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Earth, Planets and Space | 1998

Evaluation of slab images in the northwestern Pacific

Fumiko Tajima; Yoshio Fukao; M. Obayashi; Taro Sakurai

Recent P wave travel-time tomographic studies using data from the International Seismological Centre (ISC) catalog determine a large-scale subhorizontal high velocity anomaly in the northwestern Pacific subduction zones and it has been interpreted as imaging stagnant slab in the upper mantle transition zone (∼400 to 700 km). The limited resolution of the travel time tomographic studies in this depth range, however, makes it difficult to evaluate accurately the vertical and lateral extent of a stagnant slab. A broadband waveform modeling of triplicated regional seismic waves which are very sensitive to the transition zone structure is useful to evaluate the velocity structure along the propagation paths and therefore to constrain the spatial distribution of anomalies. This study thus compares tomographic images from the model of Obayashi et al. (1997) with results of the regional waveform modeling by Tajima and Grand (1998). The ISC tomographic model shows the largest lateral extent of high velocity anomaly in the layer of 478 to 551 km depths although part of this spread is likely due to the deteriorated resolution in that depth range. The waveform modeling suggests that the strong high velocity anomaly associated with a stagnant slab exists below 525 km with its maximum intensity in the top 50 km and decreases with increasing depth to vanish at 660 km. These results along with a recent global SH velocity model SAW12D of Li and Romanowicz (1996) which has the strongest high velocity anomaly in a depth range 500–550 km may be integrated into an image of a stagnant slab. The anomalous velocity structure associated with a stagnant slab has its maximum intensity not immediately above the 660 km discontinuity but in a depth range ∼100 km above it. This feature appears to be consistent with a thermo-chemical model of down-going slab in which a larger velocity contrast with the surrounding mantle is expected at a shallower depth of the transition zone. The ISC tomographic model and waveform modeling consistently show that the deflected slabs are not laterally continuous but are separated into a few subregions. Beneath the northeastern China where the resolution is good, the slab related anomaly above the 660 km discontinuity is accompanied by its downward extension into the lower mantle.


Archive | 2005

Electrical Conductivity In The Transition Zone Beneath The North Pacific And Its Implication For The Presence Of Water

Hisashi Utada; Takayuki Goto; Takao Koyama; Hirohiko M. Shimizu; M. Obayashi; Yoshio Fukao


Archive | 2010

Transition from slab stagnation to penetration beneath the northwestern Pacific and South America (Invited)

Yoshio Fukao; M. Obayashi


Archive | 2008

Slab Tearing To Be Stagnant

M. Obayashi; Junko Yoshimitsu; Yoshio Fukao


Archive | 2006

Temperature Anomalies From Whole Mantle Vp/Vs Tomography

Satoko Oki; Yoshio Fukao; M. Obayashi


Archive | 2006

A Mechanism of Slab Stagnation in The Mantle Transition Zone

Yoshio Fukao; M. Obayashi; Takashi Nakakuki; Tetsuo Irifune; Daisuke Yamazaki; Fenglin Niu


Archive | 2006

Variation of temperature anomaly beneath stagnant slab: broadband waveform modeling and tomography images

Fumiko Tajima; Takayuki Nakagawa; M. Obayashi; Yoshio Fukao


Archive | 2005

Whole mantle Vp/Vs tomography derived from broadband S-P travel time measurements

Satoko Oki; Yoshio Fukao; M. Obayashi


Archive | 2002

Seismic Slow Anomalies in the Deep Upper Mantle Oceanward of Subducting Slabs

M. Obayashi; Hiroko Sugioka; Yoshio Fukao


Archive | 2002

Trans-Pacific Cross-section of Temperature Field in the Mantle Transition Region From Seismic and Geoelectromagnetic Tomography

Yoshio Fukao; Takao Koyama; M. Obayashi; Hisashi Utada

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Yoshio Fukao

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Fumiko Tajima

University of Texas at Austin

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Alexei Gorbatov

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Junko Yoshimitsu

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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