The Crust Beneath Morocco From Surface Topography To Upper Mantle A 700 KM Long Seiemic Section Across Morocco
The Crust Beneath Morocco From Surface Topography To Upper Mantle A 700 KM Long Seiemic Section Across Morocco
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The Crust beneath Morocco: From the Surface Topography to the Upper
Mantle a 700 km long Seismic Section Across Morocco
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10 authors, including:
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
Slab tearing, vertical tectonic motions, and the Miocene marine gateways across the Gibraltar Arc View project
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                          Session Ple
                                    nie
                                       re Solennelle 2015
1- Introduction                                              Africa and Eurasia (Fig. 1). This area of the western
                                                             Mediterranean, includes the westernmost range of
                               The Gibraltar Arc             the Alpine-Himalayan system, the orogens of the
                               constitutes         the       Betic and Rif. These are considered to be part of the
                               western tip of the            same orogen curved around the Alboran back-arc
                               Mediterranean which           extensional basin (Fig. 1). The surface geology has
                               marks the vertex of           suggested a number of relatively different tectonic
                               the closure of the            models (Platt et al., 2013). Since the Miocene, the
                               Thetis. This feature is       broad region extending from the Atlas Mountains
                               part of a broad and           in the South, in Morocco, to the Betic Mountains
                               diffuse deformation           or even perhaps to the Central Iberian system in
                               zone caused by the            the North (Iberia Peninsula) has been affected by
                               collision between two         the oblique collision process resulting from the
                               continental    masses         Africa-Eurasia convergence. For the last decade
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         the area has attracted the attention of the Earth      crustal structure of Morocco from the South,
         Science community as a relevant effort has been        beneath the Atlas to the North Beneath the Rif
         dedicated to the area with the development of a        (Fig. 1). The crustal thickness and the topography
         large number of international research projects.       of the crust-mantle boundary were important
                                                                targets to unravel, as very few data were available
         The earthquake activity in the region is frequent      so far. These were the main objectives of projects
         and relatively strong, it is distributed (Fig. 1) in   based on control source seismic exploration
         the wide deformation zone and/or diffuse plate         carried out during the last few years. These are:
         boundary. The continental collision zone has           the SIMA project across the Atlas Mountains
         been referred by different authors as the Azores-      (Seismic Imaging of the Moroccan Atlas; Ayarza
         Gibraltar-Alboran plate boundary (Udias et al.,        et al., 2014); the RIFSIS sampling the Rif orogen
         1976; Buforn et al., 1988; Jimenez-Munt et al.,        (Seismic Investigations across the Rif; Gallart et
         2011; among others). This earthquake activity is       al., 2012), and the GASSIS-WestMed (Gràcia
         evidenced by the occurrence of many historical         et al., 2012) sampling the Alboran Basin. Note
         tsunami events that affected the Western coasts        that, an additional coordination effort was carried
         of Morocco and Iberia. History documents for           out between the latter two projects resulting in
         example the strong events of 60-63 BC, which           the acquisition of piggy-back onshore-offshore
         destroyed Cadiz, the 1531, 1722 and the 1755           wide-angle recordings. This contribution aims to
         Lisbon earthquake. The latter was the largest and      summaries the new knowledge and unexpected
         generated anomalously high sea waves that cause        ndings derived from this international collaboration
         a lot of damage on the coasts of Morocco and           efforts. Special emphasis is devoted to the research
         Iberia (Simoes et al., 1992; Batista et a.l, 1998).    that mobilized over a 100 multinational researchers
         The seismogenic zone is relatively broad band as       in an unprecedented cooperation effort during the
         suggested by the scattered number of hypocenters       development of the control source seismic projects.
         spanning in depth from shallow to some 100km.
         The focal mechanisms reveal an overall NNW-SSE         2 - Te c t o n i c , G e o l o g i c & G e o p h y s i c
         trending compressional stress regime. However,         Framework
         in detail these mechanism vary. The area, from
         the tectonic point of view is characterized by a       The conguration of the Western Mediterranean
         number of compressional structures, that affect        and as a result its topographic relief is, to a major
         both the continental margins and the oceanic crust.    degree, the result of an ongoing slow oblique
         These structures that affect a wide sector were        collision between African and European plates.
         formed by the convergent motion since Cenozoic         This convergence is active since the Cretaceous.
         times, some can be considered the result of the        The broad deformation zone includes from South
         inversion of previous extensional features. The        to North the mountain chains of: The Atlas and
         area is a geologic and structurally complex and,       The Rif, in Morocco, and, The Betic in the Iberia
         intriguing, furthermore, it is a broadly recognized    Peninsula. The latter two jointly feature a horseshoe
         as a seismogenic zone.                                 shape, the Gibraltar Arc, around the Alboran basin.
         Although the area has been the research topic of       The Atlas Mountains form an intra-continental
         a large number of studies resulting in a variety       asymmetric orogenic system almost 2000km
         of geodynamic ideas and models [see Plat et al.,       long. It can be traced (west-east) from the Atlantic
         2013 for a review] it has not been until recently      coast in Morocco to the Mediterranean coast in
         that a detailed and integrated scientic program       Tunisia (Fig. 1). They include the High and Middle
         has been carried out. The research programme           Atlas in Morocco, Saharan Atlas and Aurès
         beneted from the very strong collaboration            Mountains in Algeria, and Tunisian Atlas in Tunisia.
         between Moroccan and Spanish research groups           The asymmetry is marked by the existence of the
         as well as research teams from USA, Ireland and        Mesetas (Moroccan and Oran) in the western
         Germany. This major effort aimed to acquire a          part of the belt mostly revealed by tabular nearly
         variety of new geophysical data (including natural     undeformed domains. The Atlas can be considered
         and control source seismic recording, potential        an uplift, a structural inversion of Triassic-Jurassic
         eld (Gravity, magnetotellurics, geology, etc)         rift grabens associated to the opening of the
         with an unprecedented resolution. The initiative       Atlantic and the Alpine Tethys [e.g., Frizon de
         included a series of large scale research projects     Lamotte et al., 2008, and references therein].
         as Topo-Iberia (Dı́az et al., 2009) and PICASSO        Relatively small shortening is accumulated across
         (Program to Investigate Convective Alboran Sea         the belt. Shortening estimates of 15–30% have
         System Overturn) A key issue was to ll in the         been reported for the High Atlas [Beauchamp et
         missing knowledge specially constrain the seismic      al., 1999; Teixell et al., 2003] and 10% or lower
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for the Middle Atlas [Gomez et al., 1998; Frizon           two young upwarps that locally reach elevations
de Lamotte et al., 2009; Teixell et al., 2009]. For        of 2000 m the Anti Atlas and the Morocan
an intra-continental orogenic belt the relatively          Meseta. These also feature little deformation of
small shortening estimates in the High Atlas are           Cenozoic age. The Moroccan Meseta, and the
inconsistent with the topographic elevation which          Anti-Atlas are located on the northern edge of the
in this area can reach over 4000m. This is not the         West African Craton [Hefferan et al., 2000; Ennih
case for the eastern Atlas (Sahara and Tunisian            and Liegeois, 2001]. Taking into account that the
Atlas Aureas Mountain where the elevations are             entire orogen features similar crustal thickness
more moderate. The available geophysics suggest            and a unique geologic history [Frizon de Lamotte
that crustal thickness of the Moroccan and Eastern         et al., 2009] this suggests that some other factor,
Atlas are similar. Therefore, additional factors           a mantle component, is required to contribute to
are needed to account for the high elevations              the buoyancy to maintain this topographic prole
of the Moroccan Atlas [Ayarza et al., 2005].               [Ayarza et al., 2005; Teixell et al., 2005; Missenard
Furthermore, the Moroccan Atlas are anked by              et al., 2006; Frizon de Lamotte et al., 2009].
   Figure 1. Location of the study area, southern Iberia peninsula and Morocco in northern Africa, geology and
geodynamic setting. (a) Sketch map of the Iberian Peninsula, southern part, and Morocco with the location of the
most signicant geologic domains, the Atlas in the South the Rif with the horseshoe shape of the Gibraltar arc and
 the location of the Trans-Alboran Shear Zone (TAZS) obliquely crossing the Alboran basin. This map also reveals
   the topography. (b) Map of the study area revealing the distributions of the broad-band (BB) seismic stations
  in the Iberia Peninsusla and Morocco. Note that the grid of stations, backbone of BB feature an, approximately
60x60 km grid. (c) The abundant seismicity of the area, separated by depth, earthquakes located within the crust
  avice 40 km (black lled circles) and the earthquakes located at greater depth (white circles) in the study area.
                       This reveals the relatively large amount of seismic activity of the area.
Volcanic activity has been widespread in the               units are also found in the Alboran basin, Southern
Atlas. The oldest extrusives, found in the High            Iberia, and North Africa. The composition of these
Atlas, are basalts associated with Mesozoic rifting.       units changes in time and space from calc-alkaline
Paleogene to Quaternary alkaline basalts erupted           in southern Spain and the Alboran Sea during the
in the Middle Atlas and along the southern                 Miocene, to alkali basalts in North Africa during the
border of the Western High Atlas. Middle and               Pliocene and Quaternary [Duggen et al., 2004]. In
Late Miocene, Pliocene, and Quaternary volcanic            the Iberian Massif of central Spain, Late Miocene-
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         Quaternary volcanics created the Calatrava              In Early-Middle Miocene, after crustal thickening
         Volcanic Province (Ciudad Real), intracontinental       and metamorphism, the region began to undergo
         volcanism that has been related to extensional          EW to NE-SW extension, thinning the continental
         tectonics [Lopez-Ruiz et al., 1993].                    crust along normal faults and forming the Alboran
                                                                 Basin [Chalouan et al., 2008]. The basin has
         The Rif Mountains in Morocco together with the          thick Neogene material that overly deep crustal
         Betic Mountains in Iberia peninsula form the            rocks, most probably of the Sebtides-Alpujarride
         westernmost Mediterranean Alpine belt, the              complex. Since the Late Miocene, compression
         Gibraltar Arc. It is a horseshoe shaped belt that       developed large folds and reverse faulting in the
         partially encircles a deep sedimentary basin over       mountain front, and normal faults within the upper
         the extended crust of the Alboran Sea. They             crust of the Internal Zones, resulting in the current
         all developed roughly synchronously with the            topographic relief of Rif.
         orogenic belt during the Miocene [Verges and
         Fernandez, 2012; Platt et al., 2013]. Three different   A singular feature across the Alboran Basin, a
         geologic domains can be distinguished in the Rif        major bathymetric high runs obliquely from the
         and Betic Mountains (Fig. 1): the Flysch Domain,        northeast, the eastern Betics, to the Alhoceima
         the Internal Zone, and the External Zone. The           region this is known as the Trans-Alboran Shear
         Internal zones are formed by Paleozoic, Mesozoic        Zone (TASZ). This is a broad fracture zone,
         and Cenozoic sequences, including metamorphic           composed of different left-lateral strike-slip fault
         complexes all affected by Alpine deformation            segments that extends onshore at both sides of the
         since the Eocene-Late Oligocene [Chalouan et al.,       basin with the development of an analog system
         2001, 2008]. In the Rif the External Zones feature      of left-lateral strike-slip faults. In Iberia the Alhama
         carbonate and pelitic Mesozoic and Cenozoic             de Murcia and Carboneras faults are possibly part
         units, mostly limestone and marls. They constitute      of this system and in Morocco the Nekkor and
         a fold-and-thrust belt detached along Late Triassic     associated faults. The TSAZ accommodates the
         evaporite beds above the thinned continental crust      escape of Central Rif toward the SW [Perouse et
         of the North Africa passive margin [Wildi, 1983;        al., 2010] and affects the Neogene basins of the
         Chalouan et al., 2008]. The Flysch units consists       region [Udıas and Buforn, 1992; Martınez-Dıaz
         of Cretaceous-Lower Miocene detrital rocks.             et al., 2001]. Perhaps one of the most seismically
         They overthrust the External Rif units and include      active areas in Morocco is the Nekkor fault, it is
         klippes located on the Internal Zones [Chalouan et      linked to the normal faults beneath Alhoceimas
         al., 1995, 2008]. The Internal Zones, jointly with      region [Booth-Rea et al., 2012]. More detailed
         the Alboran Sea crust, are termed the Alboran           descriptions of the geology of the Gibraltar Arc
         Domain, an allochthonous unit that separated            can be found elsewhere [e.g., Chalouan et al.,
         from the eastern Iberian margin and drifted to          2008; Platt et al., 2013, and references therein].
         its current position during Cenozoic subduction
         rollback [e.g., Rosenbaum et al., 2002]. Well know      Previous geophysics constrain the crustal thickness
         Peridotitic bodies outcrop along the eastern ank       to 30 km beneath the Gharb Basin [Hatzfeld and
         of the Gibraltar Arc, the Ronda in Spain and Beni-      Bensari, 1977]. Beneath the Alboran Sea seismic
         Bousera in Morocco.                                     data constrained depth to the Moho of 18-20 km
                                                                 beneath the central part of the basin and, beneath
         The Gharb (or Rharb) and Guadalquivir basins are        the southernmost Rif thicknesses of 35 km were
         the associated foreland basins in Morocco and           determined from refraction recordings of quarry
         Spain, respectively. The former is a foredeep           blasts [Wigger et al. 1992]. Integrated potential
         separating the Rif belt from the Moroccan Meseta        eld methods (including modeling and inversion)
         and Middle Atlas. This basin contains part of           by various authors constrained the crustal thickness
         the Prerif nappe underlying a large amount of           to a moderately thick crust underneath the Rif and
         continental sediments, that reach a maximum             Betics (32–34 km), and a thin continental crust
         depth of 8 km toward the west [Had et al.,             (18–22 km) beneath the Alboran basin [Torne et
         2008]. It was moreover lled with sediments of          al. 2000; Frizon de Lamotte et al., 2004; Zeyen
         marine origin during the Tertiary and continental       et al., 2005 Fullea et al., 2010, 2014]. This basin
         formations during the Quaternary, except for a          progressively thins toward the east, reaching
         coastal fringe [Had et al., 2008]. The Gharb Basin,    values bellow 16 km depth at the transition to the
         like its counterpart in the Iberian Peninsula (the      Algerian basin. Onshore within Morocco, crustal
         Guadalquivir Basin), evolved as a foreland basin as     thickness increases to 38 km below the highest
         the basement was loaded by the thrust sheets of         elevations of the High Atlas, then it decreases to
         the External Units [Fernandez et al., 1998; Garcia-     the southeast to 30–32 km. It is important to point
         Castellanos, 2002] during the Miocene.                  out that a three major Bouguer gravity anomalies
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can be identied, all of them with similar values,        geophysics, geodesy and geotechnology. The
these are located, one in the High Atlas, a secod in      research team was very aware that the knowledge
the Rif and the third in the highest topography of        on the relief changes and its causes is of great
the Betic Mountains. Although, with similar values,       social impact concerning the climate change and
the expected crustal thicknesses is, probably, very       the evaluation of natural resources and hazards.
different between them.                                   The seismic part of this mega-initiative involved
                                                          the deployment of a back-bone of broad-band
A laterally heterogeneous upper crust characterized       (BBB) auntonomous seismic station distributed
by resistive and conductive bodies has been               within a grid, similarly to what EAR THSCOPE
determined by a Magnetotelluric (MT) NW-SE                was developing in USA. The Spanish research
oriented traverse across the Rif [Anahnah et al.,         group gor support form the Spanish institutions
2011]. In the uppermost crust (10km) resistive            to extend the BBB over to Moroccan teritory. This
anomalies have been imaged within the Internal            was possible by the invaluable colaboration of the
Zones, and conductive anomalies within the                Moroccan colleagues of the Institute Scientique
External Zones and foreland basin. Their variable         of the Universite Mohammed V at Rabat. An
thicknesses suggest basement highs possibly               nearly 60 x 60 km array was installed in Morocco
related to blind frontal thrusts between the Gharb        covering the Rif orogen.
Basin and the External Zones. A major crustal
decollement separates the shallow geological              The PICASSO initiative aimed to increase the BBB
units from the probable Variscan basement. At             coverage in the area close to the Gribraltar Arc
depths below 5 km, a high resistivity anomaly             in Morocco and in Spain to an average spacing
appears below the frontal part of the Rif. The MT         of 5x5 km (Fig. 1). Instrumentation from different
image across the southern Rif reveals a wide              institutions in USA (including instruments from the
and thin low resistivity anomaly which could be           IRIS-PASSCAL Instrument center) were deployed
associated to detrital rocks that alternate with marl     to achieve this dense coverage. Constraints on
and carbonates [Anahnah et al., 2011].                    the crustal structure were a key target to be able
                                                          to develop full scale geodynamic models for the
Constraints on the convergence rate and directions        tectonic evolution of the area, as well as to be able to
are provided by GPS measurements from                     rene the velocity models derived from teleseismic
permanent and temporary deployments [Fadil et             tomography. An importan and crucial target was
al., 2006; Vernant et al., 2010; Koulali et al., 2011].   the crustal thickness. To achive constraints on the
Eurasian convergence relative to Africa trended           crustal structure, three major control source seismic
south during the Late Cretaceous-Paleogene,               data acquisition projects were launched. These
and has trended southeast oblique to the African          were: the SIMA project across the Atlas Mountains;
margin from the Miocene. The present-day tectonic         the RIFSIS to characterize the Rif orogen, and the
motions show south to southeast motion at 5 mm/           GASSIS-WestMed to address the structure of the
yr of the Rif region relative to stable Nubia.            Alboran Basin and its margins.
3. Integrated Seismic Projects: Experiments               The structure of the Atlas Mountains was targeted
Setup & Data                                              by the almost 700 km SIMA traverse (Fig. 2). Along
The strong Moroccan & Spanish collaboration               the prole the energy released by six explosions
was established within the framework of the               was recorded by 939 Reftek 125a stations (Texans)
PICASSO research initiative. This represented             from the IRIS instrument pool (Fig. 3). This vertical
an effort developed in parallel with the Spanish          component seismic stations were deployed
TOPOIBERIA research project. TOPOIBERIA was a             between Tanger and the Sahara desert, with an
multi-institutional effort a singular project within      average spacing of 400 m from the S of Fes to
Earth Sciences in Spain. It involved more than 100        Merzouga and with a 1000 m spacing from Fes
Earth scientists from 10 different research groups        to Tanger. The shots were distributed between
within the country, all doing coordinated research        the rst one located a few kilometres north of the
aimed to establish an integrated framework to             Middle Atlas and the last one located just south
develop multidisciplinary geoscientic studies            of Merzouga, with an average spacing of 70 km
within the Iberian peninsula. In the project              between each of them. The charge (approximately
innovative, frontier research on its topography           1 TM) was distributed in 2–4 boreholes per shot
and 4-D geodynamic evolution. The objective of            point at depths of 30-to-60 m. The quality of the
TOPOIBERIA was to understand the interaction              data varies along the prole [Ayarza et al., 2014].
between deep, superficial and atmospheric                 The RIFSIS experiment consisted in two wide-
processes, integrating research on geology,               angle seismic reflection profiles oriented,
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         approximately, EW and NS (330 km-long and                   desert into southernmost Iberia. As in the SIMA
         430 km-long, respectively) (Fig. 3). The design             acquisition the 5 sources consisted of 1Tn of
         follows the overall Rif strike and dip directions           chemical explosives in 2 boreholes. The shots were
         and conform to the major and minor axes of the              recorded by the IRIS-PASSCAL Texans (almost
         shape of the Bouguer anomaly. The EW transect               900 instruments). Up to 402 seismographs were
         extends from the Gharb Basin to the Algerian                deployed along the EW prole and 443 along
         border. The NS line follows the trace of the SIMIA          the NS prole including 35 in Spain. The average
         prole, starting at the Middle Atlas, en extends to         receiver spacing was of 750 m. Shots R1 through
         the north 70km into Iberia resulting in a unique            R3 where located along the NS line, and R3–R5
         700km-long traverse from the northern Sahara                were along the EW line (Fig. 3).
             Figure 2. Sketch map of the trace of the SIMA controlled source experiment. This is a 700 km long transect
           that starts close to Merzouga, north od the Saharan craton and goes acros the Atlas mountains follwing a major
          communitarian route (road). The transect crosses the Middle Atlas the Rif and ends a the tip of the Gribraltar arc.
             This gure also shoes the most prominent geodynamic features including the surface trace of the major fault
         structures and surface morfologies, like the moroccan Mesetam the Atlas, the Anti-Atlas, Middle Atlas and the Rif.
         The GASSIS-WestMed targeted the active faults in            crustal structure of seismogenic/active faults and
         the Alboran basin as these broad fracture zones are         fractures and, evaluate their seismic potential
         the key structures that accommodate the crustal             which can represent a signicant earthquake
         deformation due to the NW-SE convergence                    and potential tsunami hazard for the coasts of
         (4.5-5.6 mm/yr) between the African and                     Morocco and Southern Iberia. The program
         Eurasian plates. Stuctures like the TASZ consist            included seismic reection traverses across the
         on extensional, compressive and large strike-slip           southern terminations of the Eastern Betic Shear
         faults with signicant seismic activity SE of the           Zone at sea, such as the left-lateral Carboneras and
         Iberian Peninsula. The seismicity is characterized          Al-Idrissi faults and, the associated structures (e.g.
         by continuous, shallow seismic events of low to             the dextral usuf fault). The prominent Alboran
         moderate magnitude (Mw < 5.5) although, large               Ridge, a large compressional and potentially
         destructive earthquakes (MSK Intensity IX-X) have           tsunamigenic structure was also an objective of
         also occurred in the region (e.g. 1522 Almeria,             GASSIS. Other proles sampled the extensional
         1910 Adra, 1994 and 2004 Al-Hoceima). The                   features in the Adra region, (an example of fault
         main objectives of the multichannel marine                  growth and linkage).
         acquisition was to determine the shallow and
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Figure 3. Acquisition geometry of the RIFSIS controlled source wide-angle seismic reection experiment acquired
   acrossthe Rif moutnains. Two nearly perpendicular transects, roughtly oriented NS and EW were acquires. (a)
   Reveals the positions of the transects with respect to the Bouguer gravity anomalies. Note that both transects
  nearly intersect ontop of the Bouguer gravity minima. (b) Reveals the geometry and location of the acquisition
    transects with respect to the topography. This transects correpond to the location of the receivers (over 900
TEXANS from the IRIS-PASSCAL (USA) instrument center. (b) Also reveals the location and geometry of the CDP’s
estimated from the midpoints of the wide-angle shot records. Mid point between the source location and receiver
location. Note that the gravity anomalie can be imaged bu two transects. The location and geometry of the 3 lines
of the marine seismic reection data acquisition of the GASIS project that were also recorded by land instruments
         are also displayed. The mid points of the wide-angle offshore-onshore recordings are also marked.
                              R1, R2, R3, R4, R5 refer to the location of the shot points.
 Figure 4. Vp seismic velocity model derived from the wide-angle shot records acquired during the SIMA seismic
experiment acros the Atlas. This cross-section reveals the distribution of the seismic velocities as well as an overlay
 of the MT (resistivity models by Anahnah et al., [2011]). It is important to point out the low resitivity anomaly the
  overlays the root zone to the north of the High Atlas. This MT anomaly closely overlaps with the estimated trace
   of the reactivated faults of the original agraven, rif structure. Note also the relatively large amount of earquakes
   foci concentrated within the crust to the north of the root zone. The velocity models clearly markes the surface
   expresion of the deep basins such as the Saiss Basin. Stars along the surface of the velocity model indicate the
  position of the shot points. The discontinious soth dipping line that outcrops between the Saiss Basin and the Rif
marks the end of the well resolved model determmined from the SIMA project. The root zone imaged to the north
                               is constrained from the RIFSIS dataset (Ayarza et al., 2013).
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                                                                                                      juin 2015
         4. Seismic Constraints on the Crust &                 modeled to the N of the highest topography,
         Lithospheric structure                                coinciding with the minimum Bouguer anomaly
                                                               values. The root is most probably the result of
         The multi-seismic data acquisition has resulted in    a crustal NW-dipping thrust-fault that offsets
         a large data volume which can be analyzed using       the Moho and under-thrusts the Sahara lower
         a variety of approaches, techniques. Details on the   crust to the N (Fig. 4). This structure would be
         individual analysis, methods and interpretations      similar to other inverted continental rifts like the
         of these dataset either have been developed and       Pyrenees [Beaumont et al., 2000; Choukroune
         published and//or the most new approaches are         and Team, 1989; Daignieres et al., 1994; Teixell,
         on the processes of being published [Bezada           1998] or the Donbas fold belt [Maystrenko et al.,
         et al., 2013; Ayarza et al., 2014; Palomeras et       2003], which show thrust offsets of the lower
         al., 2014; Thurner et al, 2014; Levander et al.,      crust and Moho. Some characteristics of the
         2014; Gil et al; 2014, among others]. Therefore,      Atlas root constrained by the Vp velocity model
         within this section a relatively short summary of     indicate a positive lateral gradient towards the
         the main results is being developed. The section      north with velocities approaching those of the
         is separated in two parts one considering the         mantle revealing an under-thrust of the lower
         controlled source seismic data and a second           crustal which can be estimated to be on the order
         centered on the natural source, earthquake            of 30 km in length. This is on the order of the
         recordings. The former have been processed and        estimated shortening [Teixell et al., 2003, Ayarza
         interpreted using conventional ray-tracing and        et al., 2013]. Perhaps the key structural feature
         iterative modeling of travel time of interpreted      that denes the Atlas root is the still tectonically
         reections. The latter has involved nite frequency   active South Atlas frontal thrust which overlaps
         tomography of surface waves, of body waves and        a low resistivity anomaly in the MT models
         receiver function analysis.                           [Schwarz et al., 1992]. Note that this structure
                                                               has most probably accommodated the Cenozoic
         4.1 Control Source Seismic Reflections
                                                               shortening [Sebrier et al., 2006] and coincides
         Constraints
                                                               with the location of the seismicity.
         The control source seismic reection data acquired
                                                               Following the transect to the North just after the
         within SIMA and RIFSIS consists on densely space
                                                               root the crust is about 35 km thick across the
         wide-angle seismic reection records. In all shot
                                                               Middle Atlas and the southern part of the External
         gathers traces are spaced less than 1 km thus
                                                               Rif domain. One of the most spectacular features
         providing a relatively high lateral resolution.
                                                               imaged by the RIFSIS transect across the Rif is the
         This type of data can be processed using several
                                                               unexpected and approximately 50 km deep crustal
         different approaches. These include: conventional
                                                               root beneath a topography that does not reach 1.5
         iterative trial-and-error forward modeling by ray
                                                               km in height (External Rif). The increase in crustal
         tracing [Zelt and Smith, 1992]; inversion of rst
                                                               thickness is identied by two shot records (R3 and
         arrival travel times; low fold stacking; depth
                                                               R4) (Fig. 5). Both shots reveals a high amplitude
         migration. The former two provide maps of the
                                                               PmP phase. Travel time tting requires this
         distribution of physical properties (Vp and Vs if
                                                               notable increase in crustal thickness. Further to the
         possible), the latter two provide low resolution
                                                               north the rst shot record (R1) retrieves the base
         structural images. For detail processing and the
                                                               of the crust at an average depth of 42-43 beneath
         interpretation of the SIMA wide-angle seismic
                                                               the Internal Rif domain (Fig. 5). The sedimentary
         reection data see Ayarza et al., [2014] and for
                                                               basins are image as relatively low seismic Vp
         the RIFSIS see Gil et al., [2014].
                                                               velocities on the order of 3 km/s. Note that R3
         The crustal section across the Atlas is imbricated,   is located on a relatively thick (5.0 km) Neogene
         develops a root slightly N of the Axis of the High    sedimentary basin. Along the transect the upper,
         Atlas axis. The maximum depth of the Moho across      middle and lower crusts are constrained by the
         the Atlas reaches 40–41 km, and its position is       different seismic arrivals (including refracted and
         displaced to the North of the highest topography      reected phases, labeled accordingly --Pg, PiP,
         of the High Atlas. Ayarza el al. [2005] already       PcP, PmP--). The overall average velocities within
         suggested this geometric location differences         the crust are 5.9, 6.2, 6.8 and 8 km/s for the upper
         between the deepest Moho and the highest              mantle (below the Moho).
         topography from the analysis and modeling of
                                                               Very marked lateral variations of the Structure
         gravity data. The trend of the Bouguer anomaly
                                                               Beneath the External Rif Domain are imaged by
         (NE–SW) is oblique to that of the High Atlas
                                                               the East-West transect from the Gharb Basin to the
         (ENE–WSW) thus the High Atlas root has been
                                                               Algerian Border (Fig. 5). The bottom of the deep
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     Bulletin d’Information de l’Académie Hassan II des Sciences et Techniques                               n°17
Gharb Basin is identied at 10 km depth by shot           available data. Further high resolution studies are
R3 recorded along the EW deployment. The basin            required to address this issue.
itself is mapped as a low velocity anomaly in the
Vp velocity model. In the EW direction the crustal        4.2 Analysis of the Natural Source Data
thickness increases laterally reaching a maximum          (Earthquake)
depth over 50 km located closely beneath shot             The analysis and inversion of the Surface waves
R4. This shot reveals a travel time difference            reveals that the Iberian Massif and the Moroccan
between the east and western branches of the              Meseta feature similar velocity structure. 3.5 km/s at
PmP arrival of almost 5 s. The anomalous increase         the mid-crustal depths from 15 km, approximately,
of crustal thickness is very well constrained as it       until the Moho then, a sharp increase to 4.3 km/s
is sampled in both directions (reverse coverage           is identied. This velocity increases to values over
using shots R3 and R4). Further to the east the           4.4 km/s between 55-75 km depth decreasing
crust is only approximately 29-30 km in thickness.        back to 4.3 km/s at 110-120 km. The eastern and
The relatively thin crust corresponds to the crust        western Alboran Sea can be differentiated in terms
beneath the foreland ant Atlasic terranes up to           of S velocities. Down to 20 km low velocities
the Algerian border. The change in thickness is           approaching 3.2 km/s are mapped. Beneath the
rather sharp and is located beneath the surface           east Alboran velocities increase sharply to values
expression of the Nekkor fault/TASZ and, it               over 4.1 km/s increasing steadily with depth
corresponds to the eastern end of the Bouguer             and at 90 km depth S velocity reaches 4.5 km/s.
gravity anomaly over the Rif. If this two structural      Beneath the western Alboran velocity increases
features, sharp crustal thinning and the surface          to 4.0 km/s at 20 km depth, then at 40 km depth
outcrop of the Nekkor fault/TASZ are related is           it decreases down to 3.9 km/s to sharply increase
unclear and cannot be resolved by the currently           again so that at 75km it reaches values of 4.6 km/s.
  Figure 5. Crustal velocity model derived from the wide-angle seismic reection point acquired by the RIFSIS
 experiment. (s) Three dimensional perspective of the velocity model across the Riff Mountains with the location
   of the root zone. Map with the Moho topography estimated from the control source seimsic reection data
                                               (Alba et al., 2014).
The velocity models reveal different shear                Sierra Nevada Mountains velocity is systematically
velocities for the Betics and Rif Mountains               lower increasing from 3.9 to 4.0 km/s at 35 km
[Palomeras et al., 2004] although they are part of        depth then it increases to 4.2 km/s at 55 km
the same mountain system, similar lithologies have        and it increases further to 4.6 at, approximately
been identied at surface [Plat et al., 2013]. Lower      75km. Velocity, at 150 km depth, starts decreasing
shear velocities are mapped for the middle and            reaching 4.5 km/s at 250 km depth. This behaviour
lower crust in the Rif than in the Betics. At roughly     is similar beneath the Rif. There the Shear velocity
the base of the crust velocity changes sharply            increases from 3.6 km/s at 25 km depth to
to 4.2 km/s and it increases gradually down to            4.1 km/s at 55 km where the crust-mantle boundary
80 km depth. Under the Granada Basin and the              or Moho discontinuity has been interpreted from
                                                                                                                    - 39 -
                                                                                                              juin 2015
         the controlled source data [Gil et al., 2014]. Then        depth increasing to 4.2 km/s at 130 km depth
         the velocity features a smooth increase to 4.6 km/s        (Fig. 6). The location of this low velocities projects
         by 65 km depth. Below 95 km, velocity goes back            at surface beneath a middle Miocene-late Pliocene
         to 4.3 km/s at 150 km depth. Similar low velocities        basaltic volcanic eld. The low upper mantle
         (3.6 km/s) are mapped in the Strait of Gibraltar,          velocities are interpreted to be the source region
         to 60 km depth, increasing to 4.4 km/s down to             for these basalts. Mantle velocity below Moho
         75km depth, where it increases again to 4.6 km/s.          increases to 4.3 km/s, dening a thin mantle lid
                                                                    at approximately 45 km depth where velocity
         The velocity model is able to differentiate between        starts decreasing to 4.1 km/s. Beneath this low-
         the High and Middle Atlas, and the western Atlas.          velocity zone, velocity gradually increases with
         Starting at 15 km depth, beneath the High and              depth being 4.4 km/s at 250 km depth. Lower
         Middle Atlas where velocity is of 3.4 km/s it              velocities are observed in the crust of the western
         increases to 3.7 km/s at 25 km increases, further,         Atlas at 15km depth (3.3 km/s) lower than in
         to values of 4.4 km/s at 250 km depth. Between             the High Atlas (Fig. 6). Then velocity increases at
         the Rharb Basin and the Middle Atlas under the             25km depth to 4.3km/s at 35 increasing to almost
         eastern Moroccan Meseta, mantle S velocities               4.5km/s at 65km depth. At 140 km depth velocity
         are lower than in the overall Moroccan Meseta.             decreases over a 3%.
         Velocity is approximately of 4.1 km/s at 45 km
           Figure 6. (a) Three dimensional view of the S-wave velocity models derived from the natural source data, nite
            frequency surface wave tomagraphic velocity model obtained by Palomeras et al., [2014]. In includes a small
          scale inset map that denotes the location of the transect imaged in the main part of the gure. The relative high
             S-wave velocity domain that can be most probably interpreted as the slap. The red arrows mark the surface
            location of the thickenned crust. The one on the south (Morocco) located beneath the Rif corresponds to root
            evidenced by the Rif Controlled source wide-angle seismic reection data. (b) This is a 3D view of the velocity
           anomalies and the interpretation of the anomalies interms of the different domains of the lithosphere (This is a
           modied from Levander et al., 2014). The lithosphere beneath the complex bounrady zone of africa an Iberia is
              estimated from the volume of the velocities with values over 4.5 km/s. The alboran slab is also indicated.
                                The major surface topographic features are also indicated for reference.
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     Bulletin d’Information de l’Académie Hassan II des Sciences et Techniques                          n°17
Finite frequency seismic tomography by Bezada et       mantle. This low velocities can be indicative
al, [2013] also reveals P-wave velocity anomalies      of partial melting, below 100 km this involves
that reveal an almost vertical feature centered at     anomalously hot mantle. The slab rollback could
the Gribraltar arc. Bezada et al., [2013] seismic      drive the ascent of astenospheric mantle jointly
tomography image in general reveals similar            or coupled with toroidal ow around the slab
geometries as the seismic tomography models            [Funiciello et al., 2006; and Piromallo et al., 2006
determined for the area by other authors [Gutscher     and Alpert et al., 2013]. The up-owing mantle (to
et al., 2002; Spakman and Wortel, 2004]. All           ll in the gap) caused by the roll back of the slab
reveal a high velocity anomaly descending from         would melt by decompression during ascent.
W to E, nearly vertically beneath the Alboran Sea
and reaching the mantle transition zone beneath        The crustal thickness observations across the
southernmost Iberia. The images also show a low        Atlas Mountains obtained from the wide-angle
velocity anomaly beneath the western Alboran           controlled source data constrained a relatively thin
Sea between 50 and 100 km [Seber et al., 1996a;        crust with a limited root zone. This results, jointly
Morales et al., 1999] suggesting that this high        with the limited shorting measured from surface
velocity anomaly is not connected to the surface.      geology (which is estimated to be smaller than 25
The geometry of this relatively high velocity          % [Beauchamp et al., 1999; Teixell et al., 2003;
anomaly correlates with the S wave velocity            Arboleya et al., 2004]) poses difculties on how
anomaly structure already described.                   to explain the relatively high topographic relief (it
                                                       can reach 4000 m). Integrated modeling studies
Beneath the Atlas similarly to the shear velocity      using: topography, heat ow, geoid elevation
model, low seismic P-wave velocities are localized     amd Bouguer gravity, [Teixell et al., 2005; Zeyen
under the Middle and the Central High Atlas. The       et al., 2005; Missenard et al., 2006; Fullea et al.,
location of these anomalies correlate with the high    2010; Jimenez-Munt et al., 2011] solves this issue
topographic reliefs and the areas with thinnest        by compensating the orogenic belt at deep levels
lithosphere.                                           evidencing a thin lithosphere. In this models
                                                       beneath the High Atlas, the lithosphere is thin
Discussion: Structural Models &                        <70 km. Thus, the relatively shallow and, hot
Geodynamic Implications                                (buoyant) asthenosfere would then be considered
As recently mentioned the high velocity anomaly        the supporting mechanism [Teixell et al., 2005;
descends near vertically from W to E, beneath the      Zeyen et al., 2005; Missenard et al., 2006; Fullea
Alboran Basin. The anomaly reaches the mantle          et al., 2010; Jimenez-Munt et al., 2011] of the
transition zone beneath the study area. Beneath        Atlas Mountains.
west Alboran a relatively low velocity anomaly is      Deep earthquake activity (Fig. 1) identified
imaged between 50-100 km depth. This almost            beneath the Atlas has been reported at depth
vertical, slightly east dipping high velocity          below 80 km. However, if the 3-D tomographic
anomaly has been interpreted in several ways by        velocity model is used in the relocation, the focal
different authors: convective removal of thickened     depths reduce to values bellow 5 km, indicating
lithosphere [Platt and Vissers, 1989]; lithospheric    that these events are mostly related to intracrustal
delamination [Seber et al., 1996a; Calvert et al.,     seismicity. As a result, beneath the Atlas the low
2000] and, east dipping subduction [Lonergan           velocity anomalies revealed by the models can be
and White, 1997; Gutscher et al., 2002; Spakman        interpreted or associated to the asthenosphere.
and Wortel, 2004]. To differentiate among these        Despite the model resolution, the new images
different models further observations are required.    of the anomalies feature well dened, relatively
The data recorded within the Moroccan-Spanish          sharp, edges. Gradational limits of the anomalies
research initiative reveals dispersion of arrivals     would, most probably, result from thermal
coming from the east in the Gibraltar area. Also       erosion by conductive heating mechanisms (Fig.
the SKS splitting studies by Diaz et al., [2010]       6). On the other hand, well dened, relatively
reveal a rotation of the fast polarization direction   sharp, edges can be taken as an indication that,
along the arc suggest that a fast slab rollback is     the lithosphere was lost by advective processes,
perhaps the most appropriate model to explain          (e.g. delamination). The large-scale removal
the geodynamics of the Alboran region. Thus,           process most probably occurred by some form
the data acquired within the Moroccan-Spanish          of whole scale delamination or vigorous drip-
collaboration provided geophysical evidence to         like convection. The asthenosphere would ll in
rule out models featuring a mantle lithosphere         the gap providing an additional buoyancy that
instability. Furthermore, at depth between 60 to       would provide a mechanism to compensate an
160 km, the Alboran slab is surrounded by slow         isostatically uncompensated orogenic belt.
                                                                                                               - 41 -
                                                                                                               juin 2015
         These interpretations would be consistent with the          found in the study area (including: Alboran basin,
         widespread volcanic activity (Fig. 7) in Southern           Southern Iberia, and North Africa). The oldest
         Iberia and Morocco. The composition of these                basalts in the high Atlas are associated to rifting
         volcanic units changes in space and in time from            (during Mezozoic) these are the oldest volcanics.
         calc-alkaline units in southern Iberia and the              In the Iberian Massif, in central Spain, the Calatrava
         Alboran basin during the Miocene, to alkali basalts         intracontinental volcanic Province (Ciudad Real)
         in North Africa during the Pliocene and Quaternary          has been related to extensional tectonics [Lopez-
         [Duggen et al., 2004]. Middle and Late Miocene,             Ruiz et al., 1993].
         Pliocene, and Quaternary volcanic units are
           Figure 7. This is a composite plot that includes the most signicant imp locations of the velocity and structural
             models constrained by the seismic data acquired in this joint international, Spanish-Moroccan colaboration.
              Specics characteristics of the models can be found elswhere (Bezada et al., 2013, Palomeras et al, 2014,
          Thruner et al, 2014). The image reveals in a map view specs on the lithosphere including the shallow reometrie
         of the LAB constrained by the integration of potential eld (gravity, geoid) heat ow, topography measurements
         obtained by Fullea et al., 2014. The surface location of volcanic elds is also marked. See text for an explanation.
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     Bulletin d’Information de l’Académie Hassan II des Sciences et Techniques                            n°17
                                                                                                                 - 43 -
                                                                                                          juin 2015
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