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Lateral Variations of Moho Depth and Average Crustal Properties Across the Taiwan Orogen From H ‐ V Stacking of P and S Receiver Functions
Author(s) -
Goyal Ayush,
Hung ShuHuei
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2020gc009527
Subject(s) - geology , crust , forearc , receiver function , subduction , lithosphere , mantle (geology) , seismology , fibrous joint , ophiolite , oceanic crust , petrology , tectonics , geophysics , medicine , anatomy
The complexity of the young Taiwan orogen mainly resulting from arc‐continent collision is manifold. As the Moho and crustal properties are crucial to unravel the still‐debated orogenic models, we adopt a H ‐ V stacking method jointly utilizing P and S receiver functions for simultaneously reliable determination of crustal thickness and average P‐ and S‐wave velocity, their ratio ( V p / V s ), and bulk sound speed ( V b ) beneath 50 stations in Taiwan and offshore islands. Results indicate the Moho is inclined from ∼20 km in the north and west coastal areas to ∼47 km in the midwest of the Central Range (CR), and abruptly elevated >25 km at the eastern edge of the CR and adjacent collision suture zone. The uplifted Moho along with exclusively high V p / V s (2.1) suggest the subducted Eurasian crust may have been exhumed and compositionally modified by the accreted ophiolite complex of oceanic affinity during forearc basin closure. Our Moho mostly lies in the depths of the sharpest positive velocity gradient, a few to a dozen kilometers shallower than the V p = 7.5 km/s isosurface assumed in the tomographic models. The unusually thin crust (∼20 km) with high V p / V s (1.9–2.0) is observed in the northern Taiwan volcanic zone, plausibly attributed to the post‐orogenic extensional thinning and induced melting in the sublithospheric mantle producing magmatic fluids trapped in the crust. Moreover, V b apparently decreases from the coasts to the middle CR coinciding with the thickest crust, implying the crust under the central mountain range is more compressible and easily deformed/thickened by ongoing collisional compression.

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