Title
Upper mantle anisotropy beneath Peru from SKS splitting: Constraints on flat slab dynamics and interaction with the Nazca Ridge
Date Issued
05 February 2015
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
The Peruvian flat slab is by far the largest region of flat subduction in the world today, but aspects of its structure and dynamics remain poorly understood. In particular, questions remain over whether the relatively narrow Nazca Ridge subducting beneath southern Peru provides dynamic support for the flat slab or it is just a passive feature. We investigate the dynamics and interaction of the Nazca Ridge and the flat slab system by studying upper mantle seismic anisotropy across southern Peru. We analyze shear wave splitting of SKS, sSKS, and PKS phases at 49 stations distributed across the area, primarily from the PerU Lithosphere and Slab Experiment (PULSE). We observe distinct spatial variations in anisotropic structure along strike, most notably a sharp transition from coherent splitting in the north to pervasive null (non-split) arrivals in the south, with the transition coinciding with the northern limit of the Nazca Ridge. For both anisotropic domains there is evidence for complex and multi-layered anisotropy. To the north of the ridge our *KS splitting measurements likely reflect trench-normal mantle flow beneath the flat slab. This signal is then modified by shallower anisotropic layers, most likely in the supra-slab mantle, but also potentially from within the slab. To the south the sub-slab mantle is similarly anisotropic, with a trench-oblique fast direction, but widespread nulls appear to reflect dramatic heterogeneity in anisotropic structure above the flat slab. Overall the regional anisotropic structure, and thus the pattern of deformation, appears to be closely tied to the location of the Nazca Ridge, which further suggests that the ridge plays a key role in the mantle dynamics of the Peruvian flat slab system.
Start page
152
End page
162
Volume
412
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ingeniería ambiental y geológica Geología Sensores remotos
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84920896526
Source
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
ISSN of the container
0012821X
Sponsor(s)
Collection of the PULSE dataset was facilitated by the PASSCAL program of the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS), and we are grateful to PASSCAL personnel for their contributions. We thank all project participants from Yale University, University of Arizona, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and the Instituto Geofísico del Perú who assisted with fieldwork. We are particularly grateful to Astrid Martinez Kowler and Cristóbal Condori for invaluable assistance with PULSE field logistics. The GSN and PULSE data used in this study were accessed via the IRIS Data Management System (DMS). We thank Rob Clayton and Paul Davis for facilitating access to data from eight stations of the PeruSE network. The PULSE experiment was supported by the National Science Foundation via grants EAR-0943962 (MDL), EAR-0944184 (LSW), and EAR-0943991 (SLB). Constructive comments from two anonymous reviewers helped to improve the paper.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus