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Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey

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Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey. / Büyüksaraç, A.; Jordanova, D.; Ateş, A. et al.
In: Pure and Applied Geophysics, Vol. 162, No. 11, 30.11.2005, p. 2197-2213.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Büyüksaraç, A, Jordanova, D, Ateş, A & Karloukovski, V 2005, 'Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey', Pure and Applied Geophysics, vol. 162, no. 11, pp. 2197-2213. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00024-005-2712-9

APA

Büyüksaraç, A., Jordanova, D., Ateş, A., & Karloukovski, V. (2005). Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey. Pure and Applied Geophysics, 162(11), 2197-2213. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00024-005-2712-9

Vancouver

Büyüksaraç A, Jordanova D, Ateş A, Karloukovski V. Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey. Pure and Applied Geophysics. 2005 Nov 30;162(11):2197-2213. Epub 2005 Jul 29. doi: 10.1007/s00024-005-2712-9

Author

Büyüksaraç, A. ; Jordanova, D. ; Ateş, A. et al. / Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey. In: Pure and Applied Geophysics. 2005 ; Vol. 162, No. 11. pp. 2197-2213.

Bibtex

@article{ce90683d91b348169a829e7d259281ce,
title = "Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey",
abstract = "The Cappadocia region, located in Central Turkey, is characterized by widespread lava flows and volcanoclastic deposits dating from Miocene to Quaternary. Gravity and aeromagnetic anomalies of the region appear to present similar high and low amplitude regions, although the aeromagnetic anomalies exhibit a rather complex pattern which is thought to be caused by remanent magnetization. The low-pass filtered aeromagnetic map shows a deep-seated magnetic anomaly which may be linked to the widespread volcanic activity at the surface. The pseudogravity transformation of the upward continued anomaly has been constructed. The pseudogravity anomaly demonstrates some form of clockwise rotation. This anomaly was modelled by means of a three-dimensional method. The top and bottom of the body are at 6.3km and 11km (including the flight height) from the ground surface, respectively. This deep body is ellipsoidal and extends along an E-W direction, which is in line with the regional stress direction deduced from GPS measurements. A new mobilistic dynamo-tectonic system appears to explain the body's E-W elongation. The modelled body may be the source for the inferred geothermal energy of the region. Magnetic measurements were carried out on oriented rock samples collected from outcrops of ignimbrites and basalts, providing directions and intensities of remanent magnetization, susceptibilities and Koeningsberger (Q) ratios. Standard deviations of remanent directions of the Natural Remanent Magnetization (NRM) display a wide scatter implying unreliability of the surface data. Reduction to pole (RTP) transformation of magnetic anomalies was successful with the induced magnetization angle despite the complex pattern of magnetic anomalies.",
keywords = "Cappadocia, Central Turkey, Magnetic and gravity anomalies, Rock magnetic measurements, Three-dimensional modelling",
author = "A. B{\"u}y{\"u}ksara{\c c} and D. Jordanova and A. Ate{\c s} and V. Karloukovski",
year = "2005",
month = nov,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/s00024-005-2712-9",
language = "English",
volume = "162",
pages = "2197--2213",
journal = "Pure and Applied Geophysics",
issn = "0033-4553",
publisher = "Birkhauser Verlag Basel",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interpretation of the gravity and magnetic anomalies of the Cappadocia region, Central Turkey

AU - Büyüksaraç, A.

AU - Jordanova, D.

AU - Ateş, A.

AU - Karloukovski, V.

PY - 2005/11/30

Y1 - 2005/11/30

N2 - The Cappadocia region, located in Central Turkey, is characterized by widespread lava flows and volcanoclastic deposits dating from Miocene to Quaternary. Gravity and aeromagnetic anomalies of the region appear to present similar high and low amplitude regions, although the aeromagnetic anomalies exhibit a rather complex pattern which is thought to be caused by remanent magnetization. The low-pass filtered aeromagnetic map shows a deep-seated magnetic anomaly which may be linked to the widespread volcanic activity at the surface. The pseudogravity transformation of the upward continued anomaly has been constructed. The pseudogravity anomaly demonstrates some form of clockwise rotation. This anomaly was modelled by means of a three-dimensional method. The top and bottom of the body are at 6.3km and 11km (including the flight height) from the ground surface, respectively. This deep body is ellipsoidal and extends along an E-W direction, which is in line with the regional stress direction deduced from GPS measurements. A new mobilistic dynamo-tectonic system appears to explain the body's E-W elongation. The modelled body may be the source for the inferred geothermal energy of the region. Magnetic measurements were carried out on oriented rock samples collected from outcrops of ignimbrites and basalts, providing directions and intensities of remanent magnetization, susceptibilities and Koeningsberger (Q) ratios. Standard deviations of remanent directions of the Natural Remanent Magnetization (NRM) display a wide scatter implying unreliability of the surface data. Reduction to pole (RTP) transformation of magnetic anomalies was successful with the induced magnetization angle despite the complex pattern of magnetic anomalies.

AB - The Cappadocia region, located in Central Turkey, is characterized by widespread lava flows and volcanoclastic deposits dating from Miocene to Quaternary. Gravity and aeromagnetic anomalies of the region appear to present similar high and low amplitude regions, although the aeromagnetic anomalies exhibit a rather complex pattern which is thought to be caused by remanent magnetization. The low-pass filtered aeromagnetic map shows a deep-seated magnetic anomaly which may be linked to the widespread volcanic activity at the surface. The pseudogravity transformation of the upward continued anomaly has been constructed. The pseudogravity anomaly demonstrates some form of clockwise rotation. This anomaly was modelled by means of a three-dimensional method. The top and bottom of the body are at 6.3km and 11km (including the flight height) from the ground surface, respectively. This deep body is ellipsoidal and extends along an E-W direction, which is in line with the regional stress direction deduced from GPS measurements. A new mobilistic dynamo-tectonic system appears to explain the body's E-W elongation. The modelled body may be the source for the inferred geothermal energy of the region. Magnetic measurements were carried out on oriented rock samples collected from outcrops of ignimbrites and basalts, providing directions and intensities of remanent magnetization, susceptibilities and Koeningsberger (Q) ratios. Standard deviations of remanent directions of the Natural Remanent Magnetization (NRM) display a wide scatter implying unreliability of the surface data. Reduction to pole (RTP) transformation of magnetic anomalies was successful with the induced magnetization angle despite the complex pattern of magnetic anomalies.

KW - Cappadocia

KW - Central Turkey

KW - Magnetic and gravity anomalies

KW - Rock magnetic measurements

KW - Three-dimensional modelling

U2 - 10.1007/s00024-005-2712-9

DO - 10.1007/s00024-005-2712-9

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:25144464492

VL - 162

SP - 2197

EP - 2213

JO - Pure and Applied Geophysics

JF - Pure and Applied Geophysics

SN - 0033-4553

IS - 11

ER -