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Crustal structure of the Southern Alps beneath the intersection with the European Geotraverse
Institution:1. Geological Survey of Canada, 601 Booth Street, Ottawa K1A 0E8, Canada;2. Department of Geology, Cape Breton University, 1250 Grand Lake Road, Sydney, Nova-Scotia B1M 1A2, Canada;1. Mineral Exploration Research Centre, Harquail School of Earth Sciences, Laurentian University, 935 Ramsey Lake Road, Sudbury, ON, P3E 2C6, Canada;2. Earth Resources and Geoscience Mapping Section, Ontario Geological Survey, 933 Ramsey Lake Road, Sudbury, Ontario P3E 6B5, Canada;1. National Institute for Earth Physics, Măgurele, Romania;2. Freie Universität Berlin, Institute of Geological Sciences, Berlin, Germany;3. University of Aberdeen, School of Geosciences, Aberdeen, United Kingdom;4. Main Center of the Special Monitoring, State Space Agency of Ukraine, Kyiv, Ukraine
Abstract:Newly digitized and amplitude controlled record sections from the 1977 Southern Alps refraction campaign permitted a reinterpretation of the crustal structure in the area between western Lombardy and the Giudicaria fault. The resulting model exhibits considerable lateral heterogeneity: in the west, below 7.5 km of sediments of the Lombardy Basin, the crust reaches a depth of only 31 km, whereas it thickens towards the more mountainous area in the east, reaching a depth of 46 km below the Adamello Massif. Although the signal character of the corresponding reflections is somewhat erratic, the data are satisfied best by models with a low-velocity zone in the upper crust. An additional small velocity discontinuity from 6.2 to 6.4 km/s was found in the middle crust at around 20 km. Earlier interpretations, based on travel-times alone, included a layer with a velocity of about 7 km/s at this depth. This high-velocity layer was then interpreted as lower-crustal material of the Adriatic — African plate, which had been overthrust onto the European plate during the Alpine orogeny, thus explaining the uplift of the Southern Alps. However, this model of crustal doubling is questionable, because such a mid-crustal high-velocity layer is not in agreement with the amplitude data. The relatively thin crystalline part of the crust under the Lombardy Basin is interpreted, in accordance with geological evidence, as a relic of a Late Hercynian rifting event.
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