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Illinois State Geological Survey and Department of
Geology
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
615 East Peabody
Drive
Champaign, Illinois 61820
(J.H.M.)
Illinois State Geological Survey
615 East Peabody
Drive
Champaign, Illinois 61820
(W.J.N.)
High-resolution seismic reflection surveys document tectonic faults that
displace Pleistocene and older strata just beyond the northeast termination of
the New Madrid seismic zone, at the northernmost extent of the Mississippi
embayment. These faults, which are part of the Fluorspar Area fault complex in
southeastern Illinois, are directly in line with the northeast-trending
seismic zone. The reflection data were acquired using an elastic weight-drop
source recorded to 500 msec by a 48-geophone array (24-fold) with a 10-ft
(
3.0 m) station interval. Recognizable reflections were recorded to about
200 msec (100150 m). The effects of multiple reflections, numerous
diffractions, low apparent velocity (i.e., steeply dipping) noise, and the
relatively low-frequency content of the recorded signal provided challenges
for data processing and interpreting subtle fault offsets. Data processing
steps that were critical to the detection of faults included residual statics,
post-stack migration, deconvolution, and noise-reduction filtering. Seismic
migration was crucial for detecting and mitigating complex fault-related
diffraction patterns, which produced an apparent `folding' of reflectors on
unmigrated sections. Detected individual offsets of shallow reflectors range
from 5 to 10 m for the top of Paleozoic bedrock and younger strata. The
migrated sections generally indicate vertical to steeply dipping normal and
reverse faults, which in places outline small horsts and/or grabens. Tilting
or folding of stratal reflectors associated with faulting is also locally
observed. At one site, the observed faulting is superimposed over a prominent
antiformal structure, which may itself be a product of the Quaternary
deformation that produced the steep normal and reverse faults. Our results
suggest that faulting of the Paleozoic bedrock and younger sediments of the
northern Mississippi embayment is more pervasive and less localized than
previously thought.
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