Mingjie Xu
Nanjing University
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Featured researches published by Mingjie Xu.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
Xuewei Bao; Mingjie Xu; David W. Eaton; Xiaodong Song; Liangshu Wang; Zhifeng Ding; Ning Mi; Dayong Yu; Hua Li
New constraints on the pattern of crustal flow in SE Tibet are obtained from joint analysis of receiver functions and Rayleigh wave dispersion with a newly deployed seismic array. The crust in the Sichuan-Yunnan Diamond Block has an average thickness of ~45 km and gradually thins toward the Indo-China Block to the west and the Yangtze Block to the east. High VP/VS ratios are detected to the west of the Xiaojiang fault, but not in the Yangtze Block to the east. The S wave velocity profile reveals that intra-crustal low-velocity zones (IC-LVZs) are strongly heterogeneous, with two LVZs in the middle and mid-lower crust, respectively, in marked contrast to previous observations of a single LVZ. Combined with other observations, the two IC-LVZs are interpreted as isolated channels of crustal flow at different depths beneath SE Tibet, resulting in the observed complex pattern of radial anisotropy and further elucidating patterns of flow and deformation.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014
Zhouchuan Huang; Pan Wang; Dapeng Zhao; Liangshu Wang; Mingjie Xu
Seismic anisotropy in the upper mantle beneath East Asia has been studied extensively using shear wave (SKS) splitting measurements, which have provided important information on mantle dynamics in this region. However, SKS measurements have poor vertical resolution, and so their interpretations are usually not unique. In this work we use a large number of traveltime data from 34,036 local earthquakes recorded by 1563 seismic stations to determine the first model of 3-D P wave azimuthal anisotropy in the lithosphere beneath China. Our results show that the fast velocity directions (FVDs) are generally correlated with the surface geologic features, such as the strikes of the orogens, active faults, and tectonic boundaries. The FVDs in the upper crust are normal to the maximal horizontal stress (σH) in regions with extensive compression such as the Tibetan Plateau, whereas they are subparallel to σH in strike-slip shear zones such as the western and eastern Himalayan syntax. The comparison of the FVDs of P wave anisotropy with SKS splitting measurements indicates that beneath the Tibetan Plateau the seismic anisotropy in the lithosphere contributes significantly to the SKS splitting observations. In contrast, in east China the P wave FVDs in the lithosphere are different from the SKS splitting measurements, suggesting that the SKS splitting is mainly caused by the anisotropy in the deeper mantle such as the asthenosphere and the mantle transition zone under east China. These novel results provide important new information on the lithospheric deformation and mantle dynamics in East Asia.
Chinese Science Bulletin | 2005
Ning Mi; Liangshu Wang; Hua Li; Mingjie Xu; Yun-Ping Chen; Cheng Li; Yong Zhang; Dayong Yu
A portable 3-component broadband digital seismic array was deployed across the Tianshan orogenic belt (TOB) to investigate the lithospheric structure. Based on receiver function analysis of the teleseismic P-wave data, a 2-D S-wave velocity profile of the boundary area of the TOB and the Tarim Basin was obtained at the depths of 0–80 km. Our results reveal a vertical and lateral inhomogeneity in the crust and uppermost mantle. Four velocity interfaces divide the crystalline crust into the upper, middle and lower crust. A low velocity zone is widely observed in the upper-middle crust. The depth of Moho varies between 42 and 52 km. At the north end of the profile the Moho dips northward with a vertical offset of 4–6 km, which implies a subduction front of the Tarim Basin into the TOB. The Moho generally appears as a velocity transitional zone except beneath two stations in the northern Tarim Basin, where the Moho is characterized by a typical velocity discontinuity. The fine velocity structure and the deep contact deformation of the crust and upper most mantle delineate the north-south lithospheric shortening and thickening in the boundary area of the TOB and the Tarim Basin, which would be helpful to constructing the geodynamical model of the intracontinental mountain-basin-coupling system.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2017
Zhouchuan Huang; Frederik Tilmann; Mingjie Xu; Liangshu Wang; Zhifeng Ding; Ning Mi; Dayong Yu; Hua Li
Abstract The northeastern Tibetan plateau margin is the current expansion border, where growth of the plateau is ongoing. We analyze shear-wave splitting at ChinArray stations in the NE Tibetan Plateau and its margin with the stable North Chine Craton. The measurements provide important information on the seismic anisotropy and deformations patterns in the crust and upper mantle, which can be used to constrain the expansion mechanism of the plateau. Along the margin and within the craton, the dominant NW–SE fast polarization direction (FPD) is NW–SE, subparallel to the boundary between the plateau and the North China Craton. The shear-wave splitting measurements on the NE Tibetan Plateau itself generally reflect two-layer anisotropy. The lower-layer anisotropy (with NW–SE FPDs) is consistent in the whole region and FPDs are the same as those in the North China Craton. The upper-layer FPDs are parallel to crustal motion rather than surface structures within the high plateau. The two-layer anisotropy implies the presence of deformed Tibetan lithosphere above the underthrusting North China Craton. The NE Tibetan shows similar deformation patterns at the surface (inferred from GPS) and within the mantle (inferred from shear-wave splitting), but significant crustal anisotropy (parallel to crustal motion) requires mid-lower crustal channel flow or detachment to drive further tectonic uplift of the plateau.
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2011
Zhouchuan Huang; Liangshu Wang; Dapeng Zhao; Ning Mi; Mingjie Xu
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2013
Xuewei Bao; Xiaodong Song; Mingjie Xu; Liangshu Wang; Ning Mi; Dayong Yu; Hua Li
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2015
Xuewei Bao; Mingjie Xu; David W. Eaton; Xiaodong Song; Liangshu Wang; Zhifeng Ding; Ning Mi; Hua Li; Dayong Yu; Zhouchuan Huang; Pan Wang
Geophysical Research Letters | 2008
Zhouchuan Huang; Mingjie Xu; Liangshu Wang; Ning Mi; Dayong Yu; Hua Li
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2015
Zhouchuan Huang; Pan Wang; Mingjie Xu; Liangshu Wang; Zhifeng Ding; Yan Wu; Mijian Xu; Ning Mi; Dayong Yu; Hua Li
Tectonophysics | 2011
Xuewei Bao; Mingjie Xu; Liangshu Wang; Ning Mi; Dayong Yu; Hua Li