Aubreya Nicole Adams
Pennsylvania State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Aubreya Nicole Adams.
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America | 2009
Aubreya Nicole Adams; Richard Anthony Brazier; Andrew A. Nyblade; Arthur J. Rodgers; Abdullah Al-Amri
Six earthquakes within the Zagros Mountains with magnitudes between 4.9 and 5.7 have been studied to determine their source parameters. These events were selected for study because they were reported in open catalogs to have lower crustal or upper mantle source depths and because they occurred within an area of the Zagros Mountains where crustal velocity structure has been constrained by previous studies. Moment tensor inversion of regional broadband waveforms has been combined with forward modeling of depth phases on short-period teleseismic waveforms to constrain source depths and moment tensors. Our results show that all six events nucleated within the upper crust (<11 km depth) and have thrust mechanisms. This finding supports other studies that call into question the existence of lower crustal or mantle events beneath the Zagros Mountains.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Aubreya Nicole Adams; Douglas A. Wiens; Andrew A. Nyblade; G. G. Euler; Patrick J. Shore; R. Tibi
The Cameroon Volcanic Line (CVL) is a 1800 km long volcanic chain, extending SW-NE from the Gulf of Guinea into Central Africa, that lacks the typical age progression exhibited by hot spot-related volcanic tracks. This study investigates the upper mantle seismic structure beneath the CVL and surrounding regions to constrain the origin of volcanic lines that are poorly described by the classic plume model. Rayleigh wave phase velocities are measured at periods from 20 to 182 s following the two-plane wave methodology, using data from the Cameroon Seismic Experiment, which consists of 32 broadband stations deployed between 2005 and 2007. These phase velocities are then inverted to build a model of shear wave velocity structure in the upper mantle beneath the CVL. Results show that phase velocities beneath the CVL are reduced at all periods, with average velocities beneath the CVL deviating more than –2% from the regional average and +4% beneath the Congo Craton. This distinction is observed for all periods but is less pronounced for the longest periods measured. Inversion for shear wave velocity structure indicates a tabular low velocity anomaly directly beneath the CVL at depths of 50 to at least 200 km and a sharp vertical boundary with faster velocities beneath the Congo Craton. These observations demonstrate widespread infiltration or erosion of the continental lithosphere beneath the CVL, most likely caused by mantle upwelling associated with edge-flow convection driven by the Congo Craton or by lithospheric instabilities that develop due to the nearby edge of the African continent.
Geophysical Journal International | 2012
Aubreya Nicole Adams; Andrew A. Nyblade; Dayanthie S. Weeraratne
Geophysical Journal International | 2013
J. P. O’Donnell; Aubreya Nicole Adams; Andrew A. Nyblade; G. D. Mulibo; F. A. Tugume
Geophysical Journal International | 2011
Aubreya Nicole Adams; Andrew A. Nyblade
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2016
Jordan H. Graw; Aubreya Nicole Adams; Samantha E. Hansen; Douglas A. Wiens; Lauren Hackworth
Archive | 2010
Aubreya Nicole Adams
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
Aubreya Nicole Adams
2015 AGU Fall Meeting | 2015
Aubreya Nicole Adams
2014 AGU Fall Meeting | 2014
Aubreya Nicole Adams