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Seismic tomography Tomography attempts to determine anomalous structures within the Earth as revealed by deviations from “average” seismic properties at depth. Average is usually determined by one of the simple “radial” structural models of the Earth. PREM (Anderson and Dziewonski, 1981) is the most commonly used reference Earth model. Thanks and/or apologies to Barbara Romanowicz, UC Berketey whose slides have been used liberally in this presentation. PREM Anderson and Dziewonski (1981) determined a spherical shell model of the Earth that was most consistent with the observed travel times from seismic sources to seismic stations that had been accumulated in the previous 80 years of seismology. Note that the model is “layered” and laterally averaged over the whole Earth within layers and so no lateral variations in structure are modelled. P-wave velocity S-wave velocity Preliminary Reference Earth Model IASPEI91 Kennett et al. (1991) obtained another 1-D Earth model that is often used in reference. http://ds.iris.edu/spud/earthmodel What are we missing? What are we seeking? Crust and Mantle Structures What we would like to see... Body and surface waves Seismic waves integrate the seismic velocities experienced point-by-point along their paths: T() = x/v(x) dx along path Seismic wave paths A tomographic slice Over a diametrical slice through the Earth, we look for regions that are anomalously slow or fast compared to the PREM average for that depth within Basic concept Each of these 3 paths is the same distance. S1-A: no variation S2-B: encounters a fast region S1-C: encounters a slow region Earthquakes and seismographs Earthquakes and seismographs are not uniformly or even with uniform randomness distributed over the world. We only have biased data sets. Sample bias -- 1 Density of paths transiting a region of between 660 and 870km Sample bias -- 2 Density of paths transiting a region of between 2670km and CMB Vasco and Johnson, 1998 Example results Van der Hilst, et al., 1998 The Scripps SB4L18 model Seismic tomography is very fashionable, now, and most major seismic laboratories are presenting mantle velocity anomaly models. This one, the Scripps SB4L18 model, presents results as depth layers over the Earth. What is plotted is slow Swave and fast S-wave velocities. Laske, Masters and Reif, AGU 2001 Berkeley vs. CalTech Laske, Masters and Reif, AGU 2001 3D DNA09 Regional tomographic model of structure beneath the Western US. Note the P-wave and S-wave velocity anomalies, especially below Yellowstone. Is the Yellowstone “plume” so restricted to the upper mantle. http://ds.iris.edu/spud/earthmodel PNW10-S Cascadia subduction zone Figure 1. Transect S-N along the subduction interface. Figure 2. Transect following the spine of the Cascades mountains chain and heat flow profile. http://ds.iris.edu/spud/earthmodel So, what do we really know? Layered Structure Seismology finds global radial variations in physical properties α and β at many nearly fixed depths within the Earth. ~5-70 km 410 km 660 km ~2700 km ± 2890 km 5150 km Rheology from Tectonics Isostatic recovery from glacial loading and lateral tectonic plate motions suggest a different layering, especially of the outer regions. 0 – 200 km (~elastic) to ~400 km (~low viscosity fluid) to ~2900 km (~higher viscosity) to ~5100 km (very low viscosity) to 6375 km (~soft elastic) Rheological hack: e = (t/2η + 1/2μ)σ shear shear Seismic provisos Seismic technologies are not as powerful as we might like you to believe... geologists and mantle petrologists want to believe in seismic tomography What Lies Deep in the Mantle Below? “Teleseismic tomography, although sensitive to horizontal variations in seismic wave speed, has virtually no ability to determine depth variations.” ...but still “Were it not for seismology, we would be almost totally ignorant of the structure of the deep interior of Earth.”