Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking

The 410 and 660 km discontinuities (d410 and d660, respectively) beneath Alaska and adjacent areas are imaged by stacking 75,296 radial receiver functions recorded by 438 broadband seismic stations with up to 30 years of recording period. When the 1-D IASP91 Earth model is used for moveout correctio...

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Main Authors: Dahm, Haider H., Gao, Stephen S., Kong, Fansheng, Liu, Kelly H.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholars' Mine 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/geosci_geo_peteng_facwork/1558
https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2567&context=geosci_geo_peteng_facwork
id ftmissouriunivst:oai:scholarsmine.mst.edu:geosci_geo_peteng_facwork-2567
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmissouriunivst:oai:scholarsmine.mst.edu:geosci_geo_peteng_facwork-2567 2023-05-15T18:44:38+02:00 Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking Dahm, Haider H. Gao, Stephen S. Kong, Fansheng Liu, Kelly H. 2017-12-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/geosci_geo_peteng_facwork/1558 https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2567&context=geosci_geo_peteng_facwork unknown Scholars' Mine https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/geosci_geo_peteng_facwork/1558 https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2567&context=geosci_geo_peteng_facwork © 2017 American Geophysical Union (AGU), All rights reserved. Geosciences and Geological and Petroleum Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works Alaska Aleutian Trench Mantle transition zone Pacific Plate Slab window Yakutat Plate Geology text 2017 ftmissouriunivst 2022-08-09T21:17:25Z The 410 and 660 km discontinuities (d410 and d660, respectively) beneath Alaska and adjacent areas are imaged by stacking 75,296 radial receiver functions recorded by 438 broadband seismic stations with up to 30 years of recording period. When the 1-D IASP91 Earth model is used for moveout correction and time depth conversion, significant and spatially systematic variations in the apparent depths of the d410 and d660 are observed. The mean apparent depth of the d410 and d660 for the entire study area is 417 ± 12 km and 665 ± 12 km, respectively, and the mean mantle transition zone (MTZ) thickness is 248 ± 8 km which is statistically identical to the global average. For most of the areas, the undulations of the apparent depths of the d410 and d660 are highly correlated, indicating that lateral velocity variations in the upper mantle above the d410 contribute to the bulk of the observed apparent depth variations by affecting the traveltimes of the P-to-S converted phases from both discontinuities. Beneath central Alaska, a broad zone with greater than normal MTZ thicknesses and shallower than normal d410 is imaged, implying that the subducting Pacific slab has reached the MTZ and is fragmented or significantly thickened. Within the proposed Northern Cordilleran slab window, an overall thinner than normal MTZ is observed and is most likely the result of a depressed d410. This observation, when combined with results from seismic tomography investigations, may indicate advective thermal upwelling from the upper MTZ through the slab window. Text Yakutat Alaska Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T): Scholars' Mine Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T): Scholars' Mine
op_collection_id ftmissouriunivst
language unknown
topic Alaska
Aleutian Trench
Mantle transition zone
Pacific Plate
Slab window
Yakutat Plate
Geology
spellingShingle Alaska
Aleutian Trench
Mantle transition zone
Pacific Plate
Slab window
Yakutat Plate
Geology
Dahm, Haider H.
Gao, Stephen S.
Kong, Fansheng
Liu, Kelly H.
Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking
topic_facet Alaska
Aleutian Trench
Mantle transition zone
Pacific Plate
Slab window
Yakutat Plate
Geology
description The 410 and 660 km discontinuities (d410 and d660, respectively) beneath Alaska and adjacent areas are imaged by stacking 75,296 radial receiver functions recorded by 438 broadband seismic stations with up to 30 years of recording period. When the 1-D IASP91 Earth model is used for moveout correction and time depth conversion, significant and spatially systematic variations in the apparent depths of the d410 and d660 are observed. The mean apparent depth of the d410 and d660 for the entire study area is 417 ± 12 km and 665 ± 12 km, respectively, and the mean mantle transition zone (MTZ) thickness is 248 ± 8 km which is statistically identical to the global average. For most of the areas, the undulations of the apparent depths of the d410 and d660 are highly correlated, indicating that lateral velocity variations in the upper mantle above the d410 contribute to the bulk of the observed apparent depth variations by affecting the traveltimes of the P-to-S converted phases from both discontinuities. Beneath central Alaska, a broad zone with greater than normal MTZ thicknesses and shallower than normal d410 is imaged, implying that the subducting Pacific slab has reached the MTZ and is fragmented or significantly thickened. Within the proposed Northern Cordilleran slab window, an overall thinner than normal MTZ is observed and is most likely the result of a depressed d410. This observation, when combined with results from seismic tomography investigations, may indicate advective thermal upwelling from the upper MTZ through the slab window.
format Text
author Dahm, Haider H.
Gao, Stephen S.
Kong, Fansheng
Liu, Kelly H.
author_facet Dahm, Haider H.
Gao, Stephen S.
Kong, Fansheng
Liu, Kelly H.
author_sort Dahm, Haider H.
title Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking
title_short Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking
title_full Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking
title_fullStr Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking
title_full_unstemmed Topography of the Mantle Transition Zone Discontinuities Beneath Alaska and its Geodynamic Implications: Constraints from Receiver Function Stacking
title_sort topography of the mantle transition zone discontinuities beneath alaska and its geodynamic implications: constraints from receiver function stacking
publisher Scholars' Mine
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/geosci_geo_peteng_facwork/1558
https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2567&context=geosci_geo_peteng_facwork
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Yakutat
Alaska
genre_facet Yakutat
Alaska
op_source Geosciences and Geological and Petroleum Engineering Faculty Research & Creative Works
op_relation https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/geosci_geo_peteng_facwork/1558
https://scholarsmine.mst.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2567&context=geosci_geo_peteng_facwork
op_rights © 2017 American Geophysical Union (AGU), All rights reserved.
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