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Pn Tomography of the Juan de Fuca and Gorda Plates: Constraints on Mantle Deformation and Hydration in Young Oceanic Lithosphere
  • Brandon VanderBeek,
  • Douglas Toomey
Brandon VanderBeek
University of Oregon

Corresponding Author:brandon.p.vanderbeek@gmail.com

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Douglas Toomey
University of Oregon
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Abstract

Tomographic analysis of Pn arrivals times—the guided P-wave propagating within the lithospheric mantle—is ideal for studying the structure of the uppermost mantle. While plate-scale seismic images of Pn wave speeds are common beneath the continents, similar scale studies have not been possible within ocean basins due to the sparsity of seismic stations. The Cascadia Initiative (CI) dataset provides the first opportunity to image spatial variations in lithospheric structure across an entire oceanic plate. We measure 2,862 Pn arrivals from local earthquakes recorded by the CI array. Our dataset provides complete coverage of both the Juan de Fuca (JdF) and deforming Gorda plates. We invert the measured arrival times for 3D variations in anisotropic P-wave velocity and hypocentral parameters. Despite surficial evidence of extensive active faulting, the velocity structure of the Gorda uppermost mantle is remarkably consistent with predictions from a conductive cooling model (attached figure). Limited deformation at mantle depths is supported by seismic anisotropy measurements that show the fast-direction of P-wave propagation rotates in concert with the magnetic anomaly lineations. This rotation may be explained by local plate kinematics without internal deformation and hydration of the shallow mantle. In contrast to Gorda, the seismic velocity structure of the JdF plate does not exhibit a clear age dependence. Three pronounced mantle low-velocity zones are found along the southern edge of the JdF plate near the termini of large pseudofaults that contributed to the formation of the Blanco Transform fault. We attribute these velocity reductions to mantle alteration by seawater. We note that within the interior of the JdF plate pseudofaults do not appear as uniformly slow features in our seismic images. Beneath the central and northern JdF plate, P-wave speeds are ~7.7 km/s out to ~4-5 Myr before abruptly increasing to ~7.9 km/s. Curiously, this transition occurs near the onset of mantle downwelling inferred from teleseismic body wave tomography and attenuation suggesting that mantle flow dynamics may influence the structure of young oceanic lithosphere. Lastly, we note that our results do not suggest a relationship between the structure of the uppermost slab mantle and segmentation of the Cascadia megathrust.