High-resolution seismic imaging of debris-flow fans, alluvial valley fills and hosting bedrock geometry in Vinschgau/Val Venosta, Eastern Italian Alps
2018
Abstract High-resolution active-source seismic surveys target the stratigraphic and structural configuration of the mid-Venosta Valley, which hosts two mega fans located at the confluence between the Adige River and its tributaries: the Gadria-Strimm fan and the Lasa fan. We aimed at imaging with high detail: 1) the postglacial sediment accumulation within the fans, 2) the characteristics of Adige river deposits, and 3) the stratigraphic/structural relationships among fans, alluvial deposits and top of the bedrock (i.e. Otztal- Ortles-Campo Nappe units). Alluvial and debris-flow fan environments often pose significant challenges to high-resolution seismic exploration, due to the high heterogeneity and the rugged topography of the near surface. We processed our data by integrating first-arrivals refraction tomography with Common Midpoint, and Common Reflection Surface seismic reflection techniques. All methods produced complementary results which allowed us reaching a well-constrained imaging of the internal architecture of the Quaternary sedimentary cover, as well as of the geometry of the hosting bedrock surface. Our result show that the sedimentary record investigated by our profiles is nested in a strongly asymmetrical valley geometry, suggesting that the tectonic forcing associated with the contact between Otztal- Ortles-Campo Nappe units has interacted closely with fluvial and/or glacial valley incision over the past millennia. We provide also a quantitative estimation of the overall thickness of sediment accumulation in the valley and allow to evaluate the complex postglacial sediment dynamics between the Adige River and the Gadria and Lasa fans, with the Gadria system playing a dominant role in terms of sediment supply.
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