Seismic refraction measurements along two unreversed lines
indicate that the earth's crust is 26 km thick in southeastern Alaska
and 30 km thick along the Inside Passage of British Columbia. The
crust in southeastern Alaska, north of Dixon Entrance, consists of
a layer 9 km thick with a seismic velocity...
A free-air gravity anomaly map of the area between 10°-17°N and
90°-101°W shows distinctive positive and negative anomalies which
parallel the Tehuatepec Ridge. The positive anomaly approximately
overlies the topographic expression of the ridge. On the wide continental
shelf southeast of the Gulf of Tehuantepec a positive gravity
anomaly with...
A free-air gravity anomaly map of the continental margin of
Peru between 12° and 18° S. Lat. shows a -110 to -220 mgl anomaly
associated with the Peru-Chile Trench, a -60 mgl anomaly over the
Pisco Basin on the continental shelf, and -120 mgl anomaly over the
Mollendo (or Arequipa)...
Gravity and seismic data obtained by the geophysical group at
Oregon State University on the R/V YAQUINA during 1969, 1971, and
1973 plus other available data over the area just west of Nicaragua
and Costa Rica indicate the tectonic complexity of the region. Gravity
measurements show negative free-air anomalies over...