Ambient seismic noise tomography of Canada and adjacent regions: Part I. Crustal structures
journal contribution
posted on 2021-02-10, 22:05 authored by H Kao, Y Behr, C Currie, R Hyndman, John TownendJohn Townend, FC Lin, M Ritzwoller, S Shan, J HeThis paper presents the first continental-scale study of the crust and upper mantle shear velocity (Vs) structure of Canada and adjacent regions using ambient noise tomography. Continuous waveform data recorded between 2003 and 2009 with 788 broadband seismograph stations in Canada and adjacent regions were used in the analysis. The higher primary frequency band of the ambient noise provides better resolution of crustal structures than previous tomographic models based on earthquake waveforms. Prominent low velocity anomalies are observed at shallow depths (<20 km) beneath the Gulf of St. Lawrence in east Canada, the sedimentary basins of west Canada, and the Cordillera. In contrast, the Canadian Shield exhibits high crustal velocities. We characterize the crust-mantle transition in terms of not only its depth and velocity but also its sharpness, defined by its thickness and the amount of velocity increase. Considerable variations in the physical properties of the crust-mantle transition are observed across Canada. Positive correlations between the crustal thickness, Moho velocity, and the thickness of the transition are evident throughout most of the craton except near Hudson Bay where the uppermost mantle Vs is relatively low. Prominent vertical Vs gradients are observed in the midcrust beneath the Cordillera and beneath most of the Canadian Shield. The midcrust velocity contrast beneath the Cordillera may correspond to a detachment zone associated with high temperatures immediately beneath, whereas the large midcrust velocity gradient beneath the Canadian Shield probably represents an ancient rheological boundary between the upper and lower crust. Key Points Unprecedented large-scale and homogeneous analysis Considerable crustal variations across Canada Prominent mid-crust velocity gradients beneath Cordillera and Canadian Shield ©2013. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
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Kao, H., Behr, Y., Currie, C., Hyndman, R., Townend, J., Lin, F. C., Ritzwoller, M., Shan, S. & He, J. (2013). Ambient seismic noise tomography of Canada and adjacent regions: Part I. Crustal structures. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 118(11), 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1002/2013JB010535Publisher DOI
Journal title
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid EarthVolume
118Issue
11Publication date
2013-01-01Pagination
1-23Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)Publication status
PublishedContribution type
ArticleOnline publication date
2013-11-21ISSN
2169-9356eISSN
2169-9356Language
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Keywords
ambient seismic noiseCanadacrustal structureshear velocity structurecrust-mantle transitionmidcrust discontinuityScience & TechnologyPhysical SciencesGeochemistry & GeophysicsSURFACE-WAVE TOMOGRAPHYUPPERMOST MANTLE BENEATHNORTH-AMERICAN CRATONPHASE-VELOCITY MAPSTRANS-HUDSON-OROGENELASTIC THICKNESSCONTINENTAL LITHOSPHEREUNITED-STATESHEAT-FLOWNEIGHBORHOOD ALGORITHMGeochemistryGeologyGeophysics
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