Title of article :
Regional Variation of Lg Coda Q in the Continental United States and its Relation to Crustal Structure and Evolution
Author/Authors :
S. Baqer ، نويسنده , , B. J. Mitchell ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Records from broadband digital stations have allowed us to map regional variations of
Lg coda Q across almost the entire United States. Using a stacked ratio method we obtained estimates
of Q0 (Lg coda Q at 1 Hz) and its frequency dependence, , for 218 event-station pairs. Those sets of
estimates were inverted using a back-projection method to obtain tomographic images showing regional
variations of Q0 and . Q0 is lowest (250–300) in the California coastal regions and the western part of
the Basin and Range province, and highest (650–750) in the northern Appalachians and a portion of the
Central Lowlands. Intermediate values occur in the Colorado Plateau (300–500), the Columbia Plateau
(300–400), the Rocky Mountains (450–550), the Great Plains (500–650), the Gulf Coastal Plain and the
southern portion of Atlantic Coastal Plain (400–500), and the portions of the Central Lowlands
surrounding the high-Q region (500–550). The pattern of Q0 variations suggests that the United States
can be divided into two large Q provinces. One province spans the area from the Rocky Mountains to
the Atlantic coast, is tectonically stable, and exhibits relatively high Q0. The other extends westward
from the approximate western margin of the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific coast, is tectonically active,
and exhibits low Q0. The transition from high to low Lg coda Q in the western United States lies further
to the west than does an upper mantle transition for Q and electrical resistivity found in earlier studies.
The difference in Q0 between the western and eastern United States can be attributed to a greater
amount of interstitial crustal fluids in the west. Regions of moderately reduced Q within the stable
platform often occur where there are accumulations of Mesozoic and younger sediments. Reduced Q0 in
the southeastern United States may not be due to anelasticity but may rather be explained by a
gradational velocity increase at the crust-mantle boundary that causes shear energy to leak into the
mantle.
Keywords :
LG , Lg coda , Q , United States , crust , crustal evolution.
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics