4.0 Article

The effect of altimetry data in estimating the elastic thickness of the lithosphere in the western Pacific Ocean

Journal

GEODESY AND GEODYNAMICS
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages 315-322

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.geog.2021.07.001

Keywords

The elastic thickness of lithosphere; The western Pacific Ocean; Altimetry data; Spectral analysis

Funding

  1. Guangdong Province Introduced Innovative R&D Team of Geological Processes and Natural Disasters around the South China Sea, China [2016ZT06N331]
  2. National key Research and Development Program of China, China [2017YFC1500101]
  3. Guangdong Province Natural Science Foundation, China [2018A030310314]

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Analyzing the impact of gravity anomalies derived from different data sources on the estimation of the elastic thickness of the lithosphere in the western Pacific region, this study found that the repeated presence of altimetry satellite data can lead to an overestimation of T-e. The difference in effective elastic thickness can reach up to 30% for a uniform area and up to about 16% for T-e distribution. After eliminating this effect, the effective elastic thickness in the western Pacific region was found to be around 10 km.
The elastic thickness of the lithosphere (T-e) is a key parameter used to describe the strength of the lithosphere. It is usually estimated by a spectral analysis between gravity and topography. In previous research on the estimation of T-e, altimetry data were used on both the gravity data and topography data, which could lead to deviations. The study described in this paper analyzed the effects of using gravity anomalies derived from different data sources on the estimation of T-e. Taking the western Pacific region as an example, this study analyzed the impact of the repeated presence of altimetry satellite data on the calculation of the effective elastic thickness and found that if gravity anomalies and topography model both contain altimetry satellite data, they systematically overestimate effective elasticity. For a uniform area, the difference in T-e can reach up to 30%. For a T-e distribution, the difference can reach up to about 16%. After eliminating this effect, the effective elastic thickness of the western Pacific region was found to be 10 km, and the statistical results of the effective elastic thickness distribution showed that the effective elastic thickness of the lithosphere in most areas of the western Pacific is about 12 km. The paper shows the importance of choosing the appropriate gravity model in evaluating the elastic thickness of lithosphere in the oceans. A figure of T-e at seamounts with loading ages demonstrates that T-e in the western Pacific is generally distributed within the 100-300 degrees C isotherm depth and does not increase with loading age. (C) 2021 Editorial office of Geodesy and Geodynamics. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd.

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