scholarly journals Crust and upper mantle resistivity structure in the southwestern end of the Kuril Arc as revealed by the joint analysis of conventional MT and network MT data

2001 ◽  
Vol 53 (8) ◽  
pp. 829-842 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hideyuki Satoh ◽  
Yasunori Nishida ◽  
Yasuo Ogawa ◽  
Masamitsu Takada ◽  
Makoto Uyeshima
2014 ◽  
Vol 619-620 ◽  
pp. 143-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xuben Wang ◽  
Gang Zhang ◽  
Hui Fang ◽  
Wei Luo ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail K. Kaban ◽  
Sami El Khrepy ◽  
Nassir Al-Arifi

Abstract. A joint analysis of the new satellite-terrestrial gravity field model with the recent data on the crustal structure and seismic tomography model was conducted to create an integrative model of the crust and upper mantle; and to investigate the relation of the density structure and the isostatic state of the lithosphere to the seismicity of Egypt. We identified the distinct fragmentation of the lithosphere of Egypt into several blocks. This division is closely related to the seismicity patterns in this region. The relatively dense and strong lithosphere in the Nile Delta limits the seismic activity within this area, while earthquakes are mainly associated with the boundaries of this block. In the same way, the relatively strong lithosphere in the Suez Isthmus and northern Mediterranean prevents the Gulf of Suez from opening further. The central part of Egypt is generally characterized by an increased density of the mantle, which extends to the Mediterranean at a depth of 100 km. This anomaly deepens southward to Gilf El Kebir and eastward to the Eastern Desert. The average density of the crystalline crust is generally reduced in this zone, indicating the increased thickness of the upper crust. The low-density anomaly under the northern Red Sea is limited to 100–125 km, confirming the passive origin of the extension. Most of the earthquakes occur in the crust and uppermost mantle in this structure due to the hot and weak upper mantle underneath. Furthermore, an asymmetric lithosphere structure is observed across the Northern Red Sea. The isostatic anomalies show the fragmentation of the crust of Sinai with the high-density central block. Strong variations of the isostatic anomalies are correlated with the high level of seismicity around Sinai. This tendency is also evident in the North Red Sea, east of the Nile Valley, and in parts of the Western Desert.


2019 ◽  
Vol 219 (2) ◽  
pp. 1334-1347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tianze Liu ◽  
Simon L Klemperer ◽  
Gabriel Ferragut ◽  
Chunquan Yu

SUMMARY Virtual Deep Seismic Sounding (VDSS) has emerged as a novel method to image the crust–mantle boundary (CMB) and potentially other lithospheric boundaries. In Part 1, we showed that the arrival time and waveform of post-critical SsPmp, the post-critical reflection phase at the CMB used in VDSS, is sensitive to several different attributes of the crust and upper mantle. Here, we synthesize our methodology of deriving Moho depth, average crustal Vp and uppermost-mantle Vp from single-station observations of post-critical SsPmp under a 1-D assumption. We first verify our method with synthetics and then substantiate it with a case study using the Yellowknife and POLARIS arrays in the Slave Craton, Canada. We show good agreement of crustal and upper-mantle properties derived with VDSS with those given by previous active-source experiments and our own P receiver functions (PRF) in our study area. Finally, we propose a PRF-VDSS joint analysis method to constrain average crustal Vp/Vs ratio and composition. Our PRF-VDSS joint analysis shows that the southwest Slave Craton has an intermediate crustal composition, most consistent with a Mesoarchean age.


Solid Earth ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 833-846 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail K. Kaban ◽  
Sami El Khrepy ◽  
Nassir Al-Arifi

Abstract. A joint analysis of the new satellite–terrestrial gravity field model with recent data on the crustal structure and seismic tomography was conducted to create an integrative model of the crust and upper mantle and to investigate the relation of the density structure and the isostatic state of the lithosphere to the seismicity of Egypt. We identified the distinct fragmentation of the lithosphere of Egypt in several blocks. This division is closely related to the seismicity patterns in this region. The relatively dense and strong lithosphere in the Nile Delta limits the seismic activity within this area, while earthquakes are mainly associated with the boundaries of this block. In the same way, the relatively strong lithosphere in the Isthmus of Suez and northern Mediterranean prevents the Gulf of Suez from opening further. The central part of Egypt is generally characterized by an increased density of the mantle, which extends to the Mediterranean at a depth of 100 km. This anomaly deepens southward to Gilf Kebir and eastward to the Eastern Desert. The average density of the crystalline crust is generally reduced in this zone, indicating the increased thickness of the upper crust. The low-density anomaly under the northern Red Sea is limited to 100–125 km, confirming the passive origin of the extension. Most of the earthquakes occur in the crust and uppermost mantle in this structure due to the hot and weak upper mantle underneath. Furthermore, an asymmetric lithosphere structure is observed across the northern Red Sea. The isostatic anomalies show the fragmentation of the crust of Sinai with the high-density central block. Strong variations in the isostatic anomalies are correlated with the high level of seismicity around Sinai. This tendency is also evident in the northern Red Sea, east of the Nile Valley, and in parts of the Western Desert.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma L. Chambers ◽  
Raffaele Bonadio ◽  
Sergei Lebedev ◽  
Javier Fullea ◽  
Duygu Kiyan ◽  
...  

<p>Deep geothermal resources in low- to medium-temperature settings remain poorly understood and untapped in Ireland and much of Europe. Our new project DIG (De-risking Ireland’s Geothermal Potential) integrates multi-disciplinary, multi-scale datasets in order to investigate Ireland’s low-enthalpy geothermal energy potential. Seismic measurements constrain the distributions of seismic velocities and, through them, the composition and temperature within the lithosphere and underlying mantle. Recent deployments of broadband seismic stations and the surface-wave measurements using the new data yield an unprecedentedly dense data sampling of the crust and upper mantle beneath Ireland and neighbouring Britain. These data form a foundation for the region-scale, multi-parameter modelling of the thermal state of the lithosphere.</p><p>We use the recently assembled dataset of over 11,000 Rayleigh-wave, phase-velocity curves, measured for pairs of stations across Ireland and Britain (Bonadio et al. 2021) and complement it with new interstation measurements of Love-wave phase velocities. The measurements were performed using two methods with complementary period ranges, the teleseismic cross-correlation method and waveform inversion. Spanning a very broad period range (from as short as 4 s to as long as 500 s), the phase velocities provide resolution from the upper-middle crust to the asthenosphere. The joint analysis of Rayleigh and Love measurements constrains the isotropic-average shear-wave velocity, relatable to temperature and composition. The optimal-resolution, phase-velocity maps of Bonadio et al. (2021) for Rayleigh waves and the new maps for Love waves computed in this study provide essential constraints on the thermal structure of the region’s lithosphere. We demonstrate this by inverting the data using an integrated geophysical-petrological thermodynamically self-consistent approach (Fullea et al., 2021). The multi-parameter models produced by the integrated inversions fit the surface-wave and surface-elevation data and reveal the temperatures and geothermal gradients within the crust. </p><p>Bonadio, R., Lebedev, S., Meier, T., Arroucau, P., Schaeffer, A. J., Licciardi, A., Agius, M. R., Horan, C., Collins, L., O'Reilly, B. M., Readman, P. and the Ireland Array Working Group (2021). Optimal resolution tomography with error tracking: imaging the upper mantle beneath Ireland and Britain. <em>Geophys. J. Int., </em>in revision.</p><p>Fullea, J., Lebedev, S., Martinec, Z., & Celli, N. L. (2021). WINTERC-G: mapping the upper mantle thermochemical heterogeneity from coupled geophysical-petrological inversion of seismic waveforms, heat flow, surface elevation and gravity satellite data. <em>Geophys. J. Int.,</em> revised version under evaluation.</p>


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