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Surface Wave Tomography of Northeastern Tibetan Plateau Using Beamforming of Seismic Noise at a Dense Array
Author(s) -
Wang Kaiming,
Lu Laiyu,
Maupin Valérie,
Ding Zhifeng,
Zheng Chen,
Zhong Shijun
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.983
H-Index - 232
eISSN - 2169-9356
pISSN - 2169-9313
DOI - 10.1029/2019jb018416
Subject(s) - geology , seismic noise , rayleigh wave , seismology , terrane , passive seismic , seismic interferometry , seismic tomography , seismic array , tectonics , tomography , surface wave , phase velocity , ambient noise level , plateau (mathematics) , geodesy , noise (video) , mantle (geology) , geophysics , interferometry , geomorphology , optics , physics , sound (geography) , mathematical analysis , mathematics , artificial intelligence , computer science , image (mathematics)
Abstract In traditional surface wave tomography based on seismic noise, 2D phase or group velocity distribution is obtained by performing pure‐path inversion after extracting interstation velocities based on the noise cross‐correlation function. In this paper, we show that 2D surface wave phase velocity maps of adequate quality can be obtained directly, without interferometry, by beamforming the ambient noise recorded at array of stations. This method does not require a good azimuthal distribution of the noise sources. The 2D surface wave phase velocity map is obtained by moving the subarrays within a larger dense network of stations. The method is illustrated with seismic noise recorded by over 600 stations of the ChinArray (Phase II). We obtain 2D Rayleigh wave phase velocity maps between 7 and 35 s in Northeastern (NE) Tibetan Plateau and adjacent regions that compare well with results obtained with other methods. The shear wave velocity model is then derived by inverting the phase velocity with depth. The model correlates well with geology and tectonics in NE Tibet. Two clear mid‐to‐low crustal low‐velocity zones are observed at 15‐ to 35‐km depth beneath the Songpan‐Ganzi terrane and Northwestern Qilian Orogen, possibly facilitating lower crustal flow in this key region for the tectonic evolution of NE Tibet.

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