Abstract
Whether deep earthquakes beneath the southern East African Rift, down to
44 ±4 km, occur above or below the Moho has remained controversial. We
explore a new technique, relying on the amplitude ratios of Sn and Lg
seismic waves, to test earthquake depths relative to the Moho. Sn and Lg
waves propagate through reflections in the mantle lid and the crust,
respectively, so Sn is only strongly excited by events with hypocenters
below the Moho and Lg by events above the Moho (see presentations in
S024: Wang and Klemperer, and Chen et al., this meeting). We first
validated our Sn/Lg method with an earthquake accepted to be below the
Moho in the offshore extension of the East African Rift System, a
magnitude 4.6 event at 14.7 3.4 km in the Mesozoic oceanic crust of the
Mozambique Channel. Even given the Miocene-to-Recent volcanism
(associated with the offshore extension of the East African Rift
System), this event - if its depth is correct - is almost certainly in
the mantle. As predicted from our Sn/Lg models, regional seismograms for
this event have strong Sn but essentially no Lg. We then applied our
method to the 1998 m=4.7 earthquake beneath southern Lake Malawi to
determine its position relative to the Moho. Yang & Chen (JGR, 2010)
report it to be 44 km deep in a region where crustal thickness varies
rapidly from ~35 km within the rift to
~45km beneath the adjacent craton. The published
location beneath Lake Malawi suggests the earthquake may have occurred
in the mantle but Craig et al. (GJI, 2011) note that it lies within
error of the Moho. Our analysis shows rather small Sn but strong Lg
energy, so we believe it is likely in the lower crust. Given our
results, either the current depth is incorrect or the event is not
beneath the axis of the rift. Neither solution easily explains the
phases Yang & Chen described as underside PmP reflections, which were
used to suggest this earthquake occurred below the Moho. A possible
answer may lie in strong 3D structure around the hypocenter, which may
either be affecting our Sn and Lg observations, or may offer a
multi-pathing solution to the delayed “underside PmP” phases