Volume 132, Issue 3 pp. 687-700

Electromagnetic induction studies in the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia

Robert Kusi

Robert Kusi

School of Earth Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide SA 5001, Australia,

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Antony White

Antony White

School of Earth Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide SA 5001, Australia,

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Graham Heinson

Graham Heinson

School of Earth Sciences, Flinders University, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide SA 5001, Australia,

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Peter Milligan

Peter Milligan

Australian Geological Survey Organisation, GPO Box 378, Canberra City ACT 2601, Australia

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First published: 08 July 2002
Citations: 1

Abstract

Magnetic field fluctuations have been recorded by an array of portable three-component magnetometers at 60 sites across the Eyre Peninsula in South Australia between December 1993 and March 1995. An additional 54 magnetometer data records, collected prior to 1989 and described by Milligan (1989) and Milligan, White & Chamalaun (1989), were included in the analysis. A major conductive feature in the crust, first noted by White & Milligan (1984) as the Eyre Peninsula Anomaly (EPA), is re-examined to assess its continuity to the north of the original arrays and to investigate its relationship with major tectonic features.

Magnetic-field time-series were converted to induction arrows in the frequency domain. These induction arrows were initially inverted using the minimum-structure 2-D Occam approach to estimate the electrical conductance of the crust. Following this, thin-sheet forward modelling was used to examine the relationship between the conductance and the dominant tectonic features. The principal results of the modelling are that a narrow conductive feature extends inland from the coast about 160 km before terminating, and the conductance is in the range 3000 to 10 000 S, which decreases inland.

A strong correlation exists between the electrical conductance of the Eyre Peninsula and Bouguer gravity anomalies, and in particular the EPA is coincident with a significant Bouguer gravity gradient. There is also good agreement between the locations of the foci of earthquakes of magnitude greater than 4.0 and the EPA. We believe that the anomaly is associated with a geological fracture in the Precambrian upper crust as a result of crustal extension prior to the rifting of Australia from Antarctica in the Jurassic (160 Ma).

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