EGU21-12081, updated on 09 Jan 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12081
EGU General Assembly 2021
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Magnetotellurics in the Eger Rift: An overview of subsurface imaging of different tectonic features

Ute Weckmann1, Anna Platz1, Basel Aleid1, Gregor Willkommen1, Johannes Mair1, Radek Klanica2, Svetlana Kovacikova2, and Paula Rulff3
Ute Weckmann et al.
  • 1GFZ - German Research Centre for Geosciences, Section 2.2, Potsdam, Germany (uweck@gfz-potsdam.de)
  • 2Institute of Geophysics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic
  • 3Uppsala University, Geocentrum, Department of Earth Sciences Sweden

The Bohemian Massif represents the easternmost part of the geodynamically active European Cenozoic Rift System. This region hosts the contact between three tectonic units of the Variscan Belt, the NE-SW trending Eger Rift and the NNW-SSE striking Marianské Lázne fault. It is characterised by ongoing magmatic processes in the intra-continental lithospheric mantle, repeated earthquake swarms, extensive CO2 degassing in mineral springs and mofettes and the presence of Quaternary volcanoes. While the ICDP drilling programme utilizes information gathered within shallow boreholes in the region, we applied the Magnetotelluric (MT) method to obtain site characterizations in the vicinity of the proposed drill sites. The electrical conductivity has proven to be an important parameter to image the above-mentioned tectonic from the lower crust to the shallow subsurface as well as on a regional and a local scale. Here, we present 2D and 3D inversion models of different MT and Radio-MT (RMT) experiments to study e.g. the Hartouŝov mofette fields, the Quaternary scoria cones, the regional faults and their interplay. Thereby the experiments were designed that we can use lower frequency data from MT to support shallow 3D inversions of e.g. the scoria cones in the regions. The most prominent large-scale conductivity features map channels from the lower crust to the surface possibly forming pathways for fluids into the region of earthquake swarms, mofette fields and know spas. However, the locations of the scoria cones seem to be bound to regional fault zones.

How to cite: Weckmann, U., Platz, A., Aleid, B., Willkommen, G., Mair, J., Klanica, R., Kovacikova, S., and Rulff, P.: Magnetotellurics in the Eger Rift: An overview of subsurface imaging of different tectonic features, EGU General Assembly 2021, online, 19–30 Apr 2021, EGU21-12081, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu21-12081, 2021.

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