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Shear-wave velocity structure beneath the Dinarides from the inversion of Rayleigh-wave dispersion

Authors :
Belinic, Tena
Kolínský, Petr
Stipčević, Josip
Abreu, Rafael
Allegretti, Ivo
Apoloner, Maria-Theresia
Aubert, Coralie
Besançon, Simon
Bés de Berc, Maxime
Bianchi, Irene
Bokelmann, Götz
Brunel, Didier
Capello, Marco
Čarman, Martina
Cavaliere, Adriano
Chéze, Jérôme
Chiarabba, Claudio
Clinton, John
Cougoulat, Glenn
C. Crawford, Wayne
Cristiano, Luigia
Czifra, Tibor
D’Alema, Ezio
Danesi, Stefania
Daniel, Romuald
Dannowski, Anke
Dasović, Iva
Deschamps, Anne
Dessa, Jean-Xavier
Doubre, Cécile
Egdorf, Sven
Fiket, Tomislav
Fischer, Kasper
Friederich, Wolfgang
Fuchs, Florian
Funke, Sigward
Giardini, Domenico
Govoni, Aladino
Gráczer, Zoltán
Gröschl, Gidera
Heimers, Stefan
Heit, Ben
Herak, Davorka
Herak, Marijan
Huber, Johann
Jarić, Dejan
Jedlička, Petr
Jia, Yan
Jund, Hélène
Kissling, Edi
Klingen, Stefan
Klotz, Bernhard
Kopp, Heidrun
Korn, Michael
Kotek, Josef
Kühne, Lothar
Kuk, Krešo
Lange, Dietrich
Loos, Jürgen
Lovati, Sara
Malengros, Deny
Margheriti, Lucia
Maron, Christophe
Martin, Xavier
Massa, Marco
Mazzarini, Francesco
Meier, Thomas
Métral, Laurent
Molinari, Irene
Moretti, Milena
Nardi, Anna
Pahor, Jurij
Paul, Anne
Péquegnat, Catherine
Petersen, Daniel
Pesaresi, Damiano
Piccinini, Davide
Piromallo, Claudia
Plenefisch, Thomas
Plomerová, Jaroslava
Pondrelli, Silvia
Prevolnik, Snježan
Racine, Roman
Régnier, Marc
Reiss, Miriam
Ritter, Joachim
Rümpker, Georg
Salimbeni, Simone
Santulin, Marco
Scherer, Werner
Schippkus, Sven
Schulte-Kortnack, Detlef
Šipka, Vesna
Solarino, Stefano
Spallarossa, Daniele
Spieker, Kathrin
Strollo, Angelo
Süle, Bálint
Szanyi, Gyöngyvér
Szűcs, Eszter
Thomas, Christine
Thorwart, Martin
Tilmann, Frederik
Ueding, Stefan
Vallocchia, Massimiliano
Vecsey, Luděk
Voigt, René
Wassermann, Joachim
Wéber, Zoltán
Weidle, Christian
Wesztergom, Viktor
Weyland, Gauthier
Wiemer, Stefan
Wolf, Felix Noah
Wolyniec, David
Zieke, Thomas
Živčić, Mladen
Žlebčíková, Helena
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • Rayleigh-wave phase velocity in the wider Dinarides region using the two-station method. • Uppermost mantle shear-wave velocity model of the Dinarides-Adriatic Sea region. • Velocity model reveals a robust high-velocity anomaly present under the whole Dinarides. • High-velocity anomaly reaches depth of 160 km in the northern Dinarides to more than 200 km under southern Dinarides. • New structural model incorporating delamination as one of the processes controlling the continental collision in the Dinarides. The interaction between the Adriatic microplate (Adria) and Eurasia is the main driving factor in the central Mediterranean tectonics. Their interplay has shaped the geodynamics of the whole region and formed several mountain belts including Alps, Dinarides and Apennines. Among these, Dinarides are the least investigated and little is known about the underlying geodynamic processes. There are numerous open questions about the current state of interaction between Adria and Eurasia under the Dinaric domain. One of the most interesting is the nature of lithospheric underthrusting of Adriatic plate, e.g. length of the slab or varying slab disposition along the orogen. Previous investigations have found a low-velocity zone in the uppermost mantle under the northern-central Dinarides which was interpreted as a slab gap. Conversely, several newer studies have indicated the presence of the continuous slab under the Dinarides with no trace of the low velocity zone. Thus, to investigate the Dinaric mantle structure further, we use regional-to-teleseismic surface-wave records from 98 seismic stations in the wider Dinarides region to create a 3D shear-wave velocity model. More precisely, a two-station method is used to extract Rayleigh-wave phase velocity while tomography and 1D inversion of the phase velocity are employed to map the depth dependent shear-wave velocity. Resulting velocity model reveals a robust high-velocity anomaly present under the whole Dinarides, reaching the depths of 160 km in the north to more than 200 km under southern Dinarides. These results do not agree with most of the previous investigations and show continuous underthrusting of the Adriatic lithosphere under Europe along the whole Dinaric region. The geometry of the down-going slab varies from the deeper slab in the north and south to the shallower underthrusting in the center. On-top of both north and south slabs there is a low-velocity wedge indicating lithospheric delamination which could explain the 200 km deep high-velocity body existing under the southern Dinarides.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d92c2807c40f49c19ace7c8565fc6362