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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 101, NO. B2,
PAGES 3125–3138,
1996
Three-dimensional upper mantle structure beneath the intraplate Atlas and interplate Rif mountains of Morocco
Dogan Seber
Institute for the Study of the Continents and Department of Geological Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Muawia Barazangi
Institute for the Study of the Continents and Department of Geological Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Ben Aissa Tadili
Centre National de Coordination et de Planification de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Rabat, Morocco
Mohamed Ramdani
Centre National de Coordination et de Planification de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Rabat, Morocco
Aomar Ibenbrahim
Centre National de Coordination et de Planification de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Rabat, Morocco
Driss Ben Sari
Centre National de Coordination et de Planification de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Rabat, Morocco
Abstract
We integrate observations based on teleseismic P wave travel times and available geologic data to infer that the lithosphere beneath the intraplate Atlas mountains is thin
and/or it is characterized by lower P wave velocities, while beneath the interplate Rif mountains and the adjacent Alboran Sea a previously thickened lithosphere
has been delaminated into the upper mantle. Using surface geology and geochronology data, previous studies have proposed that
lithospheric delamination took place in this region. In this study we show through analysis of teleseismic P wave residuals the existence of a high-velocity (> 3%) upper mantle body, which is interpreted to be the delaminated, rigid
lithosphere. This high-velocity layer is overlain by a very low velocity uppermost mantle material (Pn velocities of about
7.6–7.7 km s−1) interpreted to be asthenospheric material replacing the delaminated lithosphere. Teleseismic P waves recorded by a recently installed digital seismic network and an older analog network in Morocco provide the residuals
database. A total of 734 P wave residuals from 92 selected teleseismic earthquakes are used to document the spatial pattern of upper mantle velocity
structure beneath northern Morocco and the Alboran Sea. Subsequent use of these residuals in a tomographic inversion scheme
produced a three-dimensional velocity image of the upper mantle. We infer from the P residuals that strong upper mantle velocity anomalies exist beneath both the Rif and Atlas regions. The Rif stations show
negative residuals (∼ 1–1.5 s) for ray paths from the east and northeast and show positive residuals (∼ 1–1.5 s) for ray paths
from the northwest and southwest. Tomographic results indicate the existence of a high-velocity body (∼ 3% higher velocities)
in the upper mantle beneath the eastern Rif and Alboran Sea, extending approximately from subcrustal depths down to a depth
of at least 350 km. In the western Rif, however, 1–2% lower velocity material is imaged in the upper mantle. The residuals
of the Atlas stations also show azimuthal variations. In general, most of the P waves that travel beneath the High and Middle Atlas have about 0.5–1.0 s delays. In contrast, the rays that travel beneath
the northwestern margin of the Atlas mountains and the adjacent Moroccan Meseta area show negative residuals (∼ 1 s), suggesting
that higher velocity material exists beneath the platform area adjacent to the Atlas mountains. Tomographic results indicate
that beneath most of the Atlas system the uppermost mantle has about 1% lower velocities. Beneath the Alboran Sea region,
however, reported low uppermost mantle Pn velocities contrast strongly with higher velocity upper mantle velocities obtained
by our analysis. Low-velocity uppermost mantle beneath the Alboran Sea underlain by a high-velocity upper mantle material
is used to support earlier interpretations of lithospheric delamination beneath the Rif and Alboran Sea regions. The enigmatic
occurrence of subcrustal earthquakes in these regions is also consistent with this active delamination mechanism.
Received 27
July
1995;
accepted 5
October
1995.
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Citation: Seber, D., M. Barazangi, B. A. Tadili, M. Ramdani, A. Ibenbrahim, and D. Ben Sari
(1996),
Three-dimensional upper mantle structure beneath the intraplate Atlas and interplate Rif mountains of Morocco,
J. Geophys. Res.,
101(B2),
3125–3138.
Copyright 1996 by the American Geophysical Union.
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