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Published February 2019 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Mantle Transition Zone Structure Beneath Northeast Asia From 2‐D Triplicated Waveform Modeling: Implication for a Segmented Stagnant Slab

Abstract

The structure of the mantle transition zone (MTZ) in subduction zones is essential for understanding subduction dynamics in the deep mantle and its surface responses. We constructed the P (V_p) and SH velocity (V_s) structure images of the MTZ beneath Northeast Asia based on two‐dimensional (2‐D) triplicated waveform modeling. In the upper MTZ, a normal V_p but 2.5% low V_s layer compared with IASP91 are required by the triplication data. In the lower MTZ, our results show a relatively higher‐velocity layer (+2% V_p and −0.5% V_s compared to IASP91) with a thickness of ~140 km and length of ~1,200 km atop the 660‐km discontinuity. Taking this anomaly as the stagnant slab and considering the plate convergence rate of 7–10 cm/year in the western Pacific region during the late Cenozoic, we deduced that the stagnant slab has a subduction age of less than 30 Ma. This suggests that the observed stagnancy of the slab in the MTZ beneath Northeast Asia may have occurred no earlier than the Early Oligocene. From the constraints derived individually on V_p and V_s structures, high V_p/V_s ratios are obtained for the entire MTZ beneath Northeast Asia, which may imply a water‐rich and/or carbonated environment. Within the overall higher‐velocity stagnant slab, a low‐velocity anomaly was further detected, with a width of ~150 km, V_p and V_s reductions of 1% and 3% relative to IASP91. Such a gap may have provided a passage for hot deep mantle materials to penetrate through the thick slab and feed the Changbaishan volcano.

Additional Information

© 2019 American Geophysical Union. Received 5 SEP 2018; Accepted 18 JAN 2019; Accepted article online 25 JAN 2019; Published online 16 FEB 2019. Waveform data for this study are provided by Data Management Centre of China National Seismic Network at Institute of Geophysics (http://www.seisdmc.ac.cn/, in Chinese; SEISDMC, doi:10.11998/SeisDmc/SN; Zheng et al., 2010), China Earthquake Networks Center and SN, SX, QH, NX, NM, GS, HB, HE, BJ, CC, BU, TJ, LN Seismic Networks, China Earthquake Administration. Thanks to Youcai Tang, Yoshio Fukao, Masayuki Obayashi, and Nathan Simmons for sharing their tomographic model. Discussions with Gaoshan Guo, Xu Wang, Tingting Yang, and Xiaozhuo Wei helped a lot in writing this paper. Ling Chen thanks COFFICE 422 at IGGCAS for the helpful discussions. We thank Computer Simulation Lab, IGGCAS, SeismoCluster in IGG, Nanjing University, and National Supercomputer Center in Guangzhou for the computing resources. GMT software (Wessel & Smith, 1998) and matplotlib (Hunter et al., 2007) were used in making part of the figures. We thank Editor Martha Savage and two anonymous reviewers for the constructive comments that helped to improve this paper. This research is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant 41688103), the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA20070302), and International Partnership Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (GJHZ1776). Zhongwen Zhan is partially supported by National Science Foundation grant 1722879.

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Published - Lai_et_al-2019-Journal_of_Geophysical_Research__Solid_Earth.pdf

Supplemental Material - jgrb53267-sup-0001-2018jb016642-s01.docx

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023