All Stories

  1. Introduction to this special section: Critical minerals exploration
  2. Mining for net zero: The impossible task
  3. A Reduced Order Approach for Probabilistic Inversions of 3D Magnetotelluric Data II: Joint Inversion of MT and Surface‐Wave Data
  4. The nature of the southern West African craton lithosphere inferred from its electrical resistivity
  5. A pioneering geophysicist: Rosemary Hutton
  6. Structure of the Lithosphere Beneath the Barotse Basin, Western Zambia, From Magnetotelluric Data
  7. Geophysical evidence for crustal and mantle weak zones controlling intra-plate seismicity – the 2017 Botswana earthquake sequence
  8. Beyond chi-squared: Additional measures of the closeness of a model to data
  9. Southern Africa's lithosphere supports 670 m of elevation, the rest is from below the lithosphere
  10. Geomagnetically induced currents in the Irish power network during geomagnetic storms
  11. Compositional multivariate statistical analysis of thermal groundwater provenance: A hydrogeochemical case study from Ireland
  12. Extensional extrusion: Insights into south-eastward expansion of Tibetan Plateau from magnetotelluric array data
  13. 3-D multiobservable probabilistic inversion for the compositional and thermal structure of the lithosphere and upper mantle: III. Thermochemical tomography in the Western-Central U.S.
  14. The advantages of complementing MT profiles in 3-D environments with geomagnetic transfer function and interstation horizontal magnetic transfer function data: results from a synthetic case study
  15. A layer stripping approach for monitoring resistivity variations using surface magnetotelluric responses
  16. Understanding hydrothermal circulation patterns at a low-enthalpy thermal spring using audio-magnetotelluric data: A case study from Ireland
  17. Proton conduction and hydrogen diffusion in olivine: an attempt to reconcile laboratory and field observations and implications for the role of grain boundary diffusion in enhancing conductivity
  18. Constraints on the evolution of crustal flow beneath N orthern T ibet
  19. Joint inversions of three types of electromagnetic data explicitly constrained by seismic observations: results from the central Okavango Delta, Botswana
  20. Magnetotelluric array data analysis from north-west Fennoscandia
  21. Structure of the Central Altyn Tagh Fault revealed by magnetotelluric data: New insights into the structure of the northern margin of the India–Asia collision
  22. Imaging the mantle lithosphere of the Precambrian Grenville Province: large-scale electrical resistivity structures
  23. Reexamination of magnetotelluric responses and electrical anisotropy of the lithospheric mantle in the Grenville Province, Canada
  24. Lithospheric Electrical Structure across the Eastern Segment of the Altyn Tagh Fault on the Northern Margin of the Tibetan Plateau
  25. A Magnetotelluric survey of the North Perth Basin: A technical case study
  26. Integrated geophysical-petrological modeling of lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary in central Tibet using electromagnetic and seismic data
  27. Northward channel flow in northern Tibet revealed from 3D magnetotelluric modelling
  28. The Eyjafjallajokull volcanic system, Iceland: insights from electromagnetic measurements
  29. Magnetotelluric inversion based on mutual information
  30. Geoelectrical baseline model of the subsurface of the Hontomín site (Spain) for CO2 geological storage in a deep saline aquifer: A 3D magnetotelluric characterisation
  31. An audio-magnetotelluric investigation of the Otjiwarongo and Katima Mulilo regions, Namibia
  32. Implications for the lithospheric geometry of the Iapetus suture beneath Ireland based on electrical resistivity models from deep-probing magnetotellurics
  33. The electrical resistivity of Canada’s lithosphere and correlation with other parameters: contributions from Lithoprobe and other programmes
  34. Compensation of the Meyer-Neldel Compensation Law for H diffusion in minerals
  35. Three-dimensional electrical structure of the crust and upper mantle in Ordos Block and adjacent area: Evidence of regional lithospheric modification
  36. A new methodology to estimate magnetotelluric (MT) tensor relationships: Estimation of Local transfer-functIons by Combining Interstation Transfer-functions (ELICIT)
  37. Magnetotelluric investigations of the lithosphere beneath the central Rae craton, mainland Nunavut, Canada
  38. Reconciling different equations for proton conduction using the Meyer-Neldel compensation rule
  39. Crustal and lithospheric scale structures of the Precambrian Superior–Grenville margin
  40. The lithosphere–asthenosphere system beneath Ireland from integrated geophysical–petrological modeling — I: Observations, 1D and 2D hypothesis testing and modeling
  41. The lithosphere–asthenosphere system beneath Ireland from integrated geophysical–petrological modeling II: 3D thermal and compositional structure
  42. Robust magnetotelluric inversion
  43. The inability of magnetotelluric off-diagonal impedance tensor elements to sense oblique conductors in three-dimensional inversion
  44. Imaging and observing the electrical Moho
  45. A novel anisotropic inversion approach for magnetotelluric data from subsurfaces with orthogonal geoelectric strike directions
  46. Lithospheric structure of an Archean craton and adjacent mobile belt revealed from 2-D and 3-D inversion of magnetotelluric data: Example from southern Congo craton in northern Namibia
  47. Magnetotelluric 3-D inversion--a review of two successful workshops on forward and inversion code testing and comparison
  48. Tectonic model of the Limpopo belt: Constraints from magnetotelluric data
  49. Lithospheric geometry revealed by deep-probing magnetotelluric surveying, Melville Peninsula, Nunavut
  50. Magnetotelluric Soundings from the Central Rae Domain of the Churchill Province, Nunavut
  51. Comment on “Deep resistivity cross section of the intraplate Atlas Mountains (NW Africa): New evidence of anomalous mantle and related Quaternary volcanism”
  52. Crustal structure and rheology of the Longmenshan and Wenchuan Mw 7.9 earthquake epicentral area from magnetotelluric data
  53. Lithospheric structure in the Baikal-central Mongolia region from integrated geophysical-petrological inversion of surface-wave data and topographic elevation
  54. Water in cratonic lithosphere: Calibrating laboratory-determined models of electrical conductivity of mantle minerals using geophysical and petrological observations
  55. Penetration of crustal melt beyond the Kunlun Fault into northern Tibet
  56. Distortion decomposition of the magnetotelluric impedance tensors from a one-dimensional anisotropic Earth
  57. The Magnetotelluric Method
  58. Three-dimensional galvanic distortion of three-dimensional regional conductivity structures: Comment on “Three-dimensional joint inversion for magnetotelluric resistivity and static shift distributions in complex media” by Yutaka Sasaki and Max A. Meju
  59. Electrical conductivity of continental lithospheric mantle from integrated geophysical and petrological modeling: Application to the Kaapvaal Craton and Rehoboth Terrane, southern Africa
  60. Artefacts of isotropic inversion applied to magnetotelluric data from an anisotropic Earth
  61. Electrical lithosphere beneath the Kaapvaal craton, southern Africa
  62. Electrical signature of modern and ancient tectonic processes in the crust of the Atlas mountains of Morocco
  63. Joint inversion of long-period magnetotelluric data and surface-wave dispersion curves for anisotropic structure: Application to data from Central Germany
  64. Lithospheric structures and Precambrian terrane boundaries in northeastern Botswana revealed through magnetotelluric profiling as part of the Southern African Magnetotelluric Experiment
  65. Europe from the bottom up: A statistical examination of the central and northern European lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary from comparing seismological and electromagnetic observations
  66. Internal structure of the western flank of the Cumbre Vieja volcano, La Palma, Canary Islands, from land magnetotelluric imaging
  67. Joint inversion of receiver functions, surface wave dispersion, and magnetotelluric data
  68. How the crust meets the mantle: Lithoprobe perspectives on the Mohorovičić discontinuity and crust–mantle transitionThis article is one of a series of papers published in this Special Issue on the themeLithoprobe — parameters, processes, and the evolut...
  69. Conductivity structure and rheological property of lithosphere in Southern Tibet inferred from super-broadband magnetotelluric sounding
  70. Area selection for diamonds using magnetotellurics: Examples from southern Africa
  71. Lithospheric structure, evolution and diamond prospectivity of the Rehoboth Terrane and western Kaapvaal Craton, southern Africa: Constraints from broadband magnetotellurics
  72. Geoelectric structure of the northeastern Williston basin and underlying Precambrian lithosphereEarth Science Sector (ESS) Contribution 20080509.
  73. The elusive lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary (LAB) beneath cratons
  74. Velocity–conductivity relationships for mantle mineral assemblages in Archean cratonic lithosphere based on a review of laboratory data and Hashin–Shtrikman extremal bounds
  75. Lithospheric geometry of the Wopmay orogen from a Slave craton to Bear Province magnetotelluric transect
  76. Robust processing of magnetotelluric data in the AMT dead band using the continuous wavelet transform
  77. Source field effects in the auroral zone: Evidence from the Slave craton (NW Canada)
  78. Joint inversion of teleseismic receiver functions and magnetotelluric data using a genetic algorithm: Are seismic velocities and electrical conductivities compatible?
  79. TOPO-EUROPE: The geoscience of coupled deep Earth-surface processes
  80. The geometry of the Iapetus Suture Zone in central Ireland deduced from a magnetotelluric study
  81. Electromagnetic imaging of a complex ore body: 3D forward modeling, sensitivity tests, and down-mine measurements
  82. Electrical anisotropy of South African lithosphere compared with seismic anisotropy from shear-wave splitting analyses
  83. Electromagnetic interrogation of the anisotropic Earth: Looking into the Earth with polarized spectacles
  84. Crustal rheology of the Himalaya and Southern Tibet inferred from magnetotelluric data
  85. Improving Bahr's invariant parameters using the WAL approach
  86. A new methodology for the acquisition and processing of audio-magnetotelluric (AMT) data in the AMT dead band
  87. Upper mantle temperature determined from combining mineral composition, electrical conductivity laboratory studies and magnetotelluric field observations: Application to the intermontane belt, Northern Canadian Cordillera
  88. Geoelectric structure of the Proterozoic Wopmay Orogen and adjacent terranes, Northwest Territories, Canada
  89. The electrical resistivity structure of Archean to Tertiary lithosphere along 3200 km of SNORCLE profiles, northwestern Canada
  90. Central Baffin electromagnetic experiment (CBEX): Mapping the North American Central Plains (NACP) conductivity anomaly in the Canadian arctic
  91. Crustal structure of the India–Asia collision zone, southern Tibet, from INDEPTH MT investigations
  92. Preface
  93. Electrical-resistivity imaging of the central Trans-Hudson orogen
  94. Electromagnetic image of the Trans-Hudson orogen — THO94 transect
  95. Electromagnetic images of the Trans-Hudson orogen: the North American Central Plains anomaly revealed
  96. Geophysical transect across a Paleoproterozoic continent–continent collision zone: The Trans-Hudson Orogen
  97. Structure of the crust in the vicinity of the Banggong-Nujiang suture in central Tibet from INDEPTH magnetotelluric data
  98. Area selection for diamond exploration using deep-probing electromagnetic surveying
  99. Shear-wave splitting observations in the lower Great Lakes region: Evidence for regional anisotropic domains and keel-modified asthenospheric flow
  100. Lithospheric structure of the Yukon, northern Canadian Cordillera, obtained from magnetotelluric data
  101. Crustal and upper mantle structure of northern Tibet imaged with magnetotelluric data
  102. Lithospheric anisotropy structure inferred from collocated teleseismic and magnetotelluric observations: Great Slave Lake shear zone, northern Canada
  103. Precise temperature estimation in the Tibetan crust from seismic detection of the α-β quartz transition
  104. Lithospheric magnetotelluric imaging in Canada: significance to diamond exploration
  105. Lithosphere development in the Slave craton: a linked crustal and mantle perspective
  106. The Slave–Kaapvaal workshop: a tale of two cratons
  107. The electrical structure of the Slave craton
  108. Partial melt or aqueous fluid in the mid-crust of Southern Tibet? Constraints from INDEPTH magnetotelluric data
  109. Okak Bay AMT data‐set case study: Lessons in dimensionality and scale
  110. Two-dimensional interpretation of three-dimensional magnetotelluric data: an example of limitations and resolution
  111. Electromagnetic images of a strike-slip fault: The Tintina fault-Northern Canadian
  112. Atmospheric sources for audio-magnetotelluric (AMT) sounding
  113. Magnetotelluric response and geoelectric structure of the Great Slave Lake shear zone
  114. Chapter 13 Decomposition of three-dimensional magnetotelluric data
  115. Regional electrical resistivity structure of the southern Canadian Cordillera and its physical interpretation
  116. Detection of Widespread Fluids in the Tibetan Crust by Magnetotelluric Studies
  117. Multisite, multifrequency tensor decomposition of magnetotelluric data
  118. Electric lithosphere of the Slave craton
  119. Magnetotelluric and teleseismic experiments as part of the Walmsley Lake project, Northwest Territories: experimental designs and preliminary results
  120. Imaging the continental upper mantle using electromagnetic methods
  121. Tectonic evolution of the Superior Boundary Zone from coincident seismic reflection and magnetotelluric profiles
  122. Geoelectric response and crustal electrical-conductivity structure of the Flin Flon Belt, Trans-Hudson Orogen, Canada
  123. Waves of the future: Superior inferences from collocated seismic and electromagnetic experiments
  124. Spectral analyses of the KTB sonic and density logs using robust nonparametric methods
  125. Robust Processing of Magnetotelluric Data from the Allroral Zone
  126. Electrically Conductive Crust in Southern Tibet from INDEPTH Magnetotelluric Surveying
  127. Partially Molten Middle Crust Beneath Southern Tibet: Synthesis of Project INDEPTH Results
  128. Deep electrical conductivity structures of the Appalachian Orogen in the southeastern U.S.
  129. Multi‐site, multi‐frequency tensor decomposition of magnetotelluric data
  130. Coincident conductive and reflective middle and lower crust in southern British Columbia
  131. Seismic reflections and electrical conductivity: A case of Holmes's curious dog?
  132. High-resolution electromagnetic images of conducting zones in an upthrust crustal block
  133. Conductivity discontinuities in the upper mantle beneath a stable craton
  134. A quantitative methodology to extract regional magnetotelluric impedances and determine the dimension of the conductivity structure
  135. Electromagnetic images of a volcanic zone
  136. Orthogonality in CSAMT and MT measurements
  137. Strike-angle determination from the magnetotelluric impedance tensor in the presence of noise and local distortion: rotate at your peril!
  138. Electromagnetic images of modern and ancient subduction zones
  139. North American Central Plains conductivity anomaly within the Trans-Hudson orogen in northern Saskatchewan, Canada
  140. Trans-Hudson orogen and Williston basin in Montana and North Dakota: New COCORP deep-profiling results
  141. Electromagnetic images of regional structure in the southern Canadian Cordillera
  142. Electromagnetic constraints on strike-slip fault geometry—The Fraser River fault system
  143. Introduction
  144. The North American Central Plains conductivity anomaly and its correlation with gravity, magnetic, seismic, and heat flow data in Saskatchewan, Canada
  145. A comparison of techniques for magnetotelluric response function estimation
  146. Magnetotelluric observations across the Juan de Fuca Subduction System in the EMSLAB Project
  147. Calculations of voltages for magnetotelluric modelling of a region with near-surface inhomogeneities
  148. Static shift of magnetotelluric data and its removal in a sedimentary basin environment
  149. Magnetotelluric observations along the lithoprobe southeastern Canadian Cordilleran Transect
  150. Are impact-generated lower-crustal faults observable?
  151. The collective review papers presented at the 7th IAGA Workshop on Electromagnetic Induction in the Earth and Moon
  152. North American Central Plains conductivity anomaly goes east
  153. An objective real‐time data‐adaptive technique for efficient model resolution improvement in magnetotelluric studies
  154. Magnetotelluric transfer function estimation improvement by a coherence‐based rejection technique
  155. An objective real‐time data adaptive technique for efficient in‐field model resolution improvement in magnetotelluric studies
  156. On the electrical crust--mantle structure in Fennoscandia: no Moho, and the asthenosphere revealed?
  157. Comment on ‘Geomagnetic depth sounding by induction arrow representation: A review’ by G. P. Gregori and L. J. Lanzerotti
  158. Magnetovariational and Magnetotelluric Investigations in S. Scotland
  159. A multi-station magnetotelluric study in southern Scotland -- II. Monte-Carlo inversion of the data and its geophysical and tectonic implications
  160. A multi-station magnetotelluric study in southern Scotland - I. Fieldwork, data analysis and results
  161. Introduction to the magnetotelluric method
  162. Case histories and geological applications
  163. Distortion of magnetotelluric data: its identification and removal
  164. Preface
  165. Plate Section