Abstract
Within the ICDP-funded project COSC (Collisional Orogeny in the Scandinavian Caledonides), mountain building processes are investigated with the help of two ~2.5 km deep fully cored boreholes in Central Sweden. Drilled in 2014, borehole COSC-1 near Åre studied the emplacement of the high-grade metamorphic allochthons and obtained a section through the Lower Seve Nappe as well as the underlying mylonite zone. The second borehole COSC-2, drilled in 2020 near Järpen/Mörsil, focuses on defining the character and age of deformation of the underlying greenschist facies thrust-sheets, the main Caledonian décollement and the Precambrian basement.An extended walkaway VSP survey at the COSC-2 drill site was performed in September-October 2021.   This study aims to support the geological interpretation with a high-resolution 3D image of the subsurface in the direct vicinity of the borehole. This allows the determination of the origin of the basement reflections and reveals the nature of the main décollement as well as the degree of basement thrusting.  Two 2D surface seismic lines approximately perpendicular to each other (North to South, West to East) and centered around the COSC-2 drill site were acquired using single (1C) and three-component (3C) geophones at 5-30m intervals. Furthermore, the West-East line was extended by 30 geophones at 100m intervals on each line end to allow the registration of wide-angle shots. A 32 t Vibroseis source operated along both lines with source point distances of 100 m within the central part of the line and 500 m at the wide-angle stations, respectively. Ocean bottom seismometers (OBS) were deployed on the bottom of a lake north of the borehole along a ~1.5 km portion of the North-South line. An airgun source was activated on this part of the profile. Along the entire borehole down to a depth of 2.26 km a 3C geophone chain recorded the seismic wavefield from all source points with a geophone spacing of 10 m, complemented by the recording from one single zero-offset source point with a geophone spacing of 2 m.The obtained surface seismic and VSP data set exhibits exceptionally good quality and shows many pronounced and clear reflections in the raw gathers. They are observed even at the largest source-receiver offsets (~11 km) and are visible at two-way-traveltimes up to 3-4 s, corresponding to structures at a depth of approximately 11 km. We present results of the ongoing surface seismic data processing and analysis, including a P-wave velocity model obtained from first arrival traveltime tomography, an analysis of seismic anisotropy related to the geological structures in the area and a first imaging result from the surface seismic data.
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