Velocity variations in the uppermost mantle beneath the southern Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane

We model Pn waveforms from two earthquakes in the southwestern United States (Mammoth Lakes, California, and western Nevada) to determine a velocity model of the crustal and mantle structure beneath the southern Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane. We derive a one‐dimensional velocity model that includes...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Geophysical Research. B. Solid Earth 2003-07, Vol.108 (B7), p.ESE2.1-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Savage, Brian, Ji, Chen, Helmberger, Don V.
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container_issue B7
container_start_page ESE2.1
container_title Journal of Geophysical Research. B. Solid Earth
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creator Savage, Brian
Ji, Chen
Helmberger, Don V.
description We model Pn waveforms from two earthquakes in the southwestern United States (Mammoth Lakes, California, and western Nevada) to determine a velocity model of the crustal and mantle structure beneath the southern Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane. We derive a one‐dimensional velocity model that includes a smooth crust‐mantle transition east of Death Valley and extending south into the eastern Mojave desert. West of Death Valley and toward the Sierra Nevada a low‐velocity mantle (Vp = 7.6 km/s) directly below the crust indicates the lithosphere is absent. At the base of this low‐velocity structure (at 75–100 km depth) the P wave velocity jumps discontinuously to Vp 8.0 km/s. The area of low velocity is bounded by the Garlock Fault to the south and the Sierra Nevada to the west, but we cannot resolve its northern extent. However, on the basis of teleseismic travel times we postulate that the anomaly terminates at about 38°N. The presence of a low‐velocity, upper mantle anomaly in this area agrees with geochemical research on xenoliths from the southern Sierras and recent studies of receiver functions, refraction profiles, tomography, and gravity. However, the velocity discontinuity at 75–100 km is a new discovery and may represent the top of the once present, now unaccounted for and possibly sunken Sierra Nevada lithosphere.
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B. Solid Earth</title><addtitle>J. Geophys. Res</addtitle><description>We model Pn waveforms from two earthquakes in the southwestern United States (Mammoth Lakes, California, and western Nevada) to determine a velocity model of the crustal and mantle structure beneath the southern Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane. We derive a one‐dimensional velocity model that includes a smooth crust‐mantle transition east of Death Valley and extending south into the eastern Mojave desert. West of Death Valley and toward the Sierra Nevada a low‐velocity mantle (Vp = 7.6 km/s) directly below the crust indicates the lithosphere is absent. At the base of this low‐velocity structure (at 75–100 km depth) the P wave velocity jumps discontinuously to Vp 8.0 km/s. The area of low velocity is bounded by the Garlock Fault to the south and the Sierra Nevada to the west, but we cannot resolve its northern extent. 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source Wiley Free Content; Wiley-Blackwell AGU Digital Library; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects crust
Earth sciences
Earth, ocean, space
Earthquakes, seismology
Exact sciences and technology
Internal geophysics
lithosphere
mantle
seismology
Sierra Nevada
Solid-earth geophysics, tectonophysics, gravimetry
waveform
title Velocity variations in the uppermost mantle beneath the southern Sierra Nevada and Walker Lane
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