We present constraints on the regional variations of the seismic and mechanical thickness of the Australian lithosphere. We infer the seismic thickness from a waveform tomographic model of S-wave speed, and as a proxy for the elastic thickness we use the wavelength at which the coherence of surface topography and Bouguer gravity drops below hald of its long-wavelength maximum. Our results show that on scales <1000 km the relationship between the age of the crust and the thickness of the lithosphere is more complicated than longer-wavelength or global averages suggest. Recent geochemical and geodynamical evidence for small-scale secular variations of the composition and stability of continental cratons further illustrates the complexity of the age dependence of seismo-mechanical lithospheric properties on regional scales.
CITATION STYLE
Simons, F. J., & van der Hilst, R. D. (2002). Age-dependent seismic thickness and mechanical strength of the Australian lithosphere. Geophysical Research Letters, 29(11), 24-1-24–4. https://doi.org/10.1029/2002GL014962
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