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Investigating the heterogeneity of the D″ region beneath the northern Pacific using a seismic array
Author(s) -
Thomas Christine,
Heesom Thomas,
Kendall J. Michael
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2000jb000021
Subject(s) - slowness , geology , discontinuity (linguistics) , mantle (geology) , downwelling , seismology , seismic array , classification of discontinuities , upwelling , transition zone , hotspot (geology) , geodesy , geophysics , oceanography , mathematical analysis , mathematics
Seismic array recordings are used to study the heterogeneity of a 15° × 25° region of the lowermost mantle beneath the northern Pacific. We investigate P waves from northwestern Pacific events, 68° to 82° from the Yellowknife array in northern Canada. Anomalous arrivals ( PdP ) are observed 2–13.5 s after P with a slowness 0.4–1.2 s/deg smaller than P , suggesting that they are reflections from a D″ discontinuity. We use vespagrams (slant stacks) and f‐k analyses to determine travel times and slowness vectors respectively. The f‐k technique simultaneously estimates both the horizontal slowness and backazimuth of arrivals at a receiver, with better resolution than vespagrams. Travel time analysis reveals a mean discontinuity height of 241 km above the core‐mantle boundary in the region studied here. However, there appears a systematic variation in this thickness which ranges from 211 to 336 km. The f‐k analyses also reveal variations between P and PdP backazimuths, further implying the existence of lateral variations in D″ in this area. This site is thought to be a transition region from an area of mantle downwelling to a region of upwelling; thus the variations in heterogeneity in this region may be related to its proximity to a site of paleoslab accumulation.

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