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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 105, NO. B5,
PAGES 10,871–10,898,
2000
Geodynamic evolution of the lithosphere and upper mantle beneath the Alboran region of the western Mediterranean: Constraints
from travel time tomography
Alexander Calvert
Institute for the Study of the Continents and Department of Geological Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
Eric Sandvol
Institute for the Study of the Continents and Department of Geological Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
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
Steven Roecker
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York
Taoufik Mourabit
Department of Geology, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, Tetouan, Morocco
Francisco Vidal
Instituto Andaluz de Geofisica, Granada, Spain
Gerardo Alguacil
Instituto Andaluz de Geofisica, Granada, Spain
Nacer Jabour
Centre National de Coordination et de Planification de la Recherche Scientifique et Technique, Rabat, Morocco
Abstract
A number of different geodynamic models have been proposed to explain the extension that occurred during the Miocene in the
Alboran Sea region of the western Mediterranean despite the continued convergence and shortening of northern Africa and southern
Iberia. In an effort to provide additional geophysical constraints on these models, we performed a local, regional, and teleseismic
tomographic travel time inversion for the lithospheric and upper mantle velocity structure and earthquake locations beneath
the Alboran region in an area of 800 × 800 km2. We picked P and S arrival times from digital and analog seismograms recorded by 96 seismic stations in Morocco and Spain between 1989 and 1996
and combined them with arrivals carefully selected from local and global catalogs (1964–1998) to generate a starting data
set containing over 100,000 arrival times. Our results indicate that a N-S line of intermediate-depth earthquakes extending
from crustal depths significantly inland from the southern Iberian coast to depths of over 100 km beneath the center of the
Alboran Sea coincides with a W to E transition from high to low velocities imaged in the uppermost mantle. A high-velocity
body, striking approximately NE-SW, is imaged to dip southeastwards from lithospheric depths beneath the low-velocity region
to depths of ∼350 km. Between 350 and 500 km the imaged velocity anomalies become more diffuse. However, pronounced high-velocity
anomalies are again imaged at 600 km near an isolated cluster of deep earthquakes. In addition to standard tomographic methods
of error assessment, the effects of systematic and random errors were assessed using block shifting and bootstrap resampling
techniques, respectively. We interpret the upper mantle high-velocity anomalies as regions of colder mantle that originate
from lithospheric depths. These observations, when combined with results from other studies, suggest that delamination of
a continental lithosphere played an important role in the Neogene and Quaternary evolution of the region.
Received 30
April
1999;
accepted 25
January
2000.
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Citation: Calvert, A., E. Sandvol, D. Seber, M. Barazangi, S. Roecker, T. Mourabit, F. Vidal, G. Alguacil, and N. Jabour
(2000),
Geodynamic evolution of the lithosphere and upper mantle beneath the Alboran region of the western Mediterranean: Constraints
from travel time tomography,
J. Geophys. Res.,
105(B5),
10,871–10,898.
Copyright 2000 by the American Geophysical Union.
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