High Impact Publications
Most Recent Publications
Past Publications
Papers that are listed here are those that have had a demonstrable impact on the non-EM geoscientific community.
By "impact" we mean that the interpretations of the EM data cause others to rethink their own interpretations, or cause others to recognise that EM studies can make significant contributions.
EM images of the San Andreas Fault
Unsworth, M.J., P. Malin, G.D. Egbert and J.R. Booker, 1997.
Internal structure of the San Andreas fault at Parkfield, California
Geology, 25, 359-362.EM images of colliding continents
Chen, L., J.R. Booker, A.G. Jones, N. Wu, M. Unsworth, W. Wei and H. Tan, 1996
Nelson, K.D., Wenjin Zhao, L.D. Brown, J. Kuo, Jinkai Che, Xianwen Liu, S.L. Klemperer, Y. Makovsky, R. Meissner, J. Mechie, R. Kind, F. Wenzel, J. Ni, J. Nabelek, Leshou Chen, Handong Tan, Wenbo Wei, A.G. Jones, J. Booker, M. Unsworth, W.S.F. Kidd, M. Hauck, D. Alsdorf, A. Ross, M. Cogan, Changde Wu, E. Sandvol, M. Edwards, 1996
Electrically conductive crust in southern Tibet from INDEPTH magnetotelluric surveying
Science, 274, 1694-1696.
Partially molten middle crust beneath southern Tibet: an initial synthesis of Project INDEPTH results
Science, 274, 1684-1688.
Electrical anisotropy as a tectonic marker
Ji, S., S. Rondenay, M. Mareschal and G. Senechal, 1996.
Mareschal, M., Kellett, R.L., Kurtz, R.D., Ludden, J.N. and Bailey, R.C., 1995.
Obliquity between seismic and electrical anisotropies as a potential indicator of movement sense for ductile mantle shear zones.
Geology, 24, 1033-1036.
See also:
Archean cratonic roots, mantle shear zones and deep electrical anisotropy.
Nature, 373, 134-137.
Senechal, G., Rondenay, S., Mareschal, M., Guilbert, J. and Poupinet, G., 1996.
Seismic and electrical anisotropies in the lithosphere across the Grenville Front, Canada.
Geophys. Res. Lett., 23, 2255-2258.
Bernard, P., G. Chouliaras, A. Tzanis, P. Briole, M.-P. Bouin, J. Tellez, G. Stavrakakis and K. Makaropoulos.
Seismic and electrical anisotropy in the Mornos delta, Gulf of Corinth, Greece, and its relationship with GPS strain measurements.
Gephys. Res. Lett., 24, 2227-2230.