4.6 Article

Seismic anisotropy of the crust: electron-backscatter diffraction measurements from the Basin and Range

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 195, Issue 2, Pages 1211-1229

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggt287

Keywords

Composition of the continental crust; Creep and deformation; Seismic anisotropy; North America

Funding

  1. NSF [EAR-0649933, EAR-0745620]

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Crystal preferred orientations were measured in a suite of rocks from three locations in the Basin and Range using electron-backscatter diffraction. Anisotropic velocities were calculated for all rocks using single-crystal stiffnesses, the Christoffel equation and Voigt-Reuss-Hill averaging. Anisotropic velocities were calculated for all three crustal sections using these values combined with rock proportions as exposed in the field. One suite of rocks previously measured in the laboratory was used as a benchmark to evaluate the accuracy of the calculated velocities. Differences in the seismic anisotropy of the Funeral Mountains, Ruby Mountains and East Humboldt Range sections arise because of differences in mineralogy and strain, with the calc-silicate dominated Ruby Mountains section having higher P-wave speeds and V-P/V-S ratios because of the reduced quartz content. In all cases, the velocities show either transverse isotropy or nearly so, with a unique slow axis normal to the foliation. Velocity anisotropy can thus be used to infer the flow plane, but not the flow direction in typical crustal rocks. Areas with a subhorizontal foliation have minimal shear wave splitting for vertically propagating waves and are thus good places to measure mantle anisotropy using SKS-splitting.

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