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Mereu, R F (2000) The complexity of the crust and Moho under the southeastern Superior and Grenville provinces of the Canadian Shield from seismic refraction - wide-angle reflection data. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 37 (2) 439-458 doi:10.1139/e99-122

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleThe complexity of the crust and Moho under the southeastern Superior and Grenville provinces of the Canadian Shield from seismic refraction - wide-angle reflection data
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsMereu, R FAuthor
Year2000 (April 2)Volume37
Issue2
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e99-122Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID483362Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:483362:2
GUID0
Full ReferenceMereu, R F (2000) The complexity of the crust and Moho under the southeastern Superior and Grenville provinces of the Canadian Shield from seismic refraction - wide-angle reflection data. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 37 (2) 439-458 doi:10.1139/e99-122
Plain TextMereu, R F (2000) The complexity of the crust and Moho under the southeastern Superior and Grenville provinces of the Canadian Shield from seismic refraction - wide-angle reflection data. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 37 (2) 439-458 doi:10.1139/e99-122
In(2000, April) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 37 (2) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The major features of the individual velocity models, Poisson's ratio values, and crustal complexity derived from the interpretation of seismic data sets from four long-range seismic refraction - wide-angle reflection experiments are summarized. The experiments were conducted from 1982-92 in the southeastern portion of the Canadian Shield. In the conventional analysis of seismic refraction - wide-angle reflection data, only the onset times and amplitudes of the major arrival phases are used to derive seismic velocity models of the region under study. These models are over smoothed, have a number of intermediate discontinuities, are unable to explain the Pg coda, and bear very little resemblance to the models derived from the analysis of near-vertical seismic reflection data. In this paper some of the differences between seismic models derived from near-vertical reflection analysis and those from refraction analysis are reconciled from an analysis of the wide-angle reflection fields of the crustal coda waves that follow the first arrivals. This was done using a migration technique that to a first approximation maps the amplitudes of the record sections into a two-dimensional (2-D) complexity section. These new sections show significant lateral variations in crustal and Moho reflectivity and may be used to complement the 2-D velocity anomaly sections and near-vertical reflection sections. The method was based on a numerical study that showed that the coda can be explained with a class of complex heterogeneous models in which sets of small-scale, high-contrast sloping seismic reflectors are "embedded" in a uniform seismic velocity gradient field.


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