Investigation of the Upper Crustal Structure in the NW Dinarides Using
Local Earthquake Tomography
Abstract
The area of the NW Dinarides lies in the northeastern corner of the
Adriatic microplate – a promontory of the African plate – which plays
a major role in the collision processes occurring in the peri-Adriatic
region. Taking advantage of the greatly increased amount of data due to
the modernization of the Slovenian seismological network, improved
cross-border data exchange, and the tempoprary deployments within the
large pan-european AlpArray project, we performed 3-D simultaneous
hypocenter–velocity inversions with routinely picked arrival times of
P- and S-waves from 502 local earthquakes. The resolution analysis
showed that the resulting 3-D P-velocity and vP/vS model could be
successfully recovered at least up to a depth of 15 km. Our results are
consistent with previous studies, but provide better resolution in the
upper crust and, for the first time, a uniform and simultaneously
computed vP/vS model for the entire study area. The final 3-D models
show two distinct velocity anomalies with a narrow transition zone in
between. The velocity anomaly in the west of our study area reflects the
thrust structure that formed due to the underthrusting of the Adriatic
microplate, while the anomaly in the east marks the transition to the
Pannonian basin. The recovered velocity distribution also appears to
correlate spatially with seismicity, which is tied to the Moho
topography at depth. The seismicity relocated with the computed models
is on average shallower and has better determined locations than the
seismicity located with the 1-D velocity model used in the daily
earthquake analysis.