, alongside the preliminary results of the study, our novel MATLAB implementations for interpreting 10Be profiles will also be showcased.

How to cite: Allaart, L., Nørgaard, J., Knudsen, M. F., Andersen, L. T., Nielsen, J. B., and Larsen, N. K.: Dating DK: Cosmogenic 10Be depth profiling of glacial outwash plains in Denmark, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9469, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9469, 2026.

EGU26-12912 | ECS | Posters on site | GM2.4

Understanding key assumptions in cosmogenic nuclide-derived catchment-average denudation rates 

Lennart Grimm, Byron A. Adams, and Matthew Fox

Basin-averaged erosion rates derived from cosmogenic nuclide concentrations are one of the most commonly used data for the study of landscape evolution histories across a wide range of tectonic and climatic regimes. Despite recent advances in global nuclide datasets and analytical techniques, methods for converting measured concentrations into denudation rates have progressed little.

Converting cosmogenic nuclide concentrations to denudation rates requires several key assumptions; however, one in particular is more difficult to assess, which is that denudation rates remain spatially and temporally constant over timescales comparable to the nuclide integration period. These assumptions rarely hold in nature, especially in mountain catchments with pronounced knickpoints propagating upstream, complicating the interpretation of a single mean concentration. Previous studies have often only evaluated how mean concentrations are affected when one or more assumptions are violated. However, minerals sampled from complex landscapes likely represent distinctly non-Gaussian populations that cannot be adequately characterized by a single mean value.

We present modelling results of cosmogenic nuclide concentration distributions in catchments experiencing spatially and temporally variable denudation rates under different tectonic and climatic forcings. Analysing concentration distributions rather than mean values alone reveals how assumption violations affect inferred denudation rates. Our model employs a detachment-limited stream power law and calculates nuclide accumulation from multiple production pathways using the Lifton-Sato-Dunai scaling scheme.

Preliminary results indicate that the presence of knickpoints does not significantly compromise the interpretation of cosmogenic nuclide concentrations except in cases with fast knickpoint retreat rates in high-relief catchments. However, we find that even moderate climatic changes (simulated by varying the erodibility constant), can yield significant errors in inferred versus real denudation rates. We propose that simple evaluations of cosmogenic nuclide distributions can enhance the reliability of denudation rate estimates in future applications.

How to cite: Grimm, L., Adams, B. A., and Fox, M.: Understanding key assumptions in cosmogenic nuclide-derived catchment-average denudation rates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12912, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12912, 2026.

EGU26-12968 | Orals | GM2.4

Bridging classical low-temperature thermochronology and geomorphology: ESR thermochronology constraints on Plio-Quaternary exhumation and canyon incision across the Colorado Plateau 

Audrey Margirier, Aditi K. Dave, Gilby Jepson, Stuart Thomson, Pierre G. Valla, Anne Voigtländer, Christoph Schmidt, and Georgina E. King

The timing and drivers of canyon incision across the Colorado Plateau are strongly debated, particularly the roles of deep-seated processes, tectonics, geological inheritance, and climate. A major limitation in resolving canyon incision histories and their controlling processes is that the amount of exhumation associated with incision is often too small to be robustly recorded by classical low-temperature thermochronometers such as apatite fission track and (U–Th)/He. Resolving the timing of exhumation acceleration and onset of canyon incision therefore requires thermochronological tools sensitive to lower temperatures and shorter timescales, such as electron spin resonance (ESR).

Here, we focus on Zion Canyon, an emblematic and well-studied canyon on the western margin of the Colorado Plateau, to evaluate the potential of ESR thermochronology to resolve late Cenozoic to Quaternary exhumation/incision histories. Classical low-temperature thermochronometers suggest that exhumation began around 7 Ma. This exhumation signal integrates regional plateau denudation and canyon incision, preventing the isolation of incision-specific dynamics. In contrast, independent geomorphic constraints document significantly higher incision rates over the last ~1 Myr, implying temporal variations in incision that cannot be resolved with classical thermochronology.

We apply ESR thermochronology to a bedrock elevation profile from Zion Canyon to (i) quantify Quaternary incision rates and (ii) test for changes in cooling rates associated with canyon incision. Preliminary ESR results reveal an increase in cooling rates at ~3–2 Ma, suggesting an acceleration of incision during the late Pliocene–early Pleistocene. These results highlight the potential of ESR thermochronology to bridge the temporal gap between geomorphological constraints and classical thermochronology, and to provide new quantitative constraints on the timing and rates of canyon incision across the Colorado Plateau. In addition, preliminary data from the Grand Canyon (where the incision history is particularly complex and controversial) suggest that ESR signals are not saturated, highlighting the method’s potential to resolve cooling and exhumation over the last few million years in other canyons.

How to cite: Margirier, A., Dave, A. K., Jepson, G., Thomson, S., Valla, P. G., Voigtländer, A., Schmidt, C., and King, G. E.: Bridging classical low-temperature thermochronology and geomorphology: ESR thermochronology constraints on Plio-Quaternary exhumation and canyon incision across the Colorado Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12968, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12968, 2026.

EGU26-13563 | ECS | Orals | GM2.4

Development of a globally applicable palaeothermometry method based on luminescence: Advances in method development and validation 

Salome Oehler, Pontien Niyonzima, Georgina E. King, Rabiul H. Biswas, Frédéric Herman, Maxime Bernard, Audrey Margirier, Rosemary Nalwanga, Mohamed El-Raei, and Christoph Schmidt

The scarcity of terrestrial temperature proxies has been a major challenge in the reconstruction of continental climate evolution throughout the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and the Pleistocene-Holocene transition. Understanding such extreme climatic conditions and major system shifts in Earth’s history is paramount for constraining climate sensitivity and predicting future climate evolution in the light of rising greenhouse gas concentrations.

Our research aims to develop a globally applicable method for temperature sensing during this timescale using the low-temperature (i.e., 200–280 °C) thermoluminescence (TL) signal of near-surface bedrock feldspar which has been demonstrated to be sensitive to terrestrial surface air temperature fluctuations over geological timescales (Biswas et al., 2020). As such, palaeothermometry represents one of few available proxies for terrestrial temperature and can aid in quantifying the magnitude of rapid climate changes on a more local scale.

While the theoretical feasibility of TL palaeothermometry has been demonstrated (Biswas et al., 2020), it still requires accurate validation on additional samples of well-constrained temperature history. Furthermore, the method has not yet been applied to a broad set of samples for temperature reconstruction purposes.

Our contribution aims to close this knowledge gap by benchmarking recent methodological improvements against samples from borehole sites located in Germany and Japan. We further present first surface air temperature reconstructions at a number of study sites, which we intend to use to constrain the evolution of altitudinal and latitudinal temperature gradients since the LGM. We show that TL palaeothermometry can be used to retrieve accurate rock and surface air temperatures and may now be more routinely applied.

 

References

Biswas, R.H., Herman, F., King, G.E., Lehmann, B., Singhvi, A.K., 2020. Surface paleothermometry using low-temperature thermoluminescence of feldspar. Clim. Past 16, 2075-2093.

How to cite: Oehler, S., Niyonzima, P., King, G. E., Biswas, R. H., Herman, F., Bernard, M., Margirier, A., Nalwanga, R., El-Raei, M., and Schmidt, C.: Development of a globally applicable palaeothermometry method based on luminescence: Advances in method development and validation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13563, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13563, 2026.

EGU26-14245 | ECS | Posters on site | GM2.4

Cross-Calibration and Sensitivity Analysis of OSL Rock Surface Exposure Dating Using Cosmogenic Nuclide Ages on an Uinta Mountains Rock Glacier (Utah, USA) 

Daniel Sperlich, Jeffrey Munroe, Arne Ramisch, and Michael C. Meyer

Rock glaciers are common permafrost features in mountain landscapes around the globe with a geohazard relevance sourcing large amounts of debris while also acting as aquifers storing large amounts of water, yet their long-term (i.e. centennial to millennial scale) dynamics remain poorly constrained due to limited dating efforts. Short term observations, via GPS, InSAR, UAVSAR, Lidar or feature tracking, show acceleration of flow rates of rock glaciers in all mountain regions.

We use rock glacier RG-2 in the Uinta Mountains (Utah, USA, 3 300 m asl) as a natural laboratory to test and cross-calibrate a novel luminescence-based surface dating technique: optically stimulated luminescence rock surface exposure dating (OSL RSeD). This method exploits the latent OSL or IRSL signals stored in quartz and feldspar bearing rocks and the fact that, in the upper centimeters of rock surfaces, these signals are reset (zeroed) by daylight exposure. By integrating previously CRN-dated quartzite boulders (n = 9) on RG-2 into our analysis, we (i) assess the sensitivity of parameters in the OSL bleaching-with-depth model, (ii) evaluate the model’s underlying assumptions, and (iii) interpret the resulting OSL ages.

Furthermore, we present a standardized, statistically robust workflow to normalize luminescence-depth profiles to saturation based on sequential analysis, suitable for datasets obtained by the 1D-coring-and-slicing- as well as the 2D-EMCCD-approach for various geological and archaeological dating applications.

How to cite: Sperlich, D., Munroe, J., Ramisch, A., and Meyer, M. C.: Cross-Calibration and Sensitivity Analysis of OSL Rock Surface Exposure Dating Using Cosmogenic Nuclide Ages on an Uinta Mountains Rock Glacier (Utah, USA), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14245, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14245, 2026.

EGU26-14441 | ECS | Posters on site | GM2.4 | Highlight

From Free-Flowing to Fragmented: Using Calibrated Models to Assess Impacts of Multiple Dams on Watershed Evolution 

Christopher Sheehan, Mark Behn, Noah Snyder, Luca Cortese, and Travis Dahl

Over the past few centuries, the natural flow of river water and sediment has been significantly disrupted by human activities, including land‐use change, dam and reservoir construction, and variable precipitation. Sediment accumulation in reservoirs leads to declining storage capacity, reduced water quality, and navigational challenges. While hydraulic models can characterize these issues over annual to decadal timescales, they are less effective for predicting sedimentation trajectories over decades to centuries. At these longer timescales, feedbacks between reservoir sedimentation and upstream erosion and deposition influence delta growth and sediment delivery, complicating the development of long-term sediment management strategies. To address this gap, we developed a workflow for building and calibrating open source, coupled landscape evolution models (LEMs) and delta sedimentation models (DSMs) for real-world watersheds. Here, we present preliminary results from the Chattahoochee River in the southeastern United States. The river is segmented by six major dams, each creating a reservoir and corresponding sub-catchment. We constructed a set of six LEMs using Landlab (one for each sub-catchment) and run them sequentially from upstream to downstream, using the sediment outflux from each model as input for the next. The LEMs are calibrated using cosmogenic ¹⁰Be mean catchment erosion rates, modern land-use data, and sediment trapping calculations. We then evaluated how well each model reproduced watershed sediment fluxes inferred from late 21st century suspended-sediment measurements. The DSMs are constructed using PyDeltaRCM and are driven by output sediment flux and provenance data from the LEMs. Using the pre-reservoir topography as a boundary condition, we validate the models by replicating the post-reservoir delta growth. We then use variable land use and hydraulic forcings in the LEMs to assess different future sedimentation patterns in the deltas. Our workflow can be easily applied to any reservoir with bathymetric data and can help stakeholders understand how upstream human impacts may influence a range of possible sedimentation patterns over the coming decades.

How to cite: Sheehan, C., Behn, M., Snyder, N., Cortese, L., and Dahl, T.: From Free-Flowing to Fragmented: Using Calibrated Models to Assess Impacts of Multiple Dams on Watershed Evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14441, 2026.

The rate of bedrock river incision both regulates and depends on the size distribution of sediment produced on hillslopes. Quantifying how hillslope sediment size varies across catchment scales is therefore fundamental to understanding feedbacks between weathering, erosion, and tectonic uplift in mountain landscapes. Here, we quantify spatial variations in hillslope sediment size distributions within a steep mountain catchment using a numerical model that combines a granulometric analysis of detrital cosmogenic nuclide and apatite (U–Th)/He age measurements from each of twelve sediment size classes ranging from medium sand to boulders. The model accounts for sediment production, mixing, and particle size evolution during transport using particle-wear relationships calibrated from tumbling experiments conducted in rotating wheels of varying size. Because these experiments span five orders of magnitude in calculated sediment energy, they enable upscaling of measured abrasion and fragmentation relationships from laboratory to field conditions. 

Measured age distributions by size class show excesses and deficits relative to spatially uniform erosion that we detect using a Monte Carlo-based departure analysis. For example, cobbles at the outlet are relatively old and thus preferentially derived from higher elevations while boulders are relatively young and thus preferentially derived from lower elevations. When these granulometric elevation distributions are combined with measured granulometric variations in cosmogenic nuclides, our model predictions are consistent with independent field-based measurements of hillslope sediment size distributions and their spatial variability across the catchment. Hence, the measured size-dependent variations in cosmogenic nuclides at our study site need not be attributed solely to depth-dependent shielding of relatively coarse material on steep hillslopes. Instead, the granulometric variability in isotopic tracers can be explained by the linkage between erosion rate and particle size production. Together, these results demonstrate that coupling granulometric cosmogenic nuclides and tracer thermochronology with empirically calibrated particle-wear relationships provides a powerful framework for predicting spatial variations in sediment production and erosion in mountain landscapes.

How to cite: Riebe, C., Sklar, L., and Lukens, C.: Hillslope sediment size distributions revealed by granulometric cosmogenic nuclides, detrital thermochronology, and experimentally calibrated particle wear relationships, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15046, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15046, 2026.

Erosion breaks down mountains, yet it is sediment transport that removes sediment and transforms landscapes. Quantifying the rates of sediment transport is a challenging task. Luminescence, traditionally a Quaternary dating method, offers a means to help us constrain sediment transport as a unique sunlight-sensitive tracer. One of the sediment transport properties that luminescence can potentially constrain is the characteristic transport lengthscale, or hop length, that describes the mean distance of transport between long-term storage events, or rest times. Here, I discuss considerations for using luminescence to estimate hop lengths and rest times with potentially heavy- and thin- tailed probability distributions. I present recent work modeling transport distance versus in-channel sunlight exposure and highlight recent contributions in the literature that show the impressive potential of luminescence sediment tracing.

How to cite: Gray, H.: Estimating sediment transport scales with luminescence as a sediment tracer, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15487, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15487, 2026.

EGU26-15516 | ECS | Posters on site | GM2.4

Landscape Response to Rapid Uplift in Southwestern Taiwan: Insights from Denudation Rates Measurement from Cosmogenic 10Be (Meteoric)/9Be Ratios and Morphometric Indices 

Ngoc-Thao Nguyen, Lionel Siame, Maryline Le Béon, Laëtitia Léanni, Erwan Pathier, and Aster Team

Located at an active arc-continent collision zone subject to a tropical climate, the Taiwan mountain belt is characterized by intense tectonic activity, resulting in rapid landscape evolution. In the Western Foothills of southwestern Taiwan, geodetic data reveal rapid surface deformation during periods of low seismicity, where the upper crust is dominated by mudstone lithology. However, mapped active structures do not fully explain the observed sharp deformation gradients and uplift patterns. This discrepancy motivates an evaluation of how strain is accommodated across different timescales and whether the present-day deformation reflects persistent long-term kinematics or transient processes.

Using the ratio of meteoric 10Be to mineral-weathered 9Be measured from five river-sediment samples collected from watersheds with distinct short-term uplift rates, spatial variations in basin-scale denudation rates (Dmet) and their relationship to short-term uplift are evaluated. Although meteoric-10Be-derived denudation rates are particularly suitable for quartz-poor regions such as southwest Taiwan, the method relies on several assumptions that require validation. To assess its applicability, additional samples were collected from watersheds in the Central Range east of the study area, where in situ 10Be-derived denudation rates (Dinsitu) are available.

In the Western Foothills area, Dmet successfully captures large-basin denudation (0.77 ± 0.07 mm/yr) as the integrated signal of sub-basin denudation rates (average of 0.74 ± 0.01 mm/yr). Across two regions, Dmet values are systematically lower in the Western Foothills than in the Central Range (5.8 - 7.4 mm/yr, with an outlier of 32 mm/yr), reflecting contrasts in lithology, climate setting, and topographic relief. In the Central Range, Dinsituvalues (0.2-4.5 mm/yr) differ from Dmet, suggesting that potential grain-size differences between the two methods lead to distinct sediment transport behaviors. Nevertheless, Dmet remains informative by reproducing basin–sub-basin integration in the Western Foothills and distinguishing denudation regimes between regions.

Within the Western foothills, Dmet correlates weakly with uplift rate, slope, and relief. The normalized channel steepness index (ksn­) shows an unexpectedly weak to negative relationship with Dmet. This pattern suggests that meteoric 10Be-derived denudation rates might not represent short-term surface deformation rates or are integrated over timescales that differ from those represented by geomorphic indices. This likely reflects transient surface adjustments rather than steady-state conditions. In contrast, Dmet seems to positively correlate with the extent of barren-land (badland) surfaces developed in weak mudstone formation, suggesting first-order control on basin-averaged meteoric 10Be inventories. Although badlands have been proposed to be associated with rapid erosion in this region, the correspondence between their development timescale and the integration timescale of meteoric 10Be derived denudation remains uncertain.

Future work will expand sampling across additional basins spanning a wider range of badland extent and uplift signatures to test the robustness of these relationships and refine the link between short-term deformation and longer-term surface response. Additional analyses will quantify meteoric 10Be inventories on barren land and vegetated hillslopes to evaluate differences in meteoric 10Be retention across contrasting hillslope environments, thereby refining the applicability and sensitivity of the methods to hillslope transport processes.

How to cite: Nguyen, N.-T., Siame, L., Le Béon, M., Léanni, L., Pathier, E., and Team, A.: Landscape Response to Rapid Uplift in Southwestern Taiwan: Insights from Denudation Rates Measurement from Cosmogenic 10Be (Meteoric)/9Be Ratios and Morphometric Indices, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15516, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15516, 2026.

EGU26-16139 | Posters on site | GM2.4

Dating faulted terrace surfaces with thin aeolian loess cover by using terrestrial Be-10 depth profiles: an attempt along the Nobi active fault system, central Japan 

Heitaro Kaneda, Yuki Matsushi, Yuya Ogura, Ryoga Ohta, and Hiroyuki Matsuzaki

High-definition digital elevation models (DEMs) from airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR) are very powerful tools in detecting unknown tectonic-geomorphic features and quantifying cumulative slip from repeated faulting events. The faulted geomorphic features, however, need to be somehow dated to convert the slip to long-term slip rate, and this task still remains as a challenging part of many tectonic geomorphic and paleoseismic studies. The dating is particularly difficult in mountainous and densely vegetated regions, where we are most benefitted from LiDAR DEMs but most often confront challenges in finding datable organic materials in high-energy gravelly deposits. Here we attempted to date left-laterally faulted fluvial terrace surfaces discovered along the Nobi active fault system (NAFS) in the Etsumi Mountains, central Japan, by using a terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide Be-10. In this region, terrace surfaces are covered with thin aeolian loess deposits of <1 m thick, with generally thinner loess cover on younger and lower surfaces. We employed the depth-profile method to simultaneously determine the age and inherited nuclide concentration, incorporating the effect of loess deposition after terrace abandonment. Exploratory pits for depth profiling were excavated at two sites along the NAFS; the Nukumi-Shiratani site on the low terrace surface along the Nukumi fault and the Nogo site on the middle terrace surface along the Neodani fault. Our results show the terrace abandonment ages that are consistent with the generally accepted terrace-formation and incision history modulated by global climate changes (MIS 2 and MIS 4 for the low and middle terrace surfaces, respectively) and also with crypto tephras identified in the loess deposits. In turn, the long-term left-lateral slip rate for the Nukumi fault was first determined whereas that for the Neodani fault proved to be substantially larger than estimates from previous studies.

How to cite: Kaneda, H., Matsushi, Y., Ogura, Y., Ohta, R., and Matsuzaki, H.: Dating faulted terrace surfaces with thin aeolian loess cover by using terrestrial Be-10 depth profiles: an attempt along the Nobi active fault system, central Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16139, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16139, 2026.

EGU26-16746 | Posters on site | GM2.4

Putting rates on the buzz-saw? Constraining the timing and rate of cirque valley incision, Rhône valley, Switzerland. 

Georgina King, Maxime Bernard, Xiaoxia Wen, Simon Cox, Aditi Dave, and Christoph Schmidt

The observation that topography trends with snowline altitude despite large differences in tectonic uplift in various locations provides the foundation of the glacial buzz-saw hypothesis. However, despite numerous modelling studies, very few quantitative data are available that document the timing or rate of glacial topography formation. Consequently, challenges remain to explain why some localities (e.g. Alaska, southern Andes) seem to escape the glacial buzz-saw. This data gap is driven by the difficulty in constraining rates of glacial erosion over kyr-Myr timescales.

Here, we use a novel thermochronometry technique, based on the Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) of quartz minerals, to constrain the timing of cirque basin formation adjacent to the Rhône valley, Switzerland. The Fully basin, near the town of Sion, sits above the ~1.5 km deep glacial Rhône valley, and is thought to have been incised by ~400 m during the Quaternary. Samples were collected in a transect across the basin, and complement samples previously investigated using ESR-thermochronometry from the Rhône valley (Wen et al., 2024).

Forward modelling using a modified version of Pecube together with the kinetic parameters of existing ESR samples from the area (Wen et al., 2024) shows that ESR-thermochronometry data should be able to constrain the timing of cirque basin incision. This will provide the first dates and rates of glacial buzz-saw activity and will be contrasted with the timing of Rhône valley incision.

How to cite: King, G., Bernard, M., Wen, X., Cox, S., Dave, A., and Schmidt, C.: Putting rates on the buzz-saw? Constraining the timing and rate of cirque valley incision, Rhône valley, Switzerland., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16746, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16746, 2026.

EGU26-18749 | ECS | Orals | GM2.4

Controls on moraine exposure-age clustering and implications for sampling strategy 

Anna Jandová, Benjamin J. Stoker, Martin Margold, and John D. Jansen

Past glacier fluctuations can be reconstructed successfully via cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating of boulders protruding from the moraine surface. However, post-depositional processes like denudation, slope failure and weathering, together with nuclide inheritance, potentially affect nuclide concentrations and diminish the accuracy of moraine age estimates. Post-depositional exhumation of boulders leads to incomplete cosmic-ray exposure and thus underestimated ages. Conversely, some boulders contain nuclides produced prior to their deposition (nuclide inheritance) due to insufficient depth of glacier erosion, incorporation of older glacigenic sediments or material from surrounding non-glaciated areas. Nuclide inheritance yields age estimates older than the true age of moraine formation.

With an aim to evaluate the controls on moraine denudation and to gain insights to the reliability of exposure dating and sampling strategy, we compiled a global dataset of 10,083 10Be-based exposure dates from the Expage database. Clustering of exposure ages from each moraine was used as an indicator of dating quality, assuming that boulders without prior or incomplete exposure should yield a well-clustered (MSWD<2) age. Moraine age-clustering was analysed with respect to climate, topography, location and type of ice mass. 

We find that just 23% of moraine ridges with at least three exposure dates show well-clustered exposure ages, increasing to 69% after iterative removal of outliers with the highest deviation. Exposure-age clustering is mainly a function of moraine age: clustering is best among moraines of 15–10 ka age and decreases notably for moraines that are either younger or older. Climate also matters: well-clustered moraine ages are more frequent in regions with milder climates experiencing higher mean annual temperature and precipitation and lower annual temperature range. Conversely, poorly-clustered ages (e.g. Antarctic Ice Sheet, Cordilleran Ice Sheet, northeastern Asia, High Mountain Asia and Greenland) appear to reflect aridity, extreme cold, or large annual temperature range, but may also stem from complex glacial histories involving multiple glacier readvances.

A key implication for moraine boulder sampling strategies is the effect of the number of samples per moraine. While 36% of the examined moraines comprise only three samples, the likelihood of obtaining a well-clustered age increases significantly by sampling four. The optimal number of samples varies with moraine age and climate. For moraines dated to 20–10 ka, four samples are generally sufficient, whereas younger or older moraines typically require seven or more samples to achieve a similar level of accuracy. The optimal number of samples increases toward colder climates, from temperate (3–4 samples or more) through boreal (5–6 samples or more) to polar climates (7 or more).

How to cite: Jandová, A., Stoker, B. J., Margold, M., and Jansen, J. D.: Controls on moraine exposure-age clustering and implications for sampling strategy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18749, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18749, 2026.

EGU26-22489 | Posters on site | GM2.4

Geomorphic imprint of an Early Pleistocene uplift phase of the Andean forearc and its underlying mechanisms 

Conrado Rubén Gianni, Paolo Ballato, Taylor Schildgen, Guido Gianni, Hella Wittmann, Daniel Melnick, and Claudio Faccenna

The southern Central Andes forearc preserves extensive low-relief wave-cut platforms and fluvial terraces that record long-term margin uplift, yet the timing and driving mechanisms are still debated. Here we present eleven new in situ ¹⁰Be exposure ages from high fluvial terraces and four ages from a lower terrace, combined with geomorphic analyses across eight adjacent catchments, to reassess the age and tectonic significance of the degradational surfaces (pediplain) present between 29.5 and 32.5°S. Erosion-corrected exposure ages indicate that the high terrace formed during the Early Pleistocene, while a lower terrace records incision at Middle Pleistocene. Longitudinal terrace–channel profiles reveal systematically increasing relief toward the coast that terminates near the surface projection of the 50–60 km slab-depth contour, coincident with the downdip limit of megathrust domain-C earthquakes. This spatial relationship supports a regionally coherent uplift signal produced by the cumulative effect of deep coseismic deformation. In peninsular settings, notably the Altos de Talinay, this long-wavelength signal is overprinted by short-wavelength uplift consistent with localized underplating. Our results demonstrate that the high fluvial terraces and the shore wave-cut platform constitute a single, regionally continuous geomorphic marker recording an Early Pleistocene forearc uplift phase extending from ~16° to 42°S. This orogen-scale emergence implies a subtle but widespread change in subduction dynamics during the last Early Pleistocene, the causes of which are not clearly understood.

How to cite: Gianni, C. R., Ballato, P., Schildgen, T., Gianni, G., Wittmann, H., Melnick, D., and Faccenna, C.: Geomorphic imprint of an Early Pleistocene uplift phase of the Andean forearc and its underlying mechanisms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22489, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22489, 2026.

EGU26-22933 | Posters on site | GM2.4

The Python time machine – an open source software application for luminescence-based rock surface dating 

Michael Meyer, Trine Freiesleben, and Thomas Riedle

Luminescence dating of rock surfaces is an emerging and exciting branch of research in geochronology with great application potential. In principle the technique can be used to date hitherto undatable geological and archaeological materials or geomorphological landscape elements. As such, luminescence-based rock surface dating (RSD) is highly complementary to OSL sediment burial and other Quaternary dating techniques.   

RSD basically comes in two variants: rock surface burial dating (RSbD) and rock surface exposure dating (RSeD), both being highly active and promising geochronological research strands undergoing methodological development, refinement and testing. Meanwhile numerous ways of analyzing RSb and RSe luminescence data exist and different approaches to calculate rock surface ages have been introduced, yet no standardized way of handling RSb or RSe luminescence data has been put forward.

Here we present an open-source software package that is based on the software language Python©. The program enables users to evaluate their rock surface luminescence data via a simple graphical user interface (GUI). The program allows processing of data which originate either from CCD or EMCCD images or from the conventional "drilling and slicing" approach and takes various types of OSL, IRSL and IRPL signals into account. We incorporated all currently available and stat-of-the art bleaching models into the software package and provide the user with maximum degree of flexibility for normalizing luminescence signals. In the case of RSeD different calibration procedure options are implemented. Ultimately, the software allows single as well as multiple exposure and burial ages from rock surfaces to be derived.

How to cite: Meyer, M., Freiesleben, T., and Riedle, T.: The Python time machine – an open source software application for luminescence-based rock surface dating, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22933, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22933, 2026.

Understanding rare-gas release requires interdisciplinarity. Hydrous minerals degas 39Ar and 40Ar in vacuo during structural collapse due to dehydroxylation [1,2], never by Fick's Law in an inert, homogeneous matrix. Therefore monomineralic micas always give "plateaus" [3,4] despite age-zoning. Discordant age-spectra instead proceed from polymineralic, heterochemical, diachronous mixtures, unambiguously revealed by common-denominator three-isotope correlations [5,2]. The "Bruderheim staircase archetype" [6] wasn't a "lognormal distribution of monomineralic whole-rock crystals" but a more mundane polyphase maskelynite-pyroxene-anorthite assemblage [7,8]. For micas and Bruderheim, downslope extrapolations are arbitrary.

The inertness of the Itrongay sanidine crystal structure during laboratory heating was assessed by Raman microspectroscopy from 300 to 1000 °C [9]. Raman modes define robust trends at increasing temperature and over time at constant temperature, mirroring progressive excitation of phonon modes associated with structure modifications: interatomic bond stretching/deformation; Si,Al disordering; deformation/rotation of SiO2 tetrahedra. Differential activation of phonon modes is reversible, but disordering is are irreversible. The K-feldspar structure is not inert during laboratory heating, explaining the observed break in Arrhenian slope of Ar release rate [10]. This forbids downslope extrapolation of laboratory data to geological conditions.

The in vacuo releases between 500-1460 °C of 4He*, 20NeF, 37ArCa, 38ArCl, 80KrBr, 128XeI, 131XeBa, 134XeU from irradiated fluorapatite are linear, parallel Arrhenius trajectories. E=62±5 kJ/mol is independent of atomic radius, D0 values decrease from He to Xe by ~4 orders of magnitude [11]. Differential release diagrams show bimodal degassing patterns for Ne and Ar and a single burst above 1360 °C for Kr and Xe. The crystallographic site of Ba and I had no control on Xe release. All degassing rates steepen by 500 times at 1360 °C, and merge. The extreme Arrhenian break-in-slope and the merger of trajectories widely separated below 1360 °C reflect sudden, major, energetically very costly structural reordering at 1360 °C, which was documented by Raman spectroscopy, XRD, TEM and microchemical analysis by LIBS. Complete outgassing of Ne, Ar, Kr and Xe requires complete defluorination reaction modifying the apatite structure. Discrete phase transitions at high T make downslope extrapolations to low T incorrect.

 

[1] Zimmermann 1970, https://doi.org/10.1016/0016-7037(70)90045-1

[2] Villa 2021, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.1.120076

[3] Foland 1983, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0009-2541(83)80002-3

[4] Hodges &al 1994, https://doi.org/10.1130/0091-7613(1994)022<0055:AAAGIM>2.3.CO;2

[5] Villa & Hanchar 2017, https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-821X(66)90061-6

[6] Turner &al 1966, https://doi.org/10.1016/0012-821X(71)90051-3

[7] Duke &al 1961, https://doi.org/10.1029/JZ066i010p03557

[8] Baadsgaard &al 1961, https://doi.org/10.1029/JZ066i010p03574

[9] Kung & Villa 2021, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120382

[10] Wartho &al 1999, https://doi.org/10.1016/S0012-821X(99)00088-6

[11] Villa &al 2024, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2023.121860  

How to cite: Villa, I. M.: Ar data extrapolation from the lab to rocks: systematics of noble gas release in vacuo from micas, feldspars, etc., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3984, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3984, 2026.

EGU26-5908 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Eocene thrust vs. Miocene strike-slip: Kinematic transition of the West Qinling Fault driven by localized asthenospheric upwelling 

Chao Guo, Zhiyong Zhang, Wenjiao Xiao, Marco Malusà, Christoph von Hagke, Lin Wu, Bianca Heberer, Bjarne Friedrichs, Nan Wang, Dunfeng Xiang, and Bernhard Grasemann

Large-scale strike-slip structures in the northeastern Tibetan Plateau, such as the West Qinling Fault, have accommodated the northeastward extrusion of the plateau crust, thereby recording its outward growth. However, the Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the West Qinling Fault remains incompletely understood. In this study, we integrate new and published apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology with exiting sedimentary and geomorphological records to refine the exhumation history of the West Qinling in response to the kinematic evolution of the West Qinling Fault. The combined apatite (U-Th)/He dataset and thermal history modeling reveal two significant episodes of accelerated exhumation in the West Qining during the Eocene (~44–36 Ma) and the Miocene (~17–10 Ma). We attribute the Eocene exhumation to enhanced thrusting along the West Qinling Fault, representing a direct far-field response to the India-Asia collision. In contrast, the Miocene exhumation is linked to oblique-slip motion along the West Qinling Fault, marking a kinematic transition of the fault from thrust- to strike-slip-dominated deformation since the middle Miocene. Integration of our findings with geophysical, sedimentary, and petrological evidence suggests that this kinematic change was caused by a rheological weakening of the lower crust due to localized asthenospheric upwelling. The synchronous kinematic shift along the East Kunlun Fault, along with its similar deep lithospheric structure beneath the Hoh Xil region, implies a genetic link between the West Qinling and East Kunlun faults. We propose that localized asthenospheric upwelling thermally weakened the lower crust beneath both fault systems, thereby driving the kinematic shift during the middle Miocene. This analogy underscores the potential major role of small-scale asthenospheric upwelling-induced thermal weakening of the lower crust in affecting surface deformation during the late stage of orogenic plateau formation.

How to cite: Guo, C., Zhang, Z., Xiao, W., Malusà, M., von Hagke, C., Wu, L., Heberer, B., Friedrichs, B., Wang, N., Xiang, D., and Grasemann, B.: Eocene thrust vs. Miocene strike-slip: Kinematic transition of the West Qinling Fault driven by localized asthenospheric upwelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5908, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5908, 2026.

EGU26-6557 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

U–Pb dating and Sm–Nd isotopic measurement of Ti–bearing andradite: Reference material development and in situ applications by LA-(MC)-ICP-MS 

Yue-Heng Yang, Fu-Yuan Wu, Han Zhao, Lei Xu, Chao Huang, Shi-Tou Wu, Lie-Wen Xie, and Jin-Hui Yang

 Ti-bearing andradite [Ca3Fe2+Ti4+Si3O12] is generally widespread, a diagnostic accessory phase of silica undersaturated alkalic plutonic and volcanic rocks but also occurs in skarn and hydrothermal alteration assemblages, which is associated with the major economic critical metals (Nb, LREE) mineral in deposits related to carbonatite and alkaline intrusions, although it never occurs in large quantities. Because of their enrichment in incompatible elements, carbonatites and alkaline rocks have also been increasingly used by isotope geochemists to study mantle evolution processes leading to continental magmatism and to track the pathways of lithospheric recycling. For both practical and academic applications, it is important to understand the timing of carbonatite and alkaline magmatism relative to such geodynamic processes as plate collisions, rifting, crustal upcoming.

Considering its potential U-Pb dating and perseverance later alteration as well LREE-enrichment, in situ laser ablation is considered as the most suitable method to measure their U-Pb and Sm-Nd isotopic compositions. Twenty-seven Ti-bearing andradite samples from thirteen typical carbonatite and/or alkaline intrusions in Prairie Lake and Ice River, Canada, Magnet Cove, USA, Alnö, Sweden, Fen, Norway, Ozernaya and Ural, Russia, Zijinshan and Fanshan, China, Tamazert, Morocco, San Ieo, Italy, Kaiserstuhl, Germany, Schaffhausen, Switzerland, were conducted for major, trace, U-Pb and Sm-Nd measurement using Electron microprobe (EPMA) and laser ablation (multicollector) inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (LA-(MC)-ICP-MS). Based on development of several in-house Ti-bearing andradite reference materials (PL34, IR18, MC15) demonstrates that precise and accurate U-Pb ages can be obtained after common Pb correction. Moreover, we obtained a reliable in situ Sm-Nd isotopic data because of the relatively moderate LREE content in our samples. These results will have significant implications for understanding the genesis of carbonatite or alkaline intrusion related to metallogenic geochronology and ore deposits research.

How to cite: Yang, Y.-H., Wu, F.-Y., Zhao, H., Xu, L., Huang, C., Wu, S.-T., Xie, L.-W., and Yang, J.-H.: U–Pb dating and Sm–Nd isotopic measurement of Ti–bearing andradite: Reference material development and in situ applications by LA-(MC)-ICP-MS, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6557, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6557, 2026.

EGU26-6729 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

How to find rare zircon in mafic and ultramafic rocks: an integrated in-situ detection workflow 

María Salguero Fuentes, Leticia Barcos, Aitor Cambeses, Antonio Garcia Casco, Jose Francisco Molina, Pilar Montero, Irene Novo Fernández, Núria Pujol Solà, Maria Monika Repczyńska, and Fernando Bea

Zircon is a key accessory mineral because it can retain geochronological and geochemical information. In mafic and ultramafic rocks, zircon is scarce and restricted to localised microstructural domains, making its detection difficult and largely dependent on sampling strategy. We present a reproducible workflow for locating zircon directly within mafic and ultramafic rocks, designed to improve detection efficiency while preserving textural context. The approach is based on preparing multiple small rock slabs with carefully controlled polishing quality, allowing systematic inspection of large surface areas. This slab-scale screening strategy departs from conventional thin-section-based searches and is essential for accessing zircon in zircon-poor systems. Large-area elemental mapping is performed using SEM, EPMA, and micro-XRF, all of which can identify Zr-enriched domains. Comparative testing shows that micro-XRF provides the most favourable balance between acquisition time, analysed surface area and sensitivity to zirconium, making it suitable for first-pass screening of large sample sets. Across the different analytical methodologies used, the Zr signal can be affected by spectral interferences from other elements. For this reason, zircon detection in this study relies on the combined behaviour of multiple elements and on their statistical consistency across the mapped area. Zircon candidates are retained only when they meet several independent criteria, thereby reducing misidentification due to background noise or overlapping mineral phases. This approach enables the recovery of zircon grains down to ~50 µm and can be readily adapted for the in-situ detection of other scarce accessory minerals. More generally, it provides a practical framework for accessing mineral-scale records in systems where key phases are sparse, heterogeneous and difficult to locate using conventional approaches.

Work supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Fondos Feder, PID2023-149105NA-I00. M.S.F. benefits from the FPI-PRE2023-002262.

How to cite: Salguero Fuentes, M., Barcos, L., Cambeses, A., Garcia Casco, A., Molina, J. F., Montero, P., Novo Fernández, I., Pujol Solà, N., Repczyńska, M. M., and Bea, F.: How to find rare zircon in mafic and ultramafic rocks: an integrated in-situ detection workflow, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6729, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6729, 2026.

EGU26-7226 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

Zircon triple dating (U–Pb, Raman, and U–Th–Sm/He) constraints on the thermotectonic evolution of the Araçuaí Orogen at the craton–orogen interface (Brazil) 

Ana Fonseca, Johan De Grave, Tiago Novo, Melanie J. Sieber, Max Wilke, Birk Hartel, Valby van Schijndel, Jessica Stammeier, Isabel Wapenhans, Peter van der Beek, and Edward Sobel

Thermochronology has advanced through the development of new methods and applicable mineral systems, with multi-method approaches proving essential for bridging temperature–time gaps and improving the resolution of thermal history reconstructions. Here, we apply a zircon-based multi-method approach to investigate the thermotectonic evolution of the Araçuaí Orogen, along the São Francisco Craton in Brazil. While the Mesozoic–Cenozoic evolution of the orogen is relatively well constrained, its earlier thermal history remains poorly understood. To address this gap, we expand an existing apatite fission-track (AFT) dataset of 20 samples by adding new zircon (U–Th–Sm)/He (ZHe) ages, extending thermal constraints from the apatite partial fission-track annealing zone (APAZ; ~60–120 °C) to higher-temperature conditions (~140–220 °C). In addition, four representative samples were selected along a north–south transect across the craton–orogen interaction zone for zircon Raman multi-band thermochronology and zircon U–Pb analyses. Zircon Raman multi-band thermochronology, a recently developed approach, further extends thermal constraints to mid- and high-temperature conditions (~260–370 °C).

The ZHe dataset reveals a systematic relationship between effective uranium (eU) concentration and single-grain ages. Zircons with low eU contents (<500 ppm) yield predominantly Paleozoic ZHe ages, ranging from the Cambrian to Carboniferous (ca. 500–350 Ma), whereas grains with progressively higher eU concentrations record younger ages spanning the Late Paleozoic to Early Cretaceous (ca. 350–100 Ma). This inverse age–eU relationship is consistent with radiation-damage–controlled helium diffusion in zircon, as predicted by established diffusion models.

Raman ages derived from multiple zircon bands (ν1, ν2, ν3, and external bands) indicate distinct thermal responses across the transect. Two samples record Raman ages overlapping with or being older than the Araçuaí orogeny, suggesting preservation of pre- to syn-orogenic thermal signatures. In contrast, Raman ages from the other two samples correspond to the late stages of the orogeny or post-date it.

Comparison of Raman-derived ages with ZHe and AFT data provides constraints on cooling rates through successive temperature windows. Samples showing convergence of Raman, ZHe, and AFT ages indicate relatively rapid cooling through mid- and low-temperature regimes, whereas increasing separation between these chronometric results reflects more prolonged cooling histories. Variations in the thermal sensitivity of individual Raman bands, reflected in their accumulated radiation damage, constrain the rate of cooling across mid-temperature ranges: synchronous band resetting indicates faster cooling whereas differential band behavior suggest slower, stepwise cooling.

These results reinforce evidence that the craton–orogen interaction zone of the São Francisco Craton experienced significant thermal overprinting associated with the development of the Araçuaí orogenic front (ca. 500 Ma), even though the underlying crust is of Rhyacian (~2.1 Ga) and Archean (~3.2 Ga), as indicated by zircon U–Pb data. Thermal history modelling indicates that following orogenesis, the region underwent substantial cooling, allowing samples to pass through progressively lower-temperatures and reach shallow crustal levels by the end of the Paleozoic. Subsequent opening of the South Atlantic Ocean preferentially affected structurally weakened domains, particularly areas associated with deep-seated faults and shear zones.

How to cite: Fonseca, A., De Grave, J., Novo, T., J. Sieber, M., Wilke, M., Hartel, B., van Schijndel, V., Stammeier, J., Wapenhans, I., van der Beek, P., and Sobel, E.: Zircon triple dating (U–Pb, Raman, and U–Th–Sm/He) constraints on the thermotectonic evolution of the Araçuaí Orogen at the craton–orogen interface (Brazil), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7226, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7226, 2026.

EGU26-7759 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

In situ Re-Os dating of molybdenite by LA-ICP-MS/MS 

Yijia Wang, Yueheng Yang, Shitou Wu, Zhuyin Chu, Liewen Xie, and Jifeng Xu

Molybdenite is the principal host mineral for rare metals such as molybdenum and rhenium and is widely distributed in various hydrothermal deposits. Owing to its high rhenium content and negligible common osmium, molybdenite is an ideal target for Re–Os isotopic dating. Re–Os ages of molybdenite can directly constrain the timing of metal sulfide mineralization.

In recent years, the development of inductively coupled plasma tandem mass spectrometry (ICP-MS/MS) has provided a new analytical approach for in situ β-decay isotopic dating, including Rb–Sr, Lu–Hf, K–Ca, and Re–Os. In this study, an i CAP ICP-MS/MS coupled with a 193 nm G2 laser and N2O as the reaction gas was employed (Fig. 1). Based on systematic characterization of the reaction products between N₂O and Re and Os, the reaction gas flow rates were optimized, and in situ Re–Os dating of molybdenite was established.

This present protocol was applied to Re–Os age determinations of various molybdenite with ages ranging from 2.7 Ga to 0.15 Ga. The obtained results are consistent with those from ID-NTIMS or ID-ICP-MS. The study demonstrates that reliable in situ Re–Os ages can be achieved when the Re content of molybdenite more than 5 ppm. When combined with trace-element geochemical characteristics, in situ Re–Os dating of molybdenite provides important constraints on the timing of mineralization and genetic processes, offering valuable insights into the detailed geological evolution of metal sulfide deposits.

Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the basic principles of plasma tandem mass spectrometry. In the Re–Os system, reactions between rhenium (Re) and osmium (Os) with nitrous oxide (N2O) produce oxide species exhibiting a mass shift of 64 amu. However, a small proportion of Re also reacts with N2O to form 187ReO4, which interferes with the target ion 187OsO4, requiring appropriate interference correction.

How to cite: Wang, Y., Yang, Y., Wu, S., Chu, Z., Xie, L., and Xu, J.: In situ Re-Os dating of molybdenite by LA-ICP-MS/MS, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7759, 2026.

EGU26-7785 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

High precision Re-Os isotopic dating of molybdenites 

Xiaorui Fan, Jifeng Xu, Jie Li, Guiqin Wang, and Yunchuan Zeng

Molybdenite is an ideal mineral for Re-Os isotopic dating, and its Re-Os isotopic systematics are widely employed to constrain the timing of hydrothermal metal mineralization. However, high-precision Re-Os isotopic dating (precision <1‰) remains a global challenge, as most published molybdenite Re-Os isotopic ages exhibit dating precisions far above 3‰, with only scarce data falling between 1‰ and 3‰, and very few cases achieving <1‰, which severely hinders the understanding of metallogenic regularity and the optimization of mineral exploration targets. In this study, the chemical separation and instrumental analysis methods for molybdenite Re-Os isotopic dating have been optimized. Using this improved isotopic dilution method, we analyzed the Huanglongpu molybdenite (a widely utilized molybdenite reference material) and molybdenite samples from four representative metal deposits. Each individual analysis achieved a dating precision of <1‰, with the best dating precision reaching 0.13‰. In addition, the weighted mean age precision of molybdenite from the Baishiding polymetallic deposit also reached 1‰. This study reveals that the molybdenite Re-Os isotopic dating can indeed serve as another reliable high-precision dating tool, complementing the well-established U-Pb dating method for deciphering Earth's geological timescale.

How to cite: Fan, X., Xu, J., Li, J., Wang, G., and Zeng, Y.: High precision Re-Os isotopic dating of molybdenites, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7785, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7785, 2026.

EGU26-8250 | Orals | GMPV2.2

Late Cenozoic Pamir-Tianshan convergence and its tectonic-climatic implications revealed by low-temperature thermochronology 

Fujun Wang, Edward R. Sobel, Peter van der Beek, Cody L. Colleps, Jessica Stammeier, Johannes Glodny, and Wenbin Zhu

The Cenozoic India-Eurasia collision drove widespread intracontinental deformation across Central Asia, culminating in northward indentation of the Pamir and its eventual contact with the South Tianshan. However, the timing and kinematic development of the Pamir-Tianshan convergence, as well as its influence on shaping regional topography and climate, remain debated. Here we report more than 200 new apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He (AHe), apatite fission-track (AFT), and zircon (U-Th-Sm)/He (ZHe) dates from 49 samples collected from the North Pamir-South Tianshan convergence zone in the westernmost Tarim Basin, NW China. These data, integrated with inverse thermal history modeling and probabilistic estimates of cooling onset, reveal a protracted, stepwise convergence history since the late Eocene. Initial convergence occurred from the late Eocene to the middle Miocene (~35-15 Ma), marking the onset of cooling and deformation in the hinterlands. During the middle Miocene (~15-10 Ma), deformation propagated basinward into the foreland, accompanied by the activation of frontal thrust systems in both orogens. Continued convergence during the late Miocene (~10-5 Ma) led to initial interaction between the North Pamir and South Tianshan thrust systems, followed by propagation of deformation along frontal thrusts during the Pliocene to Quaternary (~5-0 Ma), producing the present-day superimposed and imbricated thrust architecture in the convergence zone. This progressive convergence and surface uplift gradually narrowed and closed topographic corridors between the Pamir and Tianshan, restricting westerly moisture transport into the Tarim Basin and promoting the development of the Taklimakan Desert. Together with existing paleoclimate records, our results demonstrate that regional tectonic processes, acting in concert with global climatic forcing, played a dominant role in the long-term aridification of Central Asia.

How to cite: Wang, F., R. Sobel, E., van der Beek, P., L. Colleps, C., Stammeier, J., Glodny, J., and Zhu, W.: Late Cenozoic Pamir-Tianshan convergence and its tectonic-climatic implications revealed by low-temperature thermochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8250, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8250, 2026.

EGU26-8286 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Multi-isotopic chronology of the polygenetic San Pedro epithermal vein system, Andacollo Mining District, Argentina 

Sebastián Dicaro, Igor M. Villa, and M. Josefina Pons

The Ag-Au (Cu,Pb,Zn) San Pedro epithermal system at Andacollo, Argentina, has been dated using 39Ar-40Ar together with Sr and Pb stepwise leaching. A precondition for multi-isotope analysis was a very detailed petrographic study of 12 hydrothermal pulses. Element maps were obtained by SEM-EDS on three thin sections from two drillcores, DHA-30 and -35. Twelve samples for isotope analyses, weighing ca. 2-10 mg, were cut with a steel blade from the analyzed thin sections, intentionally collecting "fresh" paragenetic adularia mantled by secondary alteration products to different degrees, in order to constrain the alteration trends in the Ar, Sr and Pb isotopic systems. Nine were analyzed by 39Ar-40Ar step-heating and three were step-leached [1] measuring both Sr and Pb isotopic compositions.

The Ar results demonstrate a plurality of alteration phases. A broad correlation trend between Cl/K (which should be zero in fresh feldspars) and step ages confirms the variable mass balance between primary adularia and secondary sericite, smectite, chlorite, kaolinite, and apatite. The end-members of the alteration trends observed in the scattered Ca/K-age correlation are different from those of the Cl/K-age correlation, requiring ≥ 4 compositionally different alteration phases. A regression to zero Cl/K in the three DHA-30 aliquots indicates that the primary adularia is 77±6 Ma old (2 sigma), consistent with cutting relations with dacitic dykes. The saline fluid inclusions, observed in different thick sections of the same cores, were decrepitated at low furnace temperature giving a very high 38Ar/39Ar ratio and an 40Ar*/Cl ratio of 7.7×10-5, the same order of magnitude as the 40Ar*/Cl ratio measured by Turner in fluid inclusions from Cornwall [2], whereby primary and secondary fluid inclusion in Andacollo have different 40Ar*/Cl ratios.

The six DHA-35 aliquots also show a broad Cl/K-age correlation; Cl/K ratios are higher, indicating a higher overall contamination. The extrapolated adularia age, 85±13 Ma, is statistically indistinguishabe from DHA-30.

The three Sr-Pb leach fractions gave alteration signatures very distinct from the adularia proper, both in Sr and Pb. The signature of the DHA-30 alteration is different from DHA-35. The Sr, and especially Pb, signature of both alteration fluids is very radiogenic, i.e. compatible with circulation through old country rocks. The host rocks are Carboniferous; however, significant inherited and detrital zircon contributions of Eo- to Mesoproterozoic age have been reported in both volcaniclastic and sedimentary rocks respectively [3,4]. This suggests the reworking of a Proterozoic basement, and hence a contribution to the isotopic signature of the analysed hydrothermal minerals.

The compositional and isotopic differences between the two drillcores are compatible with, but not proof of, a long-lasting alteration history as documented in other large ore deposits [5,6].

 

 

[1] Villa & Hanchar (2013) Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 101, 24-33

[2] Turner (1988) Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 52, 1443-1448

[3] Dicaro et al (2024) J. South American Earth Sci 148, 105158

[4] Pons et al, in preparation

[5] Kang et al (2020) Ore Geol. Rev. 122, 103527, 1-23

[6] Virmond et al (2024) Contrib. Min. Petrol. 179, 88

How to cite: Dicaro, S., Villa, I. M., and Pons, M. J.: Multi-isotopic chronology of the polygenetic San Pedro epithermal vein system, Andacollo Mining District, Argentina, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8286, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8286, 2026.

EGU26-8468 | Orals | GMPV2.2

 Tectono–thermal evolution of the east-central Australian intraplate: Rb–Sr, K–Ar and 40Ar/39Ar geochronology of authigenic illite. 

I.Tonguç Uysal, Abbas Babaahmadi, Jian-xin Zhao, Tunahan Aykut, and Andrew Todd

Low-temperature geochronology using multiple isotopic systems is a powerful approach for reconstructing the tectono-thermal evolution of sedimentary basins. As individual dating techniques have distinct strengths and limitations, integrating complementary geochronological methods provides a more robust framework for constraining shallow-crustal thermal events. In this study, we examine the thermal and tectonic evolution of east-central Australia, from the eastern coast to the continental interior, through isotopic dating of authigenic illitic clay minerals. We integrate new and published Rb–Sr, K–Ar, and 40Ar/39Ar illite geochronology and critically assess the applicability of these methods when applied to low-temperature mineral systems.

Our results identify multiple episodes of thermal and fluid-flow activity during the Early Jurassic (~200–190 Ma), Middle Jurassic (~165 Ma), Early Cretaceous (~120–115 Ma), and Late Cretaceous (~100–95 Ma, ~85–80 Ma, and ~70 Ma). These events broadly coincide with periods of subduction-related orogenesis and rifting along eastern Australia. Jurassic illite ages from the Permo-Carboniferous Galilee Basin are nearly synchronous with the development of the Eromanga, Surat, and Clarence–Moreton basins, and reflect contemporaneous intraplate tectonism linked to subduction processes.Early Cretaceous ages correspond with magmatic activity in eastern Queensland, including the Whitsunday Volcanic Province, and associated arc- or rift-related tectonism. Late Cretaceous ages are consistent with apatite fission-track (AFT) data and indicate a regional extensional regime that culminated in sea-floor spreading east of the Australian continent.

Although these thermal events occurred far from the active Mesozoic plate margin, they are best explained by the dynamic effects of shallow subduction and/or the transmission of far-field stresses into a mechanically and thermally weakened continental interior, resulting in widespread subsidence, extension, and enhanced heat and fluid flow. These findings have important implications for energy and resource exploration, as Cretaceous tectonic reactivation defines fault zones that currently facilitate geothermal fluid upwelling in east-central Australia. Interaction of these fluids with Precambrian granitic basement rocks enriched in incompatible and radioactive elements highlights the potential of low-temperature geochronology to constrain the timing of fluid–rock interaction and to inform exploration strategies for critical metals and carbon-free gas resources in sedimentary basins.

How to cite: Uysal, I. T., Babaahmadi, A., Zhao, J., Aykut, T., and Todd, A.:  Tectono–thermal evolution of the east-central Australian intraplate: Rb–Sr, K–Ar and 40Ar/39Ar geochronology of authigenic illite., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8468, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8468, 2026.

EGU26-8484 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Improved Sr-Specific Resin Separation Protocol and Development of High-Radiogenic Reference Materials for ID-MS Rb–Sr Geochronology 

Zhuyin Chu, Tianqi Cui, Wenbei Shi, Wanfeng Zhang, Youlian Li, Yueheng Yang, Lei Xu, and Peng Peng

LA-ICP-MS/MS single-spot Rb–Sr analysis has become a powerful tool for in situ dating of ultra-radiogenic minerals such as muscovite. However, this technique relies critically on matrix-matched, highly radiogenic reference materials (RMs) for external calibration. Accurate characterization of such RMs, in turn, requires high-precision isotope dilution mass spectrometry (ID-MS).

Nevertheless, ID-MS analysis of highly radiogenic materials remains technically challenging. First, extremely high Rb/Sr ratios hinder complete separation of Sr from Rb, resulting in potential 87Rb interference on 87Sr during TIMS Sr isotope measurements. Second, very high 87Sr/86Sr ratios combined with low absolute 86Sr abundances render analyses highly sensitive to Sr procedural blanks. Consequently, robust data quality control for ID-MS itself is essential, necessitating the availability of highly radiogenic RMs suitable for ID-MS validation. At present, however, such reference materials remain scarce.

In this study, we developed an improved Sr-specific resin separation protocol aimed at maximizing Sr recovery during ID-MS Rb–Sr analysis of highly radiogenic samples. The key modification involves dissolving HF-digested sample residues in a mixed acid of 7.5 M HNO₃ and 2.5 M HCl, rather than the conventionally used 3 M or 7 M HNO₃ alone, prior to loading onto the Sr-specific resin column. The mixed HCl–HNO₃ acid significantly enhances dissolution of fluoride-bearing residues following HF digestion. In contrast, when pure HNO₃ is used, more than 95% of Sr is coprecipitated with fluorides for muscovite samples, leading to substantial Sr loss. The improved protocol results in markedly increased Sr recovery and more reliable ID-MS measurements.

Using this optimized separation procedure, we conducted comprehensive ID-MS Rb–Sr analyses of two candidate reference materials: the pegmatite RM OU-9 (IAGeo Limited) and the muscovite Ar–Ar age RM ZMT04. OU-9 yields Rb and Sr mass fractions of 1227 ± 17 μg g⁻¹ and 13.07 ± 0.18 μg g⁻¹, respectively, with 87Rb/86Sr = 843.1 ± 3.8 and 87Sr/86Sr = 22.217 ± 0.089, corresponding to an Rb–Sr age of ~2650 Ma with an initial 87Sr/86Sr of ~1.2. ZMT04 contains 2494 ± 22 μg g⁻¹ Rb and 36.05 ± 0.25 μg g⁻¹ Sr, with 87Rb/86Sr = 832.4 ± 5.2 and 87Sr/86Sr = 32.60 ± 0.19, corresponding to an Rb–Sr age of ~1800 Ma with an initial 87Sr/86Sr of ~0.705. These results demonstrate that both materials have strong potential as highly radiogenic reference materials for ID-MS Rb–Sr geochronology.

How to cite: Chu, Z., Cui, T., Shi, W., Zhang, W., Li, Y., Yang, Y., Xu, L., and Peng, P.: Improved Sr-Specific Resin Separation Protocol and Development of High-Radiogenic Reference Materials for ID-MS Rb–Sr Geochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8484, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8484, 2026.

The West Kunlun (WKL) orogen, a pivotal boundary on the western Tibetan Plateau, records the dynamic interplay between northward underthrusting Indian lithosphere and the Tarim craton. Despite its significance, the exhumation history and mechanisms of plateau growth in this region remain contentious. Here, apatite fission-track (AFT) and (U-Th)/He (AHe) thermochronology data from three bedrock elevation transects across the WKL were used to refine the Miocene exhumation processes in the region. Our results reveal a regionally consistent two-phase acceleration in late Miocene exhumation at ca. 11–10 and ca. 7–6 Ma. Integration with regional thermochronologic, magmatic, and seismic data shows a systematic younging of cooling ages and (ultra)potassic magmatism toward the WKL, alongside increasing exhumation rates. These trends reflect outward plateau expansion driven by progressive indentation of the Indian plate into Asia. This culminated at ca. 11–10 Ma, when the cratonic Indian slab directly impinged the Tarim craton, as evidenced by rapid surface uplift and the formation of ca. 10 Ma and younger (ultra)potassic magmas in the WKL orogen. Our findings highlight the coupling between deep lithospheric processes and surface deformation, providing critical constraints on the timing of the India-Tarim collision and the mechanisms driving plateau growth along the northwestern margin of the Tibetan Plateau.

How to cite: Xiang, D.: Late Miocene rapid exhumation in the West Kunlun range: Insights into Tibetan Plateau growth and India-Asia lithosphericcollision, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9727, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9727, 2026.

EGU26-9890 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Decoupling of monazite petrochronology from P–T evolution during garnet hydrothermal dissolution–reprecipitation 

Di Wang, Jesse Walters, Huixia Ding, and Matthew Kohn

Monazite U–Th–Pb ages are commonly coupled with Y and heavy rare earth element (HREE) contents to link reactions, particularly those involving the formation and breakdown of garnet, with pressure–temperature (P–T) paths to constrain and uncover orogenic processes. This link assumes that changes in garnet modal abundances reflect changes in P–T and no other processes. Here we show that protracted and cryptic fluid-driven dissolution-reprecipitation of garnet and monazite disturbed the P–T–time(t) relationship between these two minerals.

We collected samples of metapelitic schists from the Yardoi gneiss dome, southern Tibet. The central portion of the Yardoi dome comprises orthogneiss and metapelites intruded by Eocene (43–35 Ma) to Miocene (17 Ma) granitoids, providing a critical window investigate fluid–rock interaction in mid-crustal metamorphic rocks. Our data constrain prograde to peak metamorphism from 5.7 kbar and 550°C to 7.5–8.5 kbar and 650–750 °C, followed by retrograde metamorphism at 5.5–6.5 kbar and 650–700°C. Low Y+HREE monazite domains dated to 41–46 Ma indicate peak metamorphism in the presence of garnet at this time, whereas high Y+HREE contents between 23 and 15 Ma indicate the timing of garnet breakdown during isothermal decompression. These data indicate 20–30 Myr at 650–700°C, consistent with near complete resetting of garnet major element zoning in most samples.

One sample near the core of the dome displays atoll garnets along with biotite, muscovite, plagioclase, quartz, and rutile. Annuli of plagioclase, quartz, and biotite grains separate the garnet core from the rim. Monazite from this sample show a quasi-continuous age spread from 50 Ma to 19 Ma, with an increase in Y + HREE between 45 and 38 Ma, followed by a decrease after ~38 Ma. These data suggest a period of garnet breakdown followed by (re-)growth between 45 and 20 Ma. Phase diagram models show very limited variation in garnet modal abundance at >7 kbar and 600–700 °C, indicating that changes in PT are unlikely to influence garnet modes. Additionally, there are no other phases like staurolite, which may have reacted with garnet.

We propose instead cryptic dissolution-reprecipitation of garnet. Maps of grossular content (XGrs) shows a pebbly texture with interconnected moats of low XGrs garnet surrounding islands of high XGrs garnet, whereas other endmember fractions show flat garnet cores and mantles with slight increases in spessartine at the rim. We suggest that garnet recrystallization was driven by the release of magmatic-hydrothermal fluids from nearby 43–35 Ma granite intrusions. We suggest that fluid-assisted recrystallization can generate age-composition trends that mimic monazite zoning patterns of P–T path controlled garnet breakdown or growth. Misinterpretations of such data would propagating significant errors into tectono-metamorphic reconstructions, emphasizing the necessity of microstructurally constrained petrochronology when interpreting monazite U–Th–Pb ages.

How to cite: Wang, D., Walters, J., Ding, H., and Kohn, M.: Decoupling of monazite petrochronology from P–T evolution during garnet hydrothermal dissolution–reprecipitation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9890, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9890, 2026.

EGU26-9932 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

What do Re-Os ages of sulfide minerals at amphibolite facies mean: resolving syngenetic vs metamorphic ages in an Archean VMS deposit 

Cendi Dana, Steven Hollis, Lorenzo Tavazzani, Cyril Chelle-Michou, Stijn Glorie, Yusuke Kuwahara, Kazuhide Mimura, Moei Yano, Junichiro Ohta, David Selby, Yasuhiro Kato, Vanessa Pashley, Megan James, and Darryl Podmore

Establishing the age of mineral deposits and their host rock sequences is fundamental to mineral exploration, as it constrains the temporal evolution of prospective geological environments and the geodynamic processes responsible for ore formation. This is particularly critical for syn-genetic stratiform systems such as volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposits, which are typically localized along favorable stratigraphic horizons within volcanic belts and linked to episodes of regional extension and magmatism. In Archean cratons, however, VMS deposits commonly experience multiple post-ore deformation, metamorphic, and hydrothermal events that may obscure primary isotopic signatures and result in metal remobilization, complicating efforts to constrain the timing of syn-genetic mineralization.

In this study, we apply an integrated geochronological approach including U–Pb zircon and titanite, Lu–Hf garnet, Re–Os sulfide and molybdenite, and Pb–Pb galena dating to constrain the age of syn-genetic mineralization in an Archean VMS deposit metamorphosed to amphibolite facies. Our results demonstrate that the Re–Os isotopic system in syn-genetic pyrite can be preserved through high-grade metamorphism and yields ages consistent with U–Pb zircon ages of the felsic host rocks, providing a robust means to directly date VMS mineralization in highly metamorphosed Archean terranes. In contrast, Re–Os ages obtained from pyrrhotite record prograde metamorphism and align with Lu–Hf garnet ages, indicating their utility for constraining metamorphic overprinting and metal remobilization events.

We further show that Re–Os dating of bulk massive sulfide ore dominated by both pyrite and pyrrhotite produces mixed, geologically meaningless ages, rendering this approach unreliable where extensive pyrrhotite formation has occurred via pyrite desulfidation. Although molybdenite within the footwall stratigraphy yields robust Re–Os ages despite amphibolite-facies metamorphism, these ages reflect late granitoid emplacement and regional metamorphism rather than syn-genetic VMS mineralization. Collectively, our findings provide new constraints on the timing of metamorphosed VMS deposits and have significant implications for regional exploration strategies, particularly within the Yilgarn Craton.

How to cite: Dana, C., Hollis, S., Tavazzani, L., Chelle-Michou, C., Glorie, S., Kuwahara, Y., Mimura, K., Yano, M., Ohta, J., Selby, D., Kato, Y., Pashley, V., James, M., and Podmore, D.: What do Re-Os ages of sulfide minerals at amphibolite facies mean: resolving syngenetic vs metamorphic ages in an Archean VMS deposit, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9932, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9932, 2026.

EGU26-10272 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Garnet U-Pb ages reset during ultrahigh temperature melt-rock interaction 

Jesse B. Walters, Leo J. Millonig, Aratz Beranoaguirre, Andrew J. Smye, Josh M. Garber, Axel Gerdes, and Horst R. Marschall

In situ garnet U-Pb geochronology by laser ablation-inductively coupled mass spectrometry (LA-ICPMS) is a powerful tool for rapid and high-spatial resolution dating of metamorphic pressure-temperature–time histories. Yet, the substitution of U and Pb  into the structure of common pyralspite garnet and its influence on diffusion and potential age-resetting is poorly constrained. Studies by Mezger et al. (1989), Burton et al. (1995), and Dahl (1997) estimate U-Pb system closure temperatures in garnet of >800 °C. Similarly, Shu et al. (2024) proposed a closure temperature of  >1100 °C but suggested that recrystallization may have reset some garnet U-Pb ages. However, there is little information on how dynamic processes, such as recrystallization, may impact the closure of the U-Pb system in garnet. 

Here we examine the impacts of garnet recrystallization on U-Pb ages by examining ultrahigh-temperature (UHT) crustal xenoliths from the southwestern USA and northern Mexico. These metapelitic granulites experienced isobaric heating at >900 °C between 36 and 30 Ma and UHT conditions were maintained until eruption at <1 Ma (Droubi et al., 2024; Cipar et al., 2020; 2024). Garnet trace element zoning shows diffusively reset growth zoning overprinted by island-moat structures, which formed via melt-driven loss of REE and HFSE along now-healed fractures (Droubi et al., 2024). Zircon HREE depletions and ages suggest garnet initially formed at ca. 30 Ma, whereas diffusion modeling indicates that garnet island-moat structures formed rapidly <1 Myr before eruption (Droubi et al., 2024; Cipar et al., 2020; 2024). Our in situ U-Pb garnet ages, as measured by split-stream LA-MC-ICPMS, range from 4.6 ± 2.3 Ma (2s) to 1.77 ± 0.32 Ma (2s).  The corresponding trace element data show decreasing U contents with decreasing LREE and HFSE, consistent with significant (but partial) resetting of U contents during the formation of the island-moat structures. In contrast, Pb contents show no trends with REE and HFSE. These data, combined with the overlap of our U-Pb ages with the eruption age of the magmas that entrained the xenoliths, are consistent with complete resetting of Pb contents during melt-garnet interaction. Overall, we demonstrate that garnet ages are susceptible to (near-)complete resetting via dynamic open-system processes.

 

Burton et al. (1995). Earth Plan. Sci. Lett. 133, 199–211.

Cipar et al. (2020). Nat. Geosci. 13(11), 758–763.

Cipar et al. (2024). Geochem. Geophys. Geosys. 25(7), e2023GC011177.

Dahl (1997). Earth Plan. Sci. Lett. 150, 277–290.

Droubi et al. (2024). JGR Solid Earth 129, e2024JB029138.

Mezger et al. (1989). Contrib. Min. Pet. 101, 136–248.

Shu et al. (2024). Contrib. Min. Pet. 179 (49).

How to cite: Walters, J. B., Millonig, L. J., Beranoaguirre, A., Smye, A. J., Garber, J. M., Gerdes, A., and Marschall, H. R.: Garnet U-Pb ages reset during ultrahigh temperature melt-rock interaction, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10272, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10272, 2026.

EGU26-10876 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Four potential carbonite reference materials for in situ U-Pb geochronology 

Fen Xiao, Tianyi Li, Shitou Wu, and Yueheng Yang

Carbonite forms in a wide variety of geological environments as both a primary and secondary mineral phase and may contain sufficient U for U-Pb geochronology. The limited availability of well-characterized calcite reference materials, however, has impeded its broader application in microanalysis, in particular for the low-U (<0.1 mg g-1) calcite and dolomite. In this study, four potential carbonite reference materials (JCL03, THMT, TL-2, TL10-7) were primary characterized for in situ U-Pb geochronology. JCL03 and THMT are low-Mg calcite with Mg concentrations of ~0.35 wt.%, ~0.39 wt.%, respectively. TL-2, TL10-7 are the dolomite with Mg concentrations of ~21.5 wt.%, ~17.4 wt.%, respectively. JCL03 and THMT were characterized as low-U calcite with U concentrations of ~0.036 mg·g-1, ~0.021 mg·g-1, respectively. TL-2 and TL10-7 have U concentrations of ~2.3 mg·g-1, ~1.5 mg·g-1, respectively. JCL03 and THMT have homogeneity ages, while TL-2 and TL10-7 shows multiple dolomitization process. Multiple LA-ICP-MS analytical sessions yielded ages of 428.7 ± 5.2 Ma, 286.3 ± 7.1 Ma, 233.8 ± 4.4 Ma and 180.0 ± 6.3 Ma for JCL03, THMT, TL-2 and TL10-7, respectively. These four carbonaite are the useful additions to the widely distributed WC-1 reference material for LA-ICP-MS U-Pb geochronology.

How to cite: Xiao, F., Li, T., Wu, S., and Yang, Y.: Four potential carbonite reference materials for in situ U-Pb geochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10876, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10876, 2026.

EGU26-11115 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

High Rb/Sr Muscovite from the Koktokay Highly Fractionated Granites: Implications for Rb–Sr Chronology and LA-ICP-MS/MS In Situ Reference Material Development 

TianQi Cui, Zhuyin Chu, Ping Shen, Haoxuan Feng, Menpin Zhang, and Yueheng Yang

Highly fractionated granites are important hosts for rare metals (Li, Be, Nb, Ta, Rb, Cs, Zr, Hf, etc.). Dating the mica minerals abundant within them can more accurately constrain the timing of rare metal mineralization. To investigate the episodes and chronology of rare metal mineralization in the Koktokay region, we conducted precise Rb-Sr dating by Isotope Dilution Mass Spectrometry (ID-MS) on muscovite separates, along with apatite and whole-rock powder, from six samples collected from this highly fractionated granite. The obtained age for this highly fractionated granite is 200.86 ± 0.29 Ma(2σ, n = 21), with an initial ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr ratio of 0.805598 ± 0.000069. This age is younger than the main Triassic magmatic phase (ca. 210 Ma) but falls within the mineralization window of the No. 3 pegmatite vein (220-175 Ma). Meanwhile, the initial Sr ratio is significantly higher than that of typical crust-derived granites (~0.720), indicating derivation from a highly evolved source.

In recent years, laser ablation (multi-collector) inductively coupled plasma tandem mass spectrometry (LA-(MC)-ICP-MS/MS) techniques for in-situ Rb-Sr analysis have developed rapidly and become indispensable tools in geological research. However, the accuracy of LA-ICP-MS/MS Rb-Sr dating relies on matrix-matched reference materials to correct for instrumental drift (e.g., sensitivity changes) and elemental fractionation effects during analysis. For high Rb/Sr systems, there is still a lack of reference materials with high ⁸⁷Rb/⁸⁶Sr and high ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr ratios.

The six muscovite samples analyzed in this study exhibit exceptionally high ⁸⁷Rb/⁸⁶Sr and ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr ratios. Electron Probe Microanalysis (EPMA) shows that these micas have high and stable Al and K contents of 10.755 ± 0.0373% and 33.39 ± 0.16%, respectively. Backscattered Electron (BSE) imaging confirms their homogeneous major element composition, devoid of impurities.

Given their exceptionally high ⁸⁷Rb/⁸⁶Sr ratios, we further analyzed these six muscovite samples using LA-ICP-MS/MS. The measured ages range from 190 Ma to 200 Ma. Rb concentrations vary from 2300 to 3700 µg/g, while Sr concentrations are low, at 2.5 and 3.5 µg g⁻¹. Among these samples, four exhibit extremely high ⁸⁷Rb/⁸⁶Sr ratios (28000-35000) and ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr values (80-100). In contrast, the remaining two samples show moderately high ⁸⁷Rb/⁸⁶Sr ratios (11000-12000) and ⁸⁷Sr/⁸⁶Sr values (30-35). Based on the ID–MS isochron results and detailed LA-ICP-MS/MS data, all six muscovite samples show potential as candidate reference materials for LA-ICP-MS/MS Rb-Sr dating. Further detailed and systematic work is required to rigorously evaluate and validate their suitability.

How to cite: Cui, T., Chu, Z., Shen, P., Feng, H., Zhang, M., and Yang, Y.: High Rb/Sr Muscovite from the Koktokay Highly Fractionated Granites: Implications for Rb–Sr Chronology and LA-ICP-MS/MS In Situ Reference Material Development, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11115, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11115, 2026.

EGU26-12199 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

The Times of Castles Project: A Combined Study of Rocks and Mortars for Geological Provenance 

Emanuele Intrieri, Elena Pecchioni, Sara Calandra, Carlo Alberto Garzonio, Teresa Salvatici, Carmine Lubritto, Noemi Mantile, Valentina Giacometti, Maria Rosa di Cicco, Giulia Bellato, Luigi Provero, Alessio Fiore, Andrea Arrighetti, Mauro Paolo Buonincontri, Andrea Bardi, and Giovanna Bianchi

The PRIN 2020 CASTLES Project focuses on studying mediaeval castles in Italy, particularly their chronology and dating through archaeometric analysis of castles walls mortars. The project is based on a multidisciplinary approach and aims at establishing a new chronology for the construction sites of incastellamento (11th-12th centuries).

A multidisciplinary team integrated their expertise into exploring the subject from multiple perspectives. The team consists of archaeologists and historians (respectively the Universities of Siena and Turin), geologists and conservation scientists (University of Florence), and physicists and archaeologists (University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli"). The group selected several sites across three regions of Italy (Piedmont, Liguria and Tuscany). The criteria for selecting the castles were: chronology, state of conservation, historical context, available historical and archaeological data, significant historical relevance. Before starting the sampling of the walls structures mortars, and proceeding to the characterization and dating, it was of fundamental importance to geolocate the castles. This is basilar to understand the geology of the areas where the castles were located and be able to identify the supply sources of the raw materials used by workers to build them. The study was carried out by researching geological maps, aerial photographs, drone images, and scientific publications concerning each castle’s area of ​​the Piedmont, Liguria, and Tuscany regions, as well as sampling rocks of outcropping and constituting the walls. Minero-petrographic and chemical characterization of rock and mortar samples were performed, using X-Ray Diffraction Powder (XRPD), Polarized Light Microscopy (PLM) and Scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM–EDS). The mineralogical and petrographical analyses of the rocks from each castle area were then compared with the components constituting the mortars (aggregate and binder) from the same castles, to identify correlations. It is essential to establish whether the materials used by the workers were sourced locally or from elsewhere. The results of this first step of the research showed that the raw material used in the realization of Ligurian and Tuscany castles was local. The origin of the rocks used to produce lime in Piedmont's castles is uncertain. In fact, limestone outcrops are very rare in the north of the region. Beyond dating, the analysis of raw materials provides important insights into medieval building organization, showing that most of studied castles relied on local geological resources, while changes in supply areas may reflect settlement expansion and/or a different and more complete organization of the sites of incastellamento.

How to cite: Intrieri, E., Pecchioni, E., Calandra, S., Garzonio, C. A., Salvatici, T., Lubritto, C., Mantile, N., Giacometti, V., di Cicco, M. R., Bellato, G., Provero, L., Fiore, A., Arrighetti, A., Buonincontri, M. P., Bardi, A., and Bianchi, G.: The Times of Castles Project: A Combined Study of Rocks and Mortars for Geological Provenance, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12199, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12199, 2026.

EGU26-12387 | Orals | GMPV2.2

The Time of Castles Project: Characterization of Mortar Raw Materials for ¹⁴C Dating in Medieval Castles of Northern and Central Italy 

Sara Calandra, Elena Pecchioni, Carlo Alberto Garzonio, Teresa Salvatici, Emanuele Intrieri, Carmine Lubritto, Noemi Mantile, Valentina Giacometti, Maria Rosa Di Cicco, Giulia Bellato, Luigi Provero, Alessio Fiore, Andrea Arrighetti, Mauro Paolo Buonincontri, Andrea Bardi, and Giovanna Bianchi

The transformation of medieval castles in Italy, especially between the 11th and 12th centuries during the process of incastellamento, represents a crucial yet complex phase in European history. The transition from early wooden fortifications to durable stone structures is often poorly documented and broadly dated. PRIN 2020 CASTLES Project integrates archaeology, history, geology, conservation science, and physics in a multidisciplinary framework aimed at building a new and more precise chronology of medieval castle construction in northern and central Italy. The project focuses on 25 castles in Piedmont, Liguria, and Tuscany, combining historical and archaeological evidence with archaeometric analysis of masonry to refine the dating of construction phases and improve understanding of building practices. For this purpose, radiocarbon dating (14C) is used as an absolute dating technique. In this study, the 14C method was applied for dating ancient mortars of masonry castles, targeting both inorganic material (binder and lump calcite) and organic inclusions (charcoal). However, selection of the inorganic datable fraction and elimination of potential contamination proves to be a challenge for the international radiocarbon community. To select the most suitable mortar binder for 14C dating, a key step in the research is mortar sampling and the characterisation of the raw materials used in mortars. To minimise mortar contamination, samples were carefully taken with consideration for the archaeological structure and the preservation of the masonry. Once the mortar samples were selected, penetrometric and carbonation tests were carried out on site. Subsequently, mineralogical, petrographic, and chemical analyses were performed using XRPD, OM, SEM–EDS, OM-CL, and ATR-FTIR. These analyses enabled the identification of binder types, aggregate composition, and hydraulic properties. Air-hardening lime mortars proved to be the most reliable, whereas natural hydraulic and magnesium-rich limes often introduced complications. Further analyses were performed on powders of binder-rich portions or lumps, using non-destructive techniques, such as XRPD, OM-CL, ATR-FTIR [1]. More than 120 mortar samples were analysed, from which 63 powder samples were selected and prepared for ¹⁴C dating. Mortar radiocarbon results were cross-checked with charcoal dating and archaeological data, confirming the reliability of the methodological procedure. Several case studies from Tuscan castles demonstrate strong coherence between mortar characterization and radiocarbon ages, validating the approach. On a larger scale, the project is defining chronological trends that reflect different phases of castle development, from early fortifications to fully developed lordly residences and village centers. Overall, the project offers a reproducible and multidisciplinary framework that significantly improves the chronological reconstruction of medieval castles in Italy and provides a model applicable to similar contexts elsewhere.

 

[1] Calandra S., et al. 2024, A new multi-analytical procedure for radiocarbon dating of historical mortars, Sci Rep, 14(1), 19979.

How to cite: Calandra, S., Pecchioni, E., Garzonio, C. A., Salvatici, T., Intrieri, E., Lubritto, C., Mantile, N., Giacometti, V., Di Cicco, M. R., Bellato, G., Provero, L., Fiore, A., Arrighetti, A., Buonincontri, M. P., Bardi, A., and Bianchi, G.: The Time of Castles Project: Characterization of Mortar Raw Materials for ¹⁴C Dating in Medieval Castles of Northern and Central Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12387, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12387, 2026.

EGU26-12699 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

Karst-hosted bauxites as a new archive for oxi-hydroxide (U-Th)/He thermochronology 

Louise Boschetti, Stephane Schwartz, Cécile Gautheron, Yann Rolland, Frédéric Mouthereau, Mélani Balvay, Nathan Cogné, and Sylvain Campillo

Low-temperature thermochronology has traditionally relied on apatite and zircon minerals that are commonly absent from carbonate platforms, leaving large regions effectively blind to shallow crustal thermal reconstructions. Recent methodological advances now permit the application of (U-Th)/He dating to iron oxides, but so far this approach has only been tested in crystallization contexts and has rarely been used to quantify burial-exhumation trajectories.

Here we explore karst-hosted bauxite deposits as a new natural laboratory for oxide thermochronology. These lateritic bodies, developed on the Durancian structural high in southeastern France, contain abundant hematite and goethite that formed during intense Lower Cretaceous weathering and were subsequently buried beneath Upper Cretaceous to Cenozoic sedimentary sequences. Such conditions provide the requirement for oxide thermochronology: iron oxides that experienced post-crystallization heating.

We report a large dataset of (U-Th)/He ages obtained from more than one hundred individual hematite and goethite grains sampled across south of France. All ages postdate bauxite formation and independent depositional constraints, demonstrating that these minerals systematically record post-depositional thermal overprints.

Coexisting hematite and goethite systematically yield distinct age populations, with goethite consistently recording younger apparent ages. This reproducible offset demonstrates that these two iron oxides behave as independent low-temperature chronometers.

Because diffusion parameters for goethite remain poorly constrained, thermal history modelling was performed using hematite only. Thermal inversion modelling, is supported by regional stratigraphic and tectonic frameworks. It identifies two successive heating phases linked to Pyrenean compression and to Oligocene–Miocene rifting. Reheating during this latter event temporally correspond to goethite ages. This age comparisons between both phases provide empirical constraints on reset temperatures of goethite about 60-40°C.

Our results demonstrate that karst-hosted bauxites constitute a robust archive for oxide-based thermochronology, and provide the first natural framework for empirically constraining reset temperature in goethite. This approach opens new perspectives for reconstructing shallow thermal histories in carbonate-dominated regions where conventional chronometers are absent.

How to cite: Boschetti, L., Schwartz, S., Gautheron, C., Rolland, Y., Mouthereau, F., Balvay, M., Cogné, N., and Campillo, S.: Karst-hosted bauxites as a new archive for oxi-hydroxide (U-Th)/He thermochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12699, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12699, 2026.

This project set out to temporally constrain Carboniferous (ca. 359-299 Ma) volcanic, magmatic, and interbedded sedimentary basins which host the important Midland Valley coal seams. We are interrogating rates of eruption and temporal variations in the magma source geochemistry to link these to palaeoclimate variability as recorded by these classic sedimentary successions.

Rifting of the Midland Valley, Scotland and synchronous short-lived volcanism (ca. 30 Myr) [7] is associated with the eruption of mildly alkaline olivine basalts and associated intrusive rocks (e.g. micro-gabbro, phonolite). Remnants of this volcanism are exposed across the Midland Valley, including the world-famous geological site, Arthur’s Seat, Edinburgh. Arthur’s Seat is a classic example of a volcanic cross section with approximately nineteen lava layers and numerous vents exposed and characterised [1, 6]. Previous mapping efforts established a stratigraphy for this Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) landmark, constrained by interbedded palynological zones. This has since been succeeded by direct radio-isotopic dating including K-Ar and 40Ar/39Ar geochronological techniques [2, 3, 4]. The most recent published ages constrained the eruption and emplacement of the Arthur’s Seat volcano with a precision ranging between 0.18-1.40% [5, 6].

New high precision (<0.1%) ⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar geochronology on lavas and CA-ID-TIMS U-Pb zircon geochronology on intrusive rocks and explosive eruptions, has been completed in addition to a suite of geochemical and isotopic data (e.g. Nd, Sr and Pb isotopes; major and trace elements). New developments in sample preparation, mass spectrometry, standard mineral characterisation, and data reduction software have enabled significant refinement of the 40Ar/39Ar technique. For example, our re-examination of the Arthur’s Seat Volcanic Formation has obtained an improved precision, achieving eruption and emplacement ages ranging 0.018-0.052%.  

Our integrated geochronologic, geochemical and isotopic data underpin a robust temporal framework that tracks the evolution of the magmatic system, places the volcano-sedimentary sequences within the global Geologic Time Scale, and constrains the ages of key fossil-bearing horizons. By directly linking the magmatism to sedimentary basin development through dating of intercalated tephras, we aim to deliver a high precision chronology for Carboniferous climate change and the evolution of flora and fauna within the Midland Valley. Our preliminary results represent an order of magnitude improvement in precision and, in some cases, are sufficient to allow Carboniferous climate variability to be examined at orbital timescales (<100 kyr).

 

References

[1] Clarkson, E. and Upton, B. (2007) Geological Magazine, 144(3), pp. 603–603.

[2] De Souza, H.A,. (1979) Geochronology of Scottish Carboniferous volcanism. Ph.D. University of Edinburgh.

[3] De Souza, H.A,. (1982) ‘Age data from Scotland and the Carboniferous Time Scale’.

[4] Fitch et al, (1970) Isotopic ages of British Carboniferous rock. Sheffield, 1967, (2), pp. 771–790.

[5] Monaghan, A.A. and Browne, M.A.E. (2010) British Geological Survey, pp. 41.

[6] Monaghan, A.A., Browne, M.A.E. and Barfod, D.N. (2014) Scottish Journal of Geology, 50(2), pp. 165–172.

[7] Upton et al, (2020) Scottish Journal of Geology, 56(1), pp. 63–79.

How to cite: Pegge, E., Mark, D., and Barfod, D.: Geochronology and geochemical evolution of Carboniferous volcanism in Scotland’s Midland Valley: Insights from Arthur’s Seat, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13082, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13082, 2026.

Understanding the emplacement timescales of the Cornubian Batholith is important due to the association of widespread mineralisation that is spatially and temporally linked to the magmatism. Historically, dating has been focussed on xenotime and monazite which established the magmatism to have occurred from ~295-275 Ma (Chen et al., 1993, Chesley et al., 1993). However, these minerals are less precise for dating due to issues with low U/Pb ratios and inability to perform chemical abrasion. Our project aims to build a temporal framework for the formation of nested plutons by utilising high precision zircon U-Pb dating on the Variscan S-type Cornubian Batholith of southwest England.   

To minimise issues of inheritance, cathodoluminescence scanning electron microscope imaging (CL-SEM) was used to identify inherited cores and fractures/inclusions within zircon. Laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) was then completed on cores and rims of zircon, with the aim of selecting the best zircon crystals for further chemical-abrasion isotope-dilution thermal-ionisation mass spectrometry (CA-ID-TIMS) analysis. The LA-ICP-MS data confirmed the complicated geochronological history, with issues of inheritance and Pb-loss ubiquitous across all sampled plutons. Whilst an accurate and precise emplacement age could not be identified based on the spread of data, most sampled plutons did show promising trends that could be related to peaks in magmatism within the currently established period of activity.  Zircon rims were isolated in preparation for CA-ID-TIMS to minimise issues with inheritance.  

Applying CA-ID-TIMS, 204Pb and 230Th corrections, and Bayesian modelling will improve precision with the aim of filtering out complicating effects to produce reliable emplacement ages for the main phases of Cornubian magmatism. Achieving accurate zircon U-Pb ages from S-type granites is both challenging and significant as it would open avenues for reinterpreting ages from difficult-to-date plutonic bodies, a potential milestone for U-Pb geochronology.  

Bibliography
 
Chen, Y., Clark, A.H., Farrar, E., Wasteneys, H.A.H.P., Hodgson, M.J., Bromley, A.V., 1993. Diachronous and independent histories of plutonism and mineralization in the Cornubian Batholith, southwest England, Journal of the Geological Society. 

Chesley, I., J.T., Halliday, A.N., Snee, L.W., Mezger, K., Shepherd, T.J., Scrivener, R.C., 1993. Thermochronoloy of the Cornubian batholith in southwest England: Implications for pluton emplacement and protracted hydrothermal mineralization, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 

How to cite: Day, L., Mark, D., and Barfod, D.: Redefining the emplacement age of the Cornubian Batholith: applying Bayesian statistics to zircon U-Pb LA-ICP-MS data , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13084, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13084, 2026.

EGU26-13988 | Orals | GMPV2.2

Neoarchean polymetamorphism and crustal melting due to magmatic heat advection in the northern Wyoming Province, U.S.A: insights from petrochronology and thermal modeling 

Besim Dragovic, Victor Guevara, Mark Caddick, Jeremy Inglis, Andrew Kylander-Clark, and Tom Raimondo

Constraining the depths, temperatures and rates of Archean metamorphism may provide a window into possible tectonic styles at this time. However, several Archean metamorphic terranes record polymetamorphism, and unravelling the pressure-temperature-time (P-T-t) histories of such terranes has proven difficult, with complexity inherent in both chronologic and petrologic data.

Here we synthesize results of a multi-analytical study in which (Sm-Nd) garnet and (U-Pb) monazite petrochronology, thermodynamic, diffusion, and thermal modeling were applied to Archean granulites from the Beartooth Mountains in the northern Wyoming Province. The data reveal two phases of garnet growth and high-temperature metamorphism likely driven by magmatic heat advection. Garnet cores grew coeval with emplacement of a granitoid batholith at ~2.78-2.76 Ga. This was followed by a distinct, second phase of peritectic garnet rim growth at ~2.71 Ga, during biotite breakdown melting at peak temperatures of ~750˚C. Diffusion modeling of chemical zoning in garnet rims shows that this second event was brief: near-peak temperatures were maintained for < 1 Myrs. In contrast, core and rim dates of garnet from a meta-granitoid from the same outcrop record only the initial phase of growth, most likely because a lack of grain boundary fluids inhibited further crystallization in these rocks. Evidence for this second event is cryptic in other granitoid samples, such that this period of heating to at least 750˚C, ~50-100 Myrs after initial batholith emplacement, is poorly recorded in the broader rock record of the Beartooths.

We propose that emplacement of the Stillwater Complex was responsible for high-grade metamorphism at ~2.71 Ga. 1-D thermal models suggest that the P-T-t path determined from our pelitic samples can be reproduced by emplacement of a large mafic sheet with the geometry of the Stillwater ~10 km above the current exposure of the Beartooth mountains. Our work serves as a case study in which: 1) field and petrologic evidence for polymetamorphism is cryptic, but can be revealed through detailed petrochronology, and 2) rapid granulite-facies metamorphism of mid-crustal rocks was coeval with, and likely driven by, high magmatic flux during upper crustal emplacement of a potential large igneous province. Lastly, we highlight the potential challenges associated with the dating of high metamorphic grade, Archean lithologies, which include the effects of deleterious mineral inclusions, polymetamorphism and multi-stage melting episodes.

 

How to cite: Dragovic, B., Guevara, V., Caddick, M., Inglis, J., Kylander-Clark, A., and Raimondo, T.: Neoarchean polymetamorphism and crustal melting due to magmatic heat advection in the northern Wyoming Province, U.S.A: insights from petrochronology and thermal modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13988, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13988, 2026.

EGU26-14110 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Field constraints on zircon (U-Th)/He closure from the European Alps 

Bianca Heberer, Meinert Rahn, István Dunkl, Keno Lünsdorf, Franz Neubauer, and Gerd Rantitsch

Thermochronology provides powerful tools for reconstructing Earth’s thermal and tectonic history. Among low-temperature thermochronometers, zircon (U–Th)/He (ZHe) dating has gained particular importance due to its sensitivity to deep-time thermal events, enabling tight temperature constraints even for thermal histories that span billions of years.

Helium diffusivity in zircon is strongly controlled by radiation-damage accumulation. This causes complex diffusion behaviour and a wide range of effective closure temperatures especially in (meta-)sedimentary rocks, where detrital zircons share their post-depositional thermal history but differ in provenance age and uranium content, leading to variable radiation-damage and annealing histories.

The widely used zircon radiation damage accumulation and annealing model (ZRDAAM; Guenthner et al., 2013) predicts complete resetting of ZHe ages for samples heated above ~200 °C during burial. Consequently, highly dispersed ZHe datasets in sedimentary rocks are commonly interpreted as reflecting mixed detrital populations and limited heating below this threshold. However, this interpretation remains largely untested against natural field laboratories.

In this study, ZHe closure and annealing is re-investigated based on two field areas with independently constrained thermal histories: (1) the Austroalpine Drau Range and adjacent Southalpine units and (2) the Helvetic Glarus Alps. Peak temperatures in these regions are well defined by vitrinite reflectance, Raman spectroscopy of carbonaceous material, Kübler-Index and fluid inclusion data as well as by metamorphic assemblages. In both areas, ZHe data systematically conflict with model predictions. The Austroalpine and Southalpine (meta-)sedimentary units targeted within this study experienced upper-diagenetic to low-grade metamorphic conditions (T>200 °C), but ZHe ages are largely not reset and show strong dispersion, contrary to ZRDAAM expectations. Combined ZHe–U–Pb double dating confirms substantial differences in pre-depositional provenance ages, but this age variation cannot explain the obvious difference to modelled age predictions.

A similar pattern is observed in the Glarus Alps, where peak metamorphic temperatures range from diagenesis to greenschist facies. ZHe ages show a systematic younging trend but retain large single-grain age dispersion and partially inherited ages even under very low-grade metamorphic conditions.

Results demonstrate significant helium retention in zircons at temperatures above 200 °C and reveal limitations of our understanding of the ZHe system. Interpreting dispersed ZHe datasets solely in terms of detrital inheritance fails to explain field constraints. Ongoing work combining U-Pb-He double dating with cathodoluminescence imaging, Raman spectroscopy, and spatially resolved U-Pb and isotopic mapping aims to identify the mechanisms responsible for this behavior and to improve the interpretation of ZHe data in sedimentary and remain-grade metamorphic rocks.

Reference:

Guenthner, W. R., Reiners, P. W., Ketcham, R. A., Nasdala, L., & Giester, G. (2013). Helium diffusion in natural zircon: radiation damage, anisotropy, and the interpretation of zircon  (U-Th)/He thermochronology. American Journal of Science, 313(3), 145-198. ://WOS:000319306100001

How to cite: Heberer, B., Rahn, M., Dunkl, I., Lünsdorf, K., Neubauer, F., and Rantitsch, G.: Field constraints on zircon (U-Th)/He closure from the European Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14110, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14110, 2026.

EGU26-14548 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

Raman mapping reveals alpha radiation damage zonation and its annealing in Durango apatite 

Guido Pastore, Xiaowei Zeng, Chuanbo Shen, Alberto Resentini, Hongyang Fu, Chaoqun Yang, Pieter Vermeesch, Matthew Fox, Yannick Buret, and Marco Giovanni Malusà

The accumulation of alpha radiation damage and its annealing in apatite are critical to thermochronological studies but remain difficult to characterize. We conducted annealing experiments on four slices from a single Durango apatite crystal and used high-resolution Raman spectroscopy mapping to analyse peak positions and full width at half maximum (FWHM) of the ν₁(PO₄) and ν₃(PO₄) bands. Track densities were measured in different regions of the crystal, and a normalized track-density reduction model was applied to estimate the original alpha radiation damage. In addition, heavy-ion irradiation was used to simulate the fission process and enhance the visibility of confined tracks.

Our results show that the FWHM of the ν₁(PO₄) band is a robust indicator of alpha radiation damage accumulation in apatite and does not correlate with fission-track damage in Durango apatite. The spatial zoning pattern of FWHM closely matches that of effective uranium (eU), and among samples with similar eU contents, those subjected to higher annealing temperatures exhibit lower FWHM values. Furthermore, alpha radiation damage does not significantly influence the annealing behaviour of fission tracks in Durango apatite. Although the behaviour of Raman peak positions remains enigmatic, our results suggest that it is influenced by both apatite chemical composition and radiation damage accumulation. This study demonstrates that high-resolution Raman spectroscopy provides a novel and quantitative approach to directly link radiation damage with thermal history in apatite. This methodology could potentially improve thermochronological apatite models and interpretation enabling detailed, spatially resolved insights into damage accumulation and annealing processes in geological studies.

How to cite: Pastore, G., Zeng, X., Shen, C., Resentini, A., Fu, H., Yang, C., Vermeesch, P., Fox, M., Buret, Y., and Malusà, M. G.: Raman mapping reveals alpha radiation damage zonation and its annealing in Durango apatite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14548, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14548, 2026.

EGU26-17436 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

Tc1D: a fast and flexible 1-D thermal and thermochronology modeling package for complex exhumation, burial, and transient thermal histories 

Benjamin Gérard, David Whipp, Sanni Laaksonen, and Ann-Kathrin Maier

Thermochronological data can provide robust constraints on crustal exhumation, erosion, and burial, yet their interpretation often requires forward and/or inverse models to account for thermal evolution and the effects of surface processes. Here we present recent developments in Tc1D, a one-dimensional thermal and thermochronometer age prediction package designed to explore exhumation, burial, and other thermal processes and their effects on low-temperature thermochronometers.

Tc1D generates thermal histories by solving the transient one-dimensional heat transfer equation to predict apatite and zircon (U-Th)/He and fission-track ages using established thermochronological models, including RDAAM and ZRDAAM. The thermal model is controlled by user-defined thermal boundary conditions and prescribed vertical crustal dynamics, including erosion and burial. These histories can be parameterized through multiple erosion model options (e.g., stepwise or linearly varying rates) as well as simplified 1-D representations of tectonically driven vertical motions (e.g., thrust-sheet emplacement/removal and extensional/thrust faulting). This physics-based yet computationally efficient setup enables rapid exploration of how various thermal and crustal scenarios translate into predicted age patterns.

Tc1D adopts a complementary approach, compared to commonly used thermal history modeling tools such as HeFTy, QTQt, or Thermochron.jl, enabling direct connection between different vertical-motion scenarios, measured ages, and physical parameters (e.g., erosion rates or eroded thicknesses), while retaining fast execution times suitable for large sensitivity and ensemble analyses. Furthermore, by remaining one-dimensional, Tc1D avoids the computational cost of full 3D thermo-kinematic models such as PECUBE, while still capturing the first-order effects of vertical lithospheric processes. Tc1D is also fully open source and Python based, facilitating transparency, extensibility, and integration into reproducible research workflows.

Recent developments in Tc1D (from version 0.3) expand its scope beyond earlier releases, which were primarily limited to forward modeling and simple erosion scenarios. Recent versions introduce support for data-driven inverse modeling, flexible definitions of exhumation and burial histories, and the inclusion of additional thermal perturbations such as magmatic intrusions. Tc1D now supports parameter inversion using either the Neighborhood Algorithmor a Markov Chain Monte Carloapproach, enabling systematic exploration of exhumation and burial histories. These histories can be defined through an external input file, allowing complex, multi-stage scenarios combining piecewise constant, linear, or exponential phases of erosion/burial.

Ongoing developments focus on improving usability and physical realism. A new unified YAML-based input file is currently being developed to provide an alternative to command-line–driven usage, improving reproducibility while simplifying model design. This structure facilitates the definition and modification of complex model configurations, including multi-stage erosion and burial histories, thermal boundary conditions, and is designed to support future inversion of stage durations and erosion parameters. In parallel, software developments aim to incorporate more realistic representations of crustal structure and rock properties, including depth-dependent density variations based on mineral phase transitions, to better account for crustal composition, thermal properties, and their influence on thermal evolution and erodibility.

These developments are being applied to investigate the long-term thermal evolution of the crust in the Fennoscandian Shield, where low relief, limited sedimentary archives, episodic burial, and subtle post-orogenic exhumation pose major challenges for thermochronological data interpretation.

How to cite: Gérard, B., Whipp, D., Laaksonen, S., and Maier, A.-K.: Tc1D: a fast and flexible 1-D thermal and thermochronology modeling package for complex exhumation, burial, and transient thermal histories, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17436, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17436, 2026.

EGU26-17806 | Orals | GMPV2.2

How stable is the Fennoscandian Shield? Insights from low-temperature thermochronology and numerical models 

Ann-Kathrin Maier, Benjamin Gérard, David Whipp, Sanni Laaksonen, and Kalin McDannell

Cratons are ancient parts of the lithosphere, often characterised by long-term stability. Geological observations indicate that the Fennoscandian Shield in the East European craton has likely experienced some of the slowest erosion rates on Earth over the past approximately 1.5 billion years1. However, a contrasting perspective has emerged based on apatite fission-track thermochronology, suggesting multiple episodes of kilometre-scale burial and exhumation during the past 1.1 Ga2. This raises the question: How stable has the Fennoscandian Shield been since the Mesoproterozoic?

Since a Phanerozoic sedimentary record is not preserved in Finnish Fennoscandia, we investigate this question using new data from (U-Th)/He thermochronology and integrated modelling of multiple thermochronometer systems.

We have collected 20 samples from Finnish Fennoscandia, from which we obtained 64 single-grain zircon (U-Th)/He dates (1553 to 1.8 Ma) and 55 single-grain apatite (U-Th)/He dates (1178 to 99 Ma). In addition, we analysed 25 zircons from the Kola peninsula in Russia and obtained (U-Th)/He dates ranging from 1929 to 215 Ma. Samples from southern Finland and the Kola peninsula show a strong decrease in zircon (U-Th)/He dates with increasing U-Th concentrations, due to the effects of radiation damage. We leverage this date dispersion to determine plausible thermal histories using different inverse modelling software (QTQt3, Thermochron.jl4 and Tc1D5) and explore the complex (U-Th)/He date patterns through separate and joint inversion of the zircon and apatite data.

Preliminary inverse modelling results using QTQt and Thermochron.jl suggest that regions in southern Finland and the Kola peninsula may have experienced protracted residence at shallow upper crustal levels for at least 1 Ga. In contrast, areas in northern Finland, near the Caledonian front, show evidence of heating and cooling likely linked to burial and exhumation following Caledonian orogenesis.

Ongoing work focuses on refining the preliminary thermal history models by integrating published apatite fission track and 40Ar/39Ar data with our (U-Th)/He dataset to more effectively constrain the magnitude, timing and rates of burial and exhumation in Fennoscandia and its possible drivers (e.g. extreme glaciation, orogenies). This will not only provide insight into the exhumation history of Fennoscandia, but also the resolving power of low-temperature thermochronology for reconstructing thermal histories in cratonic areas where timescales are immense and the geological record is limited.

 

1 Hall, A.M., Putkinen, N., Hietala, S., Lindsberg, E. and Holma, M., 2021. Ultra-slow cratonic denudation in Finland since 1.5 Ga indicated by tiered unconformities and impact structures. Precambrian Research352, p.106000. 

2 Green, P.F., Japsen, P., Bonow, J.M., Chalmers, J.A., Duddy, I.R. and Kukkonen, I.T., 2022. The post-Caledonian thermo-tectonic evolution of Fennoscandia. Gondwana Research107, pp.201-234. 

3 Gallagher, K. (2012), Transdimensional inverse thermal history modeling for quantitative thermochronology, J. Geophys. Res., 117, B02408, doi:10.1029/2011JB008825.

4 Keller, C.B., McDannell, K.T., Guenthner, W.R., and Shuster, D.L. (2022). Thermochron.jl: Open-source time-Temperature inversion of thermochronometric data. 10.17605/osf.io/wq2U5

5 Whipp et al. (2025). HUGG/Tc1D: v0.3.2 (v0.3.2). Zenodo.  https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17590819

How to cite: Maier, A.-K., Gérard, B., Whipp, D., Laaksonen, S., and McDannell, K.: How stable is the Fennoscandian Shield? Insights from low-temperature thermochronology and numerical models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17806, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17806, 2026.

EGU26-18783 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Towards large-scale low-temperature thermochronological data inversion: an assessment using a dataset from Madagascar  

Alexis Derycke, Etienne Large, and Kerry Gallagher

Over the past 30 years, the number of low-temperature thermochronological data has grown, driven by advances in analytical techniques and the proliferation of studies. While generating and sharing these data with the scientific community presents the initial challenge, a second appears during their interpretation through inverse modelling. While performing joint data inversion on few samples is common, scaling this process to larger datasets (>50 samples) remains rare.

In recent years, several research teams have addressed the data sharing challenge by standardizing data-sharing formats (Flowers et al., 2023b, 2023a) and developing dedicated platforms for low-temperature thermochronological data (lithodat.com). Here, we test a "large data-set inversion" approach using a large dataset from Madagascar.

Madagascar has been the focus of over 10 studies since the 1990s, producing a dataset of ~250 samples analysed using two methods ((U-Th)/He and fission track) across various minerals, including apatite and zircon. In this study, we exploited available data (201 AFT and 87 AHe) in a large-scale inversion using a preliminary spatial clustering version of the Bayesian thermal history modelling software, QTQt. The clustering approach follows that presented in Stephenson et al. (2006) but allows for trans-dimensional thermal history models. The approach tries to determine both the number of clusters (i.e. sample groupings) and the thermal histories in each cluster that can reproduce the observed data.

We present (very) preliminary results of this approach applied to the Madagascar dataset, that divide the data in 3 clusters. Although run for 6 weeks, we managed to do just a small number of iterations (<100), and the algorithm was not converged. The inferred 3 clusters are compared to Madagascar’s known tectono-morphological blocks, and the inferred time-temperature paths can then be tentatively assigned to these blocks, potentially offering new insights into the associated vertical dynamics of the island.

 

Flowers, R.M., Ketcham, R.A., Enkelmann, E., Gautheron, C., Reiners, P.W., Metcalf, J.R., Danišík, M., Stockli, D.F., Brown, R.W., 2023a. (U-Th)/He chronology: Part 2. Considerations for evaluating, integrating, and interpreting conventional individual aliquot data. GSA Bulletin 135, 137–161. https://doi.org/10.1130/B36268.1

Flowers, R.M., Zeitler, P.K., Danišík, M., Reiners, P.W., Gautheron, C., Ketcham, R.A., Metcalf, J.R., Stockli, D.F., Enkelmann, E., Brown, R.W., 2023b. (U-Th)/He chronology: Part 1. Data, uncertainty, and reporting. GSA Bulletin 135, 104–136. https://doi.org/10.1130/B36266.1

Stephenson, J., Gallagher, K., & Holmes, C. (2006). A Bayesian approach to calibrating apatite fission track annealing models for laboratory and geological timescales. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 70(20), 5183-5200.

How to cite: Derycke, A., Large, E., and Gallagher, K.: Towards large-scale low-temperature thermochronological data inversion: an assessment using a dataset from Madagascar , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18783, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18783, 2026.

EGU26-19270 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

U-Pb zircon geochronology of coesite-bearing eclogites from the Orlica-Snieznik Dome (SW Poland)  

Malgorzata Nowak, Jacek Szczepanski, and Robert Anczkiewicz

The Orlica-Śnieżnik Dome is located in the NE part of the Bohemian Massif within the Sudetes, forming part of the European Variscan Belt. It comprises mostly orthogneisses, that host lenses of ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) eclogites and granulites. Peak-pressure metamorphic conditions recorded by these rocks have previously been estimated at 2.9–3.2 GPa and 750°C–830°C, based on thermodynamic modelling, conventional geothermobarometry, and Zr-in-rutile thermometry.

In this contribution, we present preliminary U-Pb zircon ages and trace element characteristics from two localities, Bielice and Nowa Wieś. The analysed zircons are mostly isometric or slightly elongated. Their internal structure was documented using back-scattered electron (BSE) and cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging prior to analysis. Zircons from Nowa Wieś predominantly display fir-tree and sector zoning patterns, whereas those from Bielice are mainly characterized by irregular and diffuse (aurora-light) zoning. Some grains from both localities contain possible inherited cores. Zircons from both localities show flat HREE patterns, a slight positive Ce anomaly, and no Eu anomaly. These features support the interpretation that zircon growth occurred under HP condition, contemporaneous with the eclogite-facies assemblage. Metamorphic zircon ages from Bielice cluster at 338.3 ± 3.4 Ma, whereas those from Nowa Wieś yield an age of 341.5 ± 3.4 Ma.

This project was supported by the Polish National Science Centre (UMO-2024/53/N/ST10/03586).

How to cite: Nowak, M., Szczepanski, J., and Anczkiewicz, R.: U-Pb zircon geochronology of coesite-bearing eclogites from the Orlica-Snieznik Dome (SW Poland) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19270, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19270, 2026.

EGU26-19596 | ECS | Orals | GMPV2.2

Extending Laser-Ablation (U-Th)/He to Ultra-Low-eU Magnetite and Chromite: A New Tool for Mafic and Ultramafic Rocks 

Maximilian Ehrenfels, Daniel Stockli, Michael Prior, Desmond Patterson, Lisa Stockli, and Craig Martin

Mafic and ultramafic rocks provide critical insights into ophiolite formation and obduction, orogenic suturing, and rock magnetism, yet they are difficult to date due to the absence of conventional radioisotopic chronometers. Magnetite and chromite are common primary or secondary mineral phases that often preserve growth zoning and complex overprinting, but extremely low eU concentrations and intragrain heterogeneity have limited the application of (U–Th)/He dating. Here we report recent progress at the University of Texas at Austin (UTChron) toward establishing protocols of routine laser ablation (LA) (U–Th)/He in-situ dating of magnetite and chromium spinel (chromite) with eU <10 ppb and ultra-low He concentrations. Our analytical procedures couple in-vacuo laser ablation and ultra-low-blank magnetic-sector noble gas mass spectrometry (Thermo Fisher SFT) for He with U–Th quantification by laser-ablation ICP-MS (Thermo Element2) and ablation pit volume measurements using white-light interferometry. This integrated workflow supports targeted analyses of discrete textural growth zones and complex intragrain textures at ~100 μm spatial resolution, with typical analytical precision of ~5–10%.

We present three applications for in-situ He dating of magnetite and chromite from mafic and ultramafic rocks: (1) magnetite and chromite from kimberlitic diatremes that yield LA-(U–Th)/He ages consistent with independent emplacement constraints, providing a practical alternative where conventional datable minerals are absent; (2) He ages from primary chromite from obducted orogenic ophiolitic units that record thermal resetting and subsequent cooling, offering new leverage on the tectonic histories of ultramafic sequences that are traditionally challenging to date; and (3) He dates from secondary magnetite growth in sheared serpentinites that provide direct constraints on fluid-rock interaction during deformation in ultramafic shear zones. Collectively, these results establish magnetite and chromite as viable targets for in situ (U–Th)/He thermochronometry and broaden the range of geological problems accessible to in-situ dating.

How to cite: Ehrenfels, M., Stockli, D., Prior, M., Patterson, D., Stockli, L., and Martin, C.: Extending Laser-Ablation (U-Th)/He to Ultra-Low-eU Magnetite and Chromite: A New Tool for Mafic and Ultramafic Rocks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19596, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19596, 2026.

EGU26-20163 | Orals | GMPV2.2

With or without U: uranium distribution and redox state in carbonate tracks protracted porphyry-epithermal mineralization through time 

Sarah Bowie, Catherine Mottram, E. Troy Rasbury, Paul Northrup, Ryan Tappero, and Dawn Kellett

In-situ U-Pb carbonate geochronology is a well-established technique that directly constrains the timing and rates of important geological processes including fluid flow, diagenesis, and tectonic events. However, the fundamental controls on U behaviour in carbonate minerals remain unclear, limiting geological interpretations. Knowledge gaps include the controls on U incorporation, the highly heterogeneous distribution of U at a crystal scale, and the incorporation of U with respect to other (redox-sensitive) elements. The application of synchrotron X-ray microspectroscopy (µXAS) is ideal for investigating these topics, as it can map chemical changes and measure the valance state of key elements at the micron-scale.

Here we combine µXAS, in-situ laser ablation U-Pb carbonate geochronology, and EPMA analyses to temporally track U distribution, redox state, and dolomite-ankerite composition in a porphyry-epithermal system. Multiple generations of carbonate minerals record fluid conditions and processes which control the solubility and deposition of metals, including U. Results show that temporally distinct generations of carbonate record both oxidized UO22+ and reduced U4+ species within a single sample section. Mapping of individual carbonate crystals reveals that UO22+ and U4+ also occur within individual growth bands at a sub-millimetre scale, and in rare samples, may coexist. µXAS data from the sample suite demonstrate that local fluid conditions in the case-study mineralized system changed from more oxidized to more reduced over a period of ca. 16 Ma and corresponds with an increase in U levels in crystallizing carbonate.

The preservation of two U oxidation states during discrete precipitation events requires U retentivity within older domains, indicating that the U-Pb carbonate geochronometer is robust under hydrothermal conditions (e.g., ~200–350ºC) and through rapid local redox state changes. Furthermore, crystal zones with abundant fluid/vapour inclusions linked to boiling processes coincide with higher levels of U in the carbonate and favourable U/Pb. Our results suggest redox changes and boiling conditions may be critical for both the deposition of ore minerals, as well as increased U uptake in carbonate minerals. Targeting carbonate domains with these features may therefore increase success for U-Pb geochronology. U-Pb carbonate dating combined with µXAS can track the temporal evolution of processes critical for metal deposition in long-lived and multistage hydrothermal-magmatic ore deposit settings.

How to cite: Bowie, S., Mottram, C., Rasbury, E. T., Northrup, P., Tappero, R., and Kellett, D.: With or without U: uranium distribution and redox state in carbonate tracks protracted porphyry-epithermal mineralization through time, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20163, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20163, 2026.

EGU26-20451 | Orals | GMPV2.2

Dating of submarine volcanism based on combined K-Ar and 40Ar/39Ar methods: example from the Eastern Mayotte Volcanic Chain (Comoros Archipelago). 

Mathilde Frey, Xavier Quidelleur, Julia Ricci, Nathalie Feuillet, Étienne Médard, Carole Berthod, Jean-Christophe Komorowski, Valentine Puzenat, Isabelle Thinon, Emmanuel Rinnert, Cécile Cathalot, Stephan Jorry, Fabien Paquet, and Élodie Lebas

Dating submarine volcanic rocks is essential for understanding the relationship between tectonics and volcanism, as well as for characterizing the evolution of volcanic systems, for instance. The K-Ar chronometer is generally used but dating young rocks (<50 ka) remains a significant challenge, particularly because their amount of radiogenic 40Ar is low. Here, we present a comparison of K-Ar and the 40Ar/39Ar ages obtained from submarine samples from the Eastern Mayotte Volcanic Chain (EMVC; Comoros Archipelago). This volcanic chain consists of monogenetic pyroclastic cones, lava domes and lava flow fields with basanitic to phonolitic compositions. It includes the Fani Maoré, a new submarine volcano that formed a few years ago, and the Horseshoe, a potentially active U-shaped morphological structure, located only 10 km offshore Mayotte. A total of 19 samples were collected in the Horseshoe and Fani Maoré regions, by dredging and/or using the Victor6000 remotely operated vehicle (ROV), during 6 oceanographic campaigns. These samples were dated using both the K-Ar and the 40Ar/39Ar methods, on a carefully selected groundmass fraction obtained within a narrow density range with heavy liquids. Both methods used here allow dating of very young samples with ages as young as 3 ± 1 ka for phonolitic samples, with radiogenic content as low as 0.1%. The 40Ar /39Ar inverse isochrons confirm the atmospheric initial trapped 40Ar/36Ar component, suggesting that no argon fractionation affected the ages from either method, and flat 40Ar/39Ar age spectra indicate that the K-Ar system remained closed. In order to further check both methods with zero-age basanitic lavas, we have analysed samples from the 2018 and 2020 eruptions of the Fani Maoré volcano.  The relatively precise ages obtained by both methods confirmed that, following a carefully sample selection and preparation, both K-Ar and 40Ar /39Ar methods are well suited for dating submarine Holocene volcanics such as the phonolitic lavas and pyroclasts. Finally, the comparison between K-Ar and 40Ar/39Ar shows coherent results in most cases, enabling a precise temporal framework to be established for the Horseshoe region.

How to cite: Frey, M., Quidelleur, X., Ricci, J., Feuillet, N., Médard, É., Berthod, C., Komorowski, J.-C., Puzenat, V., Thinon, I., Rinnert, E., Cathalot, C., Jorry, S., Paquet, F., and Lebas, É.: Dating of submarine volcanism based on combined K-Ar and 40Ar/39Ar methods: example from the Eastern Mayotte Volcanic Chain (Comoros Archipelago)., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20451, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20451, 2026.

EGU26-21743 | Orals | GMPV2.2

Is (U-Th)/He dating of pyromorphite a new chronometer of weathering? 

Fin Stuart, Ma Yan, Ying Wang, Jianzhang Pang, and Liene Spruženiece

Pyromorphite [Pb5(PO4)3Cl] is an end-member phase of the apatite-group minerals. It commonly forms during supergene weathering of Pb-rich ore deposits. Owing to its chemical stability and low solubility under natural environmental conditions, pyromorphite preserves a record of supergene weathering events. The U concentration of pyromorphite is typically high (up to several thousand ppm) making it a potential as a (U-Th)/He and/or (U-Th)/Ne chronometer of paleoenvironmental change.  (U-Th)/He ages of nine pyromorphite specimens from around the globe are less than 5 Ma. The near complete absence of fission tracks in all samples, despite the relatively high U concentration (1-30 ppm), is consistent with the young He ages. Complete helium extraction requires considerably shorter heating at lower temperature than similar sized Durango apatite fragments implying that He closure temperature in pyromorphite is lower than apatite.

A detailed study of an inclusion-free pyromorphite crystal from Daoping mine, Guangxi (China) has been undertaken to determine its suitability as a chronometer of supergene mineralisation.  Incremental extraction of He from 250-500 mm fragments display good linearity on an Arrhenius diagram for temperature steps less than 220°C.  The kinetic parameters (E and ln(D0/a2)) display a range of values that we use to determine a helium closure temperature in the range -30°C to -84°C for a nominal cooling rate of 10°C/Myr.  This range may reflect the presence of varying size sub-grains that are evident from EBSD.  Density functional theory modelling shows that the substitution of Ca2+ (0.99 Å) by Pb2+ (1.19 Å) expands the interstitial sites in the pyromorphite lattice compared to apatite, likely lowering the energy barrier for helium diffusion and changing the global minimum location, thus changing the diffusion pathway of He in pyromorphite. EBSD shows that lattice distortion is ubiquitous, perhaps due to the off-centre position of the electron pair of Pb2+ within its coordination environment or the substitution of V.  The dislocations may function as sinks for He and impede helium diffusion. This leads us to conclude that pyromorphite is unlikely to find use as He thermo/geochronometer but further study may aid understanding He diffusion in apatite group minerals.

How to cite: Stuart, F., Yan, M., Wang, Y., Pang, J., and Spruženiece, L.: Is (U-Th)/He dating of pyromorphite a new chronometer of weathering?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21743, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21743, 2026.

Thermal-kinematic modeling of thermochronometric datasets is widely used to reconstruct exhumation histories. Yet, the sensitivity of model outputs to input parameters is rarely evaluated, even within a given modeling framework. Comparative sensitivity analysis across multiple tools is even less common, even though these models differ substantially in their treatment of heat transport, inversion structure, and kinetic behavior. In this study, we apply the Taguchi method, a statistical design of experiments, to assess parameter sensitivity in four thermal-kinematic modeling packages. We systematically vary thermal, kinetic, and optimization parameters across each tool and quantify their influence on predicted exhumation rates. Our results reveal substantial model-specific differences in sensitivity patterns. Two modeling platforms that use the same formulation, namely, Gaussian linear inversion of an age-elevation relationship, are most responsive to different things, with one most sensitive to thermal field parameters such as heat production and thermal diffusivity, and the other strongly influenced by inversion settings, including time step and prior exhumation rate. In age2exhume, activation energy (Ea) dominates, underscoring the role of kinetic parameters in diffusion-based models. These findings demonstrate that parameter sensitivity is not intrinsic to the thermochronometric system but is shaped by modeling assumptions. As tool selection influences both interpretation and uncertainty, there is a risk that model structure may overwhelm geological signals if not explicitly tested. We advocate for broader model intercomparisons and increased flexibility in parameter configuration to support more robust and transparent thermochronologic analysis.

How to cite: Sparks, S. and Hodges, K.: Comparison of thermal-kinematic modeling approaches based on Taguchi method sensitivity analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22116, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22116, 2026.

EGU26-22769 | Posters on site | GMPV2.2

Effect of kimberlite melts on garnet U-Pb and Lu-Hf geochronology 

Aratz Beranoaguirre, Sonja Aulbach, Leo J. Millonig, Martin Kutzschbach, Anton Le Roex, Christel Tinguely, and Axel Gerdes

One of the principles of Geochronology states that below a certain temperature (i.e. closure temperature), a system has cooled so that daughter isotopes no longer diffuse out of the mineral, and the geochronometer starts recording the time. However, there are multiple examples in the literature in which these geochronometers have been totally or partially reopened by subsequent geological events.

 

Accepting that transport in the host magma is too short-lived to thermally affect its xenolith cargo, in this contribution, we have studied the effect on the Lu-Hf and U-Pb systems of pre-entrainment percolation of high-temperature kimberlite melts, which is known to result in heating and precursory metasomatism of cratonic lithospheric mantle [e.g. 1]). We do so by analysing garnet from kimberlite‐borne eclogite xenoliths from the Namaqua‐Natal Fold Belt, at the southwestern Kaapvaal craton margin, which was affected by the 1.2-1.0 Ga Namaqua-Natal orogeny, whereas the kimberlites were emplaced in the Cretaceous ([2,3] and references therein). The xenoliths yielded emplacement pressures and temperatures of 1.7±0.4 GPa and 815-1000 oC, respectively ([2]). The analyses were done by LA-ICPMS for both Lu-Hf and U-Pb systems.

 

The results obtained for each of the geochronometers are different and not comparable. On the one hand, the U-Pb analyses result in a relatively precise Cretaceous age, similar in all samples within the uncertainty, consistent with a complete reset during interaction with kimberlite melts and/or the eruption. On the other hand, the Lu-Hf ages show a wide range of ages, from the Mesoproterozoic to the Cenozoic, in many cases with a large uncertainty. This I) may imply a partial reset of Hf during secular cooling and/or the heating produced by kimberlite melts, II) it may be associated with the higher closure temperature for the Lu-Hf system.

 

References:

[1] Fitzpayne et al. (2020) Lithos 370-371: 105595; [2] Le Roex et al. (2020) J. Petrol. 61: egaa040; [3] Aulbach S et al. (2024) J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth 129: e2023JB027894.

How to cite: Beranoaguirre, A., Aulbach, S., Millonig, L. J., Kutzschbach, M., Le Roex, A., Tinguely, C., and Gerdes, A.: Effect of kimberlite melts on garnet U-Pb and Lu-Hf geochronology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22769, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22769, 2026.

The Paleoproterozoic Sandmata Complex (SC) of the Aravalli Craton (NW India) is traditionally regarded as a reworked Archean crustal terrane. It also preserves exhumed granulite-facies rocks that record high-grade metamorphic events. In the westernmost part of the complex, the dominant lithology comprises garnet-bearing, migmatitic quartzo-feldspathic gneisses (MS30A) that host mafic microgranular enclaves (MME; MS30B) and leucosomes (MS30C). This study presents new insights based on integrated structural, metamorphic, geochemical, and geochronological analyses of rocks from the western Sandmata Complex. The migmatitic gneisses preserve evidence for at least two deformation events (D1 and D2). The early fabric (S1) is a centimetre-scale, gently dipping gneissic foliation, which is overprinted by a spaced, NNE-striking, steeply dipping axial-planar foliation (S2). The peak metamorphic assemblage in the migmatitic gneisses consists of Grt(core) + Pl2 + Kfs + Qz + Amp + Ilm + Ttn ± Bt1 ± Mt. In contrast, the MMEs record the peak assemblage Grt(core) + Pl2 + Kfs + Amp1 + Ep2 + Ttn2 + Qz + Ilm ± Mt, whereas the leucosomes contain Grt(core) + Pl2 + Qz + Amp1 + Ep2 + Ttn2 + Ilm ± Mt. The MME and leucosomes are characterized by symplectitic coronas around garnet, defined by Grt-rim + Pl3 + Qz + Amp2 + Ep3 + Ttn3 ± Mt ± Ilm ± Bt. Pseudosection modelling constrains peak metamorphic conditions at ~9.7 kbar and ~820 °C. The symplectite assemblages reflect post-peak re-equilibration at ~7.6 kbar and 580–610 °C. Prograde conditions, estimated using the melt-reintegration approach, indicate temperatures of ~600 °C at ~10.3 kbar. Together, the prograde, peak, and retrograde P–T estimates define a clockwise P–T path involving isobaric heating to peak conditions, followed by cooling and decompression. U–Pb dating of magmatic zircon cores from the migmatitic gneiss yields concordant age of 1720 ± 13 Ma (MSWD = 0.97; n = 15), which are interpreted as the crystallization ages of the parental magmatic protolith. In contrast, U–Pb analyses of titanite associated with the peak metamorphic assemblages produce a discordant age of 969 ± 7 Ma (MSWD = 1.7; n = 49). This younger age constrains the timing of partial melting and migmatization of the gneisses. These results provide the first robust evidence for ~0.97 Ga high-grade metamorphism in the Sandmata Complex, a metamorphic event not previously documented in this terrain. Combined with earlier records of 1.78–1.90 Ga granulite-facies metamorphism, the data indicate that the SC experienced two distinct high-grade metamorphic episodes during its geological history. Regionally, the ~0.95–1.0 Ga event corresponds to a major tectonothermal phase associated with the accretion and amalgamation of the Aravalli Orogen and the Central Indian Tectonic Zone. This younger metamorphic overprint, thus, reflects the development of a high-grade orogenic belt during the assembly of Rodinia, linking the evolution of the Sandmata Complex to broader Neoproterozoic continental-scale processes.

How to cite: Sahu, M., Dev, A., Naraga, P., and J Kallukalam, T.: Early Neoproterozoic (~0.95–1.0 Ga) HT-HP Metamorphism in the Sandmata Complex and Its Implications for Rodinia Assembly in the Aravalli Craton (NW India), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-408, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-408, 2026.

EGU26-1597 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Water-fluxed melting of an A-type granite associated with shear zones: Insights from the São Pedro da União Migmatite Unit, Brazil 

Edinson Celis, Renato Moraes, Aratz Beranoaguirre, Horst Marschall, and Axel Gerdes

Understanding the role of H2O-fluxed melting in Fe-rich granites is crucial for evaluating their contribution to crustal differentiation. In this study, we examine the São Pedro da União Migmatite Unit (SE Brazil), where a Paleoproterozoic A-type granite was reworked during the Neoproterozoic, as part of the assembly of western Gondwana. New U-Pb and Lu-Hf zircon data indicate that the protolith crystallized at ca. 1.72 Ga, was derived from a quartz-feldspathic continental crustal source, and that magma generation was linked to Statherian continental rifting.

Phase equilibrium modelling suggests subsequent Ediacaran partial melting at ca. 600 Ma, which required an influx of externally derived H2O at 670–720 °C and 1.0 GPa. Despite the extensive anatexis, the migmatite preserves geochemical characteristics of the protolith, including high XFe in peritectic hornblende (hastingsite). The increase in leucosome proportion towards the Jacuí Shear Zone—from stromatic metatexite at the top to homogeneous diatexite at the base—suggests progressively greater H2O availability in a zone of syn-anatectic deformation.

These results reveal that, although A-type granites are typically considered hot and anhydrous, they can undergo significant reworking and generate substantial melt volumes when infiltrated by external H2O. In this scenario, shear zones likely acted as localized pathways for fluid ingress.

How to cite: Celis, E., Moraes, R., Beranoaguirre, A., Marschall, H., and Gerdes, A.: Water-fluxed melting of an A-type granite associated with shear zones: Insights from the São Pedro da União Migmatite Unit, Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1597, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1597, 2026.

EGU26-1902 | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Insights into Mogok Ruby–Sapphire Genesis from U–Pb Geochronology and Trace Elements 

Khin Zaw and Arkar Moe Myint

The Mogok Metamorphic Belt (MMB) consists of an interlayered suite of magmatic and metasedimentary rocks that record metamorphic conditions from low grade to upper amphibolite–granulite facies. Banded gneiss dominates the succession with subordinate quartzite and discontinuous marble layers. The Mogok area in the northern part of the MMB is a renowned gemstone tract notable for its world-class ruby, sapphire, and other gemstones. Marbles are major host rocks for best-quality pigeon blood ruby. The metamorphic rocks are associated with alkaline rocks (mostly sodic nepheline–syenite and syenite–pegmatite) which host exceptionally high-quality, royal blue sapphires. Searle et al. (2020) classified the alkaline host rocks as charnockite–syenite intrusions and identified multiple episodes of syenitic magmatism from the Jurassic to the Oligocene (170–168 Ma, ~68–63 Ma, and 44–21 Ma). U–Pb zircon dating of sapphire-bearing nepheline syenite from the Ondan district, approximately 40 km west of Mogok, yielded an age of 57.81 ± 0.5 Ma (Myo Min, 2016, per. com). U-Pb titanite ages from the ruby-bearing marbles and meta-skarns at Le Oo mine in the Mogok valley are 21 Ma, similar to titanite ages from an adjacent syenite (22 Ma) (Searle et al., 2020). Sutherland et al. (2019) considered that the Mogok rubies were formed at 32.4 Ma (U-Pb age of titanite inclusion in ruby) which is older than the 21 Ma U-Pb titanite age from the ruby-bearing marbles. Hence, the Mogok rubies were considered to have formed around 17-35 Ma. In comparison, the timing of the Mogok sapphires is debatable and not resolved yet (Akar Moe Myint et al., 2025 in press). The sapphires are associated with pegmatitic syenites of the Jurassic to Oligocene (Searle et al., 2020). Arkar Moe Myint et al. (2025, in press) dated zircon inclusions in Baw Mar (Mogok) sapphires using LA–ICP–MS U–Pb geochronology, yielding ages of 54.11 ± 1.6 Ma to 65.39 ± 1.77 Ma, which indicate the timing of sapphire formation in the Baw Mar area of Mogok. Precise LA-ICP-MS analysis of ruby and sapphire from Mook placer and in situ deposits reveal V can exceed 5000 ppm (Khin Zaw et al., 2015). Such values significantly exceed those elsewhere and are focused on a specific area, suggesting a geological control on V-rich ruby and sapphire distribution. These findings highlight vanadium as an important tracer for ruby, with vanadium and associated trace-element patterns, together with age dating, providing robust tools for geographic typing and fingerprinting.

References

Akar Moe Myint et al. 2025 (in press). Gem and Gemology.

Khin Zaw et al. 2015. Mineralium Deposita https://doi.org/10.1007/s00126-014-0545-0.

Searle et al. 2020. Tectonics https://doi.org/10.1029/2019TC005998.

Sutherland et al. 2019. Minerals https://doi.org/10.3390/min9010028.

 

How to cite: Zaw, K. and Moe Myint, A.: Insights into Mogok Ruby–Sapphire Genesis from U–Pb Geochronology and Trace Elements, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1902, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1902, 2026.

EGU26-7039 | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Timescales and petrophysical changes associated with amphibolitization of mafic crust 

Timm John, Saskia Grund, and Johannes Vrijmoed

We explore timescales and petrophysical responses to fluid–rock interaction processes associated with far-field differential stress that promoted mode I fracture opening during the development of E–W-striking shear zones. Our study focuses on a ~100 m-scale shear-zone system developed within the Kråkeneset gabbro (western Norway) during the Caledonian orogeny. Shear-zone formation induced brittle deformation of the gabbro, producing alternating N–S-trending mode I fractures with meter-scale spacing.

Fluid infiltration along these fractures resulted in the formation of decimeter-wide amphibolitized alteration zones, transforming an originally dry gabbro. Under amphibolite-facies conditions (~650 °C, 0.58 GPa), H₂O-rich fluids exploited the newly opened mode I fractures, which acted as efficient fluid pathways. Microstructural observations reveal that amphibolitization reactions preferentially occurred along mafic–felsic grain boundaries. These reactions proceeded via dissolution–precipitation mechanisms, generating transient porosity and thereby enhancing permeability and fluid transport.

In order to reveal chronometric and petrophysical constraints on the amphibolitization process, we applied reactive-transport modeling combined with lithium concentration and isotope data. The modeling results show that fluid and element transport was dominated by advection, whereas diffusion controlled local isotopic equilibration. From a tectonic perspective, the mode I fracture set most likely formed during a single deformation event. Such a brittle response of the gabbro to shear-induced stress buildup at elevated temperatures implies a rapid and sudden mode I fracture development.

Subsequent fluid infiltration was controlled by an externally imposed fluid-pressure gradient, which exerted first-order control on amphibolitization timescales. Modeling results suggest that the transient fluid overpressure at the wall rock interface generated short-lived porosity increases, accelerating hydration reactions. Outcrop observations show reaction zone widths along the mode I fractures clustering around ~30 ±15 centimeters. The wall rock adjacent to the fractures likely exhibited spatial variations in permeability within one order of magnitude prior to fluid infiltration. These pre-existing heterogeneities resulted in the development of reaction zones with variable widths during a single fluid infiltration event.

Modeled reaction-front propagation rates of decimeters to meters per year indicate brief, episodic brittle events that link rapid stress accumulation, fluid pressure relaxation, transient porosity-permeability relations, and metamorphic transformation in the lower crust. Together, these results provide a quantitative framework for understanding fluid-driven metamorphism and transient permeability in deep crustal environments.

How to cite: John, T., Grund, S., and Vrijmoed, J.: Timescales and petrophysical changes associated with amphibolitization of mafic crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7039, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7039, 2026.

EGU26-7128 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Assessing the budget of water-present melting in a heterogeneous continental crust 

Jonas Vanardois and Pierre Lanari

Melt fractions higher than 10 vol.% in meta-igneous rocks are reported from many orogenic belts and commonly exert a strong control on strain localization within the crust. The production of this melt requires the addition of external water to increase the degree of partial melting. One potential source of this water is the subsolidus dehydration of adjacent metasedimentary rocks. To evaluate this hypothesis, we developed a path-dependent, multi-lithology phase equilibrium model that simulates the amount of water released by metasedimentary rocks between their solidus and the orthogneiss solidus. The released water is then transferred as external fluid influx to the orthogneiss and the resulting melt fractions simulated. We applied this model to ten prograde pressure–temperature (P–T) paths using metapelite–orthogneiss and metagraywacke–orthogneiss associations.

Our results show that metasedimentary rocks release less than 1.0 mol% H₂O, mainly through the breakdown of staurolite and paragonite, with minor contributions from muscovite and biotite consumption. Despite these limited quantities, the water significantly enhances melt fractions in orthogneiss by several percent, making orthogneiss the most melt-fertile lithology along most prograde paths at temperatures below 750 °C. If orthogneiss constitutes half or less of the crust, the melt fractions generated are sufficient to substantially weaken it and localize deformation. We propose that such strain localization may promote the development of preferential pathways for further fluid influx, thereby enhancing partial melting in meta-igneous rocks and establishing a positive feedback mechanism. These results indicate that this process is likely to operate along most prograde P–T paths in orogenic crusts composed of metasedimentary rocks and orthogneisses.

How to cite: Vanardois, J. and Lanari, P.: Assessing the budget of water-present melting in a heterogeneous continental crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7128, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7128, 2026.

EGU26-12621 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Constraining timescales of fluid-driven metamorphic rock transformation at a subduction interface using THMC modeling combined with Mg isotope diffusion chronometry 

Boris Antonenko, Timm John, Besim Dragovic, Emmanuel Codillo, Marco Scambelluri, and Johannes Vrijmoed

The plate interface at subduction zones represents one of Earth’s most dynamic environments in terms of deformation, metamorphism, and chemical exchange. The efficiency with which these processes affect rocks at the interface is strongly controlled by the presence of fluids. Accordingly, quantifying the rates of fluid–rock interaction is essential for understanding the pressure–temperature–deformation (P–T–d) evolution of rocks at plate interfaces.

In this study, we investigate a metasomatic reaction zone developed along the tectonic contact between serpentinite and metagabbro in the Voltri Massif (Ligurian Alps, Italy) under high-pressure conditions. The hydrated mantle-derived rocks were juxtaposed with the mafic oceanic crust at lower temperatures prior to the metasomatic process. A temperature increase led to dehydration of both lithologies, the serpentinite and the metagabbro, both of which liberated different amounts of aqueous fluids with very distinct fluid chemistries. This setting enabled Mg-rich fluids derived from serpentinite to infiltrate the adjacent mafic crust, triggering extensive metasomatic transformation. The aim of this study is to constrain the timescale of rock transformation and to explore the evolution of porosity and permeability within the modified system.

Our approach integrates a fully coupled Thermo–Hydro–Mechanical–Chemical (THMC) reactive transport model with thermodynamic phase equilibria calculations and diffusion chronometry. Phase equilibria calculations, validated by observed mineral assemblages, modal abundances, and mineral chemistry, are used to constrain the pressure–temperature conditions of the reaction zone formation. The estimated conditions correspond to pressures of 1.6 ±0.1 GPa and temperatures of 600 ±20 °C, with the maximum temperature being constrained by the serpentinite stability field. The profile across the reaction zone displays a continuous gradient in bulk MgO concentration from serpentinite (~40 wt.%) to metagabbro (~5 wt.%). This gradient is accompanied by a systematic Mg isotope fractionation, with δ²⁶Mg values decreasing from +0.09‰ in serpentinite to −1.1‰ within the reaction zone and an increase to −0.1‰ towards the least affected metagabbro. Such an Mg isotope profile indicates kinetic fractionation during Mg diffusion and provides the basis for Mg isotope diffusion chronometry.

Our THMC model results reproduce the observed major-element and isotopic profiles and suggest transient porosity generation localized at the reaction front. Calculated Peclet numbers (~0.01–0.1) indicate diffusion-dominated mass transport, with a minor advective component. The chronometric results of the modeling constrain the duration of metasomatic transformation to 10³–10⁴ years, highlighting the rapid nature of fluid-mediated processes at the subduction interface. This study shows how integrating diffusion chronometry with phase equilibria and reactive transport modeling helps bridge small-scale metamorphic processes and larger-scale subduction dynamics.

How to cite: Antonenko, B., John, T., Dragovic, B., Codillo, E., Scambelluri, M., and Vrijmoed, J.: Constraining timescales of fluid-driven metamorphic rock transformation at a subduction interface using THMC modeling combined with Mg isotope diffusion chronometry, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12621, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12621, 2026.

This study presents the first detailed investigation of garnet–scapolite-bearing calc-silicate rocks from the Pur–Banera Belt (PBB) in the Bhilwara region (NW India). These rocks preserve three stages of deformation (S1, S2, and S3) and typically comprise garnet + clinopyroxene + amphibole + biotite + calcite + scapolite bearing assemblages. T–XCO2 phase equilibrium modelling was carried out in MnO–Na2O–CaO–K2O–FeO–MgO–Al2O3–SiO2–TiO2–H2O–CO2 (MnNCKFMASTHc) to investigate the mineral paragenesis during metamorphic evolution of calc-silicates. The integration of petrological and phase equilibrium modelling results reveals that the calc-silicate rocks experienced prograde metamorphism from greenschist to upper-amphibolite facies conditions (~515–694 °C, ~9 kbar). Garnet compositional zoning, mineral inclusion patterns and trace element distributions collectively record a sequence of fluid-mediated reactions and episodic mineral growth under varying P–T–XCO2 conditions as observed from phase equilibria modelling. A comparison between observed and modelled mineral proportions, coupled with the presence of disequilibrium textures, indicates that externally derived fluids with significant hydrous infiltration would have controlled mineral growth in the PBB calc-silicates. U–Pb geochronology of inclusion-type titanite constrains peak metamorphism at ~1280 ± 4 Ma, corresponding to the D1–D2 deformation. In contrast, the recrystallized titanite, occurring along the matrix grain margins yielded the timing of retrograde re-equilibration at ~953 ± 7 Ma, which was synchronous with the D3 deformation. Overall, these results highlight the critical role of externally buffered fluids in driving mineral reactions and geochemical redistribution during the metamorphic evolution of the PBB, linked to basin closure, crustal thickening, and subsequent exhumation associated with the assembly of the Rodinia supercontinent.

How to cite: Praharaj, P. and Naraga, P.: Tectono-metamorphic evolution of garnet–scapolite-bearing calc-silicate rocks from the Pur-Banera Belt, Aravalli orogen (NW India) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13547, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13547, 2026.

EGU26-14631 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Thermobarometry and geochronology of the Himachal Himalaya, NW India: Inverted metamorphism along the Sutlej and Pabbar Valleys 

Alexus Wuertemburg, Matthew J. Kohn, Delores M. Robinson, Stacey L. Corrie, and Sean P. Long

Understanding the spatial distributions of peak metamorphic P-T-t conditions helps constrain models of orogenesis. In this study, we quantified P-T conditions in Himachal Pradesh in the NW Indian Himalaya, along the Sutlej River valley and nearby Pabbar valley. From structurally lowest to highest, these rocks consist of the Lesser Himalayan Sequence (LHS), the Munsiari Sequence (MS), the Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS), and the Tethyan Himalayan Sequence (THS). The Munsiari thrust (MT) emplaces MS over LHS, while the Main Central thrust (MCT) emplaces GHS locally over MS or LHS. In areas along strike, the South Tibetan detachment system (STDS) drops the THS down onto GHS, but the STDS is not noticeably exposed along the Sutlej or Pabbar valleys.

In this study, we calculated P-T conditions using garnet-biotite thermometry and garnet-plagioclase barometry from the upper ~1 km thickness of the MS, through the GHS (~10 km), and into the basal ~9 km of the THS. P-T conditions increase abruptly at the MCT, from ~600 °C and ~9 kbar in the upper MS to ~750 °C and ~12 kbar in the lower 2 km of the GHS (c. 100 °C/km; 1 kbar/km). P-T conditions then increase to ~800 °C and ~14 kbar in the middle of the GHS (c. 15 °C/km; ~0.5 kbar/km), and then decrease consistently to ~500 °C and ~5 kbar in the highest level of the THS analyzed (c. 25 °C/km; 0.75 kbar/km). Upper GHS and THS data are sparsely distributed, so we cannot rule out a metamorphic discontinuity across the STDS. However, our data are equally consistent with flattening strain distributed through the upper GHS and lower THS without a distinct STDS, unlike all other transects in the Himalaya farther east for >1500 km. Previously published U-Pb titanite ages from the THS indicate peak metamorphism until ~22 Ma, while new zircon ages from a GHS migmatite indicate rapid cooling since ~21 Ma, similar to many transects to the east. Additional geochronology is needed to delineate prograde and high-temperature cooling patterns across the GHS and THS.

 

How to cite: Wuertemburg, A., Kohn, M. J., Robinson, D. M., Corrie, S. L., and Long, S. P.: Thermobarometry and geochronology of the Himachal Himalaya, NW India: Inverted metamorphism along the Sutlej and Pabbar Valleys, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14631, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14631, 2026.

EGU26-16538 | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Mid-crustal emplacement of the northern Kunene Complex massif-type anorthosite revealed by monazite petrochronology and phase equilibria modelling 

Jeremie Lehmann, Neeraj Kumar Sharma, Jimi Vila, Trishya M. Owen-Smith, Georgy Belyanin, Grant M. Bybee, Robyn J. MacRoberts, Ezequiel Ferreira, Lorenzo Milani, Ben Hayes, and Marlina A. Elburg

Massif-type anorthosites are one of the few rock-types on Earth that are restricted in time, occurring exclusively in the Proterozoic Eon. Understanding their unique quasi-monomineralic composition and temporal restrictions challenges current petrological and geodynamic models. It is generally accepted that mechanical accumulation of plagioclase from basaltic precursors begins at the Moho, but details regarding the crystallinity of ascending plagioclase-rich magmas and final level of emplacement remain uncertain. A major challenge is estimating the pressure conditions at which anorthosite is emplaced due to the absence of necessary phases. This uncertainty is particularly evident in the Kunene Complex (KC), the largest Proterozoic massif-type anorthosite on Earth (1.50-1.36 Ga), where pyroxene and amphibole thermobarometry suggest that the southern segment was emplaced at 7-9 kbar and the northern segment at 3-5 kbar. It is unclear if these differences are geological and/or methodological.

An alternative approach for determining emplacement depth of magmatic bodies involves examining the metamorphic conditions of magma-host rock interaction in the contact metamorphic aureoles. In this study, we focus on Paleoproterozoic (1.88-1.82 Ga) nebulite and stromatite migmatitic supracrustal rocks located at the margin of the northern KC anorthosite pluton (1.384-1.375 Ga). The stromatic foliation dips towards the pluton and is characterised by leucosomes of quartz, K-feldspar, plagioclase, cordierite, garnet, and sillimanite, while the mesosome is richer in cordierite, garnet and biotite. The presence of common, transgressive, and discontinuous nebulitic migmatite of similar mineralogy and in gradational contact with the stromatite attests to the segregation of partial melt outlasting the formation of the stromatic foliation. Mineral equilibria modelling indicates that the migmatite formed at P-T conditions of 4 kbar and 730°C.

In-situ monazite ages in nebulite as well as leucosome and mesosome of the stromatite span 500 million years, from 1.8 to 1.3 Ga. Two combined textural and chemical domains have been identified in monazite, helping to categorise the age data. Domain 1 shows embayed and cuspate BSE-dark grey areas and is Y-rich, has variable Eu/Eu* and Sr content, low Th/U and is typically found in monazite cores. Domain 2 is more common and shows BSE-bright rims or convex-inward mantles around Domain 1 or can encompass the entire grain, and has consistently low Y, Eu/Eu* and Sr content, and higher Th/U. U-Pb ages for Domain 1 cluster at 1.80-1.77 Ga, interpreted as the age of a prograde event, preceding the growth of peritectic garnet and cordierite. U-Pb ages for Domain 2 cluster at 1.41-1.36 Ga and correspond to the co-crystallisation of monazite, feldspar and garnet during the migmatitic event constrained at 4 kbar and 730°C. The age of Domain 2 monazite coincides with the emplacement of the northern KC anorthosite pluton.

Altogether, the fabric analysis, migmatitic metamorphic assemblage, and coeval age of Domain 2 monazite and KC anorthosite indicate that the emplacement of anorthosite caused significant heating, melting and hypersolidus ductile flow of the contact aureole at metamorphic pressures equivalent to a mid-crustal depth of ~15 km. Consequently, this study offers new insights into the length scale of ascent and emplacement levels of massif-type anorthosite magmas.

How to cite: Lehmann, J., Sharma, N. K., Vila, J., Owen-Smith, T. M., Belyanin, G., Bybee, G. M., MacRoberts, R. J., Ferreira, E., Milani, L., Hayes, B., and Elburg, M. A.: Mid-crustal emplacement of the northern Kunene Complex massif-type anorthosite revealed by monazite petrochronology and phase equilibria modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16538, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16538, 2026.

EGU26-17222 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Reconstruction of metamorphic gradients and thinning in the lower continental crust 

Luca Pacchiega, Sarah Degen, Alexia Secrétan, Kim Lemke, Ankan Bhattacharyya, Zheng Luo, Alina Hofer, Sarah Kurzen, György Hetényi, Othmar Müntener, Jörg Hermann, and Daniela Rubatto

Lower crustal terranes exposed at the Earth’s surface offer unique insights into the metamorphic conditions prevailing in the deep crust and at the crust-mantle boundary. In particular, the reconstruction of time-resolved pressure-temperature (P-T) gradients across terranes is essential for characterizing different tectonic settings and heat sources during metamorphism, with direct geodynamic implications. Additionally, physicochemical gradients along depth, such as variations in bulk rock composition and density, are also fundamental parameters intrinsically linked to crustal formation and evolution. However, a quantitative understanding of the deep Earth is strongly limited by the incomplete mineral record and inherent uncertainties in thermobarometry estimates. In practice, a standard approach involves sampling along a field gradient to retrieve punctual pressure-temperature-time information.

This contribution presents a natural case study of a lower continental crustal section, the Ivrea Verbano Zone (IVZ), northern Italy, where a metamorphic field gradient from amphibolite to granulite facies is exposed along the Ossola Valley. U-Pb dating of zircon from different lithologies and crustal depths constrains the high-temperature history and associated melting between 285–260 Ma. Multiple thermobarometers have been applied on mafic and felsic rocks along the section, including thermodynamic phase equilibria modelling and Zr-in-rutile thermometry. The Zr-in-garnet temperature dependence was also applied as a thermometer, revealing good agreement with Zr-in-rutile temperatures and successfully retaining peak temperatures in granulite facies metasedimentary rocks. The metamorphic gradient continuously evolves from ~ 5 kbar, 600 °C to 11 kbar, 1000 °C, and defines a present-day geobaric gradient of ~0.79 kbar/km, significantly higher than what is expected in a steady-state lower crust (0.28-0.3 kbar/km). Paleodepth reconstructions based on barometry and measured densities reveal that the lower crustal section experienced significant degrees of thinning (thinning factor β ~2.7). This result indicates that syn-to-post metamorphic extension has led to the modification of the geobaric gradient. Furthermore, it complements previous studies from the region, indicating that there is a lateral gradient in β along the axis of the current IVZ.

Lithological proportions and associated measured bulk rock compositions continuously evolve upgrade and define two distinct crustal endmembers. The amphibolite facies lower crust is volumetrically dominated by felsic metasediments and compositionally resembles typical upper continental crust, relatively enriched in heat producing elements. In contrast, the granulite facies lower crust is dominated by mafic lithologies, and its composition more closely resembles typical lower continental crust (Rudnick and Gao, 2014). Measured densities show significant variabilities (± 250 kg/m3, 2SD) within both felsic and mafic lithologies, with a linear increase from ~ 2750 to 3150 kg/m3 at the base of the section. Overall, our results reveal that the change in lithological proportions with paleodepth and high-temperature metamorphism play a primary role in controlling the physicochemical properties of the lower continental crust and its evolution.

How to cite: Pacchiega, L., Degen, S., Secrétan, A., Lemke, K., Bhattacharyya, A., Luo, Z., Hofer, A., Kurzen, S., Hetényi, G., Müntener, O., Hermann, J., and Rubatto, D.: Reconstruction of metamorphic gradients and thinning in the lower continental crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17222, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17222, 2026.

EGU26-17518 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

Ultra-high Temperature (UHT) Metamorphism in the Momeik Area, Mogok Metamorphic Belt, Myanmar 

Khaing Nyein Htay, Yasuhito Osanai, Lin Thu Aung, Nobuhiko Nakano, and Tatsuro Adachi

Although numerous studies have been conducted along the Mogok Metamorphic Belt (MMB), granulite facies and ultrahigh temperature (UHT) metamorphism have only been inferred in parts of the belt. This study documents typical UHT metamorphism in Momeik area, northeastern MMB, and its associated diagnostic mineral assemblages: (1) the Spl + Qz assemblage in khondalite (medium-grained garnet-sillimanite gneiss) formed by the reaction Grt + Sil = Spl + Qz, in which a partition coefficient between Grt and Spl shows 0.02 as quite good equivalent with the experimental result of Bohlen et al. (1986), and (2) Grt + Opx + Crd + Sil assemblage in sillimanite-garnet-orthopyroxene-cordierite granulite (GOC granulite) from melanosome layer intercalated with heterogeneous stromatic metatexite migmatite. The GOC granulite is very coarse- grained rocks in which garnet formed during prograde metamorphism through reactions involving Sil+Qz+Bt. At peak UHT metamorphism, Opx developed via biotite dehydration melting under strongly anhydrous conditions. During subsequent decompression, garnet became unstable and was replaced by symplectitic coronas composed of Opx, Crd, and Spl. The mineral assemblages and reaction textures surrounding garnet record multiple stages of deformation and metamorphism.

Mineral chemical characteristics, including Fe-rich garnet, Opx-Crd, Crd-Spl and Opx-Spl symplectites, Grt-Qz reaction textures, and high XFe values (up to 0.17) in residual F-rich biotite, indicate consistent peak UHT metamorphic conditions of ~6.5 ± 1.5 kbar and 900-1000℃. LA-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon data show detrital age populations of ~60-3100 Ma in khondalite, with metamorphic zircon growth at 26.56 ± 0.76 Ma, whereas GOC granulite record zircon ages of ~30-40 Ma. These results constrain Late Eocene to Early Oligocene prograde burial metamorphism in the Momeik area, subsequently overprinted by localized Oligocene UHT metamorphism during decompression and ductile extension, synchronous with collision-induced extrusion and slab-remnant thermal input during Indian-Asian collision.

Key words: Momeik; ultra-high-temperature metamorphism (UHT); Khondalite (garnet-sillimanite gneiss); sillimanite-garnet-orthopyroxene-cordierite granulite (GOC granulite); reaction textures

How to cite: Htay, K. N., Osanai, Y., Aung, L. T., Nakano, N., and Adachi, T.: Ultra-high Temperature (UHT) Metamorphism in the Momeik Area, Mogok Metamorphic Belt, Myanmar, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17518, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17518, 2026.

EGU26-20881 | Posters on site | GMPV4.1

New U-Pb zircon and monazite ages on Ordovician magmatism and migmatization in the Paleozoic basement of the Eastern Alps (Ötztal Nappe, N Italy) 

Stefano Zanchetta, Silvia Favaro, Luca Toffolo, Luca Minopoli, Stefano Piccin, Stefano Poli, and Simone Tumiati

The Austroalpine Domain in the Eastern Alps consists of Mesozoic (meta)sedimentary cover units and polymetamorphic crystalline basements. The latter were heterogeneously overprinted by the Alpine metamorphism, with some of them still preserving traces of their Paleozoic magmatic and metamorphic evolution. One of the most prominent examples is the Ötztal–Stubai Complex, which extends over approximately 50 × 20 km across northern Italy and western Austria. Despite this complex experienced extensive Variscan high- to medium-grade metamorphism, some relicts of older events related to previous orogenies (i.e. Cadomian) are still preserved. As such, it represents a key natural archive for reconstructing the Paleozoic evolution of the Austroalpine Domain.

Within this regional framework, a small area of about 25 km² near Reschen Pass (South Tyrol, NE Italy) is of particular interest, as it hosts potential pre-Variscan geological features that escaped younger metamorphism and deformation. These include the Klopaier Pluton, its contact metamorphic aureole, and associated migmatites, all enclosed within country gneiss characterized by Variscan mineral assemblages and fabrics. The coexistence of these elements offers is key to investigate the timing and relationships between magmatism, metamorphism, and deformation during the early Paleozoic.

New detailed field mapping indicates that the Klopaier Pluton is largely undeformed, locally behaving as a rigid body and locally preserving primary intrusive contacts. Relicts of cordierite-bearing assemblages are locally found at the pluton margins and may represent remnants of a contact metamorphic aureole. The surrounding migmatites, predominantly metatexites, are interpreted as the result of syn-intrusion partial melting of the host rocks, later affected by Variscan metamorphism. Pegmatitic dikes are widespread both within the pluton and in the surrounding country rocks. These dikes are likely related to highly evolved fluid-rich melts derived from the main body of the Klopaier Pluton and have previously yielded U–Pb ages between ca. 490 and 413 Ma. These ages suggest that the observed structural configuration was already established during the Ordovician. New U–Pb zircon dating of the Klopaier Tonalite constrains its emplacement to approximately 460 Ma, in good agreement with the ages obtained from the associated pegmatites.

Despite these constraints, the relative timing of pluton emplacement and migmatite formation remains unresolved, posing a classic geological “chicken-or-egg” problem: did the pluton intrude into pre-existing, already cooled migmatites, or did its emplacement and associated heat supply trigger partial melting in the surrounding rocks? To address this question, new U–Pb zircon and monazite ages from the migmatites, combined with their geochemical characterization, indicate crystallization and melt-related processes between ca. 460 and 450 Ma. These new data provide crucial constraints on the early Paleozoic tectonometamorphic evolution of the Austroalpine Domain and contribute to a better understanding of pre-Alpine crustal processes in the Eastern Alps.

How to cite: Zanchetta, S., Favaro, S., Toffolo, L., Minopoli, L., Piccin, S., Poli, S., and Tumiati, S.: New U-Pb zircon and monazite ages on Ordovician magmatism and migmatization in the Paleozoic basement of the Eastern Alps (Ötztal Nappe, N Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20881, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20881, 2026.

EGU26-368 | Orals | GMPV5.2

Mineralization Characteristics and Prospecting Potential of Potash in the Qaidam Basin,Qinghai Province, China 

Tong Pan, chuanbao Zhu, jinming zhang, shaodong zhang, and xiaoning chen

 

Abstact:The Qaidam Basin is a large-scale Cenozoic intermontane closed fault-depression basin in the northern part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Controlled by the plateau uplift and the dry-cold, cool-humid, dry-cold climatic cycles, it has formed lithium-rich salt lakes through arid evaporation and concentration, and possesses favorable conditions for salt formation in "high mountain and deep basin" settings.

In terms of geological background, the basin is an irregular rhomboidal water-collecting graben basin extending in the NW-SE direction, covering an area of approximately 255,000 km², with 12 types of proven minerals. Regarding spatiotemporal distribution, halite and gypsum are present in the Shizuigou structural area during the Oligocene; potassium-rich deep brines developed in areas such as Nanyishan during the Pliocene; and thenardite, halite, and potassium-magnesium salts formed in the Early Pleistocene.  

In terms of mineralization units and mineral resources, the formation of the basin can be traced back to the Mesozoic Era, and it is currently divided into 5 mineralization units (e.g., the Boron-Potassium-Magnesium Salt-Oil Fault Step Zone in the Northern Margin of Qaidam). There are 33 salt lakes of varying sizes in the basin, with key development areas including Chahan, East and West Taijinar-Yiliping. The cumulative proven salt lake resources amount to approximately 400 billion tons, and 55 ore deposits (31 of which are large-scale or above) have been discovered, involving 12 types of minerals such as lithium (brine), strontium, and potash. A mineralization model has also been established.

The division of mineralization series adheres to the principles of sedimentary basin evolution, geological process correlation, and reflection of the latest exploration results. Two mineralization series and 5 sub-series have been identified, including the Paleogene-Neogene potassium-lithium-boron-strontium-gypsum ore deposit series related to deep fluid and sedimentary superposition, and the Quaternary potassium-sodium-magnesium-lithium-boron-strontium-halite-trona and clay-lithium ore deposit series related to sedimentation.

The conclusions point out that 55 ore deposits and 12 types of minerals have been discovered in the basin; the piedmont glutenite-type potassium-rich deep brines and the mid-western anticline zone fracture-cave-type lithium-rich deep brines have huge reserves and are key breakthrough areas for ore prospecting; the first division of 2 mineralization series and 5 sub-series has improved the mineralization theory and provided guidance for subsequent exploration.

KeywordsQaidam Basin; Potash; Mineralization Characteristics;Prospecting Potential;  Salt Lakes

How to cite: Pan, T., Zhu, C., zhang, J., zhang, S., and chen, X.: Mineralization Characteristics and Prospecting Potential of Potash in the Qaidam Basin,Qinghai Province, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-368, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-368, 2026.

EGU26-581 | ECS | Orals | GMPV5.2

Magmatic to Hydrothermal Evolution: Insights from Savage River Magnetite Deposit, Tasmania, Australia 

Pratichee Mondal, Owen P Missen, Lejun Zhang, Julie Hunt, Alexey Lygin, Mohammadbagher Fathi, Ivan Belousov, and Roger Hill

Savage River is one of the largest iron ore deposits in Australia, yet its genetic classification remains debated. It occurs in the Proterozoic Arthur Metamorphic Complex in northwest Tasmania. Mineralisation dominantly consists of magnetite – an important petrogenetic indicator used for a wide array of applications. This research presents the first study of the paragenesis and composition of magnetite from Savage River, integrating field observations, core logging, petrography, micro-texture and geochemistry. Results indicate four distinct generations of magnetite that give insights into the ore-forming history. Analysis of the results and comparison to published data suggest an iron oxide-apatite (IOA) type genetic affinity for Savage River. Testing was carried out on 40 samples collected from two drill holes in the North Pit of the deposit. Graphic core logging, hyperspectral logging, magnetic susceptibility, backscattered electron imaging (BSE) and automated mineralogy data were used to: (1) identify different magnetite generations based on texture and cross-cutting relationships; (2) differentiate lithologies and host rocks; and (3) understand associated alteration minerals. Trace elements of the four identified magnetite generations were measured using laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). Magnetite I is massive to semi-massive, with well-developed ulvöspinel/ilmenite exsolution lamellae and it is highly fractured and inclusion poor, with highest Ti (< 1 wt%), V (up to 0.8 wt%) and lowest Ni (up to 378 ppm) concentrations. These characteristics record high-temperature magmatic crystallisation and rapid cooling and represent the earliest iron enrichment in the system. Magnetite II forms euhedral to subhedral grains and show moderately reduced Ti (up to 670 ppm), V (up to 4000 ppm), and increased Ni (up to 637 ppm) contents. Magnetite II partially overgrows Magnetite I, indicating precipitation during an early hydrothermal overprint, marking a transition from magmatic to magmatic–hydrothermal fluid regimes. Magnetite III occurs as subhedral to anhedral grains that are inclusion rich, highly porous, and mostly have hematite replacement on the rims. Its low Ti (up to 670 ppm) and V (up to 234 ppm), elevated Ni (727 ppm), and strongly depleted Cr (up to 0.6 ppm) trace-element signature indicate extensive re-equilibration with evolving lower-temperature fluids. This generation is interpreted to correspond to a major hydrothermal alteration phase involving fluid rock reaction with mafic host rocks. Magnetite IV occurs as fine disseminated subhedral to anhedral grains that are comparatively pristine, and inclusion poor. It exhibits the lowest Ti (up to 426 ppm), V (up to 3000 ppm), and the highest Ni (up to 899 ppm) concentrations, consistent with its precipitation from a highly evolved, oxidised hydrothermal fluid. In addition to Ti and V, other discriminatory trace element (like Mn, Ga, Cr) systematics define a clear vector from high temperature magmatic to low temperature hydrothermal conditions accompanied by increasing oxygen fugacity. Comparisons of Savage River magnetite with magnetite from other deposit types shows the most similarities in texture and magnetite chemistry to those of IOA-type deposits. Collectively, these findings suggest that the four magnetite generations at Savage River deposit record a complete magmatic to hydrothermal continuum.

How to cite: Mondal, P., Missen, O. P., Zhang, L., Hunt, J., Lygin, A., Fathi, M., Belousov, I., and Hill, R.: Magmatic to Hydrothermal Evolution: Insights from Savage River Magnetite Deposit, Tasmania, Australia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-581, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-581, 2026.

The Arabian Nubian Shield is a massive juvenile accretionary orogenic belt formed due to the assembly of Gondwana. It is exposed along the margins of the Red Sea and hosts hundreds of gold prospects as well as a limited number of operating gold mines. Until recently, the widespread occurrence of gold across the shield was thought to be exclusively the result of Neoproterozoic Gondwanan tectonics and related ore-forming processes. This proposal suggests that the shield contains gold mainly in older volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposits and younger orogenic gold deposits. This widely accepted proposal complies with the geological history of the shield, but it remains unproven, given that most prospects are still understudied, with only a handful having ore-stage geochronological constraints.

The Hamama polymetallic gold prospect in Egypt hosts a Zn-Pb rich stratabound ore with inferred gold and silver resources of 230 koz and 7836 koz, respectively. The prospect area is mainly covered by submarine metavolcanics-metavolcaniclastics assemblage, and the ore has been long classified as a syngenetic Au-bearing VMS based on the general geologic setting and old literature data. Interestingly, modern exploration activities confirmed the absence of massive sulfide lenses at depth and elucidated that the ore in Hamama is hosted exclusively in an oxidized horizon composed essentially of  carbonates, silica and barite. The oxidized gossan cap extends between the metavolcanics-metavolcaniclastics for 3.2 km in a NE-ENE direction. Boreholes penetrate the oxidized cap usually to ~30 m depth, beneath which the unoxidized host rock occurs. The mineralized host, as whole, is intersected in the boreholes at an average depth of 120 m. It is intensely brecciated and fractured, and has been previously described as an exhalite or a carbonatized felsic volcanic rock.

Our detailed petrographic study on deep drill cores retrieved from two representative diamond drillholes supported by frequent field campaigns reveals that the mineralized horizon is a dolomitic formation representing the base of the sedimentary cover in the region, which is reported for the first time in this study. Based on its fossil content and local paleogeography, we reinterpret this ore-bearing formation as a part of the Late Cenomanian-Early Turonian carbonate platform of NE Africa deposited in a paleovalley between the Neoproterozoic basement. The structural complexity of the shield, the thick oxidized cap, and the diagenetic and hydrothermal processes played a major role in the previous misinterpretation of the host rock. This finding refutes the Neoproterozoic VMS deposit model in Hamama area and introduces a new sedimentary formation of economic potential to the Egyptian stratigraphic sequence, which we call Abu Garida dolostone. As a starting point, this study provides the first evidence for the presence of significant Late Phanerozoic gold inside the shield. Finally, this interesting case study elucidates that the history of gold precipitation across the shield is more complex than previously thought.

How to cite: E. Morad, A. and Wagner, T.: Hamama polymetallic Au prospect in the Egyptian part of the Arabian Nubian Shield: How a single occurrence can improve the knowledge of a gigantic metallogenic province., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-653, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-653, 2026.

The previously mined Viscaria Cu-Fe deposit consists of three stratabound orebodies, named the A, B and D zone. Historic copper mining focused on the highest-grade A zone. Sulfide mineralization is distributed within several ore zones of a 1 km thick sequence of steeply tilted volcano-sedimentary Paleoproterozoic greenstones. The deposit was originally interpreted as a syngenetic exhalative deposit, which was partially enriched and altered during subsequent footwall alteration (Martinsson, 1997). Recent exploration with deep drilling by Gruvaktiebolaget Viscaria AB was undertaken with the purpose of restarting copper production and unlocking the exploration potential of the broader mineral system. This work has shone a new light on the deposit by redefining the spatial relations of the alteration zones and uncovering new mineralized lenses at depth, including a mineralized body between the A and B zone, aptly named the ABBA zone. In combination with the proximity to the world-class Kiirunavaara Fe deposit, and its location within a broader metasomatic iron alkali-calcic (MIAC) mineral province, the Viscaria Cu deposit has been reinterpreted by some as an epigenetic IOCG-style deposit (Imaña et al., 2023).

This study investigated the recently discovered ABBA zone to chime in on this ongoing debate. The evolution of the mineral system was first constrained through detailed study of drill core, petrography, mineral geochemistry and lithogeochemistry. These results provided the boundaries in which the geochemical modelling work was fitted by first constructing a detailed mineral paragenesis and conceptual fluid evolution model. Alteration zones in and around the ABBA zone are dominantly replacive, developing into more vein-hosted mineral assemblages over time. The replacive alteration assemblages are well-suited to geochemical modelling, as they indicate pervasive fluid-rock interaction.

Geochemical modelling was performed using the Gibbs Energy Minimization Selektor (GEMS) code package with the MINES 2023 thermodynamic database. A combination of titration, flush and flow-through model set-ups were used to constrain both the influence of the fluid-rock ratio and fluid evolution through fluid-rock interaction. Physiochemical fluid conditions were derived from previous work on the Viscaria deposit, from regionally similar deposits and further constrained by equilibrium with the Viscaria alteration assemblage. The influence on alteration of the diverse volcano-sedimentary host rock sequence, consisting of black schists, basic tuffs and carbonates, was tested. Geochemical fluid-rock interaction modelling shed light on some key ingredients of the Viscaria Cu-Fe mineral system, including host rock composition, physiochemical fluid characteristics, fluid-rock ratios and fluid evolution. The results of this study support an epigenetic origin by fluid-rock interaction with MIAC-style fluids for the Viscaria Cu-Fe deposit.

How to cite: Hegeman, P. and Imaña, M.: Fluid-rock interaction constraints from geochemical modelling of the mineral paragenesis and system of the Viscaria Cu-Fe deposit, Kiruna district, Northern Sweden, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1189, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1189, 2026.

EGU26-1472 | Orals | GMPV5.2

Evidence of multi-stage orogenic gold mineralization at the Bonnefond deposit, Val-d’Or, Québec 

Crystal LaFlamme, François-Xavier Bonin, Georges Beaudoin, Bertrand Rottier, Chris McFarlane, and Laure Martin

A significant part of gold production in Canada is associated with orogenic-style quartz veins. However, some critical parameters – the timing of mineralization, the source and transport of gold, and the gold precipitating mechanisms – remain enigmatic in several districts. The Bonnefond deposit, located in the southeastern Abitibi Subprovince, Québec, is part of the world-class Val-d’Or vein field (VVF). Gold mineralization is associated with pyrite in quartz-tourmaline-carbonate (QTC) veins that cut a subvertical tonalitic plug. Near-infrared imaging and trace element mapping of this Au-bearing pyrite show complex chemical zoning. An inclusion-richer core (Py1) is overgrown by a euhedral, oscillatory-zoned domain (Py2). A sharp front delineates a final pyrite generation (Py3), barren of gold. Highest trace element contents are recorded in Py1 (Co ~ 2000 ppm, Ni ~ 1500 ppm, As < 60 ppm) whereas Py2 displays lower contents (Co < 1750 ppm, Ni < 1000 ppm, As < 50 ppm). The Py1 shows δ34S = -7.7‰ to -2.2‰ and Δ33S = -0.04‰ to 0.04‰; Py2 displays δ34S = -4.7‰ to 4.0‰ and Δ33S = -0.15‰ to 0.08‰; and Py3 shows δ34S = -1.6‰ to 4.7‰ and Δ33S = -0.06‰ to 0.03‰. Gold is found as Au ± Te inclusions in Py2 (Au1), as trapped inclusions at Py2-Py3 border (Au2), and at pyrite margins and in microfractures (Au3). Trace element contents and multiple S isotopes suggest that fluid-rock interactions drove a coupled fO2, fS2, and fTe2 decrease in the auriferous fluid which precipitated Au1. The dissolution-reprecipitation (DR) textures and the multiple S isotopes suggest that pyrite DR triggered gold remobilization (Au2). In situ U-Pb xenotime geochronology yields a QTC mineralization age of ca. 2663 Ma whereas a ca. 2608 Ma age indicates gold remobilization. The proposed multi-stage mineralizing process supports recent studies in the VVF, suggesting that fluid-rock interactions and gold remobilization via DR are key mechanisms to orogenic gold mineralization.

How to cite: LaFlamme, C., Bonin, F.-X., Beaudoin, G., Rottier, B., McFarlane, C., and Martin, L.: Evidence of multi-stage orogenic gold mineralization at the Bonnefond deposit, Val-d’Or, Québec, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1472, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1472, 2026.

EGU26-1606 | ECS | Orals | GMPV5.2

Quantification of mass transfer during fluid-rock interaction at the Jahaz uranium deposit, North Delhi Fold Belt, India 

Priyanka Mishra, Rajagopal Krishnamurthi, Ambika Prasad Kushwaha, and Panneerselvam Jagadeesan

The Jahaz area belongs to the Mesoproterozoic metamorphic rocks of the North Delhi Fold Belt, India, and is composed of garnetiferous quartz biotite schist (GQBS), amphibolite, graphite schist, and quartzite (Jain et al., 2016). It lies within the well-known Na-metasomatic uranium deposits along the “albitite line” of the Khetri Belt, Rajasthan (Ray, 1987). This work involves the whole-rock geochemical analysis of major, trace, and rare-earth elements in less to moderately altered (LTMA) and albitized host rocks, using XRF and ICP-MS. The alteration box plot and isocon analyses were attempted to quantify the exchange of chemical components during fluid-rock interaction. The alteration box plot corroborated the intensity of alterations such as albitization, chloritization, calcitization, actinolitization, sericitization, and linked to the Na-K-Ca-Mg metasomatism, which was responsible for the formation of various altered minerals in the metasomatic rocks (Mishra et al., 2022). The correlation coefficient plots indicated that elements such as Zr, Nb, Hf, and Tiwere less mobile during fluid-rock interaction. Isocon analysis supports the enrichment a positive correlation exists between U and Na, Mo, Cu, Th, Zr, LOI, and LREEs in the zones of intense rock alteration (Grant, 2005). The low Th/U ratio of albitized GQBS indicates that the albitized rocks are significantly enriched in uranium. Therefore, uranium enrichment is positively correlated with Na, Mo, Cu, Th, Zr, LOI, and light rare-earth elements in albitized GQBS, as well as amphibolite, in the Jahaz U-deposit. These enrichment and depletion trends match with the Kirovograd and Novoukrainka (Ukraine), Lagoa Real (Brazil), Valhalla (Australia), Longshoushan (China), Aricheng (Guyana), and Coles Hill (USA) Na-metasomatic Uranium-deposits. The outcome of the present work can be useful to exploration agencies in targeting Na-metasomatic U-deposits more precisely in other areas.

How to cite: Mishra, P., Krishnamurthi, R., Kushwaha, A. P., and Jagadeesan, P.: Quantification of mass transfer during fluid-rock interaction at the Jahaz uranium deposit, North Delhi Fold Belt, India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1606, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1606, 2026.

EGU26-2134 | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

Characteristics of Major Types of Fluorite Deposits in China 

Hua-Wen Cao, Hao-Ran Chen, and Hao Zou

With the accelerated upgrading of China's fluorine chemical industry, the gap in domestic fluorite resources is expected to widen in the future. Therefore, there is an urgent need to increase investment in the exploration of new fluorite mineral resources. Fluorite deposits occur either as independent vein-type fluorite-quartz orebodies or as associated or coexisting minerals in deposits of rare earth elements, barite, tungsten, tin, lead, zinc, iron, and other polymetallic ores. Accordingly, fluorite deposits can be classified into two types: independent vein-type fluorite deposits and associated/coexisting-type fluorite deposits. Currently, the fluorite resources developed and utilized in China mainly come from independent vein-type fluorite deposits.  

Based on differences in the origin of metallogenic hydrothermal fluids and major ore-controlling factors, fluorite deposits in China can be categorized into two major groups: meso-epithermal deposits and magmatic hydrothermal deposits. Taking both genetic and industrial types into consideration, they can be further divided into three main categories: hydrothermal filling-type, sedimentary reworking-type, and associated/coexisting-type.  

Hydrothermal filling-type deposits are the predominant type, mainly distributed in provinces such as Zhejiang, Fujian, and Jiangxi. The orebodies are controlled by fault zones, with their occurrence and morphology consistent with the fault zones. The main host rocks are Yanshanian magmatic rocks and pyroclastic rocks. The ore-forming materials primarily originate from magmatic hydrothermal fluids or heated groundwater. Sedimentary reworking-type deposits are mainly found in Inner Mongolia, Guizhou, Yunnan, and western Zhejiang. The fluorite orebodies exhibit a stratiform-like occurrence, consistent with the bedding of the strata, but are also disrupted and controlled by faults, resulting in significant variations in their occurrence and morphology. The ore-forming materials mainly derive from heated groundwater and thermal brines. Associated-type fluorite deposits are characterized by low fluorite grades but substantial resource volumes, allowing for comprehensive recovery and utilization. They are primarily distributed in regions such as Inner Mongolia, Hunan, and Yunnan. The ore-forming materials are mainly related to magmatic hydrothermal activities.  

Hydrothermal filling-type vein-like independent fluorite deposits, controlled by fault structures, are currently the main type of fluorite deposits being mined in China. The formation ages of vein-type fluorite deposits in China are primarily the Yanshanian period, followed by the Variscan and Caledonian periods. Most vein-type fluorite deposits in China are closely genetically related to mid-to-late Yanshanian granites and volcanic rocks, with the typical characteristic of fluorite orebodies occurring in intermediate-acid magmatic rocks and their surrounding host strata.

How to cite: Cao, H.-W., Chen, H.-R., and Zou, H.: Characteristics of Major Types of Fluorite Deposits in China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2134, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2134, 2026.

South China is a globally significant concentration area of fluorite deposits. Significant genetic differentiation is observed in fluorite deposits across different tectonic units due to variations in their associated mineral assemblages, yet their metallogenic dynamic settings and material sources remain unclear. A research team investigated typical fluorite deposits in the western margin of the Sichuan Basin (associated with lead-zinc deposits), its eastern margin (associated with barite), and the Zhejiang-Jiangxi region (associated with quartz). The research team, by integrating Sm-Nd geochronology, microthermometry of fluid inclusions, H-O-S-Sr-Pb isotopic tracing, and in-situ LA-ICP-MS trace element analysis, aimed to reveal why large-scale fluorite mineralization occurred in South China.

In the Zhejiang-Jiangxi region, fluorite is often associated with quartz, and the mineralization age is concentrated in the Late Cretaceous to Early Cenozoic. The ore-forming fluids were predominantly meteoric water, characterized by low temperature and low salinity. Rare earth elements and isotopic signatures indicate that the ore-forming materials were mainly derived from water-rock reactions involving fluorine-rich volcanic rocks and basement metamorphic rocks. Mineralization was controlled by extensional faults triggered by the retreat of the Pacific Plate. The eastern margin of the Sichuan Basin hosts widely developed MVT-type barite-fluorite deposits, which formed mainly during the Late Cretaceous. The tectonic setting is related to regional extension caused by the subduction of the Paleo-Pacific Plate. The ore-forming fluids were a mixed system of basin brines and meteoric water. Sr isotopes and rare earth elements suggest that the ore-forming materials were derived from Cambrian carbonate rocks, black shales, and Ordovician limestones. The western margin of the Sichuan Basin is a key area where fluorite is associated with lead-zinc deposits. Mineralization occurred mainly during the Late Triassic, related to the Indosinian orogeny following the closure of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean. The ore-forming fluids exhibited medium-low temperature and medium-low salinity characteristics. The coexistence of high- and low-salinity fluid inclusions, along with H-O isotopic data, indicates that the fluids were a mixture of basement metamorphic water, basin brines, and meteoric water. Sr-Pb isotopes and rare earth element characteristics show that the ore-forming materials were mainly sourced from Precambrian basement rocks and Cambrian sedimentary strata (e.g., black shales).

In summary, fluorite deposits in South China mainly formed during the Mesozoic–Cenozoic, with mineralization ages generally exhibiting a trend of being older in the west and younger in the east. The ore-forming fluids were dominated by meteoric water or basin brines, and the ore-forming materials were derived from fluorine-rich volcanic rocks and sedimentary strata, respectively. Tectonically, mineralization was controlled by two major dynamic systems: the closure of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean (western margin) and the subduction of the Paleo-Pacific Plate (eastern margin and Zhejiang-Jiangxi region).

How to cite: Zou, H., Liang, S., and Cao, H.: The reasons for large-scale fluorite mineralization in South China during the Mesozoic-Cenozoic, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2137, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2137, 2026.

EGU26-2628 | ECS | Orals | GMPV5.2

Hydrothermal fluid–rock interactions and subsurface Mn leaching controlling stratiform Mn mineralization in the Tizi-n’Isdid district (Western High Atlas, Morocco): insights from ore mineralogy, paragenesis, and geochemical evolution 

Imad Aflla, Said Ilmen, Mustapha Souhassou, Augustin Dekoninck, Marieme Jabbour, Zoubair El Ouad, Mohamed Zouhair, Lhou Maacha, and Ismail bouskri

The Tizi-n-Isdid manganese deposit, located along the western margin of the Ouzellarh Precambrian promontory in the western High Atlas, represents a key example of hydrothermally stratiform-type manganese ore deposit formed during the late Ediacaran to early Cambrian transition. This study integrates field observations, petrography, SEM-EDS analyses, automated mineralogical mapping and whole-rock geochemistry to reconstruct the mineralogical evolution and origin of the deposit. Macroscopic observations reveal massive, banded and brecciated Mn-rich bands hosted within lower Cambrian claystones (Adoudou Formation), with MnO contents ranging from 21 wt.% to 49 wt.%. The ore is dominated by braunite, piemontite, hollandite-group minerals, cryptomelane, pyrolusite, and subordinate amounts of barite and carbonate minerals. Textural relationships identify four successive stages: a detrital pre-ore stage; an early hydrothermal silicification stage; a carbonatation stage marked by brecciation and barite–carbonate veining; and a final near-surface oxidation stage.

Mn mineralization is closely related to hydrothermal fluid–rock interactions involving a mixed magmatic–meteoric fluid system. Meteoric waters infiltrated through permeable fault zones and sedimentary units, were progressively heated at depth by interaction with magmatic heat sources, and evolved into reactive hydrothermal fluids. During their ascent along fault-controlled pathways, these fluids efficiently leached Mn from the volcanic and crystalline basement rocks. Subsequent changes in temperature, redox conditions and fluid composition during discharge onto a shallow marine platform promoted Mn precipitation and the development of stratiform mineralization within clay-rich sediments.

Major and trace elements (Mn/Fe, Co/Ni, Co/Zn) consistently indicate a hydrothermal origin, while REE patterns, characterized by low ΣREE, strong negative Ce anomalies, positive Eu anomalies, HREE enrichment and high Y/Ho ratios, reflect the mixing of Mn-rich hydrothermal fluids with oxic seawater on a shallow platform. Structural and tectonic evidence links ore formation to late Ediacaran N–S extension, fault-controlled hydrothermal circulation and early Cambrian marine transgression. These combined mineralogical, geochemical and geological data support a genetic model in which Mn was leached from volcanic and basement rocks, transported upward along normal faults and precipitated syngenetically with clay-rich sediments in an oxygenated marine environment.

How to cite: Aflla, I., Ilmen, S., Souhassou, M., Dekoninck, A., Jabbour, M., El Ouad, Z., Zouhair, M., Maacha, L., and bouskri, I.: Hydrothermal fluid–rock interactions and subsurface Mn leaching controlling stratiform Mn mineralization in the Tizi-n’Isdid district (Western High Atlas, Morocco): insights from ore mineralogy, paragenesis, and geochemical evolution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2628, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2628, 2026.

EGU26-3441 | Orals | GMPV5.2

Rewriting Lithium’s Anatectic Narrative: A Hierarchical Framework for Mobility and Enrichment 

Omar Bartoli, Bruna B. Carvalho, Antonio Acosta-Vigil, Maurizio Petrelli, Tommaso Tacchetto, William D. A. Rickard, and Markus Wälle

Lithium-rich pegmatites and granites are commonly thought to form either by extreme fractionation of granitic magmas or low-degree crustal melting.  Yet, decades of debate leave striking questions unresolved. What are the mechanisms of Li release during crustal melting? Can crustal melting alone ever produce Li concentrations high enough to matter economically? These questions are particularly timely, as the idea that crustal anatexis alone can generate melts with sufficient Li to form economically viable ore deposits has gained renewed attention. Here, we present the first comprehensive database of Li concentrations in anatectic melt inclusions (i.e., melt inclusions hosted in perictectic minerals of migmatites and granulites), providing direct empirical constraints on the Li budget of primary crustal melts formed under common mid- to lower-crustal P–T–Xbulk conditions.

Lithium concentrations in these melts reach a maximum of ~600 μg/g during the earliest stages of fluid-absent biotite melting at 750–800 °C in cordierite-free metasedimentary rocks. Although these values are two to three times higher than those of typical S-type granites, they overlap the range of barren pegmatites and remain far below those of Li ore-forming systems. Integration of this dataset with thermodynamic and geochemical modelling shows that melting of Li-enriched sources or multi-stage melting can locally enhance melt Li contents, but are unlikely to directly generate high-grade Li deposits without subsequent melt differentiation. Without compelling evidence that strongly pre-enriched sources can preserve extreme Li anomalies (10 to 200 times crustal values) up to anatectic conditions, extreme post-anatectic differentiation emerges as a necessary condition for generating economically viable Li deposits. Nature demands more than a melting source: high-grade Li deposits of anatectic origin are earned in the details of differentiation.

Melt inclusions in anatectic rocks thus represent robust quantitative tracers of critical metal mobility, opening new avenues for future interrogation of fertile anatectic systems.

How to cite: Bartoli, O., B. Carvalho, B., Acosta-Vigil, A., Petrelli, M., Tacchetto, T., D. A. Rickard, W., and Wälle, M.: Rewriting Lithium’s Anatectic Narrative: A Hierarchical Framework for Mobility and Enrichment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3441, 2026.

EGU26-4166 | Orals | GMPV5.2

Key to formation of Jinding world-class Mississippi Valley-type lead-zinc deposit in the Tibetan-Himalayan orogen 

Yingchao Liu, Xiaosong Xiong, Nian Yu, Mark Hoggard, and Zengqian Hou

Mississippi Valley-type (MVT) deposits are vital sources of lead and zinc, crucial for the energy transition. Giant MVT deposits often occur in fold-thrust systems within collisional orogens, but the processes driving mineralizing fluids remain unclear. Here, we investigate a deep seismic reflection profile and broadband magnetotelluric survey traversing the world-class Jinding MVT deposit in the Sanjiang belt of Tibetan-Himalayan orogen. Our results reveal an upper-crustal fold-thrust system with a deep décollement underlain by a thermal dome at a depth of ~20-40 km that is likely caused by ponding and degassing of hydrous potassic magmas. We suggest that rock dilatancy along the décollement during compressive deformation provided a pathway for the lateral migration of regional ore-forming fluids. Heat, provided by the underlying thermal dome, together with fault channels caused by a transition from regional compression to extension, drove the upward discharge of fluids from the décollement and led to mineralization in the overlying fold-thrust belt. Although MVT deposits have classically been considered unrelated to magmatic activity, our revised model of deposit genesis suggests that intra-crustal magma chambers may drive fluid circulation and make important contributions to the timing and spatial localization of MVT ores in collisional orogens.

How to cite: Liu, Y., Xiong, X., Yu, N., Hoggard, M., and Hou, Z.: Key to formation of Jinding world-class Mississippi Valley-type lead-zinc deposit in the Tibetan-Himalayan orogen, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4166, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4166, 2026.

The Tongbai Orogen, located in the Qinling–Tongbai–Dabie orogenic belt, contains numerous lode Au–Ag deposits, yet the relative roles of Paleozoic orogenic processes and Mesozoic magmatism in their formation remain controversial. In the Weishancheng ore field, Au–Ag mineralization is spatially associated with structures formed during Paleozoic deformation, but available age constraints suggest a much younger mineralization event.

We conducted an integrated study combining in situ U–Pb dating of titanite from metamorphic rocks and xenotime from ore veins, petrography and LA–ICP–MS trace-element analysis of pyrite and marcasite, in situ S–Pb isotopes, and EPMA/TOF-SIMS element mapping. Titanite records two Silurian–Devonian metamorphic events, indicating prolonged Paleozoic tectonometamorphism. Pyrite related to these events locally contains elevated Au, suggesting that early metamorphism was capable of mobilizing gold from the sedimentary sequence and modifying the chemical conditions of the host rocks.

In contrast, xenotime from ore-stage veins yields consistent Early Cretaceous U–Pb ages of ~125 Ma, directly constraining the timing of lode Au–Ag mineralization. Ore sulfides show a systematic chemical evolution from Co–Ni-bearing pyrite to As-rich pyrite with invisible Au–Ag, followed by Ag–Sb-enriched pyrite and late marcasite. Their restricted sulfur isotope compositions and uniform Pb isotopic signatures differ from those of the ore-host strata and regional basement, indicating that the ore-forming fluids were not dominated by metamorphic devolatilization. Instead, the geochemical and geochronological data are consistent with a magmatic–hydrothermal origin related to Early Cretaceous intrusions.

These results suggest that Paleozoic orogenesis primarily established favorable structures and locally redistributed gold, whereas Early Cretaceous magmatism provided the heat and fluids responsible for economically significant Au–Ag mineralization. The Tongbai Orogen therefore represents a case where mineralization reflects the superposition of multiple orogenic processes rather than a single tectonic event.

How to cite: Zhou, J.-J. and Li, Z.-K.: Regional Metamorphism, Magmatism and Lode Au–Ag Mineralization Controlled by Composite Orogenesis in the Tongbai Orogen, Central China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6131, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6131, 2026.

EGU26-6819 | Orals | GMPV5.2

Decoding multistage fluid-rock interactions in the Takab Iranian iron-ore deposit. 

Christiane Wagner, Nicolas Rividi, Johan Villeneuve, Omar Boudouma, Ghasem Nabatian, Maryam Honarmand, Beate Orberger, and Iman Monsef

The Takab (NW Iran) BIF consists of alternating iron- and silica-rich layers. It formed ca 560 Ma in a back-arc basin from a mixing of seawater and hydrothermal fluids with incorporation of ca. 20% of terrigenous material [1]. The ore bodies are composed of magnetite with various textures (disseminated, banded, lenticular, nodular, and massive) mainly hosted in folded micaschists. The magnetite and/or the matrix may contain accessory minerals, monazite, barite, scheelite, and Fe-Mn-carbonates in nodular magnetite. In this study we show that the different types of magnetite layers recorded a variety of fluid-rocks interactions that occurred at moderate temperature (200-300°C) under variable but mostly reduced fO2.

All magnetite types have low Ni and Cr (10-30 ppm) and V (< 100 ppm), and high Mn (1800-2600 ppm; up to 1% in nodular magnetite), characteristics of hydrothermal magnetite. Ti concentration is also low (15-200 ppm) except in disseminated magnetite, in which Ti (up to 1940 ppm) is correlated with Al and Mg. Moreover, all magnetite types show positive Eu and Y anomalies plus a negative Ce anomaly in nodular magnetite, typical for mixed seawater/hydrothermal fluid precipitation. The negative Ce anomaly of nodular magnetite is similar to that of the calcschist laminates.

The disseminated magnetite shows highly positive ∂56Fe (+1.4 ‰) and ∂18 values (+2.2 ‰) testifying for a magmatic/high-T hydrothermal origin, also suggested by the trace element behavior.

The banded magnetite also shows mostly positive ∂56Fe (up to +1.1 ‰) values, but a lighter oxygen isotopic composition (∂18 values=-2.5 to +1 ‰). This suggests that banded magnetite did not preserve the magmatic/high-T hydrothermal signature unlike disseminated magnetite, and was further affected by a hydrothermal alteration or re-equilibration with low-T fluids.

The nodular magnetite shows important differences from the other two types: mostly light ∂56Fe values, indicative of a low-T hydrothermal fluid signature, and heavy ∂18O (+4 to ‰) values consistent with a magmatic/high-T hydrothermal origin. Decoupling of the Fe and O isotope signature suggests a more complex hydrothermal history. The presence of Cl-bearing apatite inclusion in the nodular magnetite supports the precipitation of low ∂56Fe magnetite from a Cl-bearing hydrothermal fluid. Furthermore, the high ∂18O values possibly suggest a re-equilibration of a magmatic-hydrothermal fluid with carbonate rocks or mixing with fluid in equilibrium with the carbonate in the host rock. A likely scenario is the involvement of CO2-bearing hydrothermal fluids produced during the decarbonatization of the close-by calcschist.

In conclusion, the most characteristic feature of the Takab BIF is the large predominance of the hydrothermal overprint on the volcano-sedimentary sequence throughout the formation and the evolutionary history of the iron ore deposit. The varied chemical and isotopic composition of the different magnetite types and the presence of accessory minerals point out both the variety of the fluids involved and the degree of the Sfluid-rock interactions [2, 3].

 [1] Honarmand et al., Precambrian Research, 2024; [2, 3] Wagner et al., Minerals, 2023, 2025.

How to cite: Wagner, C., Rividi, N., Villeneuve, J., Boudouma, O., Nabatian, G., Honarmand, M., Orberger, B., and Monsef, I.: Decoding multistage fluid-rock interactions in the Takab Iranian iron-ore deposit., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6819, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6819, 2026.

Tungsten (W) is a highly incompatible element enriched in the crust through time and closely associated with granitic magmatism. While reduced-conditions have long been emphasized as the critical control, many reduced granites are barren, indicating redox alone is insufficient. Here we examine the giant Hukeng W deposit in the Wugongshan Complex in South China to identify the fundamental factors controlling W-fertility. Integrated zircon geochronology, Lu–Hf isotopes and trace element data, wolframite geochronology, and whole-rock geochemistry of the W-related Hukeng and barren Caledonian–Jurassic granites demonstrate that Hukeng formed at ~150 Ma. The Hukeng granite, derived from Paleo-Proterozoic metasedimentary crust, had underwent extreme differentiation (DI ≈ 95) and fluid–melt interaction. It exhibits strong Ba–Sr–Eu–Ti depletion, high Rb/Sr (~18) and K/Ba (~740), low K/Rb (~79), La/Ta (<2.1), (La/Yb)N (<3.6), Zr/Hf (~18) and Nb/Ta (~7.6), significantly negative Eu anomalies ((Eu/Eu*)N <0.12), and pronounced lanthanide tetrad effects (TE1,3 ≈ 1.19). Zircons display decreasing negative Eu and increasing positive Ce anomalies through advanced magma fractionation and fluid–melt interaction under reduced conditions. In contrast, barren granites, though more reduced, display weaker differentiation and minimal fluid signatures. We conclude that the combination of fertile-crust source, extreme differentiation, and vigorous fluid exsolution—rather than oxygen fugacity—was decisive in concentrating and precipitating W. A discriminant model based on DI >88, TE1,3 > 0.96, (Eu/Eu*)N <0.4, K/Rb <105, Rb/Sr >7, La/Ta < 6, (La/Yb)N <6, Zr/Hf < 38, and Nb/Ta <10 provides refined exploration criteria for W-related granites in South China and globally.

How to cite: zhang, Y. and he, X.: Magma Source, Differentiation, and Fluid-Melt Interaction as Controls on W Fertility: Insights from the Hukeng W Deposit, South China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8428, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8428, 2026.

The reported coexisting Cu and W mineralization of economic significance in single ore deposit worldwide is rare. However, both Cu and W mineralization have been discovered in the giant Zhuxi W‒Cu deposit in South China. To address the genetic relations between the shallow Cu and deep W mineralization in this giant ore system, here we report U‒Pb dating, trace element and Hf isotope data of zircon from the Cu-related granodiorite porphyry, U‒Pb dating and trace element data for hydrothermal titanite and S isotopic data for sulfide related to Cu mineralization. The U‒Pb ages of zircons from two granodiorite porphyry samples are 155.7 ± 0.8 Ma and 152.5 ± 0.7 Ma, respectively, which are consistent with the U‒Pb age of the hydrothermal titanites of 154.5 ± 5.0 Ma, suggesting that the shallow Cu mineralization formed in the late Jurassic and was simultaneously associated with the deep giant W mineralization at Zhuxi. Trace element composition of titanites favor a high fH2O and relatively low fO2 environment for Cu formation. Sulfides exhibit δ34S values ranging from –0.9‰ to 3.5‰, indicating a magmatic origin. Zircons from the granodiorite porphyry present εHf(t) values of −9.9 to 1.3, suggesting that the Cu ore-related granodiorite magmas were derived mainly from the partial melting of Cu-enriched metavolcanoclastic rocks with minor mantle sources. Trace element composition of zircons indicate a magma mixing process with high-temperature melts >750°C that are relatively rich in Y, Th and rare earth elements but with lower Hf concentrations, being added to relatively low-temperature ~700°C crustal-derived granodiorite magmas. Combining the above data and previously determined zircon Lu–Hf isotopes, we propose that the Cu and W in Zhuxi may have been derived mainly from the partial melting of Cu-enriched metavolcanoclastic rocks and W-enriched metasedimentary sequences of the Neoproterozoic juvenile crust, respectively. The intrusion of the Cu-related granodiorite porphyry should have been triggered by the upwelling of heated mafic magmas from the asthenospheric mantle during the Late Jurassic lithospheric compressional–extensional conversion stage.

How to cite: He, X.: How can Cu-W mineralization be economically co-enriched in single deposits?, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8677, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8677, 2026.

EGU26-10358 | Orals | GMPV5.2

The sources of base and precious metals in Kuroko deposits of NE Japan 

Andrea Agangi, Manuel Nopeia, Asif Didari, Ryohei Takahashi, Pearlyn Manalo, Henriette Ueckermann, and Linda Iaccheri

The middle-Miocene volcano-sedimentary succession of Akita Prefecture, Northeast Japan, hosts a well-studied example of felsic volcanic-hosted massive sulphide deposits, known as “Kuroko”, which represent the type locality for this type of deposits worldwide. These have long been used as a model for understanding similar ore deposits occurring in other localities and across the geological time. The main commodities extracted from this type of ore are Zn, Cu and Pb, with locally significant amounts of Au and Ag as by-products.

In this study, we combine major and trace element analyses (including Au and Ag) with high-precision Pb isotope analyses of ore samples from Akita Prefecture and evaluate their co-variations in order to understand the source of base and precious metals in these deposits. We also compile previous Pb isotope analyses to obtain a wider view of the isotopic value distributions at the district scale. Lead isotope maps based on this dataset were compared with geological features, such as the orientation of main Miocene faults and basement depth to assess the possible effects of such features on Pb isotopic composition of hydrothermal deposits.

The highest values of Au (up to ca. 120 ppm) and Ag (up to ca. 7000 ppm) were observed in sphalerite-rich “black ore” samples from Matsumine and Shakanai deposits. Petrographic observations and mineral analyses in these samples indicate that the main host for precious metals are sulfosalts, such as tennantite-tetrahedrite and pearceite [Cu (Ag,Cu)6 Ag9 As2 S11]-polybasite [Cu (Ag,Cu)6 Ag9 Sb2 S11]. Electrum occurs at Au-Ag hosts phase of Nurukawa and Furutobe deposits, along with tennantite-tetrahedrite. In Matsumine and Shakanai samples, positive correlations in plots of Pb isotopic ratio 207Pb/204Pb vs Zn, Pb, Au and Ag point to contributions of these metals mostly from isotopically evolved sources (the pre-Miocene basement). Anticorrelation between 207Pb/204Pb and Cu indicates a relatively unradiogenic source for Cu (the Miocene volcanic rocks). The maps of 207Pb/204Pb and 206Pb/204Pb indicate a prominent N-S distribution of values, parallel to the orientation of the main Miocene faults and the elongation of Miocene rifts, reflecting the paths of hydrothermal fluid circulation. The Cretaceous Pb model ages of ore samples (ca. 80–140 Ma) are significantly older than the middle-Miocene formation age, and overlap with the ages of basement granites. In addition, a comparison of the map of Pb model ages at the district scale with the map of the basement depth indicates progressively older model ages occurring to the northeast, in areas where the basement becomes shallower. Lead with such “old” isotopic ratios was likely preserved in feldspar of Cretaceous basement granites, and remobilised during fluid circulation in the middle-Miocene. We propose a model that involves an isotopically juvenile source (the Miocene volcanic rocks) providing Cu and an isotopically evolved source providing much of Zn, Au and Ag to the mineralising fluids.

How to cite: Agangi, A., Nopeia, M., Didari, A., Takahashi, R., Manalo, P., Ueckermann, H., and Iaccheri, L.: The sources of base and precious metals in Kuroko deposits of NE Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10358, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10358, 2026.

The Akbaştepe Au–Ag mineralization is located in the Söğüt district (Bilecik, NW Türkiye), within the Sakarya Zone on the northern margin of the İzmir–Ankara–Erzincan Suture Zone. The deposit is hosted by greenschist-facies schists of the Nilüfer Formation and occurs as a steeply dipping, N70W-trending quartz vein system extending for approximately 2 km with an average thickness of ∼5 m. The geometry and orientation of the vein system indicate strong structural control related to late-stage orogenic deformation.

This study integrates ore petrography, alteration mineralogy, whole-rock geochemistry, and sulfur isotope data to constrain the role of fluid–rock interaction and metal mobilization during the formation of the Akbaştepe mineralization. Reflected-light microscopy reveals a multi-stage paragenesis dominated by pyrite, arsenopyrite, scheelite, Hg–Te minerals (coloradoite), and Au–Te phases, with native gold occurring both as free grains (15–95 µm) and as inclusions within fractured and oxidized pyrite. Multiple generations of pyrite indicate episodic fluid flow and repeated mineralizing events within structurally prepared zones.

Hydrothermal alteration is characterized by silicification, carbonatization, and Fe-oxidation, overprinting the primary greenschist assemblage. Alteration mineralogy records progressive fluid–rock interaction, marked by a systematic transition from chlorite-dominated greenschist facies toward smectite-, kaolinite-, and illite-bearing assemblages localized along mineralized and shear zones. The inverse relationship between chlorite and smectite reflects increasing chemical re-equilibration between hydrothermal fluids and reactive host rocks, emphasizing the role of alteration processes in controlling metal precipitation.

Whole-rock geochemical data show Au contents up to 10 ppm and consistently high Au/Ag ratios, reflecting gold-dominated mineralization. Gold exhibits strong positive correlations with As, Hg, W, and Sb, whereas base metal concentrations remain low. This elemental association is characteristic of orogenic gold systems and indicates efficient metal mobilization controlled by fluid chemistry and wall-rock interaction. The presence of scheelite and Hg–Te phases further supports a chemically reactive ore-forming system.

Sulfur isotope compositions of pyrite and arsenopyrite range between –2.1‰ and –8.8‰ (δ³⁴S), suggesting a sedimentary sulfur source, most likely related to devolatilization of subducted marine sediments. The close mineralogical association between gold and Fe-sulfides highlights the key role of sulfide precipitation during fluid–rock interaction.

The integration of ore petrography, geochemical signatures, and sulfur isotope data indicates that the Akbaştepe Au–Ag mineralization represents a structurally controlled orogenic gold system formed during crustal-scale fluid flow. Gold deposition was governed by chemical reactions between metamorphic fluids and reactive host rocks, leading to efficient metal precipitation along shear zones. These results provide new insights into orogenic gold metallogeny within the Sakarya Zone and contribute to a broader understanding of fluid–rock interaction processes in convergent tectonic environments.

How to cite: Toygar Sagin, O. and Cesur, D.: Chemical Fingerprints of an Orogenic Gold System: Fluid–Rock Interaction and Metal Mobilization in the Akbaştepe Au–Ag Deposit (Bilecik, NW Türkiye) , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10674, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10674, 2026.

EGU26-14660 | ECS | Orals | GMPV5.2

Isocon mass-balance constraints on element mobility in the Tepeköy high-sulfidation epithermal Au system within Melendiz volcanics, Central Türkiye 

Hatice Nur Bakkalbasi, Mustafa Kumral, Amr Abdelnasser, and Ali Erdem Bakkalbasi

The Tepeköy Au prospect within the Melendiz volcanic suite (southern Central Anatolian Volcanic Province, central Türkiye) preserves a high-sulfidation (HS) epithermal alteration system hosted by andesite porphyry and basaltic–andesite volcanic rocks. Alteration is spatially zoned from an inner vuggy silica–Fe-rich domain outward to an alunite-rich halo and a distal kaolinite-rich zone, with gold concentrated mainly in the inner two zones. This framework and mineral association (dominantly pyrite ± arsenopyrite ± magnetite with supergene/oxidation products such as limonite, hematite, and goethite) are consistent with established HS epithermal model in which acid–sulfate fluids generate advanced argillic assemblages and residual/precipitated silica near the hydrothermal ascending core.

To quantify element mobility and bulk-rock modification across the alteration gradient, mass-balance calculations were evaluated using isocon methods, treating TiO2–Nb–Zr as immobile indicators. The vuggy silica–Fe-rich zone records the most extreme open-system behavior, defined by substantial gains in SiO2, Fe2O3, sulfur (S, SO3) and LOI, accompanied by enrichment in As–Co–Ni–Mo–V–Cr (locally ±Sc). These increases occur alongside pronounced depletion of major base cations (Na2O–K2O–CaO–MgO) and marked loss of several chalcophile elements (Cu–Zn–Sn–Sb). Isocons indicate that both bulk mass and volume changes exceed the reference frame, implying high fluid/rock ratios and strong permeability focusing within the inner zone. The alunite-rich halo shows similarly robust additions of SiO2–Fe2O3–SO3–LOI and systematic pathfinder enrichment (notably As ± Mo ± V ± Pb ± Co–Ni), while maintaining persistent base-cation depletion; additional gains in Cl, Sr, and Ba and overall mass/volume increase suggest continued influx of sulfate-bearing fluids and deposition of hydrated sulfate phases. In contrast, the kaolinite-rich zone displays net mass/volume loss, relative SiO2 depletion, and more mixed gains (Fe2O3, SO3, LOI, As ± Ba–Sr), consistent with distal buffering and/or dilution of the reactive acidic fluid. A coupled P2O5–Sr enrichment in the alunite halo supports stabilization of aluminum phosphate–sulfate (APS) minerals during apatite breakdown under advanced-argillic conditions, offering an additional geochemical vector toward the hydrothermal center.

Finally, the mass-balance results demonstrate that fluid-driven addition and leaching dominate within the vuggy silica core and alunite halo, while distal kaolinitization indicates reduced mass transfer. These patterns offer quantitative criteria for identifying High Sulfidation influx zones and their associated Au enrichment at Tepeköy.

Keywords: Mass-balance calculation; alteration geochemistry; Tepeköy high sulfidation epithermal Au mineralization; Melendis volcanic suite; Central Türkiye

How to cite: Bakkalbasi, H. N., Kumral, M., Abdelnasser, A., and Bakkalbasi, A. E.: Isocon mass-balance constraints on element mobility in the Tepeköy high-sulfidation epithermal Au system within Melendiz volcanics, Central Türkiye, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14660, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14660, 2026.

The Qinglonggou gold deposit is a largescale deposit located within the Tanjianshan gold orefield on the northern margin of the Qaidam Basin. Recent exploration has achieved significant breakthroughs at depth and along its periphery; however, the occurrence of gold in deep ores and the evolution of the oreforming fluids remain debated. This research methodology integrated detailed field investigations and drill core logging with systematic mineralogical and geochemical analyses. These included electron probe microanalysis (EPMA), laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) for in-situ trace elements, and laser ablation multi-collector ICP-MS (LA-MC-ICP-MS) for in-situ sulfur isotope analysis of pyrite, arsenopyrite, and native gold from the main mineralization stages (III–V).

The results indicate that gold primarily occurs as nanoscale inclusions within main-stage pyrite (Py3, Py4, Py5) and arsenopyrite, with minor amounts found as native gold filling fractures in pyrite or calcite. Geochemical data from pyrite reveal an evolution in fluid composition from Stage III to Stage V, marked by systematic variations in Co/Ni ratios, As content, and trace elements (e.g., Au, Ag, Cu, Sb). This reflects a transition from moderate-temperature to higher-temperature conditions. Stage IV witnessed intense fluid boiling, which was a critical mechanism for the large-scale precipitation of gold. In-situ sulfur isotope analyses demonstrate a multi-sourced sulfur system: Stage III sulfur is predominantly magmatic-hydrothermal (δ³⁴S: +5‰ to +20‰), Stage IV shows significant seawater influence (δ³⁴S up to +25‰), and Stage V indicates a mixed source. Furthermore, platinum-group element (PGE) signatures and high Bi contents suggest a potential contribution of mantle-derived or deep magmatic components to the ore-forming materials.

In conclusion, the Qinglonggou deposit formed through multiple overprinting hydrothermal events. Early mineralization (Stage III) produced As-rich, Au-poor pyrite in an island-arc setting. The main gold mineralization (Stage IV) was triggered by fluid boiling accompanied by seawater mixing, leading to gold enrichment in arsenopyrite and native gold. A later fluid pulse (Stage V), possibly involving new As-rich fluid and mantle-derived components, further complicated the system. This study provides key geochemical constraints on the metallogenic processes in the Tanjianshan area.

How to cite: Chen, M., Wang, G., Zhao, W., and Xie, H.: Gold Occurrence and Evolution of OreForming Fluids of the Qinglonggou Gold Deposit, Northern Margin of Qaidam Basin, Qinghai Province, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15997, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15997, 2026.

EGU26-16375 | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

Sulphide Remobilization, Deformation and Durchbewegung: The BMK deposit, Saskatchewan, Canada 

Ron Uken, John Shmyr, Tarryn Cawood, and Bemnet Abebe

The Brabant Mckenzie (BMK) Cu, Zn, VMS deposit is hosted within a package of highly deformed and high grade metamorphosed bimodal volcanics, likely representing a backarc basin setting, inverted during the Trans Hudson Orogeny.  Mineralization comprises massive to semi massive sphalerite-pyrrhotite-pyrite and chalcopyrite contained within two major zones up to 18 m in width and part of a regional prospective trend.

VMS associated chlorite-sericite hydrothermal alteration protoliths are defined by coarse anthophyllite-cordierite-biotite-garnet assemblages in both the hangingwall and footwall of the sulphides. Detailed structural mapping and 3D modelling support a complex structural history with at least 5 deformation events (D1 to D5). Significant VMS remobilization, with durchbewegung texture, occurred during D2, synchronous with peak metamorphism, anatexis, and the pervasive syn-migmatitic S2 foliation. S2 is folded by D3, F3 folds with a scatter of F3 orientations suggesting either progressive D2-D3 noncylindrical ptygmatitc folds or subsequent refolding of F3 axes. Mineral stretching lineations are locally developed and parallel the F3 fold axes.  Late stage D4 brittle ductile shears were synchronous with pegmatite emplacement. Pegmatites subparallel and transgress the dominant S2 foliation and remobilized sulphides resulting in sphalerite, chalcopyrite and lesser gahnite spots, and locally coarse galena. Final D5 brittle faulting is associated with minor offsets.

How to cite: Uken, R., Shmyr, J., Cawood, T., and Abebe, B.: Sulphide Remobilization, Deformation and Durchbewegung: The BMK deposit, Saskatchewan, Canada, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16375, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16375, 2026.

In peraluminous, rare-metal granites associated with tungsten (W) mineralization, greisen alteration is common. However, the economic locus of wolframite [(Fe,Mn)WO4] varies between endogreisen within the granite and quartz-dominated vein systems hosted by granite and/or country rocks. This study evaluates how feldspar availability, halogen-controlled melt–fluid evolution, and Fe–W mass transfer govern the degree of endogreisen development and wolframite localization. We compare two Neoproterozoic granite-associated ore systems from the W (±Sn) province of NW India: Degana and Balda. At Degana, the abundance of magmatic topaz indicates an F-rich late-magmatic evolution and high effective F activity in the melt–fluid system. We interpret Na–F (±Na–Al–F) complexing to have reduced early albite saturation, favouring a sodic, albite-rich residual granite. Metasomatic textures record pervasive potassic overprinting along feldspar-rich reaction fronts, which pre-conditioned the granite for subsequent low-pH greisen alteration. Feldspar-destructive reaction fronts then produced pervasive quartz–muscovite endogreisen with secondary topaz and fluorite, within which wolframite precipitated. Isocon-based whole-rock mass-balance constraints indicate net Fe addition and strong alkali loss (ΔCi/Ci0 ≈ +0.82 for Fe; ≈ –1.32 for Na+K), together with enrichment of W and granitophile elements (Li, Sn, Rb). These gains and losses are consistent with their transport by granite-derived magmatic–hydrothermal H2O–CO2 brines of moderate–high salinity (~12–22 wt% NaCl equiv.).

Balda represents a contrasting end-member in both melt evolution and hydrothermal halogen budget. Magmatic topaz is scarce, implying lower effective F activity during late differentiation than at Degana; early feldspar stability and fractionation yielded a comparatively feldspar-poor granite. Reduced feldspar buffering capacity, together with limited F-assisted feldspar hydrolysis, restricted both potassic and subsequent greisen overprinting, producing discontinuous, weakly developed tourmaline-rich endogreisen that lacks hydrothermal topaz and fluorite. Despite this, Balda endogreisen records pronounced Fe addition and rare-metal enrichment relative to unaltered granite, with Fe and associated metals (W–Sn–Li) hosted in Fe-rich micas and tourmaline. Wolframite is not observed in either endogreisen within the granite or exogreisen developed in metapelitic country rocks; instead, it is confined to metapelite-hosted quartz–tourmaline veins, where decompression-driven immiscibility of H2O–CO2 fluids and wall-rock buffering likely increased pH and promoted wolframite saturation. Together, Degana and Balda demonstrate that Fe and rare-metal enrichment in endogreisen is common but not sufficient for wolframite precipitation. Economic endogreisen-hosted wolframite mineralization requires concurrence of F-assisted feldspar destruction with adequate feldspar buffering capacity—conditions better expressed in the F-dominant Degana system than in the tourmaline-rich (B-dominant) Balda system.

How to cite: Bhattacharya, S. and Roy, J. K.: F-dominant versus B-dominant granite–greisen systems of Degana–Balda, NW India: controls on endogreisen development and wolframite deposition, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18314, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18314, 2026.

EGU26-19346 | Orals | GMPV5.2

 Amphibole-driven redox evolution and magmatic fertility at the Oyut Cu–Mo Deposit, Mongolia 

Thomas Mueller, Ariuntsetseg Ganbat, Munkhtsengel Baatar, Batkhishig Bayaraa, Otgonbayar Dandar, Manzshir Bayarbold, Altankhuyag Dorjyunden, Gerel Ochir, Marie Genge, Chris Tsz Long, Sean Newby, Jiawei Zuo, Ryan McKenzie, and Dominik Sorger

The formation of porphyry Cu–Mo deposits in continental crust frequently encounters the "Cu paradox", where magmas exhibiting the strongest indicators of ore potential (e.g., high Sr/Y) possess the lowest bulk copper concentrations due to early sulfide saturation. This study investigates the magmatic evolution of the Permian–Triassic Oyut Cu–Mo deposit in Central Mongolia to clarify the mechanisms driving magmatic fertility and metal enrichment. Zircon U–Pb geochronology identifies two distinct magmatic stages: a pre-ore barren stage (256–240 Ma) and a subsequent fertile stage (240–227 Ma). Whole-rock data from the ore-bearing suite display typical “fertile magma” signatures, including high Sr/Y ratios and spoon-shaped REE patterns with depleted heavy REEs (HREE). However, Zircon trace element chemistry records a significant redox change: pre-ore suites were more reduced (≈ FMQ buffer), while strong positive Ce anomalies in zircon reflect elevated oxidation state during the emplacement of fertile magmas (log fO₂ ≈ NNO buffer). Zircon εHf(t) values (+0.1 to +10) indicate constant addition of juvenile source, suggesting that high fO₂ was attained during differentiation rather than inherited. Moreover, the high content of HREE suggests that deep crustal garnet fractionation was not the primary driver. Instead, elevated ΣMREE/ΣHREE ratios through time confirm that differentiation was dominated by amphibole fractionation. We propose that water-saturated conditions promoted highly oxidizing conditions and extensive hornblende crystallization, depleting Fe from the melt, lowering sulfide saturation capacity, and triggering early sulfide sequestration as well as apparent Cu depletion. In contrast to the pre-ore reduced magmas, this amphibole-mediated pathway and oxidizing conditions maintained metals in high-solubility sulfate complexes, concentrating the volatiles and chalcophile elements necessary for large-scale Cu–Mo mineralization. These findings highlight hydrous magma and an amphibole fractionation as a key discriminator between barren and fertile magmas in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt.

How to cite: Mueller, T., Ganbat, A., Baatar, M., Bayaraa, B., Dandar, O., Bayarbold, M., Dorjyunden, A., Ochir, G., Genge, M., Long, C. T., Newby, S., Zuo, J., McKenzie, R., and Sorger, D.:  Amphibole-driven redox evolution and magmatic fertility at the Oyut Cu–Mo Deposit, Mongolia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19346, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19346, 2026.

EGU26-19489 | ECS | Orals | GMPV5.2

Contrasting Sn isotope signatures in cassiterites of melt- and fluid-dominated granitic ore systems 

Katharina Ebert, Julie Anne-Sophie Michaud, François Holtz, Dino Leopardi, Philip Wiegel, Ingo Horn, Mathias Burisch, and Stefan Weyer

Cassiterite (SnO₂) is the main tin ore mineral. Hence, understanding the controlling factors for cassiterite crystallization/precipitation are a crucial basis for developing ore deposit models for exploration and mining.

The precipitation of cassiterite is inherently linked to a change in Sn speciation, from Sn²⁺ in silicate melts or hydrothermal fluids to Sn⁴⁺ in the oxide mineral. The preferential enrichment of heavier Sn isotopes in oxidized Sn⁴⁺ species makes variations in Sn isotope ratios a promising tool allowing to constrain redox conditions during transport, concentration, and deposition. To better understand Sn-isotope fractionation in ore-forming environments, we examined cassiterite from a magmatic and magmatic-hydrothermal occurrence: the Argemela rare-metal granite system in Portugal and the Sadisdorf greisen system in Germany, because they represent different environments of Sn mobilization and deposition, namely mainly melt-driven at Argemela (magmatic cassiterite) and fluid-driven at Sadisdorf (hydrothermal cassiterite). High-resolution, in situ measurements of Sn isotopes and trace elements were carried out on distinct growth zones within individual cassiterite crystals using UV femtosecond laser ablation multi-collector ICP-MS. The results reveal clear contrasts between magmatic and hydrothermal cassiterite. Hydrothermal cassiterite from Sadisdorf commonly displays elevated W contents and an increase in δ124/117Sn values from core to rim, suggesting that oxidation occurred during precipitation. At Sadisdorf, vein-hosted cassiterite shows a spatial trend from positive δ124/117Sn values in proximal greisen to negative δ124/117Sn values in more distal veins. This systematic difference suggests progressive reduction along the fluid flow path, recorded in the Sn isotope signatures. In contrast, cassiterite crystals from Argemela are enriched in Nb and Ta, and some grains show decreasing δ124/117Sn values toward their crystal rims, which can be explained by Rayleigh crystallization.

These preliminary findings indicate that Sn isotopes are a suitable tracer of redox conditions and processes during Sn transport and cassiterite crystallisation. Ongoing Li isotope analyses of Li-bearing micas will provide additional constraints on the nature of the fluid and ore-forming conditions in both granitic systems.

How to cite: Ebert, K., Michaud, J. A.-S., Holtz, F., Leopardi, D., Wiegel, P., Horn, I., Burisch, M., and Weyer, S.: Contrasting Sn isotope signatures in cassiterites of melt- and fluid-dominated granitic ore systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19489, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19489, 2026.

EGU26-20133 | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

Tracing magmatic and hydrothermal processes in rare-metal granites using zircon geochemistry: the Janchivlan pluton, Central Mongolia 

Ariuntsetseg Ganbat, Marie Genge, Ankhbayar Chimidtseren, Alexander G. Webb, Nathan Cogné, Chris Tsz Long, Ryan McKenzie, Dominik Sorger, and Thomas Mueller

Distinguishing magmatic from hydrothermal processes in rare-metal granite systems is critical for understanding ore formation; however, zircons in these rocks are commonly affected by fluid-mediated modification, complicating the interpretation of both geochronological and geochemical signatures. We investigated zircon crystals from the Janchivlan rare-metal granite complex (Central Asian Orogenic Belt, Mongolia), a highly fractionated peraluminous system evolving from biotite-granite through graphic granite, amazonite-bearing to albite-lepidolite granite, with potential for Sn, W, Ta, and Li mineralization, as well as associated pegmatites. These lithologies record successive stages of magmatic differentiation and increasing fluid involvement.

Zircon U-Pb dating yields concordant ages of 290 ± 2.1 Ma for pegmatite and 195 ± 2.1 Ma for biotite-granite, indicating that the pegmatites formed from a different magmatic event. Zircon single-grain ages from biotite and lepidolite granites define a discordia with lower intercepts at 220 ± 2.1 Ma and 195 ± 2.1 Ma, respectively, interpreted as Pb loss during hydrothermal alteration. This interval overlaps with the apatite U-Pb age of 213 ± 3.7 Ma, supporting hydrothermal activity at this time.

Zircon REE patterns show a systematic evolution from biotite granite, characterized by (1) high ΣREE, moderate Eu/Eu* (~0.1–0.2), through graphic and amazonite granites with variable REE distributions and weak tetrad effects, to (2) lepidolite granite marked by LREE depletion, very low Eu/Eu* (<0.05), and pronounced tetrad effects. These trends document progressive melt fractionation accompanied by increasing melt-fluid interaction. Whole-rock geochemistry shows element-specific decoupling from zircon fertility: biotite-granite displays high Ta–W–Li–Rb concentrations, reflecting accumulation in biotite and accessory phases before fluid exsolution; amazonite granite records Sn and Pb enrichment during an intermediate fractionation window; and albite-lepidolite granite exhibits extreme Li and Rb enrichment but no corresponding enrichment of Ta, W, or Sn despite representing the most evolved stage. This pattern indicates that exsolution of fluids selectively redistributed fluid-compatible metals, while Li and Rb were mostly retained in late-crystallizing mica phases, producing distinct metallogenic stages within the granite system. These findings show that rare-metal mineralization in highly fractionated granites results from a multi-stage process where magmatic differentiation establishes initial metal budgets, but subsequent fluid exsolution and melt-fluid partitioning govern the ultimate distribution and concentration of specific ore metals.

How to cite: Ganbat, A., Genge, M., Chimidtseren, A., Webb, A. G., Cogné, N., Long, C. T., McKenzie, R., Sorger, D., and Mueller, T.: Tracing magmatic and hydrothermal processes in rare-metal granites using zircon geochemistry: the Janchivlan pluton, Central Mongolia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20133, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20133, 2026.

EGU26-20372 | ECS | Orals | GMPV5.2

A newly discovered low Sb isotopic endmember in global Sb ore deposits, evidence from Tibet (SW China) 

Ling Jiang, Degao Zhai, and Marina Lazarov

Tibet in SW China hosts numerous Sb mineralization, with a number of Sb-only and Sb-polymetallic ore deposits and occurrences distributed across both southern and northern parts. Here we present in-situ Sb isotope compositions of stibnite from multiple ore deposits in this region, spanning Sb-only, Sb–Au, and Sb–Pb–Zn ore systems across seven deposits and mineralizations. The principal Sb-bearing mineral in all deposits is stibnite. Mineralogical determination and Sb isotope composition of stibnite have been performed on well selected samples. Antimony isotope composition has the potential to record variability in Sb source reservoirs and the evolution of mineralizing fluids. Measurements were performed in-situ at Leibniz University Hannover using deep UV-fs laser ablation system coupled to MC-ICP-MS, following Kaufmann et al. (2021).

Obtained stibnite δ¹²³Sb values range from -0.69 to +0.81‰ (relative to NIST SRM 3102a). Evident isotope fractionation of 0.94 ‰ measured in stibnite is observed in Sb–Pb–Zn ore deposit, which may indicate several episodes of stibnite formation. In general, other ore deposits show limited antimony isotope fractionation (< 0.45 ‰) within deposit, which is consistent with the well-established Rayleigh crystallization model of fluid evolution. While the maximum deviation within an Sb-Au deposit is ~0.25 ‰, with an average value of -0.07±0.14 ‰ (2SD), the range among Sb-only deposits is much greater, exceeding 1.2 ‰, with the mean of ~0.05±0.67 ‰ (2SD). In one of the Sb-only deposits in northern Tibet, the most negative δ¹²³Sb value of -0.69±0.46 ‰ and a deviation of 0.7 ‰ were observed, while the other deposits in southern Tibet show an intra deposit range below 0.44 ‰ and the lowest values of -0.06 ‰. According to the well-known Sb isotope variations during ore formation, our new data reveal that the metal sources for Sb mineralization in northern and southern Tibet might have been distinct. This may further indicate that the Sb isotopes can be used to constrain metal sources and metallogenic domains at a large scale across the Tibetan Plateau.

 

Kaufmann, A.B., Lazarov, M., Kiefer S., Majzlan, J., Weyer S. (2021): In-situ determination of antimony isotope ratios in Sb minerals by femtosecond LA-MC-ICP-MS, JAAS 36(7).

How to cite: Jiang, L., Zhai, D., and Lazarov, M.: A newly discovered low Sb isotopic endmember in global Sb ore deposits, evidence from Tibet (SW China), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20372, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20372, 2026.

EGU26-20701 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

Spatio-temporal scales of fluid transport and reaction during ore formation 

Maxime Fatzaun
The formation of ore deposits includes complex interaction of fluid pathways, advection and diffusion of matter and temperature, mixing of fluids, as well as reactions that include replacement as well as new growth of material. Even though fluids are often modelled as having a certain chemical composition, eventually, every locality in an ore deposit, down to small scales, can have a different fluid composition. Incoming fluids or existing pore fluids may initially have constant compositions, but these will change locally due to mixing and as soon as reactions take place, the host rock is dissolved into the fluid, new material precipitates and the fluid chemistry changes. Even a simple crack around which reactions take place will become a multi-component system with complex chemical and transport interactions on the grain scale.
 
This research project investigates spatio-temporal patterns in ore-formation on the small to outcrop scale with numerical simulations. The models will be calibrated with natural examples and used to develop proxies for the related processes and their scales. 
 
In this project, we will model reactions and related fluid changes to be able to capture the full complexity of ore formation on the small scale. We will then quantify the developing patterns as a function of incoming and pore fluid chemistries as well as host rock properties and extrinsic variables like depth and temperature. In addition, we will attain complete geochemical cross-sections of alteration zones and ore zones around specific fluid pathways in our model field systems. These will be compared with the numerical patterns to develop a predictive tool for alteration zone and ore formation.

How to cite: Fatzaun, M.: Spatio-temporal scales of fluid transport and reaction during ore formation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20701, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20701, 2026.

EGU26-20726 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

Post-orogenic alteration and rare-earth elements mineralization in the northernmost Arabian-Nubian Shield (southern Israel) 

Uriel Moller, Navot Morag, Nadya Teutsch, Elan J Levy, and Yaron Katzir

Rare earth elements (REE) are commonly enriched in alkaline magmatic systems and may be further redistributed by late-stage hydrothermal processes. This study focuses on REE-bearing mineralization in post-orogenic alkaline rocks and hydrothermal veins of the Amram Massif and Ramat Yotam volcanic complex, at the northernmost Arabian-Nubian Shield (Eilat area, southern Israel). These late Neoproterozoic (600-580 Ma) rocks record shallow emplacement of alkaline magmas followed by prolonged, possibly multi-stage, hydrothermal activity.

Fieldwork targeted late-stage silicic alkaline rocks, which often show intense alteration, and associated calcite, barite, and manganese-oxide veins. Whole-rock REE concentrations were determined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) and mineralogical assemblages were defined using X-ray diffraction (XRD) and scanning electron microscopy combined with energy dispersive spectroscopy (SEM-EDS). Oxygen and hydrogen isotope ratios of calcite-hosted fluid-inclusions and oxygen and carbon isotope ratios of host vein calcite were measured using cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRDS) and isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS).

Total REE concentrations in Amram alkaline rocks range from 100 to 700 ppm and are generally higher than those of other basement rocks in Israel (≤300 ppm). The LREE are enriched over HREE in all the magmatic rocks studied. Primary magmatic monazite is locally replaced by REE-F carbonates, recording remobilization of REE from phosphates into secondary phases during hydrothermal alteration.

Calcite veins provide an additional REE reservoir, with total REE ranging from 100 to 800 ppm, comparable to the host magmatic rocks, yet significantly higher than any other calcite veins recorded in Israel.  Most calcite veins are LREE-enriched while some, from Amram Massif, are equally enriched in LREE and HREE. Stable isotope ratios of calcite and hosted fluid-inclusions indicate relatively high temperature (120-150°C) calcite precipitation from fluids of meteoric-origin, suggesting that REE were first concentrated in shallow alkaline magmas and subsequently redistributed into veins by later hydrothermal circulation in post-orogenic setting.

How to cite: Moller, U., Morag, N., Teutsch, N., Levy, E. J., and Katzir, Y.: Post-orogenic alteration and rare-earth elements mineralization in the northernmost Arabian-Nubian Shield (southern Israel), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20726, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20726, 2026.

EGU26-21759 | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

The Heavy-Metal Enrichment in Fault Zones of the South Alpine Basement: Implications for Excavation Waste Valorisation  

Filippo Luca Schenker, Alessia Grisgnaschi, and Marco Casale

The study area is located in southern Switzerland and forms part of the pre-Alpine basement of the Southern Alps. It is situated within a tectonically and structurally complex setting at the frontal zone of the south-verging thrust of the Upper Orobic Nappe over the Varesotto slices. The area is bounded to the west by the Variscan or post-Variscan Val Colla Fault and to the east by the Lugano Fault, which formed during Jurassic extension and was later reactivated during Alpine compression. The exposed lithologies are dominated by paragneisses, schists, and orthogneisses affected by Variscan amphibolite-facies metamorphism, locally preserving mafic relics recording eclogite-facies conditions. During the Alpine cycle, including Jurassic extension and Cenozoic collision, these rocks likely remained at temperatures below ca. 180 °C. Heavy-metal mineralisation, including gold occurrences, has traditionally been associated with the Val Colla Fault; however, its age remains poorly constrained and may be Permian, Jurassic, or Cenozoic.

Here, we present new geological and structural maps and cross-sections, combined with petrological investigations, whole-rock geochemical analyses (major and trace elements), and electron-microprobe data, to characterise heavy-metal mineralisation along a transect between the Val Colla and Lugano faults, where a new motorway tunnel is planned. Our results show that heavy-metal enrichment along the future tunnel trace is not pervasive, but rather localised and strongly structurally controlled. Mineralisation is preferentially associated with (i) NE–SW-striking faults with left-lateral strike-slip kinematics and a normal component, and (ii) NW–SE-striking normal faults. Enrichment is concentrated within ductile–brittle fault zones, particularly in dark cataclasites, locally graphite-rich, and in mylonitic gneisses, whereas light-coloured gneisses and porphyrites are largely barren.

Elevated concentrations of As, Sb, and Zn are linked to fine-grained sulfides (<100–200 µm), including arsenopyrite, bournonite, boulangerite, and sphalerite, hosted in intensely deformed rocks and carbonate veins formed during the circulation of alkaline, carbonate-rich fluids. Microprobe analyses indicate that vein carbonates are commonly iron-rich dolomite–ankerite and, locally, magnesium-rich siderite. Overall, our findings highlight deformation zones as the primary pathways and traps for heavy metals. Finally, we provide first-order estimates of heavy-metal concentrations in tunnel excavation waste to evaluate its potential as a source of sub-economic raw materials after selective treatment and enrichment aimed at increasing metal concentrations and reducing environmental risk.

How to cite: Schenker, F. L., Grisgnaschi, A., and Casale, M.: The Heavy-Metal Enrichment in Fault Zones of the South Alpine Basement: Implications for Excavation Waste Valorisation , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21759, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21759, 2026.

EGU26-22630 | Posters on site | GMPV5.2

Micro-textural and geochemical constraints on fluid–rock interaction and fluid fluctuation in hydrothermal strategic metal mineralization systems 

Hao Song, Qi Li, Kun-Feng Qiu, Zhengqi Xu, Huijie Yu, and Jun Deng

The formation of hydrothermal deposits of strategic metals such as gold and uranium involves complex, multi-stage processes coupling fluid–rock interaction, structural dynamics, and chemical evolution across scales. This study integrates structural and micro-textural analysis with multi-scale chemical kinetic investigations to elucidate the dynamics of element enrichment and ore formation. We focus on bridging the dynamic linkages between micro- to nano-scale textures and the larger-scale chemical evolutionary processes in complex natural systems, aiming to decode the kinetic mechanisms governing element migration and mineralization. Modern analytical approaches, including machine learning–assisted data interpretation, are explored for their potential to resolve the spatio-temporal evolution of mineralization.

Using representative hydrothermal gold deposits from the Jiaodong region and uranium deposits from the Bashibulake district (Xinjiang) in China as case studies, we investigate the micro-textures and in-situ trace element and oxygen isotopic compositions of hydrothermal quartz. Cathodoluminescence (CL) zoning and cross-cutting relationships reveal multiple generations of quartz, corresponding to discrete fluid infiltration events. The CL intensity correlates positively with Al content but not with δ18O, indicating differing controls on trace element incorporation versus isotopic fractionation. Elevated trace elements (e.g., Al) in quartz are attributed to intensified fluid–rock interaction, which mobilized lithophile elements. Seismically induced fluid fluctuations are shown to enhance compositional variability in quartz by affecting fluid chemistry and pH.

Oxygen isotope analyses of successive quartz generations yield distinct δ18O ranges. Calculated fluid δ18O values evolve from mantle-like signatures (≥7‰) in early stages toward progressively lower values, reflecting increasing meteoric water input in later stages. Water–rock reaction is identified as a key process modifying fluid O isotopic composition. Remarkably, mineral-scale near-constant δ18O values suggest effective isotopic buffering by the host rock despite episodic fluid fluctuations.

Our results demonstrate that micro-textural and geochemical signatures in quartz serve as effective tracers for quantifying water–rock interaction intensity and fluid fluctuation history. The study highlights the value of combining micro-analytical techniques (e.g., LA-ICP-MS, SIMS) with macro-structural analysis and emerging data-science methods to unravel the kinetic pathways of strategic metal mineralization in hydrothermal U-Au systems.

Keywords: Quartz geochemistry; Strategic metal deposits; Fluid–rock interaction; Multi-scale chemical kinetics

How to cite: Song, H., Li, Q., Qiu, K.-F., Xu, Z., Yu, H., and Deng, J.: Micro-textural and geochemical constraints on fluid–rock interaction and fluid fluctuation in hydrothermal strategic metal mineralization systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22630, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22630, 2026.

The Niğde Massif is a metamorphic core complex located at the southernmost of the Central Anatolian Crystalline Complex (CACC) and is productive in terms of metamorphic-hosted Au-Sb, Au-As mineralization. It is bordered by the Ecemiş fault zone to the east and the Celaller thrust to the south. South-to-north lower-grade metamorphosed units cover ductile deformed high-temperature metamorphic levels on the massif. The massif is mostly composed of the Upper Devonian Gümüşler Formation, Carboniferous-Lower Permian Kaleboynu Formation, and Mesozoic Aşıgediği Formation, which occur unconformably. The Üçkapılı Granodiorite and Sineksizyayla Metagabbro in the Upper Cretaceous cut metamorphics, while post-Paleocene sedimentary deposits in the south and Neogene volcanic deposits in the north cover the entire sequence. Gümüşler, Kaleboynu, and Aşıgediği formations contain gneiss, schist, amphibolite, marble and quartzite units. This study examines the Çamardı region in the southeastern part of the Niğde Massif and the Au-As and Au-Sb mineralizations in this region. In the Çamardı Region, thrusted Gümüşler Formation over the younger Kaleboynu and Aşıgediği metamorphics are in NE-SW direction. This thrust forms the sub-formation which is known as SE Gümüşler, and the average dip- dip direction of the metamorphics forming the base of this formation has been measured as 150/40. Gold mineralization in ductile cataclastic breccia and schists is related with pyrite-arsenopyrite mineralizations. However, gold is related with siliceous-rich matrix with well-developed stibnite crystals in marble-schist contacts at the upper levels. W-E and NW-SE faults have been identified; it has been determined that the NW-SE faults generally intersect the W-E faults. These fault zones may be transfer zones for metamorphic-derived fluids to generate Au-As cataclastic breccias in deep cataclastic zones and Au-Sb mineralized brittle silica-rich breccia in marble-schist contacts at higher levels. It is considered that the Üçkapılı granodiorite and associated aplitic dikes intruding into the schists cut by NW-SE faults in the southwest of the field play a role in the transport and remobilization of Au-As-Sb mineralization observed both within the schists and in the marble-schist contacts. Gold values in rock samples in the field ranged from 0.3-6.7 ppm, while antimony values ranged from %0.3- 1. arsenic values ranged from %0.1-1 in gold-antimony rich samples. In polished sections, gold, arsenopyrite, stibnite, realgar, and marcasite are identified as ore minerals; and quartz, sericite, and rutile as gangue minerals. Gold grains generally range in size from 30-100 µm and are mostly found within pyrite and arsenopyrite. Deformation textures developed by cataclastic processes are present in arsenopyrite, pyrite, and stibnite minerals. Realgar-quartz fillings through fractures, tetrahedrite/tennantite veins cutting deformed pyrite crystals and the marcasite that replaces arsenopyrite and pyrite represent late-stage hydrothermal components. In certain samples, gold fills the discontinuities between pyrite and arsenopyrite alongside stibnite. The findings collectively impose significant early-stage constraints on the structural, mineralogical, and hydrothermal development of gold mineralization in the southern part of the Niğde Massif. All these observations indicate that gold mineralization occurred in at least two phases; may have associated with the arsenopyrite-pyrite paragenesis, and may also have been transported through discontinuities in later stages with stibnite.

How to cite: Bakkalbasi, A. E., Kumral, M., and Oyman, T.: Metamorphic hosted Au-Sb mineralizations in the Nigde Massif (SE Çamardı Region), Central Anatolia: field and ore microscopy studies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22679, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22679, 2026.

EGU26-1000 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Thermal Structure and EBSD Microstructural in Pelitic Schists of the Sanbagawa High-P/T Metamorphic Belt, Japan 

Aoi Harada, Yui Kouketsu, and Katsuyoshi Michibayashi

The Sanbagawa Metamorphic Belt is a typical high-P/low-T metamorphic belt. We studied thermal structure and microstructures within pelitic schists in the Tenryu area, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. Previous studies of the Tenryu area based on the Degree of Graphitization (GD) of carbonaceous materials have reported a complex thermal structure[1] and subdivided the area into chlorite, garnet, and, in some parts, biotite zones based on mineral assemblages. However, the relationship between GD values and peak metamorphic temperature remains unclear. In this study, Raman carbonaceous material geothermometry[2][3] and SEM-EBSD analyses were applied to investigate the thermal structure and microstructure of pelitic schists collected from the Shirakura Unit, western Tenryu area. The main mineral assemblages of the pelitic schist included quartz, albite, muscovite, chlorite, and carbonaceous material, with garnet and calcite observed in some of the samples. The temperatures estimated using Raman carbonaceous material geothermometry ranged from 329 to 458 °C, with samples from the northeastern part of the study area exhibiting higher temperatures. The mean grain size of quartz ranges from 12 to 60 µm, whereas that of albite ranges from 15 to 75 µm. A positive correlation was partly observed between the Raman temperature estimates and the GD values. The mean grain sizes of quartz did not exhibit systematic variations with temperature, whereas those of albite we correlated with temperature. These findings clarify the tectono-metamorphic characteristics of the Tenryu area in the Sanbagawa Metamorphic Belt.

 

References

[1] Tagiri et al. (2000) Island Arc, 9, 188–203. [2] Aoya et al. (2010) Journal of Metamorphic Geology, 28, 895–914. [3] Kouketsu et al. (2014) Island Arc, 23, 33–50.

How to cite: Harada, A., Kouketsu, Y., and Michibayashi, K.: Thermal Structure and EBSD Microstructural in Pelitic Schists of the Sanbagawa High-P/T Metamorphic Belt, Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1000, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1000, 2026.

What resemble epidote-mineralized joints in the mid-crustal Late Cretaceous Mount Stuart Batholith (Washington, USA) may instead be evidence for mode I/joint-like fractures in the magma during crystallization. Zones ranging in thickness from a few mm to several cm are occupied by epidote, chlorite, and other minerals. Adjacent to these zones in the hornblende quartz diorite, textures suggest epidote grew into the crystal mush, and was partly replaced and overgrown by magmatic plagioclase. The plagioclase appears to have nucleated on the epidotes, and commonly contain fragments in optical continuity. The plagioclase is nearly pure albite (~An99), and Sr and Y commonly exceed Ca. These relationships do not resemble low T post-magmatic alteration of the plagioclase.

In the same areas, rounded to amoeboid patches, up to several mm across, are composed of small (25-100 micron) and uniform ‘pills’ of hemispherical or radiating chlorite aggregates (xMg~0.7) occur, in sharp contact with adjacent minerals. Some are completely enclosed inside other minerals including quartz and plagioclase, whereas others are interstitial to large igneous minerals. Some contain grains of apatite, titanite, or fragments of epidote. These are tentatively interpreted to have originated as melt patches, from a melt greatly depleted in Ca, Si, Na, and K from the crystallization of plagioclase, quartz, and other minerals, and likely in the process of crystallizing apatite and titanite. A few ultra-fine-grained patches suggest a possible glass precursor. Assuming simple hydration, it would have been a very mafic residual melt.

Complex intergrowths of minerals are common, including a partial replacement of epidote by hornblende. Fluid inclusions are large and abundant in multiple minerals.

There is abundant evidence of halogens, including fluorapatite, and Cl, F, Br, and even I detectable in several minerals. REEs are detectable even by EDS in several minerals. K-feldspar contains up to 1.5 wt% Ba.

Large, healthy chlorite crystals comparable in size to the magmatic minerals occur in sharp contact with other minerals, and these do not appear to be replacing anything, nor does chlorite like this occur elsewhere in the batholith.

A 0.3 mm zircon contains a small ovoid patch containing quartz, K feldspar, and a more calcic plagioclase. This is interpreted as a melt patch of an earlier composition, crystallized into a nanogranite.

Tentatively, these relationships suggest fracturing of the crystal mush during crystallization led to a water- and halogen-rich ‘dike’ that interacted with the adjacent melt, dropping the solidus. Epidote crystals, some multi-cm in length, penetrated the melt, but was subsequently partly resorbed during crystallization of hornblende, plagioclase, and quartz, and even possible magmatic chlorite, at a depressed solidus temperature, and remaining melt quenched into the pockets. Fluid inclusion work and geothermometry is in progress.

How to cite: Magloughlin, J.: Evidence for magma fracturing, solidus depression, coarse magmatic epidote, devitrified and nanogranite melt pockets, and possible magmatic chlorite in the mid-crustal Mount Stuart Batholith, USA, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2259, 2026.

EGU26-5180 | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Calcite vein microstructures along the South Atlantic Transect: Implications for intraplate stress variations 

Walter Kurz, Lucien Eckstein, Gerald Auer, Terezia Kunkelova, Thomas Müller, and Jochen Gätjen

The South Atlantic Transect (SAT) is a multidisciplinary scientific ocean drilling experiment designed to investigate the evolution of the ocean crust and overlying sediments across the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (Coggon et al., 2024). The SAT comprises International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expeditions 390 and 393, built on engineering preparations during Expeditions 390C and 395E. It targeted six sites on 7, 15, 31, 49, and 61 Ma ocean crust to sample intact in situ crust regarding crustal age, spreading rate, and sediment thickness and to investigate the hydrothermal interactions within the aging ocean crust.

An integrated petrological, geochemical and microstructural study unravels the conditions of host rock alteration and the formation conditions of mineralization within hydrothermally formed veins and voids.

This contribution focuses on the internal microstructure of hydrothermal veins in drill cores sampled during IODP Expeditions 390 and 393. Microstructures, preferably in calcite, were analyzed using Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD). Here, data on the density and misorientation of calcite sub-grains potentially allow the assessment of intraplate stresses and stress variations with depth and distance from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, related to the increasing density of crust with cooling and age.

Microstructures in vein calcite are characterized by the formation of sub-grains, indicating that calcite deformation is mainly characterized by dislocation glide. Mechanical twinning is very subordinate and does not substantially contribute to internal deformation. The evaluated misorientation axes between the calcite sub-grains indicate that basal and prism planes are the main intracrystalline gliding planes. The activation of these slip planes requires relatively high differential stresses, which are far above the critical stresses for twinning. Analysis of average calcite sub-grain sizes shows a general trend characterized by a continuous decrease in sub-grain size with decreasing distance from the mid-ocean ridge.

Oxygen stable isotope data from vein calcite indicate low precipitation temperatures in the range of 2° to 10 °C, without a correlation between precipitation temperature and the age of the oceanic host rock, and with a very minor influence of magmatic fluids. Therefore, we assume that vein calcite precipitated from seawater.

The microstructural and stable isotope data imply that several calcite veins formed in situ at the drilled sites. The microstructures, particularly the calcite sub-grain sizes, seem to indicate that the related differential stresses decrease with increasing distance from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge. This can be related to the higher cooling rates of the oceanic host rocks situated closer to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge; higher cooling rates presumably generate higher internal stresses due to higher rates of density increase and volume loss with cooling. Alternatively, it may also be related to the fact that the ridge-push forces, and therefore the related intraplate stresses, decrease with increasing distance to the Mid-Atlantic Ridge.

References:

Coggon, R.M. et al., 2024. South Atlantic Transect. Proceedings of the International Ocean Discovery Program, 390/393: College Station, TX (International Ocean Discovery Program). https://doi.org/10.14379/iodp.proc.390393.101.2024

How to cite: Kurz, W., Eckstein, L., Auer, G., Kunkelova, T., Müller, T., and Gätjen, J.: Calcite vein microstructures along the South Atlantic Transect: Implications for intraplate stress variations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5180, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5180, 2026.

EGU26-5807 | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Almandine-1O and spessartine-1O in the Franciscan blueschists from Laytonville Quarry, northern California: petrographic, optical and compositional features 

Bernardo Cesare, Sofia Lorenzon, Cristian Biagioni, Fabrizio Nestola, Dominik C. Hezel, Matthew J. Kohn, Mykola Shopa, Maxwell Day, Martha Pamato, and Enrico Mugnaioli

The best example of optically anisotropic, sector-zoned garnet has just been discovered in stilpnomelane-garnet ironstones from Laytonville Quarry. The analyzed sample was metamorphosed under low-T (<400 °C) blueschist facies conditions, and consists of garnet and stilpnomelane in similar amounts, with minor quartz and accessory titanite, apatite, sulfides and ilmenite.

Garnet is subhedral to euhedral and < 300 µm in diameter. It locally shows rim dissolution and replacement by stilpnomelane. Optically, all garnet crystals show a weak birefringence even under conventional crossed polars. Analysis by polychromatic polarization confirms the already known sector-zoned pattern of birefringence, with six pairs of opposed pyramidal sectors displaying equal optical orientation. The twelve pyramids define the overall rhombic dodecahedral shape of the crystals. The optical sector zoning is accompanied by a subtle oscillatory concentric zoning, more developed at crystal rims where chemical zoning in Fe and Mn is strongest.

Optical measurements reveal that the birefringence in this garnet is 0.00053, and indicate that the optic axes in each sectors are oriented tangentially and form angles of 90° and 60° to each other.

Chemically, garnet displays regular concentric growth zoning with a well-developed bell-shaped Mn profile, but with a reversal at the rim. Considering all iron as FeO, typical compositions are: core = Sps43Alm41Grs15Pyr01 and rim = Alm61Sps20Grs17Pyr02. Notably, the pyrope content is extremely low, and XMg is < 0.03. The chemical zoning has no relationship with the optical sector zoning. Rather, some steps in the chemical zoning profile overlap with the optical concentric oscillations.

Ferric iron in the garnet was measured by electron microprobe using the flank method: the Fe3+/Fetot is in the range 5-8 %. It follows that the andradite component is not negligible, and decreases the grossular content, so that the compositional zoning becomes: core = Alm39Sps43Grs13Pyr01Adr03 and rim = Alm60Sps21Grs11Pyr02Adr07. Therefore, the garnet can be classified as spessartine in the inner core, and almandine in the rest of each crystal. The measured Fe3+ content of garnet has been used in the subsequent refinement of the crystal structure.

Transmission FTIR spectra recorded from garnets show weak absorption in the OH-stretching region, suggesting garnets contain trace amounts of OH and no molecular H2O. However, as garnets contain numerous inclusions, it is not clear whether the observed OH-signal is due to garnet or OH-bearing mineral inclusions.

Analysis of the blueschist-facies rocks from the Laytonville Quarry deepens our knowledge of non-cubic Fe-Mg-Mn-Ca garnets increasingly observed in low-T metamorphic rocks, and allows discussion of the relationships of (non) parallelism among their optic and crystallographic axes.

How to cite: Cesare, B., Lorenzon, S., Biagioni, C., Nestola, F., Hezel, D. C., Kohn, M. J., Shopa, M., Day, M., Pamato, M., and Mugnaioli, E.: Almandine-1O and spessartine-1O in the Franciscan blueschists from Laytonville Quarry, northern California: petrographic, optical and compositional features, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5807, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5807, 2026.

EGU26-8142 | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Decoding crystallographic orientations: how grain-scale textures can be used to infer UHP conditions in felsic rocks 

Rellie Goddard, Andrew Cross, Geoffrey Lloyd, Thomas Breithaupt, Brendan V.Dyck, Haiyan Chen, Andrew Parsons, and Anna Bidgood

At plate boundaries where continents collide, felsic continental crust can be buried to depths of  > 100 km resulting in the formation of ultra-high pressure (UHP) minerals such as coesite, a high-pressure polymorph of SiO2. While the burial and subsequent exhumation of buoyant continental crust poses interesting questions for large-scale tectonics, the identification of such UHP terranes is difficult as few petrological barometers are suitable for dominantly felsic lithologies. In such cases, burial to extreme depths is commonly identified through the preservation of coesite or from parallel or radiating columnar grains of quartz assumed to have formed as quartz transforms from coesite—a microstructure termed 'palisades'. However, coesite readily transforms to quartz upon exhumation, while palisade microstructures can easily be modified by annealing during exhumation, meaning that UHP metamorphism of felsic lithologies may often be overlooked. Recent studies proposed that the former presence of coesite could be identified through an orientation signature inherited by quartz, providing a crucial and relatively simple test of deep subduction. However, debate exists within the literature as to whether the quartz↔coesite transformations involve specific crystallographic relationships. Before using crystallography to identify UHP terranes in nature, a better understanding of the coesite-to-quartz crystallographic signature and the conditions under which it forms is required. 

We collected crystallographic data using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) on quartz in rocks from the Tso Morari Complex (NW Himalaya) and the Dora Maira Massif (Western Alps), two areas known to reach UHP conditions. We demonstrate that neighbouring domains of quartz commonly feature an 84 ± 4° rotation of [c] axes around the pole of a common {m} plane, matching the rotation axis and angle of a Japan Twin. This orientation relationship is a product of epitaxy, whereby the Japan twin plane in quartz nucleates on the (b) plane in coesite. In supercell simulations, the nucleation of Japan twins can be explained by the energetically favourable alignment of quartz tetrahedra on parental coesite tetrahedra. Through subsequent high-pressure, high-temperature experiments, we demonstrate that this microstructural signature emerges over a broad range of conditions, regardless of the availability of nucleation sites (e.g., grain boundaries) or the density of crystal lattice defects (e.g., dislocations). In addition, Japan twins are present in all experimental specimens that traversed the quartz↔coesite phase boundary, whereas palisade microstructures are largely absent. Our crystallographic method of identifying UHP terranes is therefore more robust, and remains applicable even in the absence of palisade quartz. Overall, this work provides a new tool to quantitatively and unambiguously identify UHP terranes, even when all coesite has transformed to quartz. 

How to cite: Goddard, R., Cross, A., Lloyd, G., Breithaupt, T., V.Dyck, B., Chen, H., Parsons, A., and Bidgood, A.: Decoding crystallographic orientations: how grain-scale textures can be used to infer UHP conditions in felsic rocks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8142, 2026.

EGU26-9568 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

In-situ analysis of nanogranitoids in monazite opens up new paths for understanding crustal melting 

David Günzler, Dominik Sorger, Thomas Müller, Matthias Willbold, and Silvio Ferrero

Melt inclusions in minerals provide key insight into mineralisation and petrogenesis in the lithosphere. For decades research commonly focused on glassy inclusions hosted in igneous minerals, helping to characterise a variety of magmatic processes. More recently, inclusions of anatectic melt in high grade metamorphic rocks increasingly gained more interest, providing a direct snapshot of crustal melting processes. In most cases they occur as polyphase crystalline inclusions in metamorphic minerals, consisting of quartz (or quartz polymorphs), mica and feldspar polymorphs, referred to as nanogranitoid. Nanogranitoids must be re-melted to a homogenous glass by recreating their original confinement conditions with subsequent quenching for a complete geochemical analysis.

In this project we analyse nanogranitoid-inclusion (NI) hosted in monazite and garnet from granulite facies gneisses with differing P-T-t paths of the southern Moldanubian Bohemian Massif. Distinct zonation in monazite and garnet were used to reveal this multiple complex metamorphic evolution from ca. 370 Ma to 312 Ma (Sorger et al. 2020). NI within these distinct mineral generations enable us to correlate metamorphic conditions during anatexis. For successful re-homogenisation of NI while ensuring individual grain recovery, we apply a modified established experimental routine with a piston cylinder apparatus (Bartoli et al. 2013). NI identification, textural and geochemical analysis are carried out by Raman and infrared spectroscopy, electron microscopy and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Monazite as an important reservoir for LREE, Th, U and Y, paired with nanogranitoids provides an ideal toolset for studying partitioning mechanisms under variable conditions in natural systems. Geochemical analysis of the hosted melt inclusions could help us to further enhance our understanding of the dynamics and timing of crustal melting during orogeny, the fluids involved and the conditions of melt-host stability.

 

References
Bartoli et al. (2013). Geofluids 13 (4), 405-420
Sorger et al. (2020). Gondwana Research 85, S. 124–148

How to cite: Günzler, D., Sorger, D., Müller, T., Willbold, M., and Ferrero, S.: In-situ analysis of nanogranitoids in monazite opens up new paths for understanding crustal melting, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9568, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9568, 2026.

EGU26-12222 | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

A shocked quartz pebble from the Araguainha impact structure, Brazil, investigated by U-stage, CL, and EBSD  

Lidia Pittarello, Natalia Hauser, Enrica Bonato, Roberto Pivato, Lucia Savastano, and Tesařová Hana

Quartz pebbles in the conglomerates of the Devonian Furnas Formation in the central uplift of the 40 km Araguainha impact structure, Brazil, are pervasively crosscut by shear fractures and shocked, showing sets of planar fractures (PFs), planar deformation features (PDFs) and feather features (e.g., von Engehardt et al., 1992). A recent reinvestigation of such pebbles interpreted the shear fractures as resulting from post-shock brittle deformation, but still impact-related (King et al., 2025).

A petrographic thin section and a polished mount from one of such pebbles were here investigated by Universal-stage (U-stage), cathodoluminescence (CL) and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to characterize the shear fractures. The shear fractures are filled by angular clasts of quartz embedded in a fine-grained quartz matrix, showing neither crystallographic preferred orientation nor recrystallization. The host quartz is twinned and clearly dislocated along the shear zones. A network of thin pressure-solution lines occurs at ca. 60° from the main set of shear fractures. The distribution and orientation of (shock) planar fractures was compared with the orientation of the shear fractures, following the suggestion that they should show a preferred orientation, and this might be related with the shock wave propagation direction (e.g., Pittarello et al., 2020). Further investigations on oriented pebbles are planned to better constrain their deformation history in relation with the impact event.

Engelhardt v. et al. (1992) Meteoritics 27:442-457.

King et al. (2025) Meteoritics & Planetary Science 60:124-132.

Pittarello et al. (2020) Meteoritics & Planetary Science 55:1082-1092.

How to cite: Pittarello, L., Hauser, N., Bonato, E., Pivato, R., Savastano, L., and Hana, T.: A shocked quartz pebble from the Araguainha impact structure, Brazil, investigated by U-stage, CL, and EBSD , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12222, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12222, 2026.

EGU26-17026 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

The Rengali Province, east India: a result of the Singhbhum Craton’s southward accretion or a ~1000-km dragging of the East Indian Shield?  

Aishi Debnath, Sandro Chatterjee, Indranil Paul, Siddharth Satish Karjini, Abhipsa Panigrahi, Saibal Gupta, and Iris Buisman

Major geodynamic processes driving Archean cratonic growth remain enigmatic, but rocks formed during Earth’s early evolution provide critical constraints on Archean geodynamics. The Rengali Province (RP) of eastern India is an Archean terrane situated between low-grade Archean rocks of the Singhbhum Craton (SC) to the north, the Neoproterozoic granulites of the Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt (EGMB) to the south, and the Archean high-grade rocks of the Bastar Craton (BC) to the west. The RP is bounded by the Barakot–Akul Shear Zone (BSZ) along its northern margin and the Kerajang Shear Zone (KSZ) to the south. As the RP provides a window into the cratonic growth processes, tectonic characterization of this province is essential. Previous studies have variably interpreted the RP as either an exhumed lower-crustal root of the SC, with the BSZ representing a thrust boundary or as a rotated fragment of the BC juxtaposed against the SC along a strike-slip contact. To resolve these contrasting models, we integrate field observations with petrology, microstructural analyses by electron backscatter diffraction, thermobarometry and geochronological investigations. The province comprises two contrasting metamorphic lithounits: (1) a southern high-grade unit composed of migmatites, augen-gneiss, charnockite, and metabasics; and (2) a northern low-grade unit consisting of actinolite schists and quartzites. Integrated field observations, petrography, and microstructural analyses indicate that high-grade and low-grade units followed distinct tectonometamorphic histories prior to their juxtaposition. Following gneissosity development, the high-grade unit records two generations of folding, followed by N–S-trending sinistral shearing event that overprinted the earlier foliation forming dome-and-basin structure. However, the low-grade unit preserves a single folding episode. Both units subsequently experienced an ESE–WNW-trending dextral shearing event at ~490–470 Ma under greenschist-facies conditions activating prism <a> slip-system of quartz, suggesting their juxtaposition during Gondwana assembly. Field-based kinematic indicators and vorticity analyses further demonstrate that the BSZ and KSZ represent dextral strike-slip shear zones. Thermobarometric calculation on the charnokcite suggests an average P-T conditions of ~750°C and ~5 kbar, while the low-grade records greenschist-facies condition evident from stabilization of actinolite+chlorite+albite+epitode+quartz±sphene in actinolite schist. Metabasics from the high-grade unit records ferropargasite+anorthite+quartz composition, indicative of upper amphibolite facies conditions. Published P–T estimates from the BC closely resemble those of charnockitic units of the RP and the metabasic rocks of high-grade unit exhibit geochemical affinities with BC metabasics. These correlations suggest that the high-grade unit of the RP is Bastar-affiliated, while the low-grade unit represents a fragment of the SC. The kinematics and P–T conditions of shear zones within and surrounding the RP closely resemble the Mahanadi and Cauvery Shear Zone. These similarities imply that, prior to Gondwana assembly, high-grade and low-grade lithounits of the RP evolved independently and were subsequently translated by ~1000 km into their present juxtaposition. This large-scale displacement was partitioned across multiple dextral shear zones farther south, accommodating small-circle motions. These shear zones can be correlated with the dextral strike-slip shear zones in East Antarctica, suggesting that this crustal-scale shear system extends beyond the Indian Shield and likely continues into the Antarctic interior.

How to cite: Debnath, A., Chatterjee, S., Paul, I., Karjini, S. S., Panigrahi, A., Gupta, S., and Buisman, I.: The Rengali Province, east India: a result of the Singhbhum Craton’s southward accretion or a ~1000-km dragging of the East Indian Shield? , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17026, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17026, 2026.

EGU26-17406 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Almandine-1O and Spessartine-1O in the Franciscan blueschists from Laytonville Quarry, northern California: crystallographic features 

Sofia Lorenzon, Enrico Mugnaioli, Cristian Biagioni, Dominik C. Hezel, Fabrizio Nestola, Matthew Kohn, and Bernardo Cesare

Occurrences of anhydrous garnets enriched in almandine-spessartine-grossular component showing sector-zoned birefringence are increasingly reported in low-grade metamorphic rocks in localities around the world [1, 2]. Despite several proposed hypotheses [1, 3, 4], the origin of optical anisotropy in garnet have remained unclear for a long time. Recently, reduction from cubic to orthorhombic symmetry due to Al-Fe3+ ordering in octahedral sites has been demonstrated to cause the birefringence of garnets from the Cazadero blueschists (Franciscan Complex, USA), strengthening the idea that garnets directly grew non-cubic in low-T metamorphic environments [1, 2].

Stilpnomelane-garnet metasediments from Laytonville Quarry (Franciscan Complex, USA), equilibrated at T < 400°C, contain a new, especially illustrative example of direct growth of non-cubic, low-T, almandine-spessartine-grossular solid solution garnets. Garnets in these rocks show optically well-defined sector zoning under polychromatic polarizing light, not corresponding to any chemical zonation. Chemically, these crystals have a spessartine-rich core, typical Mn bell-shaped distributions, and almandine-rich rims.

Crystal structure refinements, performed on grains separated from single birefringent sectors (n = 2) analyzed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD), determined these garnets as I2/a12/d orthorhombic (Fddd unconventional setting) with pseudo-tetragonal (which is in turn pseudo-cubic) unit-cell parameters (c > a, b; c -a = 0.002 to 0.005 Å). Slight cation ordering between Al and Fe3+ within octahedral sites leads to reduction from cubic to orthorhombic symmetry, where Y1 and Y2 sites are occupied by 5% and 1% of Fe3+, respectively. This result is supported by cation-anion bond distances, which are longer in cation sites with greater Fe3+, and by EPMA data processed by flank method, which indicates Fe3+/ΣFe of ~5 to 8% in these almandine-rich garnets. These observations further support symmetry lowering as the cause of the optical anisotropy.

Overall, the present crystallographic investigation on Laytonville Quarry samples confirms the results obtained in garnets from Cazadero blueschists [2], reinforcing the idea that common almandine-spessartine garnets grow non-cubic at low-T conditions due to a small but non-negligible andradite component coupled with Al-Fe3+ octahedral site ordering. Our results recommend reassessment of garnet thermodynamics properties and urge a revision to the nomenclature and classification of this key mineral in the lithosphere, in agreement with current IMA – CNMNC rules [5]. Therefore, we propose to name the orthorhombic Fe- and Mn-rich garnet end-members as almandine-1O and spessartine-1O, and to distinguish them from their cubic analogues (almandine-1C and spessartine-1C).

[1] Cesare B et al. (2019) Sci Rep 9: 14672

[2] Lorenzon S et al. (2025) EGU2025

[3] Griffen DT et al. (1992) Am Min 77: 399-406.

[4] Hofmeister AM et al. (1998) Am Min 83: 1293-1301

[5] Nickel EH and Grice JD (1998) Miner Petrol 64(1): 237-263

How to cite: Lorenzon, S., Mugnaioli, E., Biagioni, C., Hezel, D. C., Nestola, F., Kohn, M., and Cesare, B.: Almandine-1O and Spessartine-1O in the Franciscan blueschists from Laytonville Quarry, northern California: crystallographic features, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17406, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17406, 2026.

EGU26-17749 | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

The magmatic-hydrothermal transition record in zircon: implications for zircon texture, composition and rare-metal granite dating (Beauvoir granite, French Massif Central) 

Pierre Bouilhol, Nicolas Esteves, Urs Schaltegger, Maria Ovtcharova, André Navin-Paul, and Lydéric France

During their continuous cooling and differentiation, granitic magmas progressively shift from a medium dominated by crystal-melt interactions to a medium that is dominated by crystal-fluid interactions. We refer to this transition between a purely magmatic to a hydrothermal system as magmatic-hydrothermal transition (MHT), which is often associated with the formation of ore mineralisation. In highly differentiated and volatile-rich magmas (e.g., rare-metal granites and pegmatites), the circulation of hydrothermal fluids often modifies the original rock texture, by dissolving and/or replacing the primary minerals phases by secondary ones. Since most of our petrological interpretations are based on mineral composition (e.g., chemical zoning, geochronology), it is crucial to evaluate and quantify the chemical and mineralogical changes such rocks have undergone during the MHT.

To better understand the MHT in highly evolved magmas, especially how these episodes of fluid circulation impacted the texture and composition of the primary mineral phases, we have investigated the internal texture and chemical composition of heterogeneous zircons from the Beauvoir rare-metal granite (Massif Central, France). By combining µ-Raman spectroscopic, mineralogical and geochronological analyses on these grains, we show that primary (magmatic) zircon was partially replaced by secondary (hydrothermal) porous “zircon” through dissolution-reprecipitation mechanisms. The zircon-fluid interactions were notably facilitated by the primary, high trace element content in zircon (especially for U). This newly formed mineral grains (secondary “zircon”) are extremely enriched in non-stoichiometric elements up to few weight percent of P, U, F, Ca, Fe and Mn while they are depleted in Si and Zr compared to pristine zircon. These drastic compositional changes during the MHT of the Beauvoir granite clearly indicate that altered, secondary pseudomorphs after magmatic zircon can be a good tracer for the MHT in evolved silicic systems.

As a result of these dissolution-reprecipitation processes, these zircon grains are porous and highly metamict from the high degree of decay damage related to percent levels of Uranium, which considerably limits their use for zircon petrochronology. By comparing the ID-TIMS geochronological analyses performed on these zircon (312 ± 7.2 Ma – discordia upper intercept) with those performed on apatite (313.4 ± 1.3 Ma – 206Pb/238U weighted mean age, 9 analyses), we thus envision that the use of zircon to precisely date the emplacement of highly differentiated magmas is limited, while that of other minerals such as apatite (and potentially columbo-tantalite, cassiterite) may be more appropriate in such systems.

How to cite: Bouilhol, P., Esteves, N., Schaltegger, U., Ovtcharova, M., Navin-Paul, A., and France, L.: The magmatic-hydrothermal transition record in zircon: implications for zircon texture, composition and rare-metal granite dating (Beauvoir granite, French Massif Central), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17749, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17749, 2026.

EGU26-19616 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Transition from Fe-skarn to carbonate-replacement deposits: Evidence for structural control in the world-class Lavrion Mining District, Greece. 

Michalis Fitros, Stylianos Tombros, Xenophon Simos, and Sotirios Kokkalas

The Lavrion metallogenetic district, located in the Attico-Cycladic Massif, Greece, hosts an evolving proximal calcic Fe-skarn followed by distal sulfide-rich skarn, transitioning into the world-class Pb-Zn-Ag carbonate-replacement deposit. This study investigates the structural and microstructural controls on skarn metasomatism and its transition to carbonate-replacement mineralization, with emphasis on the role of extensional tectonics and detachment faulting.

The study integrates detailed structural mapping with microstructural and mineralogical analyses of thin sections. In detail, the study included microtectonic analysis, fluid inclusion microthermometry, EBSD, SEM-EDS, stable and radiogenic isotopes, and geochronological constraints (U-Pb, Re-Os, Pb-Pb). These datasets allow us to reconstruct deformation conditions, fluid evolution, and the timing of fault-related mineralization.

The Lavrion skarn system occurred within the footwall of the Lower Tectonic Unit, where NW–SE-trending brittle to ductile-brittle faults and the West Cycladic Detachment System (WCDS) generated an extensive damage zone characterized by intense fracturing, brecciation, and enhanced permeability. Skarns, skarnoids, and associated oxide and sulfide ores are spatially localized along these fault-related structures, which acted as infiltration paths for magmatic-hydrothermal fluids.

Microstructures in the different skarn zones, i.e., garnet-clinopyroxene and garnet-epidote, and associated ores, i.e., magnetite, pyrrhotite, and chalcopyrite, including oscillatory and sector zoning, sigma-type tails, replacement fronts, crack-seal textures, and mineralized breccias record episodic fluid flow, fluctuating redox conditions, and syn-tectonic mineral growth. Prograde Fe-skarn assemblages formed at ~560–530 °C and ~0.2 GPa under relatively oxidizing conditions, leading to widespread magnetite ores. Subsequent cooling to ~460–380 °C, combined with variations in fO₂ and fS₂, acid and saline fluids, promoted extensive retrograde replacement of magnetite by sulfide ores, i.e., pyrrhotite, galena, sphalerite and chalcopyrite.

Fluid inclusion microthermometry and stable and radiogenic isotopes indicate that the skarn-forming fluids were primarily magmatic in origin and were sourced from the Miocene Plaka and Villia granitoids. The ore fluids were significantly modified through wallrock-fluid interaction with the metasedimentary host rocks within the detachment damage zone.

The WCDS, not only controlled skarn formation but also exerted a first-order influence on the temporal and spatial development of the overlying Pb-Zn-Ag carbonate-replacement deposits. The Lavrion district represents a structurally controlled calcic Fe-skarn transitioning toward the carbonate-replacement deposit, where extensional faulting, folding, detachment-related damage zones, and microstructural evolution governed fluid pathways and ore deposition. Our results highlight the importance of integrating microstructural analysis with tectonic architecture in exploration modeling for skarn-oxide-related and carbonate-replacement-sulfide related deposits in extensional or post-collisional settings.

How to cite: Fitros, M., Tombros, S., Simos, X., and Kokkalas, S.: Transition from Fe-skarn to carbonate-replacement deposits: Evidence for structural control in the world-class Lavrion Mining District, Greece., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19616, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19616, 2026.

EGU26-20822 | Posters on site | GMPV8.1

Plagioclase textures reveal contrasting magma storage conditions for plutonic versus volcanic rocks 

Martin Mangler and Charlotte Gordon

The nature of the relationship between volcanic and plutonic rocks is a topic of ongoing debate despite decades of research. Plutons have been interpreted either as “failed eruptions” equivalent to erupted material; as “crystal graveyards” left behind after melt extraction; or as genetically distinct from volcanic rocks. Extensive geochemical, geochronological, and modelling work has not led to a conclusive resolution; at the same time, comparative textural studies of plutonic and volcanic crystal cargoes are rare despite their potential to reveal petrogenetic differences.

Here, we examine differences in plagioclase textures in volcanic versus purely plutonic rocks across a range of magma compositions and tectonic settings. We target plagioclase, an abundant igneous mineral phase which records significant disequilibrium – caused by, e.g., magma recharge and remobilisation – as prominent resorption horizons. The number of major resorption horizons was counted for ≥100 plagioclase crystals (>100 µm) per sample using BSE images, excluding oscillatory zoning and outermost rims in volcanic crystals. We observe that plagioclase cargoes in volcanic rocks consistently show more major resorption horizons per crystal (mean ≈ 4) than those in plutonic rocks (mean ≈ 1–2). This pattern is reproduced across magma compositions, except basalts, in which plagioclase crystals have a similar number of resorption boundaries (mean ≈ 1) to those in plutonic rocks.

Our results demonstrate that intermediate and silicic volcanic rocks record pronounced disequilibria more often than plutonic rocks of comparable composition, implying fundamental differences in magma storage. Assuming that major resorption horizons record recharge/remobilisation events, the observed textural contrast suggests that plutonic systems experience lower magma recharge rates and limited interaction between distinct batches, whereas higher recharge rates in volcanic systems repeatedly remobilise stored magma and promote the formation of hybridised, eruptible reservoirs. Our results highlight the potential of comparative crystal textural analysis to reassess the plutonic–volcanic connection across tectonic settings.

How to cite: Mangler, M. and Gordon, C.: Plagioclase textures reveal contrasting magma storage conditions for plutonic versus volcanic rocks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20822, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20822, 2026.

EGU26-810 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

High-resolution monitoring techniques for fault reactivation during the 2024 Kīlauea Southwest Rift Zone eruption 

Stefano Mannini, Joel Ruch, Steven Lundblad, Nicolas Oestreicher, Richard Hazlett, Drew Downs, Mike Zoeller, Jefferson Chang, and Ingrid Johanson

Kīlauea volcano, on the Island of Hawaiʻi, is one of the most active volcanoes on Earth.  Eruptive activity alternates between the summit caldera and two rift zones, to the east and southwest. On June 3, 2024, Kīlauea experienced its first eruption along the Southwest Rift Zone (SWRZ) in 50 years. This brief eruption was preceded by multiple seismic swarms, some associated with dike intrusions, that started in November 2023. These dikes did not reach the surface but reactivated pre-existing faults and generated new structures, reshaping the rift’s near-surface deformation patterns.
To quantify these surface changes, we used high-resolution topographic datasets derived from our helicopter photogrammetry surveys conducted in April 2022 and September 2024. These campaigns produced centimeter-scale DEMs (~8 cm) and orthomosaics (~4 cm), enabling detailed mapping of newly formed fractures, vertical offsets, and extensional opening across the ~12 × 2 km study area. To expand spatial coverage and better constrain multi-year deformation patterns, we complemented these products with airborne LiDAR acquisitions from missions in July 2019 and September 2024. The integration of these multi-temporal topographic datasets reveals the subtle and rapid morphological changes associated with magma intrusion and fault reactivation.
To better understand the kinematics of fault reactivation and magma propagation, we integrated these structural observations with seismic data recorded before, during, and after the June 2024 eruption. This approach reveals the along-rift migration of magma from the summit reservoir, its interaction with pre-existing faults, and the formation of new surface structures. Our analyses highlight the role of flank instability in controlling both rift dynamics and surface faulting during the eruptive episode.
By merging LiDAR, photogrammetry, InSAR, and seismic datasets, this study demonstrates a multi-method approach for capturing near-field deformation with unprecedented detail. Our analysis provides new insights into the mechanics of magma-driven faulting, the propagation of eruptive activity along rift zones, and the interplay between shallow and deep processes. These results not only enhance the fundamental understanding of volcanic rifting dynamics but also inform the development of more accurate hazard monitoring and forecasting models, offering practical applications for risk assessment and mitigation at Kīlauea and similar rift-controlled volcanic systems worldwide.
This study illustrates how integrating multi-temporal, high-resolution geospatial datasets with geophysical observations can advance both scientific knowledge and hazard management strategies. Our approach provides a framework for future eruptions, enabling rapid detection of surface deformation, tracking of magma pathways, and improved preparedness for volcanic crises.

How to cite: Mannini, S., Ruch, J., Lundblad, S., Oestreicher, N., Hazlett, R., Downs, D., Zoeller, M., Chang, J., and Johanson, I.: High-resolution monitoring techniques for fault reactivation during the 2024 Kīlauea Southwest Rift Zone eruption, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-810, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-810, 2026.

EGU26-1601 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Large-scale rift-related faulting linked to a caldera-forming eruption: A case study from Taupō, New Zealand 

James Muirhead, Alexander Gold, Madisen Snowden, Pilar Villamor, Colin Wilson, Genevieve Coffey, and Regine Morgenstern

Phases of accelerated normal faulting in the Taupō Volcanic Zone have been demonstrated to be triggered by rhyolite eruptions, yet little is known about how the Taupō Fault Belt responds in the aftermath of caldera-forming events, particularly the 232 CE Taupō eruption. To address this issue, we conducted paleoseismic trenching coupled with remote and field analyses of the Whakaipō Fault (north Taupō) and the displaced post-232 CE paleoshorelines intersected by this structure. The throw profiles along the Whakaipō Fault reveal increasing throw in proximity to Lake Taupō, highlighting the importance of Taupō volcano (in particular the 232 CE caldera margin) for localising fault strain. Paleoseismic trenching exposed a ~50º dipping un-degraded paleoscarp draped by fall deposits of the 232 CE eruption, implying that fault slip occurred in the days to months preceding the eruption. Analysis of fault and paleoshoreline displacements at Whakaipō Bay on the northern shoreline of Lake Taupō suggest that two main phases of slip on the Whakaipō Fault occurred: (1) an “aftermath” phase, occurring over a ~10-20-year period after the 232 CE eruption, during which 5-10 m of throw was accrued locally on the fault; and (2) a subsequent “longer-term” phase through to the present day, during which 2.8 ± 0.3 m of fault throw has accrued. Faulting during the aftermath phase is estimated to account for ~75% of the total extension accommodated locally on the Whakaipō Fault since 232 CE, and demonstrates that exceptionally large (>5 m) normal fault displacements may accrue along the Taupō Fault Belt in association with caldera-forming eruptions.

How to cite: Muirhead, J., Gold, A., Snowden, M., Villamor, P., Wilson, C., Coffey, G., and Morgenstern, R.: Large-scale rift-related faulting linked to a caldera-forming eruption: A case study from Taupō, New Zealand, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1601, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1601, 2026.

EGU26-2812 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Reconstructing the Shape of Magma Domains from Observations of Ground Deformation in Volcanic Regions 

Théo Perrot, Freysteinn Sigmundsson, and Charles Dapogny

Volcano geodesy provides information about shallow magma domains (locations of magma) in volcanic areas, usually inferred through inversion of geodetic data giving a set of parameters, such as position and internal magma pressure change. These inversions require a model of the crust and the embedded magma domain, typically with an assumed specific shape for the magma domain. This shape is constrained to be parametrizable to be inverted for, thus is limited to classical regular shapes among spheres, ellipsoids and sills, which are unlikely to capture the morphological complexity of actual magma domains. Here, we present an alternate approach to invert for the shape of the magma domain without requiring any prior assumptions about it, based on recent techniques from the field of shape optimization. Instead of optimizing a finite vector of parameters, the entire shape of the magma domain is optimized to minimize the discrepancy between observed ground displacements and those predicted by the model, under the assumption of an elastic crust. More precisely, our strategy relies on a “shape gradient'' descent based on the concept of shape derivative and on the level set method to track changes in the magma domain boundary. We provide magmaOpt, a Python and FreeFEM based code that iteratively performs the shape gradient search and solves successive partial differential equations that govern the problem on an evolving mesh of the area of interest. First, we demonstrate the potential of the method using a test case with synthetic data. Then, we apply the method to data from interferometric analysis of synthetic aperture radar satellite images (InSAR) observations of the 2022 inflation episode in Svartsengi, Iceland, to explore possible shapes of the magma domain responsible for the inflation. This work paves the way for a new class of methods that provide more information on magma domains and ultimately lead to better volcanic hazard monitoring.

How to cite: Perrot, T., Sigmundsson, F., and Dapogny, C.: Reconstructing the Shape of Magma Domains from Observations of Ground Deformation in Volcanic Regions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2812, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2812, 2026.

Volcano deformation is an important precursor to eruptions, offering the opportunity to obtain information on the internal structure and magma plumbing system. Furthermore, deformation of volcanoes occurring after eruptions may also provide evidence of magma pathways and conduit dynamics, as demonstrated by this study. The 2021 Tajogaite eruption on La Palma was followed by progressive subsidence and the formation of major fracture networks surrounding the active craters. In this study, we analyse time-lapse data acquired using repeat drone photogrammetry and fixed-installation cameras to demonstrate that the aligned conduits withdraw and collapse over a time scale spanning from months to years following the eruption. Topography derivatives and pixel tracking show the convergence and subsidence of material into the possible conduit and the formation of inward-dipping normal faults affecting the inner and outer crater walls. To gain insights into the physical processes controlling the observations, we design models of conduit withdrawal that can reproduce the structures if topography and conduit burial are considered. Our findings suggest that the normal fractures surrounding the Tajogaite crater and numerous other craters are not the result of the eruption itself, but rather the consequence of volumetric reduction in the feeding conduit or dyke after the eruption.

How to cite: Walter, T. R., Ai, L., Zorn, E., and González, P. J.: Post-eruptive deformation and faulting caused by conduit withdrawal and subsidence of the 2021 Tajogaite craters (La Palma), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3537, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3537, 2026.

EGU26-3835 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Tracking volcanic stress and strength changes using the seismic moment ratio (Mstk/M0) at Kirishima volcano, Kyushu, Japan 

Satoshi Matsumoto, Issei Hirata, Yushi Nagayama, Kentaro Emoto, Takeshi Matsushima, Mie Ichihara, Yohei Yukutake, and Hiroshi Yakiwara

Seismic activity in volcanic regions is strongly influenced by spatio- temporal changes in stress and crustal strength associated with magma intrusion and fluid migration. We investigate to capture these processes using the seismic moment ratio, Mstk/M0, defined as the ratio of the norm of a stacked seismic moment tensor to the sum of scalar seismic moments of individual earthquakes. This parameter provides a quantitative measure of crustal criticality, approaching unity for optimally oriented slip under high stress and decreasing under reduced strength or heterogeneous stress conditions.

We apply this approach to the Kirishima volcanic area, Kyushu, Japan, where volcanic activity has repeatedly intensified and declined over the past two decades. Focal mechanism solutions derived from waveform data recorded by permanent and temporary seismic networks between 2000 and early 2025 were analyzed. Seismic moment tensors were estimated from focal mechanisms and magnitudes and stacked within spatial blocks containing at least 20 events.

The inferred stress field indicates a strike-slip to normal-faulting regime around Shinmoe-dake, with the minimum principal stress axis oriented northwest–southeast, consistent with regional vent alignment. Spatially, Mstk/M0 values are systematically lower near Shinmoe-dake than in surrounding regions, suggesting locally reduced crustal strength and/or short-wavelength stress heterogeneity. Temporally, Mstk/M0 exhibits large fluctuations near the volcanic center, whereas values remain consistently high in distal areas. Comparison with focal mechanism misfit angles indicates that these variations are primarily controlled by temporal changes in medium strength, likely driven by magmatic fluids. Our results demonstrate that Mstk/M0 is a useful proxy for monitoring evolving stress–strength conditions in active volcanic systems. 

How to cite: Matsumoto, S., Hirata, I., Nagayama, Y., Emoto, K., Matsushima, T., Ichihara, M., Yukutake, Y., and Yakiwara, H.: Tracking volcanic stress and strength changes using the seismic moment ratio (Mstk/M0) at Kirishima volcano, Kyushu, Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3835, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3835, 2026.

The emplacement of intrusions (e.g., sills, dikes, laccoliths) is a key process shaping the structural evolution of passive continental margin basins, and their emplacement characteristics are crucial for understanding magmatism-driven deformation of the basin fillings. This study focuses on the intrusion emplacement characteristics in a passive continental margin basin offshore southern Brazil, aiming to elucidate the spatiotemporal patterns of intrusions and their genetic links with the stratigraphic evolution of the basin.

We integrated 3D seismic data with multi-disciplinary datasets from drilled boreholes, including petrophysical, geochronological, and petrographic information. A comprehensive interpretation approach was adopted, incorporating insights from structural geology, stratigraphy, and volcanology to construct a unified model for intrusion emplacement and its coupling relationship with basin filling evolution.

Seismic interpretation reveals that igneous intrusions (sills, dikes, laccoliths) in the study area exhibit distinct high-amplitude responses on seismic profiles, which facilitates the identification of their geometric shapes and spatial distributions—key characteristics of intrusion emplacement. The emplacement of these intrusions induced significant uplift and arching of pre-eruptive strata in the sub-volcanic zone. By analyzing the spatiotemporal patterns of sedimentary filling, variations in sedimentary thickness, the spatial location of volcanic craters, and the relationship between sedimentary rocks and intrusions beneath volcanic cones, we successfully constrained the emplacement period of intrusions, the process of basin subsidence, and the active period of magmatism. Additionally, multiple types of sediment-magma interactions were identified, which further reflect the response of sedimentary systems to intrusion emplacement and provide supplementary evidence for understanding emplacement characteristics.

This study systematically clarifies the intrusion emplacement characteristics of the passive continental margin basin in offshore southern Brazil, providing critical insights into the mechanisms of intrusion emplacement in similar geological settings. It also offers a valuable reference for understanding magmatism-driven basin filling evolution in global passive continental margin basins.

How to cite: Yang, X.: Intrusion Emplacement Characteristics of the Passive Continental Margin Basin, Offshore Southern Brazil, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4940, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4940, 2026.

EGU26-5204 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Magma compressibility matters: a key to decoding multiparameter datasets from active volcanoes 

Daniele Carbone, Marco Liuzzo, François Beauducel, and Eleonora Rivalta

The joint analysis and interpretation of multiparameter datasets from active volcanoes may lead to misleading conclusions, if important factors are not appropriately considered. Among these, magma compressibility, which is mainly controlled by the volume fraction of exsolved gas in the magma, may play a key role.
Past studies showed that the intrusion of new magma in a shallow reservoir may lead to significant mass increase without the expected volume change, since magma compressibility buffers most of the chamber expansion. Similarly, the magma chamber volume reduction during an eruptive phase may be much lower than the volume of erupted material, due to pressure-driven gas exsolution and expansion, compensating the withdrawal of magma, thus buffering the contraction of the reservoir.
Here, we introduce a theoretical study on how the different compressibility of the magma at different depths (variable amount of exsolved volatiles in equilibrium with the silicate melt) may influence the patterns of deformation and gravity changes observed at the surface. Magma intruding a volcano’s plumbing system may induce heterogeneous responses across different depths. At deeper levels, where magma compressibility is lowest, volume change may be substantial and control most of the observed ground deformation. Conversely, at shallower levels, where magma compressibility is highest, important mass changes may develop with only minor volume changes, accounting for most of the gravity changes observed at the surface. 
An important broader implication is that ground deformation and gravity data may not be suitably modelled by assuming a single, uniform source. Rather, a vertically distributed and mechanically heterogeneous magma system may need to be considered. This underscores the need for a joint interpretation of deformation, gravity, and volatile content data when investigating volcanic processes.

How to cite: Carbone, D., Liuzzo, M., Beauducel, F., and Rivalta, E.: Magma compressibility matters: a key to decoding multiparameter datasets from active volcanoes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5204, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5204, 2026.

Campi Flegrei caldera has experienced a critical increase in uplift rates over the past 20 years. Recent geodetic and seismic data indicate significant ground deformation (~18 cm in 2024) as well as increasing seismicity rates and magnitudes, further prompting the ongoing debate about the underlying causes. While shallow magma transport is often invoked to explain the deformation, other studies point to the accumulation of fluids in the shallow crust as primary drivers of overpressure and surface displacement. Disentangling the contribution of these processes remains a key challenge. In this study, we aim to quantify the uplift resulting from potential shallow magma migration and determine whether the deformation can be attributed mainly to it.

To address this, we integrate constraints from seismic imaging, geodesy, and rock physics into a 3D thermo-mechanical model with a visco-elasto-plastic rheology. Employing the available structural information on the caldera, the model features a deep magma influx originating from a depth of 8 km, feeding a shallower reservoir at approximately 5 km depth. We test the potential contribution of upward magma migration to surface deformation. We further explore how a mechanically weak shallow tuff layer and the hydrothermal system influence the response to the magmatic intrusion. The results show whether shallow magma migration should be paired with the effects of overlying structures and rheologies. The thermo-mechanical model reproduces only part of the observed surface deformation implying additional pressure sources, such as volatile exsolution or hydrothermal pressurization - which are not explicitly modeled here - play a significant role.

Thermo-mechanical modeling thus discriminates the role of magma in the ongoing deformation and provides insights into how stress builds and evolves in the system due to magma migration. These results are crucial for improving our comprehension of the deformation sources at Campi Flegrei and their interactions with shallow structures for seismic modeling purposes.

How to cite: De Siena, L., Nardoni, C., and Spang, A.: Quantifying the contribution of magma intrusion to the current unrest at Campi Flegrei caldera through thermomechanical modeling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5225, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5225, 2026.

EGU26-5406 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Topographic controls on fissure eruptions at Lakagigar and Eldgja, Iceland 

Maria Hurley, Francesco Maccaferri, and Thomas R. Walter

The coupling between surface topography and subsurface magma dynamics in volcanic rift zones is a well-established concept; however, quantitative constraints on this interaction remain rare and not systematically explored. In this study, we integrate high-resolution geodetic data from satellite and drone-derived digital elevation models to study eruption vents, cones and associated fractures from the two largest fissure eruptions in historical time, i.e., the Laki (1783–1784) and Eldgja (939–940) eruptions, each tens of km long and hosting dozens of eruptive vents. Comparing cone morphometrics with analytical stress models reveals a statistically significant inverse correlation between topography-induced compressive stress and cone volume. We show that increased confining stress at higher elevations narrows feeder dykes, reducing eruptive efficiency and producing smaller cones. Conversely, larger cones dominate in topographic lows where loading is minimized. Furthermore, we find that steep slopes generate high stress gradients that drive fissure segmentation, arresting lateral propagation and trapping magma beneath mountains. Our models also help to explain why variations in topography correlate with a transition from symmetric grabens in flat terrain to asymmetric fault offsets in complex terrain due to topography-driven vertical shear stress. These findings move beyond conceptual models and establish topography as a predictive parameter for along-rift vent location, discharge patterns, and surface deformation, offering a quantitative framework for volcanic hazard assessment in rift zones.

How to cite: Hurley, M., Maccaferri, F., and Walter, T. R.: Topographic controls on fissure eruptions at Lakagigar and Eldgja, Iceland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5406, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5406, 2026.

EGU26-5506 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Resolving traction changes on fractures in volcanic or tectonic contexts 

Valerie Cayol, Farshid Dabaghi, Olivier Bodart, Delphine Smittarello, and Virginie Pinel

To understand how magma propagates in the crust, displacement data are analyzed using models combined with inversions. Most often, the fracture geometry is assumed and discretized into dislocations, whose amplitude is determined by linear inversions. However, determination of dislocations is not as physical and parsimonious as determination of stress changes. In addition, most dislocation solutions assume that the Earth is an elastic and homogeneous half-space, which can lead to inaccurate results, as volcanoes are intrinsically heterogeneous (Montgomery-Brown et al., 2009; Masterlark, 2007).

To resolve pressure instead of dislocations, a method (Smittarello et al., 2019a and 2019b) was previously implemented that relied on the combination of InSAR and GNSS data, where InSAR data covering an eruption were used to determine the geometry of the eruptive fracture and GNSS data were used to track the pressurized part of this fracture. This method was applied to the May 2016 Piton de la Fournaise (Réunion Island, France) eruption, showing that magma first intruded in a sill before turning into the dike that fed the eruption.

In order to take medium heterogeneities into account, we propose a new method (Dabaghi et al., 2026) based on a fictitious domains approach (Bodart et al., 2016). As we use finite elements, heterogeneous media can be taken into account. The cost function involves a misfit, as well as regularization terms. An algorithm is presented based on the direct problem and the adjoint problem. Synthetic tests demonstrate that the method is efficient and robust for one to four InSAR observations in different lines of sight, even in the presence of missing data and noise. The method also works for GNSS data. Finally, our method was tested on the May 2016 eruption of Piton de la Fournaise, showing results consistent with our previous analysis, providing further validation.

How to cite: Cayol, V., Dabaghi, F., Bodart, O., Smittarello, D., and Pinel, V.: Resolving traction changes on fractures in volcanic or tectonic contexts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5506, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5506, 2026.

EGU26-7892 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Impact of topography and water load on magma propagation modelling 

Séverine Furst, Lorenzo Mantiloni, Francesco Maccaferri, Fiene Stoepke, Megan Campbell, and Morelia Urlaub

Coastal and submarine volcanoes are characterized by complex topographies, a significant portion of which lies below sea level, complicating efforts to fully quantify how surface geometry influences magma transport. Understanding the coupling between topography, stress fields, and magma propagation is essential for assessing volcanic hazards, including dike-fed eruptions and edifice instability. 

Conventional models of dike propagation commonly approximate volcanic edifices as simplified surface loads, thereby neglecting the spatially variable stress perturbations introduced by realistic topography and bathymetry. To overcome this limitation, we develop a two-dimensional Boundary Element Model for fluid-filled fractures that explicitly incorporates a discretized free surface. This approach enables direct coupling between detailed topography and magma-driven deformation, allowing magma pathways to dynamically respond to surface geometry.

We implement the model geometry in COMSOL Multiphysics to compute stress under four representative scenarios: (1) a flat surface with an imposed surface load, (2) a symmetric volcanic edifice, (3) an asymmetric edifice, and (4) an asymmetric edifice subjected to an additional water load, with gravitational forces included in all cases. These end-member configurations are designed to isolate the effects of topography and water loads on magma propagation.

Preliminary results indicate that incorporating realistic topography significantly alters dike trajectories, fracture geometries, and associated stress and displacement patterns compared to simplified surface-load models. The presence of asymmetric topography and water loads further enhances stress heterogeneity, with implications for both magma ascent pathways and slope stability. These findings highlight the importance of explicitly resolving topography and marine loading when interpreting deformation signals and assessing hazards in coastal and submarine volcanic systems.

How to cite: Furst, S., Mantiloni, L., Maccaferri, F., Stoepke, F., Campbell, M., and Urlaub, M.: Impact of topography and water load on magma propagation modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7892, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7892, 2026.

EGU26-8103 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Repeated dike injections beneath the Sundhnúkur crater row, Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland, imaged by relatively relocated seismicity 

Tom Winder, Elías Rafn Heimisson, Egill Árni Gudnason, Bryndís Brandsdóttir, Nick Rawlinson, Jan Burjánek, Jana Doubravová, Tomáš Fischer, Pavla Hrubcová, Kristín Jónsdóttir, and Eva P.S. Eibl

Between November 2023 – July 2025 there have been ten dike intrusions and nine fissure eruptions beneath Sundhnúkur, on the Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland. Geodetic and geochemical analyses show that these have been fed by a common source, located at 3-4 km depth beneath the harnessed Svartsengi geothermal area. This remarkable sequence of magmatic activity has been marked by abundant seismicity. Relative quiescence on the Peninsula – following the July-August 2023 Fagradalsfjall eruption – was interrupted in late October by elevated seismicity and surface uplift measured at Svartsengi, 8 km further west. As during inflation episodes at Svartsengi in 2020 and 2022, intense shallow seismicity accompanied the deformation, dominantly consisting of strike-slip faulting above an inferred sill.

From around 15:00 on 10th November 2023, intense migrating seismicity and rapid metre-scale horizontal deformation marked the intrusion of a NNE-SSW oriented dike, which reached approximately 15 km length in just 8 hours, and propagated under the town of Grindavík, which was evacuated. On 18th December, similar (though smaller amplitude) signals marked a second, smaller intrusion, but in contrast this dike quickly breached the surface and culminated in a 4 km long fissure eruption. A similar pattern has repeated in the following 2 years, with cyclical re-inflation beneath Svartsengi, and repeated dike intrusions and fissure eruptions along a common lineament. Through analysis of high-resolution relative relocations of the dike-induced seismicity, we investigate the relative geometry of the repeated dike intrusions, and the relationship between the seismicity and distribution of dike opening and location of eruption onset.

We find that most dikes initiate from a common point, likely marking a repeatedly used connection to the shallow magma storage region beneath Svartsengi. The dikes vary in propagation direction, forming a complementary pattern of seismicity and inferred opening, and occupy at least two sub-parallel planes, which closely match the geometry of eruptive fissures at the surface.

How to cite: Winder, T., Heimisson, E. R., Gudnason, E. Á., Brandsdóttir, B., Rawlinson, N., Burjánek, J., Doubravová, J., Fischer, T., Hrubcová, P., Jónsdóttir, K., and Eibl, E. P. S.: Repeated dike injections beneath the Sundhnúkur crater row, Reykjanes Peninsula, Iceland, imaged by relatively relocated seismicity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8103, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8103, 2026.

EGU26-8453 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Backward Propagation of Seismicity During the 2014–2015 Bárðarbunga Diking Events 

Yan Zhan, Yiwen Huang, and Yuen Yee Chan

Dike propagation governs how magma is transported and emplaced within the crust, fundamentally controlling eruption dynamics and the mechanical state of volcanic systems. Understanding its evolution is therefore essential for assessing volcanic hazards and crustal stress redistribution. Seismicity, which occurs as a dike fractures and deforms the surrounding host rock, provides key evidence for tracking the geometry, velocity, and temporal evolution of dike propagation. While the forward (tipward) propagation of dikes, accompanied by migrating seismicity, has been extensively studied, episodes of backward seismic migration—where earthquakes progress opposite to the main propagation direction—remain poorly understood. The physical mechanism responsible for this phenomenon and its relationship to magma pressure evolution and host-rock damage are still uncertain. To address this, we developed a damage-mechanics-based finite element model that couples fluid dynamics and solid mechanics to simulate the interactions between magma pressure, fracture propagation, and inelastic deformation of the surrounding rock. The model reproduces both forward and backward seismic migration patterns by incorporating stress redistribution and fracture reactivation following transient pressure drops during dike propagation. We apply this framework to the 2014–2015 Bárðarbunga diking events in Iceland—one of the most comprehensively monitored lateral intrusions—to identify the controlling processes behind the observed backward propagation of seismicity. Model results suggest that back-propagation arises from the reactivation of previously damaged segments as magma pressure decays and stress is transferred back along the dike. Our findings provide a mechanistic explanation for the dual propagation behavior of seismicity during dike intrusions and establish a physically grounded approach for linking seismic migration to magma dynamics and crustal damage evolution in active volcanic systems.

How to cite: Zhan, Y., Huang, Y., and Chan, Y. Y.: Backward Propagation of Seismicity During the 2014–2015 Bárðarbunga Diking Events, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8453, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8453, 2026.

EGU26-9062 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Surface deformation and volcanic activity at Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy) over the last 5000 years 

Elisa Trasatti, Ana Astort, Marco Polcar1, Prospero De Martino, Luca Caricchi, Jamie Gordon Clark, Carlo Del Gaudio, Lisa Beccaro, Sven Borgstrom, Valerio Acocella, Carmine Magri, Stefano Carlino, Tommaso Pivetta, Umberto Riccardi, Ciro Ricco, Federico Galetto, and Mauro Antonio Di Vito

Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy) has experienced repeated unrest episodes over historical and instrumental times, with the latest Monte Nuovo eruption in 1538 CE, making eruption forecasting particularly challenging. This contribution integrates long-term records of surface deformation with modern geodetic observations to interpret the short- and long-term dynamics of the caldera over the last 5000 years. A revised dataset of 32 elevation points integrates onshore borehole stratigraphy and offshore abrasion platforms, and provides documentation of the uplift due to the resurgence in the centre of the caldera 5 ka. Also, historical, archaeological, and bathymetric data constrain elevation changes at 20 coastal sites since Roman times, allowing reconstruction of pre-, syn-, and post-eruptive deformation associated with the Monte Nuovo eruption. Then, GNSS and InSAR measurements documenting the unrest since 2005 are combined with 3D finite element modelling to infer the geometry, depth, and volume changes of the active plumbing system. Results over these different time periods consistently indicate an active two-source plumbing system at Campi Flegrei, comprising a shallow deformation source at ~4–5 km depth beneath Pozzuoli and a deeper magmatic reservoir at ~8 km depth. Similar deformation patterns and source configurations characterize both historical eruptive phases and the current unrest. Petrological constraints suggest that magma ascent to depths shallower than ~8 km is the primary driver of unrest, even when an eruption does not occur. These findings provide a coherent framework for linking centuries-scale caldera dynamics with present-day observations. They suggest that the magmatic system at Campi Flegrei has been stable over the last 5000 years, thereby improving our understanding of unrest processes at this caldera.

How to cite: Trasatti, E., Astort, A., Polcar1, M., De Martino, P., Caricchi, L., Clark, J. G., Del Gaudio, C., Beccaro, L., Borgstrom, S., Acocella, V., Magri, C., Carlino, S., Pivetta, T., Riccardi, U., Ricco, C., Galetto, F., and Di Vito, M. A.: Surface deformation and volcanic activity at Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy) over the last 5000 years, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9062, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9062, 2026.

EGU26-9963 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

The 2024-2026 Kīlauea eruption sequence: eruption patterns, magma source migration and the evolution of the plumbing system 

Miriam Christina Reiss, Corentin Caudron, Christoph Sens-Schönfelder, Arthur D. Jolly, Diana D. Roman, Christelle Wauthier, Arthur Wan Ki Lo, Kyle Anderson, and Ashton Flinders

Kīlauea, Hawaii, one of the world's most active volcanoes, has experienced 40 episodic eruptions (at the time of writing) with remarkable lava fountain heights in Halemaʻumaʻu Crater since December 2024. Following a dike intrusion and successive opening of a conduit to the surface within the Halemaʻumaʻu crater on December 23rd 2024, the eruption episodes entered a stable pattern from January 2025 onwards, consisting of ~hours-long lava fountain events separated by days-to-weeks long repose periods. Lava fountaining events have reached heights of 450 m and all lava flows to date have been confined to Halemaʻumaʻu crater.

We study this outstanding eruption sequence with a combination of seismic and geodetic data analyses to understand how melt moves through Kīlauea’s plumbing system and how the system has evolved over time. We estimate the location of seismic tremor, which is the most dominant seismic signal of this eruption sequence, to study the eruption dynamics and inter-eruptive recharge of magma reservoirs. We also examine relative changes in frequency (df/f) and seismic velocity (dv/v), as well as tilt, GNSS and InSAR data. Taken together, these data allow us to study the geophysical response to the eruption dynamics in close detail.

We infer that the current eruptions are controlled by a complex subsurface magma plumbing system with migrating melt sources. We derive three distinct phases of activity which show the subsequent deflation of a shallow and then deeper magma reservoir, as well as melt recharge from depth and the dynamics of the shallow reservoir controlling the lava fountaining. Our study sheds light on the dynamics between different magma reservoirs and links to surface processes. It further showcases how tremor locations could be used, in combination with seismic velocity changes, to track melt movement in near-real time in the future.

How to cite: Reiss, M. C., Caudron, C., Sens-Schönfelder, C., Jolly, A. D., Roman, D. D., Wauthier, C., Lo, A. W. K., Anderson, K., and Flinders, A.: The 2024-2026 Kīlauea eruption sequence: eruption patterns, magma source migration and the evolution of the plumbing system, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9963, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9963, 2026.

EGU26-9973 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Deformation of shallow thermo-poro-elastic spherical sources and the 2021 Vulcano Island (IT) unrest 

Samuel Battolini, Massimo Nespoli, and Maria Elina Belardinelli

Fluids play a fundamental role in controlling deformation, stress redistribution, and seismicity in volcanic and geothermal systems. Variations in pore pressure and temperature associated with hydrothermal circulation can significantly alter the mechanical state of the crust, particularly during unrest episodes in volcanic scenario. Classical analytical models, such as the Mogi point source, have been widely used to interpret surface deformation induced by magmatic intrusions. However, these formulations neglect thermo-poro-elastic coupling and predict an isotropic stress state within the source, thus failing to account for seismicity occurring inside the deformation source.

Thermo-poro-elastic (TPE) theory provides a physically consistent framework to describe the coupled effects of fluid pressurization and heating in porous media. Analytical thermo-poro-elastic inclusion models have recently demonstrated their effectiveness in reproducing stress heterogeneities and associated focal mechanisms both internal and external to the source.The inclusion represents a finite, permeable region affected by temperature and pore-pressure variations, while the surrounding medium is assumed to be in isothermal and drained conditions. Nonetheless, at present time, the available solutions for spherical inclusions are derived for an infinite medium, limiting their applicability when surface observations are considered, especially for shallow sources.

In this study, we develop new fully analytical solutions for spherical and spherical shell TPE inclusions embedded in a half-space, explicitly accounting for the presence of a free surface. Closed-form expressions are obtained for displacement, strain, and stress fields throughout the domain, including within the source.

The problem is formulated under an axisymmetric hypothesis using cylindrical coordinates. Free-surface boundary conditions are enforced through a combination of the image source method and the Galerkin approach. The methodology is first applied to a spherical TPE inclusion representing a pressurized and heated reservoir, and subsequently extended to a spherical magmatic source surrounded by a spherical TPE shell, modeling a mechanically distinct fractured zone surrounding a magma chamber.

The results show that the free surface strongly modifies deformation and stress fields compared to full-space solutions. For shallow sources significant differences arise in all mechanical fields. In the spherical shell configuration, thinner shells exhibit enhanced internal shear stress and reduced external deformation, suggesting a higher susceptibility to internal failure.

The model is applied to the 2021 unrest episode at Vulcano Island. Using source parameters constrained by previously published we found that significant shear stress concentrations are predicted within and around the source, providing a physically consistent explanation for the clustered shallow seismicity observed near the crater. These results highlight the importance of TPE coupling and free-surface effects in the interpretation of volcanic unrest processes and fluid-driven seismicity.

How to cite: Battolini, S., Nespoli, M., and Belardinelli, M. E.: Deformation of shallow thermo-poro-elastic spherical sources and the 2021 Vulcano Island (IT) unrest, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9973, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9973, 2026.

EGU26-10568 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Modelling volcanic deformation from coupled magmatic and hydrothermal systems; application to Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat 

Jasmine Dibben, James Hickey, Adelina Geyer, Karen Pascal, and Graham Ryan

Soufrière Hills is an active dome building volcano on the island of Montserrat, part of the Eastern Caribbean, that has been in a state of ongoing eruption since 1995. Multi-parametric monitoring is conducted by the Montserrat Volcano Observatory, including an island-wide ground deformation GNSS network operating for nearly three decades. The ground displacement timeseries has been key to modelling the subsurface processes and pressure changes causing them, often using a pressurized cavity or, in more recent models, a poroelastic body in an elastic medium. However, a purely magmatic deformation source has thus far been unable to fully account for the observed deformation signal across the island, leading to significant residuals between simulated and observed geodetic data, particularly at sites closest to the vent. In this study, we will investigate the influence of the Soufrière Hills hydrothermal system on the deformation field. Fumarolic fields and heated springs suggest the presence of an active hydrothermal system at high elevations near the volcanic vent. In the southwest, a more distal geothermal upwelling, as well as anomalies in seismic tomography and gravity data, suggests the presence of a deeper accumulation of hydrothermal fluids, hypothesised to have formed due to the intersection of a number of regional faults and zones of weakness.

In this study we compare magmatic, hydrothermal, and combined deformation source simulations to investigate how different causal mechanisms influence the modelled surface displacement field across Montserrat. We use observed deformation from Montserrat between 2010 and 2022 via GNSS records from 14 continuous monitoring stations to validate our models. Two different model setups are tested: a homogeneous model as a computationally inexpensive baseline, and a heterogeneous model containing seismically defined low permeability andesitic cores in the north of the island, faults in the southwest, and a clay capped region of high permeability in the region of the inferred hydrothermal aquifer. Deviating from traditional volcano-deformation models, our models include a seismically inferred magma reservoir geometry in a poroelastic model domain in an effort to better simulate observed deformation at near-vent GNSS stations. The results from this study will assist volcanic hazard assessment and contribute to the investigation of on-island geothermal resources.

How to cite: Dibben, J., Hickey, J., Geyer, A., Pascal, K., and Ryan, G.: Modelling volcanic deformation from coupled magmatic and hydrothermal systems; application to Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10568, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10568, 2026.

EGU26-10577 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Coupled magmatic-hydrothermal processes during ongoing inflation at Askja volcano 

Laure Brenot, Társilo Girona, Hélène Le Mével, Mathieu Gossez, Loïc Peiffer, Noé García-Martínez, Kristín Jónsdóttir, and Corentin Caudron

Askja volcano's ongoing inflation since August 2021 (+85 cm uplift) presents a unique opportunity to study coupled magmatic-hydrothermal processes during sustained volcanic unrest. Concurrent observations of seismic velocity decrease (dv/v) at ~2 km depth and decreasing surface thermal anomalies (>1 K) suggest that hydrothermal circulation actively responds to magmatic intrusions. In this project, we aim to understand how hydrothermal processes modulate surface deformation and thermal emissions during magmatic injections at depth using coupled thermo-poroelastic, Finite Element Method (FEM), numerical models. Our models (built with COMSOL Multiphysics) integrate solid mechanics, Darcy flow, and heat transfer in porous media, representing a permeable hydrothermal reservoir above a sill intrusion at 2.6 km depth. Sill geometry is constrained by elastic inversions of geodetic data from Parks et al. (2024). Permeability depends on effective stress (exponential reduction under compression), temperature (exponential increase with heating), and volumetric strain (cubic modification of porosity).

Long-term simulations provide initial conditions with background thermal and hydraulic gradients, followed by a 4-year perturbation simulating the magma intrusion through increased heat flux and a prescribed displacement rate (0.21 m/year). Results show that compression at depth creates a low-permeability seal, trapping heat and pressurized fluids below. Beneath the seal, temperature increases, consistent with observed dv/v decreases at 2 km depth; while above the seal, reduced fluid circulation causes surface cooling of less than 1 K, explaining the decrease in thermal anomalies detected in satellite observations.

Our preliminary results suggest that multi-parameter observations at Askja (geodetic, seismic velocity, thermal anomalies) can be explained through coupled thermo-poroelastic processes, showing that hydrothermal system dynamics should be considered to interpret  monitoring data during volcanic unrest.

How to cite: Brenot, L., Girona, T., Le Mével, H., Gossez, M., Peiffer, L., García-Martínez, N., Jónsdóttir, K., and Caudron, C.: Coupled magmatic-hydrothermal processes during ongoing inflation at Askja volcano, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10577, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10577, 2026.

EGU26-10582 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Mechanical stability of Mount Pelée volcano: insights from elasto-plastic numerical models. 

Ada Abboud Oropeza, Muriel Gerbault, Valérie Clouard, Sébastien Chevrot, Bastien Plazolles, and François Beauducel

Mount Pelée volcano (Martinique) is under unrest since 2019, characterized by an increase in shallow seismicity and surface deformation. To date, an explanation for this unrest is the presence of a shallow inflating source beneath the western flank of the volcano. The objective of this study is to develop more realistic mechanical models than those traditionally used to explain the observed deformation.

In this work, we investigate the mechanical stability of the volcanic edifice using Drucker-Prager elasto-plastic rheology. The mechanical model is constructed by interpolating topography and bathymetric data around the volcano over a distance of 30 km, with lateral boundaries set in free-slip, bottom face blocked and a free top surface. The elastic properties of the crust are derived from the P- and S-wave average velocities. We explore two extreme effective strengths of the crustal domain in the gravity field, as well as the response to a compliant shallow inflating source (30 MPa at 0 km depth).

Our models show that gravitational loading alone can reproduce the magnitude and pattern of the observed surface deformation. Progressively decreasing the effective crustal strength generates stress and deformation over distances larger than those observed with the geodetic measurements over the edifice, but compatible to what a giant landslide could produce. In addition, incorporating a shallow inflating source within the gravity field produces specific shear stress and strain patterns that also correlate with the observed seismicity during the unrest period, as well as surface deformation consistent with geodetic observations. Differentiating between gravitational or inflation-driven mechanisms requires higher-resolution geodetic and seismic observations.

Overall, our results indicate that the western flank of the volcanic edifice is prone to surface deformation and failure, while the eastern flank concentrates shear stress and strain at depth, highlighting potential hazard on both flanks. In this framework, deformation is primarily controlled by the strength parameters of the crust. Incorporating visco-plasto-elastic behavior with layered parameters consistent to a complete velocity model, together with inferred faults and landslide scars, should further improve our understanding of Mount Pelée’s mechanical behavior.

How to cite: Abboud Oropeza, A., Gerbault, M., Clouard, V., Chevrot, S., Plazolles, B., and Beauducel, F.: Mechanical stability of Mount Pelée volcano: insights from elasto-plastic numerical models., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10582, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10582, 2026.

EGU26-10745 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Dyke propagation scenarios feeding the Monte Nuovo eruption (1538 CE) at Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy): insights into magma dynamics and implications for unrest. 

Francesco Maccaferri, Elisa Trasatti, Eleonora Rivalta, Luigi Passarelli, and Lucia Pappalardo

The 1538 Monte Nuovo event — the most recent eruption at Campi Flegrei —represents a key benchmark for understanding volcanic unrest at the caldera. Its preparatory phase exhibits significant parallels with modern non-eruptive unrest episodes (1950–1952, 1969–1972, 1982–1984) and the ongoing crisis (2005–present). While historical accounts, archaeological records, and field observations have previously allowed for detailed reconstructions of the pre-eruptive activity, these have largely provided static quantitative snapshots of pre-eruptive phases. This study translates these reconstructions into a physics-based modeling framework for Monte Nuovo pre-eruptive dynamics. We simulate the magma transport process during the two-year lead-up to the eruption, focusing on the propagation of a magmatic intrusion from a central shallow sill (~3 km depth) to the peripheral Monte Nuovo vent (~4 km away from the sill center). Our results test the robustness and consistency of previous findings, and isolate the effect of magma dynamics to the ground deformation, providing new insights on the magnitude of the magmatic vs hydrothermal contributions to uplift signals. This work offers critical implications for interpreting modern monitoring data and evaluating possible scenarios of unrest evolution should a Monte Nuovo-like event become increasingly probable.

How to cite: Maccaferri, F., Trasatti, E., Rivalta, E., Passarelli, L., and Pappalardo, L.: Dyke propagation scenarios feeding the Monte Nuovo eruption (1538 CE) at Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy): insights into magma dynamics and implications for unrest., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10745, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10745, 2026.

EGU26-10915 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Characterization of activity at Semeru volcano using high resolution radar and optical imagery 

Fabien Albino, Pierre Bouygues, and Virginie Pinel

Semeru volcano, located in eastern Java, Indonesia, reactivated in December 2021 following the destabilization of a

summit lava dome that had been growing since 2009. Monitoring topographic changes and surface deformation at

Semeru is important for understanding eruptive processes and assessing associated hazards, but remains challenging

due to the inaccessibility of the summit area, frequent activity, and the cost and sparsity of ground-based instrumentation.

In this context, satellite remote sensing combining bi-static and repeat-pass Synthetic Aperture Radar interferometry

(InSAR) with high resolution optical photogrammetry provides observations of surface deformation and topographic

changes at high spatial resolution. However, steep topography, tropical climate, dense vegetation, and rapidly evolving

volcanic deposits strongly affect InSAR observations introducing noise associated with atmospheric delays, temporal

decorrelation, and residual topographic errors. These external contributions can obscure low-amplitude deformation

signals, especially during periods of moderate or persistent activity. A set of seven high-resolution digital elevation

models (DEMs) is produced from TanDEM-X bistatic acquisitions and Pleiades stereo images. These DEMs allow

detailed characterization of the summit dome and proximal deposits prior and posterior to the December 2021 eruption.

Between 2015 and July 2021, the lava dome grew heterogeneously, reaching a volume of about 1.35 million m3. Over

the same period, and pyroclastic deposits accumulated with thicknesses locally exceeding 75 m, progressively filling

existing eastward channels and contributing to a redirection of eruptive activity toward the eastern flank after 2018.

The major 2021 eruptions produces a large pyroclastic density current reshaping the summit and the Besuk Kobokan

valley with a total volume of material mobilized during the eruption of 29.1 Mm3. The analysis of ground deformation

using TerraSAR-X InSAR data, corrected for atmospheric delays using ERA-5 reanalysis, reveals spatially coherent

patterns of subsidence affecting older lava flows and pyroclastic deposits on the southeastern flank of Semeru. These

signals are interpreted as post-emplacement compaction, with line-of-sight displacement rates of 5 cm/yr. However,

low and spatially variable interferometric coherence within the summit crater and the main deposition channel prevents

reliable measurement of post-eruptive magmatic deformation in these areas. Volcanoes capable of rapid transitions from

Strombolian to Plinian activity in tropical environments affected by intense rainfall, as observed at Semeru in December

2021, remain hazardous and insufficiently understood, highlighting the need for long-term, integrated monitoring of both

topographic changes and ground deformation to better characterize eruptive processes and associated hazards.

How to cite: Albino, F., Bouygues, P., and Pinel, V.: Characterization of activity at Semeru volcano using high resolution radar and optical imagery, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10915, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10915, 2026.

EGU26-11169 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Investigating the subsurface drivers of the 2025 Kolumbo volcano-tectonic unrest  

Kyriaki Drymoni, Társilo Girona, Jeremy Pesicek, Stephanie Prejean, Paul Lundgren, Jackie Kendrick, and Yan Lavallée

At active volcanoes, surface deformation and seismicity reflect underlying processes related to regional tectonics as well as the storage and movement of magma and fluids. These processes frequently overlap, complicating efforts to distinguish between magmatically, hydrothermally, and tectonically driven volcanic unrest. As a result, interpreting unrest signals remains a major challenge in volcanology, particularly if geophysical and geodetical observations are not integrated with physics-based models. In this study, we investigate the subsurface processes that may account for the pulsating seismicity observed along a ~30km-long NE-SW-trending structure during the 2025 Santorini-Amorgos (Greece) earthquake crisis, using physics-based, time-dependent Finite Element Method (FEM) models. Specifically, we simulate crustal extension and poroelastic deformation driven by magmatic and/or hydrothermal pressure sources. Our preliminary results show that the pulsating seismic patterns observed during the seismic crisis may have been controlled by a transient poroelastic response of the shallow crust to the transport of volatiles from a deep magma reservoir to the surface. Numerical simulations show that the sudden pressurization of leaky magma reservoirs, which release fluids through permeable pathways, generates cyclic and laterally migrating zones of tensile stress within a depth-dependent, highly fractured elastic crust. This dynamic response contrasts with the more localized and static stress accumulation produced by the pressurization of sealed magma reservoirs, thus underscoring the critical role of fluid migration in controlling the spatial and temporal evolution of seismicity during volcanic unrest. Integrating fluid–rock coupling into models of fluid transport and crustal pressurization offers a pathway toward more reliable interpretation of unrest signals and improved volcanic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Drymoni, K., Girona, T., Pesicek, J., Prejean, S., Lundgren, P., Kendrick, J., and Lavallée, Y.: Investigating the subsurface drivers of the 2025 Kolumbo volcano-tectonic unrest , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11169, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11169, 2026.

EGU26-11179 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Temporal elastic properties changes and rock weakening at Campi Flegrei, Italy 

Stefania Tarantino, Piero Poli, Maurizio Vassallo, Nicola D'Agostino, and Stéphane Garambois

Understanding volcanic activity remains a challenging task. So far, several conceptual geodetic models have been proposed to describe the inter-eruptive period, typically invoking either progressive rock damage or increasing overpressure within the magmatic (or gas) reservoir. Here, we adopted a combined seismo-geodetic framework to investigate volcanic unrest and to model surface deformation at the Campi Flegrei (CF) volcano, Italy. 

The CF caldera is one of the most active hydrothermal systems in the Mediterranean region and has experienced notable unrest episodes. Since 2005 a monotonic uplift phenomenon has been observed, accompanied by unsteadily accelerating seismicity (Bevilacqua et al., 2022). 

Subsurface rocks sustain large strains and exhibit high shear and tensile strength (Vanorio & Kanitpanyacharoen, 2015). Consequently, seismicity reaches magnitude ~ 4.0 only upon relatively large uplifts ~70–80 cm during the 1980s unrest and >1 m during the recent episode), contrary to what is generally observed for calderas exhibiting much lower deformation levels (Hill et al., 2003).

The caprock above the seismogenic zone is characterized by a fibril-rich matrix that enhances ductility and resistance to fracturing (Vanorio & Kanitpanyacharoen, 2015). However, changes in pore pressure and/or chemical alteration may ultimately induce mechanical failure and modify the structural properties of subsurface rocks. In addition, increased magma pressure within the reservoir can weaken the volcanic edifice, leading to reductions in elastic moduli (Carrier et al., 2015; Olivier et al., 2019). In recent years, a quasi-elastic behavior and a stress memory effect of the upper crust of the CF caldera under increasing stress suggest a progressive mechanical weakening (Bevilacqua et al., 2024; Kilburn et al., 2017, 2023). Seismic tomography indicates that most of the observed seismicity is associated with a pressurized gas reservoir (De Landro et al., 2025), while advanced big-data-based earthquake locations exclude shallow magma migration (Tan et al., 2025). Furthermore, recent petrological and geochemical studies identified a weak layer that plays a key role in overpressure accumulation, driving both deformation and seismicity (Buono et al., 2025). The initiation and growth of a volcano-tectonic fault have also been hypothesized (Giordano et al., 2025).

In our study, we tracked the evolution of subsurface elastic properties by monitoring temporal changes in relative seismic wave velocities (δv/v) thanks to the coda wave interferometry of continuous ambient noise at local seismic stations. A progressive decrease in δv/v is detected in the area where we observe the highest concentration of seismicity and that we attribute to the rock-weakening tracked by the earthquake occurrences. By incorporating time-dependent elastic moduli changes in the geodetic inversion of surface displacement recorded by a local GPS network (De Martino et al, 2021), we retrieved a refined time evolution of reservoir overpressure.  Our results suggest the active contribution of elastic properties of geomaterials in controlling the volcanic dynamics.

How to cite: Tarantino, S., Poli, P., Vassallo, M., D'Agostino, N., and Garambois, S.: Temporal elastic properties changes and rock weakening at Campi Flegrei, Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11179, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11179, 2026.

EGU26-11203 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Modelling magma storage and transport in Aira Caldera and Sakurajima Volcano, Japan. 

Lorenzo Mantiloni, James Hickey, Rami Alshembari, Brendan McCormick Kilbride, Tomoki Tsutsui, Miki Daisuke, Takeshi Tameguri, and Haruhisa Nakamichi

Sakurajima volcano, located on the rim of the Aira caldera in Japan, represents a major hazard for the heavily populated area of Kagoshima Bay. In recent decades, ground deformation modelling and seismic imaging have inferred the presence of a large magma reservoir ~10-15 km below Aira caldera [1] and one or multiple shallower reservoirs below Sakurajima [2, 3]. Understanding the connectivity between these reservoirs is critical for hazard assessment, as deep-melt migration into the shallow system can trigger major eruptions [4]. To this end, accurate models of the magma plumbing system are needed, considering both realistic reservoir geometries and the possibility of magma storage in dynamic magma-mush systems rather than melt-filled cavities. Modelling reservoir stability and magma transport also requires realistic estimates of the state of stress underground. In this regard, the location of Aira caldera within the Kagoshima graben offers a unique case study, as the regional stress field is likely modulated by various factors beyond reservoir pressurisation. In this study, we employ Finite-Element numerical modelling [5] and recent GNSS and seismic tomography data to investigate the coupled plumbing systems of the Aira-Sakurajima complex, describing the deep reservoir as a poroelastic magma mush. First, we use ground deformation data to constrain the geometry and location of the reservoirs, as well as melt supply parameters. We introduce a complex geometry for the deep reservoir inferred from seismic tomography [1], assessing its influence on deformation modelling compared to previously employed simplified geometries. We also estimate the volume of the active magma source, providing an upper limit to the magnitude of current eruptions. Finally, we integrate the best-fit model of plumbing system architecture and pressurisation into stress models including gravitational loading and tectonic stress to identify the conditions for magma exchange between the deep and shallow reservoirs, which might escalate volcanic risk at Sakurajima.

References:

[1] Tameguri et al. (2022) Bulletine Volcanological Society Japan, https://doi.org/10.18940/kazan.67.1.69

[2] Araya et al. (2019). Scientific Reports, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-38494-x

[3] Hotta et al. (2016). Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2015.11.017

[4] Hickey et al. (2016). Scientific Reports, https://doi.org/10.1038/srep32691

[5] Mantiloni et al. (2026). Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, under review.

How to cite: Mantiloni, L., Hickey, J., Alshembari, R., McCormick Kilbride, B., Tsutsui, T., Daisuke, M., Tameguri, T., and Nakamichi, H.: Modelling magma storage and transport in Aira Caldera and Sakurajima Volcano, Japan., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11203, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11203, 2026.

EGU26-11297 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Rheological effects in volcano deformation modelling 

James Hickey, Rami Alshembari, Gilda Current, Patricia Gregg, Matthew Head, Lorenzo Mantiloni, and Yan Zhan

The build-up of magma beneath a volcano can be revealed by ground surface deformation, and the recorded surface displacement can be modelled to infer details of the magma system dynamics. Constraints on magmatic processes can then be used to aid hazard assessment and eruption forecasting. However, inferring the processes occurring in the magma plumbing system during volcano deformation episodes is inherently dependent on the modelling approach used to interpret the recorded deformation data, and in particular the choices of rheology used to represent the solid and fluid parts of the magmatic and host rock system. Here, we explore the elastic, viscoelastic, and poroelastic rheologies typically implemented in volcano deformation analyses, and assess how their choices impact the interpretation of recorded volcano deformation data. Different viscoelastic rheologies can produce drastically different predicted surface deformation patterns, but all viscoelastic rheologies will typically lead to different source pressurisation estimates compared to a linear elastic rheology. Poroelastic source implementations can produce surface deformation even after supply to a reservoir has stopped, due to diffusive redistribution of pore pressures. Both viscous and poroelastic processes add a time-dependent component to the stress-strain evolution, which changes model predictions of temporal volcano deformation. Consequently, when applied to interpret recorded deformation, viscous and poroelastic rheologies can suggest non-linear magma system dynamics that are not captured by a simpler purely elastic model rheology. Issues persist with reliably parameterising different rheological approaches but their importance in modifying surface deformation predictions cannot be overlooked.

How to cite: Hickey, J., Alshembari, R., Current, G., Gregg, P., Head, M., Mantiloni, L., and Zhan, Y.: Rheological effects in volcano deformation modelling, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11297, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11297, 2026.

Understanding the transport of magma below the Earth’s surface is a key to studying volcanic systems. However, processes taking place at large depths are increasingly difficult to infer, since signals are often obscured by shallower processes. The Reykjanes Peninsula is an oblique rift zone in SW-Iceland and hosts several en-echelon arranged volcanic systems that experience contemporaneous rifting episodes over the course of 200-400 years. This episodic behaviour alternates with phases of volcanic quiescence lasting 800-1000 years. The occurrence of several eruptions since 2021 indicates the onset of a new phase of volcanic activity. Seismic and geodetic observations during recent years indicate that while at most one volcanic system appears to be active at any time on the peninsula, the focus of activity may shift abruptly between systems. Furthermore, while activity has focused on the Svartsengi volcanic system in 2023, the neighbouring Krýsuvík volcanic system has subsided at variable rates, indicating some degree of connection or communication between the systems.

We test this hypothesis of potential deep-seated communication by implementing lumped-parameter- and Finite Element models where the mid- to lower crustal magmatic plumbing systems within individual volcanic systems, connect to a zone underlying the peninsula near the crust-mantle boundary. This zone is thought to consist of discrete melt lenses, mush, partial melt and hot, ductile rock, and is rheologically weaker than its surroundings. The zone’s increased compliance relative to that of layers above and below allows for the transmission of pressure from one system to another. Pressure transfer does not require significant flow of material to occur between systems, allowing each volcanic system to keep its distinct geochemical characteristics.

In accordance with previous studies, the lumped parameter models represent the peninsula-scale magmatic system through several mid-crustal and one underlying, deep magma domain, all of which are connected through conduits and consist of melt lenses, mush and hot rock. The models reproduce several observed dynamics, including the temporary focus of activity on a single volcanic system, potential passive reactions in neighbouring systems, and abrupt transitions of activity between systems. Furthermore, the models underline the importance of considering processes and properties of the shallow plumbing system as well as volcano-tectonic interaction for deeper processes. 

How to cite: Greiner, S. H. M., Geirsson, H., and Sigmundsson, F.: Models of deep interaction between volcanic systems during volcanic unrest and its implications for lower crustal structure and processes: Insights from the Reykjanes Peninsula, SW-Iceland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11866, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11866, 2026.

EGU26-12106 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Reservoir connectivity in a continental rift: Insights from geodetic observations during the 2024-2025 dike intrusions at Fentale, Main Ethiopian Rift 

Lin Way, Juliet Biggs, Sam Wimpenny, Weiyu Zheng, Simon Orrego, Tim Davis, Edna W. Dualeh, Milan Lazecky, Tim Wright, and Elias Lewi

Direct observations of dike intrusions during continental magmatic rifting are rare. Therefore, magma plumbing systems and associated hazards in continental rifts are not well understood. The 2024-2025 rifting event in the Fentale-Dofen magmatic segment of the Main Ethiopian Rift involved the prolonged intrusion of a ~50 km long dike into ~35 km thick continental crust lasting over 3 months, accompanied by deflation of a ~6 km deep magma reservoir beneath Fentale. Satellite-based Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) observations at regular intervals throughout the intrusion allow us to monitor the co-evolution of the magma source and the intrusion using surface deformation data, in the absence of ground-based instrumentation.

Modelled dike volumes (>1 km3) are 4-9 times larger than the volume loss of the deflating magma reservoir beneath Fentale. At other systems, this volume mismatch has been attributed to host rock rigidity, reservoir geometry, and magma compressibility. While the total dike to source volume ratio is typically reported, this ratio can vary during the diking event due to changes in gas content and compressibility, or involvement of multiple sources. Temporally-dense displacement measurements of the intrusion at Fentale present an opportunity to investigate the evolution of the dike to source volume ratio during a continental rifting event, providing a novel constraint on the conditions for magmatic storage and transport.

We propose that tracking the geodetic volume balance between the dike intrusion sink and reservoir source over time could be used as a tool to reveal changes to the magmatic system, in the absence of other observations (i.e., seismological or petrological). We present a timeseries of intrusion to source volume ratio, derived from analytic kinematic models of surface displacements. We use the relative volumes as a proxy to infer whether and how the mechanical properties of the magma, or the magma source(s) being tapped by the dike changed over time. We show that the volume balance timeseries suggests a change in the magmatic system during the intrusion, possibly related to deeper changes in the plumbing system that caused emissions of methane and carbon dioxide in January 2025 and a ~19 km deep non-double-couple earthquake in February 2025.

Pre-diking inflation and post-diking ground uplift around Fentale points towards magmatic recharge and re-pressurisation of a reservoir that is distinct from the co-diking shallower deflating source. The interpretation of a single magma source feeding a lateral dike intrusion may be insufficient to explain the geodetic observations of the intrusion, where the spatial and temporal connectivity of magmatic reservoirs is not trivial. Continuous monitoring of deformation will contribute to our understanding of threshold conditions for reservoir failure, with implications for forecasting the spatio-temporal likelihood of future intrusions.

How to cite: Way, L., Biggs, J., Wimpenny, S., Zheng, W., Orrego, S., Davis, T., W. Dualeh, E., Lazecky, M., Wright, T., and Lewi, E.: Reservoir connectivity in a continental rift: Insights from geodetic observations during the 2024-2025 dike intrusions at Fentale, Main Ethiopian Rift, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12106, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12106, 2026.

EGU26-12425 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Shared magma supply at Santorini and Kolumbo constrained by amphibious seismological and geodetic analyses of the 2025 dike intrusion 

Jens Karstens, Marius P. Isken, Paraskevi Nomikou, Michelle M. Parks, Emilie E.E. Hooft, Dimitris Anastasiou, Nikolai M. Shapiro, Thomas R. Walter, Eleonora Rivalta, Heidrun Kopp, Torsten Dahm, Christian Berndt, Vincent Drouin, and María Blanch Jover

In January 2025, Santorini and its neighbouring islands experienced an intense earthquake swarm, prompting the Greek authorities to declare a state of emergency followed by the island’s evacuation of the majority of the population. Following a gradual inflation and rise in seismic activity beneath the Santorini caldera, the main seismic swarm began on January 27, close to the submarine volcano Kolumbo, 10 km offshore NE of Santorini at 18 km depth. The Santorini and Kolumbo volcanoes have both produced highly explosive (VEI 5) eruptions in historical times, including the 1650 eruption of Kolumbo, which formed a 2.5 km-wide and 500 m-deep submarine crater and triggered a tsunami that devastated the surrounding islands. Although petrological, seismological, and geodetic analyses identified distinct shallow- and mid-crustal magma reservoirs, there has been debate over whether the two volcanic centres are connected and share a common deep magma source, or whether they result from distinct plumbing systems. The 2025 seismic crisis provided an unprecedented opportunity to observe the volcanic system and investigate the potential deep coupling. Integrating seismic and geodetic data from onshore and offshore instruments, we observe and model the dynamic emplacement of a 13-km long intrusion with a volume of 0.31 km3 into the upper crust offshore Santorini, reactivating principal regional faults and arresting 3–5 km below the seafloor. We determine a gradual inflation of Santorini's shallow reservoir 6 months before the crisis, during the intrusion a mid-crustal reservoir beneath Kolumbo at ~7.6 km depth rapidly deflated. This suggests that both volcanoes share, and potentially compete for, a common deep magma supply. In December 2025, we recovered additional ocean-bottom seismometers and pressure sensors, enabling us to refine our seismological catalogues and deformation modelling during and after the seismic crisis. Our analyses highlight the importance of shoreline-crossing monitoring and the need for real-time access to submarine sensor data for a more robust crisis response.

How to cite: Karstens, J., Isken, M. P., Nomikou, P., Parks, M. M., Hooft, E. E. E., Anastasiou, D., Shapiro, N. M., Walter, T. R., Rivalta, E., Kopp, H., Dahm, T., Berndt, C., Drouin, V., and Blanch Jover, M.: Shared magma supply at Santorini and Kolumbo constrained by amphibious seismological and geodetic analyses of the 2025 dike intrusion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12425, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12425, 2026.

EGU26-12475 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Magmatically driven antithetic faulting on a topographic high: field and numerical insights from Northern Iceland 

Fabio Luca Bonali, Sofia Brando, Federico Pasquaré Mariotto, Alessandro Luppino, and Alessandro Tibaldi

Dike intrusions commonly generate normal faulting and graben structures in volcanic rift zones, but distinguishing magma-driven deformation from regional tectonics remains challenging, especially where pre-existing faults, topography, and lithological contrasts coexist. Here we document a previously unrecognised mechanism of magmatically driven antithetic faulting, based on an integrated field and numerical study from the Fremrinámur Rift, Northern Iceland.

We investigate a N–S-trending graben developed entirely on a Late Glacial subglacial pillow lava–hyaloclastite cone, without deformation of the surrounding lava plateau. High-resolution UAV photogrammetry combined with detailed field mapping reveals a strongly asymmetric graben geometry: the eastern fault, aligned with the rift-border fault, displays vertical offsets up to one order of magnitude larger than the western fault. Eruptive fissures at the northern and southern base of the cone suggest a single dike intrusion event that failed to propagate to the cone summit.

To explore the controlling mechanisms, we performed 2D finite-element numerical models simulating dike-induced stress and surface deformation under varying dike dip, intrusion depth, interaction with a pre-existing fault, and host-rock rheology. The models show that an inclined dike propagating along a pre-existing rift-border fault, combined with a strong mechanical contrast between the competent basaltic substratum and the weaker subglacial cone, produces pronounced stress and displacement asymmetry. In this configuration, von Mises shear stresses concentrate within the hanging-wall block, promoting the formation of an antithetic fault, while tensile stresses above the dike tip are significantly reduced, favouring dike arrest within the cone.

These results highlight the combined role of fault inheritance, topography, and lithological heterogeneity in controlling dike-induced deformation, fault asymmetry, and intrusion arrest in volcanic rift environments.

How to cite: Bonali, F. L., Brando, S., Pasquaré Mariotto, F., Luppino, A., and Tibaldi, A.: Magmatically driven antithetic faulting on a topographic high: field and numerical insights from Northern Iceland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12475, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12475, 2026.

EGU26-12492 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Insights into the possible relationships between the Vesuvius and Campi Flegrei volcanic systems in the sixteenth–seventeenth centuries through artistic and literary sources 

Flora Giudicepietro, Pierfrancesco Calabria, Elena Cubellis, Lisetta Giacomelli, Giovanni Macedonio, Chiara Martini, Lucia Pappalardo, Donato Pirovano, Calogero Giorgio Priolo, Roberto Scandone, and Pierluigi Leone de Castris

Vesuvius is one of the volcanoes with the highest volcanic risk worldwide, owing to the exceptionally dense urbanization of its surroundings. Its eruptive history is well constrained from 1631 to the present, while the period preceding this date, particularly the 15th and 16th centuries, remains poorly defined. During this interval, the volcano is generally believed to have undergone a prolonged phase of quiescence, although several historical reports describe episodes of activity. This time window is of critical importance for the correct interpretation of Vesuvius’s eruptive behavior, especially in understanding the relationship between large, explosive eruptions, such as the 1631 event, which represents the reference scenario in the current national emergency plan, and the more frequent effusive or mixed eruptions that characterized the volcano’s persistent activity pattern.

Previous studies have undertaken a critical re-examination of the historical “accounts” of volcanic activity during the 16th century in light of new scientific, historical, and art-historical evidence. These analyses have revealed previously unrecognized features of Vesuvius’s behavior prior to the major eruption of 1631, identifying elements that merit further investigation. Moreover, further research is needed to clarify the relationships between Vesuvius and the nearby Campi Flegrei caldera. Historical records indicate that, during the 16th century, the activity of the two volcanic systems was concurrent, suggesting possible interactions or mutual modulation of their behavior. In addition, Rosi et al. (2025) show that the long-term unrest that preceded the Monte Nuovo eruption (1538), which affected the Campi Flegrei area during the 15th and 16th centuries, represents the only historically documented unrest episode prior to the one currently underway. This aspect is of fundamental importance for interpreting the present unrest at Campi Flegrei, which has been ongoing for more than twenty years and continues to show progressive intensification and spatial expansion.

How to cite: Giudicepietro, F., Calabria, P., Cubellis, E., Giacomelli, L., Macedonio, G., Martini, C., Pappalardo, L., Pirovano, D., Priolo, C. G., Scandone, R., and Leone de Castris, P.: Insights into the possible relationships between the Vesuvius and Campi Flegrei volcanic systems in the sixteenth–seventeenth centuries through artistic and literary sources, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12492, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12492, 2026.

EGU26-13293 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Upper Acıgöl Tuff: Eruption dynamics of the youngest Cappadocian ignimbrite 

Xavier Bolós, Ivan Sunyé-Puchol, Rengin Özsoy-Ünal, Efe Akkas, Louise Muir, Lorenzo Tavazzani, Manuela Nazzari, Olivier Bachmann, Piergiorgio Scarlato, and Silvio Mollo

The Late Pleistocene Lower and Upper Acıgöl Tuffs (LAT and UAT; 190 ± 11 ka and 164 ± 4 ka) represent the two most recent major ignimbrite eruptions on the Cappadocia Plateau in the Central Anatolian Volcanic Province. Both Acıgöl ignimbrite eruptions correspond to VEI 6 events, with caldera collapse and regionally widespread dispersal of tens of km³ of tephra. Understanding syn-caldera eruptive processes is critical for volcanic hazard assessment in regions such as Cappadocia, where active volcanic systems coexist with dense populations and intense tourism. Although previous studies of the Acıgöl caldera complex have constrained eruption ages, stratigraphy, and geochemistry, the latest syn-caldera eruptive processes associated with UAT ignimbrite emplacement remain poorly resolved. Here we reconstruct the eruptive history of the UAT through proximal volcanostratigraphy, integrated with glass geochemistry and previous published geochronology. The stratigraphic record within the caldera documents a continuous succession of deposits including a phreatomagmatic tephra ring, debris-avalanche deposits derived from the Koçadağ intra-caldera dome, lithic-rich Plinian fallout, caldera-forming ignimbrite, and post-collapse lava-dome emplacement. Our results indicate that the Taşkesik intra-caldera maar eruption occurred during the early stages of the UAT caldera-forming eruption. While not a deterministic precursor, this small-scale event could represent the onset of a cascade of processes that ultimately led to magma chamber decompression, roof subsidence, and ignimbrite emplacement associated with caldera collapse. This refined syn-caldera framework at Acıgöl provides new constraints on caldera-collapse dynamics and has direct implications for hazard assessment in active caldera systems.

This work was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (TURVO, PID2023-147255NB-I00; MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033), the EU (ERDF; Horizon 2020–MSCA PÜSKÜRÜM, Grant 101024337), and the Italian PNRR–NextGenerationEU through the ÇoraDrill project (CUP B83C25001180001).

How to cite: Bolós, X., Sunyé-Puchol, I., Özsoy-Ünal, R., Akkas, E., Muir, L., Tavazzani, L., Nazzari, M., Bachmann, O., Scarlato, P., and Mollo, S.: Upper Acıgöl Tuff: Eruption dynamics of the youngest Cappadocian ignimbrite, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13293, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13293, 2026.

EGU26-13925 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Influence of tectonic stress and pore-fluid pressure on caldera collapse and resurgence – a 3D analytical solution 

Daniel Woodell, Martin Schöpfer, and Eoghan Holohan

Caldera collapse or resurgence is commonly accommodated by slip along a near-cylindrical ring fault system, and is hence often idealized as a rigid piston moving in response to pressure changes in a fluid chamber. Existing piston models explore variations in geometry and mechanical properties of the reservoir and ring fault, but they generally neglect effects of regional tectonic stresses and pore-fluid pressures. Here we present a new analytical piston model that incorporates the regional stress state as a single parameter, the “average earth pressure coefficient,” which is defined as the mean horizontal to vertical effective stress.  The presence of pore-fluids is incorporated by using Terzaghi’s effective stress principle, which governs the effective normal stress acting on the ring fault. Data from 14 active caldera volcanoes that have well-constrained piston dimensions and that span a range of eruptive compositions and collapse magnitudes are used to explore realistic model parameter ranges.

The model results are captured by a dimensionless stability parameter (μK/r̄), combining effective ring fault friction (μ), average earth pressure coefficient (K), and piston radius normalized by its thickness (). This parameter governs piston stability and describes a hysteresis (i.e., a history-dependent lag) between changes in magma reservoir pressure and ring-fault slip. A key finding is that extensional tectonic stresses, low ring-fault friction, and/or elevated pore-fluid pressures are necessary conditions for initiating caldera collapse and resurgence, particularly at calderas with high thickness to diameter (T/D) ratios. Consistent with model predictions, most of the well-constrained calderas examined here occur in extensional or transtensional tectonic settings; collapse or resurgence under a compressional tectonic regime is comparatively rare.

How to cite: Woodell, D., Schöpfer, M., and Holohan, E.: Influence of tectonic stress and pore-fluid pressure on caldera collapse and resurgence – a 3D analytical solution, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13925, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13925, 2026.

EGU26-14932 | Orals | GMPV10.12

The 1 September 2025 geodetic event: a key phenomenon for understanding the unrest evolution at Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy) 

Giovanni Macedonio, Flora Giudicepietro, Francesco Casu, Manuela Bonano, Giuseppe Brandi, Claudio De Luca, Prospero De Martino, Mauro A. Di Vito, Mario Dolce, Antonio Iorio, Michele Manunta, Fernando Monterroso, Lucia Pappalardo, Patrizia Ricciolino, Yenni Lorena Belen Roa, Giovanni Scarpato, Pasquale Striano, and Riccardo Lanari

On 1 September 2025, an Md 4.0 earthquake occurred within a seismic swarm at the Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy) and produced an unprecedented coseismic displacement. The resulting ground deformation, reaching approximately up to 4 cm, clearly outlined the directions of motion of a distinct crustal block and revealed an extensional displacement pattern. This deformation developed in an area where a geodetic anomaly (an uplift deficit, in particular), superimposed on the long-term background deformation field, was identified in previous studies. The spatial distribution and geometry of the deformation, retrieved through GNSS and DInSAR measurements, closely replicate those of the previously recognized anomaly in the Mt. Olibano–Accademia sector, thereby confirming the active involvement of this structural domain in the ongoing caldera dynamics. The sharp and well-defined displacement associated with the Md 4.0 earthquake allowed us to retrospectively identify smaller, analogous deformation episodes that occurred earlier in the unrest sequence but remained less distinct due to their limited amplitude. Altogether, these observations place new constraints on the mechanical behavior of the central–eastern sector of the Campi Flegrei caldera. They improve our understanding of how localized fracturing and faulting processes, within the shallow crust, interact with the broader deformation field driven by the current unrest phase.

How to cite: Macedonio, G., Giudicepietro, F., Casu, F., Bonano, M., Brandi, G., De Luca, C., De Martino, P., Di Vito, M. A., Dolce, M., Iorio, A., Manunta, M., Monterroso, F., Pappalardo, L., Ricciolino, P., Roa, Y. L. B., Scarpato, G., Striano, P., and Lanari, R.: The 1 September 2025 geodetic event: a key phenomenon for understanding the unrest evolution at Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14932, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14932, 2026.

EGU26-14970 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

How does topography affect the propagation of magmatic intrusions? An experimental study 

Saskia Willar-Sheehan, Janine Kavanagh, and Kate Williams

Understanding the controls on magma ascent is critical for developing eruption forecasting. The movement of dykes (vertical magma intrusions) through the crust is particularly important to constrain, as often dyke propagation inferred from surface deformation, geodetic inversion techniques and seismicity is used to signify volcanic unrest, potentially leading to evacuation orders and eruption. However, the factors affecting dyke direction, geometry and ascent velocity are still relatively unconstrained.

In this study we explore the topographic loading controls on dyke behaviour. It is impossible to visualise dyke behaviour in natural systems as these processes occur at depth and on large scales, but scaled experimental analogue setups allow us to study the natural world in a laboratory setting, allowing us to make valuable insights into natural processes. We use an analogue setup, with a transparent, gelatine solid as a homogeneous elastic crust injected by dyed water from below as an intruding Newtonian fluid representing magma. The surface of the gelatine was moulded to represent a flat, inclined or ridge topography. Two CCD cameras placed above the experiment measure the vertical and lateral surface displacement created by the intrusion, as a penny-shaped experimental dyke grows. Polarised light is used in order to visualise the evolving stress field within the gelatine solid, recorded by an HD camera positioned at the side of the tank. Multiple injection points were used to vary the location of dyke initiation and their interactions with topography and previous injections. These experiments allow us to measure the 3D intrusion geometry, tip velocity, extent of surface deformation and rate, and relate these to the gelatine’s evolving internal stress field. Preliminary results indicate that topography does have an effect on dyke propagation, producing dyke bending, rotation and changing ascent velocity.

By understanding the topographic controls on dyke behaviour, we can better identify areas more likely to experience magmatic intrusions at volcanic systems worldwide, which has important implications for hazard mapping and managing volcanic risk.

How to cite: Willar-Sheehan, S., Kavanagh, J., and Williams, K.: How does topography affect the propagation of magmatic intrusions? An experimental study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14970, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14970, 2026.

EGU26-15028 | Orals | GMPV10.12

GNSS data highlight new spatial and temporal dimensions of the Santorini volcano-tectonic unrest during 2025 

Athanassios Ganas, Vassilis Sakkas, Alessandro Bonforte, Philippe Vernant, Pierre Briole, Efstratios Liadopoulos, Salvatore Consoli, Erik Doerflinger, Nikolaos Madonis, Ioannis Mintourakis, and George Goutsos

Since late summer of 2024 the Santorini Volcanic Complex (SVC) in South Aegean Sea (Greece) entered another phase of unrest as GNSS data indicated the start of strong deformation onshore Thera Island followed by increased seismic activity, offshore, NE of the island in late January 2025. The seismic events were detected first inside the caldera (September 2024 to early 2025), then spreading with intense activity towards the north-east to Anydros Islet, spanning an overall distance of ~30 km, displaying a NE-SW orientation. The seismicity pattern indicated swarm characteristics that culminated during February 2025, and subsequent seismic activity declined but remained above the unrest levels during the rest of 2025. In terms of ground deformation, cm to dm-size displacements were recorded onshore Thera and in neighbouring islands during the period August 2024 - February 2025. In early 2025 several groups installed new permanent GNSS equipment on Thera and surrounding islands. This GNSS instrumentation in South Cyclades reached 32 sites during April 2025. Those stations provide a wealth of open data that we use to study the evolution of the deformation in the broad South Cyclades Islands.

Overall, the GNSS data showed an inflation of the Thera volcano since August 2024. The modelled magma source was located near the inflation centre of 2011-2012 unrest period. At the end of February 2025, the ground displacements in South Cyclades islands depicted a NE-SW converging pattern between Thera and Anydros, and a NW-SE diverging pattern between Ios-Naxos and Astypalaia Islands. The motion amplitudes were large, exceeding 13 cm at Thera and 3 cm at Naxos. The February 2025 GNSS data fits well with a dislocation model of a south-east dipping fault located between the Kolumbo submarine volcano and the Anydros islet (Briole et al. 2025). Since March 2025, the deformation continues with the positive, 3D baseline rate changes between GNSS stations exceeding the pre-unrest rates thus indicating a nearly-aseismic opening of the Santorini – Amorgos graben. This implies that new magma continues to arrive at shallow crustal depths.

 

Briole, P., Ganas, A., Serpetsidaki, A., Beauducel, F., Sakkas, V., Tsironi, V., Elias, P. 2025. Volcano-tectonic interaction at Santorini. The crisis of February 2025. Constraints from geodesy, Geophysical Journal International, ggaf262, https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggaf262

 

How to cite: Ganas, A., Sakkas, V., Bonforte, A., Vernant, P., Briole, P., Liadopoulos, E., Consoli, S., Doerflinger, E., Madonis, N., Mintourakis, I., and Goutsos, G.: GNSS data highlight new spatial and temporal dimensions of the Santorini volcano-tectonic unrest during 2025, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15028, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15028, 2026.

EGU26-15110 | Orals | GMPV10.12

Source modelling of surface deformation and seismicity at the Campi Flegrei
 

Jinhui Cheng, Zhen Li, Mateo Acosta, Brice Lecampion, and Jean-Philippe Avouac

Campi Flegrei, a restless caldera near Naples, Italy, has experienced significant ground uplift, elevated seismicity, and intense gas emissions over the past two decades. The physical source driving the observed deformation and seismicity remains debated, with proposed mechanisms including magmatic intrusion, hydrothermal pressurization, or hybrid processes. Recent seismic tomography images reveal a gas-rich reservoir at depths of ~2–3.5 km, coincident with concentrated seismicity, highlighting the potential dominant role of the shallow hydrothermal system.

In this study, we investigate whether a shallow reservoir can jointly explain both surface deformation and seismicity during the ongoing unrest. We use geodetic observations to constrain time-dependent volume changes of the shallow reservoir, integrating multi-year InSAR data from Sentinel-1 with continuous GPS measurements. To isolate signals associated with distinct deformation sources, we apply variational Bayesian Independent Component Analysis (vbICA). The reconstructed reservoir volume-change history is then incorporated into the induced-seismicity framework Flow2Quake to compute Coulomb stress changes, which are assumed to modulate seismic activity.

Our results show that volume changes within the shallow reservoir can consistently reproduce both the observed surface deformation and the spatial–temporal patterns of seismicity at Campi Flegrei. These findings place new constraints on the dominant source of unrest and improve our understanding of the coupled hydrothermal–mechanical processes governing the current state of the caldera.

How to cite: Cheng, J., Li, Z., Acosta, M., Lecampion, B., and Avouac, J.-P.: Source modelling of surface deformation and seismicity at the Campi Flegrei
, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15110, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15110, 2026.

EGU26-15522 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Geodetic and Seismic Observations of the 2025 Intrusion Event at Fernandina Volcano, Galapagos Islands 

Marco Yepez, Patricia Mothes, Stephen Hernandez, Mario Ruiz, Andrew Bell, Peter LaFemina, and Santiago Aguaiza

The most recent eruption of Fernandina volcano in the Galapagos Islands took place in March 2024. Subsequently, during the latter part of 2024 and the first half of 2025, the volcano showed clear signs of edifice inflation, as informed by geodetic InSAR and GPS data.  The InSAR analysis allowed us to identify changes in deformation patterns and localized accelerations, mainly in areas near the caldera and its interior. Finally, on November 17, 2025, IGEPN seismic stations registered a swarm of volcano-tectonic (VT) earthquakes on Fernandina’s northern flank, beginning with a 4.4 (MLv) earthquake.  GPS stations showed co-seismic displacements, accompanied by significant deformation, also observed by InSAR (TerraSAR-X & Sentinel-1). Despite this sequence of signals, the seismic activity — 106 VTs located beneath the edifice —did not culminate in an eruption, as there were no lava flows nor detectable gases emitted to the surface.  The inflationary pattern has diminished, but we remain attentive to further activity that could portend a future eruption, especially if there are MLv 4-5 VT events beneath the edifice.  On previous occasions, these larger earthquakes have heralded an imminent eruption.  Our next step is to model geodetic data to obtain a source model and its depth. While Fernandina Island is uninhabited, frequent tourist vessels pass by the shoreline to observe Galapagos wildlife and to observe lava flows entering the sea, as was the case in March 2024.

How to cite: Yepez, M., Mothes, P., Hernandez, S., Ruiz, M., Bell, A., LaFemina, P., and Aguaiza, S.: Geodetic and Seismic Observations of the 2025 Intrusion Event at Fernandina Volcano, Galapagos Islands, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15522, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15522, 2026.

EGU26-17192 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Change in microgravity during an inflation episode at Askja Volcano, Iceland, 2023 – 2025 

Fjóla María Sigurðardóttir, Freysteinn Sigmundsson, Elske van Dalfsen, Vincent Drouin, Michelle Maree Parks, Halldór Geirsson, Yilin Yang, and Benedikt Gunnar Ófeigsson

Askja is one of the most monitored volcanoes in Iceland. Since 1966, annual ground deformation measurements have been carried out in Askja along a leveling line. In 1993 the first Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) measurements were made in Askja and in 1992 the first Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) images of Askja were gathered. Since 2021 there has been uplift at Askja volcano, after decades of subsidence. The uplift is monitored with GNSS and InSAR measurements. The net uplift from June 2021 to December 2025 is approximately 90 cm with a decreasing rate. Previous geodetic models of the observed ground deformation inferred an inflation source at a median depth of 2.7 – 2.8 km. Gravity surveys have been carried out regularly since 1988, and annually since 2018. Gravity measurements show mass or density changes in the sub-surface. From 1988 – 2017 there was a net gravity decrease, while measurements from 2017 – 2023 show a net gravity increase during that period.

We carried out GNSS campaigns and gravity surveys in August of 2024 and 2025. We measured 18 gravity stations and 20 GNSS stations scattered around Askja. The gravity was measured with two relative spring gravimeters (Scrintex CG5 and CG6). Gravimeters are very sensitive and prone to sudden data tares, to mitigate this we used two meters. We can evaluate the uplift between years with GNSS and InSAR data and apply the theoretical Free Air gradient to correct for the gravity change due to elevation change.  The yearly uplift rate 2023 - 2025 is up to about 10 cm/year. After correcting for the height changes, preliminary evaluation suggests that the net gravity change from 2023-2025 does vary between stations, with increase at some stations and decrease at others. By analyzing the gravity change we are adding another parameter to our dataset, which helps us to identify the process responsible for the current uplift episode. 

How to cite: Sigurðardóttir, F. M., Sigmundsson, F., van Dalfsen, E., Drouin, V., Parks, M. M., Geirsson, H., Yang, Y., and Ófeigsson, B. G.: Change in microgravity during an inflation episode at Askja Volcano, Iceland, 2023 – 2025, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17192, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17192, 2026.

Following a quiescent period of 3,000 years and several centuries of subsidence, with only one eruption in 1538, Campi Flegrei has experienced intermittent unrest since 1950. The 1982-84 uplift episode was followed by a period of subsidence, but since the early 2000s there has been almost continuous uplift, accompanied by geochemical anomalies and seismicity. In 2012, the Major Risk Commission raised the Alert Level from green to yellow.
SAR images from different missions have made it possible to monitor the deformation field of Campi Flegrei since the 1990s. In particular, the periods 1993–2010 and 2015–present have been covered by the ERS/ENVISAT and Sentinel-1 missions of ESA, respectively. The time gap between these two periods has recently been filled using Radarsat-2 images (Amoruso et al. 2025). Consequently, we were able to conduct a systematic analysis of Campi Flegrei deformation over the last three decades. We have employed linear regression models and blind source separation techniques (Principal Component Analysis and Independent Component Analysis).
The preliminary results suggest the coexistence of two stationary deformation fields throughout the entire investigated period. The field with the larger amplitude has dimensions similar to those of the caldera, and its temporal history is almost the same as that of the area of maximum uplift. This field is consistent with a pressurised sill located around 4 km deep. The other field is less conspicuous, but it may have even more significant implications. It is more extensive, it is shifted eastwards relative to the centre of the caldera, it is characterised by uplift since at least the beginning of the available DInSAR time series, and it is consistent with a deep pressurised deformation source. In addition, anomalies in the Solfatara area (Amoruso et al. 2014) and in the Accademia Aeronautica area (Giudicepietro et al. 2024) are confirmed and detailed. In this way, the deformation of Campi Flegrei is fully satisfied within data uncertainties throughout the entire period under investigation.

References 

Amoruso, A. et al., J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth, 119, 858–879, 2014.
Amoruso, A. et al., Remote Sens., 17, 3268, 2025. 
Giudicepietro, F., et al., Int. J. Appl. Earth Obs. Geoinf., 132, 104060, 2024.

How to cite: Amoruso, A. and Crescentini, L.: DInSAR data from the last three decades reveals persistent large-scale features and local anomalies in the ground deformation of Campi Flegrei, Italy., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17598, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17598, 2026.

EGU26-17871 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Magma conduit-induced ground deformation at lava dome–building volcanoes   

Eliot Eaton, Jurgen Neuberg, and Susanna Ebmeier

Monitoring ground deformation induced by magma conduits at lava dome–building volcanoes provides key insights into magma ascent dynamics. Changes in dome growth rate are often associated with hazards such as increased explosive activity, dome collapse events, and pyroclastic flows. Timely detection and interpretation of precursory unrest are therefore vital for hazard assessment. 

This study aims to elucidate the range of detectable conduit processes, inform the deployment of ground deformation monitoring infrastructure, and identify which conduit processes meet the detection criteria for measurement using high-resolution InSAR. We use 2D axisymmetric physics-based fluid dynamic models of magma ascent coupled to an elastic edifice to demonstrate how variations in shear stress and excess pressure on conduit boundaries generate ground deformation proximal to growing domes. Model scenarios are compared for three recent lava dome eruptions, highlighting key parameters controlling conduit-induced deformation, including syn-eruptive crystallisation, outgassing, initial conduit geometry, and magma composition. 

The potentially long-lived and periodic nature of lava dome eruptions enables strategic deployment of ground-based monitoring infrastructure, such as tiltmeters, to improve observation of such events. This study provides a framework for assessing which transitions in conduit behaviour may be detectable, and over what distances from the conduit, by different geodetic methods. 

How to cite: Eaton, E., Neuberg, J., and Ebmeier, S.: Magma conduit-induced ground deformation at lava dome–building volcanoes  , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17871, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17871, 2026.

EGU26-17905 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Earthquake focal mechanisms reveal a complex response to re-inflation at Askja caldera, Iceland 

Isabel Siggers, Tom Winder, Nicholas Rawlinson, Robert S. White, and Bryndís Brandsdóttir

Askja, an active basaltic caldera volcano in Iceland’s Northern Volcanic Rift Zone, has experienced more than 85 centimetres of surface uplift since August 2021, following several decades of subsidence. Geodetic modelling of the observed uplift suggests an inflating sill type source at around 3 km below the surface (Parks et al., 2024), and recent tomography work by Han et al (2024) and Fone et al. (2025) image a shallow low-velocity anomaly, centred on the area of maximum uplift. In the same month that uplift began, there was a clear increase in the rate of shallow microseismicity, observed primarily in clusters surrounding the youngest lake-filled caldera Öskjuvatn. 

To gain more insight into how the change in rate of microseismicity relates to the observed reversal in surface deformation, moment tensor solutions were constructed for a subset of events beneath Askja, both before and after the start of re-inflation. The Cambridge Volcano Seismology Group has maintained a dense seismic network around Askja since July 2007, which provides sufficient azimuthal coverage to produce well constrained moment tensor solutions. An expanded network deployed within Askja caldera in summer 2023 improves this azimuthal coverage significantly, extending the smallest well constrained events from magnitude 0.5 to just below magnitude 0. 

Our results provide new constraints on the ring fault geometry beneath Öskjuvatn – where the microseismicity rate increase was most prominent – complementing previous insights from mapping of surface faults. Surprisingly, there is no evidence for a reversal in earthquake slip direction associated with the start of re-inflation, and only the modelled stress changes during the re-inflation period favour slip that aligns with our moment tensor solutions. We therefore propose that the microseismicity prior to the onset of re-inflation may have been driven primarily by regional deformation processes, not the long-term subsidence within Askja caldera. Our future work will exploit this expanded dataset of manually picked earthquake phase arrivals to improve our resolution of the velocity structure at the shallowest depths beneath Askja. This will contribute to a full structural model linking surface deformation, ring faulting and the underlying magma storage region. 

Citations: 

Han, J., N. Rawlinson, T. Greenfield, R. White, B. Brandsdóttir, T. Winder, and V. Drouin (2024),  

Evidence of a shallow magma reservoir beneath askja caldera, iceland, from body wave  tomography, Geophysical Research Letters, 51 (9), e2023GL107,851 

 

Parks, M. M., F. Sigmundsson, V. Drouin, S. Hreinsdóttir, A. Hooper, Y. Yang, B. G. Ófeigsson, E.  

Sturkell, Á. R. Hjartardóttir, R. Grapenthin, et al. (2024), 2021–2023 unrest and geodetic  

observations at askja volcano, iceland, Geophysical Research Letters, 51 (4),  

e2023GL106,730. 

 

Fone, J., Winder, T., Rawlinson, N., White, R., Brandsdóttir, B., and Soosalu, H. (2025), Imaging the  

shallow structure beneath Askja volcano, Iceland, with ambient noise tomography, Journal of  Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 130 (12), e2025JB031,905. 

How to cite: Siggers, I., Winder, T., Rawlinson, N., White, R. S., and Brandsdóttir, B.: Earthquake focal mechanisms reveal a complex response to re-inflation at Askja caldera, Iceland, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17905, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17905, 2026.

EGU26-19366 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Decoding temporal deformation patterns: From Magma Triggers to Mush Dynamics  

Camila Novoa and Andrew Hooper
Understanding magma movement beneath volcanoes is key for predicting eruptions. Traditionally, uplift at the surface has been seen as a direct sign of magma intrusion, sometimes prolonged by later processes inside the magmatic system. Our work shows that uplift can restart even without new magma input when poro-viscoelastic behaviour is considered. By adjusting the mechanical properties of the magmatic plumbing system, we can reproduce the diverse deformation patterns observed worldwide—where volcanoes uplift and subside without erupting. This suggests that magma intrusion may act only as a short-lived trigger, while long-term changes are driven by internal dynamics within the mush. These findings reshape how we interpret volcanic feeding processes and connect subsurface behaviour more directly to geodetic signals.

How to cite: Novoa, C. and Hooper, A.: Decoding temporal deformation patterns: From Magma Triggers to Mush Dynamics , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19366, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19366, 2026.

EGU26-19488 | ECS | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

A deep learning framework for rapid inversion of ground deformation to model volcanic sources 

Martina Allegra, Flavio Cannavò, Gilda Currenti, Miriana Corsaro, Philippe Jousset, Simone Palazzo, and Concetto Spampinato

Rapid detection of the locations and movements of magma within the crust is essential for tracking volcanic unrests. The pressure exerted on the Earth's crust by magma migration causes ground deformation that can be measured by a variety of geodetic instruments. Consequently, the inversion of deformation signals allows the geometry and the position of the magmatic source to be inferred.

In the field of volcanic monitoring, the high temporal resolution of continuous Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) measurements makes them widely used for near real-time applications. However, traditional inversion techniques are usually time-consuming, model dependent, and often require a dense, well-distributed GNSS network, which is available only in a few volcanoes worldwide.

To overcome these challenges, machine learning provides efficient tools for emulating direct deformation models, accelerating the inversion process while modelling sources with complex geometries. Taking advantage of generalization capabilities of deep learning algorithms, we present a station-independent deep learning-based inversion framework that can instantly reconstruct underground magmatic causative sources from as few as ten GNSS stations without any prior knowledge of the station configuration or the target volcano.

Trained and tested on hundreds of synthetic deformation patterns, the deep learning-based inversion proves its potential and robustness in the retrospective application to the May 2008 eruption of Mount Etna as well as to Iceland's intrusive sequence between December 2023 and August 2024.

How to cite: Allegra, M., Cannavò, F., Currenti, G., Corsaro, M., Jousset, P., Palazzo, S., and Spampinato, C.: A deep learning framework for rapid inversion of ground deformation to model volcanic sources, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19488, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19488, 2026.

EGU26-19509 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Analysis of relationship between strain and atmospheric pressure data at Stromboli volcano 

Pierdomenico Romano, Bellina Di Lieto, Annarita Mangiacapra, Zaccaria Petrillo, and Agata Sangianantoni

Strain data recorded by Sacks-Evertson strainmeters, due to the high dynamic of the instrument and since its output responds to input over a wide frequency range, are prone to be affected by anthropic noise, changes in atmospheric pressure, tides, rainfall, underground water movements, changes in underground temperature, earthquakes, as well as other crustal movements. Several kinds of procedures have been developed over time by geophysicists to remove the unwanted (“spurious”) signals from the actual recordings, in order to thereby obtain cleaner strain data, capable of representing the actual changes of the local strain in proximity to the installation site. The clearly most dominant signals in a strain data time series are associated with Earth tides and atmospheric pressure loading. Earth tides, due to the relative motion of Sun and Moon with respect to Earth, account for 10−10 strain over a frequency range of 10−4–10−5Hz (periods of hours to days), and are induced by periodic, measurable forces: this allows a reproducibility of the phenomenon using numerical simulations software. On the other hand, atmospheric pressure, for its own characteristics, is a highly variable signal, spanning over extremely wide strain- and frequency-ranges. Both signals, however, are characterized by frequencies comparable with those of interest. One of the most successful methods to remove tides and atmospheric pressure uses a combination of harmonic and non-harmonic techniques, through the implementation of Bayesian statistics. The software assumes that a given signal can be decomposed into a tidal component, a trend term, a perturbation due to an external source, the atmospheric pressure, responsible for generating a change in the recorded signal, and some random noise superimposed.

Barometric admittance quantifies how rock/soil strains to atmospheric pressure changes, often modeled linearly but non-linearities arise from complex subsurface media (aquifers, faults, cracks), requiring advanced techniques like neural networks or state-space models to capture frequency-dependent responses, revealing aquifer properties, fault activity, or seismic precursors, with higher frequencies showing local effects and lower frequencies reflecting regional pathways, indicating that strain varies nonlinearly with pressure due to medium heterogeneities.

The data recorded by a Sacks-Evertson strainmeter installed at Stromboli volcano show a non-linear relationship between barometric pressure and strain variations for lower frequencies: an empirical mode decomposition has been used considering the frequency dependent characteristics of the pressure response and the borehole strain observation data, and the pressure observation curve of synchronous observation are decomposed, obtaining the frequency dependent pressure response coefficient, realizing the refined pressure correction of borehole observation data.

In the higher frequency range, when the medium shows an elastic response related to pressure changes, a linear regression model in the time domain has been carried out to highlight volcanic-related strain changes.

This analysis could improve the volcanic hazard assessment of strain data related to open-conduit volcanoes, such as Stromboli, during unrest phases.

Data used contains valuable information for scientific community and are made available on the EPOS data portal. Attention is taken into metadata handling and intelligent management of distributed resources.

How to cite: Romano, P., Di Lieto, B., Mangiacapra, A., Petrillo, Z., and Sangianantoni, A.: Analysis of relationship between strain and atmospheric pressure data at Stromboli volcano, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19509, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19509, 2026.

EGU26-20302 | Orals | GMPV10.12

The geometry and development of a lava tube network as deduced from multispectral imaging and InSAR 

Eoghan Holohan, Alexis Hrysiewicz, Peter LaFemina, Andrew Bell, Federico Galetto, Silvia Vallejo, and Benjamin Bernard

Detecting lava tubes is challenging in the field due to their hidden nature and inaccessibility, but it can be important for understanding lava flow dynamics and mitigating hazards. Here we show how analysis of multispectral imagery (Sentinel-2 and Landsat) and InSAR (Sentinel-1) can enable the delineation of a ∼14-km long lava-tube network entirely by remote sensing. The lava tube network formed in 2024 during the 68-day long eruption of Fernandina volcano, a highly active, yet remote and uninhabited island in the Galapagos Islands. The arterial tube(s) and main branches of the network were mapped based on: (1) spatio-temporally stable, point-like thermal anomalies (“skylights”) from syn-eruption shortwave and thermal infrared imagery; and (2) a dendritic pattern of horizontal displacements defined by post-eruption InSAR timeseries analysis. Furthermore, elongated perpendicular baselines of Sentinel-1 interferograms enabled us to estimate lava-flow thicknesses of up to ∼17 m locally and a lava-field bulk volume of ∼84 ± 40 × 106 m3. Lastly, we traced the growth of the lava field from a time series of InSAR coherence images. Combined with the lava thickness mapping, the coherence mapping gives initial magma eruption rates of 87 m3s−1, which over two weeks declined rapidly and non-linearly to below 6 m3s−1. This sharp reduction in eruption rate coincides with a transition - observed in multispectral imagery - from initial open channel flow to enclosed tube flow. Although the tube flow phase accounted for only 18% of the total erupted volume, it spanned 75% of the eruption duration and facilitated 35% (5 km) of the total lava run-out. These entirely remotely generated results are consistent with field‐based observations of lava tube development on Hawaii. A multi-sensor approach to remote sensing of lava tubes may therefore contribute in future to modelling of lava flow advance and to assessment of tube-collapse hazard.

How to cite: Holohan, E., Hrysiewicz, A., LaFemina, P., Bell, A., Galetto, F., Vallejo, S., and Bernard, B.: The geometry and development of a lava tube network as deduced from multispectral imaging and InSAR, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20302, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20302, 2026.

EGU26-20322 | Posters on site | GMPV10.12

Fluid-Driven Fault Mechanics and Strain Release: Insights from the 2021 Deformation Episode in the Peloritani-Aeolian Sector 

Mario Mattia, Danilo Messina, Marta Corradino, Graziella Barberi, Valentina Bruno, Domenico Patanè, Massimo Rossi, Luciano Scarfì, and Fabrizio Pepe

Fluids play a pivotal role in altering rock mechanics by affecting shear strength and influencing strain accommodation. This study integrates GNSS time-series and seismological data to reconstruct the spatiotemporal evolution of deformation during 2021 within the Peloritani Mountains (NE Sicily) and the Aeolian Archipelago. Our analysis identifies significant crustal-scale deformation along the NNW-SSE right-lateral transtensional Aeolian-Tindari-Letojanni Fault System (ATLFS), as well as in WNW-ESE to NW-SE right-lateral transfer zones in the western and central sectors of the Aeolian Archipelago. Specifically, throughout 2021, we observed a distinct acceleration in deformation rates along the eastern block of the ATLFS relative to its western counterpart. This kinematic anomaly was strictly synchronous with a peak in seismic strain release and a significant unrest phase at Vulcano Island, characterized by rapid ground inflation and intense degassing. The temporal correlation between tectonic slip and volcanic activity suggests that enhanced fluid circulation—evidenced by gas emissions in the Peloritani area— may modulate the mechanical response of faults, promoting strain release. These findings provide critical constraints on the interplay between active tectonics, fluid migration, and volcanic processes in the Central Mediterranean.

How to cite: Mattia, M., Messina, D., Corradino, M., Barberi, G., Bruno, V., Patanè, D., Rossi, M., Scarfì, L., and Pepe, F.: Fluid-Driven Fault Mechanics and Strain Release: Insights from the 2021 Deformation Episode in the Peloritani-Aeolian Sector, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20322, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20322, 2026.

EGU26-21028 | ECS | Orals | GMPV10.12

Modelling the 2018 Kīlauea Caldera Collapse with a joint Finite Volume Method and Distinct Element Method approach 

Thomas Austin, Claire Harnett, Eoghan Holohan, Alexis Hrysiewicz, and Martin Schöpfer

Kīlauea’s 2018 collapse represents one of the best-monitored caldera-forming events recorded. A dense network of geodetic and seismic instrument, complimented by still and satellite-based imagery, captured the full temporal evolution of summit deformation and clearly defined distinct collapse phases. An initial pre-collapse phase was characterised by lava-lake drainage and small, elastic surface displacements, followed by a three non-elastic collapse phases, captured on GNSS stations NPIT and CALS. This detailed and well-resolved, multiphase evolution makes Kīlauea an exceptional case for testing mechanical models of caldera collapse.

Analytical and continuum-based numerical models are commonly used to relate these surface displacements to deformation sources at depth. However, their elastic or viscoelastic material assumptions limit the representation of large-strain discontinuous deformation, such as fracturing and faulting, typical of caldera collapse events. To overcome this, we use 3D Discrete Element Method (DEM) modelling, in conjunction with Finite Volume Method (FVM), to capture a transition from elastic to non-elastic (fictional-plastic) behaviour similar to that during the 2018 Kīlauea collapse event.

Sentinel-1 acquisitions between the 5th and 14th of May 2018 were used to compute surface displacements during the elastic, pre-collapse subsidence phase. The resulting summit subsidence provided constraints on subsurface source characteristics and were used to test a range of chamber geometries, depths and pressure states using FVM models. This approach allowed for a rapid and systematic exploration of the trade-offs among these parameters and demonstrates the non-unique elastic surface displacement solutions, consistent with the observed elastic, pre-collapse deformation at Kīlauea.

The “best-fitting” parameter combinations were then used to inform forward modelling within the 3D DEM solutions. The initial source geometry, as constrained by FVM models, had a depth of 500m, vertical axis of 2000m and horizontal axes of 1500m. As underpressure was progressively increased to 6-8 MPa, deformation transitioned from elastic into non-elastic, as characterised by host-rock fracturing and accelerated summit subsidence. The DEM model subsidence curve mimics closely that measured by GNSS at Kīlauea. Furthermore, model fracture population characteristics through time show similarly with observed earthquake magnitude distributions. This study thus highlights the capacity of 3D DEM models for capturing structural, geodetic and seismic observations during large-strain discontinuous events at volcanoes.

How to cite: Austin, T., Harnett, C., Holohan, E., Hrysiewicz, A., and Schöpfer, M.: Modelling the 2018 Kīlauea Caldera Collapse with a joint Finite Volume Method and Distinct Element Method approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21028, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21028, 2026.

EGU26-1392 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Correlative X-ray Micro-CT and Surface Profilometry for Multiscale 3D Characterization of Sandstone 

Zhaoyuan Zhang, Sharon Ellman, Laurenz Schröer, and Veerle Cnudde

X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) has become a widely used non-destructive technique in geosciences for three-dimensional visualization and quantitative analysis of geomaterials. However, in laboratory-based systems, spatial resolution is constrained by a trade-off between sample size, X-ray flux, and focal spot size, with the highest achievable resolutions typically in the micrometer range. In addition, near-surface regions are often affected by imaging artifacts such as beam hardening, cone-beam artifacts, and partial volume effects, which complicate accurate surface characterization. This constraint is particularly significant because many key physical and chemical processes are highly sensitive to the details of surface geometry. Surface properties—including roughness and pore morphology—play a critical role in governing fluid flow, chemical reactions, and mechanical behavior in rocks, making precise measurement essential for understanding geomaterials at multiple scales. 

High-resolution techniques such as FIB-SEM can provide detailed three-dimensional information, but they are destructive and time-consuming. Synchrotron-based X-ray CT offers a non-destructive alternative with higher spatial resolution, although access to synchrotron facilities is limited. Surface profilometry, particularly when combining confocal microscopy and focus variation microscopy, provides an additional non-destructive and time-efficient approach for acquiring high-resolution three-dimensional surface topography. 

This study presents a correlative imaging workflow that integrates laboratory X-ray micro-CT with surface profilometry measurements on Bentheimer sandstone. The micro-CT dataset was acquired at the Ghent University's Center for X-ray Tomography (UGCT) using the CoreTOM (Tescan) with a voxel size of 6.5 μm, while the surface profilometer S neox (Sensofar) achieved a lateral spatial resolution of up to 0.34 μm. The workflow includes data acquisition, registration, and combined multiscale visualization. 

The applicability of this approach is demonstrated by comparing surface modifications before and after nano-silica treatment of Bentheimer sandstone. The correlative dataset reveals morphological changes that cannot be resolved by micro-CT alone, including reduced surface roughness and partial infilling of surface-connected pores. At the same time, micro-CT captures complementary information on the penetration depth and spatial distribution of the treatment products. Together, these observations highlight the added value of integrating surface profilometry with micro-CT for quantitative near-surface characterization of geomaterials. 

Acknowledgment: This abstract is part of project Fluidcontrol (with project number G065224N) which is financed by Research Foundation–Flanders (FWO). Ghent University's Center for X-ray Tomography (BOF.COR.2022.008) and IOF (project FaCT F2021/IOF-Equip/021) are also acknowledged. 

How to cite: Zhang, Z., Ellman, S., Schröer, L., and Cnudde, V.: Correlative X-ray Micro-CT and Surface Profilometry for Multiscale 3D Characterization of Sandstone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1392, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1392, 2026.

Abstract: The second member of the Kongdian Formation (Ek2) in the Cangdong Sag, Bohai Bay Basin, China, develops thick organic-rich shale sequences with significant resource exploration potential. However, a systematic understanding of the coupling relationship between shale lithofacies and pore structure remains unclear, hindering in-depth analysis of shale oil enrichment mechanisms.

To clarify the microscopic pore structure characteristics of different shale lithofacies, this study takes the Ek2 shales in the Cangdong Sag as the research subject, the samples were collected from wells GX, G, G1, GD, and GY in the Cangdong Sag. Multiple techniques, including X-ray diffraction (XRD), total organic carbon (TOC) analysis, field emission-scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM), gas adsorption (N2 and CO2), advanced mineral identification and characterization system (AMICS) mineral quantitative analysis, and focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM) 3-D reconstruction, were employed for multi-scale characterization of the microscopic pore structure.

The results indicate: (1) Five shale lithofacies types are developed in the study area: laminated felsic shale, laminated mixed shale, massive mixed shale, laminated carbonate shale, and massive carbonate shale. (2) Different lithofacies exhibit various reservoir space types, including inorganic pores, organic matter pores, and micro-fractures, with significant differences in pore structure. The dominant pore size range for all shale lithofacies is 2–200 nm, indicating that nanoscale pores serve as the primary contributors to storage capacity. Among them, the laminated felsic shale and laminated mixed shale lithofacies possess larger pore volumes due to the presence of macropores and micro-fractures. The connectivity of organic-rich laminated shale facies is superior to other shale lithofacies. (3) Syngenetic organic matter, interstitial organic matter, and organic matter-clay composites exhibit different morphologies and contact relationships with minerals, leading to differential contributions to pore volume, connectivity, and development. Syngenetic organic matter in high-frequency laminated shales can enhance pore structure. (4) The deposition and evolution of organic matter and mineral components control the modification of the reservoir pore system: the pressure resistance of the felsic mineral framework favors pore preservation; dissolution pores are widely developed in laminated carbonate shale and massive carbonate shale lithofacies, but mineral cementation restricts their porosity and pore connectivity; moderate TOC content and corrosive fluids generated during thermal evolution migrating along lamina interfaces and micro-fracture channels are significant factors causing differences in reservoir properties among different lithofacies.

Keywords: Shale lithofacies; Pore structure; Controlling factors; Second member of Kongdian Formation; Cangdong Sag

How to cite: Feng, G., Chen, S., Yan, J., Zhang, L., and Pu, X.: Lithofacies-Based Analysis of Pore Structure Characteristics and Controlling Factors of Shale Reservoirs: A Case Study of the Second Member of the Kongdian Formation in the Cangdong Sag, Bohai Bay Basin, China, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1974, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1974, 2026.

EGU26-5065 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Quantifying Reaction-Induced Porosity During KBr–KCl Replacement: 4D Synchrotron Tomography and Statistical Microstructure Descriptors 

Hamed Amiri, Vangelis Dialeismas, Damien Freitas, Roberto Rizzo, Florian Fusseis, and Oliver Pleumper

Fluid-induced mineral replacement reactions play a key role in controlling porosity generation and permeability evolution in geologic systems. However, the dynamic feedback between pore structure development and fluid transport remains poorly quantified. This study investigates the spatiotemporal evolution of reaction-induced pore space in the fluid-driven KBr–KCl system using time-resolved synchrotron X-ray tomography. Due to its high solubility and rapid reaction kinetics, the KBr–KCl system serves as an effective analogue for fluid–rock interactions in natural settings. We performed two operando experiments at the TOMCAT beamline (Swiss Light Source): one with direct KCl solution flow over a KBr crystal, and another using a pressurized X-ray-transparent cell. Machine-learning-based segmentation enabled quantitative analysis of porosity evolution through spatiotemporal correlation functions and transport property estimation. We identified a three-stage pore evolution process: (1) rapid pore channel formation along crystallographic axes with high reaction rates and a rough interface; (2) a transitional stage characterised by smoother interfaces and enhanced lateral connectivity; and (3) a steady-state regime where permeability continues to increase due to pore coarsening and reduced tortuosity. These results advance our quantitative understanding of how reaction-induced porosity governs dynamic fluid–rock interactions.

How to cite: Amiri, H., Dialeismas, V., Freitas, D., Rizzo, R., Fusseis, F., and Pleumper, O.: Quantifying Reaction-Induced Porosity During KBr–KCl Replacement: 4D Synchrotron Tomography and Statistical Microstructure Descriptors, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5065, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5065, 2026.

EGU26-5134 | PICO | GMPV12.1

Numerical modeling of lava flows at Mount Etna: Influence of lava rheology on flow morphology 

Alik Ismail-Zadeh, Natalya Zeinalova, and Igor Tsepelev

Numerical modelling is an essential approach for investigating the rheological, thermal, and dynamical processes that control lava flow behaviour. In this study, we present a numerical analysis of lava flows emplaced during the 6–8 December 2015 eruption of Mount Etna, employing a shallow-water-approximation model solved using a finite-volume method. We assess the influence of temperature-dependent, as opposed to isothermal, Newtonian, Bingham, and Herschel–Bulkley rheologies on lava flow morphology, together with the effects of discharge-rate variability, vent location, and the post-eruption phase of flow propagation. The results demonstrate that temperature plays a dominant role in governing lava flow advancement. Thermal Newtonian and Bingham models successfully reproduce the observed flow dynamics and runout distances, whereas the nonlinear Herschel–Bulkley model, with a temperature-dependent power-law index, underestimates the flow extent. Simulated thickness distributions closely agree with field observations, accurately capturing lava accumulation near the vent and at the flow front. By contrast, isothermal models significantly overestimate lateral spreading and fail to replicate the observed emplacement patterns. Post-eruption simulations indicate that cooling controls lava flow evolution following the cessation of effusion, resulting in increased viscosity, flow starvation, and eventual arrest. Sensitivity analyses further reveal that small variations in vent position and discharge-rate distribution can substantially alter lava flow pathways.

How to cite: Ismail-Zadeh, A., Zeinalova, N., and Tsepelev, I.: Numerical modeling of lava flows at Mount Etna: Influence of lava rheology on flow morphology, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5134, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5134, 2026.

EGU26-6173 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Plucked Apart: Grain-Scale Mechanics of Mafic Enclave Disintegration 

Jakob Scheel, Michael Gardner, and Philipp Ruprecht

Mafic magmatic enclaves are common in silicic magmatic systems and often signal recharge of shallowly stored magma with basaltic magma from depth. They are associated with volcanic eruption triggers and help sustain shallow magma systems. After formation, enclaves may settle, erupt, or remain mobile, but their fate is mostly unknown. Textures like glassy rims and high crystallinity reflect their response to mixing and flow. Convective motion can disrupt boundaries between magmas, and over time, the magma body can hybridize through diffusion and mechanical breakdown.
This study investigates how mechanical disintegration affects the survival of mafic enclaves during mixing. The enclave interface can erode as crystals are plucked away by fluid-solid interactions, gradually shrinking the enclave. We use a new numerical model (LBM-DEM) to simulate the mechanical response of crystals at the enclave boundary and explore how these interactions influence the rate of enclave breakup.
Our simulations show that at high viscosities, the breakup process becomes independent of viscosity. Instead, fluid influx and the initial position of crystals mainly control the rate of enclave disintegration.

How to cite: Scheel, J., Gardner, M., and Ruprecht, P.: Plucked Apart: Grain-Scale Mechanics of Mafic Enclave Disintegration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6173, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6173, 2026.

EGU26-10604 | PICO | GMPV12.1

Visualising Garnets: Linking complex microstructures through a multi-modal approach to reveal metamorphic history 

Valby van Schijndel, Gary Stevens, Elis J. Hoffmann, Christina Günter, Oliver Plümper, and Hamed Amiri

The 3.46- 3.1 Ga Dwalile Supracrustal Suite (DSS) of the Ancient Gneiss Complex in Eswatini constitutes one of the world’s oldest greenstone belts, recording a prolonged crustal evolution from the Palaeoarchaean to Mesoarchaean. Archaean metasediments are commonly poorly preserved, with matrix minerals frequently altered or no longer in equilibrium with garnet porphyroblasts due to superimposed metamorphic events. Consequently, garnet textures, when integrated with petrological observations and both major- and trace-element geochemistry, may provide valuable insights into the entire metamorphic history.

Garnet-staurolite schists of the DSS mainly differ in their garnet and staurolite modes and their unusual garnet microstructures. In some samples, the almandine garnets are distributed as thin boudinaged layers consisting of elongated ribbons, with local resorption textures and peninsular features surrounded by coarse recrystallised quartz. The euhedral garnet cores are only visible in compositional maps. Other schists consist of staurolite-mica rich layers intertwined with garnetite layers containing almandine garnet.

The complexity of these garnet grains cannot be adequately captured by spot analyses using techniques such as electron probe microanalysis (EMPA) and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). Instead, the polyphase nature of the microstructures is investigated by a multi-scale, multi-modal imaging approach that integrates complementary techniques, including X-ray micro–computed tomography for three-dimensional structural information and electron backscattered diffraction, EMPA major element, and LA-ICP-MS trace element mapping.

The EBSD maps show distinct microsctructural differences between the samples. Many of the garnetite porphyroblasts are consisting of polycrystals with distinct crystal orientations, evidence for aggregation due to pervasive fluid influx which has accelerated garnet nucleation. Whereas, the garnet banding surrounding older euhedral cores often show the same preferred orientation as the cores themselves, but distinct differences in orientation occur between individual cores and between sections of the garnet banding. This may be the result of accelerated garnet growth due to channelled fluid flow during metamorphism.

The garnet growth is mainly associated with amphibolite-facies metamorphism recorded by monazite at ca. 3.16 Ga, at maximum pressures of ~4 kbar and temperatures of 510–540 °C. However, to better resolve the complexity of the microstructures, additional geochronology targeting distinct garnet generations and other mineral phases associated with fluid activity may be necessary.

How to cite: van Schijndel, V., Stevens, G., Hoffmann, E. J., Günter, C., Plümper, O., and Amiri, H.: Visualising Garnets: Linking complex microstructures through a multi-modal approach to reveal metamorphic history, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10604, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10604, 2026.

Surface deformation measured from satellites has provided useful information about the magma plumbing system at active volcanoes. Observed deformation results from complex interactions and coupling between the magma and the host rock. Fracturing of the crust during its deformation can make the pattern of surface displacement even more complex. Models taking into account both the fluid and solid phases of natural systems and linking them are a crucial next step for a better understanding of natural systems and observed deformation. We use the software MFiX (Multiphase Flow with Interphase eXchanges) which considers two phases: a fluid phase computed with a Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) method, and a solid phase discretized as spherical particles computed using Discrete Element Methods (DEM) method. Spherical particles are bonded together. Bonds can break at any time step, such that actual fractures can develop through the simulations. We present here the modified drag force between fluid and particles that allows us to model a bonded packing of particles impermeable to a fluid phase. Reproducing a set of analogue experiments, we simulate the injection of fluid in a spherical cavity. Rock tests implemented in MFiX allow us the precise calibration of the packing to the gelatine mechanical properties. The injected volume, the cavity dilatation, the fluid pressure evolution and the surface deformation are measured in the numerical modelling and compared to analogue experiment for benchmarking. We show that this new model has the potential to model the magmatic phase and coupling it to the elastic and brittle deformation of the surrounding rock.

How to cite: Morand, A., Burgisser, A., Rust, A., Zmajkovic, G., and Biggs, J.: Coupling a fluid phase with a discretised solid phase: Benchmarking a Computational Fluid Dynamics-Discrete Element Methods (CFD-DEM) model with analogue experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10820, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10820, 2026.

Magma bodies play a critical role in Earth's geological evolution across a wide range of scales from local-scale volcanic activity to crustal-scale petrogenesis, and planetary-scale magma ocean solidification. The internal flow dynamics of melt-dominated magma bodies are dominated by crystal-driven convection where flow is driven by the significant density contrast between crystalline solid phases and their carrier melt. The same density difference can also cause crystals to settle/float and sediment into cumulate/flotation layers with important implications for the compositional and structural evolution of magma bodies and resulting igneous rocks. 

As magma bodies range in size from metre-scale crustal chambers to thousand kilometre-scale planetary magma oceans, the resulting dynamics cover a wide range of flow regimes. Here we present the mathematical derivation, scaling analysis, and two-dimensional numerical implementation of a model for crystal settling and crystal-driven convection with a focus on two characteristic length-scales: the crystal size governing crystal settling relative to the magma, and the layer depth governing the convective vigour of the magma as a particulate suspension.  

We adapt standard approaches from particle sedimentation and turbulent flow theories to produce a model framework which treats the magmatic suspension as a continuum mixture fluid applicable across the entire range of relevant crystal sizes and layer depths. As mixture continuum models resolve dynamics at the system scale, some critical aspects of local scale dynamics remain unresolved. Here, we focus on two: the fluctuating motion of particles during sedimentation, and the development of eddies cascading down to small scales in turbulent convection. Our continuum model represents both processes by an effective diffusivity, i.e., the settling and eddy diffusivities, which enhance mixing. Two random noise flux fields are then added proportional to these diffusivities to reintroduce some stochasticity which is lost by not resolving the underlying fluctuating processes. Whereas this type of treatment based on statistical mechanics has long been adopted in general fluid mechanics, it has not received much attention in geodynamic modelling. 

We find that crystal size matters most in 1–10 m crustal magma bodies where the crystal settling speed comes to within one to two orders of magnitude of the convective speed and the settling diffusivity is dominant. For moderately sized (>10–100 m) crustal magma bodies up to planetary-sized magma oceans laminar to turbulent convection regimes dominate where the flow behaviour converges towards that of a single fluid with crystallinity behaving as a buoyancy-carrying scalar field like temperature or chemical concentration with eddy diffusivity dominating over settling diffusivity. Whereas our model does not consider thermo-chemical evolution and phase change we expect similar behaviours to pertain to fully coupled thermo-chemical-mechanical magma flow problems. 

How to cite: Keller, T. and Aellig, P.: Modelling crystal settling and crystal-driven convection from crustal to planetary scales , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10859, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10859, 2026.

EGU26-13045 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

 A Two-Phase, Multi-Component Geochemical Model of Mid-Ocean Ridge Magmatism 

Shona Swan, Tobias Keller, Derek Keir, and Thomas Gernon

Understanding melt generation, transport, and crust formation within a mid-ocean ridge context is a compelling challenge in geoscience. These systems are indirectly observable, both spatially and temporally, and our current understanding therefore relies on poorly resolved geophysical imaging and geochemical signatures preserved in erupted products.  Previous numerical studies incorporating two-phase melt transport have greatly improved our understanding of melt migration and focusing beneath mid-ocean ridges [1,2,3]. However, these models typically simplify the treatment of crustal formation and have a limited ability to make a direct comparison between model predictions and observed mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) compositions.  

We present a new two-dimensional staggered-grid finite-difference model based on the framework of [3,4]. Implemented in MATLAB, the model is designed to simulate magmatic systems at mid-ocean ridges. The model solves fully compressible solid-state mantle flow coupled to two-phase melt transport and includes a novel multi-component model of mantle melting and crust formation. 

A key advance of this framework is an in-situ melt extraction and crust formation algorithm that conserves mass and enables the development of a crustal layer along the seafloor rather than artificially removing melt from the ridge axis as most previous models do. The model further includes a multi-component model of major, trace, and isotopic composition to understand petrogenesis and geochemical evolution through melt production, focusing, and extraction. This allows for a more detailed comparison with real-world geochemical datasets.

The petrogenesis component of the model is calibrated to allow for the prediction of MORB compositions based on the underlying physical dynamics. This enables us to test the sensitivity of crustal production and composition to variations in physical parameters such as spreading rate, mantle potential temperature, mantle composition, and mantle rheology. Additionally, it allows us to assess whether different melt focusing end members from active to passive flow regimes result in a detectable geochemical signature.

The primary aim of this work is to develop a flexible modelling framework that can be used to explore the parameter space governing passive and active melt focusing and understand how mantle and melt dynamic regimes are expressed in petrological and geochemical observables. 

[1] Katz, 2008: https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egn058 

[2] Katz, 2010: https://doi.org/10.1029/2010GC003282

[3] Keller et al., 2017: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2017.02.006 

[4] Keller and Suckale, 2019: https://doi.org/10.1093/gji/ggz287 

 

How to cite: Swan, S., Keller, T., Keir, D., and Gernon, T.:  A Two-Phase, Multi-Component Geochemical Model of Mid-Ocean Ridge Magmatism, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13045, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13045, 2026.

EGU26-15083 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Interoperable Geochemical Data Infrastructures for Computational Magmatic Studies through Controlled Vocabularies 

Leander Kallas, Marie Katrine Traun, Axel D. Renno, Dieter Garbe-Schönberg, Bärbel Sarbas, Adrian Sturm, Stefan Möller-McNett, Daniel Kurzawe, Matthias Willbold, Kerstin Lehnert, and Gerhard Wörner

Computational approaches in geochemistry are increasingly central to advancing our understanding of magmatic and volcanic systems as well as general Earth System processes. These methods rely on the integration of heterogeneous geochemical datasets spanning multiple spatial and temporal scales, analytical techniques, and material types. However, the effective reuse of such data remains limited by inconsistent metadata, ambiguous terminology, and insufficient interoperability between major geochemical data resources.

The Digital Geochemical Data Infrastructure (DIGIS) addresses these challenges as part of the "OneGeochemistry Initiative" by modernizing and integrating two foundational geochemical databases: GEOROC (Geochemistry of Rocks of the Oceans and Continents) and GeoReM (Geological and Environmental Reference Materials). GEOROC and other databases provided to the community through the EarthChem Portal provide open access to millions of geochemical analyses of igneous and metamorphic rocks, minerals, and glasses, while GeoReM curates critically evaluated data on reference materials used for calibration, quality control, and uncertainty assessment in geoanalytical laboratories worldwide. Re-establishing and strengthening interoperability between these complementary resources is essential for computational studies that require traceable, reproducible, and quantitatively robust input data.

This effort requires development and implementation of shared, machine-readable controlled vocabularies covering sample descriptions, lithology, mineralogy, geological setting, analytes, material matrices, methods, and reference materials. These vocabularies harmonize legacy data in GEOROC and GeoReM, while remaining compatible with international data standards developed by the OneGeochemistry Initiative. By linking observational data and rich metadata, the integrated system enables more flexible data filtering, uncertainty-aware model input, and reproducible benchmarking of computational results.

Recent computational studies illustrate the scientific value of such harmonized geochemical data infrastructures. Machine-learning approaches have successfully leveraged large global GEOROC data compilations to quantitatively discriminate tectono-magmatic settings and extract compositional features related to magma generation and evolution. Combining volcanic eruption histories with interoperable GEOROC and PetDB datasets from the EarthChem portal has further enabled data-driven exploration of magma compositional variability across tectonic environments. In parallel, emerging machine-learning-based petrological models, such as thermobarometers trained on large, standardized compositional melt and mineral datasets, demonstrate how consistent geochemical input data are critical for inferring magma storage conditions and differentiation.

This contribution highlights how sustained investment in FAIR-aligned geochemical data infrastructures directly support advances in computational magmatic studies. By improving interoperability of international geochemical databases, such as GEOROC and GeoReM, through controlled vocabularies, we provide a foundation for computational volcanic and magmatic studies, uncertainty-aware analysis, and quantitative modelling.

How to cite: Kallas, L., Traun, M. K., Renno, A. D., Garbe-Schönberg, D., Sarbas, B., Sturm, A., Möller-McNett, S., Kurzawe, D., Willbold, M., Lehnert, K., and Wörner, G.: Interoperable Geochemical Data Infrastructures for Computational Magmatic Studies through Controlled Vocabularies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15083, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15083, 2026.

EGU26-15118 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Reactive melt channelization in an upwelling mantle 

Min Huang, John Rudge, and David Rees Jones

Partial melting occurs in the upwelling mantle due to adiabatic decompression, and melt is thought to be transported through a channelized network formed by reaction-infiltration instability. Earlier studies of melt channelization primarily focused on melt transport while neglecting the melt production process, whereas recent models that incorporate decompression melting argue that adiabatic melting stabilizes reactive flow and suppresses channel formation. Therefore, how reactive flow interacts with decompression melting remains poorly understood for the mantle melt transport problem.

To better understand this problem, we present a two-phase flow model in an upwelling, compacting, and chemically reactive medium, based on conservation of mass, momentum, and composition for a solid-melt system. The mass transfer rate from solid to melt includes contributions from both chemical reaction and adiabatic decompression melting. Using this framework, we first derive a vertical, one-dimensional steady-state melting model. We then introduce small perturbations to this base state and perform two-dimensional, time-dependent simulations. The results demonstrate that significant melt channelization can occur in the presence of melting driven by adiabatic decompression.

We further explore the evolution of magmatic channels across parameter space and identify the key controls on this behaviour. In particular, we find that the porosity-dependent bulk viscosity, which controls the solid compaction, is a key stabilizing mechanism in the system. We analyse the balance between reactive melting and compaction associated with decompression melting, and explore the parameter regime under which melt channelization may occur in the mid-ocean ridge system dominated by decompression melting.

How to cite: Huang, M., Rudge, J., and Rees Jones, D.: Reactive melt channelization in an upwelling mantle, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15118, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15118, 2026.

EGU26-16947 | PICO | GMPV12.1

Physics-informed and data-driven eruption forecasting from seismic tremor 

Társilo Girona, David Fee, Vanesa Burgos Delgado, Matthew Haney, John Power, and Taryn Lopez

Understanding how pre-eruptive processes manifest in geophysical observables remains a central challenge in volcanology and volcanic hazard assessment. Among these observables, seismic tremor, a persistent ground vibration commonly recorded at active volcanoes, holds strong potential for eruption forecasting, yet its temporal evolution is notoriously difficult to interpret. Bridging tremor observations with eruption forecasting therefore requires computational frameworks that explicitly link tremor characteristics to the degree of volcanic unrest and the likelihood of eruption. Here, we present two complementary computational frameworks for eruption forecasting from continuous seismic tremor data that integrate physics-based forward modeling, inverse methods, and machine learning. Both approaches are tested using the 13 paroxysms of Shishaldin Volcano (Alaska) that occurred between July and November 2023. The first framework is physics-informed and relies on data assimilation to invert tremor observations and retrieve subsurface pressure evolution. It couples a physical model of tremor generation, rooted in multiphase gas accumulation and porous-media flow within the upper conduit, with genetic algorithm optimization and Monte Carlo simulations. This approach captures the effects of magma ascent, volatile exsolution, partial conduit sealing, and gas transport on transient tremor signals, revealing pressure increases of several MPa and a systematic rise in eruption probability hours before each paroxysm. The second framework is data-driven and applies pattern-recognition techniques to extract physically motivated seismic features (e.g., dominant frequency, amplitude, kurtosis, entropy), which are combined with a supervised machine-learning classifier (random forest) to estimate eruption probabilities. Despite their differing philosophies, both frameworks consistently relate pre-eruptive tremor evolution to probabilistic eruption forecasts. Together, these results demonstrate how computational approaches can enhance the interpretation of seismic tremor, provide quantitative insight into magma–volatile interactions, and advance eruption forecasting and volcanic hazard assessment strategies.

How to cite: Girona, T., Fee, D., Burgos Delgado, V., Haney, M., Power, J., and Lopez, T.: Physics-informed and data-driven eruption forecasting from seismic tremor, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16947, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16947, 2026.

EGU26-17364 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Filling the Gaps: Machine Learning Prediction of Sparse Mineral Phase Data 

Julia Schmitz, Joyce Schmatz, Mingze Jiang, Eva Wellmann, Mara Weiler, Friedrich Hawemann, and Virginia Toy

Mineral phase information derived from scanning electron microscopy (SEM) combined with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) is commonly restricted to selected imaged areas, while large parts of a sample remain unmapped. The main challenge is to predict mineral phase information from the locally measured EDS regions to the full sample surface, relying on BSE imaging that can cover the entire sample because of its short acquisition times. In this study, we analyze three distinct lithologies - granite, marl (Muschelkalk), and sandstone (Bundsandstein) - using the MaPro software (Jiang et al., 2022). MaPro applies a physics-informed decision tree to analyze EDS data in conjunction with high-resolution backscattered electron (BSE) data for each lithology. After thresholding, mineral phases are segmented from the EDS maps, generating pixel-based phase maps that are used as ground truth for subsequent predictions. In comparison with the original EDS data, the ground truth allows pixel-wise phase analysis, which is essential for subsequent data processing. A random forest–based machine learning (ML) model was trained using MaPro phase analyses to predict phases across broader sample areas. The predicted phase distributions show very good agreement with the MaPro ground truth. Prediction accuracy is higher for relatively homogeneous lithologies such as sandstone and granite, and decreases for a more heterogeneous sample such as the marl. The fine-grained domains produce the largest errors in the MaPro analysis and, consequently, in the ML predictions. In these areas, mineral phases with similar compositions are more difficult for the ML classifier to distinguish and therefore require more ground-truth data than compositionally distinct phases. The results enable a reliable assessment of mineral phases across the entire sandstone sample and across large areas of the granite and marl samples, achieving extensive coverage with short analytical times.

How to cite: Schmitz, J., Schmatz, J., Jiang, M., Wellmann, E., Weiler, M., Hawemann, F., and Toy, V.: Filling the Gaps: Machine Learning Prediction of Sparse Mineral Phase Data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17364, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17364, 2026.

EGU26-19176 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

Modelling volcanic eruptions from the volcano to the atmosphere 

Hugo Dominguez, Boris Kaus, Hendrik Ranocha, Evangelos Moulas, and Ivan Utkin

Volcanic eruptions are complex processes involving multiple interacting phases, such as ascending magma, exsolved gases, deformation of the host rock and atmospheric dynamics. Typically, numerical models treat the sub-aerial eruptive column and the subsurface rock deformation as distinct domains due to the different timescales and material properties involved. This study presents a 2D numerical framework that couples the propagation of atmospheric waves with the elastic deformation of the host rock via a unified formulation. Using a finite volume method to solve the conservative form of the mass and momentum equations on a staggered grid, we demonstrate that this formulation can correctly predict the localisation of shock waves in the atmosphere, as well as the propagation of elastic waves in the host rock. Furthermore, we show that a single discretisation can capture both the conversion of acoustic waves into elastic waves from the atmosphere to the host rock, and the reverse process. This provides a foundation for fully coupled models of explosive volcanic events to potentially offers new insights into the interaction between the subsurface and the atmosphere during these processes.

How to cite: Dominguez, H., Kaus, B., Ranocha, H., Moulas, E., and Utkin, I.: Modelling volcanic eruptions from the volcano to the atmosphere, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19176, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19176, 2026.

EGU26-19574 | ECS | PICO | GMPV12.1

The challenge of correlating imaging datasets in geoscience 

Rosa de Boer, Daan Wielens, and Lennart de Groot

A broad range of microscopy tools and imaging techniques is available for studying geoscientific samples. Often, multiple imaging datasets are correlated to connect chemical and/or physical information to investigate complex systems. However, combining datasets obtained from different imaging techniques remains challenging. They often cannot be directly matched due to differences in resolution, scale, or instrument calibration.

One solution is the application of markers on samples. Several techniques exist for applying markers on the surface of polished geoscientific samples, such as thin sections. These markers can be used during sample handling to identify the area of interest and ensure reproducible sample placement. After data acquisition, they enable accurate scaling and co-registration of different imaging datasets during data processing. Marker application techniques range from accessible, simple, and cost-effective approaches to more complex, specialized, and expensive methods, depending on the intended purpose.

I will provide a brief overview of the available techniques and highlight the use of microlithography on thin sections, a technique that enables writing nano- to microsized symbols on sample surfaces. These markers provide a practical solution for simplifying the correlation of multiple datasets and support a deeper understanding in geoscientific research.

How to cite: de Boer, R., Wielens, D., and de Groot, L.: The challenge of correlating imaging datasets in geoscience, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19574, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19574, 2026.

EGU26-21832 * | PICO | GMPV12.1 | Highlight

The EXCITE² Network 

Selene van der Poel

The EXCITE² Network

Seléne van der Poel, Geertje W. ter Maat, Oliver Plümper, Richard J.F. Wessels & the EXCITE team

The EXCITE² Network is transforming Earth and environmental material science with transnational access to 40 worldclass European imaging facilities in 22 research institutes across 14 European and partner countries. Researchers anywhere can now explore complex processes in Earth materials across scales ranging from nanometers to decimeters. This yields unprecedented insights into critical areas such as environmental toxicity and human health, sustainable extraction of critical metals for renewable energy, and safe long-term storage of climate-relevant gases.

EXCITE² also brings together expertise and pioneers innovative services, tools, and training, to enhance the ability of users to address complex scientific challenges. The ‘EXCITE Academy’ offers an open community and collaborative platform for sharing knowledge, tools, experiences and expertise though monthly EXCITE Academy Webinars, live events and the online searchable database ‘Academy Hub’. Innovative services and tools include AI-driven data analysis and next-generation imaging technologies.

By fostering interdisciplinary collaboration between academia, industry, and diverse scientific fields, EXCITE² accelerates innovation and strengthens Europe's position in global sustainability efforts. The initiative actively supports capacity building through tailored training programs for early-career researchers, fully embedded within the principles of European open science.

Through its commitment to scientific excellence, sustainability, and societal impact, EXCITE² is shaping the future of Earth and environmental research. Interested in joining the network? Apply for transnational access via our open call! Visit the EXCITE² website (https://excite-network.eu) for more information.

How to cite: van der Poel, S.: The EXCITE² Network, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21832, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21832, 2026.

EGU26-3113 | Posters on site | PS1.3

Plate tectonics is crucial for habitability of terrestrial planets 

Yakiv Khazan and Olga Aryasova

We argue that the habitability of terrestrial planets is linked to plate tectonics. We base our proposal on two premises.

First, in the absence of a robust magnetic field, a planet’s atmosphere is vulnerable to stripping by the solar wind, leading to catastrophic water loss and, ultimately, sterilization, as exemplified by modern Mars and Venus.

Second, a strong intrinsic planetary magnetic dipole must be generated by vigorous convection in the liquid core, which in turn requires efficient removal of heat from the core. On Earth, this heat removal occurs through the operation of plate tectonics.

The contrasting evolutionary paths of Earth, Venus, and Mars provide a natural laboratory for examining these relationships. Unlike Earth, both Mars and Venus lack plate tectonics and simultaneously lack a strong magnetic field. Venus currently operates in a stagnant-lid regime, in which heat loss occurs primarily by conduction across a thick lithosphere. This mode of heat transfer appears insufficient to sustain a core dynamo, resulting in the absence of a magnetic field and, consequently, in the loss of water and the development of an uninhabitable environment.

Another key “experiment” is recorded in Earth’s own history at the end of the Ediacaran period. This interval was preceded by approximately 1.5 billion years of a gradual decline in Earth’s dipole moment, from values comparable to the present field to a minimum that was roughly 30 times weaker. This minimum field strength persisted between 591 and 565 Ma, followed by a rapid threefold strengthening by about 532 Ma. Concurrently, atmospheric and oceanic oxygen levels began to rise, supporting an increase in the abundance and size of living organisms. These developments are commonly attributed to the formation of the inner core around ~550 Ma. However, both inner core growth and the associated intensification of the magnetic field would have been impossible without the simultaneous onset of plate tectonics. Thus, it was this tectonic regime change that enabled the rapid expansion of habitability at the Precambrian–Phanerozoic boundary.

We conclude that, although direct evidence remains limited, current scientific understanding strongly supports the notion that Earth’s long-term habitability is linked to the operation of plate tectonics, which sustains the geodynamo and protects the atmosphere from erosion by the solar wind. Nevertheless, the fundamental question of why Earth retained a functioning dynamo through plate tectonics, whereas Mars and Venus did not, remains an open problem for future investigation.

How to cite: Khazan, Y. and Aryasova, O.: Plate tectonics is crucial for habitability of terrestrial planets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3113, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3113, 2026.

EGU26-5763 * | Posters on site | PS1.3 | Highlight

JANUS observations of the Earth during and shortly after JUICE’s Lunar and Earth Gravity Assist (LEGA) on August 2024 

Ricardo Hueso, Pasquale Palumbo, Cecilia Tubiana, Ganna Portyankina, Luisa María Lara, Katrin Stephan, Angelo Zinzi, Alice Luchetti, Livio Agostini, Luca Penasa, Athena Coustenis, Junichi Haruyama, Elke Kersten, Klaus-Dieter Matz, Romolo Politti, Manish Patel, Mitsuteru Sato, Amy Simon, Yukihiro Takahashi, and Yoav Yair and the JANUS Earth flyby team

JUICE (JUpiter ICy moons Explorer) is the first Large ESA mission in the Cosmic Vision Science program. JUICE was launched in 2023 and is aimed to study the Jupiter system in 2031-2035 where it will answer major science goals of the Jovian atmosphere and the Galilean satellites (Grasset et al., 2013). JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) is the high-resolution camera on JUICE and operates in the spectral range 340-1080 nm. The instrument is equipped with 13 filters and a detector of 1,504x2,000 pixels with a pixel FOV of 15 microrad and a total FOV of 1.29ºx1.72º (Palumbo et al. 2025).

JANUS imaged the Earth during and shortly after a Lunar and Earth Gravitational Assist maneuver (LEGA) on 19-20 August 2024. Earth observations offer a real testbed scenario to the science investigation of the Jovian atmosphere (Fletcher et al. 2023). Close approach observations were acquired at spatial resolutions of 126-256 m/pix and covered a narrow strip of the planet in which the spacecraft flew from the night-side over Madagascar, moved over the Indian Ocean, Cambodia and Vietnam and observed the terminator and dawn over Luzon Island. Later observations were acquired over morning to noon hours flying above tropical latitudes over the Western Pacific. Additional observations acquired on September 9, 2024 provided a low-resolution multi-filter portrait of the Earth and the Moon.

The high-resolution images contain atmospheric airglow, convective clouds illuminated by a full Moon, fires in rural areas, lights over the ocean from maritime traffic, city lights over Cambodia and Vietnam, and bright pixels compatible with meteoroids of 1-30 g entering Earth's atmosphere. Images over the terminator and dawn show crepuscular rays under extreme incidence angles with highly convective clouds projecting elongated shadows. Day-time observations show gravity waves on elevated cirrus clouds, sun glint on multi-filter images of the tropical Western Pacific, convective storms over tropical latitudes over the Northwest Pacific and internal waves in the ocean. We compared multi-filter images of the ocean and cloud systems over 12 filters through the JANUS spectral range with spectra obtained by the EnMAP and PRISMA instruments on Earth observing satellites showing good agreement.

These Earth images confirm the expected instrument performance and the ensemble of observations contains a large variety of atmospheric features that are good analogs to multiple systems in Jupiter's atmosphere (Hueso et al. 2026). Additional observations of the Earth will be acquired during the next two Earth flybys on September 2026 and January 2029 providing new data at a wider variety of spatial resolutions.

 

References

  • Fletcher et al. Jupiter Science Enabled by ESA’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, Space Science Reviews (2023).
  • Grasset et al. JUpiter ICy moons Explorer (JUICE): An ESA mission to orbit Ganymede and to characterise the Jupiter system, Planet. and Space Sci. (2013).
  • Hueso et al., JANUS observations of Earth in preparation for its investigation of Jupiter’s atmosphere, Annales Geophysicae, in preparation (2026).
  • Palumbo et al. The JANUS (Jovis Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) VIS-NIR Multi-Band Imager for the JUICE Mission, Space Science Reviews (2025).

How to cite: Hueso, R., Palumbo, P., Tubiana, C., Portyankina, G., Lara, L. M., Stephan, K., Zinzi, A., Luchetti, A., Agostini, L., Penasa, L., Coustenis, A., Haruyama, J., Kersten, E., Matz, K.-D., Politti, R., Patel, M., Sato, M., Simon, A., Takahashi, Y., and Yair, Y. and the JANUS Earth flyby team: JANUS observations of the Earth during and shortly after JUICE’s Lunar and Earth Gravity Assist (LEGA) on August 2024, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5763, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5763, 2026.

EGU26-6124 | Posters on site | PS1.3

The Climate Evolution of Earth's Distant Future and implications for eta Earth 

Michael Way and Rory Barnes

Earth's climate has changed in many ways over the past 4+ gigayears (Gyr), while mostly sustaining temperate conditions via volatile cycling.  This is remarkable given that the Sun's luminosity has changed by almost 30% in 4 Gyr.  The Earth's rotation rate has also changed by a factor of nearly 2 due to the receeding of the moon from Earth and changing bathymetry affecting tidal dissipation.  The climate of deep time future Earth (+1-3 Gyr) has seldom been explored, but one can use Earth's distant past to help inform us. The Sun's luminosity will continue to increase, while the moon's orbit will continue to grow affecting tidal dissipation in whatever bathymetry the Earth has in the future.  Using the ROCKE-3D climate model and VPlanet orbital dynamics components we attempt to model the future climate of Earth and how it might inform us about similar worlds orbiting nearby stars. For example, in one modeled dynamical scenario 1.9Gyr into the future the Earth's length of day (LoD) will increase to 46 days, while it's obliquity will approach zero. The global mean surface temperature (GMST) will only be 7.6C. If we choose a less dissipative scenario we find a LoD=1.5 days, an obliquity of 27.5, and a GMST=40C!  Will Earth eventually enter a moist and then a runaway greenhouse, or will it remain a temperate world until the Sun's red giant phase engulfs it in another 5 gigayears?  We will attempt to provide some answers to these questions.

How to cite: Way, M. and Barnes, R.: The Climate Evolution of Earth's Distant Future and implications for eta Earth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6124, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6124, 2026.

EGU26-12339 | ECS | Posters on site | PS1.3

Thermodynamic predictions of redox metabolisms within Mars analogue hot springs 

Toni Galloway, Eva Stüeken, Sophie Nixon, Jon Telling, Grace Nielson, Christopher Stead, Carla Greco, and Claire Cousins

The toolkit of methods used in the search for life on other planets is growing vaster as research pushes new ways to examine the habitability of other planetary bodies. One method which can highlight the bioenergetic potential of our solar system involves thermodynamic calculations to estimate the Gibbs free energy produced by redox reactions. This method allows for predictions of the dominant biological reactions within environments such as Noachian-age martian hot springs and could be a useful indicator of habitability based on simple geochemical measurements capable by future Mars missions.

We utilise aqueous, gas and mineral measurements of key redox species within modern hot spring systems to predict the thermodynamic feasibility of chemolithoautotrophic metabolisms. These predictions are then compared to metagenomic and metatranscriptomic sequencing of these analogous microbial communities, to test the accuracy of Gibbs free energy calculations in predicting dominant redox metabolisms within primitive ecosystems. In addition, we model the outflow of these springs within a Noachian atmosphere to examine the differences in free energy availability and therefore dominant metabolisms compared to modern Earth systems.

Results reveal thermodynamically feasible carbon, iron and sulfur metabolisms and a ubiquitous reliance on biological fixation of inorganic N2 and carbon within the hot spring communities. We find that the proportion of reduced and oxidised mineral iron in models impacts the feasibility of many redox reactions, including those which do not use iron species, suggesting that redox conditions are impacted by mineralogy. In addition, the free energy yield of redox reactions varies before and after equilibrating with mineral and atmospheric species, encompassing the natural chemical gradients within both modern hot springs and ancient systems on Mars.

Combining geochemical methods with genomic sequencing in this way allows for a true interdisciplinary assessment of free energy predictions and habitability of early Earth and Mars hot spring habitats.

How to cite: Galloway, T., Stüeken, E., Nixon, S., Telling, J., Nielson, G., Stead, C., Greco, C., and Cousins, C.: Thermodynamic predictions of redox metabolisms within Mars analogue hot springs, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12339, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12339, 2026.

EGU26-14723 | Posters on site | PS1.3

Validated temporal gradient-driven gas migration on Earth as the primary mechanism for repeatable methane fluctuations on Mars. 

Dr. HOVAV Zafrir, Yuval Reuveni, Ayelet Benkovitz, Zeev Zalevsky, Elad Levintal, Noam Weisbrod, and Danielle Ilzycer

 Validated temporal gradient-driven gas migration on Earth as the primary mechanism for repeatable methane fluctuations on Mars.

By

Hovav Zafrir1, Yuval Reuveni2, Ayelet Benkovitz2, Zeev Zalevsky1, Elad Levintal3, Noam Weisbrod3,Danielle Ilzycer4

 

1 Faculty of Engineering, Bar Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 5290002, Israel

2Department of Physics, Ariel University, Ariel 4070000, Israel

3The Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research, BGU University, of the Negev, Sede Boker, Israel

4Soreq NRC, Yavne, Israel

 

ABSTRACT

A significant observation by Curiosity’s Tunable Laser Spectrometer in Mars' Gale Crater involves repeatable methane fluctuations with distinct seasonal and sub-diurnal variability. After a decade of data, these methane emissions clearly require robust geophysical explanations rooted in thermodynamics.

On Earth, extensive field and laboratory research have demonstrated that surface temperature gradients primarily drive subsurface gas flows, particularly those of Radon-222. This thermally induced transport exhibits an exponential dependence, verified through long-term field measurements (4 years (*)) and also in controlled laboratory conditions, where oscillating vertical gas flow closely matches surface heating cycles, from the natural one per day to one per eight days. The field monitoring has shown that radon gas flows downward throughout all daylight hours within the bedrock to a measured depth of 100 meters and responds inversely to atmospheric temperatures at night, creating an inverted surface temperature gradient that drives nocturnal exhalation.

While gases on Earth's ground also respond linearly to semi-diurnal barometric pressure changes (barometric pumping), within cracks, voids, or fractures between geological layers and structures, our experience indicates that such effects become negligible when the pressure gradient is less than 2 millibars. Specifically, on Mars, where barometric pressure is two orders of magnitude lower than Earth's, the resulting pressure gradient is insufficient to drive significant gas transport, even through sand on Earth's surface.

(*) Benkovitz et al., 2023, https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15164094. Zafrir, et al., 2016, https://doi. org/10.1002/2016JB013033.

How to cite: Zafrir, Dr. H., Reuveni, Y., Benkovitz, A., Zalevsky, Z., Levintal, E., Weisbrod, N., and Ilzycer, D.: Validated temporal gradient-driven gas migration on Earth as the primary mechanism for repeatable methane fluctuations on Mars., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14723, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14723, 2026.

EGU26-16133 | ECS | Posters on site | PS1.3

N-body simulations to track the long-term fate of impact–induced debris 

Rongwei Duan

Impact events represent the most energetic processes during late-stage terrestrial planet accretion and generate large amounts of debris that can be redistributed throughout the inner Solar System. The long-term dynamical fate of this impact-generated material plays a key role in regulating planetary growth, cross-planet mass exchange, and material loss from the system. However, most N-body accretion models still rely on simplified collision prescriptions that neglect the detailed structure and dynamics of impact remnants.

In this study, we investigate the long-term evolution and final fate of impact-induced debris by coupling high-resolution Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations with GPU-accelerated N-body integrations. We perform a systematic suite of SPH simulations spanning a broad parameter space in impactor mass, impact velocity, and impact angle. Gravitationally bound clumps (GBCs) formed in the impact aftermath are identified using an energy-based clustering algorithm and mapped self-consistently into N-body initial conditions, which are then evolved for 15 Myr using the GENGA integrator in a realistic inner Solar System configuration.

Our simulations reveal a two-stage debris clearance process. More than 80% of the ultimately accreted mass is reaccreted within the first 105 years after impact, followed by a prolonged phase of dynamical depletion dominated by planetary perturbations. Earth is the primary sink of impact debris, reaccreting on average ∼40% of the total fragment mass, while Venus acts as a significant secondary reservoir, capturing ∼18-27%. In contrast, Mercury and Mars contribute only marginally to debris accretion. Approximately 25-30% of the debris is ultimately ejected from the Solar System, primarily through gravitational scattering by Jupiter.

Statistical analysis demonstrates that impact angle and velocity are the dominant parameters controlling debris fate, with high-velocity and grazing impacts strongly enhancing mass loss via ejection. Initial orbital phase also modulates debris survival and reaccretion efficiency. These results provide quantitative constraints on post-impact mass redistribution and highlight the importance of explicitly resolving impact remnants when modeling late-stage terrestrial planet formation.

How to cite: Duan, R.: N-body simulations to track the long-term fate of impact–induced debris, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16133, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16133, 2026.

EGU26-20005 | Posters on site | PS1.3

Education as a transfer mechanism: translating planetary remote sensing methodologies into operational Earth Observation for Earth-system applications 

Monica Pondrelli, Francesco Salese, Alessandro Coletta, Enrico Flamini, Francesca Mancini, Bruno Pace, Gianluca Iezzi, Sara Satolli, Giovanna Vessia, Paolo Boncio, and Gian Gabriele Ori

Earth is the best-constrained planetary body, yet many Earth-system challenges still require remote-sensing workflows that remain robust under incomplete ground truth, multi-sensor heterogeneity, and complex observation geometries. Planetary science has long operated under these constraints, developing interpretation strategies and processing practices that are increasingly relevant for Earth Observation (EO) applications in hazard monitoring, environmental change, and geological process understanding. In line with the PS1.3 scope of transferring planetary-science methodologies to advance Earth-system knowledge, we present an education-driven framework designed to operationalise this methodological transfer at MSc level.
We describe the structure and rationale of a new Earth Observation curriculum embedded within an MSc in Planetary Sciences, conceived as an “educational pipeline” that trains students to move from sensor-aware analysis to geology-driven interpretation and application-ready products. The curriculum integrates core modules on Earth Observation analysis, satellite multi/hyperspectral data analysis, and geospatial technologies, followed by geology-centred Earth-system applications (e.g., sedimentary environments, marine geology, global changes) and applied EO modules targeting volcanic monitoring and tectonic deformation. A distinctive component is digital field mapping with emerging technologies, designed to explicitly link remote-sensing products to validation strategies and field-based geological reasoning. The training pathway is reinforced through institutional collaboration with national agencies and research bodies, enabling exposure to operational practices and real-world constraints.
We argue that the key innovation lies in implementing a reproducible planetary-to-Earth methodological transfer framework based on: (i) observation-geometry and uncertainty-aware processing, (ii) scalable multi-sensor analytics, (iii) process-based geological interpretation, and (iv) field-connected validation and mapping. By framing education as a mechanism for transferring robust planetary methodologies into EO practice, this approach contributes to bridging planetary and Earth-system sciences while producing graduates capable of translating EO data into reliable, decision-relevant geoscience knowledge.

Keywords: comparative planetology; Earth Observation; remote sensing; hyperspectral; GIS/geoprocessing; hazards; digital field mapping. 

How to cite: Pondrelli, M., Salese, F., Coletta, A., Flamini, E., Mancini, F., Pace, B., Iezzi, G., Satolli, S., Vessia, G., Boncio, P., and Ori, G. G.: Education as a transfer mechanism: translating planetary remote sensing methodologies into operational Earth Observation for Earth-system applications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20005, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20005, 2026.

EGU26-20108 | ECS | Posters on site | PS1.3

Venus: The Coronae Enigma and Lessons for Earth 

Anna Gülcher

Venus hosts hundreds of enigmatic circular tectono-magmatic features known as coronae, whose origins, activity state, and role in planetary heat loss remain among the most persistent open questions in Earth and planetary sciences. Coronae display extraordinary diversity in size, morphology, topography, gravity signatures, and tectonic setting, indicating that they do not represent a single formation mechanism, but instead reflect a spectrum of dynamic processes. Understanding these structures is critical not only for deciphering Venus’ geodynamic regime, but also for assessing whether similar processes may have operated on the early Earth before, or during, the onset of sustained plate tectonics.

Here, we present new insights into the coronae enigma by integrating results from a newly compiled global corona database with joint analysis of topography and gravity observations, complemented by recent three-dimensional thermo-chemical geodynamic modeling. The updated database includes 741 coronae, substantially more than previously catalogued features, enabling a more accurate global-scale statistical assessment of coronae morphology, geological setting, and spatial distribution. The expanded dataset reveals numerous corona(-like) structures not previously recognized and highlights systematic variations in corona expression across different tectonic environments.

We investigate the topography and gravity signatures of the largest coronae using Magellan datasets. By analyzing free-air gravity anomalies together with key topographic characteristics, we identify distinct classes of coronae that exhibit signatures consistent with buoyant mantle support and different styles of plume–lithosphere interaction, including scenarios in which crust is recycled back into the mantle through lithospheric delamination or subduction-like processes. Importantly, our analysis further reveals that the limited spatial resolution of the Magellan gravity field can obscure or suppress positive gravity anomalies beneath some coronae, particularly where deep annular troughs surround an uplifted interior. This suggests that a subset of potentially active coronae could be effectively “hidden” in current geophysical datasets. These coronae therefore represent key observables for forthcoming missions such as ESA's EnVision and NASA's VERITAS.

Finally, we explore how corona-formation models are relevant to early Earth evolution.  These results provide a framework for evaluating plume-induced lithospheric weakening and transient subduction-like behavior as key mechanisms for the onset of plate tectonics on our planet.

 

How to cite: Gülcher, A.: Venus: The Coronae Enigma and Lessons for Earth, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20108, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20108, 2026.

EGU26-20877 | Posters on site | PS1.3

Polarimetric Characterisation of Volcanic Surfaces Using Dual and Full Polarimetric Spaceborne SAR Datasets: Analogue Studies for the Venus’s EnVision Mission 

Shubham Awasthi, Yao Gao, Gerard Gallardo i Peres, Nikol Davidova, Richard C. Ghail, and Philippa J. Mason

Radar remote sensing is essential for investigating Venus’ surface due to its dense CO₂-rich atmosphere and permanent cloud cover. The forthcoming ESA EnVision mission, equipped with the S-band VenSAR instrument operating in dual polarimetric HH and HV modes, will provide high-resolution observations to characterise surface scattering mechanisms, surface roughness, and dielectric properties. These observations are expected to enable the identification of signatures associated with active volcanic processes, including recent lava flow emplacement and surface alteration driven by thermal and chemical weathering. However, interpretation of polarimetric SAR observations over volcanic terrains remains challenging due to strong surface roughness, structural anisotropy, and orientation angle-induced depolarisation effects. Terrestrial volcanic analogues therefore provide a suitable framework for the development and validation of physically consistent polarimetric models prior to the availability of VenSAR data. This study presents a technical analysis of polarimetric scattering mechanisms at the Sundhnúksgígar and Holuhraun volcanic sites in Iceland using dual and full polarimetric ALOS-PALSAR-2 L-band SAR datasets. Fully polarimetric observations are used to quantify dominant scattering contributions and to evaluate the performance of conventional model-based decomposition approaches, including Freeman-Durden and Yamaguchi decomposition, over rough and structurally complex lava surfaces. To address the systematic overestimation of volume scattering, which can cause rough aa lava flows to be misclassified as vegetation, a modified model-based decomposition technique is introduced. By redistributing cross-polarised backscatter as a function of surface roughness, the proposed approach improves the separation of scattering mechanisms and enables more accurate discrimination of lava flow units and volcanic surface textures across both study areas. In addition, a dual polarimetric analogue of the proposed model-based decomposition technique is developed to enable volcanic surface characterisation using reduced polarimetric configurations consistent with the EnVision VenSAR acquisition mode. Multi-temporal ALOS PALSAR 2 dual polarimetric acquisitions are analysed to investigate surface evolution and volcanic dynamics associated with lava emplacement, flow cooling, and post-eruptive surface modification at the Sundhnúksgígar volcano site. The dual polarimetric formulation demonstrates strong correspondence with full polarimetric results in terms of dominant scattering behaviour and spatial variability, supporting the applicability of the proposed framework for future Venus observations. These results provide a validated polarimetric approach for characterising volcanic surfaces and contribute directly to the scientific preparation and exploitation of EnVision VenSAR data.

Keywords: Volcanos; SAR Polarimetry; Polarimetric SAR Decomposition; EnVision; ALOS-PALSAR-2; VenSAR

How to cite: Awasthi, S., Gao, Y., Gallardo i Peres, G., Davidova, N., C. Ghail, R., and Mason, P. J.: Polarimetric Characterisation of Volcanic Surfaces Using Dual and Full Polarimetric Spaceborne SAR Datasets: Analogue Studies for the Venus’s EnVision Mission, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20877, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20877, 2026.

EGU26-21129 | ECS | Posters on site | PS1.3

From Iceland to Mars: Fault Scaling and Tectonic Insights from an Earth Analogue 

Işık Su Yazıcı, Thomas Kenkmann, Sebastian Sturm, Oguzcan Karagoz, Ernst Hauber, and Daniela Tirsch

Faults provide key evidence for a planet’s tectonic history, especially where direct geophysical data are scarce. Fault geometry analysis is essential for understanding tectonic deformation [1] and seismic potential [2]. Thorough fault geometry analysis constraints fault evolution mechanical response [3,4]. Marsquakes at Cerberus Fossae, Mars [5] which were detected by InSight mission’s seismometer renewed interest in Martian tectonics, and underscored the significance of extensional fault systems. Memnonia Fossae is a region hosting prominent extensional structures similar to Cerberus Fossae. Yet, these structures in Memnonia Fossae are much older than the ones in Cerberus Fossae, which provides a valuable opportunity to explore the long-term evolution of fault systems on Mars. However, due to the challenges in obtaining high-resolution topographic data [6], fault geometry studies on Mars are still limited. Therefore, to address this limitation, we use the Reykjanes Peninsula in Iceland as a terrestrial analogue, where active tectonic processes in basaltic terrains reflects those believed to occur on Mars. The objective of this study is to evaluate and compare the geometric properties and scaling relationships of normal faults in Memnonia Fossae region on Mars and Reykjanes Peninsula in Iceland, providing insights into fault growth mechanisms at a planetary scale.

Previously, we obtained a maximum displacement-to-length (Dmax/L) ratio of 0.007 by analyzing fault scaling in Memnonia Fossae using remote sensing data from 100 faults. In this study, we focused on the Reykjanes Peninsula, and we collected structural measurements from 74 faults and fractures across 180 locations, recording parameters such as strike, dip, opening throw, shear, and extension vectors. Alongside field measurements, the Arctic DEM and drone imagery were employed also for less accessible faults.  The integration of field measurements, remote sensing, and drone imagery enabled a detailed characterization of fault geometry and displacement. The Dmax/L ratio derived from Reykjanes peninsula was 0.006, closely corresponding to values derived for Memnonia Fossae and aligning with fault scaling observation in volcanic terrains on Earth. The observed similarities between faults in Reykjanes and Memnonia Fossae indicate that comparable fault growth processes may operate in both regions despite differences in age and origin. Reykjanes faults are part of an active plate-boundary rift zone on Earth, whereas Memnonia faults formed in the ancient crust of a single-plate planet. Comparing older and younger faults offer insights into the tectonic evolution of Mars and demonstrates the value of Earth-based multi-source datasets in planetary studies.

Figure 1: Dmax/L ratio comparisons of Memnonia Fossae, Reykjanes, and volcanic rocks on Earth [7].

 

[1] Schultz, R.A. et al. (2010) J. Struct. Geol., 32, 855-875. [2] Wells, D.L. and Coppersmith, K.J. (1994) Bull. Seismol. Soc. Amer., 84, 974-1002. [3] Cartwright, J. A., et al., (1995) J. Struct. Geol. 17, 1319-1326. [4] Cowie, P.A. and Scholz, C.H., (1992) J. Struct. Geol. 14, 1133-1148. [5] Drilleau, M., et al., (2021) EGU General Assembly. Conf. 14998. [6] Gwinner, K. et al., (2010) Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 294, 506-519. [7] Lathrop, B. A., et al., (2022) Frontiers in Earth Science, 10, 907543.

How to cite: Yazıcı, I. S., Kenkmann, T., Sturm, S., Karagoz, O., Hauber, E., and Tirsch, D.: From Iceland to Mars: Fault Scaling and Tectonic Insights from an Earth Analogue, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21129, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21129, 2026.

EGU26-21130 | ECS | Posters on site | PS1.3

From terrestrial volcanic ashes to planetary surfaces:FTIR spectral constraints on eruption style from surge deposits from Vulcano Island (Italy) 

Camilla Gentili, Carla Tiraboschi, Alessandro Pisello, Marco Baroni, Gianluigi Ortenzi, Mickael Baqué, Tobias Bohnhardt, and Diego Perugini

The physical behaviour of silicate magmas and their eruptive style are strongly controlled by melt structure, volatile content, and cooling conditions, reflected in spectral properties. Magma rheology and eruptive style are primarily controlled by volatile-driven modifications of melt structure (especially due to H₂O), which govern fragmentation during magma–water interactions, producing fine, lithic-rich tephra. Spectroscopic techniques provide a powerful means to investigate melt structure and pre-eruptive volatile contents, offering insights into eruption dynamics.
We analysed tephra samples from two phreatomagmatic successions on Vulcano Island (Aeolian Arc, Italy), a natural laboratory to investigate relationships among magma composition, volatile content, and eruption style (Keller, 1980; De Astis et al., 1997). Eleven ash-rich layers were sampled. Field measurements included VNIR reflectance spectra acquired with an ASD FieldSpec spectroradiometer and portable Raman spectroscopy. Diffuse reflectance FTIR spectra were collected using a Bruker Invenio X spectrometer on natural and oven-dried samples (105 °C, 48 h) to evaluate adsorbed water. Quantitative spectral parameters were extracted, including band center, full width at half maximum, and area under the curve in the 300–25000 nm domain. We investigate whether VNIR reflectance spectroscopy and laboratory FTIR measurements can identify spectral criteria diagnostic of eruption style in surge-dominated pyroclastic deposits. Preliminary analyses reveal systematic spectral variations related to volatile content and silicate melt structure. The spectra display absorption features attributed to Fe³⁺, molecular H₂O, OH⁻, Al–OH, and Fe–OH vibrations, enabling extraction of band parameters sensitive to hydration state and polymerization degree. Thermal treatment experiments show reduced band areas and spectral slope associated with H₂O and OH⁻ absorptions after heating, indicating that most water in natural samples is weakly bound or adsorbed. However, water loss varies among stratigraphic levels, reflecting differences in glass content, porosity, and hydration history. Variations in Si–O and Al–O band positions and widths indicate differences in silicate network polymerization, with narrower bands and shifts toward higher wavenumbers consistent with evolved compositions. Overall, the spectral signatures are consistent with highly explosive eruptions involving water-rich, evolved magmas and record internal heterogeneity within the eruptive column, marked by progressive degassing during the eruptive event.
This study contributes to the development of spectral reference datasets of terrestrial volcanic materials, essential for interpreting remote sensing data. By linking spectral features to the physical and chemical characteristics of volcanic deposits and their eruptive context, we constrain the nature of volcanic activity on other planetary bodies.

De Astis, G.F. et al., 1997. Volcanological and petrological evolution of the Vulcano Is land Aeolian arc, southern Tyrrhenian Sea. J. Geophys. Res. 102, 8021–8050.
Keller, J., The island of Vulcano, Rend. Soc. Ital. Mineral. Petrogr., 36, 369–414, 1980

How to cite: Gentili, C., Tiraboschi, C., Pisello, A., Baroni, M., Ortenzi, G., Baqué, M., Bohnhardt, T., and Perugini, D.: From terrestrial volcanic ashes to planetary surfaces:FTIR spectral constraints on eruption style from surge deposits from Vulcano Island (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21130, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21130, 2026.

EGU26-540 | Orals | SM2.4

Adapting CyberShake for Europe using OpenQuake-Derived Earthquake Rupture Forecasts 

Andrea Camila Riaño Escandon, Josep de la Puente, Laurentiu Danciu, and Scott Callaghan

Over the past two decades, seismic hazard modeling has advanced along two complementary frontiers: empirical probabilistic frameworks, which systematically capture uncertainty through statistical inference, and physics-based simulation platforms, which directly compute ground motions from the governing equations of wave propagation. This project seeks to unify these two worlds by developing an end-to-end integration between OpenQuake and CyberShake, thereby creating a new generation of seismic hazard models that are globally extensible, probabilistically complete, and physically consistent. CyberShake has been under active development for more than a decade, demonstrating its robustness and scientific maturity through extensive implementations in California. It performs a physics-based probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA), replacing traditional empirical Ground Motion Prediction Equations (GMPEs) with full 3D numerical simulations of seismic wave propagation. Built upon the UCERF2/3 Earthquake Rupture Forecasts, CyberShake computes hazard curves directly from synthetic seismograms generated via Strain Green’s Tensors and thousands of stochastic rupture variations. This approach enables non-ergodic, site-specific hazard estimation and has set a global benchmark for high-fidelity hazard computation. However, its application has remained geographically limited: both the ERF and 3D velocity models were designed specifically for California, requiring extensive datasets that are rarely available elsewhere. Conversely, OpenQuake, developed by the Global Earthquake Model (GEM) Foundation, provides a fully open-source, Python-based framework for probabilistic seismic hazard and risk analysis. It serves as the computational backbone of large-scale hazard models such as the European Seismic Hazard Model 2020 (ESHM20), which integrates decades of regional expertise into a unified and statistical representation. OpenQuake provides a complete probabilistic framework to build Earthquake Rupture Forecasts (ERFs) that combine declustered catalogs, background seismicity, and multi-branch logic trees, ensuring a balanced and uncertainty-aware representation of regional tectonics. Furthermore, its ecosystem extends seamlessly to vulnerability and exposure modules, enabling the translation of hazard into actionable risk assessments and resilience planning.

This project will establish a direct pipeline from OpenQuake’s event-based results to the generation of an ERF compatible with CyberShake’s simulation framework, ensuring moment–rate consistency. By doing so, it will enable CyberShake simulations to be performed for regions beyond California, extending its use to Europe based on the knowledge contained in the ESHM20. The first pilot region is Istanbul, Turkey, a densely populated metropolis located near the western termination of the North Anatolian Fault. Our initial results show that the workflow is already functioning at the prototype level: we have developed a unified 3D velocity model for the Istanbul region by combining available tomographic models with local datasets; generated preliminary event-based rupture catalogs from ESHM20 using OpenQuake; and demonstrated early convergence behavior in hazard curves, indicating that the rupture sampling strategy is statistically robust. These initial results demonstrate the feasibility of the integration approach and indicate that the essential elements needed for a CyberShake-ready ERF are already in place.

How to cite: Riaño Escandon, A. C., de la Puente, J., Danciu, L., and Callaghan, S.: Adapting CyberShake for Europe using OpenQuake-Derived Earthquake Rupture Forecasts, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-540, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-540, 2026.

EGU26-1665 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Integrated Stress Evolution and Multi-Segment Rupture Dynamics of the Main Marmara Fault After the 2025 Mw6.2 Marmara Sea Earthquake 

Yasemin Korkusuz Öztürk, Ali Özgün Konca, and Nurcan Meral Özel

The northern branch of the North Anatolian Fault (NAF), the Main Marmara Fault (MMF), constitutes one of the most critical seismic hazards in the Eastern Mediterranean. This system currently hosts an ~120-km seismic gap bounded by the Mw 7.4 1912 Ganos and Mw 7.4 1999 İzmit earthquakes, and most recently accommodated the Mw 6.2 April 23, 2025 Marmara Sea Earthquake. The 2025 event ruptured the Kumburgaz segment, a key structural transition zone between the partially creeping Central Marmara Basin to the west and the fully coupled Çınarcık Basin to the east. Given the ~260-year seismic quiescence along this region of the MMF, understanding how the 2025 earthquake, together with the 1912 and 1999 events, has modified the regional stress field is essential for evaluating the likelihood and characteristics of a future large Marmara Sea earthquake.

In this study, we construct three complementary quasi-static block models to quantify stress evolution along the MMF: (1) a cumulative coseismic stress transfer model incorporating the 1912, 1999, and 2025 earthquakes; (2) a coseismic model isolating the effects of the 2025 rupture; and (3) an interseismic loading model constrained by GNSS observations. The two models enable a comparative assessment of static Coulomb stress changes on adjacent fault segments, illuminating how recent and historical ruptures collectively influence present-day stress accumulation patterns.

Building upon the quasi-static results, we generate new 3D dynamic rupture simulations using a 1D crustal velocity structure for the nonplanar multi-segment MMF, explicitly incorporating interseismic stress loading, coseismic stress perturbations, and the partially creeping behavior of the MMF. We further benchmark these new simulations against our earlier dynamic models that assumed a homogeneous velocity structure to evaluate the sensitivity of rupture dynamics to crustal heterogeneity and initial stress conditions.

Our integrated modeling framework reveals that, during a potential future large Marmara earthquake, rupture is likely to propagate westward through multiple MMF segments, while arresting near the eastern entrance of the İzmit Fault. New segmented rupture patterns are also observed as a result of using a 1D crustal structure instead of a homogeneous medium, together with the inclusion of coseismic stress transfer. The findings offer important insights into post-2025, post-1999, and post-1912 stress redistribution, fault-segment interactions, and rupture cascade potential across the Marmara region. Collectively, this work advances the scientific basis for earthquake hazard assessment in one of the world’s most densely populated and tectonically active metropolitan corridors.

How to cite: Korkusuz Öztürk, Y., Konca, A. Ö., and Meral Özel, N.: Integrated Stress Evolution and Multi-Segment Rupture Dynamics of the Main Marmara Fault After the 2025 Mw6.2 Marmara Sea Earthquake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1665, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1665, 2026.

Reservoir-induced seismicity (RIS) is a critical concern in geo-engineering, arising from the coupled interactions among in-situ stress, fluid flow, and fault mechanics, associated with reservoir impoundment. Improving our understanding of earthquake dynamics is therefore essential for elucidating the dynamics of rupture processes at RIS. In particular, understanding fault reactivation and the transition from quasi-static aseismic slip to dynamic rupture is crucial, as the nucleation phase may provide valuable information for detecting pre-seismic signals and estimating earthquake magnitudes.

We develop a novel two-dimensional, fully coupled poro-visco-elasto-dynamic finite-element model (implemented in COMSOL) to simulate RIS under reservoir impoundment in extensional tectonic settings. The porous medium is represented as a Kelvin–Voigt poro-visco-elastic solid to capture elastic deformation and intrinsic damping, while inertial effects are included to resolve rupture dynamics and seismic wave propagation. The fault is modeled as  non-penetrating surfaces enforced using an augmented Lagrangian contact formulation and governed by rate-and-state friction, where fault deformations are tolerated by using a virtual thin layer capability.

Model results show that when frictional and hydromechanical conditions permit fault reactivation, slip may become unstable and transition into a coseismic event, with rupture propagating along the fault in asymmetric two–crack-tip–like slip pattern emanating from the hypocenter. Rupture propagation speed is higher in the stiffer rock than in the softer one. Preferential flow induced by the reservoir impoundment forces the rupture nucleation earlier. Porosity and permeability of the fault damage zone decrease with depth (higher than that of the ambient rock at the upper part of the fault), providing the conduit for fluid flow over the fault and promoting longer rupture lengths at RIS.

These findings highlight the critical role of mechanical and hydraulic properties in controlling nucleation and rupture processes in RIS, with important implications for the design and management of reservoir impoundment.

How to cite: Zhou, X. and Katsman, R.: Reservoir Induced Seismicity Modelled Using a Fully Coupled Poro-Visco-Elasto-Dynamic Model with Frictional Contact and Rate-and-State Dependent Friction: Dynamics of Spontaneous Coseismic Rupture, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2242, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2242, 2026.

EGU26-2376 | ECS | Posters on site | SM2.4

Linking off-fault strain to rate-and-state friction nucleation: Implications for monitoring precursory velocity changes 

Lin Zhang, Jean-Paul Ampuero, and Pierre Romanet

Precursory signals preceding large earthquakes are commonly attributed to the acceleration of localized slip during rupture nucleation, yet their spatial expression in the surrounding medium remains poorly constrained. Here, we model the evolution of off-fault strain during earthquake nucleation governed by rate-and-state friction. Our results show that strain accumulates gradually during the early nucleation phase and then accelerates sharply, exceeding a threshold of ε ~ 10-7—comparable to natural strain levels and detectable by modern strainmeters and geodetic instruments—tens to hundreds of days before instability, depending on the uncertainty in the characteristic slip distance Dc and effective normal stress σeff. Approximately 0.7 times the nucleation duration prior to failure, the strained region (ε > 10-7) extends to distances exceeding one nucleation length away from the fault and spans most of its entire length. We further show that σeff  controls both the magnitude and spatial distribution of strain, whereas Dc primarily influences the spatial extent of the strained region. Assuming a representative value for the sensitivity of seismic velocity changes to strain (η ≈ 104), the predicted strain amplitudes correspond to ~0.1%-100% changes in seismic velocity, well above the detection limits of ambient-noise monitoring. A comparison between strain footprints and seismic wavelengths further suggests that analysis of short-period noise (T = 0.1 - 1 s) would be most favorable for identifying these precursory signals. Together, these findings directly link nucleation theory to observable field-scale precursors and provide a physics-based framework for precursor identification in natural fault systems.

How to cite: Zhang, L., Ampuero, J.-P., and Romanet, P.: Linking off-fault strain to rate-and-state friction nucleation: Implications for monitoring precursory velocity changes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2376, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2376, 2026.

EGU26-2980 | ECS | Posters on site | SM2.4

Toward physics-based PSHA study in northern Italy: 3D velocity model validation and broadband seismic signals synthesis. 

Chiara Saturnino, Luca De Siena, and Irene Molinari

Physics-based approaches are increasingly recognized as essential for improving seismic hazard assessment, however, no fully physics-based probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) exists for the Italian territory. This gap is particularly relevant in the Po Plain area in northern italy, where deep sedimentary deposits strongly amplify seismic waves and prolong shaking, even for moderate-magnitude events. In this context, broadband ground-motion simulations represent a key requirement for capturing both long-period basin effects and high-frequency scattering. In this study, we generate synthetic seismograms spanning the engineering-relevant 0.1–10 Hz bandwidth using a hybrid approach that combines deterministic low-frequency (<1 Hz) simulations with stochastically generated high-frequency (1–10 Hz) ground motion. The low-frequency component (<1 Hz) is computed using the SPECFEM3D Cartesian code, which implements the spectral element method to solve the full seismic wave equation in complex 3D media. A central goal of this work is the validation of the 3D MAMBo velocity model (Molinari et al., 2015). We test the model using several earthquakes and compare its performance against alternative candidate 1D and 3D velocity models, highlighting the critical role of a detailed 3D representation of basin geometry and major velocity discontinuities. The synthetic seismograms are quantitatively evaluated using time–frequency misfit and goodness-of-fit metrics. Our results show that the 3D characterization significantly improves the agreement with observed waveform shapes and durations, and they provide a foundation for future refinement of the regional velocity model. The resulting broadband synthetics are suitable for seismic-hazard analysis and engineering applications in the densely populated and economically important Po Plain. Overall, this study outlines a pathway toward fully physics-based probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) in northern Italy, grounded on validated 3D structure and physics-based broadband ground-motion simulations.

How to cite: Saturnino, C., De Siena, L., and Molinari, I.: Toward physics-based PSHA study in northern Italy: 3D velocity model validation and broadband seismic signals synthesis., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2980, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2980, 2026.

EGU26-3216 | ECS | Posters on site | SM2.4

Impact of Fault Geometry in dynamic modeling simulations: The case of the 2016 Mw7.8 Kaikoura. 

Emmanuel Caballero-Leyva, Duo Li, Ryosuke Ando, and Rafael Benites

The 2016 Mw7.8 Kaikoura earthquake presents one of most challenging natural events to model dynamically, with up to 21 faults involved in the full rupture, according to geological measurements of surface rupture ( e.g. Litchfield et al. 2018). However, most studies using static displacement observations do not resolve individual fault activation and their temporal connectivity at some parts of the fault range (e.g. Hamling et al. 2017), as suggested by the near-source strong motion data (REF). A more recent complete aftershock catalog provides improved seismological constraints on the rupture kinematics, offering new insights into the fault geometry and faulting mechanisms (Chamberlain et al. 2021). These advances motivate a re‑examination of the mysterious multi-fault rupture with complete seismological observation and physics-based dynamic rupture modeling for to better understand the governing mechanisms of multi-fault ruptures.

Compared to kinematic source inversions, dynamic modeling is a powerful numerical tool to compute realistic cases of earthquake occurrence due to complex ruptures. Yet, for earthquakes involving multiple interacting faults, even state-of-the-art dynamic models can lead to fundamentally different physical interpretations. On one hand, the corresponding dynamic modeling setup heavily depends on prior knowledge of the full system geometry, as well as on the stress-state and velocity model of the medium. On the other hand, due to the nonlinear nature of the problem, several models can produce similar results. Results show that for relatively simple ruptures, involving one or two fault planes, the solution is stable. However, when the rupture involves several faults, even minor changes to the dynamic setup result in instability and non-uniqueness of the solution.

To gain insight into how such extreme fault complexity controls rupture evolution, we perform the dynamic modeling of the 2016 Mw7.8 Kaikoura earthquake using the open-access SeisSol package. We use the New Zealand 3D velocity model and compare two different geometries. The first geometry uses the NZ Community Fault Model, while the second is based on a previously published rupture model (Ando & Kaneko 2018). For the first geometry, we analyze whether the rupture actually used secondary faults to continue its path, or if subsequent rupture was triggered by the generated wavefield. For the second geometry, we investigate the impact of rupture bifurcation onto two faults and assess whether this process generates identifiable seismic phases in the wavefield.

We analyze both dynamic scenarios using near-field and regional strong-motion records, which are expected to capture hidden features of the rupture. We further compare the simulated rupture evolution with previously published high-resolution earthquake catalogs to identify rupture patterns and evaluate potential changes in the stress field before and after the event. Our results highlight both the strengths and inherent ambiguities of dynamic rupture modeling for complex multi-fault earthquakes and provide new constraints on the physical processes governing the Kaikoura rupture.

How to cite: Caballero-Leyva, E., Li, D., Ando, R., and Benites, R.: Impact of Fault Geometry in dynamic modeling simulations: The case of the 2016 Mw7.8 Kaikoura., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3216, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3216, 2026.

EGU26-3583 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Characterizing Earthquake Rupture Directivity Using Apparent Source Spectra: A Case Study from Central Italy 

Edlira Xhafaj, Lorenzo Vitrano, Francesca Pacor, Sara Sgobba, and Giovanni Lanzano

This study investigates rupture directivity effects on source spectra of small-magnitude earthquakes in Central Italy, based on a dataset comprising 18,994 waveforms from 656 shallow crustal events recorded between 2008 and 2018. The Generalized Inversion Technique (GIT) is employed to isolate frequency-dependent source characteristics. Apparent Source Spectra (AppSS) exhibit clear azimuthal variations, indicating the presence of directivity effects, particularly in events associated with higher standard deviations. The source spectra are analyzed using multiple empirical models, allowing for the estimation of seismic moment and stress drop for 138 events. Model performance is evaluated through residual analysis across a frequency range of 0.5–25 Hz. Our findings indicate that the ω² source model fitting on the plateau (ωest²) provides a better fit to the observed spectra for the selected events in the dataset. Comparison with previous studies confirms the reliability of the spectral estimates and modeling approach. For the two selected events, spatial maps of ground motion are presented, offering valuable insights into the regional variability of shaking. The study results underscore the importance of incorporating rupture directivity in ground motion models, thereby reinforcing the robustness of empirical predictive approaches and their relevance for improving seismic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Xhafaj, E., Vitrano, L., Pacor, F., Sgobba, S., and Lanzano, G.: Characterizing Earthquake Rupture Directivity Using Apparent Source Spectra: A Case Study from Central Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3583, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3583, 2026.

EGU26-4273 | Posters on site | SM2.4

UrgentShake for Scenario-Based Ground Motion Simulations: Integrating Multiple Source Realizations with CyberShake 

Elisa Zuccolo, Natalia Zamora, and Chiara Scaini

UrgentShake is an urgent computing system developed by OGS (National Institute of Oceanography and Applied Geophysics) for the rapid generation of physics-based ground shaking scenarios. It employs a distributed architecture across High-Performance Computing (HPC) and cloud infrastructures to perform numerical simulations in near real-time, providing reliable estimates of ground motion following significant seismic events in Northeastern Italy, thereby supporting decision-making by emergency management authorities.

Although primarily designed for rapid response to earthquakes, UrgentShake’s flexible architecture also makes it suitable for non-real-time applications, such as Civil Protection exercises and risk analyses. In these contexts, a single realization of a specific seismic source is not sufficient; instead, a suite of plausible scenarios is needed to define median, minimum and maximum estimates of ground shaking and potential impacts.

To address this need, a feasibility study was conducted to demonstrate the potential integration of UrgentShake with CyberShake, a physics-based platform for seismic hazard modeling that simulates many rupture scenarios. CyberShake simulations for a representative earthquake scenario were performed using the Graves and Pitarka stochastic rupture generator and the Anelastic Wave Propagation code on HPC resources at the Barcelona Supercomputing Centre. By generating multiple independent source realizations with varying nucleation points, fault geometries and rupture characteristics, this proof of concept illustrates how source-related uncertainties can be incorporated into UrgentShake to produce robust ground shaking scenarios. These scenarios can support Civil Protection training and preparedness activities while enabling physics-based damage assessments to inform risk analyses.

How to cite: Zuccolo, E., Zamora, N., and Scaini, C.: UrgentShake for Scenario-Based Ground Motion Simulations: Integrating Multiple Source Realizations with CyberShake, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4273, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4273, 2026.

Fault geometrical complexity is a first-order controlling factor on the extent of strike-slip fault surface rupture and earthquake magnitude, and step-over represents a key type of such complexity. The Banquan pull-apart basin along the Tanlu fault zone provides a natural example to investigate how tectonically evolved fault geometry influences dynamic rupture propagation across step-overs. We construct a 3-dimensional fault model that incorporates Y-shaped negative flower structure, connecting faults, and a sedimentary layer within the extensional step-over. The shallow fault geometry is constrained by surface geological observations, and the deep fault structure is informed by analogue experiments of pull-apart basin formation. Spontaneous coseismic dynamic rupture simulations are performed to examine the rupture behavior under these fault geometries. Our results show that when stress perturbation associated with stopping phases at the main fault termination is insufficient to trigger rupture on the secondary fault directly, the presence of connecting faults can act as a bridge to facilitate rupture propagation across the step-over. A deeper connecting fault can generate a stress shadow on the secondary fault, inhibiting local rupture propagation and potentially behaving as a barrier on the secondary fault, whereas shallow connecting faults have little influence on the rupture process. These findings provide insights into rupture jumping behavior in step-overs with similar fault structures and extend the existing interpretation of step-over triggering based on stopping phases with planar fault geometries. 

How to cite: Lu, Z. and Hu, F.: Effects of tectonic evolution informed fault geometry on dynamic rupture propagation across step-overs: A case study of the Banquan pull-apart basin, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4321, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4321, 2026.

EGU26-4671 | ECS | Posters on site | SM2.4

Uncovering the stabilizing and destabilizing roles of aseismic creep in earthquake rupture 

Yanchuan Li and Xinjian Shan

Aseismic creep is widely recognized to influence earthquake rupture, but whether its role remains stationary in different earthquakes is poorly understood. In this study, we integrate GNSS/InSAR observations along the Xianshuihe fault in eastern Tibet and identify six aseismic creeping sections, which have been partially or fully involved in historical earthquakes. The creep exhibits spatiotemporal transient behavior. Using interseismic fault locking as a constraint, we performed 3D dynamic rupture simulations of the Xianshuihe fault. We demonstrate that aseismic creep exerts a dual role in earthquake rupture. On the stabilizing side, creeping sections terminate rupture propagation, with earthquakes that nucleate and are absorbed within the creeping zones further reinforcing their function as stable rupture barriers. Conversely, under favorable local stress conditions and modulated by transient aseismic slip migration and hypocenter location, creeping sections could promote rupture propagation, rendering their impact on rupture non-stationary in different earthquakes. These findings provide a plausible explanation for the pronounced variability of rupture segmentation and cascading on the geometrically simple Xianshuihe fault, and highlight the importance of incorporating both stabilizing and destabilizing effects of aseismic creep into seismic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Li, Y. and Shan, X.: Uncovering the stabilizing and destabilizing roles of aseismic creep in earthquake rupture, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4671, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4671, 2026.

EGU26-5554 | Orals | SM2.4

Accuracy of the Finite-difference Modeling of Seismic Motion – Wavenumber Limitation of Medium 

Jozef Kristek, Jaroslav Valovcan, Peter Moczo, Miriam Kristekova, Rune Mittet, and Martin Galis

Material interfaces play crucial role in forming seismic wavefield in local surface sedimentary structures and resulting free-surface motion. Multiple reverberations between the free surface and sediment-bedrock interface can lead to resonant amplifications and generation of local surface waves, and consequently to strong site effects of earthquakes.

It is therefore important to properly implement material interfaces in numerical modelling of seismic wave propagation and seismic motion. This has been well known for some time, and several approaches have been developed in variety of numerical methods.

The finite-difference (FD) method is still dominant method in numerical investigations of site effects of earthquakes. It applies relatively simple discretization in space to the material parameters and discretization in space and time to wavefield variables. Therefore, consequences of discretization must be analyzed in time, space, frequency and wavenumber domains.

Interestingly enough, the least attention has been paid to the wavenumber domain. Mittet (2017) and Moczo et al. (2022) recently demonstrated that, due to spatial discretization, a model of the medium must be wavenumber-limited by a wavenumber k smaller than the Nyquist wavenumber. Mittet (2021) and Valovcan et al. (2024) proved that the wavefield (numerically simulated or exact) in a medium limited by wavenumber k can only be accurate up to half this wavenumber. This has significant consequence for practical FD modelling of motion in realistic models of local structures.

We numerically demonstrate a perfect and unprecedented sub-cell resolution (capability to sense the position of interface within a grid cell) of FD modelling based on the wavenumber-limited medium using a finite spatial low-pass filter. The finding that it is possible to use a finite-length filter for wavenumber limitation of the medium is of key importance for the next development of the concept in terms of computational efficiency in modelling site effects.

How to cite: Kristek, J., Valovcan, J., Moczo, P., Kristekova, M., Mittet, R., and Galis, M.: Accuracy of the Finite-difference Modeling of Seismic Motion – Wavenumber Limitation of Medium, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5554, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5554, 2026.

The Gulf of Aqaba (GoA) fault system constitutes the southernmost segment of the Dead Sea Transform Fault (DSTF) and forms a ~180 km long left-lateral strike-slip plate boundary separating the Arabian Plate from the Sinai microplate.  As the most seismically active region of the Red Sea, the GoA has hosted multiple large historical earthquakes and poses significant seismic hazards to surrounding coastal communities. Increasing tourism activity and the infrastructural giga-project NEOM of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia in the vicinity of the GoA, highlight the need for advanced seismic hazard assessment (SHA). However, the offshore nature of the fault system and limited availability of observational data complicate the efforts. 

To assess earthquake potential and seismic hazard in the region, we construct multiple realizations of three-dimensional, multi-segment fault models representing alternative configurations of the GoA fault system. We constrain variations in 3D fault geometry with  recent high-resolution multibeam imaging and local seismicity, while explicitly accounting for uncertainties in seismogenic depth, initial stress conditions, and fault roughness. Incorporating off-fault plasticity along with realistic topography and bathymetry, we perform dynamic rupture simulations with varying hypocenter locations to investigate mechanically plausible rupture scenarios and the resulting ground motions in the GoA. Our physics-based simulations show that all considered model uncertainties, especially the fault geometry, prestress condition and hypocenter location, can strongly influence rupture dynamics, cascading, and segment interactions, determining how and if rupture propagates across the multi-segment GoA fault system. Beyond characterizing earthquake potential on individual fault segments, the simulations indicate that events as large as Mw 7.6 are possible if rupture extends along the full north–south length of the fault system. The resulting synthetic ground motions show attenuation properties consistent with empirical ground motion models, but display highly heterogeneous spatial patterns, including strong rupture-directivity effects during subshear propagation and pronounced off-fault Mach-front amplification for supershear rupture that significantly enhance ground shaking in coastal communities along this narrow gulf. These results underscore the substantial seismic hazard posed by large, dynamically complex earthquakes in the Gulf of Aqaba region and highlight the value of physics-based simulations in enhancing and complementing seismic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Li, B. and Mai, P. M.: Physics-based assessment of earthquake potential and ground motions in the Gulf of Aqaba, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5925, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5925, 2026.

EGU26-7716 | Posters on site | SM2.4

Rupture Speed Signatures of Near-fault Particle Motion in Large Strike-slip Earthquakes 

Suli Yao, Hongfeng Yang, Harsha Bhat, and Hideo Aochi

Earthquake rupture propagation speed is an essential source factor that largely controls hazard and risk. However, measuring rupture speeds of natural earthquakes is often challenging and ambiguous. Near-fault seismic waveforms (recorded within several km) are believed to have high capability for resolving rupture process. In this study, we probe the feasibility of using near-fault data signatures to directly infer rupture speeds in continental strike-slip earthquakes.

 

To thoroughly understand near-fault features, we synthesize the near-fault seismic waves for kinematic source models on a strike-slip fault under different rupture speeds in a 3D medium. We identify the dependence of velocity waveform and particle motion on rupture speed in both amplitude and shape. In addition, we compare our results with the analytical solution with steady-state constant rupture speed. The discrepancies between the kinematic model and the analytical model indicate the contribution of radiation from different configurations. With inspecting the near-fault dataset of eight M>7 strike-slip earthquakes, we find that instead of dealing with the velocity waveforms with multiple high-frequency spikes, the features of the particle motion shape are easier to identify. Then we apply the particle-motion-based criterion to identify signatures associated with supershear, subshear, and other complexities such as multiple rupture fronts and initial-stage rupture phase. Our study highlights the further application of near-fault seismic data in studying earthquake sources.

How to cite: Yao, S., Yang, H., Bhat, H., and Aochi, H.: Rupture Speed Signatures of Near-fault Particle Motion in Large Strike-slip Earthquakes, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7716, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7716, 2026.

The Ryukyu subduction zone offshore eastern Taiwan possesses significant seismogenic potential, exemplified by the 1920 M8 earthquake. However, even to date, the scarcity of near-field data leaves the ground motion characteristics of such mega-earthquakes poorly constrained, posing a threat to seismic hazard assessments. To estimate potential ground motions in inland eastern Taiwan from future mega-earthquakes, we simulated an M8 scenario earthquake using characterized source models (CSMs) based on the "Recipe" procedure (Irikura and Miyake, 2011). We employed a 3-D finite-difference method to conduct 1,728 full-waveform simulations, incorporating kinematic fault-rupture parameters, including rupture directivity, rupture speed, source time function, and asperity distribution, along with two recent tomographic velocity models and topography. Synthetic waveforms generated at 4,950 virtual stations (about 1.5 km spacing) were analyzed using RotD50 spectral accelerations (SA) at 1, 3, and 5 s. Detailed analysis highlights two notable characteristics of the dataset: first, rupture speed and directivity primarily govern the spatial variability and intensity of ground motions; second, tests demonstrate that utilizing a Gaussian source time function with periods of 2, 5, and 9 s yields optimal performance for assessing SA at 1.0, 3.0, and 5.0 s, respectively. We further calculated non-ergodic terms based on the CH20 GMM (Chao et al., 2020). The patterns clearly delineate northeastern Taiwan's geological domains: high values in the Ilan area (SA 1.0 s) and Longitudinal Valley (SA 1.0, 3.0, 5.0 s), and low values in the Coastal Range. These patterns mirror the crustal velocity structure, highlighting the dominance of path effects over relatively weak source effects. Consequently, our extensive simulation datasets provide a foundation for refining current GMMs and facilitate the transition toward non-ergodic seismic hazard assessments, thereby improving the accuracy of ground motion predictions for future mega-earthquake scenarios in the region.

How to cite: Hsieh, M.-C., Sung, C.-H., and Yang, Y.-C.: 3-D Seismic Wave Simulations for Non-Ergodic Ground Motion Modeling: Source and Path Variability in an M8 Ryukyu Subduction Scenario, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8902, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8902, 2026.

EGU26-9624 | ECS | Posters on site | SM2.4

Influence of Fault Roughness on Earthquake Rupture Parameters Correlations 

Pramod Kumar Vyas and Martin Galis

Geological observations show that fault surfaces are complex at both large scales (fault segmentation) and small scales (surface roughness). These geometric complexities strongly influence earthquake rupture behaviour, including slip, rupture speed, rise time, and peak slip velocity. Understanding how these rupture parameters are related to each other is essential for improving understanding of earthquake rupture physics and for developing synthetic rupture models that reproduce realistic dynamic behaviour within kinematic frameworks. Although earlier studies have examined these correlations, the effect of small-scale fault roughness is still not well understood. Therefore, this study focuses on understanding how fault roughness affects correlations among rupture parameters.

To address this problem, we use the dynamic rupture dataset of Mai et al. (2018), which includes twenty-one rupture models with different roughness realizations, roughness amplitudes, and hypocentre locations. Because dynamic slip-velocity functions have complex shapes, we simplify them by fitting the regularized Yoffe function proposed by Tinti et al. (2005). From these fits, we extract key kinematic parameters. We then examine correlations among eight parameters: slip, peak slip velocity, acceleration time, rise time, rupture speed, strike, dip, and rake.

Our results show that slip is positively correlated with rise time, but it does not show clear correlations with other rupture or geometry parameters. Peak slip velocity is negatively correlated with both acceleration time and rise time, and positively correlated with rupture speed. Importantly, as fault roughness increases, the correlation between peak slip velocity and rupture speed becomes weaker. Acceleration time is also negatively correlated with rupture speed, and this correlation also decreases with increasing fault roughness. In contrast, the geometry parameters strike and dip do not show significant correlations with any rupture parameters. Overall, fault roughness mainly affects the relationships between only two pairs of rupture parameters, whereas the correlations among other parameter pairs are not strongly affected.

Our findings provide important constraints for developing synthetic rupture models that can generate realistic high-frequency seismic radiation consistently with radiation of dynamic ruptures propagating on rough faults.

How to cite: Vyas, P. K. and Galis, M.: Influence of Fault Roughness on Earthquake Rupture Parameters Correlations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9624, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9624, 2026.

EGU26-9901 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Accelerating and scaling up SEAS simulations using GPUs in Julia 

Gabriele Benedetti and Elías Rafn Heimisson

Sequences of Earthquakes and Aseismic Slip (SEAS) simulations focus on km scale models and consider all phases of faulting from aseismic slip to earthquake nucleation, propagation and termination. Many codes exist that use different approaches to tackle SEAS simulations; however, solutions designed to leverage the potential of GPUs to parallelize and speed up the simulation are limited (although recent examples are emerging such as PyQuake3D). In this work, we propose a GPU parallelized SEAS quasi-dynamic solver written in Julia adopting the Spectral Boundary Integral Method (SBIM). The SBIM approach is optimal for GPUs as it is more memory efficient in respect to other mesh-based solvers, thus enabling to efficiently run high resolution simulations with around 10 million nodes on the fault plane. We rearrange the rate-and-state equations to solve for the slip rate and adopt a slightly modified Newton-Raphson algorithm for root finding. We introduce elastic bulk by using an analytical stress-slip relationship in the Fourier/wavenumber domain. Most of the operations that are carried out in the solver are element wise and thus can be run in parallel on GPUs, significantly cutting down on computation time as the domain resolution increases. While FFT is inherently not fully parallelizable, GPU kernels are available to efficiently perform Fourier transforms on GPUs. Moreover, by using the FFT algorithm, the numerical complexity for calculating the stress is reduced from O(N²) to O(NlogN). To verify the correctness of our solver, we use the BP4-QD benchmark and show comparable results with other outputs hosted by SCEC. We then measure the runtime of the solver on CPU and 2 NVIDIA GPUs, the RTX4060 8GB and the A100 40GB, and show a x5 to x16 speedup for simulations depending on the GPU. Finally, we run the BP4-QD problem on the A100 GPU, decreasing the indicated node spacing and Dc values by an order of magnitude. This simulation yielded 36 events of Mw > 7 and 181 events of Mw between 5 and 6, showing emergence of complexity. Moreover, we observe that the earthquake’s nucleation points are distributed along the edges of the rate-weakening patch. The smaller events are mostly concentrated on the four corners and the two sides parallel to the slipping direction while the bigger events are distributed more uniformly all around the border.

How to cite: Benedetti, G. and Heimisson, E. R.: Accelerating and scaling up SEAS simulations using GPUs in Julia, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9901, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9901, 2026.

EGU26-10178 | Posters on site | SM2.4

Postseismic and shallow slow slip events on the Izmit segment of the North Anatolian Fault controlled by depth-dependent frictional variations 

Cécile Doubre, Neyrinck Estelle, Rousset Baptiste, Wei Matt, and Kaneko Yoshihiro

Earthquake cycle modeling has enabled to reproduce the full spectrum of slip rates observed along fault segments, and refine our understanding of seismic cycle dynamics. However, key parameters controlling the occurrence of shallow slow slip events (SSE) such as those observed along strike-slip fault segments remain unclear, due to rare worldwide observations and the lack of long-lasting observations covering all phases of the seismic cycle. Here, we apply rate and state friction quasi-dynamic 1D models to explain the ensemble of observations along the Izmit segment of the North Anatolian Fault in Türkiye. This fault segment ruptured in 1999 with the magnitude 7.6 Izmit earthquake, and has been since then widely studied, providing constraints on most of the phases of the seismic cycle, from mainshock amplitude and recurrence times to afterslip logarithmic decay, and the occurrence of shallow SSEs. GNSS, InSAR and creepmeters geodetic data associated with seismological and paleoseismological data enable to describe the cumulative displacement during all phases of the seismic cycle. The comparison between model predictions and the observational time scales led to an optimal set of frictional models. First, the mainshocks maximum slip of ~6 m and return times of about ≥200 yrs are explained by an unstable seismogenic layer below 5.5 km depth with a thickness of 9.5 km and with frictional parameters a-b of about -0.004. The decadal afterslip, well constrained by a pair of campaign GNSS stations located on both sides of the fault, is mostly due to a stable layer located between 5.5 and 1.3 km depth, the lower limit being compatible with the aftershocks sequence limit. We compared model slip predictions and GNSS time series by computing Green's functions for a layered elastic half space medium. Model parameters for this intermediate layer explaining the observed relaxation time have frictional parameters a-b and critical distance of about 0.005 and 8 km, respectively. Finally, a shallow layer from the surface to 1.3 km depth with either a gradient of frictional parameters with depth or constant negative frictional parameters is needed to generate shallow SSEs 20 yrs after the main earthquakes. The shallow layer depth extent being compatible with the Izmit Quaternary sedimentary basin may suggest a key role of the sediments frictional properties to allow a velocity weakening behavior. Models with a gradient of apparent frictional properties throughout the basin may suggest the importance of pore-pressure variations as a function of the fault gouge depth.

How to cite: Doubre, C., Estelle, N., Baptiste, R., Matt, W., and Yoshihiro, K.: Postseismic and shallow slow slip events on the Izmit segment of the North Anatolian Fault controlled by depth-dependent frictional variations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10178, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10178, 2026.

This paper presents the quantification of site-city-interaction (SCI) effects on the dynamic response of buildings and free-field motion using domain reduction method. The simulated physics based broadband near-fault ground motion due to Mw6.5 strike-slip earthquake is being utilized to excite the site-city models using domain reduction method. The two step, domain reduction method, is utilized to reduce the exorbitant computational memory and speed as well as measures have been taken to preserve the ground motion characteristics. A building is incorporated in numerical grid as a building block model (BBM) and its dimension, different modes of vibrations and damping are as per the real building. The dynamic response of site-city models is simulated using both the pulse and non-pulse type motions. The analysis of simulated results reveals that the SCI study using realistic earthquake ground motion has caused a reduction of response of building and free field motion in a wide frequency bandwidth as well as its fundamental frequency. An increase of these reductions has been obtained with decrease of building-damping, fundamental frequency and impedance contrast between the BBM and the underlying sediment. A considerable difference in SCI effects is obtained when site-city model is excited with pulse and non-pulse type near-fault ground motions. Detailed study is carried out in order to find out the terms and conditions under which SCI is beneficial to all the buildings of the city.

How to cite: malik, S. and Narayan, J. P.: Quantification of site city interaction effect on Response of building in near fault region using Domain Reduction Method, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10205, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10205, 2026.

EGU26-10413 | Posters on site | SM2.4

Dynamic Rupture and Ground Motion Simulations of Potential Earthquake on the Tianzhu Seismic Gap 

Bihe Ren, Wenqiang Wang, and Hezhong Qiu

The Tianzhu seismic gap is an important segment of the Haiyuan fault system. In recent decades, earthquakes have occurred on most fault segments within this region, whereas the Jinqianghe–Maomaoshan fault has not experienced a major earthquake for an extended period. Given that this fault segment is widely regarded as having elevated potential seismic hazard, we conduct three-dimensional dynamic rupture and strong ground motion simulations using the curved grid finite difference method.To effectively constrain model input parameters, interseismic locking coefficients and slip deficit distributions inverted from InSAR and GPS observations are used to impose physically based constraints on the heterogeneous initial stress conditions along the fault. Simulation results indicate that the spatial distribution of locked regions plays a critical role in controlling rupture extent. Under locking-constrained conditions, scenario earthquakes with moment magnitudes of Mw 7.3–7.4 and maximum slip of approximately 5.5 m are generated. Further analyses show that larger accumulated slip deficits tend to promote higher earthquake magnitudes, whereas the surface seismic intensity does not exhibit a monotonic response to slip deficit.These results suggest that the Jinqianghe–Maomaoshan fault segment may be associated with elevated potential seismic hazard.

How to cite: Ren, B., Wang, W., and Qiu, H.: Dynamic Rupture and Ground Motion Simulations of Potential Earthquake on the Tianzhu Seismic Gap, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10413, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10413, 2026.

EGU26-11804 | Posters on site | SM2.4

A High-Efficiency and Low-Storage Algorithm for Seismic Simulation Using Half Precision and Scalable Vector Extension on ARM Platforms 

Wenqiang Wang, Bihe Ren, Juepeng Zheng, and Zhenguo Zhang

Seismic simulations are essential for ground motion characterization and seismic hazard mitigation. However, achieving accurate seismic modelling requires highly refined computational grids, which impose severe memory and computational challenges. Traditional seismic solvers based on single-precision floating-point 32-bit (FP32) arithmetic, suffer from excessive memory consumption, low-memory access efficiency and limited computational efficiency. In contrast, half-precision floating-point 16-bit (FP16) halves memory usage and effectively doubles memory access efficiency, making it attractive for large-scale seismic simulations. However, direct application of FP16 to classical elastic wave equations is challenging due to overflow and underflow caused by the wide dynamic range of physical variables. In this work, we reformulate the elastic wave equations by introducing three dimensionless scaling constants, Cv, Cs, and Cp, and derive an FP16-based elastic wave equation. Furthermore, we provided a practical strategy for determining these constants based on the source time function, ensuring that velocity and stress variables remain within the representable range of FP16. To maintain FP32-level accuracy, a mixed-precision strategy using “FP16 storage and FP32 arithmetic” is adopted. From a computational perspective, we further exploit the Scalable Vector Extension (SVE) on ARM architectures to accelerate stencil-based computations. However, effectively combining FP16 with SVE introduces additional challenges, including stencil restructuring for vectorization and data layout mismatches arising from “FP16 storage and FP32 arithmetic”. To overcome these challenges, this study develops three complementary seismic solvers on the ARM architecture: an FP16-based solver, an SVE-accelerated solver, and an FP16–SVE hybrid solver that integrates memory efficiency with vectorized computation. All three solvers are implemented, systematically validated, and benchmarked using both synthetic test cases and real earthquake simulations. Numerical results demonstrate near-identical agreement with a reference FP32 solver across diverse seismic scenarios. In particular, the FP16–SVE hybrid solver reduces memory consumption by approximately 50% and achieves up to a threefold speedup, delivering more than a 2.3× acceleration in real-world earthquake simulations. These results highlight the strong potential of the proposed FP16–SVE approach for enabling large-scale, high-efficiency, and near-real-time seismic simulations and earthquake hazard assessment on ARM-based platforms.

How to cite: Wang, W., Ren, B., Zheng, J., and Zhang, Z.: A High-Efficiency and Low-Storage Algorithm for Seismic Simulation Using Half Precision and Scalable Vector Extension on ARM Platforms, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11804, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11804, 2026.

EGU26-12099 | Posters on site | SM2.4

 The future Community-Driven SCEC SEAS Code Comparisons for [1] Three-Dimensional fluid injection and [2] a Two-Dimensional dipping fault with variable normal traction. 

Pierre Romanet, Eric Dunham, Brittany Erickson, Taeho Kim, Valère Lambert, and Prithvi Thakur

The Statewide California Earthquake Center (SCEC) sequence of earthquake and aseismic slip (SEAS) group has regularly developed and published benchmarks along the years to follow recent development in the modeling of sequences of aseismic slip and earthquakes, as well as progress in numerical methods. These benchmarks, as well as the results from the different groups are publicly available at: https://strike.scec.org/cvws/seas/. It provides both reference solutions for code verification and a framework for systematic comparison of different modeling approaches. Every group is welcomed to join this Community driven comparison.

Recent efforts have focused on adding physics to better reproduce earthquake cycle by considering 2-dimensional fault (Jiang et al., 2022), improve our understanding of fluid injection processes (Lambert et al., 2025), and the effect of free surface and dipping fault (Erickson et al., 2023).

To follow up these developments, the SCEC SEAS group is designing two new benchmarks, that will be released to the community soon:

[1] A generalization of our benchmark about fluid injection (BP6) from a 2-dimensional domain to 3-dimensional domain. In this benchmark pore fluid diffuses along a 2-dimensional fault, modifying the effective normal traction  through one-way hydromechanical coupling. The fluid is injected for 10 hours on a rate strengthening faut and then shut off. The benchmark is designed to admit an analytical formulation for pore fluid diffusion while avoiding numerical singularities that may occurred with point source injection. For this reason, fluid is injected along a Gaussian profile.

[2] An updated version of our previous dipping fault benchmark (BP3), in a two-dimensional medium with a free surface. Previous version assumed that the normal traction along the fault was constant.  This is obviously a strong assumption, because the normal traction should increase with depth. However, this has proven to be difficult to simulate numerically as the system is going stiffer with lower normal traction. This benchmark therefore aims at providing a more realistic simulation of a dipping fault with a free surface by introducing depth dependent normal traction while also testing the ability of different numerical code to circumvent the problem of stiffness. This benchmark will be a joint benchmark with CRESCENT (Cascadia Region Earthquake Science Center).

This contribution will present the design of these forthcoming benchmarks and will provide an opportunity for the community to discuss about future benchmarks and directions for SEAS code comparison efforts.

How to cite: Romanet, P., Dunham, E., Erickson, B., Kim, T., Lambert, V., and Thakur, P.:  The future Community-Driven SCEC SEAS Code Comparisons for [1] Three-Dimensional fluid injection and [2] a Two-Dimensional dipping fault with variable normal traction., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12099, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12099, 2026.

EGU26-12115 | Orals | SM2.4

Dynamic rupture of a gouge layer in a meter-sized labquake: a coupled numerical model 

Guilhem Mollon and Nathalie Casas

Seismic waves originate from dynamic rupture propagation in faults. Seen from afar, faults are analogous to shear cracks, and their rupture can be analysed using the tools of fracture mechanics. However, a closer look reveals that faults can also be considered locally as a tribosystem, i.e. as a layered structure which accommodates deformation thought localized shearing in a thin granular layer of fault gouge. These two scales are equally important but are difficult to handle simultaneously in simulations.

In this communication, we propose a novel numerical model where this challenge is addressed. The gouge layer is represented using the Discrete Element Method, where each micrometric gouge grain (about 1 million of them in the present case) is explicitly represented and submitted to Newtonian dynamics, based on the forces it receives from its contacting neighbours. This layer is 2 mm-thick, and is confined between two continuum regions simulated using an explicit Meshfree Method. They receive the elastic properties of country rock, and are prestressed in the normal and tangential directions in order to bring the gouge layer just below its peak strength. The resulting fault system has a total length of 64 cm.

A labquake is then triggered from the central point of the fault, and the weakening rheology of the gouge layer allows it to propagate along two rupture fronts, which exhibit specific properties inherited from the frictional response and structure of the gouge. Inclined Riedel bands spontaneously develop at quasi-periodic intervals in the granular layer, and both rupture fronts propagate by leaps when successively activating slip in these structures. They both transition to a supershear regime after a certain sliding distance.

This model allows for the first time to observe the behaviour and response of the gouge layer as it endures the propagation of a rupture front. Localization patterns and granular complexity render the rupture irregular and heterogeneous, but a moving average in time in the frame of the crack tip allows to recover stress concentrations and slip velocity patterns which are consistent with the Linear Elastic Fracture Mechanics predictions. Il allows to relate gouge frictional response and rupture dynamics without the need to prescribe an arbitrary friction law or to rely on separation of scales.

How to cite: Mollon, G. and Casas, N.: Dynamic rupture of a gouge layer in a meter-sized labquake: a coupled numerical model, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12115, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12115, 2026.

EGU26-12196 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Rupture Complexities of Slow Slip Events Controlled by Fault Friction Mechanics 

Yiran Shi and Huihui Weng

Slow slip events (SSEs) are usually observed in elongated transitional zones between the seismogenic and creeping regions of the subduction zones, with the potentials to trigger large subduction earthquakes. Geodetic observations of SSEs in the Cascadia subduction zone (Michel et al., 2019) reveal contrasting complexities of rupture segmentations in the northern and southern segments separated by 44°N, with the northern segment preferring longer ruptures and the southern part preferring shorter ruptures. However, it remains unclear what mechanisms control the observed contrasting rupture segmentations of SSEs. Additionally, understanding the mechanisms behind the rupture complexities of SSEs can provide physical insights into the processes governing characteristic or complex earthquakes. Here, we conduct numerical simulations of SSE cycles along an elongated fault with a finite width W , which is governed by the rate-and-state friction with velocity-strengthening. We find that the rupture complexities of SSEs on a fault – classified as characteristic ruptures, complex ruptures, or creeping – depend on two non-dimensional ratios  Lnuc/W and Lc/W, where Lnuc is the critical nucleation length and Lc is the critical cohesive zone length. When Lnuc/W  is larger than 0.5, the fault keeps creeping and cannot produce any SSEs, which is consistent with previous theoretical predictions of 0.5 to 1. In addition, we find that runaway characteristic ruptures are enabled if the fault satisfies the energy balance condition between the energy release rate G0 and the fracture energy Gc,, G0 = Gc, derived from the three-dimensional theory of dynamic fracture mechanics that accounts for finite rupture width (Weng and Ampuero, 2022). If G0 < Gc, ruptures prefer to arrest in a short distance and form complex events. This work proposes that a wide spectrum from creeping to characteristic ruptures is controlled by two length ratios in the framework of fracture mechanics, providing new physical insights into the mechanisms of SSEs.

References:

Michel, S., Gualandi, A., & Avouac, J.-P. (2019). Similar scaling laws for earthquakes and Cascadia slow-slip events. Nature, 574(7779), 522–526. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1673-6

Weng, H., & Ampuero, J.-P. (2022). Integrated rupture mechanics for slow slip events and earthquakes. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34927-w

 

 

How to cite: Shi, Y. and Weng, H.: Rupture Complexities of Slow Slip Events Controlled by Fault Friction Mechanics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12196, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12196, 2026.

EGU26-12340 | Posters on site | SM2.4

Cluster Analysis of Fourier Amplitude Spectra Residuals for Ground Motion Characterization in Southern Italy. 

Paola Morasca, Maria Clara D'Amico, and Daniele Spallarossa

The main objective of this study is to identify clusters of seismic records with similar Fourier Amplitude Spectrum (FAS) shapes that can be associated with different tectonic domains, path attenuation properties, and site effects in Southern Italy. The analyzed dataset consists of FAS of S-wave windows, computed in the 0.5–25 Hz frequency range from accelerometric and velocimetric records available from EIDA and ITACA for 1349 events and 502 stations, with focal depths up to about 40 km.

We analyzed residuals between empirical FAS-based ground-motion models (GMMs), using ITA18 as reference, and observed spectral amplitudes through a mixed-effects regression framework. This allows us to decompose the total residuals into systematic contributions due to source (between-events term, δBe), path (systematic differences in attenuation, δWes), and site (site-to-site term, δS2S) effects, which are then grouped into clusters.

For the source terms δBe, four clusters are identified. Two of them are particularly interesting: one shows systematic amplification with increasing frequency, while the other shows systematic deamplification at high frequencies. The spatial distribution of the corresponding events highlights the Gargano and southeastern Sicily as regions characterized by amplified spectral amplitudes, whereas northeastern Sicily and the Aeolian area exhibit deamplified amplitudes. Additional insights are obtained by examining the dependence of these clusters on magnitude and focal depth; this analysis reveals that one of the source-related clusters is composed exclusively of shallow events (depth ≤ 10 km), which display distinctive spectral behaviors in specific crustal and volcanic domains.

For the path residuals δWes, four clusters are also recognized, revealing systematic differences in wave propagation across distinct crustal structures. The systematic site terms δS2S are grouped into three clusters: one identifies stations largely unaffected by significant soil amplification, while the other two show, respectively, systematic amplification and deamplification across the whole frequency band, with the clearest separation at intermediate frequencies (about 3–8 Hz).

These results provide a regional framework for ground-motion characterization in Southern Italy, supporting the identification of reference stations and of areas with distinct source and attenuation properties. This work is preparatory to future large-scale and local-scale Generalized Inversion Technique (GIT) studies aimed at the characterization of ground motion for shallow-crustal events and at the definition of key input parameters for earthquake simulations. In particular, the source-related clusters associated with volcanic areas reveal spectral features that deviate from classical ω² source models, pointing to processes likely controlled by complex fluid–rock interactions.

How to cite: Morasca, P., D'Amico, M. C., and Spallarossa, D.: Cluster Analysis of Fourier Amplitude Spectra Residuals for Ground Motion Characterization in Southern Italy., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12340, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12340, 2026.

EGU26-13053 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Bridging the Gap Between Millions of Years and Milliseconds: Modeling Earthquake Sequences, Slow Slip, and Splay Fault Rupture in Subduction Zones 

Alexander Koelzer, Mhina de Vos, Taras Gerya, and Ylona van Dinther

Earthquakes and tsunamis occur on a timescale of seconds and are experienced by humans as sudden devastating disasters. However, the tectonic systems that determine where they occur are shaped over millions of years. Deformation in subduction zones is characterized by visco-elasto-plastic interactions between the accretionary prism featuring splay faults, subducting and overriding plate, asthenosphere, and free surface. To understand the present-day seismicity, earthquake cycle, and splay faulting in particular, these deformation processes need to be considered across all time scales. However, numerical models have not been able to resolve the dynamics across both tectonic and earthquake time scales.

We present a novel numerical modeling technique that simulates fully dynamic earthquake sequences and slow slip events in a subduction zone described by a visco-elasto-plastic rheology. Faults form and evolve spontaneously according to heterogeneous, temperature-dependent material parameters and the local stress field during both the initial 4 million years of subduction and the subsequent seismic phase. We employ an invariant formulation of rate- and state-dependent friction and adaptive time stepping to fully resolve all phases of the seismic cycle.

We generate events covering the slip spectrum from aseismic creep to earthquakes with slip rates in the order of m/s and tens of meters of slip. We find that events are largely characteristic despite the potential for deviating rupture paths in the subduction channel. We find that splay faults need to be sufficiently weak to be activated during a megathrust earthquake, since they cannot accumulate stress over time because velocity-strengthening afterslip relaxes their stresses. Dynamic triggering of a splay fault can lead to an early arrest of the megathrust rupture. Such short-term effects alter the long-term deformation compared to a purely geodynamic model by increasing the importance of one splay fault over others. We also observe that trapped seismic waves significantly change the slip distribution in a similar manner as has been found using a dynamic rupture model.

We conclude that our model successfully combines aspects of established geodynamic models and dynamic rupture models, providing a missing link between the long-term and the short-term. When applying this modeling approach to a complex continental setting, the interaction of multiple faults results in further complexities such as clustering. This highlights the potential and versatility of the method for a wide range of tectonic settings.

How to cite: Koelzer, A., de Vos, M., Gerya, T., and van Dinther, Y.: Bridging the Gap Between Millions of Years and Milliseconds: Modeling Earthquake Sequences, Slow Slip, and Splay Fault Rupture in Subduction Zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13053, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13053, 2026.

EGU26-13780 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

From uncertain velocity models to ensemble-based ground motion simulations 

Sam A. Scivier, Paula Koelemeijer, Adrian Marin Mag, and Tarje Nissen-Meyer

Physics-based earthquake wave propagation and ground motion simulations rely critically on three-dimensional seismic velocity models as inputs. These models may originate from seismic tomography, empirical regional compilations, geological constraints, or hybrid modelling approaches, and are commonly treated as deterministic representations of the subsurface. However, all such velocity models are affected by substantial epistemic uncertainty arising from limited data coverage, modelling assumptions, and methodological choices, and often disagree in overlapping regions. Neglecting this uncertainty obscures how variability in Earth structure propagates into simulated wavefields and ground motion estimates, limiting the interpretability and robustness of physics-based seismic hazard assessments.

We present a probabilistic framework to account for velocity model variability in physics-based ground motion predictions. Rather than selecting a single preferred velocity model, we represent model uncertainty through the fusion of multiple, spatially overlapping velocity models using scalable Gaussian process (GP) regression. Our approach treats existing velocity models as spatially correlated observations of an underlying velocity field and infers a continuous probability distribution that captures both shared structural features and model disagreement. The GP formulation thus preserves spatial coherence across scales and provides an interpretable description of uncertainty in terms of spatial covariance, characteristic length scales, and amplitude variability. This enables the generation of ensembles of physically plausible velocity model realisations for use in wave propagation solvers, thereby producing ground motion predictions that explicitly reflect velocity model uncertainty.

Using our framework and realistic 3D seismic velocity models in a regional case study, we generate an ensemble of velocity model realisations and propagate them through physics-based earthquake simulations. We show that uncertainty in velocity structure alone can produce substantial variability in simulated wavefields and predicted ground motions, even when all other aspects of the simulation are held fixed. These results highlight the sensitivity of physics-based ground motion estimates to uncertain subsurface structure and motivate the need to explicitly incorporate velocity model uncertainty in physics-based earthquake simulations.

While demonstrated here for seismic velocity models, the framework can readily incorporate additional geophysical parameters relevant to earthquake wave propagation, such as density and attenuation. This provides a practical route for incorporating epistemic Earth model uncertainty into physics-based seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Scivier, S. A., Koelemeijer, P., Mag, A. M., and Nissen-Meyer, T.: From uncertain velocity models to ensemble-based ground motion simulations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13780, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13780, 2026.

EGU26-14664 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Effects of the lower crust on slab detachment – a case study in the Hindu Kush 

Tatjana Weiler, Andrea Piccolo, Arne Spang, and Marcel Thielmann

Earthquake nests are defined as volumes of intense intermediate-depth seismicity which are isolated from any surrounding seismic activity. The high seismic activity within these earthquake nests occurs continuously and thus sets them apart from other seismic sequences such as earthquake swarms or aftershocks. These intermediate-depth earthquakes cannot be explained by the same causes as shallow earthquakes. Instead, they are often linked to slab detachment (e.g. in the Hindu Kush).

To constrain the conditions at which these large intermediate-depth earthquakes occur, numerical models are required to better understand their tectonic environment. Here, we use two-dimensional thermomechanical models with a nonlinear visco-elasto-plastic rheology were to determine the deformation state and the controlling mechanisms of the detachment process.

In this study, we focus on the question how the viscosity ratio (ηlithlc) between the lithosphere and the lower crust and the depth dlc to which lower crust may have been subducted influence the subduction process. Both is poorly constrained for the Hindu Kush. To this end, we varied the viscosity ratio ηlithlc between 0.01 and 1000 and the subduction depth of the lower crust dlc between 160 km and 240 km. We obtained detachment depths ranging from 110 km to 470 km, which fall within the range of the Hindu Kush earthquake nest, extending up to 280 km. The deformation behaviour from the 264 models can be classified into five different regimes based on stress, strain rate, detachment depth, and coupling between subducting and overriding plate. The five regimes represent the dependency of the detachment depth (ddet) to its viscosity ratio (ηlithlc). Detachment in regime two is enhanced via shear heating and detachment in the other regimes occurs via necking. The relationship between lower crustal depth and detachment depth varies by model category. This variability reflects the complex influence of the “lubrication effect” of a weak lower crust and the limitation of subduction depth governed by its rheological properties.

How to cite: Weiler, T., Piccolo, A., Spang, A., and Thielmann, M.: Effects of the lower crust on slab detachment – a case study in the Hindu Kush, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14664, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14664, 2026.

EGU26-14752 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Versatile Surrogate Inversion of Deformation Sources 

Kaan Çökerim and Jonathan Bedford

The amount of geodetic surface displacement observations from GNSS and InSAR has been growing in recent years yet exploring the model space of corresponding sub-surface deformation remains a complicated and computationally expensive exercise. This is especially the case when there is more than one source and is further complicated when there is a variety in source types, such as combinations of on-fault slip and off-fault mantle flow.  While analytical solutions exist for a variety of deformation types within elastic half-spaces (such as fault slip, tensile dislocation, volumetric strain, expansion/contraction) the optimization of source parameters beyond single source models is computationally burdensome due to the need to extensively search with forward passes of the numerical solutions.  In most kinematic modelling exercises, the strategy is to assume geometries of sources and solve for magnitude parameters in inversions or to let a Finite Elements simulation evolve from a starting static displacement.  Furthermore, there is no effective way to blindly discover the number of sources along with their respective modes of deformation.

Here we demonstrate a solution to these problems that uses surrogate cuboid anelastic deformation sources and sparsity. Cuboid surrogates, that are trained on analytical solutions of anelastic deformation in a half-space, provide a versatile parametrization capable of approximating a wide range of deformation styles - from volumes to faults - by collapsing the thickness towards a near-planar geometry.  Once trained, the model can be run in inversion mode so that parameters of the source, such as centroid, length, width, depth, and strain tensor can be optimized by means of a back-propagated loss between the measured surface displacement and surrogate model prediction.  Multiple sources can be added trivially, and a sparse solution found with an approximately sparse optimization strategy.

By replacing repeated forward evaluations with a trained surrogate model, the proposed framework enables rapid optimization directly from observed deformation fields without the need for assuming the types of deformations or number of sources. This combination of a flexible cuboid-based source representation and efficient surrogate modelling offers a practical route towards scalable discovery of sub-surface deformation features.

How to cite: Çökerim, K. and Bedford, J.: Versatile Surrogate Inversion of Deformation Sources, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14752, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14752, 2026.

EGU26-15115 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Mechanics-based simulation of aftershock sequences in complex 3D fault networks 

Wenbo Pan, Zixin Zhang, and Qinghua Lei

Understanding the physical mechanisms governing aftershock patterns and their evolution in fault networks is crucial for interpreting seismic catalogues and improving physics-based seismic hazard assessment. Here, we develop a mechanics-based modeling framework based on the discrete fracture network approach to explicitly simulate mainshock rupture, coseismic stress changes, and aftershock generation in complex 3D fault networks. The fault system that we model comprises a primary strike-slip fault surrounded by a network of thousands of secondary faults with sizes following a power-law distribution. Dynamic rupture nucleates within a localized patch on the primary fault and propagates spontaneously at a sub-Rayleigh speed, producing a Mw 7.6 mainshock. The model captures aftershock triggering driven by radiated seismic waves and/or permanent stress redistribution, and quantifies their combined effect using Coulomb failure stress changes. Fault slip is governed by a linear slip-weakening friction law, where the critical slip distance is varied over orders of magnitude to explore its influence on breakdown-zone size, fracture-energy dissipation, and rupture propensity on secondary faults. The simulations capture key emergent characteristics of aftershock sequences: spatially, aftershocks cluster within positive Coulomb stress lobes and are suppressed within stress shadows, with additional localization near fault intersections; statistically, the cumulative frequency–magnitude distributions follow Gutenberg–Richter scaling over a broad magnitude range. Importantly, the synthetic catalogues consistently exhibit a two-branch frequency–magnitude scaling behavior, in which the lower-magnitude branch is dominated by partial ruptures and premature arrest, whereas the higher-magnitude branch corresponds to self-sustained ruptures whose moment magnitudes scale with fault area and are therefore more strongly constrained by fault network geometry. We further show that the transition between these regimes is governed by fault criticality and fracture energy dissipation, providing an alternative mechanics-based explanation for the commonly observed roll-off in frequency–magnitude distribution. Overall, our framework mechanically connects fault network structure and rupture dynamics to explain aftershock statistics, enabling physics-based interpretation of seismic catalogues and supporting improved seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Pan, W., Zhang, Z., and Lei, Q.: Mechanics-based simulation of aftershock sequences in complex 3D fault networks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15115, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15115, 2026.

EGU26-15721 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Emergence of asperity-like energy concentration in a stochastic Langevin framework 

Tsung-Hsi Wu and Chien-Chih Chen

Modeling earthquake rupture dynamics often requires stochastic approaches to address the impracticality of obtaining analytical solutions for asymmetric many-body systems. Following Langevin's approach, we propose a stochastic dynamic model for the earthquake rupture process, where complexity in degrees of freedom is reduced by introducing a random force to account for uncertainties in fault plane heterogeneity and structural collisions. In this coarse-grained framework, the random term captures unresolved heterogeneity and interactions at a macroscopic system scale; it does not assert that rupture at the scale of specific fault patches is inherently random. Treating the tectonic process as a Coulomb friction process allows this Langevin equation to be viewed as a stochastic variant of Newton’s second law, attributing physical significance to the sample paths.

However, applying a zero-dimensional (0-D) stochastic framework to complex faulting raises a critical conceptual challenge: can a model lacking explicit spatial dimensions reproduce the highly heterogeneous energy distribution observed in nature? Intuition suggests that the exponential slip distribution derived from a 0-D process may not exhibit tail behavior sufficient to satisfy the standard asperity criterion, where a small fraction of the fault area releases most of the seismic energy. To validate the physical basis of the model, we first examine the spectral properties of the synthetic velocity fluctuations. Results demonstrate that the model output is not arbitrary white noise; rather, the velocity spectra exhibit a Lorentzian form characterized by a single corner frequency. This spectral structure indicates that system memory is governed by a characteristic timescale determined by the load ratio, reflecting a competition between frictional dissipation (which erases memory) and external driving (which sustains motion).

Furthermore, we evaluate the steady-state slip distribution derived from the corresponding Fokker–Planck equation against empirical scaling relations for asperities. Adopting the criterion which defines an asperity as regions where slip exceeds 1.5 times the average, and using squared slip as an upper-bound proxy for energy release under elastic loading, we calculate the theoretical energy concentration. The model predicts that the top ∼22% of the statistical "area" contributes ∼81% of the total energy. This theoretical prediction lies within the 20–30% range observed empirically for asperity area fractions. These findings suggest that the concentration of energy in asperities can emerge from stochastic frictional dynamics, arising from the exponential tail of the slip distribution without explicit modeling of spatial heterogeneity.

How to cite: Wu, T.-H. and Chen, C.-C.: Emergence of asperity-like energy concentration in a stochastic Langevin framework, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15721, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15721, 2026.

The excitation and propagation of multiple wave types, including seismic waves, ocean acoustic waves, and tsunamis triggered by earthquakes within the oceanic wavefield, constitute a problem of substantial scientific and practical challenge for both fundamental geophysical understanding and hazard assessment. While various numerical approaches have been proposed to model these full-coupled wavefields, the role of realistic seafloor topography in modulating wave propagation remains underexplored.

We present a novel earthquake-tsunami coupled simulation approach based on the spectral-element method (SEM), leveraging its robustness and accuracy in representing arbitrary fluid-solid interface geometries. The approach is quantitatively validated through comparisons of simulated permanent seafloor deformation and sea-surface displacement time series with benchmark finite-difference method (FDM) solutions, yielding an excellent correlation coefficient of 0.998 and negligible errors. Furthermore, we construct two distinct numerical models: one incorporating realistic seafloor topography and another assuming an idealized flat seafloor to investigate the effects of bathymetry on oceanic wavefield. Our analyses reveal that complex bathymetry profoundly alters the propagation of both seismic and tsunami waves, modifying amplitudes, arrival times, and spatial distribution patterns. By systematically separating the contributions of the overlying seawater and the underlying seafloor topography, we clarify their individual influences on the composite oceanic wavefield. We also investigate how variations in earthquake source location affect wave propagation waves, underscoring the necessity of accurate bathymetric representation for offshore events.

This SEM-based earthquake-tsunami coupling framework offers a robust tool for comprehensively understanding the oceanic wavefield under gravity and holds considerable promise for advancing earthquake and tsunami risk evaluation, especially when combined with seismological observational data.

How to cite: Hou, X., Zhang, L., and Xu, Y.: Coupled simulation of earthquake and tsunami by spectral-element method and effects of bathymetry on oceanic wavefield, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15953, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15953, 2026.

EGU26-17597 | Posters on site | SM2.4

Propagation Characteristics of Rotational Ground Motions in Layered Earth Media 

Anjali C. Dhabu, Aida Hejazi Nooghabi, and Céline Hadziioannou

Rotational ground motions have recently emerged as an important and independent observable in seismology, driven by advances in rotational seismometers and the growing availability of high-quality rotational datasets. These observations provide new insights towards understanding near-source and near-surface wave propagation beyond traditional translational measurement. To model rotational components, several analytical approaches have been proposed in the recent past. However, these formulations are typically restricted to idealized source representations and simplified Earth models, limiting their applicability to realistic geological settings accounting for three-dimensional complexities.

Finite-element modeling techniques provide a powerful alternative by enabling the simulation of seismic wavefields in complex media by incorporating heterogeneous velocity structures, layered stratigraphy, surface topography, and finite-fault earthquake sources. Despite this capability, commonly used ground motion simulation codes have not yet been adapted to compute rotational ground motions. In this study, we extend the spectral finite-element code SPECFEM3D to internally compute and output rotational ground motions alongside conventional translational components. The numerical implementation is validated against analytical solutions for two benchmark cases: (i) a homogeneous half-space and (ii) a three-layered velocity model, demonstrating excellent agreement in both amplitude and waveform characteristics. Following validation, the modified code is used to simulate rotational ground motions for a range of realistic scenarios, including layered representations of the subsurface and finite-fault source models. These simulations are used to investigate the generation and propagation characteristics of rotational motions and to examine their spatiotemporal relationship with translational ground motions. Differences in amplitude and propagation behavior between rotational and translational components are particularly analyzed in the present work.

Finally, we assess the potential implications of rotational ground motions for earthquake engineering by evaluating their relative amplitudes and propagation patterns under different source and structural conditions. The results provide a framework for identifying the source characteristics and conditions under which rotational components of ground motion may become significant and potentially influence structural response. These findings contribute to an improved understanding of whether, and under what circumstances, rotational ground motions should be considered in seismic analysis and earthquake-resistant design practice.

Keywords: Rotational ground motions, Seismic wave propagation, Numerical modeling, Earthquake engineering

How to cite: Dhabu, A. C., Hejazi Nooghabi, A., and Hadziioannou, C.: Propagation Characteristics of Rotational Ground Motions in Layered Earth Media, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17597, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17597, 2026.

EGU26-18857 | ECS | Posters on site | SM2.4

Towards physic-based ground-motion simulations for the Scutari-Pec Fault System, Eastern Adria 

Claudia Abril and Alice Gabriel

The Eastern Adriatic region has been historically affected by strong destructive earthquakes, including the M6.4 1667 Dubrovnik earthquake, the M6.6 1905 Shkodra event, and the M6.4 2019 Durrës earthquake. Some of those destructive events are associated with the Scutari-Pec Fault System (Albania). This tectonic structure extends sub-parallel to the coastline, in the SW-NE direction, through the Dinaride-Hellenide transition. This fault system corresponds to a compressive and transform fault system near the Adriatic Sea that changes the tectonics to an extensional regime towards the East. The distribution of focal mechanisms  of microseismicity recorded in the region (Serpelloni et al, 2007) evidences the complex tectonics (Grund et al., 2023). 

As part of the German SPP project DEFORM, we plan to simulate 3D dynamic earthquake scenarios to study the rupture propagation of large earthquakes across the Scutari-Pec Fault System. We apply the open-source SeisSol code to generate synthetic seismograms up to frequencies of 2 Hz. We will specifically investigate the effect of variability of locking depth as a crucial parameter for determining the earthquake potential of the fault system. Ground motion for dynamic rupture scenarios with characteristics similar to the destructive reported events will be  estimated, in particular for the most populated cities located within 50 km of the central fault system. This presentation is a first step toward these goals and  aims to provide relevant information for such simulations, which may complement seismic hazard assessment in the region.

How to cite: Abril, C. and Gabriel, A.: Towards physic-based ground-motion simulations for the Scutari-Pec Fault System, Eastern Adria, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18857, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18857, 2026.

EGU26-21376 | ECS | Orals | SM2.4

Validation of a 3-D Basin Velocity Model for Physics-Based Seismic Hazard Assessment: The Sulmona Basin, Central Italy 

Jon Bryan May, Vanja Kastelic, Michele Matteo Cosimo Carafa, Rita de Nardis, and Emanuele Casarotti

Reliable physics-based seismic hazard assessment (PB-SHA) requires basin velocity models that accurately reproduce key characteristics of observed seismic wave propagation, which is critical for predicting ground-motion scenarios in complex sedimentary basins. We present a validation study of a three-dimensional basin model with depth-dependent P- and S-wave velocity profiles of the Sulmona Basin (central Italy), developed to represent basin-scale structures relevant for physics-based ground-motion simulations.

The model is implemented in the spectral-element code SPECFEM3D and evaluated through direct comparison of observed and synthetic seismograms at the available stations within the basin. Simulations are performed for selected regional earthquakes, with synthetic waveforms filtered to match the target frequency range of the model. Waveform misfit is quantified using the Pyflex framework, allowing an objective assessment of phase arrival times, waveform similarity, and amplitude differences across multiple stations.

The results show that the model reproduces basin-controlled wave-propagation characteristics, including waveform duration and spatial variability of ground-motion amplitudes. Amplitude variability and waveform agreement primarily reflect the depth-dependent velocity structure and 3D basin geometry, while localized misfits reflect unresolved features and the limited number and spatial coverage of recording sites.

Overall, this validation provides a first quantitative assessment of the Sulmona Basin velocity model, forming a foundation for subsequent work towards physics-based seismic hazard assessment and scenario modelling.

How to cite: May, J. B., Kastelic, V., Carafa, M. M. C., de Nardis, R., and Casarotti, E.: Validation of a 3-D Basin Velocity Model for Physics-Based Seismic Hazard Assessment: The Sulmona Basin, Central Italy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21376, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21376, 2026.

This study investigates the influence of surface-water-level fluctuations on seismicity in the upper crust, using the historic Dead Sea as a natural laboratory.  We apply a validated 2D poro-elasto-plastic coupling model in COMSOL Multiphysics. The model integrates coupled hydro-mechanical processes, including pore-pressure evolution, plastic strain localization, and permeability changes, to capture the interaction between surface loading and fault stability. Given reported challenges in capturing hydro-mechanical coupling and scaling behaviour in natural systems using the rate-and-state friction (RSF) formulation, this study adopts an alternative modelling framework that does not explicitly incorporate RSF. The study focuses on applying the model to reconstruct earthquake occurrence patterns associated with Dead Sea water-level variations over the past two millennia. Results demonstrate a strong correlation between relatively rapid water-level changes and increased seismic activity, highlighting the critical role of hydrological forcing in earthquake triggering. These findings provide new insights into reservoir-induced seismicity and underscore the importance of incorporating surface water dynamics into seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Belferman, M. and Agnon, A.:  Hydro-Mechanical numerical Modeling of Water-Level-Induced Seismicity: Insights from Historic Dead Sea Fluctuations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-22999, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-22999, 2026.

EGU26-211 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Automatic detection and classification of Nanoseismicity in Distributed Acoustic Sensing data 

Dominic Seager, Jessica Johnson, Lidong Bie, Beatriz De La Iglesia, and Ben Milner

The detection of nanoseismicity (very tiny earthquakes sometimes associated with small cracks in rock, also called acoustic emissions) is an important area of research aiding in the understanding of geophysical processes, hazard detection, material failure and human-driven nanoseismicity. The high frequency and attenuation of nanoseismicity require high-frequency monitoring within metres of the source to capture the event. This has made them difficult to monitor in conditions outside of small-scale lab experiments, in which failure is intentionally induced. The development of distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) as a new tool for seismic monitoring, however, has increased the feasibility of investigating such signals in the field due to its high temporal and spatial resolution. Manual picking of these events, while possible, is impractical for long-term deployments and for time-critical applications such as stability monitoring, which limits the utility of the technology. Automation of the detection of nanoseismic events within such data is therefore essential for the long-term processing of DAS data and real-time processing of data for use in stability monitoring.  

We have developed a pipeline for the automated extraction of nanoseismic events from DAS data, using a new, simple ratio technique called Spatial Short-Term Average (SSTA). The pipeline takes an input of DAS data and generates a series of windows within the data containing information about high amplitude signals relating to nanoseismicity.  

Using the automatically detected events, we labelled the windows to train a series of machine learning models to classify the different signals. Once trained, we evaluated the performance of the various models to select the most effective method for processing the collected data. The best performing models will then be tested at scale with the resulting classified dataset being plotted spatially along the length of the deployment to identify patterns of activity across space and time. 

How to cite: Seager, D., Johnson, J., Bie, L., De La Iglesia, B., and Milner, B.: Automatic detection and classification of Nanoseismicity in Distributed Acoustic Sensing data, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-211, 2026.

EGU26-893 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Optical Interferometry-based seafloor cable Measurements for Rupture Imaging and Tsunami Signal Analysis in the Southwest Pacific 

Amin A. Naeini, Bill Fry, Giuseppe Marra, Max Tamussino, Johan Grand, Jennifer D. Eccles, Kasper van Wijk, Dean Veverka, and Ratnesh Pandit

Optical interferometry on submarine fiber-optic telecommunication cables offers a transformative opportunity for offshore geohazard monitoring by providing continuous measurements of seafloor perturbation at useful intervals over trans-oceanic distances (Marra et al., 2022). We analyze a southwest Pacific subset of data from a section of the Southern Cross NEXT cable connecting Auckland (New Zealand) to Alexandria (Australia). Using only cable-based measurements, we image the seismic rupture kinematics of the 17 December 2024 Mw 7.3 Vanuatu earthquake, the largest seismic event recorded on this cable since its installation.

 

We analyze measurements of a section of cable more than 1,000 km in length and comprising 18 inter-repeater spans including the section that runs roughly parallel to the Vanuatu subduction zone and the adjoining section extending southward toward New Zealand. The earthquake produces clear and coherent arrivals in the optical frequency deviation recorded across multiple spans, with well-defined signatures visible in both time series and spectrograms. We first extract earthquake-related strain signals in the 0.1-0.3 Hz frequency band and apply the Multiple Signal Classification (MUSIC) back-projection technique to recover the source-time evolution of the rupture. The inferred rupture is predominantly bilateral and consistent with the USGS finite-fault solution, confirming that interferometric submarine cables can function as effective regional seismic arrays for rapid characterization of offshore earthquakes.

 

These results further demonstrate the capability of submarine fiber-optic cables to image earthquake rupture processes using high-frequency strain signals, providing valuable monitoring coverage, especially in instrumentally sparse regions such as the southwest Pacific. By resolving rupture kinematics directly, cable-based observations offer a pathway toward improved tsunami early-warning strategies that rely less on empirical magnitude–scaling relations, which are uncertain for large earthquakes. Planned upgrades of the interrogating laser will allow the performance of this approach to be assessed at lower frequencies, where cable-based observations may provide direct constraints on tsunami propagation and other long-period geophysical processes.

How to cite: A. Naeini, A., Fry, B., Marra, G., Tamussino, M., Grand, J., D. Eccles, J., van Wijk, K., Veverka, D., and Pandit, R.: Optical Interferometry-based seafloor cable Measurements for Rupture Imaging and Tsunami Signal Analysis in the Southwest Pacific, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-893, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-893, 2026.

EGU26-1594 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Physics-based earthquake early warning using distributed acoustic sensing 

Itzhak Lior and Shahar Ben Zeev

We present a physics-based point source earthquake early warning system using distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) data. All core modules of the system are based on physical principles of wave propagation, and models that describe the earthquake source and far-field ground motion. The detection-location algorithm is based on time-domain delay-and-sum beamforming, and the magnitude estimation and ground motion prediction are performed using analytical equations based on the Brune omega squared model. We demonstrate the performance of the system in terms of magnitude estimation and ground motion prediction, and in terms of real-time computational feasibility using local 3.1 ≤ M ≤ 3.6 earthquakes. This DAS early warning system allows for fast deployment, circumventing some calibration phases that require gathering local DAS earthquake data before the system becomes operational.

How to cite: Lior, I. and Ben Zeev, S.: Physics-based earthquake early warning using distributed acoustic sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1594, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1594, 2026.

EGU26-3915 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Quasi-static waveform inversion from DAS observations 

Le Tang, Etienne Bertrand, Eléonore Stutzmann, Luis Fabian Bonilla Hidalgo, Shoaib Ayjaz Mohammed, Céline Gélis, Sebastien Hok, Maximilien Lehujeur, Donatienne Leparoux, Gautier Gugole, and Olivier Durand

As a vehicle approaches the fiber-optic cable, the distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) records a broadband strain rate, which corresponds to propagating seismic waves at high frequencies (>1Hz) and to quasi-static strain fields at low frequencies (<1Hz). However, characterizing the subsurface media through quasi-static deformations remains challenging. Here, we propose a new method for imaging shallow urban subsurface structures using quasi-static strain waveforms, measured with fiber-optic cables. This technique utilizes the quasi-static waveform of a single DAS channel to generate a local 1D velocity model, thereby enabling high-resolution imaging of the underground using thousands of densely packed channels. We employed the Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) inversion strategy to investigate the depth range of inversion using car-induced quasi-static waveforms. The synthetic data demonstrates that the quasi-static strain field generated by a standard small car moving over the ground enables detailed imaging of structures at depths from 0 to 10 meters. Additionally, we conducted field experiments to measure the 2D shear-wave velocity model along a highway using quasi-static strain waveforms generated by a four-wheeled small car. The velocity structure we obtained is closely aligned with that derived from the classical surface-wave phase-velocity inversion. This consistency indicates that the inversion depth range is comparable to the simulation results, which confirms the applicability of this method to real data. In the future, we anticipate using the city's extensive fiber-optic communication network to record quasi-static deformations induced by various types of vehicles, thereby enabling imaging of the urban subsurface at a citywide scale. This will provide valuable insights for the design of urban underground infrastructure and for assessing urban hazards and risks.

How to cite: Tang, L., Bertrand, E., Stutzmann, E., Bonilla Hidalgo, L. F., Mohammed, S. A., Gélis, C., Hok, S., Lehujeur, M., Leparoux, D., Gugole, G., and Durand, O.: Quasi-static waveform inversion from DAS observations, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3915, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3915, 2026.

EGU26-4163 | Orals | SM3.4

Seismic data telemetry system and precise hypocenter location for distributed acoustic sensing observation using seafloor cable off Sanriku, Japan 

Masanao Shinohara, Shun Fukushima, Kenji Uehira, Youichi Asano, Shinichi S. Tanaka, and Hironori Otsuka

A seismic observation using Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) using seafloor cable can provide spatially high-density data for a long distance in marine areas. A seafloor seismic and tsunami observation system using an optical fiber cable off Sanriku, northeastern Japan was deployed in 1996. Short-term DAS measurements were sporadically repeated since February 2019 using spare fibers of the Sanriku system (Shinohara et al., 2022). A total measurement length is approximately 100 km.  It has been concluded that measurement with a sampling frequency of 100 Hz, a ping rate of 500 Hz, gauge length of 100 m, and a spatial interval of 10 m is adequate for earthquake and tsunami observation.  From March 2025, we started a continuous DAS observation to observe seismic activity. When the continuous DAS observation was commenced, we developed quasi real time data transmission system through the internet. Because a DAS measurement generates a huge mount of data per unit time and capacity of internet is limited, decimation for spatial direction is adopted. In addition, data format is converted from HDF5 to conventional seismic data exchange format in Japan (win format). An interrogator generates a HDF5 file every 30 seconds. After the file generation, the telemetry system reads the HDF5 file, and decimates data for spatial domain. Then, the data format is changed to the win format and the data are sent to the internet. In other words, data transmission is delayed for a slightly greater than 30 seconds. Data with the win format can be applied to various seismic data processing which has been developed before. To locate a hypocenter using DAS data, seismic phases in DAS data must be identified. To evaluate performance of hypocenter location using DAS records, arrival times of P- and S-waves were picked up on the computer display for local earthquakes. Every 100 channel records on DAS data and data from surrounding ordinary seismic stations were used. Location program with absolute travel times and one-dimensional P-wave velocity structure was applied. Results of location of earthquakes were evaluated by mainly using location errors. Errors of the location with DAS data were smaller than those of the location without the DAS data. Increase of arrival data for DAS records seems to be efficient to improve a resolution. However, picking up signals for all channels (seismic station) manually are costly due to a large number of channels. To expand the location method, an improved automatic pick-up program using evaluation function from conventional seismic network data by seismometers for DAS data (Horiuchi et al., 2025) was applied to the DAS data obtained by the Sanriku system. As a result, arrivals time of P, S and converted PS waves can be precisely identified with high resolution. We have a plan to locate earthquakes using all DAS channels (seismic stations)  and surrounding ordinary marine and land seismic stations.

How to cite: Shinohara, M., Fukushima, S., Uehira, K., Asano, Y., Tanaka, S. S., and Otsuka, H.: Seismic data telemetry system and precise hypocenter location for distributed acoustic sensing observation using seafloor cable off Sanriku, Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4163, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4163, 2026.

EGU26-4254 | Orals | SM3.4

Using a hybrid seismic and Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) network to study microseismicity in high spatiotemporal resolution offshore of Kefalonia Island, Greece  

Rebecca M. Harrington, Gian Maria Bocchini, Emanuele Bozzi, Marco P. Roth, Sonja Gaviano, Giulio Pascucci, Francesco Grigoli, Ettore Biondi, and Efthimios Sokos

Combining traditional seismic networks with Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) to record ground-motion on telecommunications cables provides new opportunities to study small earthquakes with unprecedented spatial and temporal resolution. Here we present a detailed study of an earthquake sequence offshore northwest of Kefalonia island, Greece that began in March 2024 and returned to background levels by November–December. The sequence was recorded by both a permanent seismic network for its duration and by DAS on a fiber-optic telecommunications cable between 1 - 15 August 2024.  The two-week DAS dataset provides continuous strain measurements along ~15 km of optical fiber between northern Kefalonia and Ithaki during a period that captured elevated seismic activity. Combining seismic station and DAS data reveals distinct physical features of the sequence that are not observable with seismic stations alone, including details of mainshock-aftershock clustering and well-resolved source spectra at frequencies of up to ~50 Hz for M < 3 events. The signal-to-noise-ratio > 3 at frequencies of up to 50 Hz observed on DAS waveforms for a representative group of events suggests consistency with typical earthquake stress-drop values that range from 1-10 MPa. It further suggests that DAS data may be used to augment detailed studies of microearthquake source parameters.

We apply semblance-based detection to DAS waveforms and manually inspect 5,734 earthquakes that occurred within ~50 km of the fiber to build an initial earthquake catalog. We then combine DAS and seismic-station data to locate 284 events with high signal-to-noise ratios and compute their local magnitudes with seismic station data to create a detailed subset of the initial catalog. We apply waveform cross-correlation to offshore DAS data for events in the detailed catalog to associate unlocated detections with template events and estimate relative magnitudes from amplitude ratios and further enhance the detailed catalog. This approach adds an additional 2,496 earthquakes (2,780 events in total) with assigned locations and magnitudes and leads to an enhanced catalog with completeness magnitude Mc = -0.5. Most earthquakes (2,718 of 2780) cluster within a ~5 km radius approximately 10 km offshore of northwestern Kefalonia and exhibit local rates exceeding 100 events per hour.

Our enhanced catalog provides a detailed spatiotemporal record of seismicity in a region with limited station coverage and demonstrates the effectiveness of integrating DAS with seismic networks for earthquake monitoring of active seismic sequences. Furthermore, it resolves details of mainshock–aftershock clustering that would have otherwise likely have been erroneously classified as swarm-like with standard monitoring, highlighting how observational resolution influences the interpretation of the physics driving earthquake sequences.

How to cite: Harrington, R. M., Bocchini, G. M., Bozzi, E., Roth, M. P., Gaviano, S., Pascucci, G., Grigoli, F., Biondi, E., and Sokos, E.: Using a hybrid seismic and Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) network to study microseismicity in high spatiotemporal resolution offshore of Kefalonia Island, Greece , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4254, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4254, 2026.

The first commercially available fibre-optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) system, Cobolt, was released in 2004, with early uptake driven by applications in perimeter security, pipeline monitoring, and upstream oil and gas operations. Although these deployments demonstrated the disruptive potential of DAS, it is only within the past five years that the geoscience community has widely embraced the technology, exploiting its ability to deliver continuous, high-fidelity measurements with exceptional spatial and temporal resolution.

Historically, commercially available DAS systems were optimised for industrial monitoring rather than scientific metrology. As a result, key requirements of geoscience applications—such as quantitative accuracy, extreme sensitivity, extended range, and robustness in challenging environments—were not primary design drivers. This situation is now changing rapidly as geoscience applications mature and expand. This contribution reviews the principal performance characteristics that define the suitability of modern DAS systems for geoscience research and examines how recent technological developments are addressing these needs.

Five performance parameters are of particular importance. First, the transition from amplitude-based, qualitative DAS to phase-based, quantitative systems has enabled true strain-rate and strain measurements suitable for metrological applications. Second, instrument sensitivity has improved by several orders of magnitude, with contemporary systems achieving pico-strain-level detection along standard telecom fibre. Third, measurement range—ultimately limited by available backscattered photons in pulsed DAS—has been extended beyond 150 km through the adoption of spread-spectrum interrogation techniques. Fourth, spatial resolution continues to improve, with gauge lengths of ≤1 m and sampling intervals of ≤0.5 m now routinely achievable, and further reductions anticipated. Finally, dynamic range remains a critical consideration for high-amplitude signals such as earthquakes; however, reductions in gauge length provide a clear pathway to mitigating cycle-skipping limitations, supporting the future use of DAS in Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) systems.

Alongside raw performance, the ability to quantify and compare DAS system capabilities has become increasingly important. Industry-led efforts have resulted in well-defined test methodologies and performance metrics, providing a common framework for objective evaluation of DAS instruments used in scientific studies.

Practical deployment considerations are also shaping system design. Reduced size, weight, and power (SWaP) enable operation in remote and hostile environments, while improved reliability, passive cooling, and environmental sealing facilitate long-term field installations. These advances are particularly relevant to emerging marine and subsea applications, where low-power, marinised DAS systems are required for seabed deployment.

Finally, the growing complexity of DAS instrumentation places increasing emphasis on software. Automated configuration, intuitive user interfaces, and integrated edge-processing capabilities are becoming essential to ensure that non-specialist users can reliably extract high-quality scientific data.

Together, these developments signal a transition in DAS from an industrial monitoring tool to a mature geoscience instrument, with continued innovation expected to further expand its role across solid-Earth, cryospheric, and marine research over the coming decade.

How to cite: Hill, D.: DAS design features critical to geoscience applications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4295, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4295, 2026.

EGU26-4413 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Coherent Source Subsampling of Seismic Noise for Distributed Acoustic Sensing in the Swiss Alps 

Sanket Bajad, Daniel Bowden, Pawan Bharadwaj, Elliot James Fern, Andreas Fichtner, and Pascal Edme

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) provides dense measurements of seismic noise along fiber-optic cables and offers new opportunities for subsurface characterization. In environments where controlled sources are unavailable, conventional noise interferometry workflows for DAS construct virtual shot gathers via cross-correlation and average them over long time windows to obtain coherent surface waves for dispersion analysis and subsequent shear-wave velocity (Vs) inversion. In noise-based interferometric imaging, the distribution of noise sources controls the quality of the retrieved interstation response. In practice, seismic sources are highly anisotropic and intermittent, and so simply averaging all available time windows produces interferometric responses that are difficult to interpret and lead to unstable dispersion curves and biased Vs estimates. We present a data-driven coherent source subsampling (CSS) framework that automatically identifies and selects the time windows of seismic noise that contribute constructively to the physically interpretable interstation response.

We demonstrate the method using DAS data acquired along 30 km of pre-existing telecommunication fiber deployed by the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) in a major alpine valley floor, recorded with a Sintela interrogator at 3 m channel spacing with 6 m gauge length. Our objective is to recover stable Rayleigh-wave dispersion curves and a shallow Vs structure in the upper 50 m. The fiber runs along the railway track in surface cable ducts, providing a realistic test bed with complex ambient noise, including car traffic, factories, quarry blasts, in addition to the train-generated signals. Subsampling strategies based on prior knowledge of the sources, such as train schedules or velocity-based filtering, can partly mitigate this problem. However, these strategies are tedious, strongly location-dependent along the fiber, and do not guarantee that the retained windows contribute coherently to the interstation response of the segment under investigation.

Here, we use a symmetric variational autoencoder (SymVAE) to perform coherent source subsampling. Trained on virtual shot gathers from multiple time windows, the SymVAE groups windows according to the similarity of their correlation wavefields and enables the selection of those windows that consistently exhibit symmetric surface-wave contributions on both the causal and acausal sides. Averaging only these subsampled windows yields interstation responses that are substantially denoised and symmetric. We interpret these cleaner and symmetric cross-correlations as being associated with the stationary-phase contributions for the fiber segment under investigation. The same framework also identifies fiber segments that lack coherent, dispersive Rayleigh waves, indicating where robust subsurface imaging is not feasible.

Applying CSS to the SBB DAS data produces stable Rayleigh-wave dispersion curves along the cable, which we invert for two-dimensional Vs profiles. Although demonstrated here on railway-generated noise, the proposed CSS framework can be extended to any uncontrolled settings, such as road-traffic-dominated areas, where source variability and non-uniformity may be even more severe.

  • 1Centre for Earth Sciences, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India
  • 2Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
  • 3 SBB CFF FFS

 

How to cite: Bajad, S., Bowden, D., Bharadwaj, P., Fern, E. J., Fichtner, A., and Edme, P.: Coherent Source Subsampling of Seismic Noise for Distributed Acoustic Sensing in the Swiss Alps, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4413, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4413, 2026.

EGU26-4603 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

What Controls Variability in DAS Earthquake Observations? Implications for Ground-Motion Models 

Chen-Ray Lin, Sebastian von Specht, and Fabrice Cotton

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) provides dense, meter-scale ground-motion measurements along fiber-optic cables. However, developing ground-motion models (GMMs) from DAS data is challenging because observations are controlled by DAS-specific factors such as cable coupling, orientation, and channel correlation. In this study, we present the first regional, partially non-ergodic DAS-based GMM that explicitly identifies and quantifies cable-related contributions to ground-motion variability. We analyze strain-rate data from a 400-channel DAS array at the Milun campus in Hualien City, Taiwan, compiling peak strain rates and Fourier amplitudes (0.1–10 Hz) from 77 regional earthquakes (3<M<7, 45<R<170 km). Building on classical seismometer-based GMMs, we extend the variability framework to account for (1) cable coupling influenced by installation and environment types, (2) cable orientation, and (3) channel correlation inherent to DAS measurement principles and array geometry. Channel correlation is modeled using Matérn kernels parameterized by along-fiber and spatial proximity distances. The resulting DAS-based GMM shows magnitude-distance scaling comparable to classical models, while decomposing variability into physically interpretable components. Cable coupling emerges as a dominant broadband source of within-event variability, whereas orientation effects capture repeatable, frequency-dependent earthquake source radiation patterns. Modeling channel correlation significantly reduces channel-related standard deviations, demonstrating that treating DAS channels as independent observations biases uncertainty estimates. Overall, our results show that DAS-derived ground motions require a fundamentally different variability framework than that of classical GMMs, highlighting the importance of deployment metadata and correlation modeling. This approach provides a statistical and physical foundation for next-generation seismic hazard assessments using dense fiber-optic sensing.

How to cite: Lin, C.-R., von Specht, S., and Cotton, F.: What Controls Variability in DAS Earthquake Observations? Implications for Ground-Motion Models, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4603, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4603, 2026.

Monitoring fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus) vocalizations is of significant scientific importance and practical value for marine ecology, hydroacoustics, and geophysics. Conventional monitoring approaches, such as hydrophone arrays, ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS), and satellite tagging, are limited by sparse spatial coverage, potential biological disturbance, and high costs. Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) is an emerging technology that utilizes submarine optical cables as dense acoustic arrays, providing opportunities for large-scale, high-resolution monitoring of whale vocalizations. Here, we reveal the wavefield features of fin whale vocalizations by integrating DAS observational data combined with numerical simulations. Three distinct features—Insensitive response segment (IRS), high-frequency component loss, and acoustic notch—were identified in the observed wavefield. DAS response analysis via ray-acoustic modeling indicates that the length of the IRS is positively correlated with the vertical source-to-cable distance, while the gauge length is responsible for the high-frequency loss in Type-B calls. Furthermore, wavefield simulations using the spectral-element method (SEM) demonstrate that the acoustic notches represent transitions between transmission zones of waterborne multipath waves entering the seafloor, exhibiting high sensitivity to the seafloor P-wave velocity, water depth, and topography. These findings not only enhance our understanding of the DAS-observed wavefields, but also highlight the potential of utilizing DAS and acoustic notches for ocean environmental parameter estimation.

How to cite: Wang, Q.: Revealing the Wavefield Features of Fin Whale Vocalizations Observed by Distributed Acoustic Sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4625, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4625, 2026.

This study aims to develop a system for the identification of vessels, seismic events, and volcanic activity through analysis of the spatiotemporal characteristics of wavefields recorded by distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) using a submarine fiber-optic cable. DAS provides unprecedented spatial coverage and resolution, making it highly suitable for monitoring dense wavefield variations and anthropogenic activities, whereas traditional seismometers remain indispensable for quantitative seismic analysis and low-frequency observations. In this study, continuous DAS records acquired from a submarine fiber-optic cable located in the northeastern offshore region of Taiwan near Guishan Island, an active volcano. This region experiences frequent seismic activity due to the northwestward subduction of the Philippine Sea Plate beneath the Eurasian Plate. In addition, the passage of the Kuroshio Current, a warm ocean current, brings abundant fish resources, resulting in frequent activities of fishing vessels and whale-watching boats. Event detection is first carried out using the recursive short-time-average/long-time-average (STA/LTA) method which uses two time windows with different durations and computes the average signal amplitude within each window. When a signal arrives, the average amplitude within a short time window changes rapidly, thereby increasing the ratio of the short-time average to the long-time average. An event is detected when this ratio exceeds a predefined threshold and manual secondary inspected. However, low signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) can significantly reduce the sensitivity of STA/LTA-based detection, leading to missed events. To overcome this problem, signal processing adjustments were applied to enhance detection performance. To validate the detection performance, the detected ship-related events were compared with records from the Automatic Identification System (AIS), while earthquake events identified from the DAS data were compared with the earthquake catalog of Taiwan Seismological and Geophysical Data Management System (GDMS). Subsequently, a regression analysis of catalog magnitudes against hypocentral distance and maximum DAS-recorded amplitude was applied to determine the minimum detectable earthquake magnitude. The proposed framework demonstrates the potential of DAS as a complementary tool for offshore geophysical and maritime monitoring, providing a basis for future studies on vessel tracking, seafloor topography, and earthquake monitoring.

How to cite: Wei, Y. J. and Chan, C. H.: Application of Distributed Acoustic Sensing to Detect and Identify of Vessels and Natural Events in the Northeastern Offshore Region of Taiwan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4712, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4712, 2026.

EGU26-5156 * | Orals | SM3.4 | Highlight

Englacial ice quake cascades in the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream - Observations and implications of ice stream dynamics 

Andreas Fichtner, Coen Hofstede, Brian Kennett, Anders Svensson, Julien Westhoff, Fabian Walter, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Eliza Cook, Dimitri Zigone, Daniela Jansen, and Olaf Eisen

Ice streams are major contributors to ice sheet mass loss and critical regulators of sea level change. Despite their important, standard viscous flow simulations of ice stream deformation and evolution have limited predictive power, mostly because our understanding of the involved processes is limited. This leads, for instance, to widely varying predictions of sea level rise during the next decades.

 

Here we report on a Distributed Acoustic Sensing experiment conducted in the borehole of the East Greenland Ice Core Project (EastGRIP) on the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream. For the first time, our observations reveal a brittle deformation mode that is incompatible with viscous flow over length scales similar to the resolution of modern ice sheet models: englacial ice quake cascades that are not being recorded at the surface. A comparison with ice core analyses shows that ice quakes preferentially nucleate near volcanism-related impurities, such as thin layers of tephra or sulfate anomalies. These are likely to promote grain boundary cracking, and appear as a macroscopic form of crystal-scale wild plasticity. A conservative estimate indicates that seismic cascades are likely to produce strain rates that are comparable in amplitude to those measured geodetically, thereby bridging the well-documented gap between current ice sheet models and observations.

How to cite: Fichtner, A., Hofstede, C., Kennett, B., Svensson, A., Westhoff, J., Walter, F., Ampuero, J.-P., Cook, E., Zigone, D., Jansen, D., and Eisen, O.: Englacial ice quake cascades in the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream - Observations and implications of ice stream dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5156, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5156, 2026.

We present a back-projection based earthquake location method tailored to Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) arrays, using short overlapping fiber segments and a combined P–S framework to reliably locate local earthquakes. A 66km quasi-linear telecommunication fiber in Israel was repurposed as a DAS array. We analyzed several local earthquakes with varying source–array geometries. We divided the fiber into overlapping 5.4 km segments and back-projected P- and S-wave strain-rate recordings using a local 1D velocity model over a regional grid of potential earthquake locations. Each grid point is assigned with P- and S-phase semblance, and the corresponding phase-specific origin times, associated with the timing of maximum semblance. Segment-specific P- and S-phase semblance maps and the difference between P and S origin times were combined through a weighting scheme that favors segments with spatially compact high-semblance regions. The objective is maximizing both P- and S-wave semblance and minimizing P- and S-wave origin time discrepancies. Results for the analyzed earthquakes reveal robust constraints on both azimuth and epicentral distance from the fiber, and demonstrate the ability to mitigate DAS-related artifacts associated with broadside sensitivity and reduced coherency. We demonstrated the potential of the approach for real-time earthquake location and showed its performance when only P-wave recordings are available, underscoring the method’s potential for future DAS-based earthquake early warning implementation.

How to cite: Noy, G., Ben Zeev, S., and Lior, I.: Earthquake Location using Back Projection with Distributed Acoustic Sensing with Implications for Earthquake Early Warning, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5259, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5259, 2026.

EGU26-5274 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Spectral analysis of background and transient signals at Mount Etna using rectilinear fibre-optic segments 

Hugo Latorre, Sergio Diaz-Meza, Philippe Jousset, Sergi Ventosa, Arantza Ugalde, Gilda Currenti, and Rafael Bartolomé

Etna is the largest, most active and closely monitored volcano in Europe,
making it a crucial study region for volcanology and geohazard assessment. In early
July 2019, a 1.5 km fibre-optic cable was deployed near the summit of Mount Etna
and interrogated for two months. The cable was divided into four main segments, two
of which point towards different active crater areas. Temporary seismic broadband
stations and infrasound sensors were also deployed along the cable. During the
experiment, three distinct eruptive events were recorded. The first two events are
characterised by a large number of explosions in the active crater area, together with
an increase in background tremor activity. The third event is characterised by a larger
increase in background tremor, but almost no explosions.

The continuous recordings are analysed in the frequency-wavenumber domain,
which reveals the features of the background tremor activity and the stacked transient
signals, such as explosions. During the first two eruptive events, the stack of
explosive sources is characterised by a non-dispersive arrival, travelling with
different apparent velocities along each segment, and a non-linear ground response up
to 25 Hz. These segments can be used as an antenna to estimate an average back-
azimuth for the explosions, which come from the same crater area during both
eruptive events.

Outside of the three eruptive events, the background tremor features two slow
dispersion modes, both well resolved on the raw recordings. The slowest mode is
affected by gauge-length attenuation at higher frequencies, due to its short
wavelength, but remains detectable up to 27 Hz, with group velocities as low as 170
m/s. These observations showcase the utility of simple, rectilinear geometries in
deployments despite their known shortcomings, such as in location procedures. For
known source regions, such as volcanoes, a well-oriented segment can leverage
continuous activity to record the incoming wavefield and extract dipersion curves
without the need to perform cross-correlations, simplifying the workflow.

How to cite: Latorre, H., Diaz-Meza, S., Jousset, P., Ventosa, S., Ugalde, A., Currenti, G., and Bartolomé, R.: Spectral analysis of background and transient signals at Mount Etna using rectilinear fibre-optic segments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5274, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5274, 2026.

EGU26-5880 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Enhancing High-frequency Ambient Noise for shallow subsurface imaging using urban ambient noise DAS recordings 

Leila Ehsaninezhad, Christopher Wollin, Verónica Rodríguez Tribaldos, and Charlotte Krawczyk

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) enables unused fiber optic cables in existing telecommunication networks, known as dark fibers, to function as dense arrays of virtual seismic receivers. Seismic waves generated by human activities and recorded by dense sensor networks provide an abundant, high-frequency energy source for high-resolution, non-invasive imaging of the urban subsurface. This approach enables detailed characterization of near-surface soils, sediments, and shallow geological structures with minimal surface impact, supporting applications such as groundwater management, site response and seismic amplification analysis, seismic hazard assessment, geothermal development, and urban planning. However, extracting coherent seismic signals from complex urban noise is challenging due to uneven source distribution, uncertain fiber deployment conditions, and variable coupling between the fiber and the ground. In particular, high-frequency range signals (e.g., above 4 Hz), needed to resolve shallow subsurface structures, are particularly difficult to recover. Two strategies can be used to address some of these challenges, by discarding poor quality seismic noise segments or by focusing on particularly favorable noise sources. In this study, we adopt the second approach and use vibrations generated by passing vehicles, particularly trains which are energetic sources that contain valuable high frequency information . Capturing and exploiting the seismic waves generated by these vehicles offers unique opportunities for efficient and high resolution urban seismic imaging.

We present an enhanced ambient noise interferometry workflow designed to exploit noise sources that are particularly favorable to the fiber geometry, i.e. transient and strong sources occurring at the edge of the fiber segment to be analyzed. The workflow is applied to traffic-dominated seismic noise recorded on a dark fiber deployed along a major urban road in Berlin, Germany. First, we select short seismic noise segments that contain signals from passing trains and then apply a frequency–wavenumber filter to isolate the targeted train-generated surface waves while suppressing other wavefield contributions. The filtered data is then processed using a standard interferometric approach based on cross-correlations to retrieve coherent seismic phases from ambient noise, producing virtual shot gathers. Finally, Multichannel Analysis of Surface Waves is applied to derive one dimensional velocity models. This workflow targeted on specific transient sources reduces computational cost while enhancing dispersion measurements particularly at higher frequencies. By stacking the responses from tens of tracked vehicles, enhanced virtual shot gathers can be obtained and inverted to improve shallow subsurface models. This can be achieved with only a few hours of seismic noise recording, which is challenging using conventional ambient noise interferometry workflows.

How to cite: Ehsaninezhad, L., Wollin, C., Rodríguez Tribaldos, V., and Krawczyk, C.: Enhancing High-frequency Ambient Noise for shallow subsurface imaging using urban ambient noise DAS recordings, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5880, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5880, 2026.

EGU26-6600 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Multi-fiber Distributed Acoustic Sensing for Urban Seismology in Athens, Greece 

Mohammed Almarzoug, Daniel Bowden, Nikolaos Melis, Pascal Edme, Adonis Bogris, Krystyna Smolinski, Angela Rigaux, Isha Lohan, Christos Simos, Iraklis Simos, Stavros Deligiannidis, and Andreas Fichtner

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) offers a promising approach for dense seismic recording in urban environments by repurposing existing telecommunication infrastructure. Athens presents an ideal setting for such an approach, as Greece is one of the most seismically active countries in Europe, and the Athens metropolitan area — home to nearly four million inhabitants — lies within a geologically complex basin whose vulnerability was demonstrated by the destructive 1999 Mw 5.9 Parnitha earthquake. Seismic hazard assessment requires accurate subsurface velocity models, but acquiring the data to build them in dense urban areas remains challenging.

We present results from a multi-fiber DAS experiment conducted in Athens, Greece, from 16 May to 30 June 2025, using four telecommunication fibers provided by the Hellenic Telecommunications Organisation (OTE). Two Sintela ONYX interrogators simultaneously interrogated the four fibers, which fan out from an OTE building with lengths of approximately 24, 38, 42, and 48 km, providing extensive azimuthal coverage of Athens. This makes the study one of the largest urban DAS campaigns ever performed.

Data were acquired in two configurations, a lower spatial resolution mode optimised for earthquake recording (~26 days) and a higher resolution mode for ambient noise interferometry (~19 days). To detect seismic events, we applied bandpass filtering followed by phase-weighted stacking across channels to enhance coherent arrivals. An STA/LTA (short-time average/long-time average) trigger was then used to identify candidate events. During the acquisition period, the National Observatory of Athens (NOA) recorded 2,645 events across the broader seismic network, of which 548 were detected on at least one fiber (368, 343, 328, and 322 on fibers 1–4, respectively). Detection capability depends on distance and magnitude — we achieve near-complete detection within ~20 km, while many events of ML ≥ 2 were recorded at distances exceeding 200 km. The array also captured small local events absent from the NOA catalogue, likely corresponding to local seismicity below the detection threshold of the sparser regional network. Characterising this unobserved local seismicity is one of the objectives of ongoing work.

For events within 50 km of the interrogator site, we pick P- and S-wave arrivals to constrain body-wave travel times. These picks are used to locate events in the NOA catalogue, which enables us to compare with network-derived hypocentres and allows us to assess potential improvement from the dense DAS coverage, before applying the approach to smaller events detected only by DAS. The travel-time data will also serve as input for 3D eikonal traveltime tomography to image subsurface velocity structure beneath metropolitan Athens.

How to cite: Almarzoug, M., Bowden, D., Melis, N., Edme, P., Bogris, A., Smolinski, K., Rigaux, A., Lohan, I., Simos, C., Simos, I., Deligiannidis, S., and Fichtner, A.: Multi-fiber Distributed Acoustic Sensing for Urban Seismology in Athens, Greece, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6600, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6600, 2026.

EGU26-6949 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

SAFE - Tsunami early warning system using available seafloor fiber cables with Chirped-pulse DAS 

Javier Preciado-Garbayo, Jaime A. Ramirez, Alejandro Godino-Moya, Jorge Canudo, Diego Gella, Jose Maria Garcia, Yuqing Xie, Jean Paul Ampuero, and Miguel Gonzalez-Herraez

Traditional tsunami early warning systems (TEWS) are typically expensive, have limited real-time availability, require continuous maintenance, and involve long deployment times. The SAFE project aims to overcome these limitations by developing a new tsunami warning technology based on Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS), leveraging existing seafloor fiber optic cables. This approach offers continuous 24/7 monitoring, near-zero maintenance, faster response times, and ease of installation. The project includes contributions ranging from the development of a novel Chirped-pulse DAS interrogator (HDAS) with improved low-frequency performance to a novel post-processing software to obtain tide height from the measured seafloor strain and automatic detection and confirmation of a tsunami wave. All this has been implemented in a friendly user interface and is undergoing final evaluation by the tsunami warning authority in the NE Atlantic (the Instituto Português do Mar e da Atmosfera, IPMA).  

The validation is currently ongoing using the ALME subsea cable, which connects Almería and Melilla across the Alboran Sea. The interrogator has demonstrated the ability to detect swell waves with a maximum error of 20 cm in the deep sea and a post-processing response time of less than 90 seconds. It is expected that slower tsunami waves will yield more precise estimations of wave height.

Importantly, the technology could also successfully detect the 5.3 Mw earthquake near Cabo de Gata, Spain, on July 14, 2025, at a distance of only 40 km from the epicenter without major saturation. The extremely large dynamic range of the interrogator (approximately 10 times larger than a usual phase system) enables the system to monitor large-magnitude earthquakes without signal clipping. The SAFE system is capable of delivering critical seismic and hydrodynamic data within 5 minutes of an event, supporting early tsunami detection and rapid response.

How to cite: Preciado-Garbayo, J., A. Ramirez, J., Godino-Moya, A., Canudo, J., Gella, D., Garcia, J. M., Xie, Y., Ampuero, J. P., and Gonzalez-Herraez, M.: SAFE - Tsunami early warning system using available seafloor fiber cables with Chirped-pulse DAS, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6949, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6949, 2026.

EGU26-7247 * | ECS | Orals | SM3.4 | Highlight

Submarine Cable Optical Response to Seismic Waves: Insights from Controlled-Environment Tests 

Max Tamussino, David M. Fairweather, Ali Masoudi, Zitong Feng, Richard Barham, Neil Parkin, David Cornelius, Gilberto Brambilla, Andrew Curtis, and Giuseppe Marra

Fibre-optic sensing technology is transforming seafloor monitoring by enabling dense, continuous measurements across vast distances using existing telecommunication infrastructure. Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) and optical interferometry [1] have demonstrated remarkable potential for earthquake detection, ocean dynamics monitoring, and hazard early warning. However, for these technologies to be used for these applications, the transfer function between environmental perturbations and measured optical signal changes in submarine cables needs to be known.

We present the, to the best of our knowledge, first controlled-environment characterisation of submarine cable responses to active seismic and acoustic sources, comparing DAS and optical interferometry measurements with ground-truth data from 58 geophones, 20 three-component seismometers, and microphones [2]. Our results reveal three key findings:

  • In contrast with proposed theoretical models [3], our interferometric measurements show first-order sensitivity to broadside seismic sources, enabling localisation of arrivals along straight fibre links.
  • We identify a previously unreported fast-wave phenomenon, attributed to seismic energy coupling into the cable's metal armour and propagating at velocities exceeding 3.5 km/s, significantly altering recorded waveforms.
  • We compared measurements between adjacent fibres within the same cable. Results show significant discrepancies between the measured waveforms, which should be considered in applications operating in a similar frequency range as our tests.

These findings show the complexity of submarine cable mechanics and their impact on optical sensing performance. Understanding these processes is critical for calibrating transfer functions and improving the reliability of fibre-based geophysical observations.  In addition to these findings, we also discuss the limitations of our methodology, which primarily arise from the limited range of seismic source frequencies available. Our work presents a first step towards understanding the complex transfer function of environmental perturbations to optical signals in subsea cables, advancing the vision of large-scale, cost-effective Earth observation systems.

[1] Marra, G. et al. Optical interferometry–based array of seafloor environmental sensors using a transoceanic submarine cable. Science 376 (6595), 874–879 (2022)

[2] Fairweather, D.M., Tamussino, M., Masoudi, A. et al. Characterisation of the optical response to seismic waves of submarine telecommunications cables with distributed and integrated fibre-optic sensing. Sci Rep 14, 31843 (2024)

[3] Fichtner, A., Bogris, A., Nikas, T. et al. Theory of phase transmission fibre-optic deformation sensing. Geophysical Journal International, 231(2), 1031–1039, (2022)

 

How to cite: Tamussino, M., Fairweather, D. M., Masoudi, A., Feng, Z., Barham, R., Parkin, N., Cornelius, D., Brambilla, G., Curtis, A., and Marra, G.: Submarine Cable Optical Response to Seismic Waves: Insights from Controlled-Environment Tests, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7247, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7247, 2026.

EGU26-7298 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Coastal Ambient Noise and Microseismic Monitoring with Distributed Acoustic Sensing: a Case Study from Norfolk, UK 

Harry Whitelam, Lidong Bie, Jessica Johnson, Andres Payo Garcia, and Jonathan Chambers

Seismic ambient noise is a ubiquitous and constant resource, ideal for non-invasive investigations of the solid earth. Coastlines around the world are handling an increase in coastal erosion due to sea level rise and more energetic storms. Monitoring this is becoming an increasingly necessary task to protect coastal settlements. Using Distributed Acoustic Sensing in seismic monitoring has already shown incredible potential and offers the advantage of dense measurements. Our project seeks to identify the efficacy of Distributed Acoustic Sensing for monitoring subsurface changes which precede cliff failure. We present early findings from the first long-term deployment of a fibre optic cable along the coastline - North Sea, Norfolk, UK. We investigate differences in signal characteristics between conventional seismometers and Distributed Acoustic Sensing in this setting, and interpret the seismic signatures of key sources in the area. This deployment was recording for 22 months, allowing us to monitor both short-term and seasonal changes. We identify the frequency ranges excited by storm events (0.2 - 1 Hz), the dominance of short-period secondary microseismic activity, and the importance of local sea state and weather on influencing higher frequency signals. We also discuss limitations of Distributed Acoustic Sensing and the sources it can not reliably capture when compared to broadband seismometers and nodal geophones. We conclude by discussing how this noise analysis affects the use of ambient noise tomography for seismic velocity monitoring. Future research will test the efficacy of such applications, with the hope of providing better estimates of coastal recession and identifying hazardous areas on a metre-scale.

How to cite: Whitelam, H., Bie, L., Johnson, J., Payo Garcia, A., and Chambers, J.: Coastal Ambient Noise and Microseismic Monitoring with Distributed Acoustic Sensing: a Case Study from Norfolk, UK, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7298, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7298, 2026.

EGU26-7427 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Strain and Temperature Monitoring in an Underground Mine to Enable Digital Twin Integration 

Michael Dieter Martin, Nils Nöther, Erik Farys, Massimo Facchini, and Jens-André Paffenholz

The aim of this study is to assess the potential of distributed fiber-optic sensors for measuring strain and temperature in order to monitor the structural integrity of underground mining drifts and chambers. The work is conducted within the framework of the project “Model coupling in the context of a virtual underground laboratory and its development process” (MOVIE). The overall MOVIE project aim is intended to support the creation of a digital twin, thereby improving safety and operational efficiency through enhanced digital planning across various mining environments. Time-dependent, spatially distributed temperature and rock deformation data will be recorded along fiber-optic sensing cables. These measurements will serve as boundary conditions for integrated geometrical and geomechanical models of the drift and chambers. In the initial phase, a 60-meter-long drift is instrumented using fiber-optic Brillouin-based Distributed Temperature and Strain Sensing (DTSS). Based on laboratory tests and considering the specific environmental conditions of the subsurface mine, i.e., ambient temperature variations, surface roughness, dust, and humidity, the optimal adhesive bonding materials and technique for direct cable installation on gneiss host rock was identified and successfully implemented. Following the initial monitoring setup, further experimental investigations are planned, including the monitoring of induced deformations in yielding arch support, rock bolts and the rock in contact with a hydraulic prop. The drift geometry and the spatial location of the fiber-optic cables within the drift are given by a 3D point cloud. Therefore, a 3D point cloud was captured after the fiber-optic cable installation using a high-end mobile mapping SLAM platform geo-referenced in a project-based coordinate frame. The locations of the geo-referenced fiber-optic cables will be correlated with the acquired DTSS measurements along the fiber-optic sensing cables. Ultimately, the meshed 3D point cloud will serve as foundational input for the combined geometrical and geomechanical model, forming the basis for a virtual reality-compatible digital twin enriched with real-time sensor data.

How to cite: Martin, M. D., Nöther, N., Farys, E., Facchini, M., and Paffenholz, J.-A.: Distributed Fiber-Optic Sensing for Strain and Temperature Monitoring in an Underground Mine to Enable Digital Twin Integration, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7427, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7427, 2026.

EGU26-7462 | Orals | SM3.4

Marine Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) for Detection of Submarine CO₂ Bubble Emissions: Insights from a Shallow-Water Volcanic Setting at Panarea (Italy) 

Cinzia Bellezza, Fabio Meneghini, Andrea Travan, Luca Baradello, Michele Deponte, and Andrea Schleifer

Fibre-optic sensing technologies are rapidly transforming geophysical monitoring by enabling spatially dense, temporally continuous observations of seismic and acoustic wavefields in environments that are difficult to instrument with conventional sensors. In marine settings, Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) applied to seabed fibre-optic cables offers new opportunities for low-impact monitoring of fluid and gas migration processes, which are fundamental both to volcanic–hydrothermal systems and to emerging offshore carbon capture and storage (CCS) applications.

In this study, we investigate the feasibility of marine DAS for detecting natural and artificial CO₂ bubble emissions in a shallow-water volcanic environment offshore Panarea (Aeolian Islands, Italy). Panarea hosts the OGS NatLab Italy, part of ECCSEL-ERIC, thanks to its active submarine degassing associated with a hydrothermal system and therefore represents a natural laboratory and an analogue site for potential subseabed CO₂ leakage scenarios. A 1.1-km-long armored fibre-optic cable was deployed on the seabed and interrogated using two different DAS systems, providing continuous passive acoustic and seismic recordings. To support signal identification and interpretation, the DAS data were complemented by controlled gas releases from scuba tanks, by a High Resolution Seismic (boomer) survey and side-scan sonar imaging, to characterize seabed morphology and shallow subsurface structures along the cable route.

The DAS recordings revealed acoustic signatures associated with both natural CO₂ bubble emissions and controlled artificial releases. Bubble-related signals were detected as localized, temporally variable acoustic responses along the fibre, demonstrating the sensitivity of DAS to gas-driven processes at the seabed. The integration of passive DAS monitoring with active seismic imaging techniques enabled a more robust interpretation of observed signals and seabed processes.

From an Earth sciences perspective, these results demonstrate that marine DAS can serve as a low-impact, spatially continuous monitoring tool for submarine volcanic and hydrothermal systems, complementing traditional geochemical sampling and visual observations and offering new insights into the temporal variability of degassing activity. Beyond natural systems, the demonstrated capability of DAS to detect bubble-related acoustic signals has direct implications for offshore CCS, where early detection of CO₂ leakage is critical for storage integrity and environmental safety.

Overall, this field-scale experiment highlights the potential of fibre-optic sensing to address key challenges in marine monitoring, and underscores the value of integrated approaches for studying fluid and gas migration processes.

Acknowledgements:

  • ECCSELLENT project (“Development of ECCSEL - R.I. ItaLian facilities: usEr access, services and loNg-Term sustainability”)
  • ITINERIS - Italian Integrated Environmental Research Infrastructures System - Next Generation EU Mission 4, Component 2 - CUP B53C22002150006 - Project IR0000032
  • Panarea NatLab Italy: https://eccsel.eu/catalogue/facility/?id=124
  • ECCSEL: https://eccsel.eu/

 

References:

  • Detection of CO2 emissions from Panarea seabed with Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS): a preliminary investigation. Meneghini et al. OGS report (2025).
  • Marine Fiber-Optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) for Monitoring Natural CO₂ Emissions: A Case Study from Panarea (Aeolian Islands, Italy). Bellezza et al. Upon submission to Applied Sciences (2026).

How to cite: Bellezza, C., Meneghini, F., Travan, A., Baradello, L., Deponte, M., and Schleifer, A.: Marine Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) for Detection of Submarine CO₂ Bubble Emissions: Insights from a Shallow-Water Volcanic Setting at Panarea (Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7462, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7462, 2026.

EGU26-7987 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Urban-Scale Seismic Imaging Using Ambient Noise and Dark Fiber Distributed Acoustic Sensing in Istanbul 

Laura Pinzon-Rincon, Verónica Rodríguez Tribaldos, Jordi Jordi Gómez Jodar, Patricia Martínez-Garzón, Laura Hillmann, Recai Feyiz Kartal, Tuğbay Kılıç, Marco Bohnhoff, and Charlotte Krawczyk

Urban areas are highly vulnerable to the impacts of geohazards due to their dense populations and complex infrastructure, with potentially severe consequences for human life and economic stability. Improving our knowledge of near-surface and shallow subsurface structures in urban environments is therefore essential for effective seismic hazard assessment and risk mitigation. However, conventional geophysical surveys in cities are often limited by logistical constraints, including strong anthropogenic activity, restricted access, legal limitations, and risks associated with instrument deployment. In this context, repurposing existing telecommunication optical fibers (so-called dark fibers) as dense seismic sensing arrays using Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) offers a powerful alternative for urban subsurface investigations. This approach enables continuous, high-resolution seismic monitoring without the need for extensive field instrumentation.

The megacity of Istanbul (Turkey) is located in one of the most tectonically active regions worldwide and is exposed to significant seismic hazard. Since May 2024, we have been continuously recording passive seismic data using Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) along an amphibious fiber-optic cable, is deployed in the urban district of Kartal (eastern region of Istanbul) and immediately offshore. In this study, we focus on the 3 km-long urban segments of the fiber. We analyze ambient seismic noise generated by various anthropogenic sources, such as train and vehicle traffic and other urban activities, and evaluate their suitability for high-frequency, DAS-based passive seismic interferometry in a complex and heterogeneous urban setting.

We develop and adapt processing strategies for ambient-noise interferometry that address the challenges of dense urban environments and DAS array geometries, including the identification of suitable fiber sections, channels, and source-receiver configurations, as well as preprocessing schemes designed for strongly anthropogenic noise.The objective is to retrieve high-resolution, urban-scale subsurface velocity models that improve our understanding of shallow structures and material properties relevant to seismic hazard. Ultimately, this work aims to establish efficient methodologies for imaging the urban subsurface using existing infrastructure, contributing to improved geohazard assessment and supporting sustainable urban development in seismically active regions.

How to cite: Pinzon-Rincon, L., Rodríguez Tribaldos, V., Jordi Gómez Jodar, J., Martínez-Garzón, P., Hillmann, L., Feyiz Kartal, R., Kılıç, T., Bohnhoff, M., and Krawczyk, C.: Urban-Scale Seismic Imaging Using Ambient Noise and Dark Fiber Distributed Acoustic Sensing in Istanbul, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7987, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7987, 2026.

Applied to existing but underutilized fiber-optic networks (dark fibers), Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) offers an attractive approach for large-scale seismic monitoring with minimal deployment effort. However, the approach introduces specific challenges, as existing infrastructures were not designed for this purpose, leading to constraints related to sensor coupling, heterogeneous installation conditions, and limited characterization of the measurement points. In the frame of the RUBADO project, we investigate the potential and limitations of DAS applied to dark fibers to provide seismic observations supporting both operational monitoring and characterization of deep geothermal reservoirs. The approach is implemented at multiple spatial scales within the Upper Rhine Graben, where several geothermal plants are currently operating, under development, or in the planning phase. In this context, research activities within the project specifically target key practical challenges related to the use of DAS on dark-fibers for the seismic monitoring of geothermal reservoirs.

Currently, data are recorded along a ~20 km fiber-optic line using the KIT infrastructure, which will support the monitoring of the drilling of a 1.4 km-deep geothermal well at KIT Campus North. We present early results from local and regional seismic monitoring and associated methodological approaches for signal enhancement and seismic event detection. We also introduce a framework for subsurface characterization that leverages the frequent vehicle-generated signals observed in the DAS recordings. We then outline planned measurements at the scale of the Upper Rhine Graben, where a key feature is the simultaneous use of multiple dark-fiber lines. Given the geometry of the planned dark-fiber network, DAS observations will enable the simultaneous monitoring of several geothermal sites with favorable spatial coverage.

How to cite: Azzola, J. and Gaucher, E.: Seismic monitoring of geothermal reservoirs using Distributed Acoustic Sensing on dark fibers: the RUBADO project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8212, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8212, 2026.

EGU26-8268 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Seismic monitoring of alpine lake ice with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) and nodal arrays 

Ariana David, Cédric Schmelzbach, Thomas Hudson, John Clinton, Elisabetta Nanni, Pascal Edme, and Frederik Massin

Lake ice stability is critical for safe operations on mid- to high-altitude Alpine lakes, such as touristic activities. Existing lake-ice monitoring approaches like ground-penetrating radar and drilling are limited in their ability to resolve spatial variability and to enable continuous monitoring and require direct access to the ice for in situ measurements. Seismological methods offer a complementary approach by recording the wave field generated by lake-ice flexure and fracturing. Here, we assess Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) as a long-term seismic monitoring tool for Alpine lakes.

During Winter 2025, we deployed two complementary seismic sensing systems on frozen Lake Sankt Moritz in the Swiss Alps: a fibre-optic network for DAS measurements and an array of over 40 three-component conventional autonomous seismic nodes to benchmark performance. We installed more than 2 km of fibre-optic cable and connected two interrogators that recorded, over a few weeks, strain and strain-rate data in two cores within the same cable.

To characterise ice properties and icequakes, we implemented workflows for automated icequake detection and location using the waveform-coherency based QuakeMigrate framework, which does not require phase picking, alongside an approach based on semi-automatic phase identification and picking. We successfully detected and located events with both types of instrument networks. Using a baseline catalogue from the three-component node data, we evaluated the DAS performance and achieved location agreement within a few metres between different sensing systems, demonstrating that DAS can robustly capture and localise icequake activity on lake ice and is a promising tool for continuous ice-stability monitoring.

How to cite: David, A., Schmelzbach, C., Hudson, T., Clinton, J., Nanni, E., Edme, P., and Massin, F.: Seismic monitoring of alpine lake ice with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) and nodal arrays, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8268, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8268, 2026.

EGU26-8383 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Distributed acoustic sensing of very long period strain signals from strombolian explosions 

Francesco Biagioli, Eléonore Stutzmann, Pascal Bernard, Jean-Philippe Métaxian, Valérie Cayol, Giorgio Lacanna, Dario Delle Donne, Yann Capdeville, and Maurizio Ripepe

Very long period (VLP; 0.01-0.2 Hz) seismicity is observed at many volcanoes worldwide, and provides key insights into magma and fluid dynamics within volcanic structures. VLPs are typically recorded by sparse networks of seismometers, which limits the ability to resolve the resulting displacement (or deformation) at fine spatial scales. Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) may help overcome this limitation by densely sampling the projection of the strain tensor along fibre-optic cables with high spatial and temporal resolution, enabling a more complete view of VLP-induced deformation. Here, we analyse VLP strain signals recorded by DAS at Stromboli volcano (Italy) in November 2022 along a 6-km dedicated fibre-optic cable. We designed the cable geometry to provide broad coverage of the craters and to sample the strain at multiple locations and along different directions. We focus on a dataset of approximately 200 VLP events recorded between November 13 and 14, 2022. The VLP strain signals correlate with explosive activity and show consistent features across multiple events, indicating a persistent, non-destructive source. Leveraging the distributed nature of DAS measurements, we recover the principal strain axes of VLPs and estimate both the location and the volumetric change of the source using a quasi-static deformation model. We retrieve the principal horizontal strains for each VLP by inverting strain amplitudes measured along three different fibre directions and at multiple locations along the cable, allowing us to resolve their spatial distribution. The resulting principal VLP strains exhibit radial and tangential orientations with respect to the craters, consistent with observed seismic particle motions and an axisymmetric source. We then model the VLP strain along the fibre using a point-like deformation source (Mogi). The optimal agreement between modeled and observed VLP strain averaged over the 200 events is for a point source located ~500 m beneath the active craters, with an estimated volumetric change of ~30 m³. Under the assumption of a spherical source with a radius of 87 m, the inferred volumetric change corresponds to a pressure change of ~19 kPa. These results are consistent with previous studies and highlight the capability of DAS to investigate volcano deformation at long periods.

How to cite: Biagioli, F., Stutzmann, E., Bernard, P., Métaxian, J.-P., Cayol, V., Lacanna, G., Delle Donne, D., Capdeville, Y., and Ripepe, M.: Distributed acoustic sensing of very long period strain signals from strombolian explosions, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8383, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8383, 2026.

EGU26-8769 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Analyzing volcanic-like earthquakes with distributed acoustic sensing using a short segment of the Tongan seafloor telecommunications cable 

Shunsuke Nakao, Mie Ichihara, Masaru Nakano, Taaniela Kula, Rennie Vaiomounga, and Masanao Shinohara

The January 2022 eruption of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha'apai (HTHH) volcano highlighted the critical challenges in monitoring remote submarine volcanic activity. Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) utilizing existing seafloor telecommunications cables offers a promising solution to bridge this observational gap. We analyzed a one-week DAS dataset recorded in February 2023, approximately one year after the eruption, using a segment of a domestic telecommunication cable in Tonga.

While a previous analysis of this dataset focused on relatively large events with clear phases, our objective was to comprehensively detect small and unclear seismic signals to evaluate the post-eruption activity. We developed a new "duration-based" detection method that identifies temporally sustained energy increases in the array's median power, effectively suppressing spatially incoherent noise. This method successfully detected 770 discrete events, revealing a stable seismicity rate of approximately 110 events per day, significantly more than those detected by conventional triggering algorithms.

To distinguish the origin of these events, we estimated the apparent slowness of the signals using a robust method combining 2D Normalized Cross-Correlation and linear fitting (RANSAC). The results showed that most events have positive apparent slowness values, corresponding to arrivals from the direction of the HTHH volcano, rather than the negative apparent slowness corresponding to tectonic earthquakes from the Tongan Trench. These findings indicate that the HTHH volcano or its surrounding magmatic system maintained a high level of seismic activity even one year after the large 2022 eruption. This study demonstrates the capability of DAS to monitor subtle volcanic seismicity in submarine environments where traditional sensors are absent.

How to cite: Nakao, S., Ichihara, M., Nakano, M., Kula, T., Vaiomounga, R., and Shinohara, M.: Analyzing volcanic-like earthquakes with distributed acoustic sensing using a short segment of the Tongan seafloor telecommunications cable, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8769, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8769, 2026.

EGU26-9174 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Clustering of Large Distributed Acoustic Sensing Datasets 

Oliver Bölt, Conny Hammer, and Céline Hadziioannou

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) turns optical fibers into high resolution strain sensors by monitoring the scattering of light within the fiber. With channel distances in the order of a few meters and a typical sampling frequency of 1 kHz, DAS is capable of recording a wide range of natural and anthropogenic seismic signals. Furthermore, the optical fibers used for DAS can be several kilometers long and are suitable for long-term measurements over weeks, months or years. The datasets obtained by DAS can therefore be very large, with up to several terabytes of data per day. Due to this large amount of data, it is challenging to get a good overview of the different types of seismic signals contained in the data, since a manual inspection can become immensely time-consuming.

In this study we aim to automatize this process by clustering the data to detect and classify different types of seismic signals.  A two-dimensional windowed Fourier transform is used to automatically extract features from the data. In contrast to many other approaches, this allows to not only use temporal information, but to also include the spatial dimension to further distinguish between different seismic sources and wave types.

The clustering is performed in two steps. First, a Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) is used to cluster the feature set. Then, the final clusters are obtained by merging similar components of the GMM.

A key advantage of this method is that each final cluster represents a specific frequency distribution and can therefore be turned into a filter. While many clustering approaches only assign a list of labels or cluster memberships to the data, our method provides the ability to directly extract the characteristic seismic signals for each cluster. This helps greatly with cluster interpretation and can also be useful for further applications like event detection or denoising.

The proposed procedure is applied to different large DAS datasets, yielding a variety of different clusters. By filtering the data for each cluster and interpreting the obtained waveforms, as well as the long-term spatiotemporal amplitude patterns, different sources like traffic or machinery can be identified.

How to cite: Bölt, O., Hammer, C., and Hadziioannou, C.: Clustering of Large Distributed Acoustic Sensing Datasets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9174, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9174, 2026.

EGU26-10581 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Urban Seismology of a Popular Road Race Using Distributed Acoustic Sensing 

Jorge Canudo, Diego Gella, Pascual Sevillano, and Javier Preciado-Garbayo

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) has emerged as a powerful tool for monitoring human-induced seismic signals in urban environments, enabling dense, meter-scale observations of dynamic sources. Building on previous studies demonstrating the capability of DAS to image large public events, such as parades and other mass-participation activities, we present a novel experiment in which two different DAS technologies (ΦOTDR and Chirped-Pulse ΦOTDR) were simultaneously deployed to record a popular pedestrian road race held in the surroundings of the University of Zaragoza (Spain).

The experiment took advantage of an already deployed optical-fiber installation with a total effective length of approximately 2 km. The fiber layout captured three distinct geometrical configurations with respect to the race course: (1) a straight section coincident with the runners’ trajectory over the last 300 m of the first kilometer (outbound leg), (2) the same straight section during the return at kilometer 4 (inbound leg), and (3) a perpendicular crossing of the fiber with the race course at the finish line. This geometry provides a unique opportunity to analyze runner-induced ground vibrations under varying crowd densities, running speeds, and fiber–source orientations.

Waterfall representations of the strain-rate data reveal clear, coherent signatures associated with individual runners and runner groups in both DAS systems. Along the straight section, the outbound leg exhibits a compact, high-amplitude wavefield characterized by closely spaced, overlapping runner traces, consistent with the tightly packed peloton early in the race. In contrast, the inbound leg shows a markedly more dispersed pattern, reflecting the progressive spreading of participants according to performance and fatigue. These differences are consistently observed in both phase-based and chirped-pulse DAS data, although with distinct signal-to-noise characteristics across different frequency bands.

At the finish line, where the fiber crosses the race course perpendicularly, the DAS records provide exceptional temporal resolution of runner arrivals. The first five finishers are individually and unambiguously identified, with isolated signatures that can be robustly matched to official arrival times. This demonstrates the potential of DAS not only for bulk crowd characterization but also for resolving individual human-induced seismic sources in real-world conditions.

Our results highlight the complementarity of DAS technologies for urban seismology applications. The experiment underscores the sensitivity of DAS to subtle variations in crowd dynamics and source geometry and illustrates its potential for non-intrusive monitoring of mass-participation events, pedestrian flows, and urban activity. These observations contribute to the growing field of anthropogenic seismology and reinforce the role of optical fiber sensing as a scalable tool for high-resolution monitoring of human activity in cities.

How to cite: Canudo, J., Gella, D., Sevillano, P., and Preciado-Garbayo, J.: Urban Seismology of a Popular Road Race Using Distributed Acoustic Sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10581, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10581, 2026.

EGU26-10676 | Orals | SM3.4

Storm Amy observations with fibre-optic DAS data at the Svelvik CO₂ Field Lab, Norway: Implications for Monitoring and Networks  

Claudia Pavez Orrego, Marcin Duda, Dias Urozayev, Bastien Dupuy, and Nicolas Barbosa

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) has become a powerful technique for high-resolution, continuous monitoring of near- and subsurface earth phenomena, with increasing applications in geohazards, seismology, and industry applications such as CO₂ storage monitoring. However, the sensitivity of DAS measurements to atmospheric forcing, particularly during extreme weather events, remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigate the response of a permanent, 1.2 km long straight fibre-optic array installed at the Svelvik CO₂ Field Laboratory (Norway), to intense wind conditions associated with the Amy Storm, which hit Norway from October 3-6, 2025. 

 

As part of efforts to understand passive methods to monitor CO2 migration in the subsurface, an Alcatel Submarine Networks (ASN) DAS system continuously recorded strain-rate data along a buried fibre that includes both near surface-installed sections and borehole down- and up-going segments reaching depths of approximately 100 m. The near-surface sections were installed inside protective pipes and were therefore not directly coupled to the surrounding ground. To characterise wind-induced seismic signatures, we analyse downsampled recordings using band-limited root-mean-square (RMS) amplitudes and spectral methods across three frequency ranges (0.1–1 Hz, 1–3 Hz, and 3–10 Hz) and time averages over 1 hr intervals. Time–frequency characteristics are examined using group-averaged spectrograms, and a Spectral Energy Index (SEI) is derived by integrating power spectral density within each frequency band. These seismic metrics are compared with near located meteorological observations, including mean wind speed, maximum mean wind speed, and maximum wind gusts. 

 

The results reveal a pronounced increase in DAS energy coincident with the maximum speed gusts of storm Amy, with the strongest responses observed at frequencies below 3 Hz. Correlation and lag analyses show that seismic energy variations are closely associated with periods of enhanced wind activity, particularly wind gusts, indicating a strong coupling between transient atmospheric forcing and ground vibrations. Importantly, the response differs significantly between surface and depth segments of the fibre. Surface-installed channels exhibit broadband amplitude increases correlated with direct wind–ground interaction, while depth channels display coherent low-frequency spectral patterns, suggesting excitation by wind-generated surface waves or distant secondary sources (e.g., waves from neighbouring fjord) rather than direct aerodynamic loading. 

 

These findings demonstrate that DAS arrays deployed at wells (abandoned or active) are sensitive to extreme meteorological forcing, which can imprint distinct and depth-dependent seismic signatures. Quantifying and distinguishing wind-induced signals is therefore critical for the robust interpretation of DAS data in long-term passive monitoring applications, particularly when subtle subsurface signals related to CO₂ injection, migration, or leakage must be detected in the presence of strong environmental noise. At the same time, this sensitivity highlights an additional benefit of such fibre-optic installations: DAS infrastructure deployed in future abandoned wells in the context of  Oil & Gas industry and their reutilization for CO2 capture and storage, can also provide valuable information for national seismic and environmental monitoring networks, extending their utility beyond site-specific applications. 

How to cite: Pavez Orrego, C., Duda, M., Urozayev, D., Dupuy, B., and Barbosa, N.: Storm Amy observations with fibre-optic DAS data at the Svelvik CO₂ Field Lab, Norway: Implications for Monitoring and Networks , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10676, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10676, 2026.

EGU26-10839 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Fibre sensing at regional scales with telecom cables: the IMAGFib project 

Nicolas Luca Celli, Chris Bean, Adonis Bogris, Georgios Aias Karydis, Eoin Kenny, Rosa Vergara, Örn Jónsson, and Marco Ruffini

Fibre sensing technology can provide seismic data at a variety of scales, but, currently, the difficulty in accessing long telecom fibres, together with the novelty of the instruments, their range limitations and massive data output, mostly constrain its applications to fibre <100 km long.

In this study, we showcase the first results from the new project IMAGFib (multiscale seismic IMAGing with optical FlBre telecom cables), acquiring on-/offshore fibre sensing data on commercial telecom fibres in the North Atlantic Ocean, Irish Sea and across Ireland. This project combines utilising Distributed Strain Sensing (DSS, also known as DAS) on >400 km with 10 m spatial sampling with a new, distributed Microwave Frequency Fiber Interferometer (MFFI) capable sensing over 1700 km of submarine cables connecting Ireland to Iceland, albeit with a coarser 50-100 km spatial sampling. We use the acquired data to assess the performance of fibre sensing as a regional-to-continental scale seismic and ocean monitoring, and a future imaging tool, with a focus on low frequencies (<1 Hz).

By forging research collaborations with multiple telecom operators, we are able to perform DSS on multiple cable sections across the region, aiming to cover a continuous linear profile from Wales to the North Atlantic through different experiments (to be completed early 2026), part of which is performed on live, traffic-carrying telecom fibres. Our DSS results show that while having lower signal to noise ratios compared to nearby seismic stations, DSS on noisy telecom fibres can successfully record most Mw>6 teleseismic events worldwide, as well as microseisms originating in the North Atlantic and/or Irish Sea on all sections of the cable.

In order to extend fibre sensing far into the North Atlantic Ocean, we present the newly developed MFFI sensor, which uses optical interferometry in conjunction with high-loss loop backs at line amplifiers, turning each section of the cable between amplifiers (50-100 km) into independent strain sensors. For our experiment on the Ireland-Iceland cable, this yields 17 traces along the fibre. Ongoing recording in late 2025-early 2026 allows us to evaluate its capability to sense seismic signals, marine storms, currents and possibly ocean-bottom temperature variations across seasons.

With a strong focus on long-range and low-frequency sensing and integration with live telecom infrastructure, IMAGFib is centred on the establishment of fibre sensing as a global geo-sensing tool. Our successful results using DSS on live telecom fibres, and developing MFFI technology using affordable off-the-shelf components represent a key step in advancing the efforts to broaden trusted research utilising existing, commercial telecom cables.

How to cite: Celli, N. L., Bean, C., Bogris, A., Karydis, G. A., Kenny, E., Vergara, R., Jónsson, Ö., and Ruffini, M.: Fibre sensing at regional scales with telecom cables: the IMAGFib project, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10839, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10839, 2026.

EGU26-11265 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

SmartScape: Distributed Strain Sensing on Dublin City Telecom Fibre to Monitor Urban and Subsurface Dynamics for Smart City Applications 

Bruna Chagas de Melo, Christopher J. Bean, and Colm Browning

Rapid urban growth in Dublin is placing increasing pressure on transport systems, construction activity, and environmental management, creating a clear need for high-resolution observations of how the city operates at both surface and subsurface levels. This study presents the initial stage of a new project that explores the feasibility of using existing optical telecommunication infrastructure as a large-scale urban sensing platform through Distributed Strain Sensing (DSS). DSS converts optical fibres into dense seismic arrays by measuring strain-rate perturbations caused by ground vibrations, offering a cost-efficient approach to city-scale monitoring. This can have a potentially transformative impact on smart and sustainable city management, offering new data insights into urban dynamics while leveraging existing city-owned fibre infrastructure.

We report on a first pilot deployment on a dark ~80 km fibre ring crossing the city centre, residential neighbourhoods, surface tram lines, and an underground tunnel. A FEBUS-A1 interrogator was installed at a data centre in Dublin’s north side and operated for 23 days. Several acquisition configurations were tested, with the most stable setup recording ~60 km of fibre at 500 Hz sampling and 20 m gauge length for a continuous 10-day period. Remote access enabled iterative optimisation of acquisition parameters during the experiment.

The analysis presented here is preliminary and focuses on assessing data quality, signal content, and key technical limitations. Initial observations indicate that the DSS array captures clear signatures of moving vehicles with different velocities, rail-related activity, and teleseismic signals, including the October 10th M7.4 Mindanao, Philippines event. Signal quality progressively degrades beyond ~30 km from the interrogator, where noise becomes dominant, highlighting challenges associated with attenuation, coupling, and urban noise in long fibre links.

Ongoing work focuses on developing denoising and source-identification strategies, including cross-correlation approaches and unsupervised machine-learning, alongside accurate georeferencing of fibre channels onto detailed urban maps. These analyses will be integrated with independent datasets such as traffic records from Dublin City Council and existing environmental acoustic noise maps. Rather than delivering operational products, this study is intended to establish a robust baseline on data quality, signal content, and interpretability, defining what information can realistically be extracted from urban DSS deployments in Dublin at this early stage.

How to cite: Chagas de Melo, B., J. Bean, C., and Browning, C.: SmartScape: Distributed Strain Sensing on Dublin City Telecom Fibre to Monitor Urban and Subsurface Dynamics for Smart City Applications, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11265, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11265, 2026.

EGU26-11391 | Posters on site | SM3.4

Integrating Distributed Acoustic Sensing and borehole seismometer data for seismic velocity measurements and negative magnitude event location: a case study from the TABOO Near Fault Observatory (Northern Apennines, Italy) 

Nicola Piana Agostinetti, Federica Riva, Irene Molinari, Simone Salimbeni, Alberto Villa, Marta Arcangeli, Giulio Poggiali, Raffaello Pegna, Gilberto Saccorotti, Gaetano Festa, and Lauro Chiaraluce

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) technology makes use of fiber optic cables to sense vibrations, at the Earth’s surface, at unprecedented spatial resolution, less than one meter over distances of kilometres. DAS data have been used for monitoring both the Solid Earth (earthquakes, dyke intrusions and more) and the environment (landslides, snow avalanches, groundwater). Despite its wide application and the numerous, successful case-studies, DAS technology presents two significant limitations: the lower S/N ratio with respect to standard seismometers and the strong "directivity effect" (vibrations must propagate in the axial direction of the fiber optic cable). In this study, we illustrate how the integration of DAS and borehole seismometer data can be used to improve earthquake location and obtain novel information on seismic velocity of the buried rock mass. We analyse the DAS data recorded along a 1km fiber optic cable deployed in a full 3D geometry. The fiber optic cables have been installed in the framework of a surface and borehole very dense seismic array partaining to the Alto Tiberina Near Fault Observatory (TABOO-NFO). The cable geometry covers two horizontal planes, off-set one from the other and at different altitudes, and a vertical borehole  going to 130m depth. The infrastructure has been installed across (from the hangingwal to the footwall) the Gubbio fault, a secondary fault segment antithetic to the main Alto Tiberina master fault bounding at depth a normal fault system. in the Alto Tiberina fault system (Northern Apennines, Italy). The center of the cable array coincides with a shallow borehole (130m deep)  instrumented with two short period seismometers, one at the surface and one at the bottom. The integration of the data from the seismometes and those recorded along such 3D geometry allows for a better recognition and location of very small seismic events occurring on the fault, which are going largely undetected by the local (dense) seismic network. Moreover, data from small size events (Mag > 1) can be used to estimate the P- and S- wave seismic velocity of the geological formation traversed by the borehole (namely, Maiolica fm and Marne a Fucoidi fm), defining precise measurements of such velocities at larger scale-length (10s of meters) with respect to measurements obtained on the same rock in the laboratory.

How to cite: Piana Agostinetti, N., Riva, F., Molinari, I., Salimbeni, S., Villa, A., Arcangeli, M., Poggiali, G., Pegna, R., Saccorotti, G., Festa, G., and Chiaraluce, L.: Integrating Distributed Acoustic Sensing and borehole seismometer data for seismic velocity measurements and negative magnitude event location: a case study from the TABOO Near Fault Observatory (Northern Apennines, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11391, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11391, 2026.

EGU26-11798 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Distributed Acoustic Sensing of debris-flow activity in the Öschibach torrent (Swiss Alps) 

Juan Sebastian Osorno Bolivar, Malgorzata Chmiel, Fabian Walter, Felix Blumenschein, and Kevin Friedli

The slope instability of Spitze Stei supplies large sediment volumes that accumulate at the slope toe and are subsequently remobilized as debris flows and debris floods in the adjacent Öschibach torrent thus threatening the nearby village of Kandersteg, Switzerland. Since early 2020, continuous monitoring and preventive measures have been implemented in the area. While long-term monitoring has documented frequent torrential activity, the dynamic linkage between sediment supply from the rock slope and debris-flow activity in the torrent remains poorly constrained due to the spatial limitations of point sensors.

In summer 2025, we deployed a dense seismic array on the rock slope and interrogated an existing dark optical fiber running along the ~4 km-long Öschibach torrent using Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS). The DAS setup enabled spatially continuous strain-rate measurements at meter-scale resolution with a sampling frequency of ~600 Hz. For the three-month acquisition period, our aim is to detect and characterize debris-flow and debris-flood activity using DAS methods, supported by relative water-level time series and data from nearby seismic stations.

A catalog of possible debris flows and debris floods is generated leveraging an established pre-warning water-level increase threshold (set at 0.6 m), using moving average windowing and duration filtering. This discharge inventory was characterized using the DAS array, whose ~850 channels have been geolocalized with tap test, based on strain rate amplitudes visualized in logarithmic waterfall plots. Analysis of Power Spectral Density (PSD) for the corresponding DAS recordings reveals an increase in seismic energy at high frequencies (~20-40 Hz) concentrated on channels closest to the stream. Vertically offset waveform comparison plots demonstrate high coherence between DAS channels and wavefields recorded at the seismic stations, from which the apparent speed of seismic sources can be estimated. We also observe other coherent signals along the fiber, including mass movements from the Spitze Stei rock slope (e.g., rockfalls and granular flows), as well as local and tele-seismic earthquakes.

Our assessment of signal quality and coherence provides a basis for subsequent event detection, source location, and characterization using array-based methods, particularly during the event initiation phase. Our multisensor approach highlights the potential of DAS to provide spatially dense observations of torrential processes in steep Alpine catchments.

How to cite: Osorno Bolivar, J. S., Chmiel, M., Walter, F., Blumenschein, F., and Friedli, K.: Distributed Acoustic Sensing of debris-flow activity in the Öschibach torrent (Swiss Alps), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11798, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11798, 2026.

EGU26-12160 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Best Practices for Machine Learning based Icequake Picking with Distributed Acoustic Sensing 

Johanna Zitt, Marius Isken, Jannes Münchmeyer, Dominik Gräff, Andreas Fichtner, Fabian Walter, and Josefine Umlauft

Over the past years, a wide range of machine learning–based phase picking methods have been developed, primarily targeting three-component seismometer data from tectonic earthquakes. With the rapid growth of distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) applications, diversification of use cases, and availability of increasingly large DAS datasets, these methods are now being applied to single-component DAS recordings. However, their optimal use for DAS data and for alternative signal types such as cryoseismological events, remains rarely explored.
In this study, we present a systematic analysis of the performance of machine learning–based phase picking methods pretrained on tectonic earthquakes on one-component cryoseismological DAS data obtained on the Rhône Glacier in the Swiss Alps in July 2020. We evaluate multiple strategies for generating pseudo-three-component data from the intrinsically single-component DAS strain-rate data, including zero-padding of missing components, duplication of the single component, and the use of consecutive DAS channels as surrogate components. In addition, we assess the phase-picking performance across different preprocessing schemes, comparing conservatively band-pass filtered data with denoised data obtained using a J-invariant  autoencoder specifically trained on cryoseismological DAS data. Finally, we analyze the spatial and temporal distribution of located events over the full observation period and across the entire glacier. Event clusters are correlated with weather conditions, daily cycles, and the geometry of the glacier bed to explore potential patterns in cryoseismic activity.
Our results indicate that treating consecutive DAS channels as surrogate components yields the most reliable phase-picking performance, whereas extensive denoising can degrade picking accuracy. We further discuss spatial clusters of event locations and their correlations with glacier topography and meteorological conditions.

How to cite: Zitt, J., Isken, M., Münchmeyer, J., Gräff, D., Fichtner, A., Walter, F., and Umlauft, J.: Best Practices for Machine Learning based Icequake Picking with Distributed Acoustic Sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12160, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12160, 2026.

EGU26-12365 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) for Geothermal Applications: a Case Study Across Dublin City 

Eoghan Totten, Jean Baptiste Tary, and Bruna Chagas de Melo

Seismic monitoring plays an integral role in geothermal renewable energy projects for imaging, site-specific noise characterisation and hazard risk assessment purposes. The number of European geothermal energy projects is expected to rise over the next decade as efforts to mitigate for reliance on fossil fuel-derived energy sources continue. Related to this is the pressing need to prospect for and expand the use of geothermal energy in urban settings.

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) is increasingly applied in lieu of geophone-based deployments. Instead of measuring seismic waves at a limited number of discrete points, DAS transforms fibre-optic cables into large and dense arrays of virtual sensors by measuring small changes in strain rate, with gauge length resolutions as small as 1-20 metres. DAS interferometry is able to capitalise on extant urban fibre-optic infrastructure, as well as exploit the diverse and passive seismic noise sources available in towns and cities.

Here we present in-progress DAS data analysis from an approximately 70-80km long cable crossing Dublin city (south to north) for three weeks of cumulative recording between September-October 2025. This cable tracks a large portion of the M50 ring road, the main arterial traffic route between north and south Dublin. We identify and characterise the main noise sources as a function of space and time, comparing DAS signals with temporally overlapping broadband seismometer data. We discuss possible approaches to suppress incoherent noise along the cable for future shallow and deep geothermal monitoring, as well as imaging applications using coherent noise.

This research feeds into the European Union-funded Clean Energy Transition partnership project, GEOTWINS, which seeks to extend the state-of-the-art in modular geothermal digital twins, for improved deep geothermal imaging methodologies, drilling risk mitigation and to progress societal acceptance.

How to cite: Totten, E., Tary, J. B., and Chagas de Melo, B.: Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) for Geothermal Applications: a Case Study Across Dublin City, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12365, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12365, 2026.

EGU26-12403 | Posters on site | SM3.4

Railway Distributed Acoustic Sensing data as an aid to earthquake monitoring in northernmost Sweden 

Björn Lund, Matti Rantatalo, Myrto Papadopoulou, Michael Roth, and Gunnar Eggertsson

The Swedish Transport Administration (STA) currently monitors the railway between Kiruna and the Swedish-Norwegian border with Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS), a distance of approximately 130 km. In collaboration with STA and Luleå University of Technology, the Swedish National Seismic Network (SNSN) has established data transmission on a request basis from the interrogator. As the railway crosses the Pärvie fault, the largest known, and still very active, glacially triggered fault, we hope to significantly improve detection and analysis of small earthquakes on that section of the fault. In this presentation we will show how we define low noise sections of the cable, using local and teleseismic events, and then use these as individual seismic stations. Over the 130 km, as the railway winds its way across the mountains, the cable generally runs in directions from N-S via NW-SE to W-E, providing many possible incidence directions. We discuss the technicalities of the data sharing, the existing metadata problems, how the DAS data is analyzed and incorporated into the routine processing at SNSN.

How to cite: Lund, B., Rantatalo, M., Papadopoulou, M., Roth, M., and Eggertsson, G.: Railway Distributed Acoustic Sensing data as an aid to earthquake monitoring in northernmost Sweden, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12403, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12403, 2026.

EGU26-12609 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Understanding fiber optic sensitivity to a wavefield: A framework to separate site amplification from orientation effects 

Olivier Fontaine, Andreas Fichtner, Thomas Hudson, Thomas Lecocq, and Corentin Caudron

Interpreting amplitudes in Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) data is challenging because the recorded signal is influenced by multiple factors.

To differentiate the impact of fiber orientation from site effects, we develop expressions of axial strain for different body wave polarizations. These expressions consider a linear fiber segment with any orientation in space. From these we explore array geometry properties and the potential of the DAS transfer function as a polarization filter. This last property arises from the polarity inversion characteristic of shear waves and the averaging nature of the gauge length. If the gauge length is set to be a loop instead of a linear segment then the DAS will average all azimuth for a horizontal loop, canceling SH waves. For a vertical loop, all dips are averaged canceling SV waves traveling within the loop plane. These results could reflect a link between DAS and rotational seismology. 

From these transfers functions, we develop a low-cost forward model based on ray theory that predicts amplitude recorded in a DAS array. Differences in amplitude between the modeled and observed wavefields relate to local site amplification from which, we create an amplitude correction factor. We evaluated this method using active seismic experiments from the PoroTomo dataset, successfully identifying regions with anomalous high amplitude responses consistent with the recordings following a magnitude 4.3. 

The results, together with the main elements of our approach, are transferable in many new sensing strategies, including optimization of fiber deployment geometry, generations of synthetic data and the acceleration and improvement of existing location methods through DAS-specific amplitude and phase corrections.
In summary, by exploiting the known directional sensitivity of DAS, we draw new insights from amplitude variations along the fiber array, treating energy loss as equally informative as energy gain in interpreting the wavefield. 

How to cite: Fontaine, O., Fichtner, A., Hudson, T., Lecocq, T., and Caudron, C.: Understanding fiber optic sensitivity to a wavefield: A framework to separate site amplification from orientation effects, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12609, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12609, 2026.

EGU26-12675 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Strategies and Challenges in Applications of DAS-based Earthquake Early Warning Systems 

Claudio Strumia, Gaetano Festa, Alister Trabattoni, Diane Rivet, Luca Elia, Francesco Carotenuto, Simona Colombelli, Antonio Scala, Francesco Scotto di Uccio, and Anjali Suresh

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) transforms fiber-optic cables into ultra-dense strainmeter arrays, providing spatially and temporally continuous earthquake recordings. While its potential for offline seismic characterization is increasingly recognized, a key application of this sensing paradigm is real-time monitoring for Earthquake Early Warning (EEW). The use of existing fiber-optic infrastructures allows for sensing cables located close to seismogenic sources, such as offshore subduction zones, potentially extending the lead time of issued alerts. DAS deployments within Near Fault Observatories further provide dense spatial coverage of epicentral areas, favouring the rapid extraction of robust source information.

The application of DAS to EEW – alone or as a complement to standard accelerometers - has been recently explored, specifically focusing on the estimate of earthquake magnitude from the first seconds of recorded data. Existing approaches rely either on conversion strategies to ground-motion proxies or on direct analysis in the strain-rate domain. However, both the robustness of different conversion strategies and the selection of the most informative physical quantity for early magnitude estimation are not yet consolidated. In offshore environments, additional complexity arises from fiber-optic cables deployed on sediments, where strong converted phases often dominate early waveforms and hinder the direct P-wave signal traditionally used for EEW.

In this work, we analyse earthquakes recorded by the ABYSS network, supported by the ERC – starting program, consisting of 450 km of offshore telecommunication cables deployed along the Chilean subduction trench and interrogated by three DAS units. At this high-seismicity testbed, we develop a strategy for fast magnitude estimation with DAS. We show that converted Ps phases preceding S-wave arrivals carry significant information on earthquake magnitude. Furthermore, we investigated whether the use of time and space-integrated observables on DAS recordings can enhance the predictive power of amplitudes from the first seconds of seismic signals.

Finally, we assess the performance of a DAS-based EEW, grounded on the software PRESTo (Satriano et al., 2011). Using moderate-to-large offshore Chilean earthquakes, we highlight potential and limitations of DAS in regions with sparse conventional instrumentation. Complementary analyses using data from the Irpinia Near Fault Observatory demonstrate the benefits of jointly exploiting DAS and traditional seismic stations within dense monitoring networks, confirming the applicability of DAS-based EEW systems across different tectonic settings.

How to cite: Strumia, C., Festa, G., Trabattoni, A., Rivet, D., Elia, L., Carotenuto, F., Colombelli, S., Scala, A., Scotto di Uccio, F., and Suresh, A.: Strategies and Challenges in Applications of DAS-based Earthquake Early Warning Systems, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12675, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12675, 2026.

EGU26-13083 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Long range Coherent-Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometry for large scale distributed sensing 

Debanjan Show, Biplab Dutta, Maël Abdelhak, Olivier Lopez, Adèle Hilico, Anne Amy-Klein, Christian Chardonnet, Paul-Eric Pottie, and Etienne Cantin

Fig. 1: Map of the REFIMEVE network (green links) and its connection to European links.

In recent years, significant technological progress has demonstrated the feasibility of using the long distance fiber optic links as large scale distributed networks for environmental sensing [1]. Optical fibers are inherently sensitive to external perturbations: their mechanical structure responds to strain, while the light propagating within them undergoes measurable intensity and phase variation when subjected to vibration or seismic waves. A notable example is the French national research infrastructure REFIMEVE [2], which distributes ultrastable time and frequency references across more than 9000 km of fiber links connecting laboratories throughout France and Europe (see Fig. 1). The infrastructure has demonstrated strong potential for geophysical studies [3]. Applications such as earthquake detection, volcano monitoring, and environmental hazard surveillance are attracting increasing interest worldwide, particularly because they can leverage already existing fiber networks. In this context, the European project SENSEI (Smart European Networks for Sensing the Environment and Internet Quality) [4] aims to harness this potential by developing the next generation photonic technologies for detecting both natural phenomena, such as earthquakes, volcano activity, and anthropogenic events including construction activity or vehicular traffic.

Within this framework, one of our objectives is to develop a coherent optical frequency domain reflectometry (C-OFDR) [5]. Current systems are limited to approximately 100 km by the coherence length of the laser source.  Here, we take benefit from the low frequency noise laser source generated by REFIMEVE frequency reference in order to extend the sensing range. In our setup, the output of a low noise laser is frequency modulated and a fiber under test is studied in a Michelson interferometer configuration. By analyzing the Rayleigh backscattered signal along the fiber, the system enables detailed diagnostics of the fiber under test including the detection of localized fiber deformations, faulty connectors, attenuation variations, and disturbances induced by environmental vibrations. As a first demonstration, we tested a prototype over a long range fiber link made of laboratory spools extending up to 335 km. The system successfully identified the position of the optical amplifier and a PC connector placed at the end of the fiber with km scale spatial resolution. In addition, vibration induced perturbation was observed and is under study, highlighting the potential of this technique for seismic applications. In future work, we plan to deploy the C-OFDR system on the operational REFIMEVE fiber network to evaluate its performance under real field conditions. This approach positions C-OFDR as a powerful tool for telecommunication infrastructure monitoring and distributed geophysical sensing.  

References :

[1] G. Marra et al., Science 361 (2018), https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aat4458

[2] REFIMEVE, https://www.refimeve.fr/en/homepage/

[3] M. B. K. Tønnes, PhD Thesis (2022), https://hal.science/tel-03984045v1

[4] SENSEI, https://senseiproject.eu/

[5] C. Liang et al., IEEE Access. 9 (2021), DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3061250

How to cite: Show, D., Dutta, B., Abdelhak, M., Lopez, O., Hilico, A., Amy-Klein, A., Chardonnet, C., Pottie, P.-E., and Cantin, E.: Long range Coherent-Optical Frequency Domain Reflectometry for large scale distributed sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13083, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13083, 2026.

EGU26-13151 | Orals | SM3.4

Fiber optic cables (DAS) for seismic event detection – An underground case study 

Vincent Brémaud and Colin Madelaine

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS), leveraging existing fiber optic infrastructure, represents a groundbreaking advancement in seismic monitoring. By converting telecommunication cables into dense arrays of virtual sensors, DAS enables continuous spatial coverage and enhanced sensitivity to seismic waves in remote or logistically constrained environments. This capability positions DAS as a complementary or alternative tool to traditional seismic networks, offering cost-effective, low-maintenance solutions for geophysical research and hazard monitoring.

This study focuses on the Premise-2 experiment, conducted at the Low-Noise Underground Laboratory (https://www.lsbb.eu/) in Rustrel, France, a site renowned for its low seismic noise. The experiment integrates active and passive seismic acquisitions, capturing both ambient noise and controlled seismic signals to assess DAS’s ability to detect and characterize events. Multiple fiber optic cable types and installation methods (laid on the ground, with sand bags, buried, or structurally attached) are evaluated to determine their impact on signal sensitivity, spatial resolution, and measurement robustness.

This study provides critical insights into optimal DAS deployment configurations for seismological applications while highlighting the challenges posed by large-scale data acquisition. The research underscores the need for advanced algorithms and specific workflows to fully exploit DAS’s potential. To characterized the events, we have used a workflow using automatic P and S arrival phases. We filtered these arrivals with an associator to select only detections that could be linked to an event. Then we tried different location algorithms to get a complete workflow from the acquisition to the location of the events.

How to cite: Brémaud, V. and Madelaine, C.: Fiber optic cables (DAS) for seismic event detection – An underground case study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13151, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13151, 2026.

EGU26-13235 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Distributed Acoustic Sensing at the Engineering Scale: Experimental Insights from the PITOP Test Site 

Olga Nesterova, Luca Schenato, Alexis Constantinou, Thurian Le Dû, Fabio Meneghini, Andrea Travan, Cinzia Bellezza, Gwenola Michaud, Andrea Marzona, Alessandro Brovelli, Silvia Zampato, Giorgio Cassiani, Jacopo Boaga, and Ilaria Barone

The PITOP geophysical test site, operated by the Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale (OGS) in north-eastern Italy, provides a unique experimental environment for testing seismic acquisition technologies under realistic field conditions. Covering ~22,000 m², PITOP was established to support the development and validation of geophysical methods and instrumentation in both surface and borehole installations. Here, we evaluate PITOP’s potential for Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) experiments, focusing on small-scale seismic measurements relevant to urban settings and engineering applications. 

Five boreholes with distinct purposes and instrumentation are available at the PITOP site, including a water well (PITOP1), two 400-m-deep wells associated with geosteering research (PITOP2 and PITOP3), a 150-m-deep borehole permanently equipped with optical fibre for DAS measurements (PITOP4), and a recently drilled well dedicated to geoelectrical surveys (PITOP5). The site also hosts a surface-deployed fibre-optic cable, containing both linear and helicoidal fibers, and about 20 3C seismic nodes. Finally, several seismic sources are available, which are a borehole Sparker Pulse, suitable for crosshole VSP configurations, and two surface vibratory sources, the IVI MiniVib T-2500, which can generate sweeps in the 10–550 Hz frequency range, and the ElViS VII vibrator, designed for frequencies between 20 and 220 Hz.

We conducted three dedicated experiments:  (i) cross-hole measurements with sources in PITOP3 at depths of 10, 50, 75, and 100 m, and DAS recording in PITOP4; (ii) a vertical seismic profiling (VSP) survey using the MiniVib source close to the well head with DAS recording in PITOP4; and  (iii) recordings of the seismic wavefield generated by P- and S-wave vibratory sources using surface DAS arrays in linear and helicoidal configurations, together with co-located 3D geophones for comparison.

DAS data were acquired with multiple gauge lengths and acquisition settings. The resulting datasets enable a systematic evaluation of acquisition parameters selection and highlight processing strategies required for different DAS configurations. They provide a valuable basis for assessing optimal DAS acquisition strategies for small-scale seismic applications and for defining processing workflows adapted to diverse source and receiver geometries.

The present study is being carried out within the framework of the USES2 project, which receives funding from the EUROPEAN RESEARCH EXECUTIVE AGENCY (REA) under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101072599.

This research has been supported by the Interdepartmental Research Center for Cultural Heritage CIBA (University of Padova) with the World Class Research Infrastructure (WCRI) SYCURI—SYnergic strategies for CUltural heritage at RIsk, funded by the University of Padova.

How to cite: Nesterova, O., Schenato, L., Constantinou, A., Le Dû, T., Meneghini, F., Travan, A., Bellezza, C., Michaud, G., Marzona, A., Brovelli, A., Zampato, S., Cassiani, G., Boaga, J., and Barone, I.: Distributed Acoustic Sensing at the Engineering Scale: Experimental Insights from the PITOP Test Site, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13235, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13235, 2026.

EGU26-13315 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Deep Learning-Based Earthquakes Localization at Campi Flegrei via Distributed Acoustic Sensing 

Miriana Corsaro, Léonard Seydoux, Gilda Currenti, Flavio Cannavò, Simone Palazzo, Martina Allegra, Philippe Jousset, Michele Prestifilippo, and Concetto Spampinato

The current phase of unrest of the Campi Flegrei caldera (Italy), one of the most dangerous volcanic complexes in the world, requires increasingly rapid and high-resolution seismic monitoring solutions. In this context, Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) has recently emerged as a highly innovative technology, enabling existing fiber-optic cables to be repurposed into ultra-dense seismic arrays capable of sampling the seismic wavefield with unprecedented spatial resolution.

In this study, we present a new earthquake-localization method that uses automatically identified P- and S-wave arrivals on DAS data to localize seismic events. Employing Transformer-based architectures designed to process DAS's high-dimensional strain data, our approach simultaneously estimates key source parameters, including hypocentral location, magnitude, and origin time. A comparative analysis against the official seismic catalogue reveals minimal residuals, validating the model's robustness. 

The model therefore represents a significant advancement, as it enables reliable earthquake localization in extremely short time frames using exclusively automatically picked data, while simultaneously overcoming the computational bottlenecks typical of traditional processing workflows. As a result, this methodology establishes a new benchmark for real-time monitoring of magmatic and hydrothermal systems, substantially contributing to improved seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Corsaro, M., Seydoux, L., Currenti, G., Cannavò, F., Palazzo, S., Allegra, M., Jousset, P., Prestifilippo, M., and Spampinato, C.: Deep Learning-Based Earthquakes Localization at Campi Flegrei via Distributed Acoustic Sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13315, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13315, 2026.

EGU26-13382 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Towards ambient noise tomography on long telecommunication cables: using DAS for characterisation of the seismo-acoustic soundscape in the Atlantic Ocean and Irish Sea 

Rosa Vergara González, Nicolas Luca Celli, Christopher J. Bean, Marco Ruffini, and Örn Jónsson

The oceans are a noisy place, where ships, waves, storms, currents, earthquakes and marine wildlife all leave their own seismo-acoustic signatures. Fibre sensing has the potential to allow researchers to utilise the thousands of sea-bottom telecommunication fibre-optic cables spread across the globe, and with them, we can record, characterise and monitor these signals from up close. However, at present sensing equipment limitations, lack of established fibre-sensing workflows and access to cables severely limit the use of this technology in the seas.

Here, we present and analyse Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) data newly recorded on long, telecom fibre-optic cables offshore through the east and west coasts of Ireland. The availability of these two different datasets allows us to compare different environments and physical phenomena across a large region. The eastern cable covers 118 km from Dublin, Ireland to Holyhead, Wales with 36 days of data recorded in Spring 2025, while the western one reaches 72 km offshore from Galway, with 60 days of data in Autumn 2025. These datasets form part of a much larger compendium, including data from approximately 300km of onshore fibre-optic cables between both shores. Thanks to the large cable lengths and long recording times, we observe a plethora of short-lived, high frequency signals such as ships, anthropogenic noise, and local earthquakes, as well as long-wavelength, long-period signals such as ocean storms and microseisms, tides, and teleseismic events.

To characterise observations in these noisy environments, we compare our observations with nearby land seismic stations and weather records to track storm systems and wave height. We identify and separate the different seismic and acoustic sources observed, resulting in a preliminary catalogue of dominant signal types observed along the cables. The results are utilised to highlight the differences between the two marine environments and separate marine, seismic and anthropic transient signals from ambient noise. This is key to improve our understanding of ocean processes and to build datasets suitable for deep Earth sensing through Ambient Noise Tomography. While our focus is seismic, characterising marine seismic and acoustic phenomena is key in applications well beyond this field, from telecommunication fibre cable safety, to marine biology and oceanographic applications.

How to cite: Vergara González, R., Celli, N. L., Bean, C. J., Ruffini, M., and Jónsson, Ö.: Towards ambient noise tomography on long telecommunication cables: using DAS for characterisation of the seismo-acoustic soundscape in the Atlantic Ocean and Irish Sea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13382, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13382, 2026.

EGU26-13416 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Temperature and strain monitoring in Reykjanes geothermal field, Iceland, using quasi-distributed fiber-optic sensing 

Julien Govoorts, Corentin Caudron, Jiaxuan Li, Haiyang Liao, Christophe Caucheteur, Yesim Çubuk-Sabuncu, Halldór Geirsson, Vala Hjörleifsdóttir, Kristín Jónsdóttir, and Loic Peiffer

Since December 2023 and after 800 years of inactivity, recurrent volcanic eruptions are taking place at the Svartsengi volcanic system indicating the start of a new volcanic cycle. In contrast, the Reykjanes volcanic system, located to the west of Svartsengi, has remained dormant since the 13th century.  The Reykjanes geothermal area, in particular the Gunnuhver geothermal field, is located at the westernmost end of the Reykjanes Peninsula. This geothermal area is associated with the upflow of seawater-derived hydrothermal fluids and characterized by numerous geothermal features, including steam vents and steam-heated mud pools.

Since October 2022, this geothermal field has been continuously monitored using a variety of technologies to record parameters such as soil temperature, strain and electrical resistivity. The present study focuses primarily on the parameters gathered from August 2024 using the Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) technology, a point fiber-optic sensing approach. This technique utilizes wavelength-division multiplexing, meaning the fiber is capable of transmitting information at distinct wavelengths. Consequently, given that each FBG possesses its own wavelength, the fiber is transformed into a cost-effective and versatile quasi-distributed sensor.

Over the course of a year, the FBG interrogator deployed on-site has measured the wavelength changes at a sampling frequency ranging from 0.4Hz to 1Hz. These changes were recorded from 24 different temperature probes and 8 strain sensors both buried in-ground throughout the geothermal field. Most of the temperature sensors were installed in areas of the soil where no geothermal surface manifestation was present. These sensors recorded temperature changes primarily driven by variations in atmospheric temperature. In contrast, the remaining sensors were directly located in altered areas or close to steam vents. These sensors exhibit clear cooling patterns due to precipitation but do not show temperature changes that can be attributed to the eruption cycle. Additionally, the FBG temperature sensors allow the identification of fiber sections that are coupled to air temperature fluctuations along a telecom fiber deployed a few hundred meters north and monitored by a Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) interrogator.

In addition to the temperature probes, the strain sensors have recorded signals ranging from periodic dynamic strain changes attributed to industrial processes, to static strain changes assigned to crustal deformation. On April 1, 2025, a volcanic eruption occurred in the Svartsengi volcanic system, resulting in strain variations observed 15 kilometers away from the eruption site using FBG and low-frequency components of DAS recordings. These variations were also observed in strain measurements obtained from permanent network GNSS stations. This experiment demonstrates the capacity and reliability of the FBG technology for monitoring temperature changes and deformation signals in an active geothermal environment.

How to cite: Govoorts, J., Caudron, C., Li, J., Liao, H., Caucheteur, C., Çubuk-Sabuncu, Y., Geirsson, H., Hjörleifsdóttir, V., Jónsdóttir, K., and Peiffer, L.: Temperature and strain monitoring in Reykjanes geothermal field, Iceland, using quasi-distributed fiber-optic sensing, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13416, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13416, 2026.

EGU26-13921 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Seismic Characterisation of an Arctic Glacier 

Tora Haugen Myklebust, Martin Landrø, Robin André Rørstadbotnen, and Calder Robinson

In recent years, Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) has emerged as a cost-effective seismic monitoring tool for cryosphere research. Compared to conventional geophone arrays, the DAS system is compact, easy to transport, and can be rapidly deployed over large distances in glaciated environments.

Previous studies have demonstrated that DAS is a useful tool for ice-sheet imaging and monitoring glacier dynamics. For example, using borehole DAS in conjunction with surface explosives (e.g., Booth et al., 2022; Fitchner et al., 2023) or passive recordings using surface DAS (e.g., Walter et al., 2020; Gräff et al, 2025). Significant progress has been made in applying surface DAS for active marine subsurface imaging (e.g., Pedersen et al., 2022; Raknes et al., 2025). We extend this approach to active englacial and subglacial imaging on Slakbreen, Svalbard.

During a multi-geophysical field campaign in March 2025, we acquired seismic data using surface explosives along an approximately 2 km fibre co-located with a vertical-component geophone array. We process different reflected modes (PP and PS) recorded on the fibre and benchmark the imaging results against the equivalent PP-image from the geophone array. We evaluate differences in wavefield sensitivity across the three datasets and we will present how these can be used to characterise the state of the cryosphere and deeper sedimentary successions.

Despite the relative immaturity of DAS for glacier imaging and current limitations of the processing workflow, our results clearly establish surface DAS as a viable monitoring tool for seismic imaging of the cryosphere and as a potential enabler of large-scale seismic monitoring of glaciers and the subsurface.

 

References:

Booth, A. D., P. Christoffersen, A. Pretorius, J. Chapman, B. Hubbard, E. C. Smith, S. de Ridder, A. Nowacki, B. P. Lipovsky, and M. Denolle, 2022, Characterising sediment thickness beneath a greenlandic outlet glacier using distributed acoustic sensing: preliminary observations and progress towards an efficient machine learning approach: Annals of Glaciology, 63(87-89):79–82.                                                                                                                                                   

Fichtner, A., C. Hofstede, L. Gebraad, A. Zunino, D. Zigone, and O. Eisen, 2023, Borehole fibre-optic seismology inside the northeast greenland ice stream: Geo-physical Journal International, 235(3):2430–2441.

Gräff, D., B. P. Lipovsky, A. Vieli, A. Dachauer, R. Jackson, D. Farinotti, J. Schmale, J.-P. Ampuero, E. Berg, A. Dannowski, et al., 2025, Calving-driven fjord dynamics resolved by seafloor fibre sensing: Nature, 644(8076):404–412.

Pedersen, A., H. Westerdahl, M. Thompson, C. Sagary, and J. Brenne, 2022, A north sea case study: Does das have potential for permanent reservoir monitoring? In Proceedings of the 83rd EAGE Annual Conference & Exhibition, pages 1–5. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers.

Raknes, E. B., B. Foseide, and G. Jansson, 2025, Acquisition and imaging of ocean-bottom fiber-optic distributed acoustic sensing data using a full-shot carpet from a conventional 3d survey: Geophysics, 90(5):P99–P112.

Walter, F., D. Gräff, F. Lindner, P. Paitz, M. Köpfli, M. Chmiel, and A. Fichtner,2020, Distributed acoustic sensing of microseismic sources and wave propagation in glaciated terrain: Nature communications, 11(1):2436.

How to cite: Myklebust, T. H., Landrø, M., Rørstadbotnen, R. A., and Robinson, C.: Seismic Characterisation of an Arctic Glacier, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13921, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13921, 2026.

EGU26-14230 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Unveiling type of fiber and coupling conditions effects on geophysical DAS measurements, results from underground experiments 

Vanessa Carrillo-Barra, Diego Mercerat, Vincent Brémaud, Anthony Sladen, Olivier Sèbe, Amaury Vallage, and Jean-Paul Ampuero

Optical fiber measurements have been demonstrated to be useful in assessing geophysical near-surface parameters and in detecting seismological events in newly accessible regions (e.g. cities, ocean floor, highways) by leveraging the existing fiber-optic infrastructure. In particular, laser interferometry performed with DAS systems (Distributed Acoustic Sensing) allows measuring the cable axial strain related to passing seismo-acoustic waves, at any point along the fiber and over tens of kilometers of cable.

However, compared to traditional seismic sensors the instrumental response of DAS remains unclear, and there is in particular a critical need to better understand how the measurements are influenced by the nature of the fiber optic cable and its coupling to the ground or medium under study. To explore this question, we present results from two active seismic campaigns carried out in the low-noise  underground tunnel LSBB (Laboratoire Souterrain à Bas Bruit), in southeastern France.

We recorded multiple active sources (TNT detonations and hammer shots) by a 10km and 2km long underground optical fiber set-ups and with conventional seismic sensors as well. We tested along both campaigns different optical fiber cable designs and different types of coupling conditions (sealed, sandbags weighted, freely posed) installed in parallel. This experimental setup provides a unique opportunity to examine in detail and quantify the possible variations in the strain signals recovered from DAS data.

Preliminary observations reveal significant discrepancies in the recorded data depending on the coupling conditions. The characteristics of the deployed source result in a signal that is primarily concentrated in the high-frequency range, for which the sealed fiber does not necessarily exhibit a significantly improved response. Additionally, the acoustic wave generated by the hammer-shot echo, propagating through the air, is strongly amplified in all cables covered by sandbags. We propose that the sandbags increase the interaction area between that signal and the cables, thereby enhancing reverberation.

Furthermore, we observe systematic differences in the maximum amplitudes recorded by the different cables tested, with the telecom cable consistently exhibiting lower amplitudes than other specialized cables, suggesting a lower sensitivity. However, this reduction is relatively modest, and when combined with the substantially lower cost of telecom cables, indicates that they remain a cost-efficient alternative for certain experiments. Additional observations and detailed analyses from this study will be presented.

 

Keywords: Coupling, fiber optics, DAS measurements, strain rate, active seismic, LSBB.

How to cite: Carrillo-Barra, V., Mercerat, D., Brémaud, V., Sladen, A., Sèbe, O., Vallage, A., and Ampuero, J.-P.: Unveiling type of fiber and coupling conditions effects on geophysical DAS measurements, results from underground experiments, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14230, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14230, 2026.

EGU26-15142 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Toward Global-Scale Submarine Fiber Sensing: Early Results from Multispan DAS at the OOI Regional Cabled Array 

Zoe Krauss, Bradley Lipovsky, Mikael Mazur, William Wilcock, Nicolas Fontaine, Roland Ryf, Alex Rose, William Dientsfrey, Shima Abadi, Marine Denolle, and Renate Hartog

A recently developed multispan distributed acoustic sensing (multispan-DAS) technique from Nokia Bell Labs enables strain measurements along submarine fiber-optic cables across multiple repeater-separated spans. By leveraging the high-loss loopback couplers within optical repeaters, this technique overcomes the long-standing limitation of conventional DAS to the first span of a repeated cable, typically < 100 km offshore. Dense, continuous arrays of seafloor strain sensors can now extend to hundreds or thousands of kilometers. This technique has been used to successfully record the 2025 M8.8 Kamchatka earthquake and tsunami at teleseismic range with a spatial resolution of ~100 m across 4400 km of a repeated submarine cable.

In November 2025, the multispan-DAS system from Nokia Bell Labs was deployed for three months on both repeated submarine cables of the Ocean Observatories Initiative Regional Cabled Array (OOI RCA) offshore Oregon. The deployment traverses the Cascadia subduction zone forearc and extends approximately 500 km offshore to Axial Seamount. During this period, the first span of the southern cable was simultaneously interrogated using a multiplexed conventional DAS unit, while data continued to stream from co-located cabled seismometers, hydrophones, and other oceanographic instruments on the OOI RCA.

The multispan-DAS system recorded a regional earthquake beyond the first repeater of both cables during testing as well as the ambient seafloor seismic wavefield, demonstrating sensitivity to a broad range of seismic, oceanographic, and acoustic signals. These observations provide a unique opportunity to directly compare multispan-DAS measurements with conventional DAS and established seafloor instrumentation across a large spatial extent. The resulting dataset will be publicly released following documentation and quality control. We will present preliminary results characterizing the noise floor, sensitivity, and signal fidelity of multispan-DAS relative to co-located sensors, and examine the consistency of observed seismic and oceanographic signals across measurement modalities. These results will highlight the potential of multispan-DAS for applications including routine earthquake monitoring, earthquake early warning, and broader seafloor observation, and represent an important step toward establishing this technique as a new tool for the seismological and oceanographic communities.

How to cite: Krauss, Z., Lipovsky, B., Mazur, M., Wilcock, W., Fontaine, N., Ryf, R., Rose, A., Dientsfrey, W., Abadi, S., Denolle, M., and Hartog, R.: Toward Global-Scale Submarine Fiber Sensing: Early Results from Multispan DAS at the OOI Regional Cabled Array, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15142, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15142, 2026.

EGU26-15227 | Posters on site | SM3.4

Enhancing Earthquake Location in the Central Apennines (Italy): A Hybrid Approach Combining Arrivals from Line-Sensor Telecom Fiber Interferometry and Traditional Point-sensors 

Diana Latorre, Cecilia Clivati, André Herrero, Anthony Lomax, Raffaele Di Stefano, Simone Donadello, Aladino Govoni, Maurizio Vassallo, and Lucia Margheriti

The integration of existing telecommunication fiber-optic infrastructure into seismic monitoring networks offers a transformative opportunity to densify observations in seismically active regions. We present the results of a multi-year monitoring experiment (2021–2026) utilizing a 39-km telecom fiber link from the Italian telecommunication company Open Fiber between Ascoli Piceno and Teramo in the Central Apennines, Italy. The system employs an ultra stable laser to measure seismic-induced deformation of the fiber, operating on a dedicated wavelength in coexistence with commercial data traffic.

A significant challenge in utilizing fiber-optic data for earthquake location is the transition from traditional point-sensor geometry to distributed sensing. To address this, we implemented a hybrid localization approach using a modified version of the NonLinLoc (NLL) algorithm. We move beyond traditional discrete measurements (point sensors) by treating the cable as a continuous "line sensor." Following the NLL algorithm, the most effective strategy is translating both point and line geometries into a unified framework of 3D travel-time maps. Once the sensors are translated into these maps, their combined use for location becomes independent of the sensor type, allowing for a seamless merging of traditional seismic station data and fiber-optic pickings. 

We applied this methodology to the real seismic catalog recorded from the fiber's installation in mid 2021 until January 2026 in the Ascoli-Teramo area, a region where the Italian seismic network is relatively sparse. Specifically, we analyzed signals from: 1) several small seismic sequences occurring at short distances (up to approximately 20 km) from the fiber cable, including the Civitella del Tronto (TE) sequence that followed a Mw 3.9 event (September 22, 2022); and 2) more distant earthquakes (ranging from approximately 20 to 50 km from the fiber) with local magnitudes exceeding ML 2.5, distributed along the Central Apennines axis. For events where the fiber signal allowed for the correct identification of P- and S-wave arrival times, we applied the NLL algorithm using the integrated network. In this work, we present several of these examples and associated tests to discuss how the inclusion of fiber-derived arrival times can provide further hypocentral constraints. This study aims to highlight the scalability of fiber interferometry combined with non-linear inversion as a robust tool for seismic surveillance in populated and high-risk tectonic environments.

How to cite: Latorre, D., Clivati, C., Herrero, A., Lomax, A., Di Stefano, R., Donadello, S., Govoni, A., Vassallo, M., and Margheriti, L.: Enhancing Earthquake Location in the Central Apennines (Italy): A Hybrid Approach Combining Arrivals from Line-Sensor Telecom Fiber Interferometry and Traditional Point-sensors, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15227, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15227, 2026.

EGU26-16522 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Detecting Microseismic Events Using Cross-Fault Borehole DAS 

Chih-Chieh Tseng, Hao Kuo-Chen, Li-Yu Kan, Sheng-Yan Pan, Wei-Fang Sun, Chin-Shang Ku, and Ching-Chou Fu

Microseismic events account for the majority of seismicity, however, sparse station spacing hinders the detection of such small events. In recent decades, distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) has shown its power to provide a denser spatial sampling in an array sense, to resolve weak signals that are often missed by conventional seismometers. In eastern Taiwan, the Chihshang fault plays a key role in accommodating deformation along the Longitudinal Valley fault system, where frequent small earthquakes and fault creep occur. In this study, we develop a new workflow for microseismic event detection by integrating borehole DAS data with the deep-learning-based automatic phase picking model PhaseNet. An event is declared when more than 75% of channels record P-wave picks and more than 30% record S-wave picks within a 1-s time window. We analyzed three months of DAS data from March to July 2025. As a result, we identified approximately twice as many events as those reported in a deep-learning-based earthquake catalog constructed using only surface seismic stations. These results suggest that borehole DAS provides an effective complementary constraint for detecting earthquake-generated wave trains. This processing workflow can significantly improve the detection capability for microseismic events, leading to higher seismic catalog completeness and finer fault structure near the Chihshang region.

How to cite: Tseng, C.-C., Kuo-Chen, H., Kan, L.-Y., Pan, S.-Y., Sun, W.-F., Ku, C.-S., and Fu, C.-C.: Detecting Microseismic Events Using Cross-Fault Borehole DAS, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16522, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16522, 2026.

EGU26-16913 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Cross-validating Distributed Acoustic Sensing and Seismic Records for Shallow Ground Motion and Near-Surface Properties 

Marco Pascal Roth, Xiang Chen, Gian Maria Bocchini, and Rebecca M Harrington

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) offers dense spatial sampling of ground motion and has the potential to perform detailed seismic monitoring and constrain shallow velocity structure. In this study, we analyze ground motion recorded by broadband seismometers and a fiber-optic interrogator of two shallow tectonic earthquakes in the Roerdalen region (The Netherlands–Germany border) with local magnitudes ML 2.2 (2025-09-09) and ML 1.9 (2025-09-15) and hypocentral depths of ~15 km to quantify the differences in sensitivity and magnitude estimates from each type of instrumentation. The Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) recordings consist of ground strain sampled at 250 Hz on a 30 km telecommunications dark-fiber with a channel spacing of 5 m and a gauge length of 50 m. Seismometer recordings consist of ground velocity sampled at 100 Hz on a Trillium Compact 20 s seismometer that has a flat frequency response up to ~100 Hz. Both types of sensors recorded the earthquakes with a minimum epicentral distance of ~20 and 10 km, respectively. We will present results showing the differences in frequency sensitivity, conversions to ground displacement, and estimated magnitudes, as well as an interpretation of differences based on the shallow ground velocity. 

We first convert DAS recordings that are initially measured in strain to ground displacement using a semblance-based approach, as well conventional seismic recordings initially recorded in velocity. We make a quantitative comparison of waveform characteristics, including amplitude-frequency dependence and its variability in space for point-wise seismic sensor measurements vs. DAS measurements. We will present an interpretation of the results based on the context of geological setting to identify spatial variations that cannot be resolved by the sparse seismic network alone. As DAS measurements reveal significant lateral variability in ground motion amplitudes that suggest a strong influence of near-surface conditions (density) and/or local coupling effects, we will also quantify the relative influence of each using a comparison of strain and converted ground displacement. In addition, we explore approaches to estimate earthquake magnitude from DAS data by relating observed strain amplitudes to ground-motion parameters derived from the co-located seismometer. Preliminary results suggest that DAS-based observations capture the relative scaling between the two events and show promise for magnitude estimation when calibrated against conventional seismic sensors. Our findings demonstrate the value of DAS for high-resolution observations of near surface properties and their influence on earthquake waveforms.  They also highlight the potential of DAS to complement existing seismic networks for monitoring small-magnitude earthquakes.  

How to cite: Roth, M. P., Chen, X., Bocchini, G. M., and Harrington, R. M.: Cross-validating Distributed Acoustic Sensing and Seismic Records for Shallow Ground Motion and Near-Surface Properties, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-16913, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-16913, 2026.

EGU26-17223 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Reimagining Seismic Array Processing with Fibre-Optic DAS: The NORFOX Array 

Antoine Turquet, Andreas Wuestefeld, Alan Baird, Kamran Iranpour, and Ravn Rydtun

NORFOX is a purpose-built fibre-optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) installation located in southeastern Norway, approximately 150 km north of Oslo. Beyond its primary function of monitoring earthquakes and explosions, the system captures a broad range of other signals, including aircraft, thunder, and atmospheric phenomena. A key advantage of NORFOX is its overlap with the co-located NORES seismometer array, which enables direct calibration of DAS measurements against conventional seismic recordings and supports method development under well-constrained ground-truth conditions. In this contribution, we introduce the NORFOX infrastructure and array layout, discuss key design choices, and summarize practical strengths and limitations using representative examples.

NORFOX is additionally equipped with all-sky cameras operated by Norsk Meteor Nettverk for meteor monitoring, which also capture nearby lightning activity. Lightning locations provide independent timing and spatial context that help interpretation coincident acoustic signatures observed on the fibre. Together with weather information, noise-floor characterization, and optical monitoring, these observations provide a benchmark dataset for both existing and future DAS installations and calibration

We also present in-house approaches to reduce noise, understanding signals, strategies on managing data volumes and edge-computing. Furthermore, we show and interpret signals from nearby quarry blasts, regional earthquakes, thunderstorms, and aircraft. Finally, we demonstrate and evaluate DAS array-processing methodologies for earthquake and explosion monitoring at NORFOX. Overall, dedicated research fibre arrays such as NORFOX provide a controlled environment to develop, benchmark, and calibrate DAS-based monitoring workflows in combination with co-located seismic instrumentation.

How to cite: Turquet, A., Wuestefeld, A., Baird, A., Iranpour, K., and Rydtun, R.: Reimagining Seismic Array Processing with Fibre-Optic DAS: The NORFOX Array, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17223, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17223, 2026.

EGU26-17496 | ECS | Orals | SM3.4

Privacy Concerns of DAS: Eavesdropping using Neural Network Transcription 

Jack Lee Smith, Karen Lythgoe, Andrew Curtis, Harry Whitelam, Dominic Seager, Jessica Johnson, and Mohammad Belal

Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) has transformed geophysical, environmental, and infrastructure monitoring. However, the increasing bandwidth and sensitivity of modern interrogators now extend into the audio range, introducing a material privacy risk. Here we demonstrate, through in-situ experiments on live fibre deployments, that human speech, music, and other acoustic signals can be under certain acquisition conditions.

We show that intelligible speech can be accurately recovered and automatically transcribed using neural networks. Experiments were conducted on both linear and spooled fibre geometries, deployed as part of an ongoing geophysical survey. We find that coiled layouts, which are common in access networks (e.g., slack loops or storage spools), exhibit enhanced sensitivity to incident acoustic waves relative to linear layouts. Modelling indicates this arises from increased broadside sensitivity and reduced destructive interference for longer wavelength acoustic fields over the gauge length. We systematically assess how acquisition parameters, such as source-fibre offset, influence signal‑to‑noise ratio, spectral fidelity, and speech intelligibility of recorded audio. We further show that neural network based denoising strategies improves intelligibility and fidelity of recorded audio, thereby exacerbating privacy concerns.

These findings demonstrate that appropriate interrogation of existing fibre infrastructure - including fibre‑to‑the‑premises links, smart-city infrastructure, and research cables – can function as pervasive, passive wide-area acoustic receivers, creating a pathway for inadvertent or malicious eavesdropping. We discuss practical mitigation strategies spanning survey design, interrogation configuration, and data governance, and argue that the incorporation of privacy‑by‑design into deployment and processing is crucial to leverage the unique benefits of DAS while managing emerging ethical and legal risks.

How to cite: Smith, J. L., Lythgoe, K., Curtis, A., Whitelam, H., Seager, D., Johnson, J., and Belal, M.: Privacy Concerns of DAS: Eavesdropping using Neural Network Transcription, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17496, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17496, 2026.

EGU26-17601 | Posters on site | SM3.4

Ambient signals analysis and cable coupling characterisation from a DAS experiment offshore South Brittany 

Florian Le Pape, Stephan Ker, Shane Murphy, Philippe Schnurle, Mikael Evain, Pascal Pelleau, Alexis Constantinou, and Patrick Jousset

As fibre-sensing measurements on submarine fibre optic cables become more widely used in geophysical studies, new challenges arise that demand a deeper understanding of the collected data. In particular, characterisation of cable coupling to the seafloor as well as the response of local sediment under the cables is needed for a better quantification of external physical phenomena by fibre-sensing measurements.

FiberSCOPE is a research project aiming to implement an intelligent seabed monitoring system for studies in seismology, oceanography and the positioning of acoustic manmade sources (ships, AUVs, etc.) using existing submarine fiber-optic cables. One of the main objectives of the project is to define tools for remote evaluation of fibre optic cable coupling with the seabed using both Brillouin Optical Time Domain Reflectometry (BOTDR) and Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) measurements of ambient noise.

Within the project’s framework, passive and active seismic experiments were performed during March-April 2025 offshore south Brittany. The experiment included acquiring DAS measurements on the electro-optic cable connecting mainland France to Groix island, combined with the deployment of 10 seismic nodes near the cable. Preliminary results show that although ocean waves dominate the DAS signals, ocean wave induced microseisms events can be extracted as they fluctuate over the 18 days’ of the passive acquisition. Interestingly, despite the short distance covered by the offshore portion of the cable, spatial variations of those events are also observed and seem consistent between cable and nodes measurements. Finally, both ocean waves and microseism signals are used to further quantify the cable coupling with the seafloor and cable response connected to changes in seafloor structure.

How to cite: Le Pape, F., Ker, S., Murphy, S., Schnurle, P., Evain, M., Pelleau, P., Constantinou, A., and Jousset, P.: Ambient signals analysis and cable coupling characterisation from a DAS experiment offshore South Brittany, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17601, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17601, 2026.

EGU26-18270 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

Assessing the Seismic Sensitivity on a Submarine Optical Fiber Link between Malta and Catania (Sicily, Italy) 

Daniele Caruana, Matthew Agius, André Xuereb, Cecilia Clivati, Simone Donadello, Kristian Grixti, and Irena Schulten

Submarine regions remain sparsely instrumented, limiting the spatial coverage of seismic monitoring in offshore environments. Recent studies have shown that optical fibers, including those actively used for telecommunications, can detect ground motion through laser interferometry. We present an ongoing evaluation of the seismic sensitivity of a 260 km optical fiber link between Malta and Catania, predominantly submerged in the Ionian Sea and continuously carrying internet traffic.

The optical-fiber recordings were analysed for signals corresponding to the arrival times of ~1500 earthquakes listed in the INGV catalogue between January 2023 and March 2025. The waveforms were manually inspected for seismic arrivals and compared to seismic data recorded on nearby land stations on Malta and Sicily. Earthquakes ranging from magnitude 1.4 to 7.9 originating from distance of 3 to 16,000 km were successfully observed. Each event was assigned a category according to signal clarity and confidence, ranging from clearly visible arrivals (category A) to non-detectable signals (category E). Preliminary results indicate that <10% of events fall into category A, 10-15% in category B, 20-25% in category C, 20-25% in category D, and >30% in category E, providing an initial characterisation of the optical-fiber cable’s sensitivity. While a majority of observations fall within lower quality categories (D-E), at least 35% of the analysed events remain robustly identifiable, highlighting the contribution of the submarine fiber to existing land-based seismic networks and extending observational coverage in submarine regions. The sensitivity of the fiber strongly depends on the earthquake magnitude-distance relationship, as expected. We compare our results with previously reported measurements on terrestrial fibers (Donadello, et al., 2024), and show that the Malta-Catania submarine cable can be a reliable new seismic tool for a submarine environment, although recording fewer high-confidence events than onshore systems.

Noise in the fiber exhibits correlations with wind and with daytime anthropogenic activity. This reduces the signal-to-noise ratio and limits the detectability of earthquakes with M<2. Ongoing data acquisition will further refine sensitivity estimates and improve the characterisation of the fiber’s seismic performance.

This study is part of the Horizon Europe–funded SENSEI project, which aims to transform fibre-optic communication networks into distributed sensors for detecting environmental and geophysical signals, improving monitoring and early warning across Europe (Project ID 101189545).

How to cite: Caruana, D., Agius, M., Xuereb, A., Clivati, C., Donadello, S., Grixti, K., and Schulten, I.: Assessing the Seismic Sensitivity on a Submarine Optical Fiber Link between Malta and Catania (Sicily, Italy), EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18270, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18270, 2026.

EGU26-19501 | ECS | Posters on site | SM3.4

 Investigating subsea cable sensing for monitoring of marine life, detection of earthquakes and tsunamis with Research and Education network infrastructure 

Shima Ebrahimi, Layla Loffredo, Alexander van den Hil, and Richa Malhotra

Recent advances in fibre-optic sensing enable subsea telecommunication cables to function as large-scale, distributed environmental sensors. Techniques such as Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS), State of Polarisation (SOP), and interferometry transform optical fibres into continuous arrays capable of detecting seismic, acoustic, and environmental signals, offering a complementary, future-proof  approach to sparsely deployed subsea instruments. This study, conducted by SURF, the Dutch National Research and Education Network (NREN), assesses the feasibility of leveraging existing and future subsea fibre-optic network infrastructure for scientific sensing within the research ecosystem. The analysis is based on an extensive data collection effort, including 55 semi-structured interviews with international experts across geoscience, marine science, networking, and technology domains, as well as a targeted survey of research institutions, which received 20 responses from 42 invited experts. Results indicate that dry-plant sensing techniques are sufficiently mature for near-term applications, with DAS enabling kilometre-scale seismic and acoustic monitoring, while SOP and interferometry support long-range sensing over thousands of kilometres. Wet-plant approaches, including SMART cables and Fiber Bragg Grating sensors, provide high-precision measurements at extreme depths but remain limited to new cable deployments due to cost and coordination requirements. Strong alignment is observed with current needs in seismology and geophysics, particularly for offshore seismic monitoring and subsurface deformation studies, while applications in oceanography and marine biology remain exploratory. Data volume, standardisation, and real-time processing emerge as key challenges. Research networking organisations play a critical role in enabling scalable, network-centric earth and ocean observation.

How to cite: Ebrahimi, S., Loffredo, L., van den Hil, A., and Malhotra, R.:  Investigating subsea cable sensing for monitoring of marine life, detection of earthquakes and tsunamis with Research and Education network infrastructure, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19501, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19501, 2026.

EGU26-20683 | Orals | SM3.4

Distributed acoustic fibre sensing for large scientific infrastructures: ocean microseism at the European XFEL 

Celine Hadziioannou, Erik Genthe, Svea Kreutzer, Holger Schlarb, Markus Hoffmann, Oliver Gerberding, and Katharina-Sophie Isleif and the the WAVE initiative

The WAVE seismic network is a dense, multi-instrument monitoring system deployed on a scientific campus in Hamburg, Germany. It combines seismometers, geophones, and a 19 km distributed acoustic sensing fiber loop installed in existing telecommunication infrastructure. The network covers large-scale research facilities including the European X-ray Free-Electron Laser (EuXFEL) and particle accelerators at DESY. Its primary goal is to characterise natural and anthropogenic ground vibrations and to quantify how these signals couple into ultra-precise measurement infrastructures that are limited by environmental noise. Beyond local applications, WAVE serves as a testbed for fibre-optic sensing concepts relevant to fundamental physics, including seismic and strain monitoring for gravitational wave detection.

The EuXFEL is a femtosecond X-ray light source designed for ultrafast imaging and spectroscopy. Its performance depends critically on precise timing and synchronisation of the electron bunches along the linear accelerator. Measurements of bunch arrival times reveal significant noise contributions in the 0.05–0.5 Hz frequency band, with peak-to-peak timing jitter of up to 25 femtoseconds. Using distributed acoustic sensing data, we demonstrate that this jitter is largely explained by secondary ocean-generated microseism, which is identified as a significant limiting factor for stable, high-precision XFEL operation in the sub-Hz regime. 

To assess the potential for prediction and mitigation, we investigate whether ocean wave activity in the North Atlantic can be used to anticipate microseismic signals observed at the EuXFEL site. Output from the WAVEWATCH III ocean wave model is used to generate synthetic Rayleigh wave spectrograms with the WMSAN framework. These are compared to seismic observations at the EuXFEL injector. By subdividing the North Atlantic into source regions, we evaluate their relative contributions to the observed seismic wavefield. While absolute amplitude prediction remains challenging, the modelling reproduces key spectral characteristics and temporal variability.

Our results demonstrate that combining dense fibre-optic sensing with physics-based ocean wave modelling provides a framework to characterise microseismic noise and assess its limiting impact on high-precision experiments. This approach supports noise mitigation efforts at high-precision accelerator facilities and is directly relevant to future ground-based gravitational wave detectors.

How to cite: Hadziioannou, C., Genthe, E., Kreutzer, S., Schlarb, H., Hoffmann, M., Gerberding, O., and Isleif, K.-S. and the the WAVE initiative: Distributed acoustic fibre sensing for large scientific infrastructures: ocean microseism at the European XFEL, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-20683, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-20683, 2026.

EGU26-21683 | Posters on site | SM3.4

Leveraging Railway Fiber-Optic Networks with DAS: Multi-Scale Opportunities 

Pascal Edme, Daniel Bowden, Frederick Massin, Anne Obermann, sanket Bajad, John Clinton, and James Fern

Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) enables the acquisition of seismic data with unrivalled spatio-temporal resolution over very large distances. Railway fiber-optic networks, originally deployed for telecommunications, offer cost-effective opportunities to monitor and characterize the subsurface at multiple scales. Here, we present a project conducted with the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) involving the interrogation of dark fibers running along two perpendicular railway tracks, each approximately 40 km long. Data were acquired over three months using a dual-channel Sintela Onyx interrogator, with variable acquisition setups (spatial sampling, gauge length, and sampling frequency) tailored to different scientific objectives described below.

The primary objective was to assess the feasibility of using pre-existing telecommunications fibers for structural track-bed monitoring, specifically shallow subsurface Vs characterization through inversion of Rayleigh-wave dispersion curves (MASW). This requires high spatial sampling and short gauge length (3 m and 6 m, respectively) to capture short wavelengths. Several ambient noise interferometry strategies were tested, including stacking (1) all available time windows with various preprocessing schemes, (2) only time windows exhibiting strong directional wavefields, and (3) a coherent-source subsampling approach based on a Symmetric Variational Autoencoder to identify time windows contributing the most useful seismic energy. Unsurprisingly, trains constitute the most energetic and reliable seismic sources, from which dense Vs profiles can be derived, demonstrating the effectiveness of both the processing and inversion workflows.

Beyond shallow characterization, the experiment also yielded valuable data to complement dense nodal arrays deployed near Lavey-les-Bains, a site of significant geothermal interest and complex geological structure. The main objectives in this context are to (1) help characterizing the subsurface over the first kilometers, (2) investigate its relationship to geothermal circulation, (3) evaluate the joint use of dense nodal and DAS data for imaging, and (4) establish a high-quality, open-access dataset to support the development of next-generation passive imaging methodologies.

Finally, at an even larger scale, the experiment provided the opportunity to explore how DAS data can be leveraged within the operational Swiss Seismological Service (SED) network and to assess whether DAS can augment standard seismicity catalogues. Lower-resolution data (100 m spatial sampling, 200 Hz sampling frequency) were streamed and converted in real time into standard seismic formats (miniSEED and StationXML), demonstrating the feasibility of integrating DAS data into SeisComP for both automatic and manual processing.

We will present the dataset along with key results relevant to the three purposes outlined above.

We acknowledge Allianz Fahrbahn (grant agreement No. 100 072 202) for enabling this study.

How to cite: Edme, P., Bowden, D., Massin, F., Obermann, A., Bajad, S., Clinton, J., and Fern, J.: Leveraging Railway Fiber-Optic Networks with DAS: Multi-Scale Opportunities, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21683, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21683, 2026.

EGU26-3364 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.4

Large Mendocino transform fault earthquakes’ foreshock and aftershock characteristics 

Min Liu, Hui Liu, and Yen Joe Tan

Compared to continental strike-slip faults, oceanic transform faults (OTFs) are thought to mainly slip aseismically and host significantly more foreshocks likely triggered by precursory aseismic slip which enhance the mainshocks' short-term predictability. However, long-term high-resolution observational constraints remain limited. In December 2024, one of the largest ever OTF earthquakes occurred offshore California on the Mendocino OTF. Here we show that compared to similar-magnitude continental strike-slip earthquakes, this moment magnitude (Mw) 7.0 earthquake has an order of magnitude fewer aftershocks which suggests limited inter-event stress triggering. Nevertheless, the aftershock zone expanded with logarithmic time substantially beyond the mainshock's co-seismic rupture zone, hence likely reflects propagating aseismic slip transients. However, foreshock activity within the mainshock's rupture zone is limited and does not indicate any accelerating aseismic slip in the preceding 30 days. The 2016 Mw 6.6 and 1994 Mw 7.0 Mendocino OTF earthquakes share similar aftershock and foreshock characteristics. The 15 historical Mw>5.5 mainshocks also have few foreshocks on average. Our results demonstrate that low-seismic-coupling OTF segments can host aseismic slip transients triggered by earthquakes on neighboring segments while inhibiting these seismic ruptures’ propagation, and enhanced foreshock activity is not a general characteristic of OTFs despite prevalent aseismic slip.

How to cite: Liu, M., Liu, H., and Tan, Y. J.: Large Mendocino transform fault earthquakes’ foreshock and aftershock characteristics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3364, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3364, 2026.

EGU26-5817 | Posters on site | SM4.4

A Note on Empirical Scaling Laws for Tremor Swarms in Subduction Zones 

Charles Sammis and Michael Bostock

 

Tectonic tremor swarms are commonly observed at depths near the brittle-ductile transition at convergent plate boundaries. Composed of many temporally overlapping low frequency earthquakes (LFEs), these swarms extend over distances of 5 to 500 km and persist over times ranging from 1 to 1000 hours. The largest swarms have been correlated with slow slip earthquakes and we assume here that smaller swarms also serve as proxies for slow slip events. Swarms are characterized by their area A, their duration T, their scalar seismic moment 𝑀0 (and corresponding moment magnitude m), the number of their constituent LFEs 𝑁𝑒, and their along-strike propagation velocity 𝑣. These parameters have been linked in the literature by the following five scaling relations: 1) the scalar moment of a swarm is proportional to its duration, 𝑀0 ~ 𝑇,  2) the number of swarms 𝑁𝑠 follows the Gutenberg-Richter (G-R) frequency-magnitude relation, 𝑁𝑠 = 10𝑎−𝑏𝑚 with b =1, 3) the number of swarms is a power law function of their duration, 𝑁𝑠 ~ 𝑇−2/3, 4) the number of swarms is a power law function of the number of events in a swarm, 𝑁𝑠 ~ 𝑁𝑒−2/3 , and 5) the along-strike velocity of a swarm scales with its duration 𝑣 ~ 𝑇−0.8. We demonstrate here that if scaling law (1) is correct then scaling law (3) is equivalent to the G-R distribution (2) with b = 1. If the moment is proportional the number of events in the swarm, 𝑀0 ~ 𝑁𝑒, then scaling law (4) is also equivalent to the G-R distribution (2) with b = 1. Further, if 𝑑̅ ~ 𝑀01/6, as observed for repeating earthquakes on the San Andreas Fault, then scaling law (5) can be written as 𝑑̅ ~ 𝐿 where 𝑑̅ is the average displacement and L is the along-strike fault length. The relation 𝑑̅ ~ 𝐿 implies that a slow earthquake behaves more like a crack than like a self-healing slip pulse often used to describe normal earthquakes, a result that is consistent with the observation of rapid tremor reversals. Finally, the emergent relation 𝑀0 ~ 𝑁𝑒 provides a possible explanation for scaling law (1) 𝑀0 ~ 𝑇, and a fractal distribution of swarm sizes with dimension D = 1.6 leads to the observed G-R relation with b = 1. This fractal dimension characterizes the early stages of fragmentation, consistent with the idea that tremor is the seismic signature of the breakup and underplating of subducting oceanic crust.

How to cite: Sammis, C. and Bostock, M.: A Note on Empirical Scaling Laws for Tremor Swarms in Subduction Zones, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5817, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5817, 2026.

EGU26-7390 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.4

From Foreshocks to Rupture: Transient Slip Controls on Nucleation 

Barnaby Fryer, Dmitry Garagash, Mathias Lebihain, and François Passelègue

Foreshocks are occasionally detected prior to earthquakes, but their influence on rupture nucleation is still poorly understood. Standard nucleation models generally attribute earthquake initiation to slow, quasi-static slip driven by fault weakening, and often disregard impulsive precursory slip events. In contrast, we demonstrate through laboratory experiments combined with a rate-and-state, Griffith-type rupture framework that foreshocks can exert a first-order control on earthquake initiation when they occur at, or during, the nucleation phase. Our results show that foreshock-induced slip bursts impose a transient sliding velocity, denoted Vmin​, whose amplitude depends on foreshock size and systematically governs both the duration and spatial extent of nucleation. Larger foreshocks produce higher Vmin​ values and promote a rapid progression toward dynamic rupture, whereas smaller foreshocks lead to prolonged quasi-static nucleation, and sufficiently weak perturbations result in complete rupture arrest. When extrapolated to tectonic fault conditions, the framework predicts that foreshock sequences and accompanying slow slip preceding natural earthquakes obey similar scaling relationships. These findings constrain characteristic nucleation slip distances to approximately 0.3–3 mm, substantially smaller than those typically inferred for dynamic rupture. Overall, our study indicates that transient slip induced by foreshocks controls the timing, evolution, and observability of earthquake nucleation.

How to cite: Fryer, B., Garagash, D., Lebihain, M., and Passelègue, F.: From Foreshocks to Rupture: Transient Slip Controls on Nucleation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-7390, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-7390, 2026.

EGU26-9848 | Posters on site | SM4.4

Tidal sensitivity of shallow tectonic tremors in northeastern Japan 

Yishuo Zhou, Hideo Aochi, Alexandre Schubnel, Satoshi Ide, Harsha Bhat, Weifan Lu, Seiya Yano, and Ankit Gupta

Shallow tectonic tremors along the northeastern Japan subduction zone show regional differences in their spatiotemporal evolution, raising the question of whether their response to tidal stressing also varies along strike. We analyze the tremor catalogue obtained by Sagae et al. (JGR, 2025, e2025JB031348)  for the period from August 2016 to August 2024. Based on their spatial distribution, tremor activity can be divided into three major regions: the southern end of the Kuril Trench (40.8–42°N; northern region), the northern Japan Trench (38.8–40.5°N; central region), and the southern Japan Trench (35–36.8°N; southern region). Here, we investigate the tidal sensitivity of tectonic tremors in these three regions. Our statistical analysis shows that tidal sensitivity is highest in the northern area, where tremors are clustered and occur in recurrent along-strike propagating bursts. Cluster-scale analyses in this northern region indicate that tidal sensitivity increases during the later stages of tremor clusters, consistent with the characteristics reported for deep tectonic tremors. Tidal sensitivity is intermediate in the southern area, where tremors appear more scattered. In the central region, where tremor activity has declined gradually since 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake, tidal sensitivity is lowest. In this region however, tremors and fast earthquakes occur in close spatial proximity. There, we further examine the relationship between tremor activity, fast earthquakes and tidal stress to explore potential interactions between slow and fast earthquakes.

How to cite: Zhou, Y., Aochi, H., Schubnel, A., Ide, S., Bhat, H., Lu, W., Yano, S., and Gupta, A.: Tidal sensitivity of shallow tectonic tremors in northeastern Japan, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9848, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9848, 2026.

EGU26-11136 | Posters on site | SM4.4

Fault volume digital twin to reproduce the full slip spectrum, scaling and statistical laws 

Navid Kheirdast, Michelle Almakari, Carlos Villafuerte, Marion Y. Thomas, Jinhui Cheng, Ankit Gupta, and Harsha S. Bhat
Seismological and geodetic observations of fault zones reveal diverse slip dynamics, scaling, and statistical laws. Existing mechanisms explain some but not all of these behaviors. We show that incorporating an off-fault damage zone—characterized by distributed fractures surrounding a main fault—can reproduce many key features observed in seismic and geodetic data. We model a 2D shear fault zone in which off-fault cracks follow power-law size and density distributions, and are oriented either optimally or parallel to the main fault. All fractures follow rate-and-state friction with parameters enabling slip instabilities. We do not introduce spatial heterogeneities in frictional properties. Using quasi-dynamic boundary integral simulations accelerated by hierarchical matrices, we simulate slip dynamics and analyze events produced both on and off the main fault. Despite spatially uniform frictional properties, we observe a natural continuum from slow to fast ruptures, as seen in nature. Our simulations reproduce the Omori law, inverse Omori law, Gutenberg-Richter scaling, and moment-duration scaling. We observe seismicity localizing toward the main fault before nucleation of main-fault events. During slow slip events, off-fault seismicity migrates in patterns resembling fluid diffusion fronts, despite the absence of fluids. We show that tremors, Very Low Frequency Earthquakes (VLFEs), Low Frequency Earthquakes (LFEs), Slow Slip Events (SSEs), and earthquakes can all emerge naturally within this fault volume framework, making it an ideal digital twin for testing hypotheses, performing ground-truth inversions, and probing mechanical properties inaccessible with natural observations.

How to cite: Kheirdast, N., Almakari, M., Villafuerte, C., Thomas, M. Y., Cheng, J., Gupta, A., and Bhat, H. S.: Fault volume digital twin to reproduce the full slip spectrum, scaling and statistical laws, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11136, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11136, 2026.

EGU26-11501 | Posters on site | SM4.4

How predictable are laboratory earthquakes? Insights from dense fault instrumentation and graph neural networks 

Francois Passelegue, Federica Paglialunga, Quentin Bletery, Barnaby Fryer, and Feyza Arzu

Earthquake prediction remains one of the most challenging problems in Earth science. Recent advances in physics-based fault modelling, high-resolution laboratory observations, and deep-learning frameworks have opened new opportunities to assess how predictable seismic processes may be in controlled environments.

Here, we present the analysis of more than 1,000 laboratory earthquakes produced in a biaxial apparatus hosting a 400 × 100 mm PMMA fault interface, allowing two-dimensional rupture propagation analogous to natural faults. The experimental setup is instrumented with 38 strain gauges distributed within the fault interface, 20 accelerometers located along both fault surfaces, and 14 acoustic emission (AE) sensors positioned at varying distances from the fault. The experiments were conducted under constant loading rate and normal stresses ranging from 50 to 250 bar. This dense instrumentation enables us to reconstruct, for each laboratory earthquake, the nucleation location, initiation time, rupture evolution, and final event magnitude. The resulting catalog spans nearly three orders of magnitude in seismic moment (from Mw=-6.5 for small ruptures to  Mw=-3.8 for the largest events).

Building on this comprehensive dataset, we explore the potential of Graph Neural Networks to predict the spatial and temporal occurrence of laboratory seismicity. The models are trained on a subset of experiments and tested on independent experiments not included in the training phase. We focus in particular on identifying the minimal set of observational features required for successful prediction, and on assessing the level of physical complexity that machine-learning algorithms trained on homogeneous laboratory faults can capture.

How to cite: Passelegue, F., Paglialunga, F., Bletery, Q., Fryer, B., and Arzu, F.: How predictable are laboratory earthquakes? Insights from dense fault instrumentation and graph neural networks, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-11501, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-11501, 2026.

EGU26-12296 * | Posters on site | SM4.4 | Highlight

Experimental tectonic tremors triggered at subduction zone conditions  

Alexandre Schubnel, Petr Zverev, Seiya Yano, Julien Gasc, Timm John, Jorn Kummerow, Loïc Labrousse, and Satoshi Ide

The origin of tectonic tremors, low-amplitude and long-duration seismic signals, observed at depth greater than 20-30km at some of the world’s tectonic plate boundaries, remains enigmatic. Here, olivine + antigorite mineral assemblages, containing up to 75 vol.% of the hydrous bearing phase, thought as analogues for dry and water-rich subducting lithologies, were experimentally compressed along pressure-temperature (P-T) paths typical of hot subduction zones. During all experiments, ultrasonic acoustic monitoring of the compression was performed. At PT conditions below 1GPa and 500°C, earthquake-like signals were recorded, with a peak activity at 0.5GPa and 250°, ie. conditions coresponding to the base of the megathrust . Above these PT conditions, spectral analysis (corner frequency, stress drop, duration vs. moment) revealed that the recorded acoustic emissions (AE) signals shared striking similarities with natural tectonic tremors. In particular, stress drops of few kPa and linear moment release vs. duration scalings were observed. While nominally dry experiments confirmed that these tremor-like AEs originated from the viscous deformation of the dry matrix, hydrous mineral bearing experiments demonstrated that experimental tremors could be triggered in bursts at the onset of dehydration reactions, probaly via a mechanism compatible with dehydration stress transfer.

 

How to cite: Schubnel, A., Zverev, P., Yano, S., Gasc, J., John, T., Kummerow, J., Labrousse, L., and Ide, S.: Experimental tectonic tremors triggered at subduction zone conditions , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12296, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12296, 2026.

EGU26-18113 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.4

Automatic detection of atypical seismic events through machine learning models trained on modulation spectrum representations of OBS datasets 

Alexander Gillert, Jerome Lebrun, Audrey Galve, Yvonne Font, and Mireille Laigle

The Ecuadorian subduction zone is one of the few subduction zones where aseismic slip occurs in the shallow segment of the megathrust fault. This aseismic slip appears to be characterized by seismic swarms. So far, no non-volcanic tremor has been detected using classical methods. This may be partially attributed to the fact that the previous deployments were mainly on land and only sparsely offshore, away from the expected locus of potential tremors.

During the HIPER marine campaign (2022, 15/03-12/04), we deployed around 40 OBS on a 3D grid to  image the structure of the Ecuadorian subduction zone in the region of the 2016 Mw 7.8 Pedernales earthquake. 

An automatic machine-learning CNN model was developed, relying on modulation spectrum representations of the seismic signals acquired from the OBS network. This approach is rooted in the detection of typical/atypical patterns in animal vocalizations or human speech, as it has been demonstrated to be highly effective in profiling and detecting the "natural" variations from noise - how the modulation patterns (the “timbre” and “prosody”) evolve around the carrier frequency (the “pitch"). 

Thus, the representation dataset in our approach consists of streams of time-varying images 2D+t (carrier vs modulation frequencies) computed for each unidimensional directional seismic time series. This approach was tested and proved to be both discriminatory and efficient in validating the detection of tremors obtained on OBS seismic signals extracted from the SEIS-PNSN tremors dataset from the Cascadia subduction zone.

For the first time, we have recorded seismic activity on a dense offshore network over a one-month-long period, which will reveal whether tremors occurred in the region of the Pedernales earthquake, a region which is prone to aseismic and seismic slip.

How to cite: Gillert, A., Lebrun, J., Galve, A., Font, Y., and Laigle, M.: Automatic detection of atypical seismic events through machine learning models trained on modulation spectrum representations of OBS datasets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18113, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18113, 2026.

EGU26-18211 | Posters on site | SM4.4

Repeated Burst Repeating Earthquakes in North Chile.        From long waiting times for short bursts. 

Jonas Folesky, Jörn Kummerow, and Kate Chen

Repeating earthquakes are pairs or families of events that rupture an identical patch of a fault repeatedly, having recurrence times from days to several years. 
They are to be distinguished from quasi-repeaters whose source areas are non or only partly overlapping. 
We report on a particular quasi-repeater phenomenon:  repeated burst repeaters, which we call raspberry repeaters. In contrast to regular repeater series, each rupture phase consists of multiple events (the burst) rather than just one event. 
In a burst phase, multiple events occur in a cascade over a short time period followed by a notably longer waiting time. In our case the waiting time between bursts range from weeks to years, while the activity during a burst is usually smaller than six hours. We identified over 20 of such raspberry repeater series in northern Chile. 
For multiple series we relocate the events and analyze their source properties as well as their inter-event interactions in detail. We find that they neither obey a classical mainshock-aftershock pattern, nor the diffuse pattern of earthquake swarms. Interestingly, several groups show remarkably consistent repeating pattern, i.e., their sub-cluster rupture order remains similar. 
The identification and description of raspberry repeater series can improve our understanding of subduction related failure and earthquake generation mechanisms, of stress transfer and triggering processes between earthquakes. 

How to cite: Folesky, J., Kummerow, J., and Chen, K.: Repeated Burst Repeating Earthquakes in North Chile.        From long waiting times for short bursts., EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18211, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18211, 2026.

EGU26-18482 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.4

Depth-Dependent Recurrence and Slip-Rate Behavior of Repeating Earthquakes in Northern Chile 

Andrei Julian Carpio, Kate Huihsuan Chen, Wei Peng, and Jonas Folesky

Repeating earthquakes provide constraints on fault slip and loading processes along subduction zones. We analyze a comprehensive repeating earthquake catalog from northern Chile spanning more than two decades (Folesky et al., 2025), consisting of 3153 repeating earthquake sequences with magnitudes ranging from −0.3 to 4.7. These sequences cluster at two depth intervals: a shallow group (<70 km) and an intermediate-depth group (70–210 km), spanning from the plate interface to within the subducting slab.

We compare the recurrence behavior and slip-rate response of shallow and intermediate-depth repeating earthquakes. Shallow repeaters show strong sensitivity to large megathrust earthquakes. Following the 2014 Mw 8.1 Iquique earthquake, inferred slip rates accelerated to peak values of up to 51.96 cm/yr, then decayed over approximately five years to a quasi-steady level of 3.3449 cm/yr, and eventually returned toward a background rate of 0.549 cm/yr. In contrast, intermediate-depth repeating earthquakes exhibit little systematic response to large megathrust events.

Despite these contrasting responses, both shallow and intermediate-depth repeaters record comparable background slip rates of ~0.5–1.0 cm/yr. Along-strike and space–time analyses further indicate that north–south variability at intermediate depth is expressed primarily in recurrence patterns rather than in slip-rate amplitude. These results demonstrate pronounced depth-dependent differences in repeating earthquake behavior and provide new observational constraints on fault slip processes from the shallow megathrust to intermediate depths.

How to cite: Carpio, A. J., Chen, K. H., Peng, W., and Folesky, J.: Depth-Dependent Recurrence and Slip-Rate Behavior of Repeating Earthquakes in Northern Chile, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-18482, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-18482, 2026.

EGU26-19567 | ECS | Posters on site | SM4.4

Tremor-informed kinematic slip modeling of the 2009-2010 slow-slip event doublet in the Mexican subduction zone 

Zaccaria El Yousfi, Mathilde Radiguet, Baptiste Rousset, and Dimitri Zigone

Slow-slip events (SSEs) release an important part of the accumulated strain at plate boundaries and can interact with large earthquakes. It is thus crucial to analyse in detail their temporal dynamics. While GNSS observations robustly capture the cumulative, static displacements associated with SSEs, their noise level limits the temporal resolution of transient, short-timescale potential variations in slip rate. In contrast, co-occurring tectonic tremor, sampled at much finer temporal resolution, reveals pronounced short-term intermittency within SSEs. Despite this, tremor-derived temporal variability has not yet been incorporated into kinematic SSE models, leaving the short-timescale dynamics largely unresolved.

 

In the Mexican subduction zone, large SSEs persist for several months,recur every few years, and GNSS-based kinematic models resolve only first-order spatiotemporal evolution at these long timescales. Here we investigate the spatio-temporal evolution of the 2009–2010 SSE sequence in Guerrero, Mexico. This sequence is of particular interest because it consists of two distinct sub-events, with the onset of the second coinciding with the occurrence of the distant Maule earthquake. A detailed kinematic analysis of this SSE, combining geodetic observations and tremor activity, therefore provides a unique opportunity to assess the potential role of dynamic stress perturbations during large SSEs.

We construct a tremor catalog covering the SSE sequence, using the temporary mini-array seismic network GGAP and a beamforming method at the tremor frequency band.

In parallel, we use GNSS time series from the local network, to jointly analyze the SSE crustal displacement signal with the resulting tremor catalog to observe the finer dynamics of the SSE sequence.

 

We develop two kinematic slip modeling schemes based on a least-squares formulation with regularization. In the first scheme, GNSS positions on fixed time windows are inverted sequentially as independent time steps. In the second scheme, the full GNSS time series are inverted simultaneously, which improves the recovery of displacement amplitudes and allows the incorporation of tremor-derived temporal constraints. Tremor burst timings are defined based on events clustering properties, and introduced as prior information in the kinematic inversion, allowing larger slip rates during tremor dense periods.

 

Our results show that the studied 2009-2010 SSE sequence includes 7 major tremor bursts that are accompanied by a slip acceleration. In 2009, two major episodes of tremor and slow-slip occurred in the westernmost part of Guerrero. Immediately following the 2010 Maule earthquake, a persistent and energetic tremor and slip episode was triggered, extending the slipping region eastward along strike, where multiple additional tremor and slip episodes were subsequently observed.

 

Although aseismic slip releases the largest moment, the accompanying tremor provides a high-resolution temporal proxy for fault slip. This enables improved temporal resolution in kinematic SSE models, and allows the identification of short-term slip accelerations that coincide with tremor timings. The complex 2009–2010 Guerrero slow-slip and tremor sequence analyzed here highlights the sensitivity of SSE slip rates and migration to far-field dynamic stress perturbations.

 

How to cite: El Yousfi, Z., Radiguet, M., Rousset, B., and Zigone, D.: Tremor-informed kinematic slip modeling of the 2009-2010 slow-slip event doublet in the Mexican subduction zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19567, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19567, 2026.

EGU26-1247 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.4

A 2D joint inversion method for Rayleigh wave phase velocity and attenuation coefficient 

Piao Yang and Youyi Ruan

Seismic attenuation is important to understand the thermal and compositional state of the lithosphere, therefore sheds light on its deformation process. However, measuring the attenuation coefficient of seismic waves is still a challenging task because the phase and amplitude can be affected by both elastic velocity structures and anelastic attenuation, let alone these effects are coupled. Here, we developed a 2D joint inversion T-matrix method for the Rayleigh-wave phase velocity and attenuation coefficient simultaneously. Using a matrix inversion calculation to update the background medium Green functions with scattering series, the scattered wavefield can be fully represented in the frequency domain. First, the T-matrix method takes the coupling of elasticity and attenuation on waveform into consideration by joint inversion. Secondly, by calculating the anelastic scattering effects, 2D distribution can be obtained even for weak attenuation, which is a step towards 3D Q structure. Without time domain wave propagation simulations, the method is affordable in regional problems. Therefore, the method can be used to invert 2D Rayleigh wave phase velocity and attenuation coefficients.

How to cite: Yang, P. and Ruan, Y.: A 2D joint inversion method for Rayleigh wave phase velocity and attenuation coefficient, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1247, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1247, 2026.

Characterizing high-frequency (~10 Hz) seismic wave propagation is essential for understanding strong ground motions and improving seismic hazard assessment. High-frequency components are strongly influenced not only by source processes but also by small-scale heterogeneity along the propagation path. In the crust, vertical layering coexists with lateral heterogeneity, which plays a key role in controlling the propagation and attenuation of seismic waves. During propagation, seismic energy is reduced by intrinsic attenuation, in which energy is dissipated into heat and acoustic energy, and by scattering due to heterogeneity, which can produce apparent attenuation or amplification. In this study, we analyze S-wave coda from the 2016 Gyeongju earthquake using Multiple Lapse Time Window Analysis (MLTWA) to estimate the intrinsic (Qi), scattering (Qs), and total (Qt) quality factors in discrete frequency bands. Over the central frequency range of 1.5–22 Hz, the inferred Qs values range from approximately 398 to 4399, Qi from 185 to 1390, and Qt from 120 to 1041, revealing a pronounced frequency dependence of attenuation. The observed Qs–frequency relationship is then interpreted using a von Kármán autocorrelation model, yielding crustal heterogeneity parameters ε = 0.048, κ = 0.32, and a = 8.0 km. These parameters reproduce the empirical Qs curve and are used to generate random heterogeneous media for numerical simulations of high-frequency wave propagation. By integrating observation-based heterogenous crustal modeling, this study quantitatively constrains the influence of crustal heterogeneity on high-frequency seismic wave propagation and provides a physical basis for refining strong ground motion prediction models and improving the reliability of seismic hazard assessments.

How to cite: Lee, S., Cho, C. S., and Song, S. G.: High-Frequency Seismic Wave Simulations in Qs-Constrained von Kármán Random Media for the 2016 Gyeongju Earthquake, South Korea, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2494, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2494, 2026.

EGU26-2933 | Orals | SM6.4

Integrating Seismic Anisotropy, Attenuation, and Machine Learning for Advanced Subsurface Characterization 

Fateh Bouchaala, Jun Matsushima, and Guibin Zhao

Seismic anisotropy and attenuation, often quantified by the inverse of the quality factor (), are powerful, but often underexploited, indicators of fracture architecture, fluid content, and small-scale heterogeneity in the subsurface. At the same time, machine-learning (ML) methods offer flexible, data-driven mappings between seismic attributes and subsurface properties yet are not often designed to exploit seismic anisotropy and attenuation. In this contribution, an integrated workflow that combines laboratory measurements, borehole and VSP data, and surface seismic attributes with ML modelling to achieve advanced subsurface characterization in fractured carbonate systems.

Seismic waveforms collected in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates (UAE), were recorded at wide frequency range from Hertz to MHz, in the field and laboratory. The lithology of Abu Dhabi subsurface is dominated by carbonates, which are known by their high heterogeneity and multiple fracturing systems. To address the complexity caused by lithology, new methods and processing workflows have been developed and applied on the data. This includes new methods for calculating seismic attenuation from surface seismic, vertical seismic profiling (VSP), and sonic data, allowing an estimate of attenuation magnitude and its anisotropy, in addition to separating between scattering and intrinsic attenuation.

The study includes a suite of field and laboratory studies that quantify azimuthal P-wave attenuation, separate intrinsic and scattering contributions, and relate these to fracture systems and tar-mat occurrence in Abu Dhabi carbonate subsurface. These include multi-offset azimuthal VSP analyses that recover fracture strike and discriminate between open and cemented fractures using attenuation anisotropy, detailed attenuation-mode separation from VSP and sonic data, AVAz-based fracture characterization from 3D surface seismic, and ultrasonic measurements that document the sensitivity of  to petrophysical properties and saturation in carbonate core plugs. Building on this physical understanding, we extend recent work on ML-based prediction of Thomsen’s parameters from synthetic and VSP data to explicitly incorporate multi-scale attenuation attributes. Training data is generated by finite-difference modeling in anisotropic, fractured carbonate media constrained by well logs, FMI, and core information from an offshore Abu Dhabi oilfield. Input features include azimuthally dependent amplitudes of direct and reflected waves, frequency- and traveltime–derived attributes. We benchmark several ML regressors (support vector regression, extreme gradient boosting, multilayer perceptrons, and 1D convolutional neural networks) and use explainable AI tools to rank the relative importance of attenuation- versus kinematics-based features.

This study demonstrates that jointly exploiting anisotropy, attenuation, and ML substantially improves the interpretability and resolution of fracture and fluid systems in complex carbonate media. The proposed workflow is generic and can be transferred to other fractured and heterogeneous settings, offering a practical route to physics-aware, data-driven seismic characterization for reservoir development and monitoring. 

How to cite: Bouchaala, F., Matsushima, J., and Zhao, G.: Integrating Seismic Anisotropy, Attenuation, and Machine Learning for Advanced Subsurface Characterization, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2933, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2933, 2026.

EGU26-3654 | Posters on site | SM6.4

A high-resolution broadband crustal Lg attenuation model beneath Colombia and its implication for triple-junction tectonics 

Lian-Feng Zhao, Zhen Liu, Xiao-Bi Xie, Carlos A. Vargas, Baofeng Tian, and Zhen-Xing Yao

The existence of a typical triple junction in Colombia is crucial for understanding plate convergence and coupling among the South American Plate, the subducting Nazca Plate, and the Caribbean Plate. However, locating this triple junction is challenging due to complex geodynamic evolution and uncertainty in the slab boundaries. Here, we developed a high-resolution Lg-wave attenuation model for Colombia and surrounding areas to constrain crustal magmatic activity, link deep processes with surface volcanism, and identify potential slab boundaries. The area encompassing Central America, western Colombia, and Ecuador exhibits strong Lg attenuation and a concentration of volcanoes, indicating thermal anomalies in the crust. In line with the velocity structure, volcanism, seismicity, and isotopic dating, the thermal anomalies associated with the subducting Nazca and Caribbean slabs suggest the presence of three subducting slabs beneath the South American Plate, with a triple junction located at approximately 7.5°N, 77°W. This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42430306).

How to cite: Zhao, L.-F., Liu, Z., Xie, X.-B., Vargas, C. A., Tian, B., and Yao, Z.-X.: A high-resolution broadband crustal Lg attenuation model beneath Colombia and its implication for triple-junction tectonics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3654, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3654, 2026.

Anelasticity is an intrinsic property of Earth’s interior and it is closely associated with temperature, partial melt, and water content. To date, the development of seismic attenuation models has lagged behind that of velocity models, due to the difficulty in distinguishing attenuation effects from velocity heterogeneities in waveforms, as well as inconsistencies across inversion methods and their resulting attenuation structures. To address these challenges, we recently developed a novel anelastic scattering-integral-based full waveform inversion (FWI) method. Its effectiveness has been verified through numerical experiments using the Northwestern United States region as a realistic case study. Specially, the method can accurately solve 3D anelastic wave equation even in the presence of strong attenuation and computes full anelastic sensitivity kernels incorporating both effects of physical dispersion and dissipation. As an application, we utilize abundant seismic waveform data from the China National Seismic Network to establish, for the first time, a high-resolution 3D anelastic structure model of the lithosphere and asthenosphere in the eastern Tibetan Plateau. Waveform comparisons and checkerboard tests verify the reliability of the inverted model, which achieves a maximum horizontal resolution of 0.6°×0.6°and a maximum vertical resolution of 25 km. This highly accurate anelastic model provides important structural constraints for understanding the deep processes of material extrusion at the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau.

This work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42204056).

How to cite: Wang, N.: 3D anelastic full waveform inversion and its application, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4131, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4131, 2026.

EGU26-4344 | Posters on site | SM6.4

Probing Mantle Deformation beneath the Southern Granulite Terrain Using Seismic Attenuation Anisotropy 

Ritima Das, Faris Hamza, and Utpal Saikia

The Southern Granulite Terrain (SGT) in peninsular India is a high-grade metamorphic region formed by intricate Precambrian tectonic processes, serves as a natural laboratory for examining the seismic properties of solid continental lithosphere. Attenuation anisotropy shows how seismic energy loss changes with direction, giving extra information beyond just how fast seismic waves move through rock. It is particularly good at showing processes like grain-boundary relaxation, dislocation creep, and fluid assisted deformation. We have measured the shear-wave splitting parameters (, ) and attenuation anisotropy (, ) for the SKS phases recorded at 13 stations spread over the SGT using the second eigenvalue minimisation method and the instantaneous frequency matching technique, respectively. The attenuation anisotropy parameters for each station, obtained through a weighted-stacking process, vary from 0.1s to 0.85s for differential attenuation () with an average of ~0.36s and -82° to 88° for fast polarisation direction (), with the apparent fast wave () attenuating more, indicating the presence of fluid-filled fractures. Removing the attenuation effects, the station-averaged delay time () lies between 0.73s and 1.27s, with an average of ~0.99s, and fast polarisation direction () lies between -87° and 58°. We further analysed the backazimuthal dependence of the splitting parameters. The melt inclusions and the anisotropic layers beneath each station are characterised using the squirt flow model. The fractures are striking at an angle between ~49° and ~306°, and dipping at an angle between ~36° and 50°. The anisotropic layer thickness varies from 33 km to 115 km beneath the stations. Variations in attenuation anisotropy across major shear zones, like the Palghat–Cauvery and Achankovil sutures, offer important information about reactivated shear deformation, fossil lithospheric fabrics, and potential asthenospheric contributions in the SGT. This information helps to clarify the tectonothermal evolution of this ancient crustal block.

How to cite: Das, R., Hamza, F., and Saikia, U.: Probing Mantle Deformation beneath the Southern Granulite Terrain Using Seismic Attenuation Anisotropy, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4344, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4344, 2026.

EGU26-4670 | ECS | Orals | SM6.4

Crustal Lg and upper mantle Pn attenuation structure beneath the Yangtze craton and its implications for the ancient cratonic nucleus 

Lin Shen, Lian-Feng Zhao, Xu Chang, Xiao-Bi Xie, and Zhen-Xing Yao

Cratons are traditionally considered to be long-lived and stable owing to their great thickness and rigid lithospheric roots. However, increasing evidence suggests that some cratons have experienced significant lithospheric thinning and destruction. The Sichuan basin, a cratonic basin within the Yangtze Craton, is widely regarded as the cratonic nucleus owing to its long-term tectonic stability and continuous sedimentary subsidence. However, the oldest Archean basement of the Yangtze Craton, represented by the Kongling Complex, is mainly exposed in the eastern Sichuan Basin, raising the question of the spatial location of the ancient nucleus for the Yangtze Craton. Since the Mesozoic, the Yangtze Craton has been affected by the combined influences of Paleo-Pacific subduction and Cenozoic eastward extrusion of the Tibetan Plateau, and the preservation and spatial distribution of its deep lithospheric root remain poorly constrained by geophysical observations. Here, we constructed a high-resolution crustal-upper mantle attenuation model using regional Pn and Lg phases to constrain the coupling/decoupling characteristics between crust and upper mantle beneath the Yangtze Craton. The weak crustal Lg attenuation in the Sichuan Basin does not correspond to the weak Pn attenuation in the upper mantle, indicating that the lithospheric root may mechanically migrate to the eastern Sichuan Basin. The phenomenon is likely associated with the Cenozoic eastward extrusion of the Tibetan Plateau, yet the eastern Yangtze Craton appears to have undergone overall lithospheric thinning and destruction related to Mesozoic Paleo-Pacific subduction. This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42474084) and Deep Earth Probe and Mineral Resources Exploration-National Science and Technology Major Project (2025ZD1005302).

How to cite: Shen, L., Zhao, L.-F., Chang, X., Xie, X.-B., and Yao, Z.-X.: Crustal Lg and upper mantle Pn attenuation structure beneath the Yangtze craton and its implications for the ancient cratonic nucleus, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4670, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4670, 2026.

EGU26-4722 | Posters on site | SM6.4

Rayleigh-wave attenuation in the southern Korean Peninsula from Helmholtz tomography 

Seungwoo Park and Sung-Joon Chang

Seismic attenuation offers insights into subsurface material properties, which are independent of the velocity information obtained from seismic tomography. Because seismic‐wave amplitude attenuation is sensitive to several factors such as temperature, mineral grain size, partial melt, and compositional variations, quantitative attenuation analysis provides additional constraints on the thermal and rheological state of the Earth’s interior. However, compared to seismic imaging studies, attenuation characteristics of the subsurface beneath the southern Korean Peninsula remain poorly constrained. In this study, we analyze seismic waveforms recorded at approximately 40 broadband seismic stations deployed across the southern Korean Peninsula between 2009 and 2012, and derive preliminary Rayleigh-wave attenuation estimates over the period range of 20–120 s. The results show generally low attenuation at short periods (20–30 s), which are primarily sensitive to the crust and uppermost mantle, whereas relatively high attenuation is observed at longer periods (80–120 s), corresponding to asthenospheric depths. These patterns likely reflect increasing temperature and rheological heterogeneity in the upper mantle. Future work will expand station coverage and invert the attenuation measurements to construct a detailed depth‐dependent attenuation model beneath the southern Korean Peninsula.

How to cite: Park, S. and Chang, S.-J.: Rayleigh-wave attenuation in the southern Korean Peninsula from Helmholtz tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4722, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4722, 2026.

EGU26-5110 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.4

Multi-parameter seismic attenuation tomography of the Calabrian crust (Italy) using MuRAT3D 

Gaia Caporale, Mario La Rocca, Rita de Nardis, and Luca De Siena

Abstract

Seismic attenuation, controlled by scattering and intrinsic absorption processes, represents a fundamental property for investigating crustal heterogeneity, fracturing, and fluid distribution. Here we present results from 3D attenuation tomography in the Calabrian Arc (Southern Italy), based on a relocated local-earthquake dataset analyzed within the MuRAT3D framework (De Siena et al. 2014). The study relies on a dedicated dataset of ~490 local earthquakes recorded between 2016 and 2024 by integrating local and national seismic networks. Event selection was designed to ensure homogeneous spatial and depth coverage while limiting clustering effects. P- and S-wave arrivals were manually picked, and earthquakes were relocated using a combined deterministic–probabilistic approach, producing a robust dataset optimized for attenuation analysis (Schweitzer, 2001; Chiappetta and La Rocca, 2024).

MuRAT3D enables a multi-parameter characterization of seismic energy loss by exploiting different portions of the seismic waveform. Scattering is investigated through Peak Delay (PD) derived from envelope broadening, while total and intrinsic attenuation are described by the quality factors Q and Qc. Analyses were carried out at discrete frequencies (1.5, 3, 6, 12, and 18 Hz), showing that only specific frequency bands yield stable and physically consistent attenuation parameters, reflecting the validity limits of the underlying assumptions and different seismic wave propagation regimes. The resulting 3D attenuation images display coherent, laterally variable patterns, with strong contrasts between continental and offshore domains and localized anomalies related to pronounced crustal heterogeneities and possible interactions with deep structures.Ongoing analyses aim to further refine attenuation patterns and their geological interpretation.

How to cite: Caporale, G., La Rocca, M., de Nardis, R., and De Siena, L.: Multi-parameter seismic attenuation tomography of the Calabrian crust (Italy) using MuRAT3D, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5110, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5110, 2026.

EGU26-5341 | ECS | Orals | SM6.4

Pn-wave attenuation tomography in Anatolia and its implications for slab break-off, mantle upwelling, and plateau uplift 

Qing-Yang Cheng, Lian-Feng Zhao, Tuna Eken, Xiao-Bi Xie, Hong-Yi Li, and Zhen-Xing Yao

Within the collision zone between the Arabian and Eurasian plates, the Anatolian Plateau represents an early stage in the closure of the Neo-Tethys Ocean (Teknik et al., 2025). The uplift mechanism of the Anatolian Plateau remains debated, as the primary geodynamic drivers likely vary regionally. While upper-crustal shortening dominates the northern margin of Central Anatolia, slab break-off and mantle upwelling are key along the southern and interior margins (Şengör et al., 2008; Yildirim et al., 2011). These processes are not isolated but may be geodynamically linked through subsequent shifts in plate motion and mantle flow following slab break-off. The Pn wave is a seismic phase that propagates primarily within the uppermost mantle. Its attenuation characteristics serve as a proxy for physical properties such as temperature, pressure, and water content in this region. Therefore, high-resolution attenuation tomography of the uppermost mantle using Pn waves can provide key constraints on the tectonic evolution of the Anatolian Plateau. 

In this study, we collected 23,830 seismic waveform data from 853 events recorded by 717 seismic stations between July 1996 and August 2025. Using a joint inversion method (Zhao et al., 2015), we constructed a broadband (0.05 - 20.0 Hz) high-resolution (1.0  1.0) Pn-wave attenuation model for the Anatolian Plateau. A prominent high-Q region observed in the southwestern part of the study area represents the Aegean Slab while a localized high-Q zone surrounded by low-Q anomalies (at approximately 36°E, 39°N) correlates with volcanism in the Central Anatolian Plateau. This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 42430306).

How to cite: Cheng, Q.-Y., Zhao, L.-F., Eken, T., Xie, X.-B., Li, H.-Y., and Yao, Z.-X.: Pn-wave attenuation tomography in Anatolia and its implications for slab break-off, mantle upwelling, and plateau uplift, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-5341, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-5341, 2026.

Seismic attenuation provides key constraints on the thermo-mechanical state and small-scale heterogeneity of the crust, but high-frequency observations are strongly affected by the coupling between intrinsic attenuation (Qi) and scattering attenuation (Qsc). This coupling hampers conventional attenuation inversions, particularly in tectonically complex regions such as the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau. High-frequency seismic coda wave envelopes provide critical insights into the influence of attenuation structures on energy evolution and serve as an essential data source for scattering studies.  In this study, we combine unsupervised machine learning and physics-based envelope modeling to investigate crustal intrinsic and scattering attenuation across the Longmenshan Fault Zone and adjacent regions. We first apply a Conditional Variational Autoencoder (CVAE) to tens of thousands of high-frequency (2–4 Hz) P- and S-wave envelopes, including their coda, recorded by a regional seismic array. By conditioning on source–receiver distance, the CVAE suppresses geometric effects and extracts latent variables that characterize lateral and vertical variations in envelope shape. Two latent variables are sufficient to describe the dominant envelope features: the first is primarily associated with variations in P-to-S energy ratios and correlates with intrinsic attenuation, while the second reflects changes in envelope width and peak timing, consistent with scattering strength. The spatial distribution of the intrinsic-attenuation-related latent variable reveals a clear contrast between the Tibetan Plateau and the Sichuan Basin, whereas scattering-related variations are mainly controlled by local small-scale heterogeneity and show no systematic dependence on large-scale tectonic units. Guided by these results, we further perform three-dimensional high-frequency envelope modeling using radiative transport theory on ~61,000 three-component seismograms. We constructed two-layer models of intrinsic attenuation and small-scale scattering structures for the crust of Sichuan Basin and Tibetan Plateau regions, respectively. The sedimentary layer of the Sichuan Basin displays strong scattering and intrinsic attenuation, suggesting a porous, potentially fluid-rich structure, which aligns with the presence of abundant oil and gas resources. The relatively weak scattering and intrinsic attenuation in the Sichuan Basin's crust indicate its nature as an ancient, stable geological block. The lower crust of the Tibetan Plateau shows stronger intrinsic attenuation than the upper crust but significantly weaker scattering, suggesting the presence of a high-temperature, viscous flow structure in the region. The upper crust of the Tibetan Plateau exhibits significantly stronger scattering and intrinsic attenuation compared to that of the Sichuan Basin, reflecting the extensively faulted and fractured structure due to ongoing tectonic collisions.

How to cite: Zhang, B., Li, J., Ni, S., and Zhang, H.: Crustal Scattering and Intrinsic Attenuation Across the Eastern Margin of the Tibetan Plateau Revealed by High-Frequency Coda Waves, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6112, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6112, 2026.

EGU26-6591 | ECS | Orals | SM6.4

Spatiotemporal monitoring of soil moisture dynamics from Rayleigh-wave attenuation: A controlled field experiment 

Xinyu Liu, Binbin Mi, Jianghai Xia, Jianbo Guan, Jie Zhou, and Haoyuan Sun

Seismic attenuation provides a highly sensitive constraint on fluid-driven processes in the shallow subsurface. These attenuation-derived spatiotemporal insights complement conventional seismic velocity monitoring and can be used for environmental monitoring and engineered subsurface infrastructure management. In this study, we implemented time-lapse Rayleigh-wave attenuation measurements during controlled shallow water injections to quantify the coupled evolution of seismic attenuation and pore-fluid infiltration. The monitoring experiment was conducted over a 14-day period at a localized test site where two vertical wells were hydraulically connected by a permeable pipeline. The frequency-dependent Rayleigh-wave attenuation coefficients are estimated from spectral-ratio slope fitting of multichannel active-source surface-wave records. These measurements are subsequently combined with phase velocities and S- and P-wave velocities to invert for depth-dependent energy dissipation factors  and  within a layered medium. The resulting attenuation variations are interpreted as proxies for changes in fluid saturation and hydrological properties in the shallow subsurface. The attenuation images clearly delineate the boundary between the pipeline and the surrounding medium and exhibit pronounced temporal variations driven by injection-induced fluid migration. Daily time-lapse variations of attenuation over the 14-day experiment reveal frequency-dependent responses to the intermittent injection schedule, with peak values near the period of maximum injection. These patterns reflect the migration and redistribution of pore fluids within the near-surface formation. The inverted Q images further identify localized low-Q zones around the pipeline and the two wells, indicating enhanced energy dissipation associated with fluid accumulation and increasing saturation. This study establishes a powerful framework for monitoring fluid migration and its physical impacts from time-lapse seismic attenuation. Our results highlight the importance of attenuation-based imaging for advancing high-resolution characterization of near-surface hydrological and engineered subsurface environments.

How to cite: Liu, X., Mi, B., Xia, J., Guan, J., Zhou, J., and Sun, H.: Spatiotemporal monitoring of soil moisture dynamics from Rayleigh-wave attenuation: A controlled field experiment, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6591, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6591, 2026.

We estimated shear-wave splitting parameters and splitting intensity using core-refracted phases (SKS and SKKS) recorded at 90 digital broadband seismic stations across the South Indian Shield, encompassing the Western Dharwar Craton (WDC), Eastern Dharwar Craton (EDC), and Southern Granulite Terrain (SGT). Observed delay times range from 0.4 to 1.5 s, with a mean of ~0.9 s, while fast polarization directions vary from NW to NE–NNE. Although delay times show no significant variation among the three tectonic domains, fast polarization directions exhibit pronounced spatial differences. The EDC is characterized predominantly by NE–NNE orientations, the WDC by N–S to NW directions, and the SGT by a mixed pattern ranging from NW to NE. The splitting intensity varies smoothly across the region, with values ranging from 0.8 to 1.0. These observations suggest that seismic anisotropy beneath the South Indian Shield reflects a complex interplay between the Archean lithospheric architecture and subsequent domain-specific deformation driven by deep Earth processes.

How to cite: Saikia, U., Shameer, S., and Das, R.: Seismic Anisotropy and Splitting Intensity Beneath the South Indian Shield: Evidence for Archean Lithospheric Fabric and Post-Archean Deformation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6793, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6793, 2026.

EGU26-6910 | Posters on site | SM6.4

A spectral-ratio-constrained joint inversion of source parameters and attenuation 

Xu Chang, Lin Shen, and Lian-Feng Zhao

Strong trade-offs between earthquake source and attenuation term remain a major challenge in source parameters inversion and attenuation structure. Spectral ratio methods alleviate this problem by using nearby small earthquakes with highly correlated waveforms as empirical Green’s functions (EGF), thereby reducing path and site effects and enabling robust relative estimation of source parameters, particularly corner frequency. However, limited signal-to-noise ratios and spikes at high frequencies significantly affect the estimation of corner frequency. In addition, different choices of EGF may further increase the uncertainty in corner frequency estimations. To reduce the effects of high-frequency spectral instability and EGF selection on spectral ratios, we first perform single-spectrum fitting to obtain physically constrained and smoothed amplitude spectra. These fitted spectra are then used to construct spectral ratios, from which corner frequencies can be robustly estimated. The source parameters constrained by the spectral ratio analysis are then incorporated as prior information, with the introduction of controlled perturbations, a joint inversion of the source parameters (M0 and fc) and the attenuation factor t* is carried out using single spectra fitting. We applied this method to earthquakes that occurred in the southern Sichuan Basin. We applied this method to 257 earthquakes with magnitudes ≥1.5 recorded in the Weiyuan area of the southern Sichuan Basin, China, between November 2015 and November 2016. Seismic moments and corner frequencies are obtained through the combined use of spectral ratio analysis and single spectral fitting, from which stress drops are estimated assuming a circular crack model. The resulting t* measurements are subsequently used to invert for the regional attenuation structure, providing an independent evaluation for the robustness of the inferred source parameters. This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42474084).

How to cite: Chang, X., Shen, L., and Zhao, L.-F.: A spectral-ratio-constrained joint inversion of source parameters and attenuation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6910, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6910, 2026.

EGU26-8977 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.4

Quantifying attenuation and scattering in skull-like phantoms using the spectral element method 

Isha Lohan, Patrick Marty, and Andreas Fichtner

In both geophysics and medical physics, the propagation of seismic waves through highly complex, heterogeneous viscoacoustic-viscoelastic media follows the same physical principles. The attenuation of seismic waves in the Earth's heterogeneous interior is identical to the way ultrasound waves behave when passing through the human skull or bones (transcranial ultrasound).
In this work, we utilize the core concepts of wave physics and spectral element method (SEM), a well-known numerical simulation technique within geophysics that is used to study the scattering and attenuation caused by the skull during transcranial ultrasound. In the Earth, P-waves can convert to S-waves at interfaces; similarly, at the interface of the skull, ultrasound undergo mode conversions, and also generates Lamb waves, which further complicates the energy transmission. Despite the massive difference in physical scale, both medical ultrasound and geophysics involve a similar number of wavelengths between the source and receiver.

The interface between the skull and soft brain tissue creates a high impedance contrast causing most of the energy to reflect and only a small amount of energy is transmitted through skull.
3D numerical phantoms replicating skull-like properties with varying thicknesses were constructed. SEM, a high-order numerical modeling technique, is used for full waveform modeling of both elastic-acoustic and viscoacoustic-viscoelastic waves through heterogeneous media. A conformal hexahedral mesh is implemented to precisely resolve the irregular geometry of the bone. This ensures that the simulated reflections and refractions are physically accurate and thereby avoid numerical staircasing artifacts. 

The difference in the amplitude and waveform propagation is studied between the acoustic-elastic and viscoacoustic-viscoelastic mediums. Elastic modeling assumes energy is conserved, while viscoelastic modeling incorporates the quality factor (Q) to simulate intrinsic attenuation. 
Amplitude decay measures the difference between the peak pressure value of the transmitted waves. Amplitude decay and difference between wavefields are analyzed to quantify how the heterogeneous internal structure affects the wavefront, and also demonstrating that SEM, a proven geophysical method, effectively simulates and quantifies medical ultrasound wave propagation.

How to cite: Lohan, I., Marty, P., and Fichtner, A.: Quantifying attenuation and scattering in skull-like phantoms using the spectral element method, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-8977, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-8977, 2026.

EGU26-9760 | ECS | Orals | SM6.4

Ambient Noise Tomography Reveals Heterogeneous Structure of the Igneous Rocks in Hong Kong’s Upper Crust 

Zhanwen Li, Xi Wang, Xin Liu, Hongfeng Yang, and Guochun Zhao

Hong Kong, one of the most densely populated financial centers in the world, has received limited attention in subsurface structure imaging due to its tectonic quiescence. However, it sits atop the core of the Lianhuashan Fault Zone and was a center of multiple super volcanic eruptions during Yanshanian movement. The complex fault systems and widespread geothermal resources in adjacent region are legacies of these intense tectonic events. We deployed a temporary array of 13 portable seismic nodal sensors covering Hong Kong core area and recorded 21-day seismic data. Using ambient noise adjoint tomography, we imaged the upper 8 km of the crust at high resolution. Significant fault-controlled heterogeneity revealed indicates both geothermal potential and seismic hazard. A deep-seated fault beneath Lantau Island experienced intense fault dilation and volcanic activity as it served as a main magma conduit during Mesozoic. It left behind fractured felsic rocks (low velocity) and rigid mafic intrusions (high velocity), forming a potential seismogenic structure. Pronounced low-velocity anomaly beneath Tai Mo Shan may reflect geothermal activity. Combined with pervasive fracturing and abundant precipitation in Hong Kong, this suggests the presence of an uplift-driven convective geothermal system in the region.

How to cite: Li, Z., Wang, X., Liu, X., Yang, H., and Zhao, G.: Ambient Noise Tomography Reveals Heterogeneous Structure of the Igneous Rocks in Hong Kong’s Upper Crust, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9760, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9760, 2026.

EGU26-10547 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.4

Lg Wave Attenuation across the Indo-Eurasian Collision Zone 

Shirish Bose, Chandrani Singh, and Arun Singh

The collision between the Indian and Eurasian plates has resulted in one of the most tectonically active zones in the world. To characterize the crustal structure and thermal properties of the region, we present a high resolution Lg wave attenuation model along with Lg wave propagation efficiency map for the Indian Shield, the Himalayas, and the Tibetan Plateau and neighbouring areas. Using a dataset comprising more than 1,800 regional earthquakes recorded by 795 broadband seismic stations, we inverted spectral amplitudes using the least squares orthogonal factorization (LSQR) method to map the lateral variation of the Lg wave quality factor (QLg ) and its frequency dependence (η). The resulting tomographic images reveal a sharp contrast in crustal attenuation across the collision zone. The Indian Shield exhibits significant tectonic stability and low attenuation (high QLg ) along with high Lg wave propagation efficiency, consistent with the transmission of seismic energy through a rigid cratonic lithosphere. Conversely, the Tibetan Plateau is dominated by widespread high attenuation (low QLg ) and significantly reduced Lg wave propagation efficiency, with the lowest values observed beneath the Qiangtang and Songpan-Ganzi terranes. The variation in the η parameter highlights the distinction between intrinsic and scattering attenuation, correlating strongly with regional heat flow variations. We observe a clear spatial correlation between low QLg anomalies and the presence of partial melt or aqueous fluids within the Tibetan crust. These results provide new insights into the geophysical understanding of the collision zone and the geometry of the crustal structure.

How to cite: Bose, S., Singh, C., and Singh, A.: Lg Wave Attenuation across the Indo-Eurasian Collision Zone, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10547, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10547, 2026.

EGU26-12286 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.4

New Insight into the Indo-Burma Subduction Zone: Implications from Seismic Attenuation Tomography in Central Myanmar 

Yilin Feng, Yinshuang Ai, Zhuoran Zhang, Yumei He, Mingming Jiang, S. Shawn Wei, Chit Thet Mon, Myo Thant, and Kyaing Sein

Myanmar is located at the southeastern margin of the collision zone between the Indian and Eurasian plates, occupying a key position in the Eastern Himalayan Syntaxis. It serves as a natural laboratory for studying oblique subduction, accretionary orogeny, and crust-mantle dynamics. However, the complex crust-mantle kinematic decoupling mechanism in this region, as well as the control of deep slab geometry on magmatic thermal evolution, remain subjects of debate. Since seismic attenuation is highly sensitive to temperature, partial melting, and fluid content, conducting high-resolution attenuation tomography is crucial for revealing the deep physical state of materials and geodynamic processes in this area. In this study, we performed high-resolution 3-D P-wave attenuation tomography of the Myanmar Orogen using seismic data recorded by 70 stations from the China-Myanmar Geophysical Survey in the Myanmar Orogen (CMGSMO I) between June 2016 and February 2018. We utilized 2,313 seismic events obtained from a deep-learning-based catalog and extracted 14,273 high-quality P-wave t* measurements. By employing the trans-dimensional Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method, we constructed a high-precision 3-D attenuation model of the study region. The inversion results reveal two significant high-attenuation anomalies: a shallow high-attenuation zone beneath the Indo-Burma Ranges (IBR) at depths of 0–40 km, and a deep high-attenuation anomaly beneath the Central Basin at depths of 80–120 km. The shallow high-attenuation zone coincides well with low-velocity structures; we attribute this to high porosity and fluid saturation within the accretionary wedge sediments, as well as fluid overpressure and rheological weakening caused by deep metamorphic dehydration. This rheologically weak layer likely acts as a lower crustal detachment, facilitating kinematic decoupling between the upper crust and the underlying lithosphere. The deep high-attenuation anomaly reflects asthenospheric upwelling triggered by a "slab window" resulting from the tearing of the Indian Plate. The injection of high-temperature material into the mantle wedge induces partial melting and significantly enhances seismic wave attenuation.

How to cite: Feng, Y., Ai, Y., Zhang, Z., He, Y., Jiang, M., Wei, S. S., Mon, C. T., Thant, M., and Sein, K.: New Insight into the Indo-Burma Subduction Zone: Implications from Seismic Attenuation Tomography in Central Myanmar, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12286, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12286, 2026.

EGU26-13919 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.4

Attenuation Tomography Analysis in the Val d’Agri Oilfield 

Martina Avella, Luca De Siena, Alexander Garcia, and Lucia Zaccarelli

The Val d’Agri basin in southern Italy is largest onshore hydrocarbon systems in Europe and, at the same time, one of the most seismically active sedimentary basins in the Apennines. This area appears as an ideal natural laboratory for investigating how fluids, rock damage and stress interact in the shallow crust thanks to the production and fluid injection that take place in this oilfield.
We analyze a dense local earthquake dataset recorded in the Val d’Agri area using seismic attenuation tomography. Attenuation is imaged with the MuRAT workflow, a Matlab algorithm that exploits multi-frequency measurements of direct and coda-wave amplitudes to recover three-dimensional distributions of scattering and absorption. These parameters are highly sensitive to fracture density, lithology, and fluid saturation, and therefore provide a physically meaningful view of the reservoir and fault system.
The resulting attenuation volumes allow us to identify zones of strong energy loss and high heterogeneity that may correspond to highly fractured, fluid-rich areas within the sedimentary cover and along major fault systems. Such features are particularly relevant in a georesource context, as they can act both as preferential fluid pathways and as mechanically weak volumes prone to seismic activation. Results of these analyses provide new light on the internal structure of the reservoir and its surrounding fault network, while also highlighting their interaction with industrial operations.
Overall, this work demonstrates how seismic energy attenuation tomography can provide a powerful framework for imaging fluid–fault interactions in active hydrocarbon systems. The results offer new insights into the processes controlling induced and triggered seismicity in the Val d’Agri basin and contribute to the development of geophysically informed strategies for sustainable resource exploitation and seismic risk management.

How to cite: Avella, M., De Siena, L., Garcia, A., and Zaccarelli, L.: Attenuation Tomography Analysis in the Val d’Agri Oilfield, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13919, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13919, 2026.

EGU26-14980 | ECS | Orals | SM6.4

Experimental characterization of urban-like scattering and attenuation from a dense nodal array: implications for seismic ground motion 

Malcon Humberto Celorio Murillo, Philippe Guéguen, Rita Touma, and Philippe Roux

Attenuation is a fundamental process of seismic wave propagation, yet its role in site–city
interaction remains poorly constrained and rarely quantified. In particular, un- derstanding
how buildings collectively dissipate seismic energy through scattering and absorption is essential
for assessing earthquake impact in urban areas. Numerical studies have recently introduced the
concepts of urban attenuation and urban mean free path to describe these processes. However,
observational evidence based on real data is still lack- ing, leaving open questions about how
such mechanisms manifest in practice.
In this study, we address this gap using the META-FORET experiment, in which a dense
pine forest is considered as a natural analogue of an urban environment. Trees act as distributed
reso- nant scatterers, allowing us to investigate urban-like scattering and attenuation processes
under well-characterized and repeatable conditions. We analyze both ambient noise and active
shot data to extract key ground motion parameters that are directly relevant to seismic hazard
assessment, including horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratios (H/V), spatial variability of ground
motion, wave attenuation and intensity indices. Passive data reveal frequency-dependent
scattering signatures around tree resonances (20 and 50 Hz), includ- ing perturbations of H/V
curves, reduced coherence and absorption.
Active shot analyses further show a systematic reduction of Arias intensity and a strong
increase in Trifunac duration within the forest compared to the open field, especially near
resonance frequencies. These observations indicate that resonant scatterers redistribute seismic
energy, reducing direct-wave amplitudes while enhancing coda wave durations.
This study provides the first experimental quantification of urban-like scattering and
attenuation from real seismic data. By bridging fundamental wave physics and ground motion
indicators, we propose a noise-based technique to characterize seismic wave atten- uation in
urban environments.

Keywords: urban-like scattering, wavefield coherence, absorption, seismic attenuation,
spectral ratios.

How to cite: Celorio Murillo, M. H., Guéguen, P., Touma, R., and Roux, P.: Experimental characterization of urban-like scattering and attenuation from a dense nodal array: implications for seismic ground motion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-14980, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-14980, 2026.

EGU26-15304 | Posters on site | SM6.4

Attenuation Tomography of the Baihetan Reservoir: Separating Fluids from Fractures in Induced Seismicity 

Yansong Hu, Luca De Siena, Ruifeng Liu, Xinjuan He, and Lisheng Xu

Impoundment of the Baihetan Reservoir has triggered intense micro-seismicity, raising questions about the underlying hydro-mechanical drivers. While stress drop variations suggest fluid lubrication reduces effective normal stress, distinguishing fluid-saturated conduits from dry fracture networks remains challenging with traditional tomography. Standard attenuation imaging (Qt-1) inherently conflates scattering (structural heterogeneity) and intrinsic absorption (anelastic loss), obscuring the true physical state of the subsurface.

To resolve this, we apply Multi-Resolution Attenuation Tomography (MuRAT) to a dense local seismic array dataset. By utilizing Radiative Transfer Theory, we independently invert for scattering (Qsc) and absorption (Qi) attenuation coefficients. Our results reveal a distinct spatial decoupling of these mechanisms. Scattering anomalies (low-Qsc) correlate strongly with the surface traces of the Zemuhe and Xiaojiang fault zones, effectively imaging the pre-existing fracture network. In contrast, intrinsic absorption anomalies (low-Qi) are concentrated at depths of 5–10 km. These high-absorption features are spatially consistent with theoretical zones of fluid infiltration. By separating structural damage from fluid presence, we provide independent geophysical constraints that support fluid-diffusion hypotheses derived from source parameter analysis.

 

How to cite: Hu, Y., De Siena, L., Liu, R., He, X., and Xu, L.: Attenuation Tomography of the Baihetan Reservoir: Separating Fluids from Fractures in Induced Seismicity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15304, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15304, 2026.

EGU26-17001 | Orals | SM6.4

Crustal Weakening by Mantle Upwelling in Southeastern Tibetan Plateau 

Haijiang Zhang, Jiachen Wang, Zengqian Hou, Bo Xu, Hao Guo, Clifford Thurber, and Robert van der Hilst

The conspicuous eastward expansion of the Tibetan Plateau is evident and uncontroversial from geological surface expressions and remote sensing, but the mechanisms that cause it have remained enigmatic. The extrusion has been attributed to ductile deformation of a weak crust. This is consistent with the discovery of mid-lower crustal low (seismic) velocity zones (LVZs), but the cause of crustal weakness and the origin and nature of the LVZs are debated, with competing hypotheses including channel flow from central Tibet, local fluid content, and mantle-derived processes. We present a high-resolution 3D seismic attenuation (Qp) model of the crust and uppermost mantle in southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Our results reveal high-attenuation anomalies in the middle-lower crust that overlap with previously imaged LVZs but extend across the Moho into the uppermost mantle. These anomalies correlate spatially with Cenozoic magmatism, mantle-derived helium isotope signatures, Zircon Hf-isotopes, and major strike-slip faults. This suggests that the crust in southeastern Tibetan plateau is weakened from below, possibly by upwelling induced by tearing of the subducted Indian slab.

How to cite: Zhang, H., Wang, J., Hou, Z., Xu, B., Guo, H., Thurber, C., and van der Hilst, R.: Crustal Weakening by Mantle Upwelling in Southeastern Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17001, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17001, 2026.

EGU26-19330 | Posters on site | SM6.4

Magnitude and source spectra estimation using an elastic radiative transfer modelling of seismic wave-field attenuations: application to a French dataset.  

Grégoire Heller, Olivier Sèbe, Ludovic Margerin, Paola Traversa, Marie Calvet, and Jessie Mayor

Accurate magnitude estimates and reliable propagation models are essential for seismic hazard assessment. Unfortunately, the magnitudes of small earthquakes remain subject to significant uncertainties, primarily due to complex high-frequency propagation effects. Similarly, spatial variations in attenuation properties are crucial for refining ground motion models and reducing epistemic uncertainties in seismic hazard assessment. This study proposes (1) to map attenuation properties (scattering and absorption) in Metropolitan France using the radiative transfer theory of elastic waves, and (2) to simultaneously estimate source and site spectra through a generalized inversion. The recovered source spectra provide access to the moment magnitude Mw​, corner frequency fc​, and apparent stress σapp​.

We apply the entire inversion procedure to approximately 21,000 recordings from the EPOS-FR and CEA databases, including events with local magnitudes ML​ ranging from 2.0 to 5.9, and stations with hypocentral distances of less than 250 km. The estimated attenuation maps reveal strong spatial and frequency-dependent variations. Scattering dominates absorption at low frequencies (< 1 Hz), while absorption prevails at high frequencies. Strong scattering anomalies are concentrated in recent sedimentary basins at low frequencies and in deformed regions or deep sedimentary basins at medium and high frequencies. Conversely, Variscan units exhibit low scattering attenuation, especially at low frequencies. Absorption is highest in the French Alps and the western Pyrenees and lowest in the Armorican Massif. Concurrently, a catalog of 1,279 Mw​ magnitudes and 577 site terms is established for Metropolitan France. The obtained magnitudes are consistent with those in the unified Euro-Mediterranean catalog. Its comparison with the SI-Hex catalog highlights the importance for correcting the attenuation variations before extracting source parameters and especially the magnitude. The analysis of the apparent stress σapp​ reveals a moderate increase with the seismic moment M0​ (scaling exponent of 0.24±0.08), without any marked regional trend. Finally, we emphasize the importance of rigorously correcting for site effects, using reference stations on bedrock and of ensuring inter-event connectivity during the generalized inversion process through the existence of common stations across event records. The next step is to integrate this approach and related results in CEA seismic alert operational framework.

How to cite: Heller, G., Sèbe, O., Margerin, L., Traversa, P., Calvet, M., and Mayor, J.: Magnitude and source spectra estimation using an elastic radiative transfer modelling of seismic wave-field attenuations: application to a French dataset. , EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19330, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19330, 2026.

EGU26-421 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

3D Crustal Density Distribution of Northeast India from Seismically-Constrained Gravity Inversion 

Priyank Pathak, Jörg Ebbing, Peter Haas, and William Kumar Mohanty

The Northeast India is a tectonically active region situated at the complex junction of the Indian, Eurasian, and Burmese plates. This area, encompassing the eastern Himalayas, the Indo-Burmese Ranges, the Shillong Plateau, the Assam Valley and Bengal Basin, exhibits a highly heterogeneous crustal structure and composition resulting from the continental collision and ongoing subduction of the Indian plate. The objective of this study is to present the first 3D crustal density model for northeast India, obtained through a novel tesseroid-based gravity inversion that accounts for the curvature of the Earth and utilises a Gauss-Newton optimization scheme. This framework is initialised and constrained by a local seismic tomography-based 3D reference density model. The inversion employs a tesseroid mesh parameterisation, in which each density contrast of the tesseroid is solved to minimise a composite objective function that balances data misfit, depth-weighted regularization, and 3D smoothness relative to the seismic reference model. The inversion utilizes the filtered residual gravity anomaly, derived by systematically removing the upper-mantle gravitational effects from the observed Bouguer anomaly and isolating the crustal signal using third-order regional-residual separation, enabling stable recovery of short-wavelength density contrasts.
The resulting 3D crustal density structure reveals: (i) High-density material within the upper crust (~10 km) and the lower crust of the Shillong Plateau indicates the presence of basic intrusions, while the uplifted structural configuration suggests a rigid Archean-Proterozoic basement of the Shillong Plateau exhumed through pop-up tectonics. (ii) Thickened, low-density crust beneath the Eastern Himalaya and Indo-Burmese Ranges reflects ongoing Indian-plate underthrusting and subduction, supported by density gradients that dip north to ~25°N and east to ~93°E, imaging the progressive burial of the Indian crust beneath the Eastern Himalayan arc and Indo-Burmese Ranges, respectively. (iii) Pronounced low-density zones beneath the Indo-Burmese Ranges, indicative of crustal weakening and hydrated fabrics. (iv) Adjacent low-density anomalies within the upper crust of the Assam Valley and the Bengal Basin clearly image the sedimentary fill, while high density at ~25 km depth beneath the Bengal Basin is associated with the presence of oceanic crust (or continental to oceanic transition). These contrasting signatures collectively highlight strong vertical and lateral density variations across the region.
These first-order results provide new quantitative constraints on the crustal density characteristics of major tectonic features in Northeast India, significantly contributing to the understanding of the regional stress field and geodynamic setting of this seismically active region.

How to cite: Pathak, P., Ebbing, J., Haas, P., and Mohanty, W. K.: 3D Crustal Density Distribution of Northeast India from Seismically-Constrained Gravity Inversion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-421, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-421, 2026.

EGU26-769 | ECS | Orals | SM6.1

Crustal imaging of the seismic velocity structure in the Emilia region 

Majed Abyat, Debora Presti, Barbara Orecchio, Silvia Scolaro, and Cristina Totaro

The 2012 Emilia seismic sequence in the central sector of the Ferrara arc included the 20 May (Mw 6.1) and 29 May 2012 (Mw 6.0) mainshocks, followed by thousands of aftershocks, and ruptured thrust faults belonging to the Ferrara and Mirandola systems buried beneath the Po Plain (Carannante et al., 2015). Several studies have demonstrated the exceptional value of this sequence for crustal imaging: refined aftershock relocations highlighted the activation of adjacent blind thrusts and the structural complexity of the Apennines frontal belt (Govoni et al., 2014), while additional analyses revealed significant lateral heterogeneity along the Ferrara arc (Chiarabba et al., 2014). The dense permanent/temporary network deployed during the crisis produced one of the most complete seismic datasets for northern Italy.

Within this framework, we construct a new three-dimensional a-priori P-wave velocity model for the Emilia–Romagna region, spanning 10–13°E and 44–46°N and parametrised on a 15-km horizontal grid with 3-km vertical spacing. The workflow follows a multi-dataset integration strategy, in which velocity–depth functions are extracted at each node of a horizontal grid and lateral continuity is ensured through spatial smoothing. The model assimilates multiple complementary datasets: Vp control points from the 3-D Po Basin model of Molinari et al. (2015), regional geological cross-sections from the ER3D model (Klin et al., 2019) used as qualitative constraints on basin and thrust geometry, crustal and lithospheric information from published tomographic models (Di Stefano et al., 2011; De Gori et al., 2014) together with the recent adjoint tomography model of the Italian lithosphere (Im25; Magnoni et al., 2022), and structural and seismogenic constraints derived from analyses of the 2012 sequence (Govoni et al., 2014). This multi-source integration produces a geologically coherent three-dimensional starting model that better represents the strong lateral variations of the Po Plain than conventional one-dimensional or poorly constrained three-dimensional initial models.

The resulting model (the a-priori model) is employed as the initial structure for 3-D travel-time tomography, implemented through an iterative inversion approach adapted to the characteristics of the Emilia region. High-quality P- and S-wave arrival times recorded by the seismic network operating during the 2012 sequence offer favourable ray coverage especially in the upper and middle crust. This helps mitigate typical limitations introduced by sharp lateral velocity contrasts and irregular station spacing, improving the reliability and resolution of the final tomographic images.

This work contributes to refine seismic imaging and hazard assessment in the Po Plain. By demonstrating the advantages of constructing a detailed a-priori velocity model in a structurally complex region, it highlights the importance of integrating multiple geophysical datasets to obtain a stable foundation for tomographic inversion. A refined starting model enhances the ability to resolve lateral heterogeneities within the sedimentary basin and better define the geometry of deep thrust systems. The resulting framework supports future investigations of ground-motion amplification, fault interaction and crustal structure along the Apennines front in one of the most industrialised and densely populated regions of northern Italy.

How to cite: Abyat, M., Presti, D., Orecchio, B., Scolaro, S., and Totaro, C.: Crustal imaging of the seismic velocity structure in the Emilia region, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-769, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-769, 2026.

EGU26-829 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

Geoelectric Architecture of Eastern Ladakh: New Insights from Magnetotelluric Imaging Across the Trans-Himalayan Suture System 

Akashdeep Barman, Pavankumar Gayatri, Ajay Manglik, Demudu Babu Molli, Raj Sunil Kandregula, and Chakravarthi N Narasimha

The eastern Ladakh region, forming a key segment of the Trans-Himalaya, preserves the tectonic archive of the India–Eurasia collision that led to the closure of the Tethys Ocean, subduction of the Indian lithosphere, and subsequent growth of the Himalayan orogen. Despite its tectonic relevance and geothermal potential, the crustal geophysical framework of this region has remained poorly constrained. To fill this gap, we conducted detailed magnetotelluric (MT) investigations along two strategically positioned profiles: Ukdungle–Hanle–Koyul and the Tso Moriri–Pangong corridor, covering the major suture zones and associated lithotectonic units. Results from the Ukdungle–Hanle–Koyul profile delineate a steeply dipping Indus Suture Zone (ISZ), an 8–10 km thick Ladakh batholith, and a prominent ~6 km-wide conductive body at ~4 km depth beneath the Tso Moriri Crystalline (TMC) complex, with an upward extension along the ISZ. Three-dimensional modelling further reveals that these shallow conductors merge downward into a laterally extensive deep conductive zone interpreted as partial melt underlying southern Tibet and extending into eastern Ladakh. The second MT profile from the TMC complex toward the Pangong metamorphics highlights additional crustal transitions, including the shift from highly resistive Indian crust to moderately resistive crust across the ISZ, the deeper root of the Ladakh batholith at ~18–20 km, and a major 20–25 km deep conductor beneath the Shyok Suture Zone (SSZ), interpreted as a fossil magma chamber. A systematic geoelectric-strike rotation from NW–SE to E–W northward reflects the transition from Himalayan tectonics to the plateau-dominated regime of western Tibet. Together, the profiles also indicate an eastward thinning of the Ladakh batholith, refining the regional crustal architecture.
Keywords: Trans Himalaya, Tso Moriri Crystalline (TMC), Pangong metamorphics, Ladakh Batholith

How to cite: Barman, A., Gayatri, P., Manglik, A., Molli, D. B., Kandregula, R. S., and Narasimha, C. N.: Geoelectric Architecture of Eastern Ladakh: New Insights from Magnetotelluric Imaging Across the Trans-Himalayan Suture System, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-829, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-829, 2026.

EGU26-1378 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

 Crustal Structure Beneath the Carpathian–Pannonian Region Using Ambient Noise Tomography 

Hari Ram Thapa, Gordana Vlahovic, Shiba Subedi, and Lok Bijay Adhikari

The Carpathian–Pannonian Region (CPR) is one of the most seismically active areas in Central Europe, as evidenced by destructive events such as the Mw 7.7 Vrancea earthquake of 1940. Understanding the crustal structure beneath the CPR is essential for understanding earthquake processes, improving high-resolution earthquake location, and mitigating seismic hazard. In this study, we present a 3-D S-wave velocity model of the CPR obtained by jointly inverting group and phase velocity dispersion data using a trans-dimensional Bayesian approach. This method provides a more robust, well-resolved crustal and uppermost-mantle structure than previous studies relying solely on group-velocity inversion. Our results show low velocities at 5–10 km depth beneath the Pannonian Basin, and elevated velocities at ~30 km depth beneath the Great Hungarian Plain, while surrounding mountain regions exhibit relatively low velocities at ~40 km depth. Velocities become nearly uniform by a depth of 50 km. Cross-sections reveal a pronounced upper-crustal low-velocity zone beneath the basin and a mid-crustal low-velocity layer at ~20 km depth along the Tisza–Dacia profile, producing a layered geometry resembling the “crocodile” pattern reported in other tectonically complex regions. Importantly, the Moho is expressed at different S-wave velocity levels across the CPR: the 3.8 km/s isoline is close to the Moho beneath the basin, whereas the 4.2 km/s isoline better represents the deeper Moho beneath the surrounding mountains reported by previous studies (Thapa & Vlahovic, 2025). Identifying the Moho using region-appropriate Vs iso-velocity values highlights how variations in crustal composition and thermal structure influence the Moho’s seismic velocity signature. Our study provides a refined crustal framework of the CPR, providing critical constraints for understanding its tectonic evolution and improving regional seismic hazard assessment.

How to cite: Thapa, H. R., Vlahovic, G., Subedi, S., and Adhikari, L. B.:  Crustal Structure Beneath the Carpathian–Pannonian Region Using Ambient Noise Tomography, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-1378, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-1378, 2026.

EGU26-2362 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

S-wave velocity and radial anisotropy structure of the Southern Italy from probabilistic tomography inversion 

Titouan Muzellec, Clément Estève, Richard Kramer, and Götz Bokelmann

Southern Italy is a tectonically active region presenting a high seismic risk. The convergence between the African and European plates has produced intense crustal deformation, widespread active faulting zones, and a highly complex tectonic architecture. Developing 3-D seismic tomography models in such a setting is essential for improving our understanding of the crustal heterogeneity and its impact on seismic hazard. Here we measure the dispersion properties of cross-correlation functions obtained from ambient noise interferometry for 69 broadband stations for the period between 2020 to 2024. To improve the azimuthal coverage and address data gaps, we extract group velocities of surface waves from 28 regional earthquakes (M>5). We jointly invert the earthquake and ambient noise dispersion data to obtain Rayleigh and Love wave group velocity maps at periods ranging from 5 to 23 s in a probabilistic framework. We then perform 1-D depth inversions of both surface wave types to retrieve depth-dependent isotropic Voigt velocity (VVoigt) and radial anisotropy models. The resulting surface-wave group velocity distributions, together with the 3D VVoigt and shear-wave radial anisotropy models, reveal pronounced seismic signatures associated with the Lagonegro Basin unit, located between the Apennine chain and the Apulian carbonate platforms. These findings provide new constraints on the crustal structure of Southern Italy and contribute to a more refined understanding of its tectonic and seismic behavior.

How to cite: Muzellec, T., Estève, C., Kramer, R., and Bokelmann, G.: S-wave velocity and radial anisotropy structure of the Southern Italy from probabilistic tomography inversion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-2362, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-2362, 2026.

EGU26-3535 | Orals | SM6.1

The Lithosphere of the Mackenzie Mountains in northwest Canada 

Derek Schutt, Aziz Bankher, Sherif Sanusi, Naeim Mousavi, Clément Estève, Christian Schiffer, Javier Fullea, and Pascal Audet

The Mackenzie Mountains are an enigmatic mountain range in northwestern Canada.  Earthquake focal mechanisms show the mountain range is actively building, even though it is 700 km from the nearest plate boundary, and there is little deformation closer to the plate boundary.  In this study, we present new results from the region, including joint local, Pn and teleseismic P tomography, crustal thickness from the Virtual Deep Seismic Sounding method and joint ambient noise/receiver function inversion, and temperatures inferred from earthquake-based and ambient noise-based Rayleigh wave phase velocities.  We find a thin lithosphere under the Mackenzies surrounded by a thick lithosphere, suggesting that mantle viscosity variations are contributing to the ongoing deformation.  However, we also find only a small increase in crustal thickness in the area which suggests the Mackenzies have not experienced significant contraction, despite several instances of uplift since about 100 Ma.  Velocity structure shows a plume-like low velocity structure ascending under the central Mackenzies.  The nature of the plume remains a mystery, as it is continuous from the mantle into the crust, but there is no evidence of magmatism at the surface.   It may be fluids, magma that hasn’t reached the surface, or a sub-solidus thermal anomaly. 

How to cite: Schutt, D., Bankher, A., Sanusi, S., Mousavi, N., Estève, C., Schiffer, C., Fullea, J., and Audet, P.: The Lithosphere of the Mackenzie Mountains in northwest Canada, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-3535, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-3535, 2026.

Gangwon Province exhibits strong topographic relief and significant variations in Moho depth, necessitating the use of a 3D reference model for reliable crustal velocity imaging. To construct this model, we incorporated ETOPO1 topography, Moho depth estimates from receiver functions, and near-surface sedimentary layers constrained by P-wave polarization angle inversion essential for improved fitting of short-period dispersion curves. Rayleigh-wave phase and group velocities were measured from ambient-noise cross-correlation functions using data from 101 broadband seismometers and accelerometers for periods of 1–16 s. To extend sensitivity to deeper structures, we also included longer-period (10–40 s) Rayleigh-wave phase velocities derived from regional Helmholtz tomography. These three complementary datasets were jointly inverted to produce a high-resolution 3D S-wave crustal velocity model of Gangwon Province. The resulting model reveals pronounced low-velocity anomalies bounded by the Inje and Geumwang faults, suggesting the presence of compositional heterogeneity and mechanically weak zones. These results provide quantitative 3D constraints on major fault systems and crust–uppermost mantle structure in Gangwon Province.

How to cite: Kim, M., Chang, S.-J., Sohn, Y. J., and Kim, K.-H.: Joint Inversion of Rayleigh-Wave Phase/Group Velocities Using a 3D Reference Model for Crustal Velocity Structure of Gangwon Province in the Korean Peninsula, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-4724, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-4724, 2026.

We present a joint full-waveform inversion (FWI) method that integrates ambient noise, teleseismic, and local earthquake data to image lithospheric structure. Synthetic experiments demonstrate that the joint inversion outperforms inversions using individual data types by leveraging the complementary sensitivities of surface waves, body waves and scattering waves, yielding a more coherent and internally consistent multiparameter lithospheric model that includes compressional-wave velocity (Vp), shear-wave velocity (Vs), and density.

We apply the joint inversion method to investigate the lithospheric structure beneath central California, producing a new three-dimensional shear-wave velocity (Vs) model that reaches a depth of 200 km. Our final model delineates a sharp crustal interface between the Great Valley (GV) and the western Sierra Nevada Batholith (SNB), and clearly images the lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary (LAB) beneath the western coast. These large-scale structural features are in good agreement with recent receiver function and traveltime tomography studies, while our model further resolves small-scale heterogeneities that were poorly constrained in previous single-datatype inversions.

How to cite: Luo, Z. and Wang, K.: Joint Full-Waveform Inversion of Ambient Noise, Teleseismic, and Local Earthquake Data to image the Lithospheric Structure Beneath Central California, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6056, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6056, 2026.

Receiver functions derived from teleseismic events are sensitive to subsurface structural effects beneath a seismic station and are therefore useful for estimating crustal thickness. More than 300 seismometers have been installed on the Korean Peninsula since the 2016 Gyeongju earthquake (ML 5.8), the largest instrumentally recorded earthquake in the region. This monitoring environment is suitable for obtaining high-resolution estimates of Moho depth and Vp/Vs ratios, considering the spatial resolution of receiver function analysis. Receiver functions were computed from 2,361 teleseismic events (Mw 5.5–7.0; epicentral distances of 30°–90°) recorded between January 2003 and January 2024. Azimuthal corrections were applied to the receiver functions by searching for the direction that minimizes energy on the transverse component. For specific stations, temporal variations in the azimuth angle were observed. Consequently, a moving-average technique was applied, and only periods with stable azimuth angles were used for the analysis. Subsequently, the Moho depth and Vp/Vs ratio were determined at the location of the maximum stacking amplitude in the H–κ domain. For stations exhibiting double peaks in the H–κ domain, normalized receiver functions were clustered based on the sum of Euclidean distances, and the H–κ analysis was repeated. The derived Moho depths indicate that crustal thickness is thinnest (~30 km) beneath the Gyeonggi Massif and thickest (~34 km) beneath the Yeongnam Massif. In the eastern Korean Peninsula, the observed crustal thickness is inconsistent with isostatic equilibrium, suggesting the influence of dynamic-topography-related downwelling. A Moho depth exceeding 34 km is also observed in the southwestern Okcheon Belt. The Gyeonggi Massif shows the lowest Vp/Vs ratio (1.72), whereas higher values (>1.78) occur in the eastern Gyeongsang Basin and the northeastern Gyeonggi Massif. High Vp/Vs ratios are interpreted to be related to the emplacement of Cretaceous Bulguksa granites.

How to cite: Lee, D. and Kim, S.: Estimation of the high-resolution Moho discontinuity beneath the Korean peninsula by receiver function analysis, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6423, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6423, 2026.

EGU26-6605 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

Crustal Structure of the Intra-cratonic Chhattisgarh Basin and the Adjacent Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt, East-Central India 

Miss Maitreyi, Arun Singh, and Chandrani Singh

The Chhattisgarh Basin in central India is one of the largest Meso-Neoproterozoic intra-cratonic Purana basins. This basin has long been the subject of debate concerning its origin and tectonic evolution. Although its geological and depositional framework are relatively well constrained, the deep crustal architecture and present-day tectonic setting remain less understood. In this study, we employ broadband seismic data from a temporary network of 30 seismic stations deployed across Chhattisgarh Basin and the adjoining Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt (EGMB) to investigate the crustal structure beneath the Chhattisgarh Basin, adjoining Gondwana sediments, the Bastar Craton and the EGMB. Receiver function analysis yields several key observations such as (a) a thin, sharp and nearly flat Moho beneath the Chhattisgarh Basin and Bastar Craton, with an average depth of ~ 37 km and clear multiples, indicating a relatively undisturbed crustal fabric; (b) seismic images beneath the Chhattisgarh Basin do not support models of intra-cratonic rifting or foreland basin development, but instead suggest that sedimentation was possibly due to sea-level fluctuations and the progressive infilling of localized topographic depressions within the Bastar Craton; (c) the Central Indian Shear (CIS) exerts a strong influence on Moho geometry, expressed as a gentle northward dip into the Archean craton segment across the basin–craton boundary, and slightly reduced average shear-wave velocities within the basin; (d) a gradational Moho is detected beneath Gondwana sediments along the north-eastern fringe of the basin; and (e) beneath the EGMB, pronounced Moho offsets of up to ~ 5 km and an eastward dipping gradational Moho delineate significant crustal heterogeneity and bear signatures of an ancient subduction system. These findings provide new constraints on the crustal architecture of the Chhattisgarh Basin and its adjoining tectonic domains, offering valuable insights into the geodynamic processes that shaped central India’s intra-cratonic basins.

How to cite: Maitreyi, M., Singh, A., and Singh, C.: Crustal Structure of the Intra-cratonic Chhattisgarh Basin and the Adjacent Eastern Ghats Mobile Belt, East-Central India, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6605, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6605, 2026.

EGU26-9653 * | Orals | SM6.1 | Highlight

GUESS: a 3D crustal model of Central Italy for geoneutrino physics 

Virginia Strati, Lorenzo Rossi, Alberta Albertella, Mauro Buttinelli, Martina Capponi, Paolo Conti, Andrea Ermini, Francesco Emanuele Maesano, Roberta Maffucci, Fabio Mantovani, Luca Pagano, Sabah Ramouz, Kassandra Giulia Cristina Raptis, Mirko Reguzzoni, Riccardo Salvini, Daniele Sampietro, Pegah Solemani Dinani, and Mara Monica Tiberti

Geoneutrinos, electron antineutrinos produced by the radioactive decay of Uranium (U) and Thorium (Th), offer a unique real-time window into the Earth’s interior composition and radiogenic heat budget. These particles are detected by large-volume underground scintillators where cosmic ray backgrounds are minimized. However, the lack of directional sensitivity in current liquid scintillator detectors, such as Borexino (Gran Sasso massif, Italy), results in a signal degeneracy that necessitates highly accurate models of the local lithosphere to isolate the mantle contribution.

In the framework of the GUESS project (GeoneUtrinos: mESSengers of the Earth's interior), we present a high-resolution 3D geophysical model of Central Italy specifically tailored for geoneutrino signal prediction. Addressing the limitations of previous models, this work adopts a joint multi-disciplinary approach.

The "GUESS model" is computed inverting ground gravity data integrating heterogeneous datasets as prior information in a Bayesian framework. The geological and geophysical prior datasets include: 1D stratigraphic data from deep exploration wells; 2D interpreted seismic profiles and geological cross-sections; 3D passive seismic data (receiver functions) to constrain the Moho discontinuity. This probabilistic framework discretizes the crust into six lithological units, from Quaternary volcanics to the Lower Crust, and explores high-dimensional solution spaces in terms of both geometry and density distribution via simulated annealing. This methodology not only optimizes mass and volume estimates according to both gravity and geophysical data but also provides a quantification of estimation uncertainties by Monte Carlo samples. This workflow demonstrates how the integration of potential field data with seismic and geological constraints provides a robust, geodynamically realistic architecture, advancing both neutrino geoscience and our understanding of complex lithospheric structures.


This study was supported by the project GUESS (GeoneUtrinos: mESSengers of the Earth's interior) funded by European Union – NextGenerationEU, Missione 4, Componente 1(CUP: F53D23001280006).

How to cite: Strati, V., Rossi, L., Albertella, A., Buttinelli, M., Capponi, M., Conti, P., Ermini, A., Maesano, F. E., Maffucci, R., Mantovani, F., Pagano, L., Ramouz, S., Raptis, K. G. C., Reguzzoni, M., Salvini, R., Sampietro, D., Solemani Dinani, P., and Tiberti, M. M.: GUESS: a 3D crustal model of Central Italy for geoneutrino physics, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-9653, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-9653, 2026.

EGU26-10874 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

High Resolution Joint Inversion of the Greater Alpine Region using the AlpArray Seismic and Gravity Datasets 

Ariane Maharaj, György Hetényi, and Steven Roecker

The Alps is a complex and dynamic region and although it has been extensively studied and has provided crucial information in understanding orogenic processes, there is still much that is continually debated in this region, such as the interactions and variations between crustal and mantle processes and structures. The AlpArray seismic network was deployed with the intention of providing a dataset that could help resolve some of these debates. It is made up of 628 stations (352 permanent and 276 temporary) deployed across 11 countries covering the greater Alpine region. The density and spatial consistency of this network provides a unique opportunity to examine the seismicity in the Alps as well as to apply geophysical methods such as tomography to provide high resolution images of this area allowing for a better understanding of these crustal and mantle dynamics. Previous studies have used this rich dataset to implement these methods such as local earthquake tomography, ambient noise tomography and teleseismic tomography. However, none have jointly inverted local and teleseismic datasets with gravity, which is what we undertake with this research. We are in the process of creating an augmented catalogue of P and S wave arrivals using an automated algorithm called REST which has already been successfully used in another orogenic region, the Andes. This catalogue will be used in the joint inversion with previously compiled teleseismic and gravity datasets to give a comprehensive image of the subsurface structure down to mantle depths consistent with these 3 datasets.

How to cite: Maharaj, A., Hetényi, G., and Roecker, S.: High Resolution Joint Inversion of the Greater Alpine Region using the AlpArray Seismic and Gravity Datasets, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-10874, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-10874, 2026.

Joint gravity–seismic inversion is a strong approach for imaging crustal and lithospheric structure, yet its success  highly depends on the formulation of the gravimetric direct problem and the quality of input datasets. Here, we investigate how commonly used global and regional grids affect forward gravimetric modelling and the subsequent interpretation of crustal structure in complex tectonic environments.

Following the methodology of Uieda et al. (2017), we construct forward gravimetric models for the Moho depth, based on multiple datasets: SGG-UGM2 gravity measurements, CRUST1.0 crustal thickness models, GlobSed sediment grids, and Gebco bathymetry. We explore the effects of grid resolution, interpolation strategies, and reference model choices on the gravity response, highlighting their influence on the information available to joint inversion schemes.

Previous applications to passive margins provide an example for assessing robustness and sensitivity of the forward-modelling strategy. Extending the approach to a tectonically and magmatically complex region – Azores triple junction – demonstrates how variations in input datasets reveal lateral and vertical heterogeneities. Forward-model experiments indicate which features of the crust are robustly resolvable and how gravity inversion with a seismic constraint can illuminate the nature of the crust, including magmatic additions and crustal thickening.

Our results emphasize that careful selection and treatment of gravity and auxiliary datasets is crucial to maximize geological information from inversions. Explicit consideration of forward-model assumptions, grid effects, and seismic constraints enhances confidence in inferred lithospheric structures, providing a practical framework for integrating multidisciplinary geophysical data in tectonically complex regions.

In addition to regional-scale studies, this methodology can be applied in platform extension projects, providing a cost- and time-efficient preliminary assessment of extensive areas. By highlighting lateral and vertical heterogeneities and identifying zones where gravity responses are most sensitive to subsurface structure, forward-model experiments can guide the prioritization of future data acquisition. Such an approach allows for targeted deployment of more detailed seismic or geophysical surveys, reducing overall exploration effort while maximizing geological insight across large and complex tectonic domains.

How to cite: Gonçalves, S. and Roque, C.: Limitations of gravimetric forward modelling in gravity inversion with seismic constraint: lithospheric studies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-12140, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-12140, 2026.

EGU26-15602 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

Fluids Involved in the Occurrence of the 1975 Ms 7.3 Haicheng Earthquake Evidenced From Seismic Velocity Anomalies 

Junjie Hao, Haijiang Zhang, Yuqi Huang, Liang Wang, and Max Moorkamp

The 1975 Ms 7.3 Haicheng earthquake in the Liaodong Peninsula is well-known worldwide to be the first successful short-term earthquake prediction. To understand the physical basis why this earthquake can be predicted and to elucidate the detailed seismogenic structure of the Haicheng earthquake, in this study we incorporate the variation of information constraints (VI) into body-wave travel-time tomography to determine high-resolution Vp, Vs and Vp/Vs models around mainshock and aftershocks. Compared to previous tomographic methods, the VI-based method can enhance the intrinsic correlation between Vp and Vp/Vs models, thus better resolving regional geological processes and lithological compositions.

We assembled seismic arrival times recorded by permanent and temporary seismic stations in the region. Our results reveal pronounced low-velocity and high Vp/Vs anomalies in the middle to lower crust beneath the seismogenic fault, indicating a mechanically weakened zone likely associated with fluids. Seismic velocities along the fault plane further show that the mainshock nucleated within a transitional zone between brittle, competent granitic rocks featured by low Vp/Vs values and adjacent fluid-rich domains associated with high Vp/Vs values. The spatial distribution of aftershocks along the seismogenic fault shows a strong correlation with zones of high Vp/Vs anomalies. We propose that deep-sourced fluids, most likely originating from the upper mantle upwelling, migrated upward along pre-existing lithospheric-scale fault systems. This progressive fluid infiltration reduced the effective normal stress and mechanically weakened the fault zone. Under sustained tectonic loading, stress became locally concentrated on the strong blocks in the fault plane until fluid overpressure acted as an efficient trigger for rupture initiation. Before the mainshock, the infiltration of fluids can induce intensive foreshocks, which were used as precursors for the prediction of the Haicheng earthquake.

This study highlights the coupled effects of stress evolution, fluid migration, and fault structure in controlling intraplate earthquake occurrence, providing new insights into the physical mechanisms governing seismic hazard in continental interiors.

How to cite: Hao, J., Zhang, H., Huang, Y., Wang, L., and Moorkamp, M.: Fluids Involved in the Occurrence of the 1975 Ms 7.3 Haicheng Earthquake Evidenced From Seismic Velocity Anomalies, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15602, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15602, 2026.

The Changbaishan volcanic field (CVF), situated in the southeastern Central Asian Orogenic Belt, hosts a Cenozoic volcanic group including Changbaishan, Longgang, and Jingpohu volcanoes which exhibit distinct activities and surface rock compositions. To understand factors controlling their different behaviors, it is important to conduct integrated analysis of lithospheric thermal, compositional, and rheological structures. Here, we employ a probabilistic joint inversion incorporating surface heat flow, topography, geoid heights and Rayleigh wave phase and group velocity dispersion data to construct the thermal, compositional, and rheological structures of the lithosphere beneath the CVF. Joint inversion results indicate that lithospheric thickness beneath Changbaishan and Longgang volcanoes (~55 km) is significantly thinner than that beneath Jingpohu volcano (~85 km). In addition, a pronounced ~200 km wide asthenospheric thermal anomaly exists beneath the Changbaishan volcano, while it is absent beneath Longgang and Jingpohu volcanoes. Crustal compositions beneath the Changbaishan volcano are dominated by felsic rocks, while they are restricted to the lower crust beneath Jingpohu. Rheological weakening (viscosity <10²¹ Pa·s) extends from the crust to the upper mantle beneath the Changbaishan volcano, whereas the Jingpohu volcano exhibits weak zones only in the lower crust. We propose that the Changbaishan volcano retains a multilevel magmatic system linking the asthenosphere to the shallow crust, sustaining its high activity and diverse eruptive rocks. In contrast, Longgang and Jingpohu volcanoes lack sustained mantle-crust connectivity, resulting in low activity and predominantly alkali basalt eruptions.

How to cite: Zhou, W. and Zhang, H.: Thermal, compositional, and rheological structures of the lithosphere beneath the Changbaishan volcanic field and their controls on volcanic activity, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-15689, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-15689, 2026.

EGU26-17405 | ECS | Orals | SM6.1

Impact of thermal property variability and structural layering in the lower crust on the continental geotherm and heat flow estimates 

Kim Lemke, György Hetényi, Zheng Luo, Klaus Holliger, and Stefan Schmalholz

The thermal structure of the lower continental crust (LCC) is poorly constrained due to the lack of sufficient data on thermal properties, such as thermal conductivity (TC) and radiogenic heat production (A). However, this is essential for modelling the continental geotherm and heat flow as well as associated temperature-dependent processes and properties. Therefore, the few existing models that calculate the geotherm beneath the upper crustal level simplify the natural variability of TC and A of the lower crust by using averages of only few lithologies or even for an entire crustal section. Notably, individual crustal sections are defined as single thick layers, sometimes tens of km thick, which mismatch the evidence regarding the structure of the LCC. This makes heat flow and temperature calculations prone to errors and may lead to inaccurate and/or biased estimates of absolute values. A recent comprehensive study on the thermal properties of lower crustal lithologies (Lemke et al., 2026), carried out as part of the ICDP-DIVE (Drilling the Ivrea-Verbano zonE) project (Greenwood et al., 2025), fills this data gap and enables us to assess the impact of the variability of thermal properties in the LCC on geothermal and heat flow estimates.

 

To this end, we set up a 1D steady-state heat flow model of the continental crust, which is divided into an upper crust with constant properties and a lower crust with variable properties. The thermal property structure for the LCC is randomly drawn from lithology-specific A and TCdistributions (Lemke et al., 2026). Similarly, the thicknesses of the individual layers (d) are also drawn from predefined statistical distributions. Based on the available evidence, these distributions are typically Gaussian for the thermal properties (A, TC) and hyperbolic for the layer thicknesses (d), but we also test uniform distributions for these parameters. To assess the influence of the variabilities of TC, A, and d, model types are defined, for which each individual parameter as well as the combined effects of all three parameters are assessed. We compute geotherms upwards and downwards, starting with basal and surface heat flow values, respectively.  We test various lower crustal compositions: an intermediate one based on project DIVE as well as mafic and felsic endmembers. By performing numerous realisations for each model setup, the variability, as quantified by two standard deviations of temperature and heat flow is assessed.

 

The results show that the variability of thermal properties and layer thicknesses has a significant impact on temperature and heat flow. TC variability has the greatest influence on temperature uncertainties, while A variability has the greatest influence on heat flow uncertainties. Thicker layers, and layers with more widely varying thicknesses cause increasing uncertainties. The uncertainties reach ~10% for the heat flow while the temperature uncertainties are comparable to common corrections e.g. related to paleoclimatic signals. The chemical composition of the LCC determines the absolute value of the geotherm, but there is no significant impact on temperature variability. This work thus provides the basis for assessing geotherm and heat flow uncertainties in future models.

How to cite: Lemke, K., Hetényi, G., Luo, Z., Holliger, K., and Schmalholz, S.: Impact of thermal property variability and structural layering in the lower crust on the continental geotherm and heat flow estimates, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17405, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17405, 2026.

EGU26-17527 | ECS | Orals | SM6.1

Lithospheric density and thermal structure of the Tibetan Plateau 

Jiakuan Wan and Zhicai Luo

We developed a density model of the lithosphere beneath the Tibet Plateau using the joint inversion of gravity and seismic surface wave data. Based on density and seismic velocity, we revealed the lithospheric thermal structure. Simulation tests show that the lateral resolution of the density model from the joint inversion is 1°, which is higher than that from surface wave inversion. The lithospheric temperature field from the joint inversion of density and seismic velocity shows an uncertainty of ~50°C beneath the Tibetan Plateau, which is much lower than that constrained by seismic velocity alone. Our density and thermal models show that: (1) The lower crust of the Tibetan Plateau has a low density and a high temperature, indicating crustal partial melting and crustal flow. (2) The lithosphere mantle beneath the plateau shows high density and high temperature, indicating partial melting and underplating of the upper mantle. (3) Low-density anomalies appear in the lithospheric mantle of the Bangonghu-Nujiang and Longmucuo-Shuanghu sutures, consistent with low Vs anomalies, possibly caused by the hydration of peridotite in the lithospheric mantle. (4) Low-density and low-temperature anomalies are found in the lithospheric mantle beneath the Yungui Plateau, the Sichuan Basin and the Ordos Block. These anomalies are consistent with the characteristics of cratonic lithospheric mantle. 

How to cite: Wan, J. and Luo, Z.: Lithospheric density and thermal structure of the Tibetan Plateau, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-17527, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-17527, 2026.

EGU26-19008 | Posters on site | SM6.1

Imaging of Serpentinites beneath the Münchberg Massif (Germany) using Joint Gravity and Magnetic Inversion 

Peter Klitzke, Mohamed Sobh, Antonia Ruppel, Meike Bagge, Nikola Koglin, Maximilian Hasch, Rodolfo Christiansen, Hamed Fazlikhani, Jan-Felix Goldmann, Ingo Heyde, and Alexander Löwer

Serpentinisation is a water–rock reaction in ultramafic lithologies that can generate natural hydrogen and strongly modifies rock density and magnetic susceptibility. Quantifying the spatial distribution of serpentinized bodies is therefore essential for assessing the subsurface potential of natural hydrogen systems.

The Münchberg Massif (northern Bavaria, Germany) is an exhumed stack of tectonic nappes of different metamorphic grades that hosts several outcropping serpentinite bodies. This provides a rare opportunity to study serpentinisation in a setting that is typically buried at considerable crustal depths. The serpentinites are mainly exposed in the southern and southeastern part of the massif and coincide with pronounced, high-amplitude magnetic anomalies attributed to elevated magnetite contents. Despite detailed petrological and geochemical studies, the structural continuation of these bodies toward the north and northwest beneath overlying nappes remains poorly constrained.

We address this problem through joint inversion of gravity and magnetic data, exploiting the characteristic properties of reduced bulk density and elevated magnetic susceptibility in serpentinized ultramafic rocks relative to the surrounding crystalline basement. We integrate newly acquired high-resolution airborne gravity and magnetic observations with vintage seismic reflection constraints and site-specific petrophysical measurements (density and magnetic susceptibility) conducted on samples collected from surface outcrops. We used topography-aware forward modelling and wavelet compression to efficiently handle dense airborne datasets. Geological and petrophysical information is incorporated through bound/interval constraints, while seismic reflectors provide structural guidance to steer the inversion toward geologically plausible geometries and reduce non-uniqueness.

Preliminary joint inversion results of serpentinites reproduce the observed magnetic anomaly patterns consistent with outcrop-based measurements. First joint gravity–magnetic models indicate that combining density and susceptibility constraints with structural guidance from vintage seismic reflection data improves the robustness of inferred serpentinite geometries compared to magnetic-only inversions, particularly with respect to thickness distribution and subsurface continuity beneath the massif.

The Münchberg Massif thus serves as a natural test site for developing and validating geophysical workflows to characterize potential natural hydrogen systems in settings where serpentinites are concealed beneath crystalline or sedimentary cover.

How to cite: Klitzke, P., Sobh, M., Ruppel, A., Bagge, M., Koglin, N., Hasch, M., Christiansen, R., Fazlikhani, H., Goldmann, J.-F., Heyde, I., and Löwer, A.: Imaging of Serpentinites beneath the Münchberg Massif (Germany) using Joint Gravity and Magnetic Inversion, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19008, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19008, 2026.

EGU26-19424 | ECS | Orals | SM6.1

Delhi-Haridwar Ridge – from Foreland Basin to the Himalayan – an insight through Passive and Active Seismic study 

Aakash Anand, Kethavath B. Naik, and Dibakar Ghosal

The convergence of Delhi-Haridwar Ridge (DHR) plays a vital role in understanding the Delhi-Rohtak seismicity and plate segmentation along the Himalaya. The study focuses three segments adjacent to: (i)  Indo-Tibetan Suture Zone (ITSZ), (ii) Mohand anticline, (iii) Rohtak in Haryana. Near ITSZ, we have estimated Lithospheric shear-wave velocity (Vs) structure by jointly inverting receiver function, computed using earthquake data from 30 stations of Y2 network, with high-resolution group velocity dispersion data computed using ambient noise and earthquake tomography. A profile along the DHR shows the presence of high velocity material (Vs ~3.6 km/s) at ~38 km depth, with relatively steeper Main Himalayan Thrust (MHT), providing the preliminary impression of the remnants of the ridge. Downwrapping of Moho along the eastern margin of DHR provides insights on the possible segmentation in the region. For Mohand anticline, we recorded seismic ambient noise using a three-component portable seismograph (Tromino) with a natural frequency of 0.1 Hz. We conduct an HVSR (horizontal-to-vertical spectral ratio) study on the recorded data using the Nakamura Method, a technique for estimating the resonance frequency and site amplification caused by different stratigraphic units underlain by the top of the bedrock. Using nine measuring points, variable resonance frequency has been identified in the range of 0.42 to 4.8 Hz, which indicates this region is prone to site amplification as overlain by Doon fan deposits. We further invert the P-velocity (Vp), S-velocity (Vs), and density (ρ) by using Monte Carlo inversion method and identify three different stratigraphic units. The top has a thickness of 3 m with a mean Vs, Vp, and ρ of 218 m/s, 385 m/s, and 1.17 g/cm3, respectively. The second layer has a thickness of 6 m with a mean Vs, Vp, and ρ of 406 m/s, 725 m/s, and 1.7 g/cm3, respectively. The bedrock depth in this region is 127 m with a mean Vs, Vp, and ρ of 582 m/s, 1238 m/s, and 1.8 g/cm3, respectively. Further south in the Rohtak region, we have conducted an active seismic study along five profiles over the DHR with a cumulative length of ~34 km. We have applied the conventional seismic processing techniques to produce the migrated image, in which we observe the presence of structural discontinuities associated with the buried faults. The findings from this study will be essential for seismic hazard assessment and able to explain the seismicity observed in the Delhi-Rohtak region.

How to cite: Anand, A., B. Naik, K., and Ghosal, D.: Delhi-Haridwar Ridge – from Foreland Basin to the Himalayan – an insight through Passive and Active Seismic study, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-19424, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-19424, 2026.

EGU26-21032 | ECS | Posters on site | SM6.1

Sub-Basaltic Sediment Imaging with Teleseismic Earthquakes using a Transdimensional Bayesian Approach 

A Manikho Rajina and Satish Maurya

The thick Deccan Traps in the Saurashtra Peninsula pose significant challenges for sub-basaltic sediment imaging using conventional seismic methods. To offer a reliable alternative, we employed a transdimensional Bayesian joint inversion of teleseismic P-wave polarizations and receiver functions. Using Bayesian inversion, which offers greater flexibility in incorporating data variance into the objective function due to its probabilistic framework, we obtain 1-D velocity models beneath five broadband stations. The resulting 1-D shear-wave velocity models indicate sub-basaltic sediment thicknesses of ~1.3 km at KHER, 1.6 km at MANK, and 1.4 km at TANA, overlain by high-velocity shear-wave layers (Vs ~2.8–3.0 km/s) with thicknesses of ~0.7–0.9 km. In contrast, no evidence of sub-basaltic sediments was observed at SONT and MORK. The exceptionally low near-surface Vs (~0.85 km/s) and the gradual increase in Vs at SONT suggest the presence of unconsolidated thick sediments (~2.3 km) overlying high-velocity basement rocks (Vs ~3.4 km/s), likely corresponding to exposed Mesozoic formations with no indication of basaltic traps. Meanwhile, MORK exhibits relatively higher near-surface Vs (~2.2 km/s), indicating more compacted sediments with a thinner sediment layer (~0.8 km)  overlying ~1.4 km thick volcanic rocks (Vs ~3.1 km/s). This study highlights the potential of passive seismic exploration in imaging sedimentary formations hidden beneath thick volcanic rock layers, offering a cost-effective alternative to conventional geophysical methods.

How to cite: Rajina, A. M. and Maurya, S.: Sub-Basaltic Sediment Imaging with Teleseismic Earthquakes using a Transdimensional Bayesian Approach, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21032, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21032, 2026.

EGU26-21510 | ECS | Orals | SM6.1

Three-Dimensional Velocity Model Of Lake Van 

Mehveş Feyza Akkoyunlu, Bülent Kaypak, and Bülent Oruç

The Mw 7.1 earthquake east of Lake Van on 23 October 2011 triggered intense aftershock activity, with over 10,000 earthquakes recorded between 2011 and 2015. Accurate earthquake locations are essential for reliable seismological studies, and they depend on station coverage, phase-picking quality, and the use of robust velocity models. In this study, waveform data from temporary and permanent seismic networks were combined into a unified dataset. P- and S-wave phases were manually picked, and earthquakes were systematically relocated. A high-quality subset of events was used to derive a one-dimensional (1-D) velocity model, which served as the reference for three-dimensional (3-D) VP and VP/VS inversion. The resulting 3-D velocity models reveal strong lateral and vertical variations along fault zones. Near the mainshock, high- and low-velocity anomalies are observed at multiple depths and extend predominantly in east–west and NE–SW directions. These anomalies reflect the influence of the compressional tectonic regime, complex faulting, and magmatic structures in the region. Our results highlight the value of integrated earthquake relocation and 3-D velocity modeling for understanding seismicity and crustal structure in complex continental collision zones such as Lake Van. Keywords: Earthquake relocation, seismic tomography, inversion, three-dimensional velocity model, seismicity

How to cite: Akkoyunlu, M. F., Kaypak, B., and Oruç, B.: Three-Dimensional Velocity Model Of Lake Van, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21510, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21510, 2026.

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