International audienceMagma is transported in the crust by blade-like intrusions such as dykes, sills, saucers, and also collects in thicker laccoliths, lopoliths and plutons. Recently, the importance and great number of shallow (b5 km) saucer-shaped intrusions has been recognized. Lopoliths and cup-shaped intrusions have also been reported in many geological contexts. Our field observations indicate that many intrusions, especially those emplaced into breccias or fractured rocks, have bulging, lobate margins and have shear faults at their bulbous terminations. Such features suggest that magma can propagate along a self-induced shear fault rather than a hydraulic tension-fracture. To investigate this we use analogue models to explore intrus...
Felsic magma intrudes earth’s upper crust through a variety of mechanisms. Magma intrusion growth an...
A systematic view of the vast nomenclature used to describe the structures of shallow-level intrusio...
International audienceIgneous sheet intrusions, such as dykes and cone sheets, represent various geo...
International audienceMagma is transported in the crust by blade-like intrusions such as dykes, sill...
Plutons in crustal shear zones may exploit inherited structures, interfere with strain localizing or...
The geometry and distribution of planar igneous bodies (i.e. sheet intrusions), such as dykes, sills...
Tabular intrusions are common features in the Earth's brittle crust. They exhibit a broad variety of...
Sills, saucer‐shaped sills, and cone sheets are fundamental magma conduits in many sedimentary basin...
Magmatic sheet intrusions contribute significantly to the upper crustal magma transport network. The...
The mechanics of magma emplacement in the Earth's crust corresponds to the flow of a viscous fluid i...
Volcanism is a fundamental process on Earth. It is responsible for the formation of new crust, by ad...
International audienceDuring intrusion of buoyant magma into a rift zone, it is a common belief that...
International audienceSubvertical dykes and inclined cone-sheets represent the two main types of mag...
International audienceInclined cone-sheets and sub-vertical dykes constitute the two principal types...
Felsic magma intrudes earth’s upper crust through a variety of mechanisms. Magma intrusion growth an...
A systematic view of the vast nomenclature used to describe the structures of shallow-level intrusio...
International audienceIgneous sheet intrusions, such as dykes and cone sheets, represent various geo...
International audienceMagma is transported in the crust by blade-like intrusions such as dykes, sill...
Plutons in crustal shear zones may exploit inherited structures, interfere with strain localizing or...
The geometry and distribution of planar igneous bodies (i.e. sheet intrusions), such as dykes, sills...
Tabular intrusions are common features in the Earth's brittle crust. They exhibit a broad variety of...
Sills, saucer‐shaped sills, and cone sheets are fundamental magma conduits in many sedimentary basin...
Magmatic sheet intrusions contribute significantly to the upper crustal magma transport network. The...
The mechanics of magma emplacement in the Earth's crust corresponds to the flow of a viscous fluid i...
Volcanism is a fundamental process on Earth. It is responsible for the formation of new crust, by ad...
International audienceDuring intrusion of buoyant magma into a rift zone, it is a common belief that...
International audienceSubvertical dykes and inclined cone-sheets represent the two main types of mag...
International audienceInclined cone-sheets and sub-vertical dykes constitute the two principal types...
Felsic magma intrudes earth’s upper crust through a variety of mechanisms. Magma intrusion growth an...
A systematic view of the vast nomenclature used to describe the structures of shallow-level intrusio...
International audienceIgneous sheet intrusions, such as dykes and cone sheets, represent various geo...