Surface-Wave Images of Western Canada: Lithospheric Variations Across
the Cordillera/Craton Boundary
Abstract
Two-station surface-wave analysis was used to measure Rayleigh-wave
phase velocities between 105 station pairs in western Canada, straddling
the boundary between the tectonically active Cordillera and the adjacent
stable craton. Major variations in phase velocity are seen across the
boundary at periods from 15 to 200 s, periods primarily sensitive to
upper-mantle structure. Tomographic inversion of these phase velocities
was used to generate phase-velocity maps at these periods, indicating a
sharp contrast between low-velocity Cordilleran upper mantle and
high-velocity cratonic lithosphere. Depth inversion along selected
transects indicates that the Cordillera/craton upper-mantle contact
varies in dip along the deformation front, with cratonic lithosphere of
the Taltson province overthrusting Cordilleran asthenosphere in the
northern Cordillera, and Cordilleran asthenosphere overthrusting Wopmay
lithosphere further south. Localized high-velocity features at
sub-lithospheric depths beneath the Cordillera are interpreted as
Farallon slab fragments, with the gap between these features indicating
a slab window. A high-velocity feature in the lower lithosphere of the
Slave province may be related to Proterozic or Archean subduction.