New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
A seismic velocity profile across the central South Island, New Zealand, from
explosion data
EUAN G. C. SMITH
TIM STERN
BRENT O'BRIEN
Institute of Geophysics
Victoria University of Wellington
P.O. Box 600
Wellington, New Zealand
Abstract Data from a seismic experiment across the central
South Island, New Zealand, were used to model the crustal structure of the
Australia-Pacific plate continent-continent boundary to a depth of c. 40 km.
Large explosions were detonated off each coast and in Lake Tekapo and recorded
on 19 seismographs deployed in a line from Timaru to just south of Fox Glacier,
and on the Pukaki Seismograph Network. In the upper crust, a clear difference
was found between the seismic velocities in Permian and younger rocks, in
agreement with findings from other studies. Within the Permian schists and
greywackes, the
P-wave velocity is 5.8 km/s to 2.7 km depth and 6.0 km/s
below, contrasting with 5.4 km/s in the Triassic greywackes which form the
basement near Lakes Pukaki and Tekapo in the central part of the survey area.
Strong second arrivals from a layer 24 km deep at the east coast, and dipping
inland at 3.4deg., were seen from both offshore shots. The true velocity of the
arrivals was determined to be 7.2 km/s. Arrivals from a deeper refractor, with
an apparent velocity of 8.3 km/s, were only evident on the West Coast shot
record. If this refractor is assumed to have a true velocity of 8.0 km/s, a
value previously determined from
Pn arrivals from earthquakes, the
refractor dip would be 2.9deg., consistent with the overlying one. The
thickness of the 7.2 km/s layer would be 11 km, giving an effective crustal
thickness of 35 km at the east coast. The intercept time of the later arrivals
from the West Coast shot and the delay of the first arrivals on the West Coast
from the Timaru shot indicate that the average velocity above the refractors
west of, and under, the Southern Alps is lower than in the east. The results
can be explained by ray-tracing models with a zone immediately east of the
Alpine Fault c. 10 km wide and at least 10 km and possibly 30 km deep in
which the velocities are 10% lower than in the adjacent rocks. The structural
interpretation of the model, with a mid-crustal detachment of the Pacific plate
crust, has marked similarities to models of the European Alps, suggesting
analogous roles for the Alpine Fault and the Insubric Line.
Keywords seismic velocities; South Island; tectonic model;
Alpine Fault
New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1995, Vol. 38: 565-570
0028-8306/95/3804-0565 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1995
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (500K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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