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Featured researches published by Forough Sodoudi.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Lithospheric structure of the Aegean obtained from P and S receiver functions

Forough Sodoudi; Rainer Kind; Denis Hatzfeld; Keith Priestley; Winfried Hanka; K. Wylegalla; G. Stavrakakis; A. Vafidis; Hans-Peter Harjes; M. Bohnhoff

Combined P and S receiver functions from seismograms of teleseismic events recorded at 65 temporary and permanent stations in the Aegean region are used to map the geometry of the subducted African and the overriding Aegean plates. We image the Moho of the subducting African plate at depths ranging from 40 km beneath southern Crete and the western Peloponnesus to 160 km beneath the volcanic arc and 220 km beneath northern Greece. However, the dip of the Moho of the subducting African plate is shallower beneath the Peloponnesus than beneath Crete and Rhodes and flattens out beneath the northern Aegean. Observed P-to-S conversions at stations located in the forearc indicate a reversed velocity contrast at the Moho boundary of the Aegean plate, whereas this boundary is observed as a normal velocity contrast by the S-to-P conversions. Our modeling suggests that the presence of a large amount of serpentinite (more than 30%) in the forearc mantle wedge, which generally occurs in the subduction zones, may be the reason for the reverse sign of the P-to-S conversion coefficient. Moho depths for the Aegean plate show that the southern part of the Aegean (crustal thickness of 20–22 km) has been strongly influenced by extension, while the northern Aegean Sea, which at present undergoes the highest crustal deformation, shows a relatively thicker crust (25–28 km). This may imply a recent initiation of the present kinematics in the Aegean. Western Greece (crustal thickness of 32–40 km) is unaffected by the recent extension but underwent crustal thickening during the Hellenides Mountains building event. The depths of the Aegean Moho beneath the margin of the Peloponnesus and Crete (25–28 and 25–33 km, respectively) show that these areas are also likely to be affected by the Aegean extension, even though the Cyclades (crustal thickness of 26–30 km) were not significantly involved in this episode. The Aegean lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary (LAB) mapped with S receiver functions is about 150 km deep beneath mainland Greece, whereas the LAB of the subducted African plate dips from 100 km beneath Crete and the southern Aegean Sea to about 225 km under the volcanic arc. This implies a thickness of 60–65 km for the subducted African lithosphere, suggesting that the Aegean lithosphere was not significantly affected by the extensional process associated with the exhumation of metamorphic core complexes in the Cyclades.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2007

An S receiver function analysis of the lithospheric structure in South America

Benjamin Heit; Forough Sodoudi; Xiaohui Yuan; Marcelo Bianchi; Rainer Kind


Geophysical Journal International | 2010

Thickness of the central and eastern European lithosphere as seen by S receiver functions

Wolfram H. Geissler; Forough Sodoudi; Rainer Kind


Geophysical Journal International | 2006

Lithospheric thickness beneath the Dabie Shan, central eastern China from S receiver functions

Forough Sodoudi; Xiaohui Yuan; Qifang Liu; Rainer Kind; Jiu Hui Chen


Geophysical Journal International | 2009

Evidence for a missing crustal root and a thin lithosphere beneath the Central Alborz by receiver function studies

Forough Sodoudi; Xiaohui Yuan; Rainer Kind; Benjamin Heit; Ahmad Sadidkhouy


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2012

Melt infiltration of the lower lithosphere beneath the Tanzania craton and the Albertine rift inferred from S receiver functions

Ingo Wölbern; Georg Rümpker; Klemens Link; Forough Sodoudi


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2013

Seismic evidence for stratification in composition and anisotropic fabric within the thick lithosphere of Kalahari Craton

Forough Sodoudi; Xiaohui Yuan; Rainer Kind; Sergei Lebedev; Joanne M.-C. Adam; Emanuel D. Kästle; Frederik Tilmann


Geophysical Journal International | 2008

Crustal thickness estimation beneath the southern central Andes at 30°S and 36°S from S wave receiver function analysis

Benjamin Heit; Xiaohui Yuan; Marcelo Bianchi; Forough Sodoudi; Rainer Kind


Solid Earth | 2015

Thickness of the lithosphere beneath Turkey and surroundings from S-receiver functions

Rainer Kind; Tuna Eken; Frederik Tilmann; Forough Sodoudi; Tuncay Taymaz; Fatih Bulut; Xiaohui Yuan; B. Can; F. Schneider


Journal of Seismology | 2010

Lithospheric structure of NW Iran from P and S receiver functions

Fataneh Taghizadeh-Farahmand; Forough Sodoudi; Narges Afsari; Mohammad R. Ghassemi

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Rainer Kind

Free University of Berlin

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Xiaohui Yuan

Free University of Berlin

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Winfried Hanka

Free University of Berlin

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Benjamin Heit

Free University of Berlin

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G. Asch

Free University of Berlin

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A. Vafidis

Technical University of Crete

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Tuna Eken

Istanbul Technical University

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