Title of article :
Seismic Detection and Characterization of the Altiplano-Puna Magma Body, Central Andes
Author/Authors :
G. Zandt ، نويسنده , , M. Leidig، نويسنده , , J. Chmielowski، نويسنده , , D. Baumont، نويسنده , , X. Yuan ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
The Altiplano-Puna Volcanic Complex (APVC) in the central Andes is the product of an
ignimbrite ‘‘flare-up’’ of world class proportions (DE SILVA, 1989). The region has been the site of large-scale
silicic magmatism since 10 Ma, producing 10 major eruptive calderas and edifices, some of which are multipleeruption
resurgent complexes as large as the Yellowstone or Long Valley caldera. Seven PASSCAL
broadband seismic stations were operated in the Bolivian portion of the APVC from October 1996 to
September 1997 and recorded teleseismic earthquakes and local intermediate-depth events in the subducting
Nazca plate. Both teleseismic and local receiver functions were used to delineate the lateral extent of a
regionally pervasive 20-km-deep, very low-velocity layer (VLVL) associated with the APVC. Data from
several stations that sample different parts of the northernAPVCshow large amplitude Ps phases from a lowvelocity
layer with Vs £ 1.0 km/s and a thickness of 1 km.Webelieve the crustalVLVLis a regional sill-like
magma body, named the Altiplano–Puna magma body (APMB), and is associated with the source region of
the Altiplano–Puna Volcanic Complex ignimbrites (CHMIELOWSKI et al., 1999).
Large-amplitude P–SH conversions in both the teleseismic and local data appear to originate from the
top of the APMB. Using the programs of LEVIN and PARK (1998), we computed synthetic receiver functions
for several models of simple layered anisotropic media. Upper-crustal, tilted-axis anisotropy involving both
Vp and Vs can generate a ‘‘split Ps’’ phase that, in addition to the Ps phase from the bottom of a thin isotropic
VLVL, produces an interference waveform that varies with backazimuth. We have forward modeled such an
interference pattern at one station with an anisotropy of 15%–20% that dips 45 within a 20-km-thick upper
crust. We develop a hypothesis that the crust above the ‘‘magma body’’ is characterized by a strong, tiltedaxis,
hexagonally symmetric anisotropy. Wespeculate that the anisotropy is due to aligned, fluid-filled cracks
induced by a ‘‘normal-faulting’’ extensional strain field associated with the high elevations of the Andean
Puna.
Keywords :
PASSCAL , Receiver functions , magma body , Anisotropy , APVC. , Altiplano-Puna
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics