Image of the Iberian Tethys paleomargin beneath the eastern Betic mountain range

Author(s):  
Flor de Lis Mancilla ◽  
Jose Morales ◽  
Antonio Molina-Aguilera ◽  
Daniel Stich ◽  
Jose Miguel Azañon ◽  
...  

<p>We obtain P-wave receiver functions from recordings at a dense seismic broadband transect, deployed along 170 km across the eastern Betic orogen in south Spain. Migrated images show the crustal structure of the orogen in detail. In particular, they reveal the situation of the subducted Iberian paleomargin, with full preservation of the proximal domain and the ~50 km wide necking domain. Crustal thinning affects the lower continental crust. The Variscan crust of the Tethys margin is bending downward beneath the Betics, reaching ~45 km depth, and terminates abruptly at a major slab tear fault. The distal domain of the paleomargin cannot be reconstructed, but the migrated section suggests that material has been exhumed through the subduction channel and integrated into the Betic Orogene. This supports an origin of the HP-LT Nevado-Filabride units from subducted, hyperextended Variscan crust.</p>

2019 ◽  
Vol 751 ◽  
pp. 41-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina Buffoni ◽  
Martin Schimmel ◽  
Nora Cristina Sabbione ◽  
María Laura Rosa ◽  
Gerardo Connon

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arefeh Moarefvand ◽  
Julien Gasc ◽  
Julien Fauconnier ◽  
Damien Deldicque ◽  
Loic Labrousse ◽  
...  

<p>Based on experimental observations, there have been claims that deviatoric stresses may trigger high pressure phase transitions below their equilibrium transition pressures. This implies that the phase assemblages observed in exhumed rocks may reflect stresses induced by tectonic overpressure rather than mere lithostatic pressure, thus resulting in overestimated maximum depths of burial. Despite the numerous studies that have addressed whether mean or principal stress may trigger polymorphic phase changes, the case is still not completely clear. The aim of this study is therefore to investigate the role of deviatoric stress on phase transitions at high PT conditions. In this study, we investigated the α-β transition of quartz, which is one of the most common mineral of the Earth’s crust. This transition has a particular importance for the lower continental crust because of the significantly different elastic properties of the two polymorphs. The α-β quartz transition is also a good experimental candidate because of its displacive and quasi-instantaneous nature.</p><p>A series of experiments was performed with a new high pressure Griggs-type apparatus equipped with ultrasonic monitoring, at the ENS Paris. Cored rock samples of Arkansas Novaculite (mean grain size of 5.6 mm) were subjected to pressure and temperature conditions of 0.5-1.5 GPa and ~ 850 °C. The deviatoric stress was increased to cross the transition while keeping the temperature constant. Two p-wave transducers were used on top and bottom of the assembly as transmitter and receiver to measure travel times across the assembly. The quartz a-b transition was directly observed by a time-shift of the p-wave arrival in the order of 10 ns. The mechanical data clearly show that the phase transformation is controlled by mean stress. The quartz α-β transition induces a softening behavior on our sample because of the volume change induced by the reaction. According to the elastic properties of α and β quartz, the variation of p wave velocity for the quartz α-β transition is in the order of 10 %. The present active monitoring method allowed us to detect variations smaller than 5 %, which can be explained by a partial transformation due to local stress heterogeneities in the sample, since microscopic stress at the grain scale can be different than the macroscopic stress that we measure.</p>


1988 ◽  
Vol 25 (5) ◽  
pp. 744-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. J. Todd ◽  
I. Reid ◽  
C. E. Keen

A seismic-refraction survey providing deep crustal structure information of the continent–ocean boundary across the South-west Newfoundland Transform Margin was carried out using large air-gun sources and ocean-bottom seismometer receivers. Continental crust ~30 km thick beneath the southern Grand Banks (P-wave velocity = 6.2–6.5 km/s) thins oceanward to a 25 km wide transition zone. In the transition zone, Paleozoic basement of the Grand Banks (5.5–5.7 km/s) is replaced by a basement of oceanic volcanics and synrift sediments (4.5–5.5 km/s). Seaward of the transition zone the crust is oceanic in character, with a velocity gradient from 4.7 to 6.5 km/s and a thickness of 7–8 km. Oceanic layer 3 is absent. No significant thickness of intermediate-velocity (>7 km/s) material is present at the continent–ocean transition, indicating that no under-plating of continental crust has taken place. The continent–ocean transition across the transform margin is much narrower than across rifted margins, supporting the theory that formation of the transform margin is by shearing of continental plates.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Wang ◽  
Ling Chen ◽  
Morteza Talebian ◽  
Yinshuang Ai ◽  
Mingming Jiang ◽  
...  

<p>The crustal structure of the Iranian Plateau bears important information about the details of the tectono-magmatic processes associated with the Neo-Tethys subduction and subsequent Arabia-Eurasia collision. Using a newly developed method of joint inversion of multi-frequency waveforms around and horizontal-to-vertical (H/V) ratios of the direct P arrivals in teleseismic P-wave receiver functions, we construct the shear-wave velocity image of the shallow crust (from surface up to 10-km depth below sea level) along a dense seismic array across the Zagros suture in the northwest Iranian Plateau. The most striking structural feature of the study region is the presence of low- and high-velocity anomalies (LVAs and HVAs) beneath the Zagros fold-and-thrust belt and the Iranian continent, respectively, indicating strong structural differences on the two sides of the suture. Systematic analysis on the velocity estimates and comparison with laboratory measurements and regional geology suggest that the LVAs and HVAs are representatives of Zagros sedimentary rocks and arc to intraplate magmatic rocks, respectively. The LVAs (1.3-2.0 km/s) are characterized by a series of faulted anti-form structures at ~1-7 km depths beneath Zagros. They are likely dominantly composed of shales and mudstones, and could have acted as mechanically weaknesses to accommodate different deformations of surroundings and give rise to the present-day depth-dependent seismicity. The HVAs beneath the central domain and Alborz in the Iranian continent present large ranges in both velocity (3.2-3.9 km/s) and depth (0-10 km), probably suggesting strong lithological variations in these areas. Most of the HVAs above 5-km depth have shear-wave velocities of 3.2 to 3.6 km/s, comparable to those of andesites and basalts dominated in the northwestern Iranian plateau. The deeper HVAs (below 5-km depth), which generally have greater velocities ~3.6-3.9 km/s falling into the velocity range of intrusive rocks such as granodiorites, diorites and diabases, appear to have much larger volumes at depth than that exposed on the surface in the study region. Moreover, the surface projections of the HVAs are spatially coincident with the major faults or tectonic boundaries of the region, suggesting a causal link. Our observations provide evidence for not only the lithology-controlled layering in both sedimentary structure and deformation in the Zagros passive margin but also the much more substantial magma generation and emplacement at depth than faulting-facilitated eruption and exposure on the surface in the Iranian active margin during the subduction and collision processes.</p>


2016 ◽  
Vol 676 ◽  
pp. 250-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ofonime Akpan ◽  
Andrew Nyblade ◽  
Chiedu Okereke ◽  
Michael Oden ◽  
Erica Emry ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suzan van der Lee ◽  
◽  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Emily Wolin ◽  
Trevor Bollmann ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rakshit Joshi ◽  
Brigitte Knapmeyer-Endrun ◽  
Klaus Mosegaard ◽  
Felix Bissig ◽  
Amir Khan ◽  
...  

<p>Since InSight (the Interior Exploration using Geodesy and Heat Transport) landed 26 months ago and deployed an ultra sensitive broadband seismometer(SEIS) on the surface of Mars, around 500 seismic events of diverse variety have been detected, making it possible to directly analyze the subsurface properties of Mars for the very first time. One of the primary goals of the mission is to retrieve the crustal structure below the landing site. Current estimates differ by more than 100% for the average crustal thickness. Since data from orbital gravity measurementsprovide information on relative variations of crustal thickness but not absolute values, this landing site measurement could serve as a tie point to retrieve global crustal structure models. To do so, we propose using a joint inversion of receiver functions and apparent incidence angles, which contain information on absolute S-wave velocities of the subsurface. Since receiver function inversions suffer from a velocity depth trade-off, we in addition exploit a simple relation which defines apparent S-wave velocity as a function of observed apparent P-wave incidence angles to constrain the parameter space. Finally we use the Neighbourhood Algorithm for the inversion of a suitable joint objective function. The resulting ensemble of models is then used to derive the full uncertainty estimates for each model parameter. Before its application on data from InSight mission, we successfully tested the method on Mars synthetics and terrestrial data from various geological settings using both single and multiple events. Using the same method, we have previously been able to constrain the S-wave velocity and depth for the first inter-crustal layer of Mars between 1.7 to 2.1 km/s and 8 to 11 km, respectively. Here we present the results of applying this technique on our selected data set from the InSight mission. Results show that the data can be explained equally well by models with 2 or 3 crustal layers with constant velocities. Due to the limited data set it is difficult to resolve the ambiguity of this bi-modal solution. We therefore investigate information theoretic statistical tests as a model selection criteria and discuss their relevance and implications in seismological framework.</p><div></div><div></div><div></div>


2018 ◽  
Vol 497 ◽  
pp. 69-79 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xu Wang ◽  
Ling Chen ◽  
Yinshuang Ai ◽  
Tao Xu ◽  
Mingming Jiang ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 121 (11) ◽  
pp. 8136-8153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Suzan Lee ◽  
Emily Wolin ◽  
Trevor A. Bollmann ◽  
Justin Revenaugh ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document