5:15 PM - 6:45 PM
[SIT14-P11] Mapping the upper mantle discontinuities under the Australian continent with the Bayesian inference using azimuth-dependent receiver functions and multimode surface waves

Keywords:Upper mantle, Lithosphere, Asthenosphere, Anisotropy, Receiver Function, Surface waves
Recent studies investigating the upper mantle structure have employed joint inversions with surface-wave dispersions (SWDs) and body-wave receiver functions (RFs) (e.g., Calo et al., 2016, EPSL; Taira & Yoshizawa, 2020, GJI). In such studies, the azimuthal dependence of RFs is generally ignored under the assumption of a 1-D stratified structure beneath a seismic station. However, if there is a rapid lateral variation of seismic interfaces under the station, RFs would vary with the incoming direction of teleseismic body waves (e.g., direct P-waves for P-RF).
In this study, at first, we estimate the orientation of horizontal components of the seismometer at all the employed stations in Australia based on the time-domain polarization analysis (Vidale, 1986, BSSA) using the direct P-waves for the better estimation of azimuth-dependent P-RFs. Then, we performed the trans-dimensional Bayesian inversion with multimode SWDs and azimuth-dependent P-RFs to estimate the radially anisotropic S-wave models (SV and SH wave speeds) and the conversion points from P to S for various incoming directions of P waves.
Our retrieved models indicate the azimuth-dependent LAB and Lehmann Discontinuity (L-D). In eastern Phanerozoic Australia, significant SV-wave speed drops, representing LAB, are generally observed at shallow depths (70-80km). However, LAB becomes deeper (130-140 km) in the north and west of a station near the margin with the western cratonic region, where the lithosphere thickens. Below the LAB, we could also detect seismic discontinuities accompanied by the S-wave velocity jump, which can be interpreted as L-D. Compared with LAB, the L-Ds are generally observed as flat and multiple interfaces in eastern Australia. On the other hand, in the western cratonic region, although the S-velocity drop seems unclearer, the LAB-like signature can be found at deeper depths (110-180 km) than in eastern Australia. In addition, L-D is seen as a single interface at around 300 km depth. As expected from earlier studies, radial anisotropy (xi = (VSH/VSV)2) increases below the LAB, reflecting the horizontal shear flow in the asthenosphere. On the contrary, below the L-Ds, radial anisotropy becomes weak and closer to isotropy, suggesting the transition from the dislocation to diffusion creep as expected from mineral physics.