Abstract
We use teleseismic receiver functions to investigate the crustal structure at two locations in western Turkey using seismic data recorded on small arrays of temporary broad-band seismographs. The results from these analyses are compared with receiver function results from the GDSN station ANTO on the Anatolian Plateau in central Turkey. The crust is ~30 km thick in the region of western Turkey where active normal faulting reveals present-day extension in the upper crust and alkali-basaltic volcanism reveals recent extension within the subcrustal lithosphere. The crust is ~34 km thick further east where crustal extension is still evident but less pronounced. In the Anatolian Plateau, which is not currently extending, the crust is ~38 km thick. The level of extension estimated from these measurements of crustal thickness implies a β-factor of ~1.2. This value agrees with the amount of extension estimated in the upper crust from the integrated seismic strain rate (β-factor of ~1.3), from surface faulting (β-factor of ~1.25) and from the amount of extension in the subcrustal lithosphere estimated from the volcanism (β-factor ≤2), all indicating that the extension is approximately uniformly distributed vertically throughout the lithosphere. The Moho transition in this region appears to thin slightly as the degree of extension increases westwards.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 373-389 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Geophysical Journal International |
Volume | 134 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug 1998 |