Abstract

S U M M A R Y Stations on the Australian continent receive a rich mixture of continuous ground motion with ambient seismic noise from the surrounding oceans, and numerous small earthquakes in the earthquake belts to the north in Indonesia, and east in Tonga-Kermadec, as well as more distant source zones. The ground motion at a seismic station contains information about the structure in the vicinity of the site, and this can be exploited by applying an autocorrelation procedure to the continuous records. By creating stacked autocorrelograms of the ground motion at a single station, information on crust properties can be extracted in the form of a signal that includes the crustal reflection response convolved with the autocorrelation of the combined effect of source excitation and the instrument response. After applying suitable high-pass filtering, the reflection component can be extracted to reveal the most prominent reflectors in the lower crust, which often correspond to the reflection at the Moho. Because the reflection signal is stacked from arrivals from a wide range of slownesses, the reflection response is somewhat diffuse, but still sufficient to provide useful constraints on the local crust beneath a seismic station. Continuous vertical component records from 223 stations (permanent and temporary) across the continent have been processed using autocorrelograms of running windows 6 hr long with subsequent stacking.A distinctive pulsewith a time offset between 8 and 30 s fromzero is found in the autocorrelation results, with frequency content between 1.5 and 4 Hz, suggestingP-wave multiples trapped in the crust. Synthetic modelling, with control of multiple phases, shows that a local pmp phase can be recovered with the autocorrelation approach. This identification enables us to make out the depth to the most prominent crustal reflector across the continent. We obtain results that largely conform to those from previous studies using a combination of data from refraction, reflection profiles and receiver functions. This approach can be used for crustal property extraction using just vertical component records, and effective results can be obtained with temporary deployments of just a few months.

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