P-wave velocity structure beneath the northern Antarctic Peninsula: evidence of a steeply subducting slab and a deep-rooted low-velocity anomaly beneath the central Bransfield Basin SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 13 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 16 time in Scopus
Title
P-wave velocity structure beneath the northern Antarctic Peninsula: evidence of a steeply subducting slab and a deep-rooted low-velocity anomaly beneath the central Bransfield Basin
Author(s)
Park, Yongcheol; Kim, Kwang-Hee; Lee, Joohan; Yoo, Hyun Jae; Plasencia L, Milton P.
Alternative Author(s)
김광희
Publication Year
2012-12
Abstract
Upper-mantle structure between 100 and 300 km depth below the northern Antarctic Peninsula is imaged by modelling P-wave traveltime residuals from teleseismic events recorded on the King Sejong Station (KSJ), the Argentinean/Italian stations (JUBA and ESPZ), an IRIS/GSN Station (PMSA) and the Seismic Experiment in Patagonia and Antarctica (SEPA) broad-band stations. For measuring traveltime residuals, we applied a multichannel cross-correlation method and inverted for upper-mantle structure using VanDecar's method. The new 3-D velocity model reveals a subducted slab with a similar to 70 degrees dip angle at 100300 km depth and a strong low-velocity anomaly confined below the SE flank of the central Bransfield Basin. The low velocity is attributed to a thermal anomaly in the mantle that could be as large as 350560 K and which is associated with high heat flow and volcanism in the central Bransfield Basin. The low-velocity zone imaged below the SE flank of the central Bransfield Basin does not extend under the northern Bransfield Basin, suggesting that the rifting process in that area likely involves different geodynamic processes.
ISSN
0956-540X
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/3411
DOI
10.1111/j.1365-246X.2012.05684.x
Bibliographic Citation
GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, v.191, no.3, pp.932 - 938, 2012
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Keywords
Antarctica; Body waves; Broad-band seismometers; Seismic tomography; Subduction zone processes; Continental margins: convergent
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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