V. Levin et al., SEISMIC ANISOTROPY IN THE NORTH-EASTERN US AS A SOURCE OF SIGNIFICANTTELESEISMIC P TRAVEL-TIME ANOMALIES, Geophysical journal international, 126(2), 1996, pp. 593-603
Observations of shear-wave splitting in the north-eastern US and south
ern Canada provide evidence for seismic anisotropy in the lithosphere
throughout most of the region. S-wave splitting times of the order of
is are found within the Proterozoic Grenville Province and at a number
of sites within the Appalachian Orogen. As a notable exception, seism
ic anisotropy is weak or absent in Vermont and western New Hampshire-a
transitional zone between Proterozoic and Palaeozoic terranes. The fa
st direction is westerly (260 degrees-280 degrees) within the Grenvill
e Province, and north-westerly (300 degrees-320 degrees) in the Appala
chians. The effects of seismic anisotropy on the traveltimes of body w
aves are modelled in a horizontal layer characterized by an anisotropi
c elastic tensor of olivine. Simulations are made to study the influen
ce of parameters such as the fraction of anisotropic material, the ang
le between the tensor symmetry axis and the wave propagation direction
, and the type of crystallographic axis aligned in olivine grains. Res
ults indicate that earth models with S-wave splitting times of about 1
s should also have P traveltime anomalies (positive or negative) of t
he order of 0.2-0.3 s. Also, alignment along either axis (a or b) can
produce the combination of P delays between - 0.25 and - 0.75 s and S-
wave splitting times between 0.7 and 1.3 s observed in the Adirondack
Mountains. We conclude that velocity anomalies found in this region by
earlier studies may in part be due to seismic anisotropy.