IAG-IASPEI 2017

Presentation information

Oral

IASPEI Symposia » S21. Lithospheric structure

[S21-3] Seismic anisotropy tomography

Fri. Aug 4, 2017 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM Room 501 (Kobe International Conference Center 5F, Room 501)

Chairs: Nicholas Harmon (University of Southampton) , Jaroslava Plomerova (Inst. Geophysics, Czech Acad. Sci., Prague)

8:30 AM - 9:00 AM

[S21-3-01] Seismic anisotropy tomography of the Western Pacific subduction zones

Dapeng Zhao, Xin Liu, Wei Wei (Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan)

invited

We present 3-D images of azimuthal anisotropy tomography of the crust and upper mantle of the western Pacific subduction zones, which are determined using a large number of high-quality P and S wave arrival-time data of local earthquakes and teleseismic events recorded by the dense seismic networks in and around the Japan Islands. A tomographic method for P-wave velocity azimuthal anisotropy is modified and extended to invert S-wave travel times for 3-D S-wave velocity azimuthal anisotropy. A joint inversion of the P and S wave data is conducted to constrain the 3-D azimuthal anisotropy of the Japan subduction zone. Main findings of this work are summarized as follows. (1) The high-velocity subducting Pacific and Philippine Sea (PHS) slabs exhibit trench-parallel fast-velocity directions (FVDs), which may reflect frozen-in lattice-preferred orientation of aligned anisotropic minerals formed at the mid-ocean ridge as well as shape-preferred orientation such as normal faults produced at the outer-rise area near the trench axis. (2) Significant trench-normal FVDs are revealed in the mantle wedge, which reflects corner flow in the mantle wedge due to the active subduction and dehydration of the oceanic plates. (3) Obvious toroidal FVDs and low-velocity anomalies exist in and around a window (hole) in the aseismic PHS slab beneath Southwest Japan, which may reflect a toroidal mantle flow pattern resulting from hot and wet mantle upwelling caused by the joint effects of deep dehydration of the Pacific slab and the convective circulation process in the mantle wedge above the Pacific slab. (4) Significant low-velocity anomalies with trench-normal FVDs exist in the mantle below the Pacific slab beneath Northeast Japan, which may reflect a subducting oceanic asthenosphere affected by hot mantle upwelling from the deeper mantle.