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  • 1
    ISSN: 1573-157X
    Keywords: Normal faulting ; Gulf of Corinth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract We present the results of a multidisciplinary study of the Ms = 6.2, 1995, June 15, Aigion earthquake (Gulf of Corinth, Greece). In order to constrain the rupture geometry, we used all available data from seismology (local, regional and teleseismic records of the mainshock and of aftershocks), geodesy (GPS and SAR interferometry), and tectonics. Part of these data were obtained during a postseismic field study consisting of the surveying of 24 GPS points, the temporary installation of 20 digital seismometers, and a detailed field investigation for surface fault break. The Aigion fault was the only fault onland which showed detectable breaks (〈 4 cm). We relocated the mainshock hypocenter at 10 km in depth, 38 ° 21.7 ′ N, 22 ° 12.0 ′ E, about 15 km NNE to the damaged city of Aigion. The modeling of teleseismic P and SH waves provides a seismic moment Mo = 3.4 1018 N.m, a well constrained focal mechanism (strike 277 °, dip 33 °, rake − 77°), at a centroidal depth of 7.2 km, consistent with the NEIC and the revised Harvard determinations. It thus involved almost pure normal faulting in agreement with the tectonics of the Gulf. The horizontal GPS displacements corrected for the opening of the gulf (1.5 cm/year) show a well-resolved 7 cm northward motion above the hypocenter, which eliminates the possibility of a steep, south-dipping fault plane. Fitting the S-wave polarization at SERG, 10 km from the epicenter, with a 33° northward dipping plane implies a hypocentral depth greater than 10 km. The north dipping fault plane provides a poor fit to the GPS data at the southern points when a homogeneous elastic half-space is considered: the best fit geodetic model is obtained for a fault shallower by 2 km, assuming the same dip. We show with a two-dimensional model that this depth difference is probably due to the distorting effect of the shallow, low-rigidity sediments of the gulf and of its edges. The best-fit fault model, with dimensions 9 km E–W and 15 km along dip, and a 0.87 m uniform slip, fits InSAR data covering the time of the earthquake. The fault is located about 10 km east-northeast to the Aigion fault, whose surface breaks thus appears as secondary features. The rupture lasted 4 to 5 s, propagating southward and upward on a fault probably outcropping offshore, near the southern edge of the gulf. In the shallowest 4 km, the slip – if any – has not exceeded about 30 cm. This geometry implies a large directivity effect in Aigion, in agreement with the accelerogram aig which shows a short duration (2 s) and a large amplitude (0.5 g) of the direct S acceleration. This unusual low-angle normal faulting may have been favoured by a low-friction, high pore pressure fault zone, or by a rotation of the stress directions due to the possible dip towards the south of the brittle-ductile transition zone. This fault cannot be responsible for the long term topography of the rift, which is controlled by larger normal faults with larger dip angles, implying either a seldom, or a more recently started activity of such low angle faults in the central part of the rift.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018
    Description: 〈span〉〈div〉Summary〈/div〉We present a joint analysis of newly acquired gravity and teleseismic data in the North Tanzanian Divergence, where the lithospheric break-up is at its earliest stage. The impact of a mantle upwelling in more mature branches of the East African Rift has been extensively studied at a lithospheric scale. However, few studies have been completed that relate the deep-seated mantle anomaly detected in broad regional seismic tomography with the surface deformation observed in the thick Archaean Pan-African suture zone located in North Tanzania. Our joint inversion closes the gap between local and regional geophysical studies, providing velocity and density structures from the surface down to ca. 250 km depth with new details. Our results support the idea of a broad mantle upwelling rising up to the lithosphere and creating a thermal modification along its path. However, our study clearly presents an increasing amplitude of the associated anomaly both in velocity and density above 200 km depth, which cannot be solely explained by a temperature rise. We infer from our images the combined impact of melt (2-3%), composition and hydration that accompany the modification of a thick heterogenous cratonic lithosphere are a response to the hot mantle rising. The detailed images we obtained in density and velocity assert that Archaean and Proterozoic units interact with the mantle upwelling to restrict the lithosphere modifications within the Magadi-Natron-Manyara rift arm. The composition and hydration variations associated with those units equilibrate the thermal erosion of the craton root and allow for its stability between 100 and 200 km depth. Above 80 km depth, the crustal part is strongly affected by intruding bodies (melt and gas) which produces large negative anomalies in both velocity and density beneath the main magmatic centers. In addition to the global impact of a superplume, the velocity and density anomaly pattern suggests a 3D distribution of the crust and mantle lithospheric stretching, which is likely to be controlled by inherited fabrics and enhanced by lateral compositional and hydration variations at the Tanzanian craton-orogenic belt boundary.〈/span〉
    Print ISSN: 2051-1965
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2014-08-08
    Description: We analyze crustal and upper-mantle structure near the Denali fault (northern Canadian Cordillera) using 11 broadband seismic stations. Receiver functions at five stations within 5–30 km of the fault trace display a strong P -to- S conversion within the midcrust (10–25 km depth) that systematically varies with back azimuth. Stacking and velocity inversion along complementary northwest–southeast and northeast–southwest back-azimuth ranges yield a strong anisotropy (〉10%) in the midcrust, with complex crustal anisotropic behavior (at least two layers) close to the Denali and Duke River faults junction. Anisotropy occurs in a low-velocity zone with the fast axis parallel to the Denali fault trend. Three additional stations close to the Denali fault (15–30 km), as well as two stations further away (〉100 km) show no significant crustal anisotropy. Shear-wave ( SKS ) splitting analysis indicates similar upper-mantle anisotropy, with a fast axis parallel to the trend of the Denali fault for all stations, except for station WHY located 125 km away. We relate this crustal and upper-mantle anisotropy to fossilized structural and mineral fabrics due to Eocene transpression on the Denali fault. These results suggest the main transpression phase (~400 km displacement) was accommodated in a shear zone at least 50–60 km (less than 125 km) wide in the midcrust and upper mantle. Lack of clear anisotropy in the lowermost crust may relate to complex deformation within a detachment layer (orogenic float model). Online Material: Table of SKS splitting information and figures of receiver function analysis.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018
    Description: 〈span〉〈div〉SUMMARY〈/div〉We present a joint analysis of newly acquired gravity and teleseismic data in the North Tanzanian Divergence, where the lithospheric break-up is at its earliest stage. The impact of a mantle upwelling in more mature branches of the East African Rift has been extensively studied at a lithospheric scale. However, few studies have been completed that relate the deep-seated mantle anomaly detected in broad regional seismic tomography with the surface deformation observed in the thick Archaean Pan-African suture zone located in North Tanzania. Our joint inversion closes the gap between local and regional geophysical studies, providing velocity and density structures from the surface down to 〈span〉ca〈/span〉. 250  km depth with new details. Our results support the idea of a broad mantle upwelling rising up to the lithosphere and creating a thermal modification along its path. However, our study clearly presents an increasing amplitude of the associated anomaly both in velocity and density above 200 km depth, which cannot be solely explained by a temperature rise. We infer from our images the combined impact of melt (2–3 per cent), composition and hydration that accompany the modification of a thick heterogenous cratonic lithosphere are a response to the hot mantle rising. The detailed images we obtained in density and velocity assert that Archaean and Proterozoic units interact with the mantle upwelling to restrict the lithosphere modifications within the Magadi–Natron–Manyara rift arm. The composition and hydration variations associated with those units equilibrate the thermal erosion of the craton root and allow for its stability between 100 and 200  km depth. Above 80 km depth, the crustal part is strongly affected by intruding bodies (melt and gas) which produces large negative anomalies in both velocity and density beneath the main magmatic centres. In addition to the global impact of a superplume, the velocity and density anomaly pattern suggests a 3-D distribution of the crust and mantle lithospheric stretching, which is likely to be controlled by inherited fabrics and enhanced by lateral compositional and hydration variations at the Tanzanian craton-orogenic belt boundary.〈/span〉
    Print ISSN: 2051-1965
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-03-12
    Description: Our knowledge and understanding of the 3-D lithospheric structure of the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau is still challenging although numerous geophysical studies have been performed in the region. The GOCE satellite mission has the ambitious goal of mapping Earth's gravity field with unprecedented precision (i.e. an accuracy of 1–2 mGal for a spatial resolution of 100 km) to observe the lithosphere and upper-mantle structure. Consequently, it gives new insights in the lithospheric structure beneath the Himalayas and the Tibetan Plateau. Indeed, the GOCE gravity data now allow us to develop a new strategy for joint gravimetry-seismology inversion. Combined with teleseismic data over a large region in a joint inversion scheme, they will lead to lithospheric velocity-density models constrained in two complementary ways. We apply this joint inversion scheme to the Hi-CLIMB (Himalayan–Tibetan Continental Lithosphere during Mountain Building) seismological network which was deployed in South Tibet and the Himalayas for a 3-yr period. The large size of the network, the high quality of the seismological data and the new GOCE gravity data set allow us to image the entire lithosphere of this active area in an innovative way. We image 3-D low velocity and density structures in the middle crust that fit the location of discontinuous low S -velocity zones revealed by receiver functions in previous geophysical studies. In the deeper parts of our velocity model we image a positive anomaly interpreted to be the heterogenous Indian lithosphere vertically descending beneath the centre of the Tibetan Plateau.
    Print ISSN: 0956-540X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2013-05-09
    Description: We analyse P -wave receiver functions across the western Gulf of Aden and southern Red Sea continental margins in Western Yemen to constrain crustal thickness, internal crustal structure and the bulk seismic velocity characteristics in order to address the role of magmatism, faulting and mechanical crustal thinning during continental breakup. We analyse teleseismic data from 21 stations forming the temporary Young Conjugate Margins Laboratory (YOCMAL) network together with GFZ and Yemeni permanent stations. Analysis of computed receiver functions shows that (1) the thickness of unextended crust on the Yemen plateau is ~35 km; (2) this thins to ~22 km in coastal areas and reaches less than 14 km on the Red Sea coast, where presence of a high-velocity lower crust is evident. The average Vp / Vs ratio for the western Yemen Plateau is 1.79, increasing to ~1.92 near the Red Sea coast and decreasing to 1.68 for those stations located on or near the granitic rocks. Thinning of the crust, and by inference extension, occurs over a ~130-km-wide transition zone from the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden coasts to the edges of the Yemen plateau. Thinning of continental crust is particularly localized in a 〈30-km-wide zone near the coastline, spatially co-incident with addition of magmatic underplate to the lower crust, above which on the surface we observe the presence of seaward dipping reflectors (SDRs) and thickened Oligo-Miocene syn-rift basaltic flows. Our results strongly suggest the presence of high-velocity mafic intrusions in the lower crust, which are likely either synrift magmatic intrusion into continental lower crust or alternatively depleted upper mantle underplated to the base of the crust during the eruption of the SDRs. Our results also point towards a regional breakup history in which the onset of rifting was synchronous along the western Gulf of Aden and southern Red Sea volcanic margins followed by a second phase of extension along the Red Sea margin.
    Print ISSN: 0956-540X
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: 〈span〉〈div〉Summary〈/div〉The largest compilation of seismological and gravimetry data is combined in a sequential inversion to shed light on unresolved crustal structures in Northern Taiwan and Southernmost Ryukyu area. Our density and seismic velocity models reveal a NW-SE trending Transfer Zone (TZ) between 23.25 and 24° N. This primary TZ delimits major changes in the Eurasian Plate (EP) slab geometry and dynamics, as well as first order crustal structure variations. North of this TZ, the EP slab is breaking off from north to south as a result of (1) the extreme EP bending favouring plastic deformation, (2) the stretching of the plate caused by the downward pull of the oceanic part of the slab versus the buoyancy of continental part of the plate still deforming in the Taiwan orogen, and (3) the indentation of the EP slab by the western slab edge of the Philippine Sea Plate (PSP).The change of EP slab dip angle is clearly observed in the density profiles. The subvertical northernmost tip of EP slab allows asthenospheric upwelling through slab tear and subsequent invasion of the region beneath the Longitudinal Valley. This process is migrating southward up to the TZ, which marks the transition to a different rheological behaviour. The combination of deep arc-continent collision, clockwise asthenospheric toroidal flow and westward propagation of the southern Okinawa rift results in a 100° clockwise rotation of the northernmost tip of the Central Range. The eastward extrusion of this crustal block (∼90 km in diameter) overlays and deflects the PSP slab.The indentation of the EP by the PSP (Luzon Arc) thus results in complex lithospheric accommodation processes and structures.〈/span〉
    Print ISSN: 2051-1965
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: 〈span〉〈div〉SUMMARY〈/div〉The largest compilation of seismological and gravimetry data are combined in a sequential inversion to shed light on unresolved crustal structures in Northern Taiwan and Southernmost Ryukyu area. Our density and seismic velocity models reveal a NW–SE trending Transfer Zone (TZ) between 23.25°N and 24°N. This primary TZ delimits major changes in the Eurasian Plate (EP) slab geometry and dynamics, as well as first order crustal structure variations. North of this TZ, the EP slab is breaking off from north to south as a result of (1) the extreme EP bending favouring plastic deformation, (2) the stretching of the plate caused by the downward pull of the oceanic part of the slab versus the buoyancy of continental part of the plate still deforming in the Taiwan orogen and (3) the indentation of the EP slab by the western slab edge of the Philippine Sea Plate (PSP).The change of EP slab dip angle is clearly observed in the density profiles. The subvertical northernmost tip of EP slab allows asthenospheric upwelling through slab tear and subsequent invasion of the region beneath the Longitudinal Valley. This process is migrating southward up to the TZ, which marks the transition to a different rheological behaviour. The combination of deep arc-continent collision, clockwise asthenospheric toroidal flow and westward propagation of the southern Okinawa rift results in a 100° clockwise rotation of the northernmost tip of the Central Range. The eastward extrusion of this crustal block (∼90 km in diameter) overlays and deflects the PSP slab.The indentation of the EP by the PSP (Luzon Arc) thus results in complex lithospheric accommodation processes and structures.〈/span〉
    Print ISSN: 2051-1965
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-246X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (DGG) and the Royal Astronomical Society (RAS).
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