Mathematics – Logic
Scientific paper
Oct 1995
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1995e%26psl.135..139w&link_type=abstract
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol. 135, Issue 1-4, pp.139-148
Mathematics
Logic
16
Scientific paper
We report large differences between measured and calculated intervals between arrival times of S waves and SS phases whose bounce points lie beneath different parts of the Tibetan Plateau and its surroundings. When compared with traveltimes calculated from the laterally homogeneous Preliminary Reference Earth Model (PREM), the shortest intervals between SS and S correspond to paths with SS reflected from the Karakorum and westernmost parts of the Tibetan Plateau and Himalaya. Comparable, but more scattered, SS - S residuals characterize paths with SS reflected beneath southern Tibet. The longest such intervals typify paths with SS reflected beneath north central Tibet. If upper mantle structure near the bounce points of SS causes these average apparent advances of 7 s and delays of up to 6 s, then these data suggest that material with high S-wave speeds underlie the Karakorum, and low S-wave speeds underlie north central Tibet, a result that concurs with other seismological observations. If such high- or low-speed regions were confined to the upper 250 km of the mantle, they would imply a difference on the order of 13% in S-wave speeds between these two regions. Heterogeneity in the lower mantle, inferred in part from these data, can, however, account for part of the large variation in residuals that we observe. After correcting for large-scale heterogeneity in the upper and lower mantle, roughly 9 s of difference persists, which would correspond to average differences of 9% or 0.4 km/s in S-wave speeds in the upper 250 km of the mantle beneath these regions. Only at subduction zones can one find such a difference in average S-wave speeds in the mantle beneath regions only 500-1000 km apart, suggesting that dynamic flow in the mantle presently occurs in the upper mantle beneath the Tibetan Plateau. This difference supports the contention that small-scale convection occurs beneath the Tibetan Plateau.
Molnar Peter
Woodward Robert L.
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