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Understanding seismic heterogeneities in the lower mantle beneath the Americas from seismic tomography and plate tectonic history
Author(s) -
Ren Yong,
Stutzmann Eléonore,
van der Hilst Robert D.,
Besse Jean
Publication year - 2007
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 - 10.1029/2005jb004154
Subject(s) - geology , subduction , pacific plate , north american plate , seismology , slab window , plate tectonics , mantle (geology) , lithosphere , seismic tomography , hotspot (geology) , oceanic crust , tectonics , paleontology
We combine results from seismic tomography and plate motion history to investigate slabs of subducted lithosphere in the lower mantle beneath the Americas. Using broadband waveform cross correlation, we measured 37,000 differential P and S traveltimes, 2000 PcP ‐ P and ScS ‐ S times along a wide corridor from Alaska to South America. We invert the data simultaneously to obtain P and S wave velocity models. We interpret slab structures and unravel subduction history by comparing our V S tomographic images with reconstructed plate motion from present‐day up to 120 Myr. Convergence of the Pacific with respect to the Americas is computed using either (1) the Pacific and Indo‐Atlantic hot spot reference frames or (2) the plate circuit passing through Antarctica. Around 800 km depth, four distinctive fast anomalies can be associated with subduction of the Nazca, Cocos, and Juan de Fuca plates beneath South, Central, and North America, respectively, and of the Pacific plate beneath the Aleutian island arc. The large fast anomalies in the lowermost mantle, which are most pronounced in the S wave models, can be associated with Late Cretaceous subduction of the Farallon plate beneath the Americas. Near 2000 km depth, the images record the post‐80 Myr fragmentation of the proto‐Farallon plate into the Kula plate in the north and the Farallon plate in the northeast. Near 1000 km depth, we infer separate fast anomalies interpreted as the Kula‐Pacific, Juan de Fuca, and Farallon slabs. This interpretation is consistent with the volume and length of slabs estimated from the tomographic images and the plate history reconstruction.

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