A shear-wave velocity model for the Scandinavian lithosphere from Rayleigh waves and ambient noise - Implications for the origin of the topography of the Scandes mountain range

We present a new 3D shear-wave velocity model and Moho map of Scandinavia, which is based on the inversion of the merged phase dispersion curves from ambient noise and earthquake-generated Rayleigh waves. A classic two step inversion scheme is used where first maps of phase velocities at different p...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Tectonophysics
Main Authors: Mauerberger, A., Sadeghisorkhani, H., Maupin, V., Gudmundsson, Ó., Tilmann, F.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5013213
Description
Summary:We present a new 3D shear-wave velocity model and Moho map of Scandinavia, which is based on the inversion of the merged phase dispersion curves from ambient noise and earthquake-generated Rayleigh waves. A classic two step inversion scheme is used where first maps of phase velocities at different periods are derived, and then a 1D transdimensional Bayesian method is applied to determine the VSV-depth structure. We assess the question of what compensates for the unusual high Scandes mountains and aim to identify the different tectonic domains of the adjacent continental lithosphere (Baltic Shield). While the southern Scandes lacks a pronounced crustal root, we observe a crustal root below the northern Scandes that is decreasing towards the central Scandes. A ∼10 km thick high-density lower crustal layer is present below the northern Scandes and generally thickening to the east below the Baltic Shield. The lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) below the Scandes is deepening as well from west to east with a sharp step and a strong VSV decrease with depth of 9% in the north and of 5.5% in the south. The LAB of the thinner lithosphere is at 150 km depth in the north and varies from 90 to 120 km depth in the south. Both LAB steps coincide with the mountain front. The central area shows rather smoothly varying structures (170 km LAB depth, −4% VSV with depth) towards the east and no clear spatial match with the front. We infer therefore distinct uplift mechanisms along the Scandes. The southern Scandes might sustain their topography due to dynamic support from the mantle, while the northern Scandes experience both crustal and mantle lithosphere isostasy. In both cases, we suspect a dynamic support from small-scale edge-driven convection that developed at the sharp lithospheric steps. Beneath the Archean Karelia craton in northern Finland, we find low-velocity areas below 150 km depth while a 250 km deep lithospheric keel is imaged below the Paleoproterozic southern Finland. The Norrbotten craton in northern Sweden ...