Peter E. van Keken
Carnegie Institution for Science
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Peter E. van Keken.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016
Jun-Ichi Kimura; James B. Gill; Susanne Skora; Peter E. van Keken; Hiroshi Kawabata
We quantitatively explore element redistribution at subduction zones using numerical mass balance models to evaluate the roles of the subduction zone filter in the Earths geochemical cycle. Our models of slab residues after arc magma genesis differ from previous ones by being internally consistent with geodynamic models of modern arcs that successfully explain arc magma genesis and include element fluxes from the dehydration/melting of each underlying slab component. We assume that the mantle potential temperature (Tp) was 1400–1650°C at 3.5–1.7 Ga and gradually decreased to 1300–1350°C today. Hot subduction zones with Tp ∼1650°C have a thermal structure like modern SW Japan where high-Mg andesite is formed which is chemically like continental crust. After 2.5–1.7 Gyr of storage in the mantle, the residual igneous oceanic crust from hot subduction zones can evolve isotopically to the HIMU mantle component, the residual base of the mantle wedge to EMI, the residual sediment becomes an essential part of EMII, and the residual top of the mantle wedge can become the subcontinental lithosphere component. The Common or Focal Zone component is a stable mixture of the first three residues occasionally mixed with early depleted mantle. Slab residues that recycled earlier (∼2.5 Ga) form the DUPAL anomaly in the southern hemisphere, whereas residues of more recent recycling (∼1.7 Ga) underlie the northern hemisphere. These ages correspond to major continental crust forming events. The east-west heterogeneity of the depleted upper mantle involves subcontinental mantle except in the Pacific.
Science Advances | 2017
S. Shawn Wei; Douglas A. Wiens; Peter E. van Keken; Chen Cai
The Tonga double seismic zone depth and distribution are controlled by slab temperature, which affects dehydration reactions. Double seismic zones are two-layered distributions of intermediate-depth earthquakes that provide insight into the thermomechanical state of subducting slabs. We present new precise hypocenters of intermediate-depth earthquakes in the Tonga subduction zone obtained using data from local island–based, ocean-bottom, and global seismographs. The results show a downdip compressional upper plane and a downdip tensional lower plane with a separation of about 30 km. The double seismic zone in Tonga extends to a depth of about 300 km, deeper than in any other subduction system. This is due to the lower slab temperatures resulting from faster subduction, as indicated by a global trend toward deeper double seismic zones in colder slabs. In addition, a line of high seismicity in the upper plane is observed at a depth of 160 to 280 km, which shallows southward as the convergence rate decreases. Thermal modeling shows that the earthquakes in this “seismic belt” occur at various pressures but at a nearly constant temperature, highlighting the important role of temperature in triggering intermediate-depth earthquakes. This seismic belt may correspond to regions where the subducting mantle first reaches a temperature of ~500°C, implying that metamorphic dehydration of mantle minerals in the slab provides water to enhance faulting.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
Ross Maguire; Jeroen Ritsema; Mickaël Bonnin; Peter E. van Keken; Saskia Goes
The strongest evidence to support the classical plume hypothesis comes from seismic imaging of the mantle beneath hot spots. However, imaging results are often ambiguous and it is questionable whether narrow plume tails can be detected by present-day seismological techniques. Here we carry out synthetic tomography experiments based on spectral element method simulations of seismic waves with period T > 10 s propagating through geodynamically derived plume structures. We vary the source-receiver geometry in order to explore the conditions under which lower mantle plume tails may be detected seismically. We determine that wide-aperture (4,000–6,000 km) networks with dense station coverage (<100–200 km station spacing) are necessary to image narrow (<500 km wide) thermal plume tails. We find that if uncertainties on traveltime measurements exceed delay times imparted by plume tails (typically <1 s), the plume tails are concealed in seismic images. Vertically propagating SKS waves enhance plume tail recovery but lack vertical resolution in regions that are not independently constrained by direct S paths. We demonstrate how vertical smearing of an upper mantle low-velocity anomaly can appear as a plume originating in the deep mantle. Our results are useful for interpreting previous plume imaging experiments and guide the design of future experiments.
Archive | 2008
Marc Spiegelman; Peter E. van Keken; Bradley R. Hacker
Archive | 2006
Erik Arthur Kneller; Peter E. van Keken
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2018
Peter E. van Keken; Ikuko Wada; Geoffrey A. Abers; Bradley R. Hacker; Kelin Wang
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
M. Morishige; Peter E. van Keken
Archive | 2008
Stephane Rondenay; Geoffrey A. Abers; Kenneth C. Creager; Stephen D. Malone; Laura S. MacKenzie; Zhongfei Zhang; Peter E. van Keken; Aaron G. Wech; John R. Sweet; Timothy Ian Melbourne; Bradley R. Hacker
Archive | 2007
Ellen M. Syracuse; Geoffrey A. Abers; Karen M. Fischer; Peter E. van Keken; Erik Arthur Kneller; Catherine A. Rychert
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018
Ross Maguire; Jeroen Ritsema; Mickaël Bonnin; Peter E. van Keken; Saskia Goes