利用剖面平衡与三维插值结构和概率建模约束褶皱-冲断带的三维几何形状

Kevin Frings, Christoph von Hagke, Florian Wellman, Elisa Heim, Miguel de la Varga, Hugo Ortner, Elco Luijendik
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摘要

定量不确定性分析、地下二维和三维建模及其可视化构成了勘探、核废料储存和地震危害评估决策的基础。横截面平衡等方法已经很好地建立起来,并产生了合理的运动学方案。然而,它们是基于有误差的地质数据,并受到人类偏见的影响。此外,运动学模型不能提供深度结构不确定性的定量测量。新的三维建模方法已经出现,使用计算插值,它较少依赖于人类的偏见。概率扩展可以量化模型结构的不确定性。然而,这些方法不能提供结构时间演化的信息。在这里,我们比较了经典的横截面平衡(2-D,运动学建模)和3-D计算建模,为在这些方法之间建立桥梁的解决方案铺平了道路。我们展示了这两种方法的优缺点,突出了概率建模可以添加定量结构不确定性信息以改善截面平衡的领域。另一方面,我们展示了概率建模仍然无法覆盖观察到的几何复杂性的地方。我们最终讨论了迭代结合方法结果的工作流如何改善结构和运动学约束。以北阿尔卑斯前陆的褶皱冲断带为例,即所谓的亚阿尔卑斯莫拉斯,重点是Hausham向斜(巴伐利亚)及其邻近地区。我们利用了这里的地层学和构造史都很受约束的事实。我们发现,向斜内的缩短自西向东逐渐增加,不受构造不确定性的影响。两个同样可行的模型可以解释这一点。首先,西部的应变被容纳在向斜下方的一个逐渐变细的三角形地带,或者第二,应变差异被容纳在更多的内部单位中。这突出了在运动学恢复中引入不确定性建模的重要性,因为它可以识别关键区域,在那里可以测试不同的假设。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Constraining the 3-D Geometry of Fold-Thrust Belts Using Section Balancing vs. 3-D Interpolative Structural and Probabilistic Modeling
Quantitative uncertainty analysis, 2-D and 3-D modeling of the subsurface, as well as their visualization form the basis for decision making in exploration, nuclear waste storage and seismic hazard assessment. Methods such as cross-section balancing are well established and yield plausible kinematic scenarios. However, they are based on geological data with errors and subject to human biases. Additionally, kinematic models do not provide a quantitative measure of the uncertainty of structures at depth. New 3-D modeling approaches have emerged that use computational interpolation, which are less dependent on human biases. Probabilistic extensions enable the quantification of uncertainties for the modeled structures. However, these approaches do not provide information on the time evolution of structures. Here, we compare classical cross-section balancing (2-D, kinematic modeling) with 3-D computational modeling to pave the way towards a solution that can bridge between these approaches. We show the strengths and weaknesses of both approaches, highlighting areas where probabilistic modeling can possibly add quantitative structural uncertainty information to improve section balancing. On the other hand, we show where probabilistic modeling still falls short of being able to cover the observed geometric complexities. We ultimately discuss how a workflow that iteratively combines results of the approaches can improve structural and kinematic constraints. As an example, we use the fold-and-thrust belt of the northern Alpine Foreland, the so-called Subalpine Molasse, focusing on the Hausham Syncline (Bavaria) and adjacent areas. We take advantage of the fact that here the stratigraphy as well as the tectonic history are well constrained. We show that shortening within the syncline progressively increases from west to east, independent from structural uncertainties. Two equally viable models can explain this. First, strain in the west is accommodated underneath the syncline in a triangle zone that progressively tapers out, or second, the strain difference is accommodated in more internal units. This highlights the importance of introducing uncertainty modeling also in kinematic restorations, as it enables identifying key regions, where different hypotheses can be tested.
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