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Large‐Scale waveform inversions of surface waves for lateral heterogeneity: 2. Application to surface waves in Europe and the Mediterranean

Roel Snieder
- 10 Oct 1988 - 
- Vol. 93, pp 12067-12080
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TLDR
In this article, linear surface wave scattering theory is used to reconstruct the lateral heterogeneity under Europe and the Mediterranean using surface wave data recorded with the Network of Autonomously Recording Seismographs (NARS).
Abstract
Linear surface wave scattering theory is used to reconstruct the lateral heterogeneity under Europe and the Mediterranean using surface wave data recorded with the Network of Autonomously Recording Seismographs (NARS). The waveform inversion of the phase and the amplitude of the direct surface wave leads to a variance reduction of approximately 40% and results in phase velocity maps in the period ranges 30–40 s, 40–60 s and 60–100 s. A resolution analysis is performed in order to establish the lateral resolution of these inversions. Using the phase velocity perturbations of the three period bands, a two-layer model for the S velocity under Europe and the Mediterranean is constructed. The S′ velocity perturbations in the deepest layer (100–200 km) are much more pronounced than in the top layer (0–100 km), which confirms that the low-velocity zone exhibits pronounced lateral variations. In both layers the S velocity is low under the western Mediterranean, while the S velocity is high under the Scandinavian shield. In the deepest layer a high S velocity region extends from Greece under the Adriatic to northern Italy. Several interesting smaller features, such as the Massif Central, are reconstructed. One of the spectacular features of the reconstructed models is a sharp transition in the layer between 100 and 200 km near the Tornquist-Tesseyre zone. This would indicate that there is a sharp transition at depth between Central Europe and the East European platform. The waveform inversion of the surface wave coda leads to good waveform fits, but the reconstructed models are chaotic. This is due both to a lack of sufficient data for a good imaging of the surface wave energy on the heterogeneities and to an appreciable noise component in the surface wave coda.

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P wave tomography of the mantle under the Alpine-Mediterranean area

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the upper mantle P wave velocity structure below the Euro-Mediterranean area, down to 1000 km depth, by seismic travel time tomography, and obtain about 26% root-mean-square (RMS) reduction of residuals by inversion in addition to roughly 31% reduction after summary rays formation and selection.
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Monte-Carlo inversion for a global shear-velocity model of the crust and upper mantle

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a method to invert surface wave dispersion data for a model of shear velocities with uncertainties in the crust and uppermost mantle.
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Ambient noise Rayleigh wave tomography across Europe

TL;DR: In this article, a cross-correlations of long time-series of ambient noise data is computed in daily segments, stacked over 1 yr, and Rayleigh wave group dispersion curves from 8 to 50 s period are measured using a phase-matched filter, frequency time analysis technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Travel-time tomography of the European-Mediterranean mantle down to 1400 km

TL;DR: In this article, the 3D P-wave velocity structure of the mantle below Europe, the Mediterranean region and a part of Asia Minor is investigated using the International Seismological Centre (ISC) data.
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Eurasian surface wave tomography: Group velocities

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a study of the dispersion characteristics of broadband fundamental surface waves propagating across Eurasia and show that the estimated maps produce a variance reduction relative to the Preliminary Reference Earth Model (PREM) of more than 90% for Rayleigh waves below 60 s period but reduce to about 70% between 80 and 200 s period.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Preliminary reference earth model

TL;DR: In this paper, a large data set consisting of about 1000 normal mode periods, 500 summary travel time observations, 100 normal mode Q values, mass and moment of inertia have been inverted to obtain the radial distribution of elastic properties, Q values and density in the Earth's interior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the upper mantle: Three‐dimensional modeling of earth structure by inversion of seismic waveforms

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented a method for the inversion of waveform data for the three-dimensional distribution of seismic wave velocities, applied to data from the global digital networks (International Deployment of Accelerometers, Global Digital Seismograph Network).
Journal ArticleDOI

Mapping the lower mantle: Determination of lateral heterogeneity in P velocity up to degree and order 6

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the International Seismological Centre bulletins for the years 1964-1979 to derive a three-dimensional model of lateral variations of the P velocity in the lower mantle.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Hellenic Subduction Zone: A tomographic image and its geodynamic implications

TL;DR: In this article, the authors derived minimum time estimates for the duration of the Hellenic subduction zone that range from 26 to 40 Ma, which is considerably longer than earlier estimates which vary between 5 and about 13 Ma.
Book

The continental crust : a geophysical approach

Rolf Meissner
TL;DR: The Crust as the Product of a Planetary Differentiation Process Collecting Physical Properties of Earth's Crust Contributions from Laboratory Experiments The Composition of the Continental Crust Crustal Structure in Various Geologic Provinces The Evolution of the continental Crust References Index as mentioned in this paper.
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