scholarly journals Seismic attenuation of regional phases in the northern Middle East and eastern Tibetan plateau

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Wenfei Ku

Temperature and composition are two major causes for subsurface seismic anomalies. Positive temperature anomalies will lead to a reduction in both attenuation and velocity; however, compositional anomalies should not necessarily produce a strong correlation in attenuation and velocity. As a result, by combining velocity and attenuation structure we can distinguish between compositional and temperature anomalies. Using efficiency tomography and Q tomography, I have constructed Sn attenuation models for two continental-continental collision zones, the northern Middle East and the eastern Tibetan Plateau. The Tibetan Plateau was formed by the continental collision between Indian and Eurasian plates that has been going on at least since [about]50Ma. Two tomographic techniques have been used to determine the attenuation structure of the uppermost mantle beneath the eastern Tibetan Plateau. I observe lateral heterogeneity of Sn attenuation beneath the southern Tibetan Plateau that indicates a complex geometry of the underthrusting Indian continental lithosphere (UICL). Sn is blocked with relative low Q values across the Qiangtang block and Songpan-Ganzi block indicating a hot and weak lithosphere. This observation can be caused by mantle upwellings induced by the sinking slab detached from the UICL. The Turkish-Iranian plateau and Zagros, the main tectonic feature of the northern Middle East, was formed as a result of the continental collision between the Arabian and Eurasian plates since Early Cenozoic (23-35Ma). I have collected a large Sn waveform data set in the northern Middle East that I have quality controlled using both automated and manual approaches. Two tomographic techniques have been used to determine the attenuation structure of the uppermost mantle. I observe inefficient/blocked Sn and low Q values in the Turkish-Iranian plateau indicating a hot and thin mantle lithosphere. Intrinsic attenuation is the dominant uppermost mantle shear wave attenuation mechanism beneath the eastern Anatolian plateau and Lesser Caucasus. Partial melting appears to be the main cause of high attenuation in two of the regions. Scattering attenuation appears to be the dominant mechanism in the Zagros. The high attenuation in the Iranian plateau is likely not caused by partial melting thus the seismic anomalies in the uppermost mantle are likely compositional. Data censorship is a common problem in seismic attenuation studies. Discarding blocked Sn paths will cause left censored data problem and the resulting model will be biased to high Q values. Using Level of Detection Divided by Two (LOD/2) technique, I am able to obtain lower Q values and smoother variations in the resulting models comparing with censored models.

2019 ◽  
Vol 220 (3) ◽  
pp. 1677-1686 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janire Prudencio ◽  
Michael Manga

SUMMARY Unrest at Long Valley caldera (California) during the past few decades has been attributed to the ascent of hydrothermal fluids or magma recharge. The difference is critical for assessing volcanic hazard. To better constrain subsurface structures in the upper crust and to help distinguish between these two competing hypotheses for the origin of unrest, we model the 3-D seismic attenuation structure because attenuation is particularly sensitive to the presence of melt. We analyse more than 47 000 vertical component waveforms recorded from January 2000 through November 2016 obtained from the Northern California Earthquake Data Center. We then inverted the S-to-coda energy ratios using the coda normalization method and obtained an average Q of 250. Low attenuation anomalies are imaged in the fluid-rich western and eastern areas of the caldera, one of which corresponds to the location of an earthquake swarm that occurred in 2014. From a comparison with other geophysical images (magnetotellurics, seismic tomography) we attribute the high attenuation anomalies to hydrothermal systems. Average to high attenuation values are also observed at Mammoth Mountain (southwest of the caldera), and may also have a hydrothermal origin. A large high attenuation anomaly within the caldera extends from the surface to the depths we can resolve at 9 km. Shallow rocks here are cold and this is where earthquakes occur. Together, these observations imply that the high attenuation region is not imaging a large magma body at shallow depths nor do we image any isolated high attenuation bodies in the upper ≈8 km that would be clear-cut evidence for partially molten bodies such as sills or other magma bodies.


2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (16) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Xueyang Bao ◽  
Eric Sandvol ◽  
James Ni ◽  
Thomas Hearn ◽  
Yongshun John Chen ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chuntao Liang

<p><span>An azimuth-dependent dispersion curve inversion (ADDCI) method is applied to Rayleigh waves to extract 3D velocity and azimuthal anisotropy. The synthetic tests show that the ADDCI method is able to extract azimuthal anisotropy </span><span>at different depths. The errors of the fast propagation direction (FPD) and the magnitude of the anisotropy (MOA) are less than 10° and 1-2%, respectively. The 3D anisotropic model shows large variations in the FPDs and MOAs with depth and blocks; strong contrasts are observed across major faults, and the average MOA in the crust is approximately 3%. The FPDs are positively correlated with the GPS velocity direction and the strikes of regional faults in most of the blocks. The low-velocity zones (LVZs) in the middle to lower crust are widely observed in the Songpan Ganze Terrence, the north Chuan-Dian block, and surprisingly in the Huayingshan thrust and fold belt. The LVZs in the middle crust are also positively correlated with the low-velocity belt in the uppermost mantle. These observations may suggest that large-scale deformation is coupled vertically from the surface to the uppermost mantle. Crust shortening by the pure shearing process, which involves the thrusting and folding of the upper crust and the lateral extrusion of blocks, may be the major mechanism causing the growth of the eastern Tibetan Plateau.</span></p>


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document