High velocity anomaly beneath the Deccan volcanic province: evidence from seismic tomography

Iyer, H. M. ; Gaur, V. K. ; Rai, S. S. ; Ramesh, D. S. ; Rao, C. V. R. ; Srinagesh, D. ; Suryaprakasam, K. (1989) High velocity anomaly beneath the Deccan volcanic province: evidence from seismic tomography Proceedings of the Indian Academy of Sciences - Earth and Planetary Sciences, 98 (1). pp. 31-60. ISSN 0253-4126

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Official URL: http://www.ias.ac.in/j_archive/epsci/98/1/31-60/vi...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF02880375

Abstract

Analysis of teleseismicP-wave residuals observed at 15 seismograph stations operated in the Deccan volcanic province (DVP) in west central India points to the existence of a large, deep anomalous region in the upper mantle where the velocity is a few per cent higher than in the surrounding region. The seismic stations were operated in three deployments together with a reference station on precambrian granite at Hyderabad and another common station at Poona. The first group of stations lay along a west-northwesterly profile from Hyderabad through Poona to Bhatsa. The second group roughly formed an L-shaped profile from Poona to Hyderabad through Dharwar and Hospet. The third group of stations lay along a northwesterly profile from Hyderabad to Dhule through Aurangabad and Latur. Relative residuals computed with respect to Hyderabad at all the stations showed two basic features: a large almost linear variation from approximately +1s for teleseisms from the north to-1s for those from the southeast at the western stations, and persistance of the pattern with diminishing magnitudes towards the east. Preliminary ray-plotting and three-dimensional inversion of theP-wave residual data delineate the presence of a 600 km long approximately N-S trending anomalous region of high velocity (1-4% contrast) from a depth of about 100 km in the upper mantle encompassing almost the whole width of the DVP. Inversion ofP-wave relative residuals reveal the existence of two prominent features beneath the DVP. The first is a thick high velocity zone (1-4% faster) extending from a depth of about 100 km directly beneath most of the DVP. The second feature is a prominent low velocity region which coincides with the westernmost part of the DVP. A possible explanation for the observed coherent high velocity anomaly is that it forms the root of the lithosphere which coherently translates with the continents during plate motions, an architecture characteristic of precambrian shields. The low velocity zone appears to be related to the rift systems (anomaly 28, 65 Ma) which provided the channel for the outpouring of Deccan basalts at the close of the Cretaceous period.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Indian Academy of Sciences.
Keywords:Deccan Volcanic Province; Seismic Tomography; Deep Structure; High Velocity Anomaly; Teleseismic Residuals; Three-dimensional Inversion
ID Code:21765
Deposited On:22 Nov 2010 10:36
Last Modified:17 May 2016 05:56

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