Inhaltsbereich
Publications
Abstract (EDOC: 5552)
In the deep crust, temperature, which is among the key parameters
controlling lithospheric dynamics, is inferred by extrapolation
from the surface using several assumptions that may fail
in regions of active tectonics and fluid migration. In the rare case
that temperatures of 700 °C or higher are exceeded in the upper
and middle continental crust composed of quartz-rich felsic rocks,
the alpha-beta quartz transition (ABQT) will occur, generating a measurable
seismic signature and offering the possibility for precisely
estimating temperature from the known ABQT phase diagram.
Here it is shown that all expected seismic features of the ABQT
are met by the boundary between the upper and middle crust below
the INDEPTH III profile in central Tibet. This finding implies
that a temperature of 700 °C is achieved at a depth of 18 km under
the southern Qiangtang block, which agrees with the depth to the
top of a high electrical conductivity anomaly, likely representing
partially melted crust. To the south in the northern Lhasa block,
the ABQT is at 32 km depth, corresponding to a temperature of
800 °C. It thus appears that this seismic boundary representing the
ABQT is the result of recent geologic processes rather than being
a lithologic boundary.
(2004): Precise temperature estimation in the Tibetan crust from seismic detection of the alpha-beta quartz transition. Geology, 32, 7, 601-604.
(2004): Precise temperature estimation in the Tibetan crust from seismic detection of the alpha-beta quartz transition. Geology, 32, 7, 601-604.

