Structure of the crust and upper mantle beneath the Bransfield Strait (Antarctica) using P-wave Receiver Functions

Author(s):  
Joan Antoni Parera-Portell ◽  
Flor de Lis Mancilla ◽  
José Morales ◽  
Javier Almendros

<p><span>The Bransfield Strait is a tectonically active region located between the South Shetland archipelago (SSI) and the Antarctic Peninsula (AP), characterised by the presence of an incipient back-arc spreading ridge driven by on-going slab rollback of the Phoenix plate under the Antarctic and Shetland plates. Twelve broad-band seismic stations deployed in the region are used to obtain P-wave receiver functions from teleseismic earthquakes to improve the current understanding of the crust and upper mantle structures. This includes the depth and spatial variability of the Moho discontinuity, the average crustal Vp/Vs ratio and the thickness of the Mantle Transition Zone (MTZ). Results reveal a highly variable crustal thickness in the South Shetland block, ranging from ~30 km near the SW and NE ends of the South Shetland Trench to ~15 km in the central Bransfield Basin (Deception Island), where the highest Vp</span> <span>⁄ Vs ratios in the region are </span><span>reached</span><span> (> 2). In contrast, the AP displays typical and homogeneous continental crust characteristics with an average crustal thickness of ~34 km and Vp/Vs ~1.77. A low velocity zone (LVZ) is identified under all stations suggesting partial melting in the upper mantle beneath the lithosphere, which is widespread throughout the region and not only confined to the mantle wedge above the subducted Phoenix oceanic slab. There is evidence of magmatic underplating under the SSB in accordance with the LVZ together with the active volcanism and the high crustal Vp/Vs ratio in the area. The Phoenix oceanic slab is inferred to subduct steeply, as the MTZ appears already thickened under the AP. </span></p>

2021 ◽  
Vol 802 ◽  
pp. 228744
Author(s):  
Joan Antoni Parera-Portell ◽  
Flor de Lis Mancilla ◽  
José Morales ◽  
Javier Almendros ◽  
Vanessa Jiménez-Morales

2005 ◽  
Vol 42 (6) ◽  
pp. 1205-1222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriela Fernández-Viejo ◽  
Ron M Clowes ◽  
J Kim Welford

Shear-wave seismic data recorded along four profiles during the SNoRE 97 (1997 Slave – Northern Cordillera Refraction Experiment) refraction – wide-angle reflection experiment in northwestern Canada are analyzed to provide S-wave velocity (Vs) models. These are combined with previous P-wave velocity (Vp) models to produce cross sections of the ratio Vp/Vs for the crust and upper mantle. The Vp/Vs values are related to rock types through comparisons with published laboratory data. The Slave craton has low Vp/Vs values of 1.68–1.72, indicating a predominantly silicic crustal composition. Higher values (1.78) for the Great Bear and eastern Hottah domains of the Wopmay orogen imply a more mafic than average crustal composition. In the western Hottah and Fort Simpson arc, values of Vp/Vs drop to ∼1.69. These low values continue westward for 700 km into the Foreland and Omineca belts of the Cordillera, providing support for the interpretation from coincident seismic reflection studies that much of the crust from east of the Cordilleran deformation front to the Stikinia terrane of the Intermontane Belt consists of quartzose metasedimentary rocks. Stikinia shows values of 1.78–1.73, consistent with its derivation as a volcanic arc terrane. Upper mantle velocity and ratio values beneath the Slave craton indicate an ultramafic peridotitic composition. In the Wopmay orogen, the presence of low Vp/Vs ratios beneath the Hottah – Fort Simpson transition indicates the presence of pyroxenite in the upper mantle. Across the northern Cordillera, low Vp values and a moderate-to-high ratio in the uppermost mantle are consistent with the region's high heat flow and the possible presence of partial melt.


1980 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 1161-1169
Author(s):  
K. Furukawa ◽  
J. F. Gettrust ◽  
L. W. Kroenke ◽  
J. F. Campbell

abstract Inversion of an 80-km-long reversed seismic refraction profile near the northwestern flank of Kōko Seamount indicates that the crust adjacent to the southern end of the Emperor Seamount chain is approximately 9-km thick with no dip in the refracting horizons. These data require positive P-velocity gradients in the crust and upper mantle to fit the observed amplitudes. The crustal refractor P velocities and crustal thickness found are in general agreement with those found previously for the Emperor chain and near the Hawaiian Ridge. It is inferred from our data that the tectonic mechanism which created the Emperor and Hawaiian chains was highly localized.


2021 ◽  
pp. M55-2018-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karsten M. Haase ◽  
Christoph Beier

AbstractYoung volcanic centres of the Bransfield Strait and James Ross Island occur along back-arc extensional structures parallel to the South Shetland island arc. Back-arc extension was caused by slab rollback at the South Shetland Trench during the past 4 myr. The variability of lava compositions along the Bransfield Strait results from varying degrees of mantle depletion and input of a slab component. The mantle underneath the Bransfield Strait is heterogeneous on a scale of approximately tens of kilometres with portions in the mantle wedge not affected by slab fluids. Lavas from James Ross Island east of the Antarctic Peninsula differ in composition from those of the Bransfield Strait in that they are alkaline without evidence for a component from a subducted slab. Alkaline lavas from the volcanic centres east of the Antarctic Peninsula imply variably low degrees of partial melting in the presence of residual garnet, suggesting variable thinning of the lithosphere by extension. Magmas in the Bransfield Strait form by relatively high degrees of melting in the shallow mantle, whereas the magmas some 150 km further east form by low degrees of melting deeper in the mantle, reflecting the diversity of mantle geodynamic processes related to subduction along the South Shetland Trench.


2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (18) ◽  
Author(s):  
Devon N. Verellen ◽  
Erik C. Alberts ◽  
Gustavo A. Larramendi ◽  
E. Horry Parker ◽  
Robert B. Hawman

1993 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 619-629
Author(s):  
Zhu-Wu Fu ◽  
Zhen Zhuang ◽  
Zi-Ling Lü ◽  
Jia-Fu Hu ◽  
Zhong-He Song ◽  
...  

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