Summary Long-period (T > 10 s) shear-wave reflections between the surface and reflecting boundaries below seismic stations are useful for studying phase transitions in the mantle transition zone (MTZ) but shear-velocity heterogeneity and finite-frequency effects complicate the interpretation of waveform stacks. We follow up on a recent study by Shearer & Buehler (2019) (SB19) of the top-side shear-wave reflection Ssds as a probe for mapping the depths of the 410-km and 660-km discontinuities beneath the USArray. Like SB19, we observe that the recorded Ss410s-S and Ss660s-S traveltime differences are longer at stations in the western US than in the central-eastern US. The 410-km and 660-km discontinuities are about 40–50 km deeper beneath the western US than the central-eastern US if Ss410s-S and Ss660s-S traveltime differences are transformed to depth using a common-reflection point (CRP) mapping approach based on a 1-D seismic model (PREM in our case). However, the east-to-west deepening of the MTZ disappears in the CRP image if we account for 3-D shear-wave velocity variations in the mantle according to global tomography. In addition, from spectral-element method synthetics, we find that ray theory overpredicts the traveltime delays of the reverberations. Undulations of the 410-km and 660-km discontinuities are underestimated when their wavelengths are smaller than the Fresnel zones of the wave reverberations in the MTZ. Therefore, modeling of layering in the upper mantle must be based on 3-D reference structures and accurate calculations of reverberation traveltimes.
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Reflection seismic profiling of mantle structure under the contiguous United States from ambient noise cross-correlation
P-wave reflections from the 410- and 660-km mantle discontinuities are visible in stacks of ambient noise cross-correlation functions of USArray stations spanning the contiguous United States. The reflections are most visible on the vertical components at frequencies between 0.1 and 0.3 Hz during low-noise periods, which generally occur during the summer months in the Northern Hemisphere. Common reflection point stacking can be used to resolve apparent lateral differences in discontinuity structure across the continent and suggests the possible existence of sporadic reflectors at other depths. Visibility of the 660-km reflector is correlated with faster P-wave velocities at similar depth in a tomographic model for North America. However, the lack of clear agreement between these P-wave ambient noise features and prior mantle-transition-zone imaging studies using other methods suggests caution should be applied in their interpretation. Ambient noise sources from the southern oceans may not be distributed uniformly enough for cross-correlation stacks to provide unbiased estimates of the true station-to-station P-wave Green’s functions. However, the clear presence of 410- and 660-km reflections in the ambient noise data suggests that it should be possible to unravel the complexities associated with varying noise source locations to produce reliable P-wave reflection profiles, providing new insights into mantle structure under the contiguous United States.
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- PAR ID:
- 10663383
- Publisher / Repository:
- Geophysical Journal International
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Geophysical Journal International
- Volume:
- 244
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 0956-540X
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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