Imaging structure and geometry of slabs in the greater Alpine area – a P-wave travel-time tomography using AlpArray Seismic Network data
<p>We perform a teleseismic P-wave travel-time tomography to examine the geometry and structure of subducted lithosphere in the upper mantle beneath the Alpine orogen. The tomography is based on waveforms recorded at over 600 temporary and permanent broadband stations of the dense AlpArray Sei...
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Formato: | article |
Lenguaje: | EN |
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Copernicus Publications
2021
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Acceso en línea: | https://doaj.org/article/160ad6be37534806918e0f46c512b355 |
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Sumario: | <p>We perform a teleseismic P-wave travel-time tomography to examine the geometry and structure of subducted lithosphere in the upper mantle beneath the Alpine orogen.
The tomography is based on waveforms recorded at over 600 temporary and permanent broadband stations of the dense AlpArray Seismic Network deployed by 24 different European institutions in the greater Alpine region, reaching from the Massif Central to the Pannonian Basin and from the Po Plain to the river Main.</p>
<p>Teleseismic travel times and travel-time residuals of direct teleseismic P waves from 331 teleseismic events of magnitude 5.5 and higher recorded between 2015 and 2019 by the AlpArray Seismic Network are extracted from the recorded waveforms using a combination of automatic picking, beamforming and cross-correlation.
The resulting database contains over 162 000 highly accurate absolute P-wave travel times and travel-time residuals.</p>
<p>For tomographic inversion, we define a model domain encompassing the entire Alpine region down to a depth of 600 km.
Predictions of travel times are computed in a hybrid way applying a fast TauP method outside the model domain and continuing the wave fronts into the model domain using a fast marching method.
We iteratively invert demeaned travel-time residuals for P-wave velocities in the model domain using a regular discretization with an average lateral spacing of about <span class="inline-formula">25</span> km and a vertical spacing of <span class="inline-formula">15</span> km.
The inversion is regularized towards an initial model constructed from a 3D a priori model of the crust and uppermost mantle and a 1D standard earth model beneath.</p>
<p>The resulting model provides a detailed image of slab configuration beneath the Alpine and Apenninic orogens.
Major features are a partly overturned Adriatic slab beneath the Apennines reaching down to <span class="inline-formula">400</span> km depth still attached in its northern part to the crust but exhibiting detachment towards the southeast.
A fast anomaly beneath the western Alps indicates a short western Alpine slab whose easternmost end is located at about <span class="inline-formula">100</span> km depth beneath the Penninic front.</p>
<p>Further to the east and following the arcuate shape of the western Periadriatic Fault System, a deep-reaching coherent fast anomaly with complex internal structure generally dipping to the SE down to about <span class="inline-formula">400</span> km suggests a slab of European origin limited to the east by the Giudicarie fault in the upper <span class="inline-formula">200</span> km but extending beyond this fault at greater depths.
In its eastern part it is detached from overlying lithosphere.
Further to the east, well-separated in the upper <span class="inline-formula">200</span> km from the slab beneath the central Alps but merging with it below, another deep-reaching, nearly vertically dipping high-velocity anomaly suggests the existence of a slab beneath the eastern Alps of presumably the same origin which is completely detached from the orogenic root.</p>
<p>Our image of this slab does not require a polarity switch because of its nearly vertical dip and full detachment from the overlying lithosphere.
Fast anomalies beneath the Dinarides are weak and concentrated to the northernmost part and shallow depths.</p>
<p><span id="page2672"/>Low-velocity regions surrounding the fast anomalies beneath the Alps to the west and northwest follow the same dipping trend as the overlying fast ones, indicating a kinematically coherent thick subducting lithosphere in this region.
Alternatively, these regions may signify the presence of seismic anisotropy with a horizontal fast axis parallel to the Alpine belt due to asthenospheric flow around the Alpine slabs.
In contrast, low-velocity anomalies to the east suggest asthenospheric upwelling presumably driven by retreat of the Carpathian slab and extrusion of eastern Alpine lithosphere towards the east while low velocities to the south are presumably evidence of asthenospheric upwelling and mantle hydration due to their position above the European slab.</p> |
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