Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yong‐Hong Duan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yong‐Hong Duan.


Science China-earth Sciences | 2015

2-D P-wave velocity structure of lithosphere in the North China tectonic zone: Constraints from the Yancheng-Baotou deep seismic profile

Yong‐Hong Duan; BaoJin Liu; Jin‐Ren Zhao; BaoFeng Liu; Cheng‐Ke Zhang; Su‐Zhen Pan; Jiyan Lin; WenBin Guo

We obtained the 2-D P-wave velocity structure of the lithosphere in the eastern North China Craton, Shanxi fault subsidence zone, and Yinchuan-Hetao fault subsidence zone by ray tracking technology based on six groups of clearly identified crustal phases and one group of lithospheric interface reflection phases from seismic recording sections of 21 shots along the 1300-km-long Yancheng-Baotou deep seismic wide-angle reflection/refraction profile. The results indicate significant differences between the lithospheric structure east and west of the Taihang Mountains, which is a gravity-gradient zone as well as a zone of abrupt change in lithospheric thickness and a separation zone of different rock components. East of the Taihang Mountains, the Mesozoic and Cenozoic lithospheric structure of the North China Craton has undergone strong reformation and destruction, resulting in the lithosphere thickness decreasing to 70–80 km. The North China Basin has a very thick Cenozoic sedimentary cover and the deepest point of crystalline basement is about 7.0 km, with the crustal thickness decreasing to about 31.0 km. The crystalline basement of the Luxi uplift zone is relatively shallow with a depth of 1.0–2.0 km and crustal thickness of 33.0–35.0 km. The Subei Basin has a thicker Cenozoic sedimentary cover and the bottom of its crystalline basement is at about 5.0–6.0 km with a crustal thickness of 31.0–32.0 km. The Tanlu fault is a deep fracture which cuts the lithosphere with a significant velocity structure difference on either side of the fault. The Tanlu fault plays an important role in the lithospheric destruction in the eastern part of the North China Craton. West of the Taihang Mountains, the crustal thickness increases significantly. The crust thickness beneath the Shanxi fault depression zone is about 46 km, and there is a low-velocity structure with a velocity of less than 6.1 km s-1 in the upper part of the middle crust. Combined with other geophysical study results, our data shows that the lithospheric destruction at the Shaanxi-Shanxi fault depression zone and the Yinchuan-Hetao rift surrounding the Ordos block is non-uniform. The lithosphere thickness is about 80–90 km in the Datong-Baotou area, 75–137 km at the Dingxiang-Shenmu region, and about 80–120 km in the Anyang-Yichuan area. The non-uniform lithospheric destruction may be related to the ancient tectonic zone surrounding the Ordos block. This zone experienced multi-period tectonic events in the long-term process of its tectonic evolution and was repeatedly transformed and weakened. The weakening level is related to the interactions with the Ordos block. The continental collision between the Cenozoic India and Eurasia plates and N-E thrusting by the Qinghai Tibet Plateau block is causing further reformation and reduction of the lithosphere.


Science China-earth Sciences | 2016

Three-dimensional crustal velocity structure model of the middle-eastern north China Craton (HBCrust1.0)

Yong‐Hong Duan; Fu‐Yun Wang; Xian‐Kang Zhang; Jiyan Lin; Zhi Liu; BaoFeng Liu; Zhuo‐Xin Yang; WenBin Guo; YunHao Wei

Lithosphere thinning and destruction in the middle-eastern North China Craton (NCC), a region susceptible to strong earthquakes, is one of the research hotspots in solid earth science. All 42 seismic wide-angle reflection/refraction profiles have been completed in the middle-eastern NCC. We collect all the 2-D profiling results and perform gridding of the velocity and interface depth data, building a 3-D crustal velocity structure model for the middle-eastern NCC, named HBCrust1.0, by using the Kriging interpolation method. Our result shows that the first-arrival times calculated by HBCust1.0 fit well with the observations. The result demonstrates that the upper crust is the main seismogenic layer, and the brittle-ductile transition occurs at depths near interface C (the interface between upper and lower crust). The depth of interface Moho varies beneath the source area of the Tangshan earthquake, and a low-velocity structure is found to extend from the source area to the lower crust. Based on these observations, it can be inferred that stress accumulation responsible for the Tangshan earthquake may have been closely related to the migration and deformation of the mantle materials. Comparisons of the average velocities of the whole crust, the upper and the lower crust show that the average velocity of the lower crust under the central part of the North China Basin (NCB) in the east of the craton is obviously higher than the regional average. This high-velocity probably results from long-term underplating of the mantle magma.


Science China-earth Sciences | 2017

Crustal and upper mantle structure and deep tectonic genesis of large earthquakes in North China

Chun-Yong Wang; Qingju Wu; Yong‐Hong Duan; ZhiShuo Wang; Hai Lou

From the 1960s to 1970s, North China has been hit by a series of large earthquakes. During the past half century, geophysicists have carried out numerous surveys of the crustal and upper mantle structure, and associated studies in North China. They have made significant progress on several key issues in the geosciences, such as the crustal and upper mantle structure and the seismogenic environment of strong earthquakes. Deep seismic profiling results indicate a complex tectonic setting in the strong earthquake areas of North China, where a listric normal fault and a low-angle detachment in the upper crust coexist with a high-angle deep fault passing through the lower crust to the Moho beneath the hypocenter. Seismic tomography images reveal that most of the large earthquakes occurred in the transition between the high- and low-velocity zones, and the Tangshan earthquake area is characterized by a low-velocity anomaly in the middle-lower crust. Comprehensive analysis of geophysical data identified that the deep seismogenic environment in the North China extensional tectonic region is generally characterized by a low-velocity anomalous belt beneath the hypocenter, inconsistency of the deep and shallow structures in the crust, a steep crustalal-scale fault, relative lower velocities in the uppermost mantle, and local Moho uplift, etc. This indicates that the lithospheric structure of North China has strong heterogeneities. Geologically, the North China region had been a stable craton named the North China Craton or in brief the NCC, containing crustal rocks as old as ~3.8 Ga. The present-day strong seismic activity and the lower velocity of the lower crust in the NCC are much different from typical stable cratons around the world. These findings provide significant evidence for the destruction of the NCC. Although deep seismic profiling and seismic tomography have greatly enhanced knowledge about the deep-seated structure and seismogenic environment, some fundamental issues still remain and require further work.


Tectonophysics | 2009

Seismic structure and origin of active intraplate volcanoes in Northeast Asia

Yong‐Hong Duan; Dapeng Zhao; Xiankang Zhang; Shaohong Xia; Zhi Liu; Fuyun Wang; Li Li


Tectonophysics | 2014

Crustal structure and tectonic study of North China Craton from a long deep seismic sounding profile

Shixu Jia; Fu‐Yun Wang; Xiaofeng Tian; Yong‐Hong Duan; Jianshi Zhang; BaoFeng Liu; Jiyan Lin


Chinese Journal of Geophysics | 2009

Velocity Distribution of Upper Crust, Undulation of Sedimentary Formation and Crystalline Basement Beneath the Ordos Basin in North China

Jiwen Teng; Fu‐Yun Wang; Wen‐Zhi Zhao; Jin‐Ren Zhao; Ming Li; Xiaobo Tian; Ya‐Fen Yan; Yong‐Qian Zhang; Cheng‐Ke Zhang; Yong‐Hong Duan; Zhuo‐Xin Yang; Chao‐Fan Xu


Chinese Journal of Geophysics | 2005

Study on Crustal Structures of Changbaishan‐Jingpohu Volcanic Area using Receiver Functions

Yong‐Hong Duan; Xian‐Kang Zhang; Zhi Liu; Qin‐xi Uan; Zhao‐Fan Xu; Fu‐Yun Wang; Sheng‐Min Fang; Zuo‐Xin Yang


Earthquake Science | 2009

Crustal velocity structures and their tectonic implications in different tectonic block regions of the Chinese mainland

Xian‐Kang Zhang; Yong‐Hong Duan; Jin‐Ren Zhao; Cheng‐Ke Zhang; Shi‐Xu Jia; Jianshi Zhang; Fu‐Yun Wang; Zhuo‐Xin Yang; Su‐Zhen Pan


Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences | 2008

Velocity structure and active fault of Yanyuan-Mabian seismic zone—The result of high-resolution seismic refraction experiment

Fu‐Yun Wang; Yong‐Hong Duan; Zhuo‐Xin Yang; Cheng‐Ke Zhang; Jin‐Ren Zhao; Jianshi Zhang; Xian‐Kang Zhang; QiYuan Liu; AiLan Zhu; Xiwei Xu; Baofeng Liu


Earthquake Research in China | 2006

Exploration and Study of Deep Crustal Structure in the Quanzhou Basin and Its Adjacent Area

Jin-Fang Zhu; Sheng‐Ming Fang; Xian‐Kang Zhang; Guo-Sheng Qu; Zong-Lin Huang; Xing Hong; Bao‐Jin Liu; Zhuo‐Xin Yang; Yong‐Hong Duan

Collaboration


Dive into the Yong‐Hong Duan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fu‐Yun Wang

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xian‐Kang Zhang

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhuo‐Xin Yang

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jin‐Ren Zhao

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Cheng‐Ke Zhang

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zhi Liu

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

BaoFeng Liu

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jianshi Zhang

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiyan Lin

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Su‐Zhen Pan

China Earthquake Administration

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge