THE EFFECTIVE ELASTIC THICKNESS OF THE INDIA PLATE FROM RECEIVER FUNCTION IMAGING, GRAVITY ANOMALIES AND THERMOMECHANICAL MODELLING

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dc.contributor.author Hetényi G.
dc.contributor.author Cattin R.
dc.contributor.author Vergne J.
dc.contributor.author Nábělek J.L.
dc.date.accessioned 2025-02-16T08:50:20Z
dc.date.available 2025-02-16T08:50:20Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=31386224
dc.identifier.citation Geophysical Journal International, 2006, 167, 3, 1106-1118
dc.identifier.issn 0956-540X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/47982
dc.description.abstract The range and the meaning of the effective elastic thickness (EET) in continental areas have been subject to controversy over the last two decades. Here we take advantage of the new data set from the Hi-CLIMB seismological experiment to re-estimate the EET of the India Plate along a south-north profile extending from the Ganges basin to central Tibet. Receiver functions give a high-resolution image of the base of the foreland basin at ~5 km depth and constrain the crustal thickness, which increases northwards from ~35 km beneath the indo-gangetic plain to ~70 km in southern Tibet. Together with available data sets including seismic profiles, seismological images from both INDEPTH and HIMNT experiments, deep well measurements and Bouguer anomaly profiles, we interpret this new image with 2-D thermomechanical modelling solutions, using different type of crustal and mantle rheologies. We find that (1) the EET of the India Plate decreases northwards from 60-80 to 20-30 km as it is flexed down beneath Himalaya and Tibet, due to thermal and flexural weakening; (2) the only resistant layer of the India Plate beneath southern Tibet is the upper mantle, which serves as a support for the topographic load and (3) the most abrupt drop in the EET, located around 200 km south of the MFT, is associated with a gradual decoupling between the crust and the mantle. We show that our geometrical constraints do not allow to determine if the upper and lower crust are coupled or not. Our results clearly reveal that a rheology with a weak mantle is unable to explain the geometry of the lithosphere in this region, and they are in favour of a rheology in which the mantle is strong. © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation © 2006 RAS.
dc.subject FLEXURE OF THE LITHOSPHERE
dc.subject GRAVITY ANOMALY
dc.subject HIMALAYA
dc.subject P WAVES
dc.subject RHEOLOGY
dc.subject S WAVES
dc.title THE EFFECTIVE ELASTIC THICKNESS OF THE INDIA PLATE FROM RECEIVER FUNCTION IMAGING, GRAVITY ANOMALIES AND THERMOMECHANICAL MODELLING
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1111/j.1365-246X.2006.03198.x


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