ITERATIVE TOMOGRAPHIC METHODS TO LOCATE SEISMIC LOW-VELOCITY ANOMALIES: A MODEL STUDY1

1989 ◽  
Vol 37 (7) ◽  
pp. 717-751 ◽  
Author(s):  
CHRISTINA KRAJEWSKI ◽  
LOTHAR DRESEN ◽  
CHRISTOPH GELBKE ◽  
HORST RUTER
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (18) ◽  
pp. 2975
Author(s):  
Huiyan Shi ◽  
Tonglin Li ◽  
Rongzhe Zhang ◽  
Gongcheng Zhang ◽  
Hetian Yang

It is of great significance to construct a three-dimensional underground velocity model for the study of geodynamics and tectonic evolution. Southeast Asia has attracted much attention due to its complex structural features. In this paper, we collected relative travel time residuals data for 394 stations distributed in Southeast Asia from 2006 to 2019, and 14,011 seismic events were obtained. Then, teleseismic tomography was applied by using relative travel time residuals data to invert the velocity where the fast marching method (FMM) and subspace method were used for every iteration. A novel 3D P-wave velocity model beneath Southeast Asia down to 720 km was obtained using this approach. The tomographic results suggest that the southeastern Tibetan Plateau, the Philippines, Sumatra, and Java, and the deep part of Borneo exhibit high velocity anomalies, while low velocity anomalies were found in the deep part of the South China Sea (SCS) basin and in the shallow part of Borneo and areas near the subduction zone. High velocity anomalies can be correlated to subduction plates and stable land masses, while low velocity anomalies can be correlated to island arcs and upwelling of mantle material caused by subduction plates. We found a southward subducting high velocity body in the Nansha Trough, which was presumed to be a remnant of the subduction of the Dangerous Grounds into Borneo. It is further inferred that the Nansha Trough and the Dangerous Grounds belong to the same tectonic unit. According to the tomographic images, a high velocity body is located in the deep underground of Indochina–Natuna Island–Borneo–Palawan, depth range from 240 km to 660 km. The location of the high velocity body is consistent with the distribution range of the ophiolite belt, so we speculate that the high velocity body is the remnant of thee Proto-South China Sea (PSCS) and Paleo-Tethys. This paper conjectures that the PSCS was the southern branch of Paleo-Tethys and the gateway between Paleo-Tethys and the Paleo-Pacific Ocean. Due to the squeeze of the Australian plate, PSCS closed from west to east in a scissor style, and was eventually extinct under Borneo.


2020 ◽  
Vol 221 (1) ◽  
pp. 178-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
N L Celli ◽  
S Lebedev ◽  
A J Schaeffer ◽  
M Ravenna ◽  
C Gaina

SUMMARY We present a tomographic model of the crust, upper mantle and transition zone beneath the South Atlantic, South America and Africa. Taking advantage of the recent growth in broadband data sampling, we compute the model using waveform fits of over 1.2 million vertical-component seismograms, obtained with the automated multimode inversion of surface, S and multiple S waves. Each waveform provides a set of linear equations constraining perturbations with respect to a 3-D reference model within an approximate sensitivity volume. We then combine all equations into a large linear system and solve it for a 3-D model of S- and P-wave speeds and azimuthal anisotropy within the crust, upper mantle and uppermost lower mantle. In South America and Africa, our new model SA2019 reveals detailed structure of the lithosphere, with structure of the cratons within the continents much more complex than seen previously. In South America, lower seismic velocities underneath the transbrasilian lineament (TBL) separate the high-velocity anomalies beneath the Amazon Craton from those beneath the São Francisco and Paraná Cratons. We image the buried portions of the Amazon Craton, the thick cratonic lithosphere of the Paraná and Parnaíba Basins and an apparently cratonic block wedged between western Guyana and the slab to the west of it, unexposed at the surface. Thick cratonic lithosphere is absent under the Archean crust of the São Luis, Luis Álves and Rio de La Plata Cratons, next to the continental margin. The Guyana Highlands are underlain by low velocities, indicating hot asthenosphere. In the transition zone, we map the subduction of the Nazca Plate and the Chile Rise under Patagonia. Cratonic lithosphere beneath Africa is more fragmented than seen previously, with separate cratonic units observed within the West African and Congo Cratons, and with cratonic lithosphere absent beneath large portions of Archean crust. We image the lateral extent of the Niassa Craton, hypothesized previously and identify a new unit, the Cubango Craton, near the southeast boundary of the grater Congo Craton, with both of these smaller cratons unexposed at the surface. In the South Atlantic, the model reveals the patterns of interaction between the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) and the nearby hotspots. Low-velocity anomalies beneath major hotspots extend substantially deeper than those beneath the MAR. The Vema Hotspot, in particular, displays a pronounced low-velocity anomaly under the thick, high-velocity lithosphere of the Cape Basin. A strong low velocity anomaly also underlies the Cameroon Volcanic Line and its offshore extension, between Africa and the MAR. Subtracting the global, age-dependent VS averages from those in the South Atlantic Basins, we observe areas where the cooling lithosphere is locally hotter than average, corresponding to the location of the Tristan da Cunha, Vema and Trindade hotspots. Beneath the anomalously deep Argentine Basin, we image unusually thick, high-velocity lithosphere, which suggests that its anomalously great depth can be explained, at least to a large extent, by isostatic, negative lithospheric buoyancy.


Geophysics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 62 (6) ◽  
pp. 1758-1773 ◽  
Author(s):  
Don W. Vasco ◽  
John E. Peterson ◽  
Ki Ha Lee

A ray series solution for Maxwell's equations provides an efficient numerical technique for calculating wavefronts and raypaths associated with electromagnetic waves in anisotropic media. Using this methodology and assuming weak anisotropy, we show that a perturbation of the anisotropic structure may be related linearly to a variation in the traveltime of an electromagnetic wave. Thus, it is possible to infer lateral variations in the dielectric permittivity and magnetic permeability matrices. The perturbation approach is used to analyze a series of crosswell ground‐penetrating radar surveys conducted at the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory. Several important geological features are imaged, including a rubble zone at the interface between two basalt flows. Linear low‐velocity anomalies are imaged clearly and are continuous across well pairs.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina Medved ◽  
Ivan Koulakov ◽  
Mikhail Buslov

<p>The causes of delamination of the mantle lithosphere in collision zones is actively debated in the scientific community. The main discussions are focused on the initiation of sinking of the continental lithosphere into the asthenosphere to a depth. Most scientists believe that such kind of immersion is impossible. However, there are several articles showing that this process is nonetheless taking place. For example Kay and Kay, (1993), Faccenda, Minelli, Gerya, (2009), Ueda et. al., (2012) and others propose various mechanisms of delamination, for example: eclogitization of the mafic layer of the lower crust, the effect of convection in the upper mantle, or gradual transition of the oceanic subduction into continental collision. Does the mantle part of the lithosphere sink into the mantle or spread laterally, as described in [for example, Deep Geodynamics, 2001; Bird, 1991; Schmeling and Marquart, 1991]?</p><p>To answer these questions, we study deep structures beneath the Caucasus and Kyrgyz Tien Shan collision zones. The studies were carried out on the basis of multiscale seismic tomography methods: regional and global. This approach made it possible to study heterogeneities both in the crust and in the upper mantle. The obtained 3D models of seismic heteroheneities reveal similar features for the both collision regions. Beneath the mountain areas, in the uppermost mantle and lower crust, we observe prominent low-velocity anomalies that possibly indicate thickening of the crust and missing (or strongly thinned) mantle part of the lithosphere. At the edges of the collision zones, we reveal inclined high-velocity anomalies appearing as continuations of the continental plates sinking underneath the collision zones, which can be interpreted as delaminating mantle parts of the continental lithosphere.  Based on joint consideration of the tomography models with the existing models of tectonic evolution, we conclude that the mechanisms of delamination in the considered two regions are different. In Caucasus, the delamination could be gradually transformed from oceanic subduction that ended here approximately ~10-15 Ma. In the case of Tien Shan, the detachment of the mantle lithosphere could be triggered by the plume that existed beneath Central Tien Shan or by the eclogitization of the mafic layer of the lower crust.</p>


2004 ◽  
Vol 388 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 225-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Flecha ◽  
D. Martí ◽  
R. Carbonell ◽  
J. Escuder-Viruete ◽  
A. Pérez-Estaún

Geophysics ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 73 (5) ◽  
pp. VE235-VE241 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juergen Fruehn ◽  
Ian F. Jones ◽  
Victoria Valler ◽  
Pranaya Sangvai ◽  
Ajoy Biswal ◽  
...  

Imaging in deep-water environments poses a specific set of challenges, both in data preconditioning and velocity model building. These challenges include scattered, complex 3D multiples, aliased noise, and low-velocity shallow anomalies associated with channel fills and gas hydrates. We describe an approach to tackling such problems for data from deep water off the east coast of India, concentrating our attention on iterative velocity model building, and more specifically the resolution of near-surface and other velocity anomalies. In the region under investigation, the velocity field is complicated by narrow buried canyons ([Formula: see text] wide) filled with low-velocity sediments, which give rise to severe pull-down effects; possible free-gas accumulation below an extensive gas-hydrate cap, causing dimming of the image below (perhaps as a result of absorption); and thin-channel bodies with low-velocity fill. Hybrid gridded tomography using a conjugate gradient solver (with [Formula: see text] vertical cell size) was applied to resolve small-scale velocity anomalies (with thicknesses of about [Formula: see text]). Manual picking of narrow-channel features was used to define bodies too small for the tomography to resolve. Prestack depth migration, using a velocity model built with a combination of these techniques, could resolve pull-down and other image distortion effects in the final image. The resulting velocity field shows high-resolution detail useful in identifying anomalous geobodies of potential exploration interest.


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