| Literature DB >> 30956376 |
György Hetényi1,2,3,4, Irene Molinari2, John Clinton3, Götz Bokelmann5, István Bondár6, Wayne C Crawford7, Jean-Xavier Dessa8, Cécile Doubre9, Wolfgang Friederich10, Florian Fuchs5, Domenico Giardini2, Zoltán Gráczer6, Mark R Handy11, Marijan Herak12, Yan Jia13, Edi Kissling2, Heidrun Kopp14,15, Michael Korn16, Lucia Margheriti17, Thomas Meier15, Marco Mucciarelli18, Anne Paul19, Damiano Pesaresi18, Claudia Piromallo17, Thomas Plenefisch20, Jaroslava Plomerová21, Joachim Ritter22, Georg Rümpker23, Vesna Šipka24, Daniele Spallarossa25, Christine Thomas26, Frederik Tilmann11,27, Joachim Wassermann28, Michael Weber27,29, Zoltán Wéber6, Viktor Wesztergom4, Mladen Živčić30.
Abstract
The AlpArray programme is a multinational, European consortium to advance our understanding of orogenesis and its relationship to mantle dynamics, plate reorganizations, surface processes and seismic hazard in the Alps-Apennines-Carpathians-Dinarides orogenic system. The AlpArray Seismic Network has been deployed with contributions from 36 institutions from 11 countries to map physical properties of the lithosphere and asthenosphere in 3D and thus to obtain new, high-resolution geophysical images of structures from the surface down to the base of the mantle transition zone. With over 600 broadband stations operated for 2 years, this seismic experiment is one of the largest simultaneously operated seismological networks in the academic domain, employing hexagonal coverage with station spacing at less than 52 km. This dense and regularly spaced experiment is made possible by the coordinated coeval deployment of temporary stations from numerous national pools, including ocean-bottom seismometers, which were funded by different national agencies. They combine with permanent networks, which also required the cooperation of many different operators. Together these stations ultimately fill coverage gaps. Following a short overview of previous large-scale seismological experiments in the Alpine region, we here present the goals, construction, deployment, characteristics and data management of the AlpArray Seismic Network, which will provide data that is expected to be unprecedented in quality to image the complex Alpine mountains at depth.Entities:
Keywords: Alps; Geodynamics; Mountain building; Seismic imaging; Seismic network; Seismology
Year: 2018 PMID: 30956376 PMCID: PMC6428228 DOI: 10.1007/s10712-018-9472-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surv Geophys ISSN: 0169-3298 Impact factor: 6.673
Fig. 1Simplified tectonic map of the Alps, their adjacent orogens and forelands that result from the collision of two converging plates, Europe and Adria. The major units are coloured according to their plate-tectonic provenance. Red colours mark the main tectonic boundaries related to plate-kinematic history of the Alps. URG Upper Rhine Graben. BG Bresse Graben.
Modified from Schmid et al. (2008), Ustaszewski et al. (2008), Schmid and Slejko (2009), Handy et al. (2010) and Bousquet et al. (2012)
Fig. 2Location of selected seismological project in the greater Alpine area. Active seismic campaigns are shown as solid lines. Past passive seismological networks are shown as symbols (broadband: large triangles, short period: small circles, mixed: small triangles). AlpArray complementary experiments are shown as squares (past and current: solid contour, planned: dashed contour). See text for overview
Fig. 3Topographical map of the greater Alpine area and the geometry of the AlpArray Seismic Network. The permanent and temporary broadband stations (respectively red triangles and orange circles) cover the area within 250 km of the smoothed 800-m altitude line of the Alps (outer and inner thick white lines). Status as of August 2017
Fig. 4Map showing distance to the closest broadband seismological station: a spacing at the beginning of AlpArray planning in summer 2011 with 234 stations; b principle of positioning newly installed temporary stations; c spacing of the complete 628 stations of the AlpArray Seismic Network in August 2017
Range of numbers for the middle 3 digits of AASN temporary station names
| Country of deployment | Range of numbers | |
|---|---|---|
| AT | Austria | 001–049 |
| BH | Bosnia–Herzegovina | 050–059 |
| CH | Switzerland | 060–069 |
| CZ | Czech Republic | 070–099 |
| DE | Germany | 100–149 and 350–399 |
| FR | France | 150–249 |
| HR | Croatia | 250–259 |
| HU | Hungary | 260–279 |
| IT | Italy | 280–329 |
| SK | Slovakia | 330–349 |
| OBS | OBS component | 400–449 |
Fig. 5Development of AASN broadband seismological stations in the AlpArray area. Each point represents one station. Time is in month (above) and year (below) units. During the peak of the installation phase in autumn 2015, more than 1 station per day was installed. Only the ocean-bottom sensor (OBS) deployment rate was higher
Housing classes, soil types and communication modes of temporary AASN sites (including already moved sites)
| Housing class | Number of stations |
|---|---|
| Cave | 2 |
| Tunnel | 3 |
| Borehole | 1 |
| Underground shelter | 19 |
| Free field | 53 |
| Urban free field | 47 |
| Building | 134 |
| Other | 8 |
| OBS | 30 |
OBS ocean-bottom seismometer
Fig. 6AlpArray Seismic Network “broadbandness”: the distribution of the longer corner period of seismological sensors. The great majority of sensors record beyond 100-s period. Status as of August 2017
Fig. 7AlpArray Seismic Network vicinity: a map of distance to the nearest other seismological station; b histogram of these distances. As on previous figures, triangles denote permanent stations and circles represent temporary ones. Status as of August 2017
Fig. 8Waveform examples across the AASN. a Teleseismic waves following the 2017-09-08T04:49:19 (UTC) MW 8.2 Mexico earthquake. Waveforms are band-pass filtered between 0.01 and 0.5 Hz. Theoretical teleseismic phase arrival times (see colour legend) are calculated by the Crazyseismic code (Yu et al. 2017). b Local and regional waves following the 2017-03-06T20:12:07 (UTC) ML 4.6 Urnerboden (Switzerland earthquakes). Waveforms are band-pass filtered between 0.04 and 2 Hz. On both figures waveforms are shown for stations available for download on 20 March 2018, represented by green dots on the maps in the lower right corners. The white vertical line across the waveforms marks the origin time of the respective earthquake