Abstract
SUMMARY We use teleseismic receiver functions to investigate the crustal structure at two locations in westernTurkey using seismic data recorded on small arrays of temporary broad-band seismographs. The results from these analyses are compared with receiver function results from the GDSN station ANTO on the Anatolian Plateau in central Turkey. The crust is *30 km thick in the region of western Turkey where active normal faulting reveals present-day extension in the upper crust and alkali-basaltic volcanism reveals recent extension within the subcrustal lithosphere. The crust is *34 km thick further east where crustal extension is still evident but less pronounced. In the Anatolian Plateau, which is not currently extending, the crust is *38 km thick. The level of extension estimated from these measurements of crustal thickness implies a b-factor of *1.2. This value agrees with the amount of extension estimated in the upper crust from the integrated seismic strain rate (b-factor of *1.3), from surface faulting (b-factor of *1.25) and from the amount of extension in the subcrustal lithosphere estimated from the volcanism (b-factor < 2), all indicating that the extension is approximately uniformly distributed vertically throughout the lithosphere. The Moho transition in this region appears to thin slightly as the degree of extension increases westwards.
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