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Publications
Helmholtz Centre Potsdam
GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Abstract (EDOC: 8607)From July 1996 to August 1997 the TOR project operated 130 seismographs in North Germany, Denmark and South Sweden,
with the aim of collecting signals from local, regional and teleseismic earthquakes. This data set is particularly interesting since the
seismic antenna crosses the most significant geological boundary in Europe, the Tornquist Zone, which in the northern part is the
border between the Baltic Shield and the younger European lithosphere. Previous studies have shown significant physical changes
in the crust and upper mantle across this transition zone, including two independent teleseismic tomographic studies of the TOR
data set. But these two studies disagree on the orientation of the slope of the transition. Both studies used an iterative linearized
inversion method. We will in this work Preprint submitted to Elsevier Science 27 July 2005 present an inversion based on Bayesian
statistics, where the solution space is examined in order to study a very large number of tomographic solutions and to examine the
solution uniqueness and uncertainty. The method is applied to measurements of 3345 relative teleseismic P-phase travel times from
48 teleseismic earthquakes with good azimuthal coverage with respect to the great circle arc of the TOR array. We find the
lithospheric transition to be a north east inclination of around 308 to 458 off vertical.
D 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. (2006): The Tornquist Zone, a north east inclining lithospheric transition at the south western margin of the Baltic Shield: Revealed through a nonlinear teleseismic tomographic inversion. Tectonophysics, 416, 1-4, 151-166. |
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