Seismic Velocity Structure of Upper Mantle Beneath the Oldest Pacific Seafloor: Insights From Finite‐Frequency Tomography

Author:

Kang Hyunsun1ORCID,Kim YoungHee1ORCID,Hung Shu‐Huei2ORCID,Lin Pei‐Ying Patty3ORCID,Isse Takehi4ORCID,Kawakatsu Hitoshi45ORCID,Lee Sang‐Mook1ORCID,Utada Hisashi4ORCID,Takeuchi Nozomu4ORCID,Shiobara Hajime4ORCID,Sugioka Hiroko6ORCID,Kim Seung‐Sep7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Seoul National University Seoul Republic of Korea

2. Department of Geosciences National Taiwan University Taipei Taiwan

3. Department of Earth Sciences National Taiwan Normal University Taipei Taiwan

4. Earthquake Research Institute The University of Tokyo Tokyo Japan

5. Institute of Earth Sciences Academia Sinica Taipei Taiwan

6. Department of Planetology Graduate School of Science Kobe University Kobe Japan

7. Department of Geological Sciences Chungnam National University Daejeon Republic of Korea

Abstract

AbstractThe oldest oceanic basin (160–180 Ma) in the western Pacific is the birthplace of the Pacific Plate and is thus essential for understanding the formation and evolution of the oceanic plate. However, the upper mantle structure beneath the region has not been thoroughly investigated because of the remoteness and difficulties of long‐term in situ seismic measurements at the ocean bottom. From 2018 to 2019, the Oldest‐1 experiment on the oldest seafloor was conducted as part of the international Pacific Array initiative. We present the first three‐dimensional P‐wave velocity structure down to a depth of 350 km based on the relative travel time residuals of teleseismic earthquakes recorded by 11 broadband ocean‐bottom seismometers operated during the Oldest‐1 experiment. Our result shows a fast P‐wave velocity anomaly (VP perturbation of 2%–4% faster than average) at a depth of 95–185 km beneath the northeast of the study area. This structure is interpreted as evidence of dry, viscous, and rigid materials at depths below the lithosphere. Two slow anomalies (VP perturbation of 2%–4% slower than average) are seen beneath the southwestern and eastern (the oldest seafloor >170 Ma) parts of the array site. The low‐velocity zones are found at depths of 95–305 km. The observed velocity structures can be indicative of plume activities that affected the upper mantle as the Pacific Plate migrated over hotspots from the southeast. Alternatively, the observed velocity features may provide seismic evidence for small‐scale sublithospheric convection.

Funder

Korea Institute of Ocean Science and Technology

National Research Foundation of Korea

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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