Using Densely Recorded Teleseismic Data to Image Lithospheric Structures Below the Transverse Ranges: Results from the LARSE II Passive Experiment
M. D. Kohler and P. M. Davis
Department of Earth and
Space Sciences, University of California at Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, CA
Upper mantle deformation processes below the plate boundary in
Southern California have their signatures in seismic data. Densely
recorded waveforms now afford us the resolution to determine
whether those processes are diffuse within a broad ductilely deforming
region, or whether they are influenced by block motion on deep
fault zones. We present tomographic P-wave images and SKSsplitting
anistropy measurements from teleseismic data collected
during the 1998–1999 passive LARSE II experiment. The 83-station,
100-km long linear array spanned the Santa Monica Mountains, San
Fernando Valley, Western Transverse Ranges, San Andreas fault, and
western Mojave Desert. We use the imaging results to address key
questions regarding plate boundary structures and dynamics, such as
the degree to which the crust and mantle lithosphere are thermally
and mechanically coupled, and block motion versus ductile deformation
in the mantle lithosphere. Previous images of lithosphere
showed that the crust below the actively deforming, converging segment
of the plate boundary has thickened by 8–10 km and that the
crustal root is directly underlain by a high-density mantle lithospheric
root whose downwelling geometry can be predicted from
theoretical dynamical experiments. The addition of threecomponent,
broadband array data from LARSE II provides a test of
whether the lithospheric root is one localized part of a multiple
downwelling process, or whether it is a single large downwelling
characteristic of the convergent region as a whole.We use SKS/SKKS
splitting measurements at stations of the LARSE II, Los Angeles Basin
Passive Seismic Array, and TriNet stations in southern California
to characterize the seismic anisotropy
.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90904©2001 AAPG Pacific Section Meeting, Universal City, California