Evidence for Stress Localization Caused by Lithospheric Heterogeneity
from Seismic Attenuation
Abstract
The Wyoming Craton underwent tectonic modifications during the Laramide
Orogeny, which resulted in a series of basement-cored uplifts that built
the modern-day Rockies. The easternmost surface expression of this
orogeny - the Black Hills in South Dakota - is separated from the main
trend of the Rocky Mountains by the southern half of the Powder River
Basin, which we refer to as the Thunder Basin. Seismic tomography
studies reveal a high-velocity anomaly which extends to a depth of
~300 km below the basin and may represent a lithospheric
keel. We constrain seismic attenuation to investigate the hypothesis
that the variations in lithospheric thickness resulted in the
localization of stress and therefore deformation. We utilize data from
the CIELO seismic array, a linear array that extends from east of the
Black Hills across the Thunder Basin and westward into the Owl Creek
Mountains, the BASE FlexArray deployment centered on the Bighorn
Mountains, and the EarthScope Transportable Array. We analyze
seismograms from deep teleseismic events and compare waveforms in the
time-domain to characterize lateral varations in attenuation. Bayesian
inversion results reveal high attenuation in the Black Hills and Bighorn
Mountains and low attenuation in the Thunder and Bighorn basins.
Scattering is rejected as an confounding factor because of a strong
anticorrelation between attenuation and the amplitude of P wave
codas. The results support the hypothesis that lateral variations in
lithospheric strength, as evidenced by our seismic attenuation
measurements, played an important role in the localization of
deformation and orogenesis during the Laramide Orogeny.