Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America

Seismic anisotropy imposes first-order constraints on the strain history of crust and upper mantle rocks. In this study, we analyze the mantle seismic anisotropy of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin using a new shear wave spitting data set consisting of 1,333 teleseismic arrivals from 82 seismic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wu, Lei, Gu, Y.J., Chen, Y., Liang, H.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FL150100133
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/91011
_version_ 1848765485330464768
author Wu, Lei
Gu, Y.J.
Chen, Y.
Liang, H.
author_facet Wu, Lei
Gu, Y.J.
Chen, Y.
Liang, H.
author_sort Wu, Lei
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Seismic anisotropy imposes first-order constraints on the strain history of crust and upper mantle rocks. In this study, we analyze the mantle seismic anisotropy of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin using a new shear wave spitting data set consisting of 1,333 teleseismic arrivals from 82 seismic stations. The resulting 332 high-quality measurements yield a regional mean apparent splitting time (i.e., the magnitude of anisotropy) of 1.1 ± 0.3 s and an average fast orientation (i.e., the direction of anisotropy) of 54.6° ± 17.2°, which favor a two-layer anisotropic model based on the 90° back azimuthal periodicity in both parameters. The northeast trending fast orientations dominate the lower layer at lithospheric depths and are approximately parallel to the present-day absolute plate motions (APMs; i.e., <35°) due to the active asthenospheric flow. On the other hand, deviations from the APMs along the Canadian Rocky Mountain foothills could reflect disrupted mantle flow surrounding a southwestward migrating cratonic lithosphere. Also revealed are two elongated upper-layer anisotropic anomalies in the lithosphere that are spatially correlated with Moho depths. Their characteristics suggest frozen-in anisotropy imprinted along two convergent boundaries: (1) the Paleoproterozoic Snowbird Tectonic Zone that separates northeast (north) from northwest (south) fast directions and (2) the foothills of the Rocky Mountains that exhibit northeast trending orientations consistent with those of the APMs, maximum crustal stress, and electromagnetic anisotropy. Compressions associated with the Cordilleran orogenesis could be responsible for the spatial changes in the shear wave anisotropy from the foothills to the cratonic interior.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:36:00Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-91011
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:36:00Z
publishDate 2019
publisher AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-910112023-05-12T03:52:24Z Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America Wu, Lei Gu, Y.J. Chen, Y. Liang, H. Science & Technology Physical Sciences Geochemistry & Geophysics Canadian Cordillera layered anisotropic fabrics shear wave splitting western Laurentia SEISMIC ANISOTROPY BENEATH SNOWBIRD TECTONIC ZONE CONTINENTAL LITHOSPHERE SOUTHERN ALBERTA UPPER-MANTLE SUBDUCTION ZONE POTENTIAL-FIELD TRANS-HUDSON CANADA LITHOPROBE Seismic anisotropy imposes first-order constraints on the strain history of crust and upper mantle rocks. In this study, we analyze the mantle seismic anisotropy of the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin using a new shear wave spitting data set consisting of 1,333 teleseismic arrivals from 82 seismic stations. The resulting 332 high-quality measurements yield a regional mean apparent splitting time (i.e., the magnitude of anisotropy) of 1.1 ± 0.3 s and an average fast orientation (i.e., the direction of anisotropy) of 54.6° ± 17.2°, which favor a two-layer anisotropic model based on the 90° back azimuthal periodicity in both parameters. The northeast trending fast orientations dominate the lower layer at lithospheric depths and are approximately parallel to the present-day absolute plate motions (APMs; i.e., <35°) due to the active asthenospheric flow. On the other hand, deviations from the APMs along the Canadian Rocky Mountain foothills could reflect disrupted mantle flow surrounding a southwestward migrating cratonic lithosphere. Also revealed are two elongated upper-layer anisotropic anomalies in the lithosphere that are spatially correlated with Moho depths. Their characteristics suggest frozen-in anisotropy imprinted along two convergent boundaries: (1) the Paleoproterozoic Snowbird Tectonic Zone that separates northeast (north) from northwest (south) fast directions and (2) the foothills of the Rocky Mountains that exhibit northeast trending orientations consistent with those of the APMs, maximum crustal stress, and electromagnetic anisotropy. Compressions associated with the Cordilleran orogenesis could be responsible for the spatial changes in the shear wave anisotropy from the foothills to the cratonic interior. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/91011 10.1029/2018JB016352 English http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FL150100133 AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION unknown
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Canadian Cordillera
layered anisotropic fabrics
shear wave splitting
western Laurentia
SEISMIC ANISOTROPY BENEATH
SNOWBIRD TECTONIC ZONE
CONTINENTAL LITHOSPHERE
SOUTHERN ALBERTA
UPPER-MANTLE
SUBDUCTION ZONE
POTENTIAL-FIELD
TRANS-HUDSON
CANADA
LITHOPROBE
Wu, Lei
Gu, Y.J.
Chen, Y.
Liang, H.
Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America
title Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America
title_full Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America
title_fullStr Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America
title_full_unstemmed Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America
title_short Shear Wave Splitting Discloses Two Episodes of Collision-Related Convergence in Western North America
title_sort shear wave splitting discloses two episodes of collision-related convergence in western north america
topic Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Geochemistry & Geophysics
Canadian Cordillera
layered anisotropic fabrics
shear wave splitting
western Laurentia
SEISMIC ANISOTROPY BENEATH
SNOWBIRD TECTONIC ZONE
CONTINENTAL LITHOSPHERE
SOUTHERN ALBERTA
UPPER-MANTLE
SUBDUCTION ZONE
POTENTIAL-FIELD
TRANS-HUDSON
CANADA
LITHOPROBE
url http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FL150100133
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/91011