Brian Kennett

Brian Kennett
Australian National University | ANU · Research School of Earth Sciences

M.A., Ph.D., Sc.D.

About

560
Publications
112,295
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Introduction
Brian Kennett AO FAA FRS is Emeritus Professor of Seismology at the Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University. He received his Ph.D. in Theoretical Seismology from the University of Cambridge in 1973. He was a Lindemann Fellow at IGPP, University of California, San Diego and then a University Lecturer at the University of Cambridge. He moved to Australia in 1984, and was President of the International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earths Interior from 1999-2003. He continues to work across a wide range of fields, particularly in Seismology.
Additional affiliations
May 2002 - June 2002
The University of Tokyo
September 1984 - present
Australian National University
Position
  • Seismology & Earth Structure
January 2009 - present
Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich

Publications

Publications (560)
Article
Full-text available
The dynamic processes within the Earth leave their record in geophysical and geochemical variation about the general stratification with depth. A snapshot of current structure is provided by geophysical evidence, whereas geochemical information provides a perspective over the age of the Earth. The combination of information on the distribution of h...
Data
The AK135 seismological tables represent an update of the IASP91 tables and include times for major seismic phases, differential travel times and ellipticity corrections.
Article
Full-text available
Although Australia has been the subject of a wide range of seismological studies, these have concentrated on specific features of the continent at crustal scales and on the broad scale features in the mantle. The Australian Seismological Reference Model (AuSREM) is designed to bring together the existing information, and provide a synthesis in the...
Article
Full-text available
The transition between the crust and mantle across the Australian continent shows considerable variations in both depth and sharpness. Recent extensive seismic reflection profiling provides a comprehensive data set to investigate the nature of the Moho in a wide range of geological environments. In reflection seismology the crust is normally charac...
Article
The current set of reference models for the radial variation of Earth structure have been in use for several decades, and provide a good representation of many aspects of the seismic wavefield. Nevertheless, strong constraints from the differential times between pairs of SmKS phases indicate the need to modify the P wavespeed profile in the upper p...
Book
Full-text available
Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) exploiting fibre optic cables provides high-density sampling of the seismic wavefield. Scattered returns from multiple laser pulses provide local averages of strain rate over a finite gauge length. The nature of DAS signal depends on the orientation of the cable with respect to the passing seismic waves, and so di...
Article
Full-text available
In the immediate vicinity of a source there are strong gradients in the seismic wavefield that are tamed and modified in DAS recording due to combined effects of gauge-length averaging and local stacking on the local strain field. Close to a source broadside propagation effects are significant, and produce a characteristic impact on the local DAS c...
Preprint
Full-text available
We use seismic ambient noise recorded by dense ocean bottom nodes (OBNs) in the Gorgon gas field, Western Australia, to compute time-lapse seafloor models of shear-wave velocity. The extracted hourly cross-correlation (CC) functions in the frequency band 0.1 – 1 Hz contain mainly Scholte waves with very high signal to noise ratio. We observe tempor...
Article
Full-text available
The use of cross-correlation between seismic stations has had widespread applications particularly in the exploitation of ambient seismic noise. We here show how the effects of a non-ideal noise distribution can be understood by looking directly at correlation properties and show how the behaviour can be readily visualised for both seismometer and...
Article
Full-text available
We present distributed fiber-optic sensing data from an airplane landing near the EastGRIP ice core drilling site on the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream. The recordings of exceptional clarity contain at least 15 easily visible wave propagation modes corresponding to various Rayleigh, pseudoacoustic, and leaky waves. In the frequency range from 8 to...
Article
Full-text available
Recent developments in seismic recording provide dense sampling of the seismic wavefield that allows the extraction of higher surface wave modes as well as the fundamental, and in some circumstances also P-dominated modes. The character of the modal branches and their dispersion with frequency and phase speed depends on interactions between differe...
Article
Full-text available
The proliferation of seismic networks in Australia has laid the groundwork for high-resolution probing of the continental crust. Here we develop an updated 3D shear-velocity model using a large dataset containing nearly 30 years of seismic recordings from over 1600 stations. A recently-developed ambient noise imaging workflow enables improved data...
Article
Full-text available
In recent years there has been a considerable expansion of deployments of portable seismic stations across Australia, which have been analysed by receiver function or autocorrelation methods to extract estimates of Moho depth. An ongoing program of full-crustal reflection profiles has now provided more than 25,000 km of reflection transects that ha...
Article
The geological structure of southwest Australia comprises a rich, complex record of Precambrian cratonization and Phanerozoic continental breakup. Despite the stable continental cratonic geologic history, over the past five decades the southwest of Western Australia has been the most seismically active region in continental Australia, though the re...
Preprint
In recent years there has been a considerable expansion of deployments of portable seismic stations across Australia, which have been analysed by receiver function or autocorrelation methods to extract estimates of Moho depth. An ongoing program of full-crustal reflection profiles has now provided more than 25,000 km of reflection transects that ha...
Article
During moderate to deep (35–260 km) earthquakes within the Philippine-sea slab along the Ryukyu arc, distinctive later phases after S are observed across the Japanese archipelago for epicentral distances from 1500 to 2200 km, producing anomalous amplification of ground motion in central and northern Japan. Broad-band observations show that these la...
Article
A century on from the first dedicated geophysical publication by the RAS, Brian Kennett reflects on its first article, presenting evidence for deep earthquakes.
Article
Full-text available
Over my research career I have worked on many aspects of Earth Structure on scales from the whole globe to the very local, this has provided insights into the nature of heterogeneity and the importance of features with small length scales (up to tens of kilometers) revealed with higher-frequency seismic waves (> 1 Hz). Progress in determining 3-D s...
Article
Full-text available
Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) exploiting fibre optic cables provides high-density sampling of the seismic wavefield. Scattered returns from multiple laser pulses provide local averages of strain rate over a finite gauge length. The nature of the signal depends on the orientation of the cable with respect to the passing seismic waves. For local...
Presentation
Southwest Australia is one of the continent’s most active seismic regions and has experienced many of Australia’s largest historical earthquakes, including the surface-rupturing 1968 MS 6.8 Meckering (Gordon and Lewis 1980), 1979 MS 6.2 Cadoux (Lewis et al. 1981) and 2018 MW 5.3 Lake Muir (Clark et. al., 2020) events. The region is also capable of...
Preprint
Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) exploiting fibre optic cables provides a means for high-density sampling of the seismic wavefield. The scattered returns from multiple laser pulses provide local averages of strain rate over a finite gauge length, and the nature of the signal depends on the orientation of the cable with respect to the passing seis...
Article
Full-text available
High‐frequency oceanic Pn/Sn (Po/So) phases (>2 Hz) recorded at ocean bottom seismometers in the northwest Pacific display strong azimuthal variations in propagation characteristics. In the direction parallel to former Pacific plate motion (N30°W), seismograms show a gentle rise at the onset of Po/So followed by large, long spindle‐shaped coda; Po...
Article
For a regular material, in a single state, the effect of increasing pressure is to produce a linear relation between shear modulus (G), bulk modulus (K) and pressure (p). Such a dependence on pressure fits the behaviour of individual mineral and mineral composites well. For the iron bearing minerals in the lower mantle, the transition from the high...
Preprint
Full-text available
The strain-energy formulation of nonlinear elasticity can be extended to the case of significant compression by modulating suitable strain energy terms by a function of relative volume. For isotropic materials this can be accomplished by the product of representations of shear, in terms of the invariants of the Seth-Hill family of strain measures,...
Article
Passive seismic recordings of teleseismic P wave arrivals and their immediate coda along a dense profile of stations can be used to image the reflection structure beneath the profile. The process exploits the autocorrelation of the seismic signals that extracts the reflection response from the transmitted signals recorded at the surface, which can...
Article
Full-text available
Brian Kennett shows what geophysics can reveal about the lithosphere of Australia.
Book
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Chapter
Exploiting Seismic Waveforms introduces a range of recent developments in seismology including the application of correlation techniques, understanding of multi-scale heterogeneity and the extraction of structure and source information by seismic waveform inversion. It provides a full treatment of correlation methods for seismic noise and event sig...
Article
The transition between the North Australian Craton and the Thomson Orogen in the area south of the Mount Isa terrane lies under cover and is a critical element in interpretation of the nature of the Tasmanides. The location of the boundary between these domains is controlled by potential field results; the gravity and magnetic signatures are most s...
Article
Full-text available
We exploit estimates of P-wave reflectivity from autocorrelation of transmitted teleseismic P arrivals and their coda in a common reflection point (CRP) migration technique. The approach employs the same portion of the vertical-component seismogram, as in standard Ps receiver function analysis. This CRP prestack depth migration approach has the pot...
Article
An equation of state can be converted into a full constitutive equation by adding to the strain energy a deviatoric component as a function of density change, which specifies incremental shear properties under compression. A suitable functional form for the shear term can be found from a semi-empirical linear relation between shear modulus, bulk mo...
Article
Full-text available
To improve exploration success undercover, the UNCOVER initiative identified high-resolution 3D seismic velocity characterisation of the Australian plate as a high priority. To achieve this goal, the Australian Government and academia have united around the Australian Passive Seismic Array Project (AusArray). The aim is to obtain a national half-de...
Article
Full-text available
Crustal architecture places first-order controls on the distribution of mineral and energy resources. However, despite its importance, it is poorly constrained over much of northern Australia. Here, we present a full crustal interpretation of deep seismic reflection profile 18GA-KB1 that extends over 872 km from the Eo- to Mesoarchean Pilbara Crato...
Article
Full-text available
Constraints on the morphology of the Moho are essential to establish reliable models of the subsurface and infer the evolution of the Australian crust. Reliable information on crustal thickness variations is important for thermal modelling and structural mapping, for both energy and mineral system studies. Here, we combine information from both pas...
Article
Surface waves are usually dispersive with long wave trains and steady decay of amplitude with distance. However, if the group velocity is nearly constant for a span of periods a strong pulse is produced that retains its amplitude for large distances. This situation arises for the fundamental mode of Love waves in the period band 40–500 s for crust...
Article
Full-text available
An important component of the seismic wavefield at moderate epicentral distances from deep earthquakes comes from seismic waves that are radiated upwards from the source. For very deep events, there is a range of distances at which upgoing S can convert into P waves that travel in the crust or in the upper mantle as the sPn phase. For a 600-km-deep...
Article
Full-text available
In order to improve exploration success under cover the UNCOVER initiative identified high resolution 3D seismic velocity characterization of the Australian plate as a high priority. To achieve this goal government and academia have united around the Australian passive seismic Array project (AusArray) which aims to obtain a national half degree dat...
Article
Full-text available
A wide range of methods exist for interpolation between spatially distributed points drawn from a single population. Yet often multiple datasets are available with differing distribution, character and reliability. A simple scheme is introduced to allow the fusion of multiple datasets. Each dataset is assigned an a priori spatial influence zone aro...
Article
Full-text available
Intra-plate volcanism in NE Australia, the eastern Highlands of New Guinea and along the Papuan Peninsula has been reasonably continuous over the Pliocene and Quaternary, without age progression, despite rapid movement of the Australian plate towards the north (∼7 cm/yr). Global seismic tomography indicates a strong zone of reduced seismic wavespee...
Article
Full-text available
The 24 May 2013 earthquake beneath the Sea of Okhotsk (610 km, Mw 8.3) produced significant ground motion across the whole span of the Japanese islands, from 1,300‐ to 4,200‐km epicentral distance. The largest shaking was concentrated along the back‐arc side of the subduction zone, which is the opposite of the normal pattern for deep earthquakes in...
Article
Full-text available
The autocorrelation of the seismic transmission response of a layered medium (autocorrelogram), in the presence of a free surface, corresponds to the reflection response. Despite many studies on the imaging of local structures through retrieval and forward modeling of stacked autocorrelograms, there is limited work on the inversion of these data. I...
Preprint
Full-text available
A wide range of methods exist for interpolation between spatially distributed points drawn from a single population. Yet often multiple datasets are available with differing distribution, character and reliability. A simple scheme is introduced to allow the fusion of multiple datasets. Each dataset is assigned an a priori spatial influence zone aro...
Article
Full-text available
We retrieve the local P wave empirical Green's functions between the elements of five different regional arrays across the globe by cross‐correlating and bin stacking the teleseismic earthquake coda waves recorded at each array. The stack is made using the coda of P and S wave phases for events in the distance range from 40° to 50° from the center...
Chapter
The origin of the midlithospheric discontinuity (MLD) is still controversial and enigmatic, but has significant implications for cratonic formation and long‐term continental evolution. Here we use the novel seismic daylight imaging (SDI) approach to interrogate fine‐scale structure in the lithosphere beneath two Archean cratons: the stable West Aus...
Book
Full-text available
The Australian Continent: A Geophysical Synthesis is designed to provide a summary of the character of the Australian continent through the extensive information available at the continental scale, as a contribution to the understanding of Australia's lithospheric architecture and its evolution. The results build on the extensive databases assemble...
Preprint
Full-text available
Four large, dominantly strike-slip, earthquakes have occurred in recent years in the Wharton Basin off the coast of Sumatra. The southernmost was the Mw 7.9 event on 2000 June 18, followed by the largest known intraplate earthquake – the Mw 8.6 event on 2012 April 11, with an Mw 8.2 ‘aftershock’ within a few hours. The most recent Mw 7.8 event on 2...
Article
The seismic correlation wavefield constructed from stacked cross-correlograms of event signals displays a wide range of features as a function of inter-station distance. The character of such correlation arrivals changes markedly with the segment of the wavefield employed. All such correlation arrivals arise from the interaction of seismic phases t...
Article
Full-text available
The seismic correlation wavefield constructed from the stacked cross-correlograms of the late coda of earthquake signals at stations across the globe provides a wealth of observed pulses as a function of inter-station distance. The interval from 3 to 10 h after the onset of major earthquakes is employed for the period range from 15 to 50 s. The obs...
Article
Lithospheric discontinuities are elusive, with properties that are strongly frequency dependent. Results from a temporary deployment of broadband stations along a north-south transect through Central Australia, and the permanent arrays ASAR and WRA, are used to evaluate the spatial coherence of lithospheric features, particularly mid-lithospheric d...
Data
Text file giving the regional detection of a low-velocity zone on top of the 410-km discontinuity beneath northeast Asia.
Data
Text file giving the regional detection of a low-velocity zone on top of the 660-km discontinuity beneath northeast Asia.
Article
Dense strong ground motion observations of the shallow Mw 6.6 2004 Mid-Niigata earthquake, Japan, show a strong, moderately long-period disturbance (5-20 s) immediately following P. The associated ground motion is as large or larger as that in the S waves and surface waves. The nature of this PL phase is revealed with the aid of 3-D finite differen...
Article
Full-text available
Cross-correlation of seismograms provides new information on the Earth both through the exploitation of ambient noise and specific components of earthquake records. Here, we cross- correlate recordings of large earthquakes on a planetary scale and identify a range of hitherto unobserved seismic phases in Earth’s correlation wavefield. We show that...
Article
We have extracted a dataset of more than 5000 Sn traveltimes for source-station pairs within continental Australia, with 3-D source relocation using Pn arrivals to improve data consistency. We conduct tomographic inversion for S-wavespeed structure down to 100 km using the Fast Marching Tomography (FMTOMO) method for the whole Australian continent....
Article
Full-text available
We exploit conversions between P and S waves for large-scale, high-resolution imaging of the mantle transition zone beneath Northwest Pacific and the margin of Eastern Asia. We find pervasive reflectivity concentrated in two bands with apparent wave-speed reduction of −2% to −4% about 50 km thick at the top of the transition zone and 100 km thick a...
Article
The Mw 7.9 earthquake beneath the Ogasawara Islands on 2015 May 30 at 680 km depth (about 100 km deeper than other seismicity in the vicinity), produced significant shaking over a broad area of Japan in the epicentral distance range 1000-2000 km. Usually deep earthquakes in the subducting Pacific slab develop a band of large ground motion along the...
Data
Supplementary material for Tauzin, B., Kim, S., & Kennett, B. L. N. (2017). Pervasive seismic low-velocity zones within stagnant plates in the mantle transition zone: Thermal or compositional origin?. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 477, 1-13. This material includes S1 Extended method section S1.1 Data processing S1.2 Back-projection of the...
Article
The dominant high-frequency component of ground motion for most seismic events in Australia comes from the crustal Lg phase that can commonly propagate efficiently to considerable distances across the continent. Using results from recent tomography for the attenuation of Lg, we are able to build the pattern of transmission of ground motion from eve...
Article
We estimate the Lg-wave quality factor (Q) across the Australian continent from vertical-component Lg waveforms. A tomographic inversion is performed to construct an Lg attenuation model for 58 frequencies between 0.05 and 10.0 Hz. The available spatial resolution is approximately 1.5° × 1.5° for the 0.5–2.0 Hz band. At 1.0 Hz, the Lg-wave Q over t...
Article
A new formulation of constitutive equations for states of high compression is introduced for isotropic media, exploiting a separation between hydrostatic and deviatoric components in strain energy. The strain energy is represented as functions of strain invariants, with one purely volumetric component and the other which vanishes for purely hydrost...
Article
Understanding the complex heterogeneity of the continental lithosphere involves a wide variety of spatial scales and the synthesis of multiple classes of information. Seismic surface waves and multiply reflected body waves provide the main constraints on broad-scale structure, and bounds on the extent of the lithosphere-asthenosphere transition (LA...
Article
Full-text available
Group and phase velocity maps in the period range 2-20 s for the Proterozoic east Albany-Fraser Orogen, Western Australia, are extracted from ambient seismic noise recorded with the 70-station ALFREX array. This two-year temporary installation provided detailed coverage across the orogen and the edge of the Neoarchean Yilgarn Craton, a region where...
Article
We use passive seismic and gravity data to characterize the crustal structure and the crust-mantle boundary of the east Albany-Fraser Orogen in Western Australia, a Proterozoic orogen that reworked the southern and southeastern margin of the Archean Yilgarn Craton. The crustal thickness pattern retrieved from receiver functions shows a belt of subs...
Article
By analyzing P reflectivity extracted from stacked autocorrelograms for teleseismic events on a dense seismic profile, we obtain a detailed image of the mid-lithosphere discontinuity (MLD) beneath western and central North China Craton (NCC). This seismic daylight imaging exploits a broad high-frequency band (0.5–4 Hz) to reveal the fine-scale comp...
Article
Full-text available
Seismic arrays provide an important means of enhancing seismic signals and determining the directional properties of the wavefield by beam-forming. When multiple arrays are to be used together, the viewpoint needs to be modified from looking outwards from each array to focusing on a specific target area and so constraining the portions of the wavef...
Poster
Full-text available
Collaborative project between the Geological Survey of Western Australia, Geological Survey of South Australia, Geoscience Australia, ANU, and Auscope.