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  5. Shear wave splitting in the Alpine region
 
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Shear wave splitting in the Alpine region

Author(s)
Hein, Gerrit  
Kolinsky, Petr  
Bianchi, Irene  
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Sezione Roma1, Roma, Italia  
Bokelmann, Götz  
Hetényi, Gyorgy  
Abreu, Rafael  
Allegretti, Ivo  
Apoloner, Maria-Theresia  
Aubert, Coralie  
Besancon, Simon  
Bes De Berc, Maxime  
Bokelmann, Götz  
Brunel, Didier  
Capello, Marco  
Carman, Martina  
Cavaliere, Adriano  
Cheze, Jerome  
Chiarabba, Claudio  
Clinton, John  
Cougoulat, Glenn  
Crawford, Wayne  
Cristiano, Luigia  
Czifra, Tibor  
D'Alema, Ezio  
Danesi, Stefania  
Daniel, Romuald  
Dannowski, Anke  
Dasović, Iva  
Deschamps, Anne  
Dessa, Jean-Xavier  
Doubre, Cécile  
Egdorf, Sven  
Fiket, Tomislav  
Fischer, Kasper  
Friederich, Wolfgang  
Fuchs, Florian  
Funke, Sigward  
Giardini, Domenico  
Govoni, Aladino  
Gráczer, Zoltan  
Groschl, Gidera  
Heimers, Stefan  
Heit, Ben  
Herak, Davorka  
Herak, Marijan  
Huber, Johann  
Jarić, Dejan  
Jedlicka, Petr  
Jia, Yan  
Jund, Helene  
Kissling, Edi  
Klingen, Stefan  
Klotz, Bernhard  
Kolinsky, Petr  
Kopp, Heidrun  
Korn, Michael  
Kotek, Josef  
Kuhne, Lothar  
Kuk, Kreso  
Lange, Dietrich  
Loos, Jurgen  
Lovati, Sara  
Malengros, Deny  
Margheriti, Lucia  
Marone, Chris  
Martin, Xavier  
Massa, Marco  
Mazzarini, Francesco  
Meier, Thomas  
Metral, Laurent  
Molinari, Irene  
Moretti, Milena  
Nardi, Anna  
Pahor, Jurij  
Paul, Anne  
Pequegnat, Catherine  
Petersen, Daniel  
Pesaresi, Damiano  
Piccinini, Davide  
Piromallo, Claudia  
Plenefisch, Thomas  
Plomerová, Jaroslava  
Pondrelli, Silvia  
Prevolnik, Snježan  
Racine, Roman  
Regnier, Marc  
Reiss, Miriam  
Ritter, Joachim  
Rümpker, Georg  
Salimbeni, Simone  
Santulin, Marco  
Scherer, Werner  
Schippkus, Sven  
Schulte-Kortnack, Detlef  
Šipka, Vesna  
Solarino, Stefano  
Spallarossa, Daniele  
Spieker, Kathrin  
Stipçević, Josip  
Strollo, Angelo  
Süle, Bálint  
Szanyi, Gyöngyvér  
Szűcs, Eszter  
Thomas, Christine  
Thorwart, Martin  
Tilmann, Frederik  
Ueding, Stefan  
Vallocchia, Massimiliano  
Vecsey, Luděk  
Voigt, Rene  
Wassermann, Joachim  
Wéber, Zoltan  
Weidle, Christian  
Wesztergom, Viktor  
Weyland, Gauthier  
Wiemer, Stefan  
Wolf, Felix  
Wolyniec, David  
Zieke, Thomas  
Živčić, Mladen  
Zlebcikova, Helena  
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
1T. Struttura della Terra
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Peer review journal
Yes
Journal
Geophysical Journal International  
Issue/vol(year)
/227 (2021)
ISSN
0956-540X
Publisher
Oxford University Press - The Royal Astronomical Society
Pages (printed)
1996–2015
Date Issued
December 2021
DOI
10.1093/gji/ggab305
URI
https://www.earth-prints.org/handle/2122/15618
Abstract
To constrain seismic anisotropy under and around the Alps in Europe, we study SKS shear wave splitting from the region densely covered by the AlpArray seismic network. We apply a technique based on measuring the splitting intensity, constraining well both the fast orientation and the splitting delay. Four years of teleseismic earthquake data were processed, from 723 temporary and permanent broad-band stations of the AlpArray deployment including ocean-bottom seismometers, providing a spatial coverage that is unprecedented. The technique is applied automatically (without human intervention), and it thus provides a reproducible image of anisotropic structure in and around the Alpine region. As in earlier studies, we observe a coherent rotation of fast axes in the western part of the Alpine chain, and a region of homogeneous fast orientation in the Central Alps. The spatial variation of splitting delay times is particularly interesting though. On one hand, there is a clear positive correlation with Alpine topography, suggesting that part of the seismic anisotropy (deformation) is caused by the Alpine orogeny. On the other hand, anisotropic strength around the mountain chain shows a distinct contrast between the Western and Eastern Alps. This difference is best explained by the more active mantle flow around the Western Alps. The new observational constraints, especially the splitting delay, provide new information on Alpine geodynamics. © 2021 The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society.
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