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Crustal shear velocity structure of the south Indian shield

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dc.contributor.author Rai, S. S
dc.contributor.author Priestley, K
dc.contributor.author Suryaprakasam, K
dc.contributor.author Srinagesh, D
dc.contributor.author Gaur, V. K
dc.contributor.author Du, Z
dc.date.accessioned 2008-09-23T16:09:58Z
dc.date.available 2008-09-23T16:09:58Z
dc.date.issued 2003-02-11
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Geophysical Research (Solid Earth), Vol. 108, No. B2, pp. ESE 10-1, CiteID 2088 en
dc.identifier.issn 0148-0227
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2248/3860
dc.description.abstract The south Indian shield is a collage of Precambrian terrains gathered around and in part derived from the Archean-age Dharwar craton. We operated seven broadband seismographs on the shield along a N-S corridor from Nanded (NND) to Bangalore (BGL) and used data from these to determine the seismic characteristics of this part of the shield. Surface wave dispersion and receiver function data from these sites and the Geoscope station at Hyderabad (HYB) give the shear wave velocity structure of the crust along this 600 km long transect. Inversion of Rayleigh wave phase velocity measured along the profile shows that the crust has an average thickness of 35 km and consists of a 3.66 km s-1, 12 km thick layer overlying a 3.81 km s-1, 23 km thick lower crust. At all sites, the receiver functions are extremely simple, indicating that the crust beneath each site is also simple with no significant intracrustal discontinuities. Joint inversion of the receiver function and surface wave phase velocity data shows the seismic characteristics of this part of the Dharwar crust to be remarkably uniform throughout and that it varies within fairly narrow bounds: crustal thickness (35 +/- 2 km), average shear wave speed (3.79 +/- 0.09 km s-1), and Vp/Vs ratio (1.746 +/- 0.014). There is no evidence for a high velocity basal layer in the receiver function crustal images of the central Dharwar craton, suggesting that there is no seismically distinct layer of mafic cumulates overlying the Moho and implying that the base of the Dharwar crust has remained fairly refractory since its cratonization en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.publisher American Geophysical Union en
dc.relation.uri http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2003/2002JB001776.shtml en
dc.subject Seismology: Body wave propagation en
dc.subject Seismology: Continental crust (1242) en
dc.subject Seismology: Surface waves and free oscillations en
dc.title Crustal shear velocity structure of the south Indian shield en
dc.type Article en


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