Pn anisotropy beneath the South Island of New Zealand and implications for distributed deformation in continental lithosphere

TitlePn anisotropy beneath the South Island of New Zealand and implications for distributed deformation in continental lithosphere
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsCollins, JA, Molnar, P
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume119
Pagination7745–7767
ISSN2169-9356
Keywordsanisotropy, Lithosphere, New Zealand, Pn
Abstract

Pn travel times from regional earthquakes recorded both by stations on New Zealand and by ocean bottom seismographs deployed offshore indicate anisotropy in the uppermost mantle beneath the region. The largest anisotropy of 8% (±2%, 1σ) lies beneath the deforming part of the South Island to just off its West Coast, a zone roughly 100–200 km wide. The fastest propagation is aligned N60°E (±3°), essentially parallel to the largely strike-slip relative plate motion since 20 Ma, also N60°E. The magnitude of anisotropy decreases abruptly northwest and southeast of this zone, and on the southeast side of the island, the orientation of fastest propagation is between N32°W and N-S. The N60°E orientation of fast propagation is consistent with finite strain within the uppermost part of the mantle lithosphere if the measured 850 km of displacement of the Pacific plate past the Australia plate is spread over a region with a width of 100–200 km. The agreement of this orientation of fast propagation with the orientation or relative plate motion suggests the possibility of but does not require some dynamic recrystallization in rock as cold as 500–800°C, where Peierls creep seems to be the likely deformation mechanism. Such a strain distribution matches deformation of a thin viscous sheet that obeys a constitutive relationship of the form , where is the average strain rate and τ is the operative deviatoric stress, with an average value of n ≈ 3–10. Presumably, the NW-SE fast propagation in the region southeast of the island results from strain that precedes the Cenozoic deformation that has shaped the island.

URLhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/2014JB011233
DOI10.1002/2014JB011233

Scholarly Lite is a free theme, contributed to the Drupal Community by More than Themes.