A long‐range seismic profile in Southeastern Australia
1977
Summary. Nine portable seismic stations deployed across the Western Plains of New South Wales recorded signals in the distance range 250–1000 km from large timed explosions at both ends of the line. A velocity—depth model derived from the travel-time data has the following features: a two-layer crust with a thickness of 35 km; a sub-Moho velocity of 7.98 km/s; an abrupt increase to 8.36 km/s at 100 km depth; a further step to 8.72 km/s at 190 km depth, with a low-velocity channel immediately above the discontinuity. The model has several features in common with others derived from long-range profiles in Australia and elsewhere. The data, however, provide the first suggestion of a low P-velocity channel in Eastern Australia.
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