Author:
Dong Xingpeng,Yang Dinghui,Niu Fenglin,Liu Shaolin,Tong Ping
Abstract
AbstractThe North China craton (NCC) was dominated by tectonic extension from late Cretaceous to Cenozoic, yet seismic studies on the relationship between crust extension and lithospheric mantle deformation are scarce. Here we present a three dimensional radially anisotropic model of NCC derived from adjoint traveltime tomography to address this issue. We find a prominent low S-wave velocity anomaly at lithospheric mantle depths beneath the Taihang Mountains, which extends eastward with a gradually decreasing amplitude. The horizontally elongated low-velocity anomaly is also featured by a distinctive positive radial anisotropy (VSH > VSV). Combining geodetic and other seismic measurements, we speculate the presence of a horizontal mantle flow beneath central and eastern NCC, which led to the extension of the overlying crust. We suggest that the rollback of Western Pacific slab likely played a pivotal role in generating the horizontal mantle flow at lithospheric depth beneath the central and eastern NCC.
Funder
National R&D Program on Monitoring, Early Warning and Prevention of Major Natural Disaster, China
Joint Earthquake Research Program of the National Natural Science Foundation and the China Earthquake Administration
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
6 articles.
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