The central Anatolian plateau in Turkey is a region with a long history of subduction, continental collision, accretion of continental fragments, and slab tearing and/or breakoff and tectonic escape. Central Anatolia is currently characterized as a nascent plateau with widespread Neogene volcanism and predominantly transtensional deformation. To elucidate the present-day crustal and upper mantle structure of this region, teleseismic receiver functions were calculated from 500 seismic events recorded on 92 temporary and permanent broadband seismic stations. Overall, we see a good correlation between crustal thickness and elevation throughout central Anatolia, indicating that the crust may be well compensated throughout the region. We observe the thickest crust beneath the Taurus Mountains (>40 km); it thins rapidly to the south in the Adana Basin and Arabian plate and to the northwest across the Inner Tauride suture beneath the Tuz Gölü Basin and Kırşehir block. Within the Central Anatolian Volcanic Province, we observe several low seismic velocity layers ranging from 15 to 25 km depth that spatially correlate with the Neogene volcanism in the region, and may represent crustal magma reservoirs. Beneath the central Taurus Mountains, we observe a positive amplitude, subhorizontal receiver function arrival below the Anatolian continental Moho at ∼50–80 km that we interpret as the gently dipping Moho of the subducting African lithosphere abruptly ending near the northernmost extent of the central Taurus Mountains. We suggest that the uplift of the central Taurus Mountains (∼2 km since 8 Ma), which are capped by flat-lying carbonates of late Miocene marine units, can be explained by an isostatic uplift during the late Miocene–Pliocene followed by slab breakoff and subsequent rebound coeval with the onset of faster uplift rates during the late Pliocene–early Pleistocene. The Moho signature of the subducting African lithosphere terminates near the southernmost extent of the Central Anatolian Volcanic Province, where geochemical signatures in the Quaternary volcanics indicate that asthenospheric material is rising to shallow mantle depths.

Central Anatolia displays a typical plateau-like morphology that appears similar to other collision-related plateaus but on a smaller scale. Elevation increases in the interior of the central Anatolian plateau to the north and the Taurus Mountains to the south (Fig. 1). The crustal architecture of the central Anatolian plateau comprises the amalgamation of continental fragments that coalesced during the closure of the Neo-Tethyan Ocean system between Africa-Arabia and Eurasia and records both subduction and collisional-related processes (Şengör and Yılmaz, 1981). To the east of the central Anatolian plateau, compression related to the Arabia-Eurasia continental collision dominates the formation and development of tectonic structures, while regional extension due to the rollback of the African slab has dominated the west since the Miocene (Bozkurt, 2001; Ring et al., 2010). These processes have led to the development of the Anatolian plate, which has been extruding westward since the Miocene as a result of African slab rollback and Arabia-Eurasia collision (Şengör et al., 1985; Reilinger et al., 2006).

Figure 1.

Tectonic map of Turkey and vicinity showing active faults (simplified after Bozkurt, 2001), terranes or blocks, and bounding sutures (after Okay and Tuysuz, 1999). Arrows show the plate motions relative to the Eurasian plate (from Reilinger et al., 2006). The study area is outlined by the blue rectangle. Red triangles are Holocene volcanoes; black lines with filled triangles are suture zones; black lines with unfilled triangles are present-day trenches; red lines are active structures and fault zones. CAP—Central Anatolian Province; DSFZ—Dead Sea fault zone; EAFZ—East Anatolian fault zone; EACP—East Anatolian contractional province; IAESZ—Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone; ITS—Inner Tauride suture; NAFZ—North Anatolian fault zone; WAEP—West Anatolian extensional province.

Figure 1.

Tectonic map of Turkey and vicinity showing active faults (simplified after Bozkurt, 2001), terranes or blocks, and bounding sutures (after Okay and Tuysuz, 1999). Arrows show the plate motions relative to the Eurasian plate (from Reilinger et al., 2006). The study area is outlined by the blue rectangle. Red triangles are Holocene volcanoes; black lines with filled triangles are suture zones; black lines with unfilled triangles are present-day trenches; red lines are active structures and fault zones. CAP—Central Anatolian Province; DSFZ—Dead Sea fault zone; EAFZ—East Anatolian fault zone; EACP—East Anatolian contractional province; IAESZ—Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone; ITS—Inner Tauride suture; NAFZ—North Anatolian fault zone; WAEP—West Anatolian extensional province.

Thanks to the expansion of seismic station coverage in Turkey, a number of regional-scale studies of the eastern Mediterranean have provided researchers with a broad understanding of the seismic structure of the Anatolian system (e.g., Biryol et al., 2011; Mutlu and Karabulut, 2011; Salaün et al., 2012; Fichtner et al., 2013; Vanacore et al., 2013; Delph et al., 2015; Govers and Fichtner, 2016). Smaller scale regional studies have also been performed using temporary seismic deployments to investigate the seismic structure of this system in higher detail, such as the North Anatolian Fault Experiment (Beck and Zandt, 2005) and the Eastern Turkey Seismic Experiment (Sandvol et al., 2003). This has resulted in dense seismic station coverage throughout most of Turkey, when combined with the extensive backbone network of the Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute (KOERI). However, until recently seismic station coverage and associated studies investigating central Anatolia have been largely neglected due to its relative stability and assumed low potential of large-magnitude earthquakes.

This study represents the first analysis of a large data set collected as part of the Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) project that combines interdisciplinary expertise to investigate the structure and evolution of central Anatolia. As part of this project, 65 Streckeisen STS2 and Guralp CMG-3T broadband seismic stations were deployed in 72 locations throughout central Anatolia and operated for 2 yr between May 2013 and May 2015. The goals of the CD-CAT seismic deployment are multifaceted, but generally focus on better understanding the interplay between the complex Cenozoic evolution of the central Anatolian plateau and how it is reflected in the modern seismic structure of the region. In this study, we use P-wave receiver function images to investigate the crustal and uppermost mantle discontinuity structure beneath central Anatolia, and find links between crustal and upper mantle variations and Miocene–recent uplift and volcanism.

Anatolia has a long tectonic history of subduction and accretion of continental fragments that ends with the present-day westward extrusion and escape of the Anatolian plate. We briefly summarize the tectonics of central Anatolia by first describing the subduction and collision history followed by a brief description of the present-day structures that dominate deformation in Anatolia during its more recent history.

The crustal architecture of Anatolia is the result of the collision and accretion of continental fragments as crustal-scale nappes during the closure of the Neo-Tethys Ocean in the Cretaceous. These accreted crustal fragments are separated by sutures zones marked by ophiolite complexes and mélanges (Fig. 1). In the north, the Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone (IAESZ) demarcates the closure of the northern branch of the Neo-Tethys Ocean that separated the Pontides in the north from the Anatolide-Tauride and Kırşehir blocks to the south (Şengör and Yılmaz, 1981), while the Inner Tauride suture (ITS) separates the Kırşehir block from the Anatolide-Tauride block in central Anatolia. In general, the Anatolide-Tauride block represents a Gondwanan-derived continental fragment comprising deformed and variably metamorphosed subduction-related rocks with higher degrees of metamorphism in the north and west along the IAESZ and ITS. Away from the suture zones, deformation is characterized by fold and thrust belt formation and a lower degree of metamorphism, which occurred during the collision and accretion of this block during the Cretaceous to Eocene (Okay and Tüysüz, 1999). The Kırşehir block, composed of mainly Cretaceous high-temperature metamorphic rocks and igneous intrusions (Göncüoğlu et al., 1991), is separated from the Anatolide-Tauride block along the more controversial ITS (Fig. 1). This suture zone is thought to represent the closure of a smaller ocean basin formed from rifting of the Gondwanan continental margin (Okay and Tüysüz, 1999; Whitney and Davis, 2006; Gürer et al., 2016); however, more recent work pointed out the lack of geologic evidence for Late Cretaceous subduction initiation along the ITS (van Hinsbergen et al., 2016; Gürer et al., 2016). The triangular-shaped Kırşehir block (Fig. 1), which is also known as the Central Anatolian Crystalline Complex, is composed of mainly Cretaceous high-temperature metamorphic rocks and igneous intrusions (Whitney et al., 2003; Whitney and Hamilton, 2004). The Anatolide-Tauride block is composed of nonmetamorphosed platform carbonates forming Tauride Mountains in the south and metamorphosed passive margin sequences in the north (Okay, 1984). In the Tauride Mountains at the southern margin of Anatolia, the older deformed rocks of the Anatolide-Tauride block are overlain by late Miocene platform carbonates. Farther to the east, the Bitlis-Zagros suture zone represents the closure of the southern branch of the Neo-Tethyan Ocean (Şengör and Yilmaz, 1981) that separated the Eurasian margin from the incoming Arabian plate in the Oligocene. The structures imposed by the collision and accretion of these continental fragments play a significant role in controlling the more recent deformation of Anatolia by acting as zones of weakness that have in part been reactivated in response to a major change in the deformational character of the Anatolian region initiating in the Miocene.

The processes occurring along the southern margin of the Anatolian plate mainly control the stress state of the plate. Despite the similar tectonic evolution of the Anatolian region prior to the Miocene, large lateral variations in crustal thickness, gravity, volcanism, and geophysical properties in the Anatolian plate are observed (Vanacore et al., 2013; Ates et al., 1999; Mutlu and Karabulut, 2011; Govers and Fichtner, 2016). In the east, the collision of Arabia and Eurasia initiating in the Oligocene led to largely compression-related deformational structures and seismicity (Şengör et al., 2008), while in the west, the southward migration of the Aegean trench presumably caused by slab rollback has led to regional-scale large-magnitude extension and the exhumation of metamorphic core complexes since the early Miocene (Ring et al., 2010). Thus, the Miocene to recent evolution of Anatolia, and the structures along which deformation is localized, may exert an important control on the present-day seismic structure of the region.

The Anatolian plate is currently defined by two conjugate strike-slip fault zones: the roughly west-east–striking North Anatolian fault zone (NAFZ) that separates the Anatolian and Eurasian plates, which formed in the mid-Miocene in eastern Anatolia (Şengör et al., 2005), and the late Miocene–Pliocene northeast-southwest–striking East Anatolian fault zone (EAFZ) that separates the Anatolian and Arabian or Eurasian plates (e.g., Şengör et al., 1985) (Fig. 1). These major neotectonic structures appear to exploit the lithospheric weaknesses created during the amalgamation of Anatolia, with the NAFZ roughly following the trace of the IAESZ (Şengör et al., 2005) and the EAFZ following the western portion of the Bitlis-Zagros suture. Farther to the south, the Dead Sea fault zone accommodates the differential motions of the Arabian plate (∼15 mm/yr northward motion) and African plate (∼5 mm/yr northward motion) with respect to Eurasia (Reilinger et al., 2006).

Central Anatolia represents the transition between the compressional deformation in the east and the highly extensional deformation of the Aegean in the west. Central Anatolia includes the Taurus Mountains, a high (>1.5 km) elevation mountain range that comprises most of the southern part of the Anatolide-Tauride block in this region, and the Kırşehir block (Fig. 2) (Şengör et al., 1985). Taken together this region has more recently been termed the central Anatolian plateau.

Figure 2.

The topographic map of the study area showing key tectonic features (young volcanism, faults, and suture zones) and the location of seismic stations used in this study. White inverted triangles are Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) stations; yellow inverted triangles are Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute (KOERI) stations; red polygons are Neogene–recent volcanic deposits; solid black lines are major structures and suture zones; white unfilled triangles are Holocene volcanoes. CAFZ—Central Anatolian fault zone; CAVP—Central Anatolian Volcanic Province; DSFZ—Dead Sea fault zone; EAFZ—East Anatolian fault zone; IAESZ—Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone; ITS—Inner Tauride suture; KF—Kozan fault; SAVF—Savcılı fault; SRF—Sarız fault; TGB—Tuz Gölü Basin; TGFZ—Tuz Gölü fault zone.

Figure 2.

The topographic map of the study area showing key tectonic features (young volcanism, faults, and suture zones) and the location of seismic stations used in this study. White inverted triangles are Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) stations; yellow inverted triangles are Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute (KOERI) stations; red polygons are Neogene–recent volcanic deposits; solid black lines are major structures and suture zones; white unfilled triangles are Holocene volcanoes. CAFZ—Central Anatolian fault zone; CAVP—Central Anatolian Volcanic Province; DSFZ—Dead Sea fault zone; EAFZ—East Anatolian fault zone; IAESZ—Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture zone; ITS—Inner Tauride suture; KF—Kozan fault; SAVF—Savcılı fault; SRF—Sarız fault; TGB—Tuz Gölü Basin; TGFZ—Tuz Gölü fault zone.

The Central Anatolian fault zone (CAFZ), which in part appears to exploit the lithospheric-scale weakness of the Inner Tauride suture, separates the carbonate nappes of the Anatolide-Tauride block from the highly deformed and metamorphosed rocks in the Kırşehir block (Fig. 2). The CAFZ is mainly a transtensional fault structure with low-magnitude left-lateral offsets during the Miocene (Koçyığıt and Beyhan, 1998); however, robust changes in Pn velocities and Bouguer gravity across the CAFZ between the Kırşehir and Anatolide-Tauride blocks show distinctly different crust and upper mantle structures on either side of the CAFZ (Ates et al., 1999; Gans et al., 2009; Mutlu and Karabulut, 2011). While as much as 75 km total lateral displacement can be observed on some portions of the CAFZ, a recent geomorphological study shows a transition to west-east extension along the CAFZ near Mount Erciyes since late Pliocene time (Higgins et al., 2015) leading to the development of a pull-apart basin that has been exploited by Miocene–recent volcanism of the Central Anatolian Volcanic Province (CAVP) (Toprak and Göncüoğlu, 1993; Toprak, 1998).

The CAVP can be characterized as a northeast-southwest–trending (Fig. 2), middle-late Miocene to Holocene calc-alkaline to alkaline volcanic complex (Innocenti et al., 1975; Toprak, 1998; Toprak and Göncüoğlu, 1993; Piper et al., 2002; Aydın et al., 2012) that consists of pyroclastic deposits and lava flows, which apparently young from northeast to southwest (Schleiffarth et al., 2015). Aydın et al. (2014) identified Pleistocene bimodal volcanic activity in the southwestern part of the CAVP suggesting a transition from calc-alkaline to Na-alkaline composition at the latest phase of volcanism in agreement with recent contribution of asthenospheric mantle, as further verified by geochemical signatures in young (younger than 2 Ma) primitive basalts intruded into the Anatolide-Tauride block (Reid et al., 2017).

The Tuz Gölü fault zone (TGFZ), which is one of the major active transtensional structures in the region, is a right-lateral strike-slip fault zone with large normal component (Özsayın et al., 2013). This northwest-southeast–trending fault zone juxtaposes the crystalline rocks of the Kırşehir block and the thick sedimentary deposits of the Tuz Gölü Basin (Çemen et al., 1999), which obscures the surface trace of the ITS in the southwest (Fig. 2). The Savcılı fault, which is oriented in a west-northwest–east-southeast direction, developed during the Paleogene as a left-lateral transpressional structure accommodating vertical axis rotations; this has led to ∼20 km lateral offset between the Mesozoic intrusive bodies of the Kırşehir block (Lefebvre et al., 2013).

The EAFZ can be characterized as a broad (∼20 km) left-lateral fault zone with a slip rate of ∼6–10 mm/yr that bounds the westward-escaping Anatolian plate in the southeast (Bulut et al., 2012; Reilinger et al., 2006; Bozkurt, 2001) (Fig. 1). The EAFZ initiated in the late Miocene–Pliocene and links to the North Anatolian fault at the Karlıova Triple Junction (Bozkurt, 2001). To the south, the EAFZ roughly follows the Bitlis-Zagros suture between the Eurasian and Arabian plates and connects with the Dead Sea fault, forming a triple junction between the Anatolian, Arabian, and African plates (Fig. 2). Farther south, the EAFZ branches into different faults toward the Adana Basin (Muehlberger and Gordon, 1987). The Sarız fault, which is located between the CAFZ and EAFZ, is characterized by ongoing left-lateral strike-slip motion accommodating internal deformation across the central Taurus Mountains (Kaymakçı et al., 2010).

The Adana Basin is a large extensional Neogene basin along the southern margin of the Taurus Mountains (Fig. 1). The transtensional Kozan fault, which bounds the basin on the north, is characterized by ∼5 mm/yr left-lateral slip estimated from delta lobes (Aksu et al., 2014) and is considered the northernmost branch of the EAFZ that may have contributed some of the differential uplift between the central Taurus Mountains and the Adana Basin (Aksu et al., 2005, 2014; Radeff et al., 2015).

Although much of the Anatolide-Tauride block underwent folding and faulting and associated accretion, recent results from the European Science Foundation Topo-Europe (http://archives.esf.org/coordinating-research/eurocores/programmes/topo-europe.html) indicate that along the southern margin of Anatolia, the central Taurus Mountains have undergone two episodes of uplift since the late Miocene, leading to ∼2 km of cumulative uplift based on biostratigraphic data from undeformed carbonate sequences (Cosentino et al., 2012; Schildgen et al., 2014; Radeff et al., 2015). This rapid uplift without evidence for Miocene shortening in the region has been interpreted as a result of mantle processes, including lithospheric delamination (Cosentino et al., 2012; Bartol and Govers, 2014; Radeff et al., 2015) and/or processes associated with the breakup of the downgoing African lithosphere (Schildgen et al., 2012a, 2012b, 2014). Based on teleseismic tomography, Biryol et al. (2011) suggested that the subducting Arabian oceanic lithosphere that was attached to the northern edge of the Arabian plate has completely broken off, while the African-Tethyan lithosphere to the west is in the process of tearing and breaking apart as the African plate moves northward and collides with the Anatolian margin.

A total of 310 teleseismic events (distances between 30° and 95°) with magnitudes >5.5, recorded between May 2013 and May 2015, are used in our P-wave receiver function analysis (Fig. 3). We used data from 72 broadband seismic stations that were part of the CD-CAT experiment and 26 KOERI stations in our analysis (see Supplemental Item1). The teleseismic earthquake distribution is dominated by events with back azimuths between 30° and 95° corresponding to the Japan, Mariana, Ryukyu, Philippine, and Kuril Trenches (Fig. 3). In order to increase our back-azimuthal coverage to ensure that results are not spatially biased, we incorporate PP receiver functions (e.g., Frassetto et al., 2011) from 190 events >6 M with epicentral distances of 95°–180° from our network. Because South America is in this distance range, it allows us to densely sample the southwestern back azimuth of our study area. In order to avoid any interference from the arrival of PKS phases on the radial component, events with distances between 137° and 152° (distances where the PKS phase will arrive within 50 s of PP) are omitted.

Figure 3.

Global distribution of events used in our receiver function analysis. Blue circles represent events used for P-wave receiver functions (30°–95° epicentral distances) and red circles represent events used for PP receiver functions (>95° epicentral distances). Red circles show 30° and 95° distance from the center of the network shown by green star.

Figure 3.

Global distribution of events used in our receiver function analysis. Blue circles represent events used for P-wave receiver functions (30°–95° epicentral distances) and red circles represent events used for PP receiver functions (>95° epicentral distances). Red circles show 30° and 95° distance from the center of the network shown by green star.

Receiver functions are very sensitive to impedance contrasts beneath a station, allowing us to gain insight into the magnitude of velocity changes across discontinuities. Large impedance contrasts over a short depth interval will be expressed as a high-amplitude Gaussian pulse over a short time interval; conversely, low-amplitude pulses over long time intervals correspond to velocity gradients. For both P and PP events, we perform a time-domain iterative deconvolution (Ligorria and Ammon, 1999) on vertical and radial component data filtered between 0.07 and 3 Hz to compute P-s receiver functions with a 2.5 Gaussian pulse width corresponding to 1.2 Hz center frequency (∼1 km vertical resolution with considering average crustal shear velocities). For quality control, we first inspect each event-station pair, and those without a clear P or PP arrival are discarded. Then, calculated receiver functions with a low variance reduction (<0.7) are discarded along with anomalous receiver functions. For the final quality control step, we use the Funclab software (Eagar and Fouch, 2012) to visually inspect the calculated receiver functions.

Calculation for Crustal Thickness and Vp/Vs: Stack Windowing Analysis

The migration of receiver function to depth requires information on the Vp/Vs (compressional wave/shear-wave velocities) ratio of the crust and uppermost mantle. By identifying multiples from the Moho Ps conversion in receiver functions, the Vp/Vs ratio of the crust beneath a station can be determined. H- stacking (Zhu and Kanamori, 2000) is a simple and automated way to measure crustal thickness (H) and Vp/Vs ratios ( ) through the summation of the primary (Ps) conversion from the Moho and its associated multiples (PpPs and PsPs + PpSs), assuming flat-lying homogeneous layers. However, the effectiveness of H- stacking diminishes in tectonically complex regions, when the assumption of flat homogeneous layering breaks down, leading to difficulty in identifying the correct crustal thickness and Vp/Vs (Fig. 4). Thus, we prefer a more manual method for identifying the multiples from the Moho discontinuity in tectonically complex areas, which we call stack windowing analysis (SWA).

Figure 4.

Comparison between H-κ (crustal thickness H, and Vp/Vs ratio, κ) stacking analysis and stack windowing analysis (SWA) for two stations. (A) H-κ result for station AT30 representing a good H-κ solution. (B) H-κ results for station AT32 representing poor H-κ solution. (C) SWA result for station AT30 showing good agreement with the H-κ method. (D) SWA result for station AT32 showing that a good result can be found without having to modify H-κ parameter search space. Red, green, and black asterisks represent the expected times of Ps and its first and second multiples with 35 km crustal thickness and 1.7, 1.8, and 1.9 Vp/Vs ratios, respectively. Red dot shows the time of the maximum amplitude of the stacked receiver function in selected time window.

Figure 4.

Comparison between H-κ (crustal thickness H, and Vp/Vs ratio, κ) stacking analysis and stack windowing analysis (SWA) for two stations. (A) H-κ result for station AT30 representing a good H-κ solution. (B) H-κ results for station AT32 representing poor H-κ solution. (C) SWA result for station AT30 showing good agreement with the H-κ method. (D) SWA result for station AT32 showing that a good result can be found without having to modify H-κ parameter search space. Red, green, and black asterisks represent the expected times of Ps and its first and second multiples with 35 km crustal thickness and 1.7, 1.8, and 1.9 Vp/Vs ratios, respectively. Red dot shows the time of the maximum amplitude of the stacked receiver function in selected time window.

SWA builds on previous approaches in estimating through the manual picking of the Ps conversion and the PpPs multiple (Zandt and Ammon, 1995). Because single earthquake traces can be contaminated with noise, we stack all receiver functions at an individual station to increase the signal to noise ratio of the data after normalizing the amplitude of a trace and correcting for moveout. We then choose a time window around the Ps and PpPs arrivals on the stacked trace, with the maximum amplitude in the time window being automatically chosen as the conversion of interest. From these times, we can calculate and H as follows (Zandt and Ammon, 1995):
graphic
and
graphic
where Vp is an assumed value for average P-wave velocity in the crust (6.1 km/s in this study) that generally has a small effect on overall crustal thickness estimates (Zhu and Kanamori, 2000), is an arbitrary ray parameter, but should be the same as the ray parameter used to correct for moveout in the stacking routine, and tPS and tPpPs are the time picks from the stacked receiver function at a station of interest. Errors are then estimated by comparing the chosen arrivals from the stacked trace with time of the maximum amplitudes in the chosen time window on individual traces by taking the standard deviation of the time differences. Using this uncertainty in a standard propagation of errors calculation, we can estimate errors in and H as follows:
graphic
and
graphic
where Δ is the standard deviation of the measurement. This technique, while requiring more interaction than H-κ stacking, allows for an improved recovery of both crustal thickness and Vp/Vs ratios where traditional H-κ stacking analysis may struggle, while obtaining very similar results in areas of simple crustal structure (Fig. 4).

Adaptive Common Conversion Point (CCP) Stacking

In order to resolve spatial variability in the crust and uppermost mantle, we utilize common conversion point (CCP) stacking analysis (Dueker and Sheehan, 1997) to create a three-dimensional (3D) volume of receiver function amplitude. In this analysis, the region of interest is gridded into bins based on user-defined width and spacing. Receiver functions are migrated to depth and ray traced back to their theoretical locations in the Earth, and receiver function amplitudes that plot within the same bin are averaged to represent the structure in that bin. To compute the theoretical ray paths in our data set, we use a regional 1D velocity model derived from the shear wave velocity model of Delph et al. (2015a), which comprises a Vs = 3.4 km/s crust and Vs = 4.2 km/s mantle with a constant Vp/Vs ratio of 1.78 and crustal thickness of 38 km. Although this 1D velocity model does not account for the variability in crustal thicknesses and velocities throughout our region, the differences that arise in ray tracing receiver functions to obtain piercing points based on a 1D model as opposed to a 3D model are very minor, especially in the crust. However, variability in Vp/Vs can have a significant effect on the depth to discontinuities (Zhu and Kanamori, 2000). We account for these lateral variations in velocity structure by creating a 3D velocity model that applies timing corrections to the ray-traced receiver functions so that conversions are mapped to their proper locations at depth (Eagar et al., 2010). Boundaries in this 3D velocity model are derived from the crustal thickness and Vp/Vs results from SWA in this study (Fig. 4) and the average shear wave velocities in the crust are derived from Delph et al. (2015a). For the mantle, a Vs of 4.2 km/s was assumed based on the results of Delph et al. (2015a) and Fichtner et al. (2013) with a constant Vp/Vs of 1.78. In order to maximize spatial resolution in this study, we follow the adaptive common conversion point approach in Delph and Porter (2015), which allows our bin width to dilate from 0.3° to 1° until each bin has at least 10 rays.

By investigating the crustal thickness and Vp/Vs results from SWA (Fig. 5), conversion amplitudes (Fig. 6), and cross sections generated from adaptive CCP stacking analysis (Fig. 7), we can gain insight into the characteristics of the crust and crust-mantle boundary throughout central Anatolia.

Figure 5.

Results of stack windowing analysis. (A) Crustal thickness. (B) Bulk crustal Vp/Vs. Red triangles are Holocene volcanoes; blue and black triangles are seismic stations; black bold lines are major tectonic structures; solid thin lines are contour intervals.

Figure 5.

Results of stack windowing analysis. (A) Crustal thickness. (B) Bulk crustal Vp/Vs. Red triangles are Holocene volcanoes; blue and black triangles are seismic stations; black bold lines are major tectonic structures; solid thin lines are contour intervals.

Figure 6.

Negative receiver function amplitudes between 10 and 30 km below surface normalized to coherence peak from common conversion point (CCP) stacking. Cold colors indicate regions with large-magnitude negative arrivals, possibly indicative of the presence of fluids and/or melts in the crust. Depth to maximum negative amplitude shown by white numbers. Black lines show major tectonic structures and sutures; white lines indicate outlines of the Neogene to recent volcanic deposits; blue inverted triangles are Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) stations; black inverted triangles are Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute (KOERI) stations; white triangles are Holocene volcanoes.

Figure 6.

Negative receiver function amplitudes between 10 and 30 km below surface normalized to coherence peak from common conversion point (CCP) stacking. Cold colors indicate regions with large-magnitude negative arrivals, possibly indicative of the presence of fluids and/or melts in the crust. Depth to maximum negative amplitude shown by white numbers. Black lines show major tectonic structures and sutures; white lines indicate outlines of the Neogene to recent volcanic deposits; blue inverted triangles are Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) stations; black inverted triangles are Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute (KOERI) stations; white triangles are Holocene volcanoes.

Figure 7.

(A–E) Common conversion point (CCP) stacks throughout central Anatolia with 150% vertical exaggeration; location map of the sections is on the right. On the cross sections, black lines represent the terrane and plate boundaries or major faults; dashed lines represent the continental Mohorovičić (Moho) discontinuity; black dots represent the relocated earthquakes across the region (from Turkelli et al., 2015). TGFZ—Tuz Gölü fault zone; CAFZ—Central Anatolian fault zone; EAFZ—East Anatolian fault zone; KF—Kozan fault; SRF—Sarız fault. Note that cross-section FF is shown in Figure 8.

Figure 7.

(A–E) Common conversion point (CCP) stacks throughout central Anatolia with 150% vertical exaggeration; location map of the sections is on the right. On the cross sections, black lines represent the terrane and plate boundaries or major faults; dashed lines represent the continental Mohorovičić (Moho) discontinuity; black dots represent the relocated earthquakes across the region (from Turkelli et al., 2015). TGFZ—Tuz Gölü fault zone; CAFZ—Central Anatolian fault zone; EAFZ—East Anatolian fault zone; KF—Kozan fault; SRF—Sarız fault. Note that cross-section FF is shown in Figure 8.

Crustal thickness estimates throughout the region are variable and correlate well with tectonic structures (Figs. 5A and 7). The thickest crust in the region corresponds with the eastern Taurus Mountains, where crustal thickness estimates are generally high (>40 km) with values reaching 45 km (Figs. 5A and 7C). The Adana Basin to the south of the Taurus Mountains is characterized by thin crust (<35 km) with measurements as low as 25 km, indicating crustal thickness changes of as much as 15 km over ∼60 km lateral distance (Figs. 5A and 7D). A similar relationship is seen on the southwestern margin of the Kırşehir block, where crustal thicknesses are as low as 30 km (Fig. 5A) in the Tuz Gölü Basin. Thin crust (∼30 km) also characterizes the Anatolian plate near the EAFZ and the Arabian plate. In the CAVP and much of the Kırşehir block, crustal thickness ranges from 35 to 40 km (Fig. 7E).

The estimates of bulk crustal Vp/Vs values are variable but show some apparent trends (Fig. 5B). The thick crust (>40 km) beneath the Taurus Mountains is associated with elevated Vp/Vs ratios (>1.85) (Fig. 5B). In contrast, the CAVP exhibits slightly lower Vp/Vs (1.75–1.8) values (Fig. 5B), suggesting that the effect of Neogene volcanism on the bulk Vp/Vs of the crust is rather limited. The Adana Basin is also characterized by low Vp/Vs (<1.8) values except in the east near the young mafic volcanics, coinciding with a high Vp/Vs (>1.85) anomaly (Fig. 5B). The lowest Vp/Vs ratios (∼1.7) are found along the IAESZ near the northwestern Kırşehir block (Fig. 5B), possibly reflecting higher SiO2 content because silica inversely correlates with the Vp/Vs ratio (Christensen, 1966).

Through the investigation of conversion amplitudes in receiver functions, we can gain insight into the relative impedance contrast in the crust. We observe high negative conversions in the mid-crust in 2 distinct regions: (1) near the boundary of the Anatolian and Arabian plates near the EAFZ (Figs. 6, 7C, and 7D), and (2) along the CAVP, where the southern anomalies show an apparent offset across Tuz Gölü fault zone (from 22 to 15 km; Figs. 6, 7A, and 7B). These anomalies are further discussed in the following.

Nature of Crustal Boundaries in Central Anatolia

A rapid change in crustal thickness corresponds to the location of the EAFZ and Bitlis-Zagros suture (Figs. 7C, 7D). While it is difficult to know whether this crustal thickness variation is due to the evolution of the EAFZ or reflects the juxtaposition of the Arabian lithosphere against more deformed and thickened Anatolian lithosphere, these variations extend farther east than the EAFZ along the Bitlis-Zagros suture (e.g., Özacar et al., 2010). Thus, it is likely that these variations are due to the collision of Arabia with Eurasia, generating thicker crust north of the suture zone, rather than transform movement along the EAFZ. However, as convergence between Arabia and Eurasia proceeded, this variation in crustal thickness may have served as a boundary along which stress could be localized, leading to the development of the EAFZ in Pliocene time as a lithospheric-scale transform fault controlling tectonic escape of the Anatolian plate. In central Anatolia, the Moho beneath the Tuz Gölü fault zone seems to be continuous, while the low-velocity layers at mid-crustal depths are offset, indicating that the Tuz Gölü fault represents a tectonic structure limited to the upper-middle crust (Figs. 7A, 7B).

A large decrease in crustal thickness also occurs at the transition from the Taurus Mountains (>40 km) into the Adana Basin (∼30 km) over a relatively short lateral distance (∼60 km). This pronounced crustal thinning corresponds to the Kozan fault, which is thought to be a transtensional splay fault of the EAFZ (Aksu et al., 2014). However, the identified motion on the Kozan fault is not sufficient to accommodate the 2 km uplift of the Taurus Mountains since the late Miocene. According to the depth contours of subducting African lithosphere extracted from teleseismic tomography (Biryol et al., 2011), the Adana Basin is located east of the Cyprus slab in an area where no subducting lithosphere is imaged, suggesting minimal sensitivity to processes related to slab dynamics. In addition, the Adana Basin was located at the leading edge of the fold and thrust belt, undergoing limited crustal thickening compared to the overthickened crust of the Anatolide-Tauride block. We interpret the Adana Basin as a diffuse transtensional plate boundary between the Anatolian and African plates that likely formed as a piggyback basin.

Across the eastern segment of the ITS that spatially coincides with a portion of the CAFZ, a thinning of the crust in the Kırşehir block–Tuz Gölü Basin is observed (Fig 5A, 7B, 7D, and 7E). Many previous geophysical studies have found drastic changes in various geophysical properties (e.g., Bouguer gravity anomaly, Ates et al., 1999; Pn velocities, Gans et al., 2009; shear wave velocities, Warren et al., 2013; Delph et al., 2015a). We interpret the differences in geophysical characteristics on either side of the suture to reflect these observed differences in crustal thickness, rather than previous interpretations that the upper mantle is slower to east of the ITS than to the west (Gans et al., 2009). To the west, the crust of the Tuz Gölü Basin and the southern Kırşehir block is relatively thin (∼30 km), thickening gradually to the northeast. As this thin crust crosses the inferred location of the Inner Tauride suture, it indicates that the true location of the Inner Tauride suture, at least in the lower crust, may be located farther to the northeast near the surface trace of the Tuz Gölü fault.

Low-Velocity Zones in the CAVP

We observe multiple large negative-amplitude conversions beneath most of the CAVP indicative of the presence of a velocity decrease with depth (Fig. 6). The top of the velocity decrease is shallower beneath the Anatolide-Tauride block (15 km) than it is beneath the Kırşehir block (22 km) (Figs. 6, 7A, and 7B). The northern anomaly beneath the CAVP at 18 km depth is the largest negative-amplitude anomaly (Figs. 6 and 7A), and correlates well with the inferred centers that fed the eruptions of large ignimbrite deposits throughout central Turkey (Aydın et al., 2012). If these low-velocity layers are associated with crustal melt that is sourcing the CAVP, we might expect high Vp/Vs ratios in the region. However, the bulk crustal Vp/Vs ratios are not consistent with a substantial amount of melt in this area (∼1.75), suggesting that if these velocity decreases represent the presence of partial melts, they must be confined to relatively thin layers (Fig. 5B). The negative anomaly located near the boundary of the Anatolian and Arabian plates at a depth of 19 km (Fig. 6) also correlates well with the recent small-volume mafic volcanic activity (Rojay et al., 2001), and may represent a mafic sill that has stalled in the crust.

Uplift of the Central Taurus Mountains

Schildgen et al. (2014) identified multiple episodes of uplift of the central Taurus Mountains along the southern margin of the central Anatolian plateau initiating in the late Miocene–Pliocene and followed by a late Pliocene–early Pleistocene episode of faster uplift that may be related to the arrival of the Eratosthenes Seamount along the subduction margin near Cyprus (Schildgen et al., 2012a). These events are consistent with uplift observed in Cyprus that shows uplift similar in magnitude and timing to what has occurred in the central Taurus Mountains (∼2 km of uplift in the past ∼6 m.y.; Morag et al., 2016). The proposed mechanisms for this uplift are generally related to slab breakoff. Cosentino et al., (2012) proposed that the upwelling of asthenosphere after slab breakoff was responsible for the uplift, while Schildgen et al. (2012a, 2012b, 2014) interpreted that some of the uplift could be attributed to the topographic response of slab breakoff (e.g., Duretz et al., 2011) without requiring the influx of asthenosphere to support the elevations of the central Taurus Mountains.

Our results show a good correlation of crustal thickness and elevation in the Taurus Mountains (Fig. 5A). The central Taurus Mountains have average elevations of ∼1.5–2.0 km and a crustal thickness of ∼40 km. While Airy isostasy depends on assumptions made about crustal and upper mantle density that are generally not well constrained, these crustal thicknesses and elevations are consistent with an isostatically compensated crust. In addition, the presence of a fast seismic velocity anomaly in the uppermost mantle beneath the central Taurus Mountains, interpreted as representing the subducting African lithosphere (Bakırcı et al., 2012), indicates that the presence of asthenosphere beneath the central Taurus Mountains is unlikely. Consistent with this fast velocity anomaly, we observe a weak positive amplitude conversion at depths ∼65–80 km beneath the central Taurus Mountains that spatially corresponds to the top of the slab imaged by Bakırcı et al. (2012) (Figs. 7C, 7E, and 8). This discontinuity can be traced to the northern edge of the central Taurus Mountains, and disappears abruptly near the southernmost extension of the CAVP, which displays young volcanism with geochemical characteristics consistent with asthenospheric input (Reid et al., 2017) (Fig. 8). The dip of this discontinuity is subhorizontal, indicating the shallow aseismic underthrusting of the African lithosphere. At greater depth, the Cyprus slab appears segmented in the teleseismic P wave tomography images, suggesting that the slab is currently in the process of detachment beneath central Anatolia (Biryol et al., 2011).

Figure 8.

Common conversion point (CCP) stack cutting through Taurus Mountains and CAVP (transect F-F shown in the location map of Fig. 7) and its interpreted section. Volcanism and high elevations of the central Anatolian plateau could be associated with the influx of asthenosphere around the edge of the African lithosphere. ITS—Inner Taurid suture; SAVF—Savcılı fault; TGFZ—Tuz Gölü fault zone. Red and black triangles are the projection of nearby Holocene volcanoes and seismic stations onto the cross section, respectively. Red lines indicate the top of the low-velocity zones in the crust. Red curved arrows show the upwelling asthenospheric material. The slab is taken from surface wave tomography (after Bakırcı et al., 2012). Inset: Gray represents the position of the slab and Taurus marine carbonates before the slab breakoff and black lines outline their positions after the slab breakoff.

Figure 8.

Common conversion point (CCP) stack cutting through Taurus Mountains and CAVP (transect F-F shown in the location map of Fig. 7) and its interpreted section. Volcanism and high elevations of the central Anatolian plateau could be associated with the influx of asthenosphere around the edge of the African lithosphere. ITS—Inner Taurid suture; SAVF—Savcılı fault; TGFZ—Tuz Gölü fault zone. Red and black triangles are the projection of nearby Holocene volcanoes and seismic stations onto the cross section, respectively. Red lines indicate the top of the low-velocity zones in the crust. Red curved arrows show the upwelling asthenospheric material. The slab is taken from surface wave tomography (after Bakırcı et al., 2012). Inset: Gray represents the position of the slab and Taurus marine carbonates before the slab breakoff and black lines outline their positions after the slab breakoff.

Based on these results, the fast shear velocities imaged beneath the central Taurus Mountains (Bakırcı et al., 2012), and the geochemical signatures indicating an input of asthenospheric material immediately to the north in the CAVP (Reid et al., 2017), we propose that rollback of the Cyprus slab initiated by at least mid-Miocene time, as indicated by extensional exhumation in the Kırşehir block (Whitney and Dilek, 1997; Whitney et al., 2003; Fayon and Whitney, 2007) and the initiation of volcanism in the CAVP (Le Pennec et al., 1994; Aydar et al., 2012). Because of this rollback, the central Taurus Mountains subsided due to the increased load of a vertically dipping slab, allowing for the deposition of late Miocene marine sediments. In the late Miocene–Pliocene, the central Taurus Mountains were characterized by thick crust most likely uplifted to attain isostatic balance. The segmentation of the Cyprus slab accelerated, probably just after the collision of Eratosthenes Seamount with the ongoing African subduction, and resulted in recent slab breakoff, followed by slab rebound and subsequent rapid late Pliocene–early Pleistocene uplift in the overriding plate (Buiter et al., 2002; Duretz et al., 2011), that formed the modern topography of the southern margin of the central Anatolian plateau (Fig. 8). This slab roll back and final breakoff would create space for the upwelling of asthenospheric material to reach the base of the lithosphere beneath central Anatolia, leading to the geochemical signatures volcanism found in the CAVP (Reid et al., 2017).

This study used recently acquired seismic data from the CD-CAT seismic deployment to produce the highest resolution images of crustal variability in central Anatolia to date. Overall, we used data from 500 teleseismic events recorded by 92 broadband seismic stations for the calculation of P and PP receiver functions. We analyzed crustal thickness and Vp/Vs ratios for this data set using SWA, which represents an interactive alternative to H- stacking analysis in tectonically complex regions. In addition, we utilized adaptive CCP stacking analysis to generate an amplitude volume representing depths to impedance contrasts that allows us to gain insight into the lateral seismic variations of the crust and upper mantle in central Anatolia.

Our main findings are summarized as follows.

  1. Crustal thickness measurements correlate well with high elevations supporting isostatically compensated crust. The thickest crust is found in the Taurus Mountains (>40 km), and crustal thicknesses decreased rapidly to the south in the Adana Basin (<35 km) and Arabian plate (∼30 km), and to the northwest beneath the Tuz Gölü Basin (∼30 km) and the Kırşehir block (35–40 km).

  2. Bulk Vp/Vs estimates are highly variable in the region. Generally, high Vp/Vs ratios (>1.85) are observed across the Taurus Mountains, while lower Vp/Vs ratios (∼1.7) are observed along the IAESZ that bounds the Kırşehir block to the northwest.

  3. Multiple low-velocity zones displaying large negative impedance contrasts are observed between 15 and 25 km depth near the EAFZ and beneath the CAVP and may correspond to mid-crustal magma reservoirs feeding surface volcanism.

  4. A gently dipping positive amplitude anomaly interpreted as the Moho of the underthrusting African lithosphere is between 65 and 80 km depth beneath the central Taurus Mountains. This anomaly abruptly ends just south of the CAVP, where young volcanism shows geochemical indicators for asthenospheric input in agreement with slab breakoff and subsequent rebound coeval with the onset of late Pliocene–early Pleistocene rapid uplift raising the late Miocene marine sequences ∼2 km above the present-day sea level.

This research was funded by National Science Foundation grant EAR-1109336 to Beck. The stacking windowing analysis (SWA) code is available by contacting Abgarmi or Delph. We thank Dogan Kalafat and Metin Kahraman for providing the relocated earthquake data, and Nuretdin Kaymakçı for providing the digital database of the faults in Anatolia. We also thank Van Hinsbergen and the anonymous reviewer for their careful reading of our manuscript and insightful comments and suggestions. The portable seismic instruments used in Continental Dynamics–Central Anatolian Tectonics (CD-CAT) deployment were provided by IRIS PASSCAL (Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology Portable Array Seismic Studies of the Continental Lithosphere) and the Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute. The figures in this study were produced using Generic Mapping Tools (GMT) developed by Wessel and Smith (1991).

1Supplemental File. Results of the receiver function analysis for each individual station. Please visit http://doi.org/10.1130/GES01509.S1 or the full-text article on www.gsapubs.org to view the Supplemental File.
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