Abstract
We present new, densely sampled shear-wave splitting results from
southern Minnesota and adjacent areas of neighboring states, sampling
the southwestern limit of the Archean Superior Province and straddling
the Proterozoic Mid-Continent Rift (MCR). The new measurements include
data from the Earthscope Transportable Array (TA) as well as the
Superior Province Rifting Earthscope Experiment (SPREE), yielding 99 new
station-averaged measurements. The split times show a consistent
decrease from 1.1 s in the NE to 0.2 s in the SW, with the lowest values
being associated with the Minnesota River Valley Terrane (MRVT). From
modelling and other geophysical constraints, we interpret the split time
variations to represent variations in fabric strength within a thick
lithosphere, rather than lithospheric thinning or a multi-layered
effect, and propose that the weak fabric of the MRVT is associated with
a different mechanism of formation than elsewhere in the Superior
Province. The fast directions we measure range from NNE-SSW to E-W and
vary on a shorter length scale than the split times, with a pattern of
NE-SW splits that closely follows the axis of the MCR. We interpret this
as a perturbation of the net fast direction due to anisotropy in an
underplate along the rift.