Sp. Larkin et al., A DETERMINISTIC AND STOCHASTIC VELOCITY MODEL FOR THE SALTON TROUGH BASIN AND RANGE TRANSITION ZONE AND CONSTRAINTS ON MAGMATISM DURING RIFTING/, J GEO R-SOL, 101(B12), 1996, pp. 27883-27897
As a high resolution addition to the 199 Pacific to Arizona Crustal Ex
periment (PACE), a 45-km-long deep crustal seismic reflection profile
was acquired across the Chocolate Mountains in southeastern California
to illuminate crustal structure in the transition between the Salton
Trough and the Basin and Range province. The complex seismic data are
analyzed for both large-scale. (deterministic) and fine-scale (stochas
tic) crustal features: A low-fold near-offset common-midpoint (CMP) st
acked section shows the northeastward lateral extent of a high-velocit
y lower crustal body which is centered beneath the Salton Trough. Off-
end shots record a high-amplitude diffraction from the point where the
high velocity lower crust pinches out at the Moho. Above the high-vel
ocity lower crust, moderate-amplitude reflections occur at midcrustal
levels. These reflections display the coherency and frequency characte
ristics of reflections backscattered from a heterogeneous velocity fie
ld, which we model as horizontal intrusions, with a von Karman (fracta
l) distribution. The effects of upper crustal scattering are included
by combining the mapped surface geology and laboratory measurements of
exposed rocks within the Chocolate Mountains to reproduce the upper c
rystal velocity heterogeneity ih our crustal velocity model. Viscoelas
tic finite difference simulations indicate that the volume of mafic ma
terial within the reflective zone necessary to produce the observed ba
ckscatter is about 5%. The presence of wavelength-scale heterogeneity
within the near-surface, upper, and middle crust also produces a 0.5-a
-thick zone of discontinuous reflections from a crust-mantle interface
which is actually a first-order discontinuity.