scholarly journals Receiver Function Investigations of Seismic Anisotropy Layering Beneath Southern California

2018 ◽  
Vol 123 (12) ◽  
pp. 10,672-10,683
Author(s):  
Fansheng Kong ◽  
Stephen S. Gao ◽  
Kelly H. Liu ◽  
Jianguo Song ◽  
Weiwei Ding ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vera Schulte-Pelkum ◽  
Thorsten Wolfgang Becker ◽  
Whitney M. Behr ◽  
Meghan Samantha Miller

Solid Earth ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 893-905 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaelle Lamarque ◽  
Jordi Julià

Abstract. The depth-dependent anisotropic structure of the lithosphere under the Borborema Province in northeast Brazil has been investigated via harmonic stripping of receiver functions developed at 39 stations in the region. This method retrieves the first (k=1) and second (k=2) degree harmonics of a receiver function dataset, which characterize seismic anisotropy beneath a seismic station. Anisotropic fabrics are in turn directly related to the deformation of the lithosphere from past and current tectonic processes. Our results reveal the presence of anisotropy within the crust and the lithospheric mantle throughout the entire province. Most stations in the continental interior report consistent anisotropic orientations in the crust and lithospheric mantle, suggesting a dominant northeast–southwest pervasive deformation along lithospheric-scale shear zones developed during the Brasiliano–Pan-African orogeny. Several stations aligned along a northeast–southwest trend located above the (now aborted) Mesozoic Cariri–Potiguar rift display large uncertainties for the fast-axis direction. This non-azimuthal anisotropy may be related to a complex anisotropic fabric resulting from a combination of deformation along the ancient collision between Precambrian blocks, Mesozoic extension and thermomechanical erosion dragging by sublithospheric flow. Finally, several stations along the Atlantic coast reveal depth-dependent anisotropic orientations roughly (sub)perpendicular to the margin. These results suggest a more recent overprint, probably related to the presence of frozen anisotropy in the lithosphere due to stretching and rifting during the opening of the South Atlantic.


2019 ◽  
Vol 220 (3) ◽  
pp. 1585-1603
Author(s):  
Zhenxin Xie ◽  
Vadim Levin ◽  
Qingju Wu

SUMMARY A uniformly spaced linear transect through the northeastern Tibetan Plateau was constructed using 54 stations from ChinaArray Phase II. We used a set of colocated earthquakes to form receiver function beams that were then used to construct a 2-D image of main converting boundaries in our region and to investigate lateral changes in main impedance contrasts along the transect. The image revealed obvious mid-crustal low-velocity zones beneath the Qilian Orogen and the Alxa Block. We developed a new procedure that uses harmonically decomposed receiver functions to characterize seismic anisotropy, and that can determine both the orientations of symmetry axes and their type (fast or slow). We tested our technique on a number of synthetic models, and subsequently applied it to the data from the transect. We found that: (1) within the upper crust the orientations of slow symmetry axes are nearly orthogonal to the strike directions of faults, and thus anisotropy is likely caused by the shape preferred orientation of fluid-saturated cracks or fractures and (2) together with the low-velocity zones revealed from receiver functions stacks, anisotropic layers in the middle-to-lower crust could be explained by the crustal channel flow that was proposed for this region by previous studies. The shear within the boundary layers of crustal flow forms anisotropy with symmetry axes parallel to the flow direction.


Geology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 200-204
Author(s):  
Youqiang Yu ◽  
Stephen S. Gao ◽  
Kelly H. Liu ◽  
Dapeng Zhao

Abstract The diverse range of active tectonics occurring in southern California, USA, offers an opportunity to explore processes of continental deformation and modification in response to the instability of the Pacific and Farallon plates. Here, we present a high-resolution receiver-function image of the mantle transition zone (MTZ). Our result reveals significant lateral heterogeneities in the deep mantle beneath southern California. Both seismic tomography and MTZ discontinuity deflections reveal foundered lithospheric segments that have dropped into the MTZ beneath the western Transverse Ranges, the Peninsular Ranges, and part of the southern Sierra Nevada. Water dehydrated from these foundered materials may contribute to the observed MTZ thickening. Our observations, combined with previous tomography and geochemical results, indicate that lithospheric foundering of fossil arc roots provides a way for geochemical heterogeneities to be recycled into the underlying mantle, and suggest that the foundered materials can play a significant role in inducing lateral variations of MTZ structure.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaohua Qi ◽  
Qiyuan Liu ◽  
Jiuhui Chen ◽  
Biao Guo

<p>It is widely accepted that the ongoing India-Asia collision since approximately 50 Ma ago has resulted in the uplift and eastward expansion of the Tibetan Plateau. Yet the interpretations of its dynamic process and deformation mechanism still remain controversial. Distinct models that emphasize particular aspects of the tectonic features have been proposed, including fault-controlled rigid blocks, continuous deformation of lithosphere and lower crust flow.</p><p>One possible way to reconcile these models is to investigate crustal deformation at multiple depths simultaneously, as well as crust-mantle interaction. Seismic anisotropy is considered as an effective tool to study the geometry and distribution of subsurface deformation, due to its direct connection to the stress state and strain history of anisotropic structures and fabrics. In the eastern margin of Tibetan plateau, previous studies of seismic anisotropy have already provided useful insights into the bulk anisotropic properties of the entire crust or upper mantle, based on shear wave splitting analyses of Moho Ps and XKS phases.</p><p>In this study, we went further to extract anisotropic parameters of multiple crustal layers by waveform inversion of teleseismic receiver function (RF) data from the western-Sichuan temporal seismic array using particle swarm optimization. Instead of directly fitting the backazimuthal stacking of RFs from each station, we translated the RF data into backazimuthal harmonic coefficients using harmonic decomposition technique, which separates the signals (of planar isotropic structure and anisotropy) from the scattering noise generated by non-planar lateral heterogeneity. The constant (k=0) and k=1, 2 terms of backazimuthal harmonic coefficients were used in our inversion. We also fixed the anisotropic model to slow-axis symmetry to avoid ambiguous interpretations.</p><p>Our results show that:</p><p>(1) Anisotropy with a titled anisotropy axis of symmetry is more commonly observed than pure azimuthal anisotropy in our data, which has been also reported by other RF studies across the surrounding areas of Tibetan plateau.</p><p>(2) The trends of slow symmetry axis vary from the upper to lower part of the crust in both Chuandian and Songpan units, indicating the deformation of the upper crust is decoupled from that of the lower crust in these two regions, while the trends are more consistent throughout the crust in the Sichuan basin.</p><p>(3) In the upper crust, the trends show a degree of tendency to lie parallel to the major geological features such as the Xianshuihe and Longmenshan faults, exhibiting a fault-controlled deformation or movement. In the middle and lower crust, the trends are NS or NW-SE in Chuandian unit and NE-SW in Songpan unit, which are coincident with the apparent extension directions of the ductile crustal flow.</p>


2000 ◽  
Vol 37 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 415-426 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stéphane Rondenay ◽  
Michael G Bostock ◽  
Thomas M Hearn ◽  
Donald J White ◽  
Hua Wu ◽  
...  

In the past decade, the Abitibi-Grenville Lithoprobe transect has been the site of numerous geological and geophysical surveys oriented towards understanding the lithospheric evolution of the southeastern Superior and adjoining Grenville provinces. Among the different geophysical methods that have been employed, earthquake seismology provides the widest range of information on the deep structures of the upper mantle. This paper presents a review of studies, both complete and ongoing, involving teleseismic datasets that were collected in 1994 and 1996 along the transect. A complete shear-wave splitting analysis has been performed on the 1994 dataset as part of a comparative study on electrical and seismic anisotropies. Results suggest a correlation between the two anisotropies (supported by xenolith data) and favour a lithospheric origin for the seismic anisotropy. The two anisotropies are believed to represent the fossilized remnants of Archean strain fields in the lithospheric roots of the Canadian Shield. Preliminary splitting results for the 1996 experiment suggest that the S-wave azimuthal anisotropy may be depth dependent and laterally varying. Ongoing receiver function analysis and traveltime inversion studies provide velocity models of the crust and upper mantle beneath the study area. Preliminary receiver function results reveal the presence of an S-velocity increase at ~90-100 km depth which appears to be laterally continuous over 200 km. Traveltime inversion models indicate the presence of an elongate, low-velocity anomaly beneath the southern portion of the 1996 array which strikes obliquely to major geological structures at the surface (e.g., Grenville Front). Preliminary interpretation relates this anomaly to the same process (e.g., fixed mantle plume, continental rifting) responsible for the emplacement of the Monteregian Hills igneous province.


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