Thin-sheet EM modelling of the Tasman Sea
G.S. Heinson and F.E.M. Lilley
Exploration Geophysics
20(2) 177 - 180
Published: 1989
Abstract
The Tasman Project of Seafloor Magnetotelluric Exploration (TPSME) took place between December 1983 and April 1984 (Filloux et al., 1985; Ferguson et al., 1985; Lilley etal., 1989). Seven magnetotelluric and two (additional) magnetometer sites spanned a range of tectonic features across the Tasman Sea. Initial analysis by Ferguson (1988) indicated large-scale three-dimensional induction effects to be present in the data. It was concluded that the most probable causes were the continental margin effect and changes in bathymetry.In the present paper, a method is presented of modelling the salt water of the Tasman Sea and adjoining oceans as a thin sheet of variable lateral conductance, which overlies a series of uniform layers representing the solid Earth. The theory and a suitable computer algorithm were developed in a group led by J. T. Weaver at the University of Victoria, B.C., Canada. Many of the features present in the TPSME data are reproduced by this method, and with a greater understanding of induction processes in the ocean which is thus obtained, it is possible to remove three-dimensional effects from observed data. The TPSME data are then solely a measure of the response of the Earth directly beneath the observing sites, and one-dimensional modelling techniques may be used to determine the conductivity structures.https://doi.org/10.1071/EG989177
© ASEG 1989