A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions

"In spite of the fact that Iceland is frequently regarded as the archetypal example of mantle plumes, the existence, depth extent, origin, dimension and excess temperature of the hypothesized plume remain enigmatic and hotly debated. The controversy mostly originates from the limited vertical r...

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Main Author: Wang, Dan
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholars' Mine 2020
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Online Access:https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/doctoral_dissertations/2880
https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/context/doctoral_dissertations/article/3885/viewcontent/uc.pdf
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author Wang, Dan
author_facet Wang, Dan
author_sort Wang, Dan
collection Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T): Scholars' Mine
description "In spite of the fact that Iceland is frequently regarded as the archetypal example of mantle plumes, the existence, depth extent, origin, dimension and excess temperature of the hypothesized plume remain enigmatic and hotly debated. The controversy mostly originates from the limited vertical resolution of seismic tomography techniques and the associated uncertainty in the depth and lateral extents of the lower wavespeed anomaly. Here we utilize a robust receiver-function-based technique to image the topography of the 410 and 660 km discontinuities bordering the mantle transition zone beneath Iceland and surrounding oceanic regions, and construct thermal and seismic wavespeed models of the upper mantle and mantle transition zone based on the observations. The preferred model invokes a broad plume laterally extending ~1000 km originated from the lower mantle. The dominant phase transition across the 660-km discontinuity is the post-spinel transition in the peripheral area, but becomes the post-garnet transition in the central portion of the plume stem due to the excessive temperature anomaly. This phase transition variation significantly enlarges the plume dimension and enhances upwelling of plume material"--Abstract, page iv.
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genre Iceland
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op_collection_id ftmissouriunivst
op_relation https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/doctoral_dissertations/2880
https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/context/doctoral_dissertations/article/3885/viewcontent/uc.pdf
op_rights © 2020 Dan Wang, All rights reserved.
op_source Doctoral Dissertations
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publisher Scholars' Mine
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spelling ftmissouriunivst:oai:scholarsmine.mst.edu:doctoral_dissertations-3885 2025-03-23T15:38:08+00:00 A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions Wang, Dan 2020-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/doctoral_dissertations/2880 https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/context/doctoral_dissertations/article/3885/viewcontent/uc.pdf unknown Scholars' Mine https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/doctoral_dissertations/2880 https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/context/doctoral_dissertations/article/3885/viewcontent/uc.pdf © 2020 Dan Wang, All rights reserved. Doctoral Dissertations Iceland Mantle Plume Receiver Functions Seismology Geology Geophysics and Seismology text 2020 ftmissouriunivst 2025-02-27T10:42:38Z "In spite of the fact that Iceland is frequently regarded as the archetypal example of mantle plumes, the existence, depth extent, origin, dimension and excess temperature of the hypothesized plume remain enigmatic and hotly debated. The controversy mostly originates from the limited vertical resolution of seismic tomography techniques and the associated uncertainty in the depth and lateral extents of the lower wavespeed anomaly. Here we utilize a robust receiver-function-based technique to image the topography of the 410 and 660 km discontinuities bordering the mantle transition zone beneath Iceland and surrounding oceanic regions, and construct thermal and seismic wavespeed models of the upper mantle and mantle transition zone based on the observations. The preferred model invokes a broad plume laterally extending ~1000 km originated from the lower mantle. The dominant phase transition across the 660-km discontinuity is the post-spinel transition in the peripheral area, but becomes the post-garnet transition in the central portion of the plume stem due to the excessive temperature anomaly. This phase transition variation significantly enlarges the plume dimension and enhances upwelling of plume material"--Abstract, page iv. Text Iceland Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T): Scholars' Mine
spellingShingle Iceland
Mantle Plume
Receiver Functions
Seismology
Geology
Geophysics and Seismology
Wang, Dan
A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions
title A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions
title_full A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions
title_fullStr A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions
title_full_unstemmed A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions
title_short A broad Iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: Constraints from receiver functions
title_sort broad iceland plume associated with two phase transitions at the 660 km discontinuity: constraints from receiver functions
topic Iceland
Mantle Plume
Receiver Functions
Seismology
Geology
Geophysics and Seismology
topic_facet Iceland
Mantle Plume
Receiver Functions
Seismology
Geology
Geophysics and Seismology
url https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/doctoral_dissertations/2880
https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/context/doctoral_dissertations/article/3885/viewcontent/uc.pdf