Crustal and Upper Mantle Shear Wave Velocity Structure of Botswana: The 3 April 2017 Central Botswana Earthquake Linked to the East African Rift System

Publication date

2020-02-28

Authors

Fadel, Islam
Paulssen, HannekeORCID 0000-0003-2799-7288ISNI 0000000398325278
van der Meijde, Mark
Kwadiba, Motsamai
Ntibinyane, Onkgopotse
Nyblade, Andrew
Durrheim, Raymond

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Abstract

Rayleigh wave group and phase velocity measurements obtained from ambient noise and earthquake data at 51 broadband stations were used to construct the first 3-D crustal and upper mantle shear wave velocity model of Botswana. The model shows low crustal velocities associated with the Passarge and Nosop sedimentary basins, whereas the Kaapvaal, Zimbabwe, Maltahohe, and Congo Cratons are recognized by high mantle velocities. The lowest upper mantle shear wave velocity, beneath northeastern Botswana, is associated with the southwestern branch of the East African Rift System. This low-velocity mantle anomaly appears to be linked to the crust of the Okavango Rift Zone and the location of the 3 April 2017 Mw 6.5 earthquake in central Botswana. We suggest that fluids or melt at the base of the crust from the southward continuation of the East African Rift Zone triggered the intraplate earthquake in an extensional tectonic setting.

Keywords

ambient noise, continental rift, craton, earthquakes, seismology, surface wave tomography, Geophysics, General Earth and Planetary Sciences

Citation

Fadel, I, Paulssen, H, van der Meijde, M, Kwadiba, M, Ntibinyane, O, Nyblade, A & Durrheim, R 2020, 'Crustal and Upper Mantle Shear Wave Velocity Structure of Botswana : The 3 April 2017 Central Botswana Earthquake Linked to the East African Rift System', Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 47, no. 4, e2019GL085598. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GL085598