High-resolution receiver function imaging reveals Colorado Plateau lithospheric architecture and mantle-supported topography
Abstract
After maintaining elevations near sea level for over 500 million years, the Colorado Plateau (CP) has a present average elevation of 2 km. We compute new receiver function images from the first dense seismic transect to cross the plateau that reveal a central CP crustal thickness of 42-50 km thinning to 30-35 km at the CP margins. Isostatic calculations show that only approximately 20% of central CP elevations can be explained by thickened crust alone, with the CP edges requiring nearly total mantle compensation. We calculate an uplift budget showing that CP buoyancy arises from a combination of crustal thickening, heating and alteration of the lithospheric root, dynamic support from mantle upwelling, and significant buoyant edge effects produced by small-scale convecting asthenosphere at its margins.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- October 2010
- DOI:
- 10.1029/2010GL044799
- Bibcode:
- 2010GeoRL..3720313W
- Keywords:
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- Seismology: Lithosphere (1236);
- Tectonophysics: Dynamics of lithosphere and mantle: general (1213);
- Tectonophysics: Lithospheric flexure;
- Structural Geology: Regional crustal structure