Inhaltsbereich
Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 18625)
The dense deployment of seismic stations so far
in the western half of the United States within the USArray
project provides the opportunity to study in greater detail the
structure of the lithosphere-asthenosphere system. We use
the S receiver function technique for this purpose, which has
higher resolution than surface wave tomography, is sensitive
to seismic discontinuities, and is free from multiples, unlike
P receiver functions. Only two major discontinuities are observed
in the entire area down to about 300 km depth. These
are the crust-mantle boundary (Moho) and a negative boundary,
which we correlate with the lithosphere-asthenosphere
boundary (LAB), since a low velocity zone is the classical
definition of the seismic observation of the asthenosphere by
Gutenberg (1926). Our S receiver function LAB is at a depth
of 70–80 km in large parts of westernmost North America.
East of the Rocky Mountains, its depth is generally between
90 and 110 km. Regions with LAB depths down to about
140 km occur in a stretch from northern Texas, over the Colorado
Plateau to the Columbia basalts. These observations
agree well with tomography results in the westernmost USA
and on the east coast. However, in the central cratonic part
of the USA, the tomography LAB is near 200 km depth. At
this depth no discontinuity is seen in the S receiver functions.
The negative signal near 100 km depth in the central part of
the USA is interpreted by Yuan and Romanowicz (2010) and
Lekic and Romanowicz (2011) as a recently discovered midlithospheric
discontinuity (MLD). A solution for the discrepancy
between receiver function imaging and surface wave tomography
is not yet obvious and requires more high resolution
studies at other cratons before a general solution may be
found. Our results agree well with petrophysical models of
increased water content in the asthenosphere, which predict
a sharp and shallow LAB also in continents (Mierdel et al.,
2007).
(2012): The lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary observed with USArray receiver functions. Solid Earth, 3, 149-159.
(2012): The lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary observed with USArray receiver functions. Solid Earth, 3, 149-159.

