Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology

The Laurentian Craton, composed of the exposed Canadian Shield ringed by sediment-covered platforms, is the Precambrian heart of North America. The craton can be divided into several provinces representing ancient Archean blocks and the suture regions which stitched them together. In western Canada,...

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Main Author: Gorman, Andrew Robert
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: The University of British Columbia 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0053300
https://doi.library.ubc.ca/10.14288/1.0053300
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spelling ftdatacite:10.14288/1.0053300 2023-05-15T16:23:07+02:00 Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology Gorman, Andrew Robert 2000 https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0053300 https://doi.library.ubc.ca/10.14288/1.0053300 en eng The University of British Columbia article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2000 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.14288/1.0053300 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The Laurentian Craton, composed of the exposed Canadian Shield ringed by sediment-covered platforms, is the Precambrian heart of North America. The craton can be divided into several provinces representing ancient Archean blocks and the suture regions which stitched them together. In western Canada, Montana and Wyoming, the general distribution of Precambrian cratonic elements has been established by previous potential field studies combined with the analysis of basement rocks extracted from a small number of exploration drill holes that penetrated the overlying sedimentary basin, and from limited outcrops in southern Montana and Wyoming. The major blocks identified in this region include the Archean Hearne (mostly beneath Alberta) and Wyoming (beneath Montana and Wyoming) Provinces. A third block, the Medicine Hat Block, often interpreted to be the southernmost part of the Hearne Province, is considered independent in this study. The objectives of this thesis are to determine the velocity structure and characteristics of the crust and sub-crustal lithospheric mantle beneath the three Archean domains and the relationships among them to further understanding of the tectonic development of cratonic western North America. These objectives are met through interpretation of data from the Deep Probe / SAREX seismic refraction experiment of 1995, the largest of its type ever undertaken on the continent. Twenty large chemical explosions were detonated along a 3000-km-long profile running from Great Slave Lake to southern New Mexico and recorded at ~ 2000 closely spaced seismograph stations between central Alberta and northern New Mexico. Interpretations, of increasing complexity, are based on: (1) the tau-p downward continuation of individual shot records, (2) a raytheoretical travel-time inversion with Earth curvature considerations, and (3) detailed modelling of specific features with a finite difference wave propagation method. Interpretations of velocities and structures are made to depths as great as 150 km. From features of the crustal structure and their correspondence with two north-dipping relict subduction zones in the upper mantle, the boundaries between the three major Archean blocks are delineated and associated with the Vulcan Structure and Great Falls Tectonic Zone, two poorly understood tectonic features in the region. A prominent 10-to-30 km thick high velocity layer at the base of the Wyoming Province and Medicine Hat Block is interpreted to represent Proterozoic crustal underplating and alteration. The composition and physical properties of the crust-mantle boundary, the relict subduction zones and a heterogeneous upper mantle layer lying between depths of 100 km and 140 km are investigated to further understand lithospheric development in this region. The seismic interpretation is combined with previous work to develop a revised scenario for the tectonic assembly of western Laurentia. Text Great Slave Lake Slave Lake DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Canada Great Slave Lake ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500) Great Falls ENVELOPE(-94.236,-94.236,55.822,55.822)
institution Open Polar
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op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description The Laurentian Craton, composed of the exposed Canadian Shield ringed by sediment-covered platforms, is the Precambrian heart of North America. The craton can be divided into several provinces representing ancient Archean blocks and the suture regions which stitched them together. In western Canada, Montana and Wyoming, the general distribution of Precambrian cratonic elements has been established by previous potential field studies combined with the analysis of basement rocks extracted from a small number of exploration drill holes that penetrated the overlying sedimentary basin, and from limited outcrops in southern Montana and Wyoming. The major blocks identified in this region include the Archean Hearne (mostly beneath Alberta) and Wyoming (beneath Montana and Wyoming) Provinces. A third block, the Medicine Hat Block, often interpreted to be the southernmost part of the Hearne Province, is considered independent in this study. The objectives of this thesis are to determine the velocity structure and characteristics of the crust and sub-crustal lithospheric mantle beneath the three Archean domains and the relationships among them to further understanding of the tectonic development of cratonic western North America. These objectives are met through interpretation of data from the Deep Probe / SAREX seismic refraction experiment of 1995, the largest of its type ever undertaken on the continent. Twenty large chemical explosions were detonated along a 3000-km-long profile running from Great Slave Lake to southern New Mexico and recorded at ~ 2000 closely spaced seismograph stations between central Alberta and northern New Mexico. Interpretations, of increasing complexity, are based on: (1) the tau-p downward continuation of individual shot records, (2) a raytheoretical travel-time inversion with Earth curvature considerations, and (3) detailed modelling of specific features with a finite difference wave propagation method. Interpretations of velocities and structures are made to depths as great as 150 km. From features of the crustal structure and their correspondence with two north-dipping relict subduction zones in the upper mantle, the boundaries between the three major Archean blocks are delineated and associated with the Vulcan Structure and Great Falls Tectonic Zone, two poorly understood tectonic features in the region. A prominent 10-to-30 km thick high velocity layer at the base of the Wyoming Province and Medicine Hat Block is interpreted to represent Proterozoic crustal underplating and alteration. The composition and physical properties of the crust-mantle boundary, the relict subduction zones and a heterogeneous upper mantle layer lying between depths of 100 km and 140 km are investigated to further understand lithospheric development in this region. The seismic interpretation is combined with previous work to develop a revised scenario for the tectonic assembly of western Laurentia.
format Text
author Gorman, Andrew Robert
spellingShingle Gorman, Andrew Robert
Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology
author_facet Gorman, Andrew Robert
author_sort Gorman, Andrew Robert
title Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology
title_short Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology
title_full Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology
title_fullStr Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology
title_full_unstemmed Deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western North America with refraction seismology
title_sort deep probe : investigating the lithosphere of western north america with refraction seismology
publisher The University of British Columbia
publishDate 2000
url https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0053300
https://doi.library.ubc.ca/10.14288/1.0053300
long_lat ENVELOPE(-114.001,-114.001,61.500,61.500)
ENVELOPE(-94.236,-94.236,55.822,55.822)
geographic Canada
Great Slave Lake
Great Falls
geographic_facet Canada
Great Slave Lake
Great Falls
genre Great Slave Lake
Slave Lake
genre_facet Great Slave Lake
Slave Lake
op_doi https://doi.org/10.14288/1.0053300
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