Not logged in
PANGAEA.
Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

Priestley, Keith; McKenzie, Dan (2015): Lithospheric thickness of Pangea [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.847325, Supplement to: Priestley, K; McKenzie, D (2013): The relationship between shear wave velocity, temperature, attenuation and viscosity in the shallow part of the mantle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 381, 78-91, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2013.08.022

Always quote citation above when using data! You can download the citation in several formats below.

RIS CitationBibTeX Citation

Abstract:
Surface wave tomography, using the fundamental Rayleigh wave velocities and those of higher modes between 1 and 4 and periods between 50 and 160 s, is used to image structures with a horizontal resolution of ~250 km and a vertical resolution of ~50 km to depths of ~300 km in the mantle. A new model, PM_v2_2012, obtained from 3×10**6 seismograms, agrees well with earlier lower resolution models. It is combined with temperature estimates from oceanic plate models and with pressure and temperature estimates from the mineral compositions of garnet peridotite nodules to generate a number of estimates of SV(P,T) based on geophysical and petrological observations alone. These are then used to estimate the unrelaxed shear modulus and its derivatives with respect to pressure and temperature, which agree reasonably with values from laboratory experiments. At high temperatures relaxation occurs, causing the shear wave velocity to depend on frequency. This behaviour is parameterised using a viscosity to obtain a Maxwell relaxation time. The relaxation behaviour is described using a dimensionless frequency, which depends on an activation energy E and volume Va. The values of E and Va obtained from the geophysical models agree with those from laboratory experiments on high temperature creep. The resulting expressions are then used to determine the lithospheric thickness from the shear wave velocity variations. The resolution is improved by about a factor of two with respect to earlier models, and clearly resolves the thick lithosphere beneath active intracontinental belts that are now being shortened. The same expressions allow the three dimensional variations of the shear wave attenuation and viscosity to be estimated.
Related to:
McKenzie, Dan; Daly, Mike; Priestley, Keith (2015): The lithospheric structure of Pangea. http://issues.pangaea.de/browse/PDI-10217, Geology, https://doi.org/10.1130/G36819.1
Coverage:
Median Latitude: -10.416610 * Median Longitude: -2.007162 * South-bound Latitude: -89.136000 * West-bound Longitude: -178.617000 * North-bound Latitude: 89.506000 * East-bound Longitude: 175.757000
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
1LATITUDELatitudeMcKenzie, DanGeocode
2LONGITUDELongitudeMcKenzie, DanGeocode
3ThicknessThickkmMcKenzie, Danof lithosphere
Size:
5864 data points

Download Data

Download dataset as tab-delimited text — use the following character encoding:

View dataset as HTML (shows only first 2000 rows)