4.5 Article

Moho geometry along a north-south passive seismic transect through Central Australia

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 676, Issue -, Pages 56-69

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2016.03.031

Keywords

Central Australia; Crustal thickness; Receiver functions; Moho offset

Funding

  1. AuScope Ltd under the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)
  2. Australian Commonwealth Government Programme

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Receiver functions from a temporary deployment of 25 broadband stations along a north-south transect through Central Australia are used to retrieve crustal and uppermost mantle structural constraints from a combination of different methods. Using H-K stacking as well as receiver function inversion, overall thick crust with significant thickness variation along the profile (40 to >= 55 km) is found. Bulk crustal vp/v, values are largely in the felsic to intermediate range, with the southernmost stations on the Gawler Craton exhibiting higher values in excess of 1.8. A common conversion point (CCP) stacking profile shows three major discontinuities of the crust-mantle boundary: (1) a two-sided Moho downwarp beneath the Musgrave Province, which has previously been associated with the Neoproterozoic to early Cambrian Petermann Orogeny, (2) a Moho offset along the Redbank Shear Zone further north attributed to the Middle to Late Paleozoic Alice Springs Orogeny, and (3) another Moho offset further north, located at the boundary between the Davenport and Warramunga.Provinces, which has not been imaged before. In all cases, the difference in crustal thickness between the two sides of the offset is >8-10 km. Unlike the two southern Moho offsets, the northernmost one does not coincide with a prominent gravity anomaly. Its location and the absence of known reactivation events in the region make it likely that it belongs to a Proterozoic suture zone that marks a previously unknown block boundary within the North Australian Craton. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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