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Featured researches published by Suyun Wang.


Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America | 2006

ML Amplitude Tomography in North China

Shunping Pei; Junmeng Zhao; Charlotte A. Rowe; Suyun Wang; Thomas M. Hearn; Zhonghuai Xu; Hongbing Liu; Youshun Sun

We have selected 10,899 M L amplitude readings from 1732 events re- corded by 91 stations, as reported in the Annual Bulletin of Chinese Earthquakes (ABCE), and have used tomographic imaging to estimate the lateral variations of the quality factor Q0 (Q at 1 Hz) within the crust of Northern China. Estimated Q0 values vary from 115 to 715 with an average of 415. Q0 values are consistent with tectonic and topographic structure in Eastern China. Q0 is low in the active tectonic regions having many faults, such as the Shanxi and Yinchuan Grabens, Bohai Bay, and Tanlu Fault Zone, and is high in the stable Ordos Craton. Q0 values are low in several topographically low-lying areas, such as the North China, Taikang-Hefei, Jianghan, Subei-Yellow Sea, and Songliao basins, whereas it is high in mountainous and uplift regions exhibiting surface expressions of crystalline basement rocks: the Yinshan, Yanshan, Taihang, Qinlin, Dabie and Wuyi Mountains, and Luxi and Jiaoliao Uplifts. Quality-factor estimates are also consistent with Pn- and Sn-velocity patterns. High- velocity values, in general, correspond with high Q0 and low-velocity values with low Q0. This is consistent with a common temperature influence in the crust and uppermost mantle.


Chinese Science Bulletin | 2002

Focal depth research of earthquakes in Mainland China: Implication for tectonics

Guomin Zhang; Suyun Wang; Li Li; Xiaodong Zhang; Hongsheng Ma

Focal depth data of earthquakes in Mainland China are processed and analyzed in this paper, as well as the relationship between the focal depths and large-scale tectonic structures. As a basic parameter for earthquakes, focal depth is used to investigate deep environment of seismogenic regions, tectonic backgrounds for concentration and release of seismic energy, the inner crustal deformation and its mechanic features. Depth data of 31282 Ml⩾2.0 events with 1st class and 2nd class precision in Mainland China from Jan. 1, 1970 to May 31, 2000 are used to get spatial features of earthquakes distributed with depth and to provide average depth for each grid area throughout China. Researches show that the average depth (D) for all the earthquakes used in this paper is (16 ± 7) km, and (13 ± 6) km and (18 ± 8) km for the events in eastern China and western China, respectively. The area with the deepest focal depth is located in southwest Xinjiang region, near the western and southwestern ends of the Tarim Basin. The focal depth related to large-scale tectonic structures, for instance, D= (33 ± 12), (21 ± 10), (14 ± 7), (11 ± 5) and (10±4) km in Tibet plateau block, Xinjiang block, North China, Northeastern China and South China, respectively. The earth-quakes are deeper at the bounders of the integrated tectonic blocks, including the southwestern and northern brims of the Tarim Basin, southern brim of the Zhunge’r Basin and that of the Alashan block, as well as the eastern and western sides of the Edos block and the western brim of the Sichuan Basin. The earthquakes at the newly ruptured belts are relatively shallower, for instance, at the southwestern Yunnan seismic belt and the Zhangjiakou-Bohai seismic belt. The mechanic behavior, deformation and features for the crust and mantle structures are also discussed.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Upper mantle seismic velocities and anisotropy in China determined through Pn and Sn tomography

Shunping Pei; Junmeng Zhao; Youshun Sun; Zhonghuai Xu; Suyun Wang; Hongbing Liu; Charlotte A. Rowe; M. Nafi Toksöz; Xing Gao


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2004

Uppermost mantle velocities beneath China and surrounding regions

Thomas M. Hearn; Suyun Wang; James Ni; Zhonghuai Xu; Yanxiang Yu; Xiaodong Zhang


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Velocity structure of the uppermost mantle beneath East Asia from Pn tomography and its dynamic implications

Suyun Wang; Fenglin Niu; Guomin Zhang


Chinese Journal of Geophysics | 2004

Sn Wave Tomography of the Uppermost Mantle Beneath the China Continent and Adjacent Regions

Shunping Pei; Zhong‐Huai Xu; Suyun Wang


Geophysical Journal International | 2008

Seismic amplitude tomography for crustal attenuation beneath China

Thomas M. Hearn; Suyun Wang; Shunping Pei; Zhonghuai Xu; James Ni; Yanxiang Yu


Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences | 2003

Velocity structure of uppermost mantle beneath North China from Pn tomography and its implications

Suyun Wang; Zhonghuai Xu; Shunping Pei


Chinese Journal of Geophysics | 2002

Pn Velocity Tomography in Xinjiang, China and Adjacent Regions

Shunping Pei; Xu Zhong-huai; Suyun Wang; Thomas M. Hearn


Chinese Journal of Geophysics | 2007

Q0 Tomography of S Wave Attenuation in Sichuanyunnan and Adjacent Regions

Hong‐Sheng Ma; Suyun Wang; Shunping Pei; Jie Liu; Wei Hua; Long‐Quan Zhou

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Shunping Pei

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhonghuai Xu

China Earthquake Administration

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Thomas M. Hearn

New Mexico State University

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James Ni

New Mexico State University

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Yanxiang Yu

China Earthquake Administration

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Charlotte A. Rowe

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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T. M. Hearn

New Mexico State University

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Youshun Sun

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Guomin Zhang

China Earthquake Administration

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Hongbing Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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